FOUNDATION’S FRIENDS
Stories
in Honor of Isaac Asimov
Edited by
Martin H. Greenberg
Copyright ©
1989
To
Isaac, with love
Preface
by Ray
Bradbury
ONE OF MY FAVORITE
STORIES AS A CHILD WAS THE ONE ABOUT the little boy who got a magical
porridge machine functioning so wildly that it inundated the town
with three feet of porridge.
In order to walk from one
house to the other, or head down-street, one had to head out with a
large spoon, eating one’s way to destinations near or far.
A delightful concept,
save that I imagined tomato soup and a thick slush of crackers. Going
on a journey and making a feast, all in one!
I imagine the name of the
little boy in that tale should have been Isaac Asimov. For it seems
to me that since first we met at the First World Science Fiction
Convention in New York City the first week in July 1939, Isaac has
been journeying and feasting through life, now at the Astronomical
tables, now in a spread of other sciences, now in religion, and again
in literature over a great span of time. One could call him a
jackdaw, but that wouldn’t be correct. Jackdaws focus on and
snatch bright objects of no particular weight. Isaac is in the
mountain-moving business, but he does not move but eat them. Hand him
a book and a few hours later, like that above-mentioned porridge,
Isaac comes tunneling out the far side, still hungry. Is there a body
of literature he hasn’t taken on? I severely doubt it.
And now here, with this
book, we have Asimov’s honorary sons and daughters. Their
machines may not run amok and inundate a city, but they are
producing, nevertheless, and looking to Papa Asimov and us for
approval, which will not be withheld.
To say more would be to
call attention to my comparable size, a mole next to a fortress or a
force of nature. I would add only a final note. People have said
Isaac is a workaholic. Nonsense. He has gone mad with love in ten
dozen territories. And there are a few dozen virgin territories left
out there. There will be few such virgins left, when Isaac departs
earth and arrives Up There to write twenty-five new books of the
Bible. And that’s only the first week!
One night two years ago,
I dreamed I was Isaac Asimov. Arising the next day, it was noon
before my wife convinced me that I should not run for President.
Bless you, Isaac. Bless
you, Isaac’s children, found herein.
February 21,
1989
The
Nonmetallic Isaac or It’s a Wonderful Life
by Ben Bova
ASTROPHYSICISTS (TO
START WITH A SCIENTIFIC WORD) CLASSIFY the universe into three
chemical categories: hydrogen, helium, and metals.
The first two are the
lightest of all the hundred-some known elements. Anything heavier
than helium, the astrophysicists blithely call “metals.”
Hydrogen and helium make up roughly ninety-eight percent of the
universe’s composition. To an astrophysicist, the universe
consists of a lot of hydrogen, a considerable amount of helium, and a
smattering of metals.
Now, although Isaac
Asimov is known throughout this planet (and possibly others, we just
don’t know yet) as a writer of science fiction, when you
consider his entire output of written material--all the
four-hundred-and-counting books and the myriads of articles, columns,
limericks, and whatnots--his science fiction is actually a small
percentage of the total. As far as Asimov’s production is
concerned, science fiction tales are his “metals.”
Science
fact is his mettle.
It is the “nonmetallic”
Asimov that I want to praise.
Remember
the classic movie It’s
a Wonderful Life!? The one where an angel shows suicidal James
Stewart what his hometown would be like if Jimmie’s character
had never been born?
Think of what our home
planet would be like if Isaac Asimov had never turned his mind and
hand to writing about science.
We narrowly missed such a
fate. There was a moment in time when a youthful Isaac faced a
critical career choice: go on as a researcher or plunge full-time
into writing. He chose writing and the world is extremely happy with
the result.
Knowing that science
fiction, in those primeval days, could not support a wife and family,
Isaac chose to write about science fact and to make that his career,
rather than biomedical research.
But suppose he had not?
Suppose, faced with that
career choice, Isaac had opted for the steady, if unspectacular,
career of a medium-level research scientist who wrote occasional
science fiction stories as a hobby.
We
would still have the substantial oeuvre of his science fiction tales
that this anthology celebrates. We would still have “Nightfall”
and “The Ugly Little Boy,” the original Foundation
trilogy and novels such as Pebble
in the Sky. We would, to return to the metaphor we started with,
still have Isaac’s “metallic” output.
But we would not have his
hydrogen and helium, the huge number of books that are nonfiction,
mainly books about science, although there are some marvelous
histories, annotations of various works of literature, and lecherous
limericks in there, too.
If Isaac had toiled away
his years as a full-time biomedical researcher and part-time science
fiction writer, we would never have seen all those marvelous science
books. Probably a full generation of scientists would have chosen
other careers, because they would never have been turned on to
science by the books that Isaac did not write. Progress in all fields
of the physical sciences would have slowed, perhaps disastrously.
Millions
of people allover the world would have been denied the pleasure of
learning that they could
understand the principles of physics, mathematics, astronomy,
geology, chemistry, the workings of the human body, the intricacies
of the human brain--because the books from which they learned and
received such pleasures would never have been written.
Entire publishing houses
would have gone into bankruptcy, no doubt, without the steady, sure
income that Isaac’s science books have generated for them over
the decades. And will continue to generate for untold decades to
come. The wood pulp and paper industry would be in a chronic state of
depression if Isaac had not turned out all those hundreds of books
and thousands of articles. Canada might have become a Third World
nation, save for Dr. Isaac Asimov.
To make it more personal,
I would have never started to write popularizations of science if it
had not been for Isaac’s works--and for his personal
encouragement and guidance. The gods themselves are the only ones who
know how many writers have been helped by Isaac, either by reading
his books or by asking him for help with science problems that had
them stumped.
Blighted careers, ruined
corporations, benighted people wandering in search of an
enlightenment that they cannot find--that is what the world would be
like if Isaac had not poured his great energies and greater heart
into nonfiction books about science.
A final word about a
word: popularization.
In the mouths of certain
critics (including some professional scientists) “popularization”
is a term of opprobrium, somewhat akin to the sneering “pulp
literature” that is still sometimes slung at science fiction.
“Popularizations” of science are regarded, by those
slandering bastards, as beneath the consideration of dignified
persons.
Such critics regard
themselves as among the elite, and they disdain “popularizations”
of science with the same lofty pigheadedness that George III
displayed toward his American subjects.
To explain science is
probably the most vital task any writer can attempt in today’s
complex, technology-driven society. To explain science so well, so
entertainingly, that ordinary men and women all over the world clamor
for your books--that is worthy of a Nobel Prize. Too bad Alfred
Nobel never thought about the need to explain science to the masses.
I’m certain he would have created a special prize for it.
Isaac Asimov writes about
science (and everything else) so superbly well that it looks easy.
He can take any subject under the sun and write about it so lucidly
and understandably that any literate person can grasp the subject
with hardly any strain at all.
For this incredible
talent he is sometimes dismissed as “a mere popularizer.”
As I have offered in the past, I offer now; anyone who thinks that
what Isaac does is easy is welcome to try it. I know I have, with
some degree of success. But easy it is not!
Thanks
be to the forces that shape this universe, Isaac decided not
to be a full-time researcher. He became a full-time writer instead.
While he is famous for writing science fiction, his “nonmetallic”
output of science fact is far larger and far more important--if that
word can be applied to writing--than his deservedly admired and
awarded fiction.
If all this adds up to
the conclusion that Isaac Asimov is a star, well, by heaven, he is!
One of the brightest, too.
Strip-Runner
by Pamela
Sargent
THE THREE BOYS
CAUGHT UP WITH AMY JUST AS SHE REACHED the strips. “Barone-Stein,”
one boy shouted to her. She did not recognize any of them, but they
obviously knew who she was.
“We
want a run,” the smallest boy said, speaking softly so that the
people passing them could not hear the challenge. “You can lead
and pick the point.”
“Done,” she
said quickly. “C-254th, Riverdale localway intersection. “
The boys frowned. Maybe
they had expected a longer run. They seemed young; the tallest one
could not be more than eleven. Amy leaned over and rolled up the
cuffs of her pants a little. She could shake all of them before they
reached the destination she had named.
More people passed and
stepped onto the nearest strip. The moving gray bands stretched
endlessly to either side of her, carrying their human cargo through
the City. The strip closest to her was moving at a bit over three
kilometers an hour; most of its passengers at the moment were elderly
people or small children practicing a few dance steps where there was
space. Next to it, another strip moved at over five kilometers an
hour; in the distance, on the fastest strip, the passengers were a
multicolored blur. All the strips carried a steady stream of people,
but the evening rush hour would not start for a couple of hours. The
boys had challenged her during a slower period, which meant they
weren’t that sure of themselves; they would not risk a run
through mobs of commuters.
“Let’s go,”
Amy said. She stepped on the strip; the boys got on behind her.
Ahead, people were stepping to the adjoining strip, slowly making
their way toward the fastest-moving strip that ran alongside the
localway platform. Advertisements flashed around her through the
even, phosphorescent light, offering clothing, the latest book-films,
exotic beverages, and yet another hyperwave drama about a Spacer’s
adventures on Earth. Above her, light-worms and bright arrows gleamed
steadily with directions for the City’s millions: THIS WAY TO
JERSEY SECTIONS; FOLLOW ARROW TO LONG ISLAND. The noise was constant.
Voices rose and fell around her as the strip hummed softly under her
feet; she could dimly hear the whistle of the localway.
Amy walked up the strip,
darted past a knot of people, then crossed to the next strip, bending
her knees slightly to allow for the increase in speed. She did not
look back, knowing the boys were still behind her. She took a breath,
quickly stepped to the next strip, ran along it toward the passengers
up ahead, and then jumped to the fourth strip. She pivoted, jumped to
the third strip again, then rapidly crossed three strips in
succession.
Running the strips was a
lot like dancing. She kept up the rhythm as she leaped to the right,
leaned into the wind, then jumped to the slower strip on her left.
Amy grinned as a man shook his head at her. The timid ways of most
riders were not for her. Others shrank from the freedom the gray
bands offered, content to remain part of a channeled stream. They
seemed deaf to the music of the strips and the song that beckoned to
her.
Amy glanced back; she had
already lost one of the boys. Moving to the left edge of the strip,
she feinted, then jumped to her right, pushed past a startled woman,
and continued along the strips until she reached the fastest one.
Her left arm was up, to
shield her from the wind; this strip, like the localway, was moving
at nearly thirty-eight kilometers an hour. The localway was a
constantly moving platform, with poles for boarding and clear shields
placed at intervals to protect riders from the wind. Amy grabbed a
pole and swung herself aboard.
There was just enough
room for her to squeeze past the standing passengers. The two
remaining boys had followed her onto the localway; a woman muttered
angrily as Amy shoved past her to the other side.
She jumped down to the
strip below, which was also moving at the localway’s speed,
hauled herself aboard the platform once more, then leaped back to the
strip. One boy was still with her, a few paces behind. His companion
must have hesitated a little, not expecting her to leap to the strip
again so soon. Any good striprunner would have expected it; no runner
stayed on a localway or expressway very long. She jumped to a slower
strip, counted to herself, leaped back to the faster strip, counted
again, then grabbed a pole, bounded onto the localway, pushed past
more people to the opposite side, and launched herself at the strip
below, her back to the wind, her legs shooting out into a split.
Usually she disdained such moves at the height of a run, but could
not resist showing her skill this time.
She landed about a meter
in front of a scowling man.
“Crazy kids!”
he shouted. “Ought to report you--” She turned toward the
wind and stepped to the strip on her left, bracing herself against
the deceleration as the angry man was swept by her on the faster
strip, then looked back. The third boy was nowhere to be seen among
the stream of people behind her.
Too easy, she thought.
She had shaken them all even before reaching the intersection that
led to the Concourse Sector. She would go on to the destination, so
that the boys, when they got there, could issue another challenge if
they wished. She doubted that they would; she would have just enough
time to make her way home afterward.
They should have known
better. They weren’t good enough runners to keep up with Amy
Barone-Stein. She had lost Kiyoshi Harris, one of the best
strip-runners in the City, on a two-hour run to the end of Brooklyn,
and had reached Queens alone on another run after shaking off Bradley
Ohaer’s gang. She smiled as she recalled how angry Bradley had
been, beaten by a girl. Few girls ran the strips, and she was better
than any of the others at the game. For over a year now, no one she
challenged had ever managed to shake her off; when she led, nobody
could keep up with her. She was the best girl strip-runner in New
York City, maybe in all of Earth’s Cities.
No, she told herself as
she crossed the strips to the expressway intersection. She was simply
the best.
Amy’s home was in a
Kingsbridge subsection. Her feeling of triumph had faded by the time
she reached the elevator banks that led to her level; she was not
that anxious to get home. Throngs of people moved along the street
between the high metallic walls that enclosed some of the City’s
millions. All of Earth’s Cities were like New York, where
people had burrowed into the ground and walled themselves in; they
were safe inside the Cities, protected from the emptiness of the
Outside.
Amy pushed her way into
an elevator. A wedding party was aboard, the groom in a dark ruffled
tunic and pants, the bride in a short white dress with her hands
around a bouquet of flowers made of recycled paper. The people with
them were holding bottles and packages of rations clearly meant for
the reception. The couple smiled at Amy; she murmured her
congratulations as the elevator stopped at her level.
She sprinted down the
hall until she came to a large double door with glowing letters that
said PERSONAL--WOMEN. Under the sign, smaller letters said
SUBSECTIONS 2H-2N; there was also a number to call in case anyone
lost a key. Amy unzipped her pocket, took out a thin aluminum strip,
and slipped it into the key slot.
The door opened. Several
women were in the pleasant rose-colored antechamber, talking as they
combed their hair and sprayed on makeup by the wall of mirrors. They
did not greet Amy, so she said nothing to them. Her father, like most
men, found it astonishing that women felt free to speak to one
another in such a place. No man would ever address another in the
Men’s Personals; even glancing at someone there was considered
extremely offensive. Men would never stand around gossiping in a
Personal’s antechamber, but things were not quite as free here
as her father thought. Women would never speak to anyone who clearly
preferred privacy, or greet a new subsection resident here until they
knew her better.
Amy stood by a mirror and
smoothed down her short, dark curls, then entered the common stalls.
A long row of toilets, with thin partitions but no doors, lined one
wall; a row of sinks faced them on the other side of the room.
A young woman was
kneeling next to one toilet, where a small child sat on a training
seat; Amy could not help noticing that the child was a boy. That was
allowed, until a boy was four and old enough to go to a Men’s
Personal by himself or with his father, an experience that had to be
traumatic the first time around. She thought of what it must be like
for a little boy, leaving the easier, warmer atmosphere of his
mother’s Personal for the men’s, where even looking in
someone else’s direction was taboo. Some said the custom arose
because of the need to preserve some privacy in the midst of others,
but psychologists also claimed that the taboo grew out of the male’s
need to separate himself from his mother. No wonder men behaved as
they did in their Personals. They would not only be infringing on
another’s privacy if they behaved otherwise, but would also be
displaying an inappropriate regression to childhood.
Amy kept her eyes down,
ignoring the other women and girls in the common stalls until she
reached the rows of shower heads. Two women were entering the private
stalls in the back. Amy’s mother had been allowed a private
stall some years ago, a privilege her husband had earned for both of
them after a promotion, but Amy was not allowed to use it. Other
parents might have granted such permission, but hers were stricter;
they did not want their daughter getting too used to privileges she
had not earned for herself.
She would take her shower
now, and put her clothes in the laundry slot to be cleaned; the
Personal would be more crowded after dinner. Amy sighed; that wasn’t
the only reason to linger here. Her mother would have received the
message from Mr. Liang by now. Amy was afraid to go home and face
her.
Four women were leaving
the apartment as Amy approached. She greeted them absently, and
nodded when they asked if she was doing well in school. These were
her mother’s more intellectual friends, the ones who discussed
sociology and settled the City’s political problems among
themselves before moving on to the essential business of tips for
stretching quota allowances and advice on child-rearing.
Amy’s mother
stepped back as she entered; the door closed. Amy had reached the
middle of the spacious living room before her mother spoke. “Where
are you going, dear?”
“Er--to my room.”
“I think you’d
better sit down. We have something to discuss.”
Amy moved toward one of
the chairs and sat down. The living room was over five meters long,
with two chairs, a small couch, and an imitation leather ottoman. The
apartment had two other rooms as well, and her parents even had the
use of a sink in their bedroom, thanks to her father’s Civil
Service rating. They both had a lot to protect, which meant that they
would scold her even more for her failures.
“You took longer
than usual getting home,” her mother said as she sat down on
the couch across from Amy.
“I had to shower.
Oh, shouldn’t we be getting ready to go to supper? Father’ll
probably be home any minute. “
“He told me he’d
be late, so we’re not eating in the section kitchen tonight. “
Amy bit her lip, sorry
for once that her family was allowed four meals a week in their own
apartment. Her parents wouldn’t have been able to harp at her
at the section kitchen’s long tables in the midst of all the
diners there.
“Anyway,” her
mother continued, “I felt sure you’d want to speak to me
alone, before your father comes home.”
“Oh.” Amy
stared at the blue carpet. “What about?”
“You know what
about. I had a message from your guidance counselor, Mr. Liang. I
know he told you he’d be speaking to me.”
“Oh.” Amy
tried to sound unconcerned. “That.”
“He says your
grades won’t be good at the end of the quarter.” Her
mother’s dark eyes narrowed. “If they don’t improve
soon, he’s going to invite me there for a conference, and
that’s not all.” She leaned back against the couch. “He
also says you’ve been seen running the strips.”
Amy started. “Who
told him that?”
“Oh, Amy. I’m
sure he has ways of finding out. Is it true?”
“Um.”
“Well, is it?
That’s even more serious than your grades. Do you want a police
officer picking you up? Did you even stop to think about the
accidents you might cause, or that you could be seriously injured?
You know what your father said the first time he heard about your
strip-running. “
Amy bowed her head. That
had been over two years ago, and he had lectured her for hours, but
had remained unaware of her activities since then. I’m the
best, she thought; every runner in the City knows about me. She
wanted to shout it and force her mother to acknowledge the
achievement, but kept silent.
“It’s a
stupid, dangerous game, Amy. A few boys are killed every year running
the strips, and passengers are hurt as well. You’re fourteen
now--I thought you were more mature. I can’t believe--”
“I haven’t
been running the strips,” Amy said. “I mean, I haven’t
made a run in a while.” Not since a couple of hours ago, she
added silently to herself, and that wasn’t a real run, so I’m
not really lying. She felt just a bit guilty; she didn’t like
to lie.
“And your grades--”
Amy seized at the chance
to avoid the more hazardous topic of strip-racing. “I know
they’re worse. I know I can do better, but what difference does
it make?”
“Don’t you
want to do well? You used to be one of the best math students in your
school, and your science teacher always praised--”
“So what?”
Amy could not restrain herself any longer. “What good is it?
What am I ever going to use it for?”
“You have to do
well if you want to be admitted to a college level. Your father’s
status may make it easier for you to get in, but you won’t last
if you’re not well prepared.”
“And then what?
Unless I’m a genius, or a lot better than any of the boys,
they’ll just push me into dietetics courses or social relations
or child psychology so I’ll be a good mother someday, or else
train me to program computers until I get married. I’ll just
end up doing nothing anyway, so why should I try?”
“Nothing?”
Her mother’s olive-skinned face was calm, but her voice shook a
little. “Is what I do nothing, looking after you and your
father? Is rearing a child and making a pleasant home for a husband
nothing?”
“I didn’t
mean nothing, but why does it have to be everything? You wanted more
once--you know you did. You--you--”.
Her mother was gazing at
her impassively. Amy jumped up and fled to her room.
She lay on her narrow
bed, glaring up at the soft glow of the ceiling. Her mother should
have been the first to understand. Amy knew how she once had felt,
but lately, she seemed to have forgotten her old dreams.
Amy’s mother,
Alysha Barone, was something of a Medievalist. That wasn’t odd;
a lot of people were. They got together to talk about old ways and
historical bookfilms and the times when Earth had been humanity’s
only home. They dwelled nostalgically on ancient periods when people
had lived Outside instead of huddling together inside the Cities,
when Earth was the only world and the Spacers did not exist.
Not that any of them
could actually live Outside, without walls, breathing unfiltered air
filled with microorganisms that bred disease and eating unprocessed
food that had grown in dirt; Amy shuddered at the thought. Better to
leave the Outside to the robots that worked the mines and tended the
crops the Cities demanded. Better to live as they did, whatever the
problems, and avoid the pathological ways of the Spacers, those
descendants of the Earthpeople who had settled other planets long
ago. They could not follow Spacer customs anyway. In a world of
billions, resources could not be wasted on private houses, spacious
gardens and grounds, and all the rest. Alysha Barone, despite her
somewhat Medievalist views, would not be capable of leaving this City
except to travel, safely enclosed, to another.
Her mother had, however,
clung to a few ancient customs, with the encouragement of a few
mildly unconventional friends. Alysha Barone had insisted on keeping
her own name after her marriage to Ricardo Stein, and he had agreed
when she asked that Amy be given both their names. The couple had
been given permission to have their first child during their first
year of marriage, thanks to their Genetics Values ratings, but Amy
had not been born until four years later. Both Alysha and Ricardo had
been statisticians in New York’s Department of Human Resources;
it made sense to work for a promotion, gain more privileges, and save
more of their quota allowances before having a child. They had
ignored the chiding of their own parents and the friends who had
accused them of being just a little antisocial.
Amy knew the story well,
having heard most of it from her disapproving grandmother Barone. The
two had each risen to a C-4 rating before Alysha became pregnant;
even then, astonishingly, they had discussed which of them should
give up the Department job. Only the most antisocial of couples would
have tried to keep two such coveted positions. There were too many
unclassified people without work, on subsistence with no chance to
rise, and others who had been relegated to labor in the City yeast
farm levels after losing jobs to robots. Her parents’
colleagues would have made their lives miserable if they both stayed
with the Department; their superiors would have blocked any
promotions, perhaps even found a way to demote them. Someone also had
to look after Amy. The infant could not be left in the subsection
nursery all day, and both grandmothers had refused to encourage any
antisocial activity by offering to stay with the baby.
So Alysha had given up
her job. Her husband might be willing to care for a baby, but he
could not nurse the child, and nursing saved on rations. Ricardo had
won another promotion a few years after Amy’s birth, and they
had moved from their two-room place in the Van
Cortlandt Section to this
apartment. Now Amy’s father was a C-6, with a private stall in
the Men’s Personal, a functioning sink in his room, larger
quota allowances for entertainment, and the right to eat four meals a
week at home.
Her parents would have
been foolish to give up a chance at all that. How useless it would
have been for Alysha to hope for her position at the Department; they
would have risked everything in the end.
The door opened; her
mother came inside. Amy sat up. Her small bed took up most of the
room; there was no other place to sit, and Alysha clearly wanted to
talk.
Her mother seated
herself, then draped an arm over Amy’s shoulders. “I know
how you feel,” she said.
Amy shook her head. “No,
you don’t.”
Her mother hugged her
more tightly. “I felt that way myself once, but couldn’t
see that I’d be any better off not trying at all. You should
learn what you can, Amy, and not just so that you’ll be able to
help your own children with their schoolwork. Learning will give you
pleasure later, something you’ll carry inside yourself that no
one can take from you. Things may change, and then--”
“They’ll
never change. I wish--Things were better in the old days. “
“No, they weren’t,”
her mother responded. “They were better for a few people and
very bad for a lot of others. I may affect a few Medievalisms, but I
also know how people fought and starved and suffered long ago, and
the Cities are better than that. No one starves, and we can,
generally speaking, go about our business without fearing violence,
but that requires cooperation--we couldn’t live, crowded
together as we are, any other way. We have to get along, and that
often means giving up what we might want so that everyone at least
has something. Still--”
“I get the point,”
Amy said bitterly. “Civism is good. The Cities are the height
of human civilization.” She imitated the pompous manner of her
history teacher as she spoke. “ And if I can’t get along
and be grateful for what I’ve got, I’m just a
pathological antisocial individualist. “
Her mother was silent for
a long time, then said, “There are more robots taking jobs away
from people inside the Cities. The population keeps growing, and that
means people will eventually have even less--we could see something
close to starvation again. The Cities can’t expand much more,
and that means less space for each of us. People may lash out at an
occasional robot now, since they’re the most convenient targets
for expressing resentment, but if we start lashing out at one
another--” She paused. “Something has to give way. Even
that small band of people who hope the Spacers will eventually let
them leave Earth to settle another world know that.”
Amy said, “They’re
silly.”
“Most would say
so.”
Amy frowned. She knew
about those people; they occasionally went Outside to play at being
farmers or some such thing. She could not imagine how they stood it,
or what good it did them. A City detective named Elijah Baley was the
tiny band’s leader; maybe he thought the Spacers would help
him. He had recently returned from one of their worlds, where they
had asked him to help them solve a crime; maybe he thought Spacers
could be his friends.
Amy knew better. The
Spacers had only used him. She thought of the Spacer characters she
had seen in hyperwave and book-film adventures. They were all tall,
handsome, tanned, bronze-haired people with eyes as cold as those of
the legions of robots that served them. In the dramas, they might be
friendly to or even love some Earthpeople, but in reality they
despised the people of the Cities. They would never allow Earthfolk
to contaminate their worlds or the others in this galaxy. They might
use an Earthman such as Baley, but would only discard him afterward.
“What I’m
trying to say,” Alysha said softly, “is that change may
come. Whatever disruptions it brings, it may also present
opportunities, but only to people who are ready to seize them. “
Amy tensed a little; this was the most antisocial statement she had
ever heard from her mother. “It would be better if you were
prepared for that and developed whatever talents might be useful.
When I worked for the Department, I knew what the statistics were
implying--it’s impossible for even the most determined
bureaucrat to hide the whole truth. I could see--but I’ve said
enough.”
“Mother--”
Amy swallowed. “Are you going to tell Father what Mr. Liang
said?”
Alysha plucked at her
long, dark hair, looking distressed. “I really should. I’ll
have to if I’m called in for a conference, and then Rick will
wonder why I didn’t mention it earlier. I won’t if you
promise you’ll work harder.”
Amy sighed with relief.
“I promise.” She hoped she could keep that vow.
“Then I’ll
leave you to your studying. You have a little time before Rick gets
home. “
The door closed behind
Alysha. Amy reached for her viewer and stretched out. Nothing would
change, no matter what her mother said. Whatever Amy did, sooner or
later she would, as her friend Debora Lister put it, wind up at the
end of the line. She would be pushed to the end of the line when her
teachers began to hint that certain studies would be more useful for
a girl. She would be forced back again when college advisers pointed
out that it was selfish to take a place in certain classes, since she
would not use such specialized training for a lifetime, as a boy
would. If she moved up the line then, she would only be pushed back
later, when she married and had her own children.
She could, of course,
choose not to marry, but such a life would be a lonely one. No matter
what such women achieved, people muttered about how antisocial they
were and pitied them, which was probably preferable to outright
resentment. She would have to live in one of the alcoves allotted to
single people unless she was lucky enough to find a congenial
companion and get permission for both of them to share a room.
Alysha had wound up at
the end of the line long ago, although later than most, and she had a
loving husband to console her, which was a good thing. Even couples
who hated each other would not willingly separate, lose status, and
be forced into smaller quarters. Of course Alysha would hope that Amy
might move up the line; she had nothing else in life except her
husband and daughter.
A fair number of women
were like Alysha. Sublimated antisocial individualism--that was what
a textbook-film Amy had scanned in the school library called it. Many
women lived through their children, then their grandchildren, hoping
they would rise yet knowing that there were limits on their
ambitions. Their transferred hopes would keep them going, but they
would also be aware that too much individual glory would only create
hard feelings in others. That was one reason her parents refused to
flaunt the privileges they had earned and used them reluctantly, with
a faintly apologetic air.
Men had different
problems, which probably seemed just as troublesome to them. Some men
cracked under the strain of having a family’s status resting
entirely on them. The psychologists had terms for that syndrome, too.
Amy saw what lay ahead
only too clearly. Perhaps she shouldn’t have viewed those
book-films on psychology and sociology, which were meant for adult
specialists. Her parents would eventually have the second child they
were allowed; except for tending to Amy and her father, and being
sociable in ways that eased relations with neighbors and her
husband’s colleagues, there was little else for Alysha to do.
Small wonder many women even had children to whom they weren’t
entitled. When Amy was grown, her mother would be waiting for the
inevitable grandchildren, and transfer her hopes to them. What a
delusion it all was, pretending that your children wouldn’t be
swallowed by the hives of the City while knowing that this was the
way it had to be.
Happy families, as the
saying went, made for a better City; mothers and wives could go about
their business feeling they were performing their civic duty. Amy’s
mother would cling to her, and then to her children, and
If this was how knowing a
lot made people feel, maybe it was better to be ignorant, to settle
for what couldn’t be changed.
She folded her arms over
her chest. She still had one accomplishment, and no one could take it
from her; she was the best strip-runner in the City. She wouldn’t
give that up, not until she was too old and too slow to race, and
maybe that day would never come. If she made a mistake and died
during a run, at least she’d be gone before she came to the end
of the line. Her parents could have another child, maybe two, and the
loss of one life would make no difference in a steel hive that held
so many. She could even tell herself that she was making room for
someone who would not mind being lost in the swarm.
The psychology texts had
terms for such notions, all of which made her feelings sound like a
disease. Perhaps they were, but that was yet another reason not to
care about what happened to her on the strips
“Amy Barone-Stein,”
the hall monitor said, “a person is looking for you.”
Amy glared up at the
grayish robotic face, a parody of a human being’s. She did not
care for robots, and this one, with its flat eyes and weirdly moving
mouth, looked more idiotic than most. “What is it?” she
asked.
“Someone outside
wishes to speak to you,” the robot said, “and has asked
me to bring you there. “
“Well, who is it?”
“She told me to
give you her name if I were asked, or if you told me that you did not
want to meet her. It is Shakira Lewes. “
Amy’s mouth dropped
open. Debora Lister moved closer to her and nudged her in the ribs.
Shakira Lewes had not run the strips in years, but Amy had heard of
her. Kiyoshi Harris claimed she was the best female runner he had
ever seen, and her last run, when she had led three gangs from
Brooklyn to Yonkers and lost them all, was still legendary.
She
was the best, Amy
told herself; I’m the best now.
“Oh, Amy,”
Debora said. “Are you going to talk to her?”
“Might as well.”
“You’ll miss
the Chess Club meeting,” the blond girl said.
“Then I’ll
miss it.”
“I’m coming
with you,” Debora said. “I’ve got to see this.”
“Miss Lewes
requested the presence of Amy Barone-Stein,” the robot said.
“She did not say--”
“Oh, stuff it,”
Amy said. The robot’s eyes widened a little in what might have
been bewilderment. “She didn’t say I couldn’t bring
a friend, did she?”
“No, she did not.”
“Then lead us to
her.”
The robot turned, leading
them past a line in front of a Personal, then through the throngs of
students crowding the hall. Amy wondered how Shakira Lewes had made
the robot do her bidding. Technically, the hall monitors weren’t
supposed to fetch students from the school levels except for an
emergency, but this robot was probably too stupid to tell that it was
being deceived. The robot’s back was erect as it marched along
on its stiff legs. Damned robots, she thought, taking jobs from
people. The hall monitors had once been human beings.
By the time she and
Debora reached the elevator banks, a small crowd of boys and girls
was following them. They all clambered aboard after the robot and
dropped toward the street level. When they emerged from the school,
Amy saw more boys clustered around a tall, dark-skinned woman with
short black hair.
“Ooh,” Debora
whispered. “Maybe she wants to challenge you.” Amy shook
her head and motioned at the robot’s back. A robot could not
harm a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come
to harm; to this creature’s simple positronic brain, possible
harm would certainly include strip-racing.
“Amy Barone-Stein,”
the robot said in its toneless voice. “This is Shakira Lewes. “
The boys stepped back as
Amy approached. The woman was slender enough for a runner, if a bit
too tall; most runners, like Amy, were short and slight, able to
squeeze into even the smallest gaps between passengers during a run.
Shakira Lewes had a perfect, fine-boned face; she looked a lot like
an actress in a historical drama about Africa Amy had recently
viewed. She wore a red shirt and black pants that made her long legs
seem even longer. The boys were staring intently at her. None of them
had ever looked at Amy that way, not even after hearing about her run
against Bradley Ohaer’s gang.
“You may leave us,”
Shakira said to the robot. The hall monitor turned and went back
inside. The woman sounded as arrogant as a Spacer; Amy looked up at
her, filled with admiration and hatred. “I’ve heard about
you,” Shakira continued. “I’d like to talk to you.”
Amy stuck out her chin.
“What about?”
“Alone, if we
could. “ Alone meant walking among the crowds, standing on a
strip or localway to talk, or, if one was lucky, finding an
unoccupied chair or bench somewhere.
Amy said, “If
you’ve got something to tell me, say it here.”
“She’s going
to challenge,” someone said behind Amy; she looked around. Luis
Horton was with the group; he’d been mad at her ever since she
beat him on a long run up to the Yonkers Sector. “She’s
going to challenge,” Luis repeated. “Maybe Amy can’t
take her.”
Amy said, “I can
take any runner in New York.”
Shakira frowned. “I
said I wanted to talk. I didn’t say anything about running. “
“Afraid?”
another boy asked.
Shakira’s face grew
grimmer. Amy saw where this was leading; the others expected a
challenge. Normally, she would have demanded one herself, but
something felt wrong. It didn’t make sense for this woman, who
surely had better things to do, to come looking for a run against
Amy, whatever her fame. Shakira had to be out of practice, and would
risk much graver consequences as an adult offender if she were caught
by the police. Yet what else could she want Amy for? Perhaps
something illegal--some illicit enterprise where a boy or girl who
could easily shake off a police pursuit might be useful.
Amy shrugged. “Come
on, guys. Anybody can see she’s too old to run the strips now.”
“I’m old, all
right,” Shakira said. “I’m nearly twenty-one.”
“Lewes isn’t
scared,” Luis muttered then. “Amy is.”
Amy’s cheeks
burned. They were all watching her now; she even imagined that the
crowds passing by were looking at her, witnesses to her shame. “I’m
not afraid of anything,” she said. “Make your run,
Shakira Lewes--you won’t lose me. From here to the Sheepshead
Bay localway intersection--unless you’re too old to make that
long a run.”
Shakira was silent.
“Now! Or are you
just too old and tired to try?”
The woman’s large
dark eyes glittered. “You’re on. I’ll do it.”
A boy hooted. Even
Debora, who would never run the strips herself, was flushed with
anticipation. Amy was suddenly furious with them all. She wasn’t
ready for this run; she realized now that she had been hoping Shakira
would back down. If the woman actually beat her, she would never live
it down, while if Amy won, the others would simply assume Shakira was
past her prime. She had risked too much on this challenge, and still
didn’t know what Shakira wanted with her.
“Let’s go,”
Amy said.
“Just a minute. “
The woman raised an arm. “This is one on one, between you and
me--and I still want to talk to you later.”
“Talk to me after I
beat you,” Amy said without much conviction, then followed
Shakira toward the nearest strip.
Shakira strode along the
gray bands, moving to the faster strips at a speed only a little more
rapid than usual. Amy kept close. Most of the boys and girls had
already headed for the expressway; they would greet the victor at the
Sheepshead Bay destination. Luis and two of his friends were
following to study a little of Shakira’s skill before joining
the others. There were still some gaps between passengers, but the
strips were already getting more crowded.
Shakira showed her moves,
increasing the pace. She did a side shuffle, striding steadily, then
moving to an adjacent strip without breaking her pace; Amy followed.
She did a Popovich, named after the runner who had perfected it,
leaping from side to side between two strips before bounding from the
second one to a third. She even managed to pull off a dervish.
Turning to face Amy, she leaped into the air and made a complete turn
before landing gracefully on a slower strip; a dervish was dangerous
even on slow strips.
She was good, but Amy
knew the moves. Show-off, she thought; the woman was only trying to
intimidate her. Flashy moves were more likely to draw attention, as
well as wearing out a runner too soon. She followed Shakira onto a
localway, then swung off after her, leaving the boys behind. She had
caught Shakira’s rhythm, but remained wary and alert; some
runners could lull a follower into their pace before doing the
unexpected.
They danced across the
strips toward an expressway. The crowds were thick on the strip next
to the expressway platform. Shakira reached for a pole and swung
herself up; Amy grabbed the next pole. The woman’s long legs
swung around, never touching the floor and barely missing a
passenger, and then she was back on the strip, her back to the wind
as she grinned up at Amy.
Amy gripped her pole,
about to follow when a few people suddenly stepped to the strip just
below her. She caught a glimpse of startled faces as her legs swung
toward them; there was just enough space for a landing. A woman
swayed on the strip; a man grabbed her by the arm. Amy knew in an
instant that she could not risk a leap. Shakira turned, ran past more
commuters, stepped to her left, and was gone.
Amy hung on to the pole;
the wind tore at her legs. She hauled herself aboard, numbed by the
abruptness of her defeat. She had lost before they even reached lower
Manhattan; tears stung her eyes.
Someone shoved her;
passengers surrounded her. “Damn runners!” a man shouted.
Other riders crowded around her; a fist knocked her to the floor.
“Get the police!” a woman cried. Fingers grabbed Amy by
the hair; a foot kicked her in the knee. She covered her head with
her arms, no longer caring what happened to her; she had lost.
A plainclothesman, a C-6
with seat privileges on the expressway’s upper level, got Amy
away from the crowd before she was beaten too badly and took her to
City Hall. Police headquarters were in the higher levels of the
structure; Amy supposed that she would be turned over to an officer
and booked. Instead, the detective led her through a large common
room filled with people and desks to a corner desk with a railing
around it.
She sat at the desk,
feeling miserable and alone, as the plainclothesman took her name,
entered it in the desk computer, called up more information, then
placed a call to her father on the communo. “You’re in
luck,” the man said when he had finished his call. “Your
father hasn’t left work yet, so he’ll just come over here
from his level and take you home. “
She peered up at him.
“You mean you aren’t going to keep me here?”
The detective glowered at
her. He was a big man, with a bald head, thick mustache, and brown
skin nearly as dark as Shakira’s. “Don’t think I
haven’t considered detaining you. I shouldn’t even be
wasting my time with you--I have a very low tolerance for reckless
kids who don’t care about anyone else’s safety. You could
have started a riot on that expressway--maybe I should have left you
to the tender mercies of that mob. Do you know what can happen to you
now, girl?”
“No,” she
mumbled, although she could guess.
“For starters, a
hearing in juvenile court. You could get a few months in Youth
Offenders’ Level, or you might get lucky and be sentenced to
help out in a hospital a few days a week. You’d get lots of
chances to see accident victims there.” He pulled at his
mustache. “That might do you some good. Maybe you ‘II be
there when they bring in some dead strip-runner who wasn’t
quick enough. You can watch his parents cry when the hospital makes
the Ritual of Request before they take any usable organs from the
corpse. And you ‘II have deep trouble if you ever misbehave
again.”
Amy squeezed her eyes
shut. “Stay here,” the man said, even though she hardly
had a choice, with the common room so filled with police. She sat
there alone, wallowing in her despair until the detective returned
with a cup of tea; he did not offer anything to her.
He sat down behind the
desk. “Will you give me the names of any runners with you?”
She shook her head
violently. Much as she hated Shakira, she would not sink that low.
“I didn’t
think you would. You’re not doing them any favor, you know. If
they meet with accidents or end up hurting somebody else, I hope you
can live with yourself.”
The detective worked at
his desk computer in silence until Amy’s father arrived. She
glanced at his pale, grim face and looked away quickly. The formality
of an introduction took only a moment before the plainclothesman
began to lecture Ricardo Stein on his daughter’s offense,
peppering his tirade with statistics on accidents caused by
strip-runners and the number of deaths the game had resulted in this
year. “If I hadn’t been on that expressway,” the
man concluded, “the girl might have been badly roughed up--not
that she didn’t deserve it. “
Her father said, “I
understand, Mr. Dubois.”
“She needs to learn
a lesson. “
“I agree.”
Ricardo shook back his thick brown hair. “I’ll go along
with any sentence she gets. Her mother and I won’t go out of
our way to defend her, and we probably share some of the blame for
not bringing her up better and supervising her more. You can be
certain there’ll be no repetition of such behavior. “
“I imagine you’ll
see to that, Mr. Stein--a solid citizen like you.” Mr. Dubois
leaned back in his chair. “So I’ll do you and your wife a
favor, and let Amy here off with a warning. She’s only
fourteen, and this is her first offense--the first time she’s
been caught, anyway--and Youth Offenders’ Level is crowded
enough as it is. But she’s in our records now, and if she’s
picked up again for anything, she goes into detention until her
hearing, at which point she’ll likely get a stiff sentence.”
“I’m grateful
to you,” Amy’s father said.
“Listen to me,
girl.” Mr. Dubois rested his arms on the desk. “Don’t
think you can lie low for a bit and then start strip-running again.
We know who you are now, and you’ll be easy to spot. Not many
girls run the strips.” He glanced at her father. “I think
I can count on you to keep her in line. Wouldn’t do your status
any good to have a criminal in the family.”
“You can count on
me, Mr. Dubois.”
Amy’s father did
not speak to her all the way home. That was a bad sign; he was never
that silent unless he was enraged. He left her outside the Women’s
Personal and went on to the apartment.
She dawdled as long as
she dared inside the Personal, then dragged herself down the hall,
filled with dread, wondering what her parents would do to her. They
would have discussed the whole affair by now, and her mother had
probably mentioned the guidance counselor’s earlier message.
They were both sitting on
the couch when she entered; there was no use appealing to her mother
for some mercy. The two rarely disagreed or argued in front of her,
and in a matter this important, they would present a united front.
She inched her way to a
chair and sat down. She would not be beaten; her parents did not
believe in physical punishment. A beating, even with all the bruises
the expressway riders had already left on her, might have been better
than having to endure her father’s harsh accusations and talk
about how humiliating her offense was for all of them. She hadn’t
thought of them at all, of how upset they would have been if she were
injured. She hadn’t thought about how her pathological display
of individualism might damage Ricardo’s reputation at work, or
her mother’s among their neighbors. She hadn’t considered
how such a blot on her record might affect her own chances later, or
reflected on the danger she had posed to commuters. She hadn’t
thought of the bad example she was setting for younger children, and
had completely ignored her father’s earlier warning about such
activity.
By the time her father
had finished his lecture, repeating most of his points several times,
it was too late to go to the section kitchen. Her mother sighed as
she folded their small table out of the wall and plugged in the plate
warmer; her father grumbled about missing the chicken the section
kitchen was to serve that night. They had been saving their fourth
meal at home this week for Saturday, when Ricardo’s parents
were to visit with a few of their own rations; Amy had ruined those
plans, too.
Amy pulled the ottoman
over to the table and sat down as her mother sprinkled a few spices
she had saved over the food. Her father took a call over the communo,
barked a few words at its screen, then hung up. “That was
Debora Lister. “ He moved the two chairs to the table, then
seated himself. “I told her you couldn’t talk.”
Amy poked at her zymobeef
and broccolettes listlessly. Just as well, she thought. Debora would
only be calling to tell her what had happened when Shakira showed up,
alone and triumphant, at Sheepshead Bay.
“You won’t be
taking any calls from your friends for a while,” her father
continued. “I’ll notify the principal at school that
you’re not to leave school levels except to go directly home,
and a monitor will note when you leave, so don’t think you can
wander around during the return trip. When you’re not in
school, you’ll stay here except for going to meals with us or
to the Personal. And in your free time, when you’re not
studying, you’ll prepare a report for me on the dangers of
strip-running. You shouldn’t find the data hard to come by, and
you’ll present it to me in a week. “ Ricardo took a
breath. “ And if I even hear that you’ve been running the
strips again, I’ll turn you in to the police myself and demand
a hearing for you. “
“Eat your food,
Amy,” her mother said; it was the first time she had spoken.
“I’m not
hungry.”
“You’d
better--it’s all we have left of home rations for this week. “
She forced herself to
eat. Her father finished his food and propped his elbows on the
table. “There’s something I still don’t
understand,” he said wearily. “Why, Amy? Why would you do
such a thing? I thought you had more sense. Why would you risk it?”
She could bear no more.
“I’m the best.” She stood up and kicked back the
ottoman. “I’m the best strip-runner in the City! That’s
all I’ll ever do, it’s all anybody will remember about
me! I was the best, and now they’ve taken it away!”
Her father’s gray
eyes widened. “You’re not sounding very repentant, young
lady.”
“I’m sorry I
lost! I’m sorry I was caught! I’m sorry you had to come
and get me, but I’m not sorry about anything else!”
“Go
to your room!” he shouted. “If I hear any more talk like
that, I will raise a
hand to you!”
Alysha reached across the
table and grabbed his upraised arm as Amy fled to her room.
Her life was over. Amy
could not view matters any other way. The story had made the rounds
quickly. She had lost to Shakira Lewes and been picked up by the
police; Luis Horton was doing his best to spread the news. A hall
monitor noted the times she left the school levels and reminded her,
right in front of other students, that she was expected to go
straight home; a few boys and girls always snickered.
She greeted questions
from her friends, even Debora, with a scowl, and soon no one was
speaking to her outside of class. Nobody dared to bring up the run,
or to tell her what the Lewes woman had said when she arrived at the
destination. There was the inevitable conference with Mr. Liang and
her mother, and an additional embarrassment when the guidance
counselor learned about the report she was preparing for her father.
She delivered the report over the school’s public address
screens, forced by Mr. Liang and the principal to repudiate the game;
she cringed inwardly whenever she thought of how the students who had
viewed her image must be laughing at her. Time inside the Youth
Offenders’ Level couldn’t have been much worse.
After three weeks, her
parents eased up a little. Amy still had to come home directly from
school, but they allowed her to do schoolwork with friends in the
subsection after supper. News of her downfall had been replaced by
gossip about Luis Horton ‘s successful run to the edge of
Queens against Tom Jandow’s gang. Her friends were again
speaking to her, but knew enough not to mention Shakira Lewes.
She was ruined, and it
was all that woman’s fault. She dreaded the daily journeys
along the strips, when she sometimes glimpsed other runners and
recalled what she had lost. She could no longer hear the music of the
strips, the rhythmic song in their humming that urged her to race.
She was already at the end of the line; the last bit of freedom she
would ever know was gone. She would become only another speck inside
the caves of steel, her past glory forgotten.
Amy left the elevator at
her floor with Debora, then suddenly stiffened with shock. Down the
hall, Shakira Lewes was loitering outside the Women’s Personal.
“What’s she
doing here?” the blond girl asked. “I don’t know.”
“I never told you,”
Debora said, “but when she finished the run, she--”
“I don’t want
to hear about it.” Amy took out her key when they reached the
door, determined to ignore the woman. Hanging around outside a
Personal was the crudest sort of behavior.
“Hello, Amy,”
Shakira said.
“Haven’t you
caused enough trouble?” Amy snapped. “You don’t
belong here.”
“But we never had
our talk. This is the first chance I’ve had to find you, and I
was pretty sure you’d be stopping here after school.”
Amy gritted her teeth.
“Now I can’t even go and take a piss in peace.”
Shakira said, “I
want to talk to you.” She lowered her voice as three women left
the Personal. “Tonight, after supper, alone. “
Amy’s fingers
tightened around her key. “Why should I talk to you?”
Shakira shrugged. “I’ll
be at the Hempstead G-level, at the end of the Long Island
Expressway. Get off and cross the strips to G-20th Street. I’ll
be standing in front of a store called Tad’s Antiques--think
you can find it?”
Amy felt insulted. “I
know my way around. But I don’t know why I should bother. “
“Then don’t.
I’ll be there by seven and I’ll wait until nine. If you
don’t show up, that’s your business, and I won’t
pester you again, but you might be interested in what I have to tell
you.” Shakira turned and walked toward the elevator before Amy
could reply.
Debora pulled her away
from the Personal door. “ Are you going?” she asked.
“Yes. I’ve
got to find out what she wants.”
“But your parents
told you not to leave the subsection. If any of their friends see
you--”
“I’m going
anyway. I have to go.” She would settle matters with the young
woman one way or another.
“To the edge of the
City?” Debora whispered.
“She can’t do
anything to me on the street with people around. Deb, you have to
cover for me. I can tell my parents I’ll be at your place. I
don’t think they’ll call to check, but if they do, tell
them I went to the Personal. “
“If my father
doesn’t get to the communo first.”
“I’ll just
have to take the chance,” Amy said.
Debora let out her
breath. “She may want to challenge you again. What’ll you
do?”
“I’ll worry
about that when I get there.” She had already made her
decision. If Shakira wanted another run, she couldn’t refuse,
and she’d make sure some of the boys she knew were waiting at
the destination as witnesses. Whatever the risk, it was a chance to
restore her lost honor.
Amy was on G-20th Street
by seven-thirty. Shakira, as she had promised, was waiting in front
of the antique store, which had an old-fashioned flat sign in script.
There weren’t many stores in the shabby neighborhood, where the
high metallic walls of the residence levels seemed duller than most,
and no more than a few hundred people in the street. Amy felt
apprehensive. Sections like this one were the worst in the City; only
badly off citizens would live here, so close to the Outside.
Shakira was gazing at an
attractive display of old plastic cutlery and cups in the store
window. Inside the store, the owner had made one concession to modem
times; a robot was waiting on the line of customers. “Didn’t
take you long to get here,” the woman murmured.
“I shouldn’t
be here at all,” Amy said. “I’m not supposed to
leave my subsection, but my parents think I’m with a friend. “
For once, they hadn’t asked too many questions, and had even
seemed a little relieved that she would be gone for the evening. “I
told them I’d be back by ten-thirty, so say what you have to
say.”
“I didn’t
want to make that run, but you insisted, and I still have my pride.”
Shakira looped her fingers around her belt. “Then, once I was
running, old habits took over. Maybe I wanted to see if I still had
my reflexes. “
“You must have had
a good time bragging about it later.”
“I didn’t
brag,” Shakira said. “I just met the kids and told them
to go home. I said it was tough shaking you, and that you were one of
the best runners who ever tailed me.”
Amy’s lip curled.
“How nice of you, Shakira. You still beat me.”
“I saw what
happened, why you didn’t jump back on the strip. Some runners
would have risked it anyway, even with less room than you had. They
would have jumped, and if a couple of people got knocked off the
strip, too bad. I’m glad you aren’t that antisocial.”
“What do you want
with me, anyway?” Amy asked. A few women stopped near her to
look in the store window, but she ignored them; even in this wretched
area, people wouldn’t be crass enough to eavesdrop.
“Well, I heard
about this girl, Amy Barone-Stein, who could run the strips with the
best of them. I still know a few runners, even though most of my
college friends would disapprove of them. I thought you might be a
little like me--restless, maybe a bit angry, wondering if you’d
ever be more than a component in the City’s machine.”
Amy stepped back a
little. “So what?”
“I thought you
might like a challenge.”
“But you said
before that you didn’t want to make that run.”
“I’m not
talking about that,” Shakira said. “I mean a real
challenge, something a lot harder and more interesting than running
strips. It might be worthwhile for you if you’ve got the guts
for it. “ Amy took another step backward, certain that the
woman was about to propose a shady undertaking. “You see, I’m
part of that group of Lije’s--Elijah Baley’s--the people
who go Outside once a week. His son Bentley is an acquaintance of
mine.”
Amy gaped at her,
completely surprised. “But why--”
“There are only a
few of us so far. The City gives us a little support, mostly because
of Lije--Mr. Baley--but I suspect the City government thinks we’re
as eccentric as everyone else does, and that we’re deluded to
think we can ever settle another world.”
“Why bother?”
Amy said. “The Spacers’ll never let anyone off Earth.”
“Lije left, didn’t
he?”
“That was
different, and they sent him back here as fast as they could. I’ll
bet they didn’t even thank him for solving that murder. They’d
never let a bunch of Earthpeople on one of their worlds. “
“Not one of theirs,
no.” Shakira leaned against the window. “But Lije Baley
is convinced they’ll allow settlers on an uninhabited world
eventually--maybe sooner than we think--and that they’ll
provide us with ships to get there. But we can’t settle another
world unless we’re able to live Outside a City.”
Amy shook her head.
“Nobody can live Outside.”
“Earthpeople used
to. The Earthpeople who settled the Spacer worlds long ago did. The
Spacers do, and we manage to--for two or three hours a week, anyway.
It’s a start, just getting accustomed to that, and it isn’t
easy, but any settlers will have to be people like us, who’ve
shown we can leave a City. “
“And you want me in
this group?” Amy asked.
“I thought you
might be interested. We could use more recruits, and younger people
seem to adapt more quickly. Just think of it--if we do get to leave
Earth, every single settler will be needed, every person will be
important and useful. We’ll need people willing to gamble on a
new life, individualists who want to make a mark, maybe even folks
who are just a little antisocial as long as they can cooperate with
others. You could be one of them, Amy.”
“If you ever
leave.”
Shakira smiled. “What
have you got to lose by trying?” She paused. “Do you have
any idea of how precarious life inside this City is? How much more
uranium can we get for our power plants? Think of all the power we
have to use just to bring in water and get rid of waste. Just imagine
what would happen if the air were cut off even for an hour or
two--people would die by the hundreds of thousands. We’ll have
to leave the Cities. They can’t keep growing indefinitely
without taking up land we need for farming or forests we need for
pulp. There’ll be less food, less space, less of everything,
until--”
Amy looked away for a
moment. Her mother had said the same thing to her.
“There isn’t
a future here, Amy. “ Shakira moved closer to her. “There
might be one for us on other worlds. “
Amy sighed. “What a
few people do won’t make any difference. “
“It’s a
beginning, and if we succeed, others will follow. You seemed to think
what you did was important when you were only running the strips. “
The young woman beckoned to her. “Here’s my challenge for
you. I’m asking you if you ‘II come Outside with me. “
“With those
people?”
“Right now. Surely
a strip-runner who used to risk life and limb isn’t afraid of a
little open air.”
“But--”
“Come on.”
She followed Shakira down
the street, helpless to resist. The woman stopped in front of an
opening in the high walls. Amy peered around her and saw a long,
dimly lit tunnel with another wall at its end.
“What is it?”
Amy asked. “
An exit. Some of them are
guarded now, but this one isn’t. There really isn’t any
need to watch them--most people don’t know about them or don’t
want to think about them. Even the people living in this subsection
have probably forgotten this exit is here. Will you come with me?”
“What if somebody
follows us?” Amy glanced nervously down the street, which
seemed even emptier than before. “It isn’t safe.”
“Believe me, nobody
will follow. They’d rather believe this place doesn’t
exist. Will you come?”
Amy swallowed hard, then
nodded. It was only a passageway; it couldn’t be that bad. They
entered; she kept close to the young woman as the familiar,
comforting noise of the street behind them grew fainter.
Shakira said, “The
exit’s at the end.” Her voice sounded hollow in the eerie
silence. Amy’s stomach knotted as they came to the end of the
tunnel.
“Ready?”
Shakira asked.
“I think So.”
“Hang on to me.
It’ll be dark Outside--that’ll make it easier for you,
and I won’t let go.”
Shakira pressed her hand
against the wall. An opening slowly appeared. Amy felt cold air on
her face; as they stepped Outside, the door closed behind them. She
closed her eyes, terrified to look, already longing for the warmth
and safety of the City.
A gust of wind slapped
her, fiercer than the wind on the fastest strips. She opened her eyes
and looked up. A black sky dotted with stars was above her, and that
bright pearly orb had to be the moon. Except for the wind and the
bone-chilling cold, she might almost have been inside a City
planetarium. But the planetarium had not revealed how vast the sky
was, or shown the silvery clouds that drifted below the black
heavens. She lowered her gaze; a bluish-white plain, empty except for
the distant domes of a farm, stretched in front of her. Her ears
throbbed at the silence that was broken only by the intermittent howl
of the wind.
Open air--and the white
substance covering the ground had to be snow. The wind gusted again,
lifting a thin white veil of flakes, then died. There was space all
around her, unfiltered air, dirt under her feet, and the moon shining
down on all of it; the safety of walls was gone. Her stomach lurched
as her heart pounded; her head swam. Her grip on Shakira loosened;
the pale plain was spinning. Then she was falling through the endless
silence into a darkness as black as the sky...
Arms caught her, lifting
her up; she felt warmth at her back. The silence was gone. She clawed
at the air and realized she was back inside the tunnel. She blinked;
her mouth was dry. “ Are you all right?” Shakira felt her
forehead; Amy leaned heavily against her. “I got you inside as
fast as I could. I’m sorry--I forgot there’d be a full
moon tonight. It would have been easier for you if it had been
completely dark.”
Amy trembled, afraid to
let go. “I didn’t know,” she said. “I didn’t
think--” She shivered with relief, welcoming the warmth, the
faint but steady noise from the street, the walls of the City. She
tried to smile. “Guess I didn’t do so well.”
“But you did. The
first time I went Outside, I passed out right after taking my first
breath of open air. The second time, I ran back inside after a few
seconds and swore I’d never set foot Outside again. You did a
lot better than that--I was counting. We must have been standing
there for nearly two minutes.”
Shakira supported her
with one arm; they made their way slowly toward the street. “Can
you walk by yourself?” the woman asked as they left the tunnel.
“I think so.”
Shakira let go. Amy stared down the street, which had seemed so empty
earlier, relieved at the sight of all the people. “I couldn’t
do that again, Shakira. I couldn’t face it--all that space.”
“I think you can.”
Shakira folded her arms. “You can if you don’t give up
now. We’ll be going Outside in two days. You’ll have to
wear more clothes--it’d help if you can get gloves and a hat.”
Amy shook her head, struck by the strangeness of needing warmer
clothes; the temperature inside never varied. “It’s
winter, so we’ll only take a short walk--we won’t be
Outside very long. I’d like you to come with us. I’ll
stay by the exit with you, and you needn’t remain Outside a
second longer than you can bear. Believe me, if you keep trying, even
if you think you can’t stand it, it’ll get easier. You
may even start to look forward to it.”
“I don’t
know--” Amy started to say.
“Will you try?”
Amy took a deep breath,
smelling the odors of the City, the faint pungence of bodies, a whiff
of someone’s perfume, a sharp, acrid scent she could not place;
she had never noticed the smells before. “I’ll try.”
She drew her brows together. “My parents will kill me if they
ever find out. I’ll have to think of an excuse”
“But you must tell
them, Amy.”
“They’ll
never let me go.”
“Then you’ll
have to find a way to convince them. They have to know for two very
good reasons. One is that it’ll cause trouble for Lije if kids
come Outside without their families’ permission, and the other
is that they just might decide to join us themselves. I’ll come
by your place for you, so you’ll have to tell them why I’m
there. You can give me your answer then. “
“There’s
something else,” Amy said. “That Mr. Baley--he’s a
detective. When he finds out I got picked up, he may not want me.”
Shakira laughed. “Don’t
worry about that. I’ll tell you a secret--Lije Baley was a
pretty good strip-runner in his day. I heard a little about his past
from my uncle and another old-timer. He won’t hold that against
you, but don’t say anything to the others about it. “
Shakira took her arm as they walked toward the strips. “We’d
better get home.”
Amy glanced at her. “You
wouldn’t want to try another run?”
“Not a chance.
You’ve had enough trouble, and you’ve got more to lose
now. Maybe some dancing, but only if there’s room, and only on
the slow strips.”
The sturdy walls of her
Kingsbridge subsection surrounded Amy once more. She had nearly
forgotten the coldness, the wind, the silence, the terrible emptiness
of the Outside.
Yet she knew she would
have to go Outside again. The comforting caves of steel would not
always be a safe refuge. She would have to face the emptiness until
she no longer feared it, and wondered how the City would seem to her
then.
She waited by the
apartment door for a few moments before slipping her key into the
slot. Her parents might be asleep already, and she could not tell
them about this event at breakfast in the section kitchen. She could
tell them tomorrow night, and would try not to hope for too much.
The door opened; she went
inside. Her parents were still awake, cuddling together on the couch;
they sat up quickly and adjusted their nightrobes.
“Amy!” Her
father looked a bit embarrassed. “You ‘re home early.”
“I thought I was
late.”
He glanced at the wall
timepiece. “Oh--I guess you are. I hadn’t noticed. Well,
I’ll let it pass this once. “
Amy studied the couple.
They seemed in a good mood; her mother’s brown eyes glowed, and
her father’s broad face lacked its usual tenseness. She might
not get a better chance to speak to them, and did not want her mother
finding out from Mrs. Lister at breakfast that she hadn’t been
at Debora’s.
“Um. “ Amy
cleared her throat. “I have to talk to you. “
Her father looked toward
the timepiece again. “Is it important?”
“It’s
very important.” She went to a chair and sat down across from
them. “It really can’t wait. Please--just let me talk
until I’m finished, and then you can say whatever you want.”
She paused. “I wasn’t at Deb’s. I know I wasn’t
supposed to, but I left the subsection.”
Her
father started; her mother reached for his hand.
“Not to run strips,
I swear,” Amy added hastily. She lowered her eyes, afraid to
look directly at them, then told them about her first meeting with
Shakira, the run that had ended in disaster, the encounter on the
street in Hempstead, what Shakira had said about the group that went
Outside, and the challenge she had met that night by facing the open
space beyond the City. She wasn’t telling the story very well,
having to pause every so often to fill in a detail, but by the time
she reached the end, she was sure she had mentioned all the
essentials.
Her parents said nothing
throughout, and were silent when she finished. At last she forced
herself to raise her head. Her father looked stunned, her mother
bewildered.
“You went Outside?”
Alysha whispered.
“Yes.”
“Weren’t you
terrified?”
“I was never so
scared in my life, but I had to--I--”
Her father sagged against
the couch. “You deliberately disobeyed us.” He sounded
more exasperated than angry. “You lied and told us you’d
be with Debora Lister. You left the subsection to meet a dubious
young woman who’s a damned strip-runner herself, and--”
“She isn’t,”
Amy protested...She doesn’t run any more, and she wouldn’t
have with me if I hadn’t insisted--I told you. That was my
fault.”
“At least you’re
admitting your guilt,” he said...I let you have your say, so
allow me to finish. Now she wants you to traipse around Outside with
that group of hers. I forbid it--do you hear? You’re not to
have anything more to do with her, and if she calls or comes here,
I’ll tell her so myself. I’ll have to be firmer with you,
Amy. Since you can’t be honest with us about your doings,
you’ll be restricted to this apartment again, and--”
“Rick.”
Alysha’s voice was low, but firm...Let me speak. If joining
those people means so much to Amy, then maybe she should.”
Ricardo’s face paled as he turned toward his wife...I know she
disobeyed us, but I think I can understand why she felt it necessary.
Anyway, how much trouble can she get into if a City detective’s
with them? They seem harmless enough.”
“Harmless?”
her husband said...Going Outside, deluding themselves that--”
“Let her go, Rick.”
Alysha pressed his hand between both of hers...That young woman told
her the truth. You know it’s true--you can see what the
Department’s statistical projections show, whether you’ll
admit it to yourself or not. If there’s any chance that those
people with Elijah Baley can leave Earth, maybe it’s better if
Amy goes with them.”
Amy drew in her breath,
startled that her mother was taking her side and confronting her
father in her presence. “You’d accept that?”
Ricardo asked...What if the Spacers actually allow those people off
Earth--not that I think it’s likely, but what if they do?
You’re saying you’d be content never to see your daughter
again.”
“I wouldn’t
be content--you know better than that. But how can I cling to her if
she has a chance, however small, at something else? I know what her
life will be here, perhaps better than you do. I’d rather know
she’s doing something meaningful to her somewhere else, even if
that means we’ll lose her, than to have to go through life
pretending I don’t see her frustrations and disappointments. “
Ricardo heaved a sigh. “I
can’t believe I’m hearing you say this.”
“Oh, Rick.”
She released his hand. “You would have expected me to say and
do the unexpected years ago.” She smiled at that phrase. “How
conventional we’ve become since then.” She gazed at him
silently for a bit. “Maybe I’ll go with Amy when she
meets that group. I should see what kind of people they are, after
all. Maybe I’ll even take a step Outside myself.”
Her husband frowned,
looking defeated. “This is a fine situation,” he said.
“Not only do I have a disobedient daughter, but now my wife’s
against me, too. If my co-workers hear you’re both wandering
around with that group of Baley’s, it may not do me much good
in the Department.”
“Really?”
Amy’s mother arched her brows. “They always knew we were
both a bit, shall we say, eccentric, and that didn’t bother you
once. Perhaps you should come with us to meet Mr. Baley’s
group. It’d be wiser to have your colleagues think you’re
going along with our actions, however odd or amusing they may find
them, than to believe there’s a rift between us.” Her
mouth twisted a little. “You know what they say--happy families
make for a better City.”
Ricardo turned toward
Amy. “You’d do it again? Go Outside, I mean. You’d
actually go through that again?”
“Yes, I would,”
Amy replied. “I know it’ll be hard, but I’d try.”
“It’s late,”
her father said. “I can’t think about this now. “
He stood up and took Alysha by the arm as she rose. “We’ll
discuss this tomorrow, after I’ve had a chance to consider it.
Good night, Amy. “
“Good night. “
Her mother was whispering
to her father as Amy went to her room. Her father had backed down for
now, and her mother was almost certain to bring him around. She
undressed for bed, convinced she had won her battle.
She stretched out, tired
and ready to sleep, and soon drifted into a dream. She was on the
strips again, riding through an open arch to the Outside, but she
wasn’t afraid this time.
The City slept. The
strips and expressways continued to move, carrying the few who were
awake--young lovers who had crept out to meet each other, policemen
on patrol, hospital workers heading home after a night shift, and
restless souls drawn to wander the caverns of New York.
Amy stood on a strip, a
sprinkling of people around her. Four boys raced past her, leaping
from strip to strip; for a moment, she was tempted to join their
race. She had come out at night a few times before, to practice some
moves when the strips were emptier, returning to her subsection
before her parents awoke. More riders began to fill the slowest
strip; the City was waking. Her parents would be up by the time she
got back, but she was sure they would understand why she had been
drawn out here tonight.
Her parents had come with
her to meet Elijah Baley and his group. The detective was a tall,
dark-haired man with a long, solemn face, but he had brightened a
little when Shakira introduced her new recruits. Amy’s mother
and father had not gone Outside with them; perhaps they would next
time. She knew what an effort it would be for them, and hoped they
could find the courage to take that step. They would be with her when
the group met again; they had promised that much. When she was able
to face the openness without fear, to stride across the ground
bravely as Shakira did, maybe she would lead them Outside herself.
She leaped up, spun
around in a dervish, and ran along the strip. The band hummed under
her feet; she could hear its music again. She bounded forward, did a
handspring, then jumped to the next strip. She danced across the gray
bands until she reached the expressway, then hauled herself aboard.
Her hands tightened
around the pole as she recalled her first glimpse of daylight. The
whiteness of the snow had been blinding, and above it all, in the
painfully clear blue sky, was a bright ball of flame, the naked sun.
She had known she was standing on a ball of dirt clad only in a thin
veil of air, a speck that was hurtling through a space more vast and
empty than anything she could see. The terror had seized her then,
driving her back inside, where she had cowered on the floor, sick
with fear and despair. But there had also been Shakira’s strong
arms to help her up, and Elijah Baley’s voice telling her of
his own former fears. Amy had not gone Outside again that day, but
she had stood in the open doorway and forced herself to take one more
breath of wintry air.
It was a beginning. She
had to meet the challenge if she was ever to lead others Outside, or
to follow the hopeful settlers to another world.
She left the expressway
and danced along the strips, showing her form, imagining that she was
running one last race. She was near the Hempstead street where she
had met Shakira.
The street was nearly
empty, its store windows darkened. Amy left the strips and hurried
toward the tunnel, running along the passageway until her breath came
in short, sharp gasps. When she reached the end, she hesitated for
only a moment, then pressed her hand against the wall.
The opening appeared. The
muted hum from the distant strips faded behind her, and she was
Outside, alone, with the morning wind in her face. The sky was a dark
dome above her. She looked east and saw dawn brightening the cave of
stars.
The Asenion Solution
by Robert
Silverberg
FLETCHER STARED
BLEAKLY AT THE SMALL MOUNDS OF GRAY metal that were visible behind
the thick window of the storage chamber.
“Plutonium-186,”
he muttered. “Nonsense! Absolute nonsense!”
“Dangerous
nonsense, Lew,” said Jesse Hammond, standing behind him.
“Catastrophic nonsense.”
Fletcher nodded. The very
phrase, “plutonium-186,” sounded like gibberish to him.
There wasn’t supposed to be any such substance. Plutonium-186
was an impossible isotope, too light by a good fifty neutrons. Or a
bad fifty neutrons, considering the risks the stuff was creating as
it piled up here and there around the world. But the fact that it was
theoretically impossible for plutonium-186 to exist did not change
the other, and uglier, fact that he was looking at three kilograms of
it right this minute. Or that as the quantity of plutonium-186 in the
world continued to increase, so did the chance of an uncontrollable
nuclear reaction leading to an atomic holocaust.
“Look at the
morning reports,” Fletcher said, waving a sheaf of faxprints at
Hammond. “Thirteen grams more turned up at the nucleonics lab
of Accra University. Fifty grams in Geneva. Twenty milligrams
in--well, that little doesn’t matter. But Chicago, Jesse,
Chicago--three hundred grams in a single chunk!”
“Christmas presents
from the Devil,” Hammond muttered.
“Not
the Devil, no. Just decent serious-minded scientific folk who happen
to live in another universe where plutonium-186 is not only possible
but also perfectly harmless. And who are so fascinated by the idea
that we’re
fascinated by it that they keep on shipping the stuff to us in
wholesale lots! What are we going to do with it all, Jesse? What in
God’s name are we going to do with it all?”
Raymond Nikolaus looked
up from his desk at the far side of the room.
“Wrap it up in
shiny red and green paper and ship it right back to them?” he
suggested.
Fletcher laughed
hollowly. ”Very funny, Raymond. Very, very funny.”
He began to pace the
room. In the silence the clicking of his shoes against the flagstone
floor seemed to him like the ticking of a detonating device, growing
louder, louder, louder...
He--they, all of
them--had been wrestling with the problem all year, with an
increasing sense of futility. The plutonium-186 had begun
mysteriously to appear in laboratories all over the world--wherever
supplies of one of the two elements with equivalent atomic weights
existed. Gram for gram, atom for atom, the matching elements
disappeared just as mysteriously: equal quantities of tungsten-186 or
osmium-186.
Where was the tungsten
and osmium going? Where was the plutonium coming from? Above all, how
was it possible for a plutonium isotope whose atoms had only 92
neutrons in its nucleus to exist even for a fraction of a fraction of
an instant? Plutonium was one of the heavier chemical elements, with
a whopping 94 protons in the nucleus of each of its atoms. The
closest thing to a stable isotope of plutonium was plutonium-244, in
which 150 neutrons held those 94 protons together; and even at that,
plutonium-244 had an inevitable habit of breaking down in radioactive
decay, with a half-life of some 76 million years. Atoms of
plutonium-186, if they could exist at all, would come dramatically
apart in very much less than one seventy-six millionth of a second.
But the stuff that was
turning up in the chemistry labs to replace the tungsten-186 and the
osmium-186 had an atomic number of 94, no question about that. And
element 94 was plutonium. That couldn’t be disputed either. The
defining characteristic of plutonium was the presence of 94 protons
in its nucleus. If that was the count, plutonium was what that
element had to be.
This impossibly light
isotope of plutonium, this plutonium-186, had another impossible
characteristic about it: not only was it stable, it was so completely
stable that it wasn’t even radioactive. It just sat there,
looking exceedingly unmysterious, not even deigning to emit a smidgen
of energy. At least, not when first tested. But a second test
revealed positron emission, which a third baffled look confirmed. The
trouble was that the third measurement showed an even higher level of
radioactivity than the second one. The fourth was higher than the
third. And so on and so on.
Nobody had ever heard of
any element, of whatever atomic number or weight, that started off
stable and then began to demonstrate a steadily increasing intensity
of radioactivity. No one knew what was likely to happen, either, if
the process continued unchecked, but the possibilities seemed pretty
explosive. The best suggestion anyone had was to turn it to powder
and mix it with nonradioactive tungsten. That worked for a little
while, until the tungsten turned radioactive too. After that graphite
was used, with somewhat better results, to damp down the strange
element’s output of energy. There were no explosions. But more
and more plutonium-186 kept arriving.
The
only explanation that made any sense--and it did not make very
much sense--was that it was coming from some unknown and perhaps
even unknowable place, some sort of parallel universe, where the laws
of nature were different and the binding forces of the atom were so
much more powerful that plutonium-186 could be a stable isotope.
Why they were sending odd
lumps of plutonium-186 here was something that no one could begin to
guess. An even more important question was how they could be made to
stop doing it. The radioactive breakdown of the plutonium-186 would
eventually transform it into ordinary osmium or tungsten, but the
twenty positrons that each plutonium nucleus emitted in the course of
that process encountered and annihilated an equal number of
electrons. Our universe could afford to lose twenty electrons here
and there, no doubt. It could probably afford to go on losing
electrons at a constant rate for an astonishingly long time without
noticing much difference. But sooner or later the shift toward an
overall positive charge that this electron loss created would create
grave and perhaps incalculable problems of symmetry and energy
conservation. Would the equilibrium of the universe break down? Would
nuclear interactions begin to intensify? Would the stars--even the
Sun--erupt into supernovas?
“This can’t
go on,” Fletcher said gloomily.
Hammond gave him a sour
look. “So? We’ve been saying that for six months now.”
“It’s time to
do something. They keep shipping us more and more and more, and we
don’t have any idea how to go about telling them to cut it
out.”
“We don’t
even have any idea whether they really exist,” Raymond Nikolaus
put in.
“Right now that
doesn’t matter. What matters is that the stuff is arriving
constantly, and the more of it we have, the more dangerous it is. We
don’t have the foggiest idea of how to shut off the shipments.
So we’ve got to find some way to get rid of it as it comes in.”
“And what do you
have in mind, pray tell?” Hammond asked.
Fletcher said, glaring at
his colleague in a way that conveyed the fact that he would brook no
opposition, “I’m going to talk to Asenion.”
Hammond guffawed.
“Asenion? You’re crazy!”
“No.
He is. But he’s
the only person who can help us.”
It was a sad case, the
Asenion story, poignant and almost incomprehensible. One of the
finest minds atomic physics had ever known, a man to rank with
Rutherford, Bohr, Heisenberg, Fermi, Meitner. A Harvard degree at
twelve, his doctorate from MIT five years later, after which he had
poured forth a dazzling flow of technical papers that probed the
deepest mysteries of the nuclear binding forces. As the twenty-first
century entered its closing decades he had seemed poised to solve
once and for all the eternal riddles of the universe. And then, at
the age of twenty-eight, without having given the slightest warning,
he walked away from the whole thing.
“I have lost
interest,” he declared. “Physics is no longer of any
importance to me. Why should I concern myself with these issues of
the way in which matter is constructed? How tiresome it all is! When
one looks at the Parthenon, does one care what the columns are made
of, or what sort of scaffolding was needed to put them in place? That
the Parthenon exists, and is sublimely beautiful, is all that should
interest us. So too with the universe. I see the universe, and it is
beautiful and perfect. Why should I pry into the nature of its
scaffolding? Why should anyone?”
And with that he resigned
his professorship, burned his papers, and retreated to the
thirty-third floor of an apartment building on Manhattan’s West
Side, where he built an elaborate laboratory-greenhouse in which he
intended to conduct experiments in advanced horticulture.
“Bromeliads,”
said Asenion. “I will create hybrid bromeliads. Bromeliads will
be the essence and center of my life from now on.”
Romelmeyer, who had been
Asenion’s mentor at Harvard, attributed his apparent breakdown
to overwork, and thought that he would snap back in six or eight
months. Jantzen, who had had the rare privilege of being the first to
read his astonishing dissertation at MIT, took an equally sympathetic
position, arguing that Asenion must have come to some terrifying
impasse in his work that had compelled him to retreat dramatically
from the brink of madness. “Perhaps he found himself looking
right into an abyss of inconsistencies when he thought he was about
to find the ultimate answers,” Jantzen suggested. “What
else could he do but run? But he won’t run for long. It isn’t
in his nature.”
Burkhardt, of Cal Tech,
whose own work had been carried out in the sphere that Asenion was
later to make his own, agreed with Jantzen’s analysis. “He
must have hit something really dark and hairy. But he’ll wake
up one morning with the solution in his head, and it’ll be
goodbye horticulture for him. He’ll turn out a paper by noon
that will revolutionize everything we think we know about nuclear
physics, and that’ll be that.”
But Jesse Hammond, who
had played tennis with Asenion every morning for the last two years
of his career as a physicist, took a less charitable position. “He’s
gone nuts,” Hammond said. “He’s flipped out
altogether, and he’s never going to get himself together again.
“
“You think?”
said Lew Fletcher, who had been almost as close to Asenion as
Hammond, but who was no tennis player.
Hammond smiled. “No
doubt of it. I began noticing a weird look in his eyes starting just
about two years back. And then his playing started to turn weird too.
He’d serve and not even look where he was serving. He’d
double-fault without even caring. And you know what else? He didn’t
challenge me on a single out-of-bounds call the whole year. That was
the key thing. Used to be, he’d fight me every call. Now he
just didn’t seem to care. He just let everything go by. He was
completely indifferent. I said to myself, This guy must be flipping
out.”
“Or working on some
problem that seems more important to him than tennis. “
“Same thing,”
said Hammond. “No, Lew, I tell you--he’s gone completely
unglued. And nothing’s going to glue him again.”
That conversation had
taken place almost a year ago. Nothing had happened in the interim to
change anyone’s opinion. The astounding arrival of
plutonium-186 in the world had not brought forth any comment from
Asenion’s Manhattan penthouse. The sudden solemn discussions of
fantastic things like parallel universes by otherwise reputable
physicists had apparently not aroused him either. He remained
closeted with his bromeliads high above the streets of Manhattan.
Well,
maybe he is crazy,
Fletcher thought. But his mind can’t have shorted out entirely.
And he might just have an idea or two left in him
Asenion said, “Well,
you don’t look a whole lot older, do you?”
Fletcher felt himself
reddening. “Jesus, Ike, it’s only been eighteen months
since we last saw each other!”
“Is that all?”
Asenion said indifferently. “It feels like a lot more to me.”
He managed a thin, remote
smile. He didn’t look very interested in Fletcher or in
whatever it was that had brought Fletcher to his secluded eyrie.
Asenion
had always been an odd one, of course--aloof, mysterious, with a
faint but unmistakable air of superiority about him that nearly
everyone found instantly irritating. Of course, he was
superior. But he had made sure that he let you know it, and never
seemed to care that others found the trait less than endearing.
He
appeared more remote than ever, now, stranger and more alien.
Outwardly he had not changed at all: the same slender, debonair
figure, surprisingly handsome, even striking. Though rumor had it
that he had not left his penthouse in more than a year, there was no
trace of indoor pallor about him. His skin still had its rich deep
olive coloring, almost swarthy, a Mediterranean tone. His hair, thick
and dark, tumbled down rakishly over his broad forehead. But there
was something different about his dark, gleaming eyes. The old
Asenion, however preoccupied he might have been with some abstruse
problem of advanced physics, had nearly always had a playful sparkle
in his eyes, a kind of amiable devilish glint. This man, this
horticultural recluse, wore a different expression
altogether--ascetic, mist-shrouded, absent.
His gaze was as bright as ever, but the brightness was a cold one
that seemed to come from some far-off star.
Fletcher said, “The
reason I’ve come here”
“We can go into all
that later, can’t we, Lew? First come into the greenhouse with
me. There’s something I want to show you. Nobody else has seen
it yet, in fact.”
“Well, if you--”
“Insist, yes. Come.
I promise you, it’s extraordinary.”
He turned and led the way
through the intricate pathways of the apartment. The sprawling
many-roomed penthouse was furnished in the most offhand way, cheap
student furniture badly cared for. Cats wandered everywhere, five,
six, eight of them, sharpening their claws on the upholstery,
prowling in empty closets whose doors stood ajar, peering down from
the tops of bookcases containing jumbled heaps of coverless volumes.
There was a rank smell of cat urine in the air.
But then suddenly Asenion
turned a corridor and Fletcher, following just behind, found himself
staring into what could have been an altogether different world. They
had reached the entrance to the spectacular glass-walled extension
that had been wrapped like an observation deck around the entire
summit of the building. Beyond, dimly visible inside, Fletcher could
see hundreds or perhaps thousands of strange-looking plants, some
hanging from the ceiling, some mounted along the sides of wooden
pillars, some rising in stepped array on benches, some growing out of
beds set in the floor.
Asenion briskly tapped
out the security-combination code on a diamond-shaped keyboard
mounted in the wall, and the glass door slid silently back. A blast
of warm humid air came forth.
“Quickly!” he
said. “Inside!”
It was like stepping
straight into the Amazon jungle. In place of the harsh, dry
atmosphere of a Manhattan apartment in mid-winter there was,
abruptly, the dense moist sweet closeness of the tropics, enfolding
them like folds of wet fabric. Fletcher almost expected to hear
parrots screeching overhead.
And the plants! The
bizarre plants, clinging to every surface, filling every available
square inch!
Most of them followed the
same general pattern, rosettes of broad shining strap-shaped leaves
radiating outward from a central cup-shaped structure deep enough to
hold several ounces of water. But beyond that basic area of
similarity they differed wildly from one another. Some were tiny,
some were colossal. Some were marked with blazing stripes of yellow
and red and purple that ran the length of their thick, succulent
leaves. Some were mottled with fierce blotches of shimmering,
assertive, bewilderingly complicated combinations of color. Some,
whose leaves were green, were a fiery scarlet or crimson, or a
somber, mysterious blue, at the place where the leaves came together
to form the cup. Some were armed with formidable teeth and looked
ready to feed on unwary visitors. Some were topped with gaudy spikes
of strangely shaped brilliant-hued flowers taller than a man, which
sprang like radiant spears from their centers.
Everything glistened.
Everything seemed poised for violent, explosive growth. The scene was
alien and terrifying. It was like looking into a vast congregation of
hungry monsters. Fletcher had to remind himself that these were
merely plants, hothouse specimens that probably wouldn’t last
half an hour in the urban environment outside.
“These are
bromeliads, “ Asenion said, shaping the word sensuously in his
throat as though it were the finest word any language had ever
produced. “Tropical plants, mainly. South and Central America
is where most of them live. They tend to cling to trees, growing high
up in the forks of branches, mainly. Some live at ground level,
though. Such as the bromeliad you know best, which is the pineapple.
But there are hundreds of others in this room. Thousands. And this is
the humid room, where I keep the guzmanias and the vrieseas and some
of the aechmeas. As we go around, I’ll show you the tillandsias
--they like it a lot drier--and the terrestrial ones, the hechtias
and the dyckias, and then over on the far side--”
“Ike,”
Fletcher said quietly.
“You know I’ve
never liked that name.”
“I’m sorry. I
forgot.” That was a lie. Asenion’s given name was
Ichabod. Neither Fletcher nor anyone Fletcher knew had ever been able
to bring himself to call him that. “Look, I think what you’ve
got here is wonderful. Absolutely wonderful. But I don’t want
to intrude on your time, and there’s a very serious problem I
need to discuss with--”
“First the plants,”
Asenion said. “Indulge me.” His eyes were glowing. In the
half-light of the greenhouse he looked like a jungle creature
himself, exotic, weird. Without a moment’s hesitation, he
pranced off down the aisle toward a group of oversized bromeliads
near the outer wall. Willy-nilly. Fletcher followed.
Asenion gestured grandly.
“Here
it is! Do you see? Aechmea
asenionii! Discovered in northwestern Brazil two years ago--I
sponsored the expedition myself--of course. I never expected them to
name it for me. but you know how these things sometimes happen--”
Fletcher stared. The
plant was a giant among giants, easily two meters across from
leaf-tip to leaf-tip. Its dark green leaves were banded with jagged
pale scrawls that looked like the hieroglyphs of some lost race. Out
of the central cup, which was the size of a man’s head and deep
enough to drown rabbits in, rose the strangest flower Fletcher ever
hoped to see, a thick yellow stalk of immense length from which
sprang something like a cluster of black thunderbolts tipped with
ominous red globes like dangling moons. A pervasive odor of rotting
flesh came from it.
“The
only specimen in North America!” Asenion cried. “Perhaps
one of six or seven in the world. And I’ve succeeded in
inducing it to bloom. There’ll be seed, Lew, and perhaps
there’ll be offsets as well--I’ll be able to propagate
it, and cross it with others--can you imagine it crossed with Aechmea
chantinii. Fletcher? Or perhaps an interspecific hybrid? With
Neoregelia carcharadon. say? No. Of course you can’t
imagine it. What am I saying? But it would be spectacular beyond
belief. Take my word for it. “
“I have no doubt.”
“It’s
a privilege, seeing this plant in bloom. But there are others here
you must see too. The puyas--the pitcairnias--there’s a clump
of Dyckia
marnierlapostollei in the next room that you wouldn’t
believe--”
He bubbled with boyish
enthusiasm. Fletcher forced himself to be patient. There was no help
for it: he would simply have to take the complete tour.
It went on for what
seemed like hours, as Asenion led him frantically from one peculiar
plant to another, in room after room. Some were actually quite
beautiful, Fletcher had to admit. Others seemed excessively
flamboyant, or grotesque, or incomprehensibly ordinary to his
untutored eye, or downright grotesque. What struck him most
forcefully of all was the depth of Asenion’s obsession. Nothing
in the universe seemed to matter to him except this horde of exotic
plants. He had given himself up totally to the strange world he had
created here.
But at last even
Asenion’s manic energies seemed to flag. The pace had been
merciless, and both he and Fletcher, drenched with sweat and gasping
in the heat, paused for breath in a section of the greenhouse
occupied by small gray gnarly plants that seemed to have no roots,
and were held to the wall by barely visible wires.
Abruptly Asenion said,
“All right. You aren’t interested anyway. Tell me what
you came here to ask me, and then get on your way. I have all sorts
of things to do this afternoon. “
“It’s about
plutonium-186,” Fletcher began.
“Don’t be
idiotic. That’s not a legitimate isotope. It can’t
possibly exist. “
“I know,”
Fletcher said. “But it does.”
Quickly, almost
desperately, he outlined the whole fantastic story for the young
physicist-turned-botanist. The mysterious substitution of a strange
element for tungsten or osmium in various laboratories, the tests
indicating that its atomic number was that of plutonium but its
atomic weight was far too low, the absurd but necessary theory that
the stuff was a gift from some parallel universe and--finally--the
fact that the new element, stable when it first arrived, rapidly
began to undergo radioactive decay in a startlingly accelerative way.
Asenion’s saturnine
face was a study in changing emotions as Fletcher spoke. He seemed
bored and irritated at first, then scornful, then, perhaps, furious;
but not a word did he utter, and gradually the fury ebbed, turning to
distant curiosity and then, finally. a kind of fascination. Or so
Fletcher thought. He realized that he might be altogether wrong in
his interpretations of what was going on in the unique, mercurial
mind of the other man.
When Fletcher fell silent
Asenion said, “What are you most afraid of! Critical mass? Or
cumulative electron loss?”
“We’ve dealt
with the critical mass problem by powdering the stuff, shielding it
in graphite, and scattering it in low concentrations to fifty
different storage points. But it keeps on coming in--they love to
send it to us, it seems. And the thought that every atom of it is
giving off positrons that go around looking for electrons to
annihilate--” Fletcher shrugged. “On a small scale it’s
a useful energy pump, I suppose, tungsten swapped for plutonium with
energy gained in each cycle. But on a large scale, as we continue to
transfer electrons from our universe to theirs--”
“Yes,”
Asenion said.
“So we need a way
to dispose of--”
“Yes.” He
looked at his watch. “Where are you staying while you’re
in town, Fletcher?”
“The Faculty Club,
as usual. “
“Good.
I’ve got some crosses to make and I don’t want to wait
any longer, on account of possible pollen contamination. Go over to
the club and keep yourself amused for a few hours. Take a shower. God
knows you need one: you smell like something out of the jungle.
Relax, have a drink, come back at five o’clock. We can talk
about this again then.” He shook his head. “Plutonium-186!
What lunacy! It offends me just to say it out loud. It’s like
saying--saying--well, Billbergia
yukonensis. or Tillandsia bostoniae. Do you know what I
mean? No. No. Of course you don’t.” He waved his hands.
“Out! Come back at five!”
It was a long afternoon
for Fletcher. He phoned his wife, he phoned Jesse Hammond at the
laboratory, he phoned an old friend and made a date for dinner. He
showered and changed. He had a drink in the ornate lounge on the
Fifth Avenue side of the Club.
But his mood was grim,
and not merely because Hammond had told him that another four
kilograms of plutonium-186 had been reported from various regions
that morning. Asenion’s madness oppressed him.
There was nothing wrong
with an interest in plants, of course. Fletcher kept a philodendron
and something else, whose name he could never remember, in his own
office. But to immerse yourself in one highly specialized field of
botany with such intensity--it seemed sheer lunacy. No, Fletcher
decided, even that was all right, difficult as it was for him to
understand why anyone would want to spend his whole life cloistered
with a bunch of eerie plants. What was hard for him to forgive was
Asenion’s renunciation of physics. A mind like that--the
breadth of its vision--the insight Asenion had had into the greatest
of mysteries--dammit, Fletcher thought, he had owed it to the world
to stick to it! And instead, to walk away from everything, to hole
himself up in a cage of glass
Hammond’s right,
Fletcher told himself. Asenion really is crazy.
But it was useless to
fret about it. Asenion was not the first supergenius to snap under
contemplation of the Ultimate. His withdrawal from physics, Fletcher
said sternly to himself, was a matter between Asenion and the
universe. All that concerned Fletcher was getting Asenion’s
solution to the plutonium-186 problem; and then the poor man could be
left with his bromeliads in peace.
About half past four
Fletcher set out by cab to battle the traffic the short distance
uptown to Asenion’s place.
Luck was with him. He
arrived at ten of five. Asenion’s house-robot greeted him
solemnly and invited him to wait. “The master is in the
greenhouse,” the robot declared. “He will be with you
when he has completed the pollination.”
Fletcher waited. And
waited and waited.
Geniuses, he thought
bitterly. Pains in the neck, all of them. Pains in the
Just then the robot
reappeared. It was half past six. All was blackness outside the
window. Fletcher’s dinner date was for seven. He would never
make it.
“The master will
see you now,” said the robot.
Asenion looked limp and
weary, as though he had spent the entire afternoon smashing up
boulders. But the formidable edge seemed gone from him, too. He
greeted Fletcher with a pleasant enough smile, offered a word or two
of almost-apology for his tardiness, and even had the robot bring
Fletcher a sherry. It wasn’t very good sherry, but to get
anything at all to drink in a teetotaler’s house was a
blessing, Fletcher figured.
Asenion waited until
Fletcher had had a few sips. Then he said, “I have your
answer.”
“I knew you would.”
There was a long silence.
“Thiotimoline,”
said Asenion finally.
“Thiotimoline?”
“Absolutely.
Endochronic disposal. It’s the only way. And, as you’ll
see, it’s a necessary
way.”
Fletcher took a hasty
gulp of the sherry. Even when he was in a relatively mellow mood, it
appeared, Asenion was maddening. And mad. What was this new craziness
now? Thiotimoline? How could that preposterous substance, as insane
in its way as plutonium-186, have any bearing on the problem?
Asenion said, “I
take it you know the special properties of thiotimoline?”
“Of
course. Its molecule is distorted into adjacent temporal dimensions.
Extends into the future, and, I think, into the past. Thiotimoline
powder will dissolve in water one second before
the water is added.”
“Exactly,”
Asenion said. “And if the water isn’t added, it’ll
go looking for it. In the future.”
“What does this
have to do with--”
“Look here,”
said Asenion. He drew a scrap of paper from his shirt pocket. “You
want to get rid of something. You put it in this container here. You
surround the container with a shell made of polymerized thiotimoline.
You surround the shell with a water tank that will deliver water to
the thiotimoline on a timed basis, and you set your timer so that the
water is due to arrive a few seconds from now. But at the last moment
the timing device withholds the water.”
Fletcher stared at the
younger man in awe.
Asenion said, “The
water is always about to arrive, but never quite does. The
thiotimoline making up the plastic shell is pulled forward one second
into the future to encounter the water. The water has a high
probability of being there, but not quite high enough. It’s
actually another second away from delivery, and always will be. The
thiotimoline gets dragged farther and farther into the future. The
world goes forward into the future at a rate of one second per
second, but the thiotimoline’s velocity is essentially
infinite. And of course it carries with it the inner container, too.
“
“In which we have
put our surplus plutonium-186.”
“Or anything else
you want to dispose of,” said Asenion.
Fletcher felt dizzy.
“Which will travel on into the future at an infinite rate--”
“Yes. And because
the rate is infinite, the problem of the breakdown of thiotimoline
into its stable isochronic form, which has hampered most
time-transport experiments, isn’t an issue. Something traveling
through time at an infinite velocity isn’t subject to little
limitations of that kind. It’ll simply keep going until it
can’t go any farther.”
“But how does
sending it into the future solve the problem?” Fletcher asked.
“The plutonium-186 still stays in our universe, even if we’ve
bumped it away from our immediate temporal vicinity. The electron
loss continues. Maybe even gets worse, under temporal acceleration.
We still haven’t dealt with the fundamental--”
“You never were
much of a thinker, were you, Fletcher?” said Asenion quietly,
almost gently. But the savage contempt in his eyes had the force of a
sun going nova.
“I do my best. But
I don’t see--”
Asenion
sighed. “The thiotimoline will chase the water in the outer
container to the end of time, carrying with it the plutonium in the
inner container. To the end of time. Literally.
“
“And?”
“What happens at
the end of time, Fletcher?”
“Why--absolute
entropy--the heat-death of the universe--”
“Precisely. The
Final Entropic Solution. All molecules equally distributed throughout
space. There will be no further place for the water-seeking
thiotimoline to go. The end of the line is the end of the line. It,
and the plutonium it’s hauling with it, and the water it’s
trying to catch up with, will all plunge together over the entropic
brink into antitime.”
“Antitime,”
said Fletcher in a leaden voice. “ Antitime?”
“Naturally. Into
the moment before the creation of the universe. Everything is in
stasis. Zero time, infinite temperature. All the universal mass
contained in a single incomprehensible body. Then the thiotimoline
and the plutonium and the water arrive.” Asenion’s eyes
were radiant. His face was flushed. He waved his scrap of paper
around as though it were the scripture of some new creed. “There
will be a tremendous explosion. A Big Bang, so to speak. The
beginning of all things. You--or should I say I?--will be responsible
for the birth of the universe.”
Fletcher, stunned, said
after a moment, “ Are you serious?”
“I
am never anything but serious. You have your solution. Pack up your
plutonium and send it on its way. No matter how many shipments you
make, they’ll all arrive at the same instant. And with the same
effect. You have no choice, you know. The plutonium must
be disposed of. And--” His eyes twinkled with some of the
old Asenion playfulness. “The universe must be created,
or else how will any of us get to be where we are? And this is how it
was done. Will be done. Inevitable, ineluctable, unavoidable,
mandatory. Yes? You see?”
“Well, no. Yes.
Maybe. That is, I think I do,” said Fletcher, as if in a daze.
“Good. Even if you
don’t, you will.”
“I’ll
need--to talk to the others--”
“Of course you
will. That’s how you people do things. That’s why I’m
here and you’re there.” Asenion shrugged. “Well, no
hurry about it. Create the universe tomorrow, create it the week
after next, what’s the difference? It’ll get done sooner
or later. It has to, because it already has been done. You see?”
“Yes. Of course. Of
course. And now--if you’ll excuse me--” Fletcher
murmured. “I--ah--have a dinner appointment in a little while”
“That can wait too,
can’t it?” said Asenion, smiling with sudden surprising
amiability. He seemed genuinely glad to have been of assistance.
“There’s something I forgot to show you this afternoon. A
remarkable plant, possibly unique--a nidularium, it is, Brazilian,
not even named yet, as a matter of fact--just coming into bloom. And
this one--wait till you see it, Fletcher, wait till you see it--”
Murder in the Urth Degree
by Edward
Wellen
LET THERE BE DAY.”
Day was
when he said it was. Periscoped sunlight obediently flooded the
stateroom at the core of Terrarium Nine.
Keith Flammersfeld saw
the light with still-closed eyes and knew that his little world
remained safe and warm outside his eyelids. Lazily, he removed from
his temples the interactive patcher that had put him into the video
of Through the Looking-Glass that had just now faded from the
screen of his computer/player.
He opened his eyes and
sat up in his bunk and stretched. He loosed a jaw-cracking yawn,
momentarily disappearing the chipmunk pouches that flanked his
self-satisfied mouth. To keep up his muscle tone and stay in shape,
he lay supine again and thought aerobic thoughts for a good five
minutes. He was pushing forty, but he was pushing forty back.
Feeling fit after all
that exercise, he sat up and swung around to put his feet on the
carpeted deck. He checked his priorities: the call of nature could
wait, the clamor from his stomach could not. He called for his tray.
It slid out of the
bulkhead to fit just above his lap. He put away a healthy breakfast
of fruits, vegetables, and grains--all grown right here inside
Terrarium Nine. The tray sensed when the last of the food was gone
and slid itself back into the bulkhead.
Flammersfeld stood up and
got out of his pajama shorts. He tossed them into the revamper,
stepped into the toilet cubicle and relieved himself, washed up,
fizzed his mouth clean, and put on fresh shorts.
Two steps to the right
took Flammersfeld to his office. He sat down at his master computer
and tapped keys. The screen displayed a blank requisition form.
His face split in a huge
grin as he typed two items and moused them into the right spaces.
Tight facial muscles around mouth and eyes told him it was a
malicious grin. At this awareness, he quickly slackened the grin into
an expression of innocent merriment. Then, reminding himself that he
was all alone aboard Terrarium Nine and that no one watched, he
hauled again on the lines of the malicious grin.
He savored, then saved,
the requisition. He was on the point of sending it to the home office
on Earth, when he all but jumped out of his skin.
The lower right quadrant
of the screen was displaying a reduced image of another monitor
screen’s display.
This display labeled
itself as coming from the work station in Buck Two. He put his own
page on hold and filled the screen with the Intruding display.
He stared at it, feeling
his eyes bulge.
Someone had entered his
system and infected it with rabid doggerel.
Is the sun a milky bud?
Whence the shadows on my
face? Why’s the sky as green as blood?
Who will win the Red
Queen’s race?
Madness.
But even madness had to
have a logical explanation.
Possible explanation
number one, a computer virus. If true, it would have entered by way
of the master computer, sole link to Earth and the universe. What
would be the point of trying to trick him into thinking the message
came from Buck Two’s slave computer, not from Buck One’s
central memory? Merely the prankish pleasure of sending him on a
wild-goose chase through Buck Two’s jungle? A small payoff for
what would have to have been a major effort, cracking the vaccinated
and regularly boostered Labcom system headquartered on Earth.
Possible explanation
number two, a stowaway, presence hitherto entirely unsuspected by
Flammersfeld and completely overlooked by all sensors. If true, the
person would have had to slip aboard during resupply a full year ago.
If such a one had survived all that while by living on the fruits and
vegetables and grains grown in Terrarium Nine--though how that could
be when Flammersfeld kept those precious items all carefully tagged
and tabulated and tracked--why would that stowaway give his or her
presence away at this point? Lonely and dying for companionship?
Fallen ill and in need of help? Gone mad and about to attack? Having
bided his or her time, now ready for a takeover bid?
Possible
explanation number three, true madness--Flammersfeld’s own.
Could Flammersfeld himself have programmed that display, say while
dream-experiencing Through
the Looking-Glass? Had cabin fever affected his brain, split his
awareness?
Even as he stared at the
screen the display changed. Another verse appeared, letter by letter,
slowly, painfully, as though stiff and hesitant fingers were working
in real time.
When Adam delved
Was it then I selved?
When Eve span
Was it then I began?
Flammersfeld
tightened his mouth. Someone was
in Buck Two.
He hurried to his
bulkhead safe and punched the combination. The safe door swung open
and he armed himself with the blaser he had never dreamed he might
one day have to use.
Terrarium Nine, in
near-earth orbit, was a six-bucker--six concentric spheres built on
R. Buckminster Fuller’s geodesic principle. A pseudo black hole
at the center provided Earth-gravity for the innermost sphere. The
calibrated pull diminished to nothing in the outermost sphere, where
the zero-gravity lab was. Access was by companionway and lift.
Terrarium Nine was large enough to make northern and southern
companionways practical and efficient. The two-way lift, slightly
bowed to bypass the pseudo black hole, ran along the axis, from polar
airlock to polar airlock. The cage had handholds to facilitate
orientation--rather, borealization or australization.
The Buck Two work station
was in the northern hemisphere. Flammersfeld made for the lift,
started to step in, then had a second thought.
He punched the lift to go
north to Buck Two by itself, but entered a five-minute delay.
Swiftly he backtracked
along the gently curving geodesic deckplates to the southern
companionway, and raced up it to the hatch.
If someone lay in wait
for Flammersfeld to emerge from the lift, and if that someone kept a
shrewd eye on the nearby north companionway hatch, Flammersfeld,
making his way around from the south, would come upon that someone
from behind.
He glanced at his watch,
sucked in, undogged the hatch. Blaser at the ready, he vaulted into
Buck Two’s lesser gravity, where, in lunar soil with various
admixtures of nitrates, plants flourished mightily.
He landed lightly, sought
concealment in a ten-meter-high stand of slowly swaying rye. Held his
breath, listened through the soft sough of programmed breeze, heard
nothing. He’d outflanked the intruder; seemed safe to move out.
Made good time through
chubby Swiss chard, enormous endives, plump peas, and bulky beans. In
under four minutes he reached the stout sweet potatoes. Nearly there.
The work station lay underneath the towering walnut tree dead ahead.
Past that stood tremendous tomatoes, prodigious peppers, large
lettuce, and corpulent cabbage; then a pile of mulch--and beyond all
that the lift.
He padded carefully to
the walnut and peered around the massive trunk. He saw plainly the
computer station. No one was at it.
The tomato vines blocked
his view of the lift area. Flammersfeld thrust against the soil for a
giant leap. He caught one-handed hold, five meters up, of the stem of
a thirty-meter tomato vine and hung there looking through and across
vines and foliage while the blaser quested.
He heard the sudden
coming-to-life hum of the lift.
That should make an
ambusher take position. Flammersfeld had a commanding view of the
lettuce and cabbage patches. An ambusher there would have a clear
field to the lift and the northern companionway hatch. No one moved
there.
The lift stopped and the
door slid open. Flammersfeld looked for some stir somewhere. The
blaser quested in vain. No one lay in wait.
He hung there, his face
reddening with anger and frustration; the tomatoes were large as his
head, so that it might have been one of them. A wild-goose chase
after all.
Grimacing, he stuck the
blaser in the waistband of his shorts and let himself down the vine
hand under hand. Once on deck, he headed for the work station.
He stepped into a loop of
vine and made a mental note to clear away debris and undergrowth
first chance he got. Before he realized the loop was a noose, it had
tightened around his ankle. Before he could bend to loosen it, he
found himself whipped high into the air, where he remained dangling
bouncily by his foot from the noose whose other end was tied to a
springy bough of the towering walnut tree.
Rolling his eyes way up
to look way down, he spotted the peg and the severed end of another
length of vine that had held the bough to the deck. Where below was
the trapper who had cut the tie?
Flammersfeld pretended to
be helpless. He thrashed about, twisting, twisting in the
continuously maintained light breeze. He made his voice sound
panicky. “Help! Let me down! Please!”
Still the damned
stowaway--for Flammersfeld had perforce settled on possible
explanation number two--did not show his or her face.
Flammersfeld could not
wait like this much longer; even with the inconsequential gravity of
Buck Two, the noose was cutting off the circulation to his caught
foot.
He gave himself one
painful minute more; then, when no foe appeared, he drew the blaser
from his waistband and sliced the vine.
As he fell he aimed the
blaser deckward and thumbed the retro stud. The gelled-light effect
slowed his fall enough to let him land rolling.
He scrambled to his
feet--and groaned as the numbed foot betrayed him. He put his weight
on his good foot and looked around for another trap--or even an
outright attack. He looked high up at the walnut tree’s
branches and foliage, saw no figure or contraption above him, and put
his back against the trunk. He bent to remove the noose from his
ankle--and saw on the ground a few fragments of cabbage leaf.
His jaw dropped as the
chilling realization hit him.
Then his lips thinned.
Very well. He knew now what he was up against.
It was not any of the
three possible explanations. It was a fourth--and it was probable and
in a few minutes would be provable.
He
laughed. To think of the poor miserable creature stalking him!
Then
he grew grim. He had underestimated the creature. That it might have
been responsible for the doggerel on the computer screen had not even
occurred to him. Had to give the thing credit; lot more to it than he
had thought. Still, now that he knew, he could handle the threat.
“All right, you
bastard,” he muttered through his malicious grin, “you’re
digging your own grave. “
He hobbled directly to
the cabbage patch. He looked down at an empty space and nodded. There
had been an uprooting, though some effort had been made to smooth the
disturbed soil.
As if that could fool
him! He knew perfectly well what had grown at this particular spot,
what should still be growing here, what seemed now on the loose.
A closer look at the soil
showed him a dotted line of milky green droplets running from the
center of the empty space. He touched one. Sticky. He brought the
finger to his nose and sniffed. His grin widened. The damned thing
was truly damned. Did it know it had not long?
The trail was short; it
ended abruptly at a nearby cabbage. A freshly ripped edge showed
where a leaf had been tom off. His grin stretched to its utmost. The
creature must be using the leaf to stem the flow.
The trail gone,
Flammersfeld cast about for other signs.
He glanced at the nearby
heap of mulch. He felt a twinge for having neglected it; he had let
it decompose almost to compost. He stiffened. There seemed some
difference in its makeup, some shifting of its components. It
consisted half of tree limbs he had sectioned for study or trimmed
and split into rough boards and half of discarded paper printouts. He
thought the paper covered more of the heap than when he had looked at
it last--more spread out, less neatly accordioned.
The creature might be
hiding under there.
Flammersfeld held the
blaser ready to fire.
With his free hand he
jerked lengths of dank and moldy continuous-fold printouts away in
long fluttering banners. He did not find his creature but did unearth
what appeared to be a crude catapult, a thing of branches and vine
and a ball of compacted soil held together with some vegetable glue.
He also found a winding drum fitted with a crank--a winch; this also
was fashioned of sectioned tree limbs and vine.
Both contraptions looked
as if a child might have put them together--but they had worked. The
catapult had shot the weighted end of a length of vine over a bough
and the winch had pulled the bough down.
He rooted around a bit
more and found something else--half a walnut shell big as his cupped
palm. The size he was used to; what it held was--something else.
The creature had used the
empty half-shell as a mortar to pound something vegetable into a
resinous black sticky substance that had an aromatic tarry smell. A
crude preparation, showing foam of spit.
Visions of amylase danced
in Flammersfeld’s head. What would the idiosyncratic enzymatic
action be in this case--on, what he felt sure he would find when he
analyzed it, green pepper? Seemed clear that the creature had in mind
a curare, an arrow poison. That was just what this substance appeared
to be.
Flammersfeld found
himself asweat. He needed a relaxant--but not this kind. This kind
could relax him to death.
Better get the hell out
of here. The creature was sure to bleed to death--but how soon?
Flammersfeld found himself not so sure any more about a lot of things
concerning the creature.
How could he not have
seen its intelligence waken, its hate turn on him?
Still crouching, he faced
about. For the first time, he looked around at this small world from
another’s point of view.
From the cabbage patch,
the computer screen was in plain sight. How much the creature must
have learned simply by watching and listening to the work and the
play!
This was not the time to
wonder about that. This was the time to beat it before a small arrow
flew or a small lance thrust.
Flammersfeld straightened
and hobbled double-time to the open lift.
He breathed a sigh at
having made it, and reached to punch the door shut and the lift down.
The killer must have
slipped into the lift while the noose held Flammersfeld adangle.
From the left near corner
of the cage, where the killer had crouched unseen behind the door
that did not slide flush, a frail arm thrust the sharpened and
poison-tipped twig into the soft tissue of Flammersfeld’s left
ankle.
Flammersfeld stared down
at the sadly wise and wearily savage face.
“God damn you,”
he said.
“You damn you.”
It was the first and last
time he ever heard the rusty piping voice.
But he was not thinking
about that. He was thinking about getting to the dispensary in time
to work up an antidote. His heart pounding, he punched the lift shut
and down.
His eyes were glazing and
he did not look at the creature again until the lift stopped and the
door opened. Then he kicked the creature out of his way and took two
stumbling steps forward before he sprawled his length on the deck.
The killer could not
stanch the flow of green blood and soon followed Flammersfeld across
the dark threshold into the abode of the dead. But the killer had won
what he wanted--vengeance and oblivion.
Inspector H. Seton
Davenport of the Terrestrial Bureau of Investigation had expected to
see anything but an inverted detective. Yet that was just what he
walked in upon.
Dr. Wendell Urth, the
Terran extraterrologists’ extraterrologist, had sounded strange
when he voiced Davenport in. Davenport had caught a note of strain in
the thin tenor delivery of “Enter!”
But Davenport had not
dreamed that was due to Dr. Urth’s attempting a headstand. At
least, that was what the learned ex-officio consultant to the T.B.I.
appeared at first glance to be doing.
Second glance showed him
that Dr. Urth was really engaged in rolling a hologram sun along the
baseboards. And that he was doing so to light up the floor under the
overhanging book-film shelves.
The blood rushing to Dr.
Urth’s head made his naked eyes look even more hyperthyroid.
That the eyes were naked and that the good doctor’s shirttail
hung out told Davenport what was up--or down--or toward. Without
taking another step, Davenport scanned the floor.
He spotted them not on
the floor itself but on a bottom shelf they had bounced to. He took
two steps and made a stretch and picked up what Dr. Urth was hunting
for.
“Here you are, Dr.
Urth.”
“Here I certainly
am,” Dr. Urth wheezed. “Embarrassingly so.” Then he
apparently replayed Davenport’s words and tone. He twisted the
upside-down half of his body to face Davenport, squinted, and
apparently made out what Davenport was holding. “Ah.” He
straightened with a huff and a puff, and placed the solar-powered
hologram sun on a pile of papers--it was evidently loaded to serve as
paperweight as well as to help light the vast dim cluttered room.
Dr. Urth took the
eyeglasses from Davenport’s outstretched hand. “Thanks.”
Then he smiled a transforming smile, one that changed him from
blinking owl to beaming Buddha. “But you have had your reward
in seeing me make a spectacle of myself.” He polished the
lenses with the shirttail, peered at and through them, then put them
on. The ears did their part but the button nose did little to support
the frame.
He gestured Davenport to
a chair. Himself he settled in his armchair-desk with a sigh the seat
echoed. He locked his hands over his paunch and looked expectant. The
paunch enhanced the look of expectancy.
“This is about the
death on Terrarium Nine?”
Davenport nodded. “
‘Death’ is the working word for it. ‘Death’
is ambiguous enough for something we can’t seem to label
satisfactorily. We can’t call it accident, we can’t call
it murder, and we’re not ready to call it suicide.”
Dr. Urth shifted himself
more comfortable. “Tell me the details.”
“It’s better
and easier to show you.” Davenport drew from a capacious pocket
a sheaf of holograms. He hopped his chair nearer Dr. Urth and leaned
over to show him the holograms one by one, pointing and explaining.
“Here’s a
close-up of Terrarium Nine taken from the investigating vehicle on
its approach in response to the anomaly alarm. Flammersfeld, the lone
experimenter aboard Terrarium Nine, had not transmitted the daily
report to Earth headquarters at the scheduled hour, had not punched
the All’s-Well signal at the appointed time, and had not
responded to worried queries...Here are shots the responding officer
took of both docking jacks before she made entry through north dock.
You’ll notice a year’s worth of undisturbed space dust
coats both jacks. That indicates no one docked since the last
resupply--a full year ago...Here’s the death scene, located in
the innermost sphere. “
Dr. Urth took this last
hologram into his own hands for protracted scrutiny. Then he gave
Davenport a quizzical look. “ Aside from telling me that
Flammersfeld had just come down to his living quarters from Buck Two,
bringing with him a cabbage either for study or for eating, that he
stepped out of the lift and fell dead, having somehow taken a
poison-tipped dart in his ankle, this hologram does not tell me all I
need to know if I’m to help you label his death. What about the
autopsy findings? What was the poison?”
Davenport shook his head.
“That’s what’s strange. You’d think a
biochemist of Flammersfeld’s standing would have brewed it in
his lab, in test tubes, without impurities. But this was a weird kind
of curare crudely prepared. The investigator found some of the guck
in a walnut shell that she discovered in a pile of trash in Buck
Two.” He handed Dr. Urth another hologram. “Here’s
a shot of that.”
Dr. Urth gave half a nod,
half a shake. “I see that, but what are these things?”
Davenport looked where
Dr. Urth pointed. “Oh, yeah; them. They seem to be a toy winch
and a toy catapult. The engineer we consulted says they’re no
great shakes but they work. Maybe Flammersfeld was in his second
childhood. “
Dr. Urth grunted
doubtingly. He went back to the death-scene hologram. He pointed a
stubby finger to a green-black mass. “This is the cabbage?”
Davenport grimaced. “Bad.
Pretty well rotted by the time our investigator got there. Stank up
the place, she said, so--after taking protection shots--she
incinerated it.”
“Bad.”
“Yes, putrid.”
Dr. Urth eyed the TBI
inspector censoriously. “I was not speaking of the cabbage, I
meant the officer’s action. She should have preserved the
evidence no matter how offensive she found it.”
Davenport neither
defended nor blamed the officer. Like her, he saw the cabbage not as
evidence but as happenstance. “Perhaps.”
“No perhaps about
it,” Dr. Urth snapped. His paunch showed momentary agitation,
then subsided with his sigh. “Well, it can’t be helped
now. But I do wish I could have had a closer look at that cabbage.
There’s something queer about it.”
Davenport grinned. “No
problem. This is one of the new SOTA holograms. See the bubble-mice
sealed in the left and top edges?”
Dr. Urth noticed for the
first time two beads of air that almost met at the top left corner of
the hologram film. His eyes lit up. “You mean that if I get a
stereotaxic fix on the cabbage the cabbage will enlarge?”
“Exactly. By
pinching the edge you can move the bubble-mouse along. Coordinate the
mice to enlarge and automatically enhance the area you want to
observe in greater detail. There’s a limit, of course, but
you’ll see quite a lot more than you do now.”
Dr. Urth pinched the mice
along till he had the cabbage area blown up by a magnification of
five.
He looked long and hard,
and at last removed his glasses to wipe tears of strain from his
eyes. “Much better, but still lacking. My complaint is not
about the resolution but about the object pictured. The cabbage
remains blurry thanks to decomposition. I must admit that even had
the officer preserved it so that you could put it before me I would
be hard put to make out much more. That does not mean that its
destruction is not a great loss. It should have been possible to
determine its exact composition by autopsy.”
Davenport stared. “
Autopsy? Of a cabbage?”
Dr. Urth nodded curtly.
“Autopsy. I choose my words carefully.” His mouth
twitched suddenly and he unbent unexpectedly, his voice mock-serious.
“I do not see-aitch-oh-you my cabbage twice.” He grew
fully serious again. “It’s clear that something got out
of hand--the experiment, the experimenter, or both.”
Davenport was still
working on the autopsy business. What was Dr. Urth getting at?
Dr. Urth sighed and
handed back the death-scene hologram. He gave a slight shiver, then
shot Davenport a look as if wondering whether Davenport had noticed.
Davenport kept a poker
face.
Dr. Urth breathed an
easier sigh. “This calls for mulling over.” He turned a
grave face and a twinkling eye on his visitor. “What would you
say to a finger of Ganymead?”
“I’d say
hello.” Davenport had heard of Ganymead but had never seen it,
much less tasted it. He knew it to be extremely rare and extremely
expensive and he knew many communities prohibited it. He was not
about to ask Dr. Urth how Dr. Urth had come by it. “I’m
game.”
He did not feel so game
when Dr. Urth drew two containers and two glasses from a liquor
drawer of the armchair-desk and one of the containers proved to hold
fingers.
Dr. Urth shook two
fingers out and stood one, fingernail down, in each glass.
Davenport looked and
shuddered.
One corner of Urth’s
rosy mouth lifted. “Ganymead is a binary. The fluid part
activates the solid part. The ‘fingernail’ is a
crystallization. Watch.”
He poured an amber fluid
out of the other container into one of the glasses and as it splashed
the nail the finger melted. The whole became a clear violet with a
bouquet that tickled the senses. Dr. Urth transformed the other
finger, handed one of the glasses to Davenport, and lifted the other
in a toasting gesture.
Davenport answered with a
lift of his own glass, sniffed, then sipped. Tantalizingly delicious,
deliciously tantalizing. He saw that it could be dangerous--a taste
too easily acquired for something not so easily acquired.
The
smooth but strong drink seemed to turn Dr. Urth philosophical. “
Actually, Ganymead comes not from Ganymede but from Callisto. So many
things are misnomers. What’s in a name, Davenport? I should
have yours--I’m
the couch potato, the settee spud, the Murphy-bed murphy. At
most, a rambler rose-tethered as I am to the University campus.
You’re the one with the gypsy in his soles, the man in the
field. Davenport, you’re a misnomer.”
Davenport permitted
himself a smile. Davenport’s nose was shaped for wedging into
tight spots; a youthful altercation had left a star-shaped scar on
his right cheek. Yet a fellow could get his fill of the field, lose
his taste for adventure, and--while cherishing his memories of
encounters of the close kind--look almost with envy at the cloistered
academic who adventured with his mind. Perhaps the Ganymead had
turned him philosophical--or prone to babble--too; he was about to
express his feelings about life when Dr. Urth saved him.
Dr. Urth had taken a last
sip, had raised the glass to his eye to look through its emptiness,
and now set it down with regretful finality. “Back to work. To
give Flammersfeld’s death its proper name, we must first
understand what Terrarium Nine is all about, what Flammersfeld was in
the business of.”
He raised a forefinger,
though Davenport had given no sign of breaking in.
“I know you think
you know, but please bear with me while I tell you what I think I
know. Let me state the obvious and posit the known--nothing is so
overlooked as the obvious and nothing is so mysterious as the known.
“
Davenport sweepingly
brought his palm up in sign of turning everything over to Dr. Urth.
Dr. Urth just as
graciously gave a nod. “To forestall ecological disruption,
Earth has laws against releasing genetically altered plants and
animals into the terrestrial environment. Such experiments must take
place off-planet. Hence, the Terrariums--at last count, a dozen?--in
near-earth orbit. A collateral benefit is zero gravity, which
facilitates such techniques as electrophoresis--the rapid
continuous-flow fractionating of concentrated solutions of proteins
in a high-intensity electric field. “ He cocked an eye at
Davenport. “Your turn. What do you think you know about
Terrarium Nine and Flammersfeld’s experiments?”
Davenport
shrugged. “All I know about Terrarium Nine is that it was
constructed and commissioned six years ago and that Flammersfeld was
its first and only personnel. All I know about Flammersfeld is that
he was a hard worker who never took a break; he routinely turned down
R and R--according to his superiors in the home office he said he got
all the relaxation he needed by interactive video, and in fact at the
time of his death Through
the Looking-Glass was in his computer/player --and he was working
concurrently on two unrelated projects. Plus he had plans for the
future--his last, though unsent, requisition was for swine embryo and
eagle eggs. “
Dr. Urth wrinkled his
brow, then resettled his glasses. “I would like to see his
notes on the two unrelated projects you mentioned.”
Davenport looked
uncomfortable. “That may be impossible.”
Dr. Urth’s mouth
tightened. “Is there a clearance problem? If so, good day.”
Davenport hastened to
say, “It’s not that, Dr. Urth, not that at all. I believe
you have cosmic clearance.”
That mollified Dr. Urth.
“Then what is the problem? Did Flammersfeld destroy his notes?”
“Not that, either.
It’s just that he seems to have been paranoidally secretive.
His notes are in his computer’s memory, but locked behind
passwords that we haven’t broken--yet.”
“I admire your
optimism, sir, but optimism--while admirable even when it is
foolish--is pie in the sky, a future repast; it does not feed us
now.”
Davenport reddened.
Dr. Urth relented. “Two
unrelated projects; you know that much. You may know more than you
think you know--that is, if you can give me the titles of the two
projects. His superiors at the home office to whom he reported must
have had some idea of what he was working on if they were to approve
his requisitions.”
Davenport brightened. “I
don’t have the titles at the tip of my tongue, but I do
remember that he was seeking a cure for hemophilia and that he was
looking for the--uh--direction sensors in plant cells.”
Dr. Urth patted his
paunch as if he had just had a good feed. “Excellent.
Hemophilia. Bleeder’s disease. Disease of kings--e.g., the
Romanovs of Czarist Russia. Women pass it on through a recessive X
chromosome but do not themselves have it. Profuse bleeding, even from
the slightest wound. In a test tube, normal blood from a vein clots
in five to fifteen minutes; hemophiliac clotting time varies from
thirty minutes to hours. A natural for zero-gravity research. While
the sheer bulk of total plasma would rule out its fractionation by
electrophoresis at zero gravity, the same does not hold for minor
components, such as clotting factors.”
His voice pitched even
higher in his excitement. “Yes, yes. And Flammersfeld’s
other project is another natural for zero-gravity research. The plant
world presents an intriguing puzzle: how does a plant sense the
direction of gravity? Plants tend to grow in a vertical
direction--but we have yet to find the cellular direction sensors.
Yes, yes. We have our answer. “
Davenport stared at Dr.
Urth. “We have?”
“It’s as
obvious,” Dr. Urth said sharply, ‘‘as the nose on
my face.”
Maybe
that’s why I don’t see it. Davenport muttered
mentally. But he put on a pleasant mask. “You said it’s
easy to overlook the obvious.”
“You’ve been
listening, at least.” Dr. Urth made himself a monument of
patience. “Listen now to a bit of verse.
“‘The time
has come,’ the Walrus said,
‘To talk of many
things:
Of shoes--and ships--and
sealing-wax--
Of cabbages--and kings--
And why the sea is
boiling hot--
And whether pigs have
wings. ‘ “
Dr. Urth looked at
Davenport and smiled. “You don’t know whether to laugh or
snort at such utter nonsense. Well, laugh. We humans need a leavening
of levity; there can be too much gravity.”
Davenport did not laugh,
but then he did not snort. “That’s from a child’s
book, isn’t it?”
“Indeed.
The child in Charles Lutwidge Dodgson was named Lewis Carroll. The
verse is from his Through
the Looking Glass. “
“Flammersfeld’s
interactive video!”
“The same.”
Davenport shook his head.
“How does it tie in?”
“It ties in first
with an even older nursery rhyme.
“‘Old King
Cole
Was a merry old soul,
And a merry old soul was
he;
He called for his pipe,
And he called for his
bowl,
And he called for his
fiddlers three.
Every fiddler, he had a
fiddle,
And a very fine fiddle
had he;
Twee tweedle dee, tweedle
dee, went the fiddlers.
Oh, there’s none so
rare
As can compare
With King Cole and his
fiddlers three!’ “
This time Davenport could
not help laughing. And after a moment Dr. Urth joined in.
Davenport sobered first
and non-judgmentally waited for Dr. Urth to subside.
Dr. Urth sounded all the
more serious when he picked up where he had left off. “The
rhyme about King Cole was in Lewis Carroll’s mind--consciously
or unconsciously--when Carroll wrote the Walrus’s speech. ‘
King Cole’--cole as in cole slaw--split naturally into’
cabbages and kings.’ And came back together in Flammersfeld’s
mind as a protoplast fusion of cabbage seed and royal blood. “
Davenport fumbled the
death-scene hologram to light and stared at the magnified cabbage.
“You mean this thing…?”
Dr. Urth nodded. He
pointed to a spot atop the cabbage. “Very like a crown gall,
wouldn’t you say?”
“I wouldn’t--since
I don’t know the first thing about crown galls.”
“Then
take my word for it. There are two kinds of living cells: eukaryotic
and prokaryotic. A eukaryotic cell is nucleated; that is, its nucleus
walls in its chromosomes. A prokaryotic cell is less organized; that
is, its chromosomes drift freely in the cytoplasm, in among the
organelles. Enter Agrobacter--short for Agrobacterium
tumefaciens. Agrobacter’s innards hold the Ti plasmid--a
tiny loop of DNA--some two hundred genes long. Agrobacter can hook a
plant cell and inject the Ti plasmid into the nucleus. Once inside, a
twelve-gene length--called tDNA, for transfer DNA--cuts loose from
the Ti plasmid and becomes part of the plant cell chromosome. The
tDNA genes then program the plant to nurture Agrobacter.”
Dr. Urth paused a moment
for breath and--Davenport thought--for dramatic effect.
“Now I come to the
point of all this. The insidious parasite Agrobacter causes a
tumorous swelling--a crown gall.” Dr. Urth’s voice rose
in wrath. “Can you imagine? That nasty procedure was
Flammersfeld’s elaborate way of fitting his poor little
intelligent hybrid King Cole with a crown!”
Davenport gazed upon the
image, saw only a rotted cabbage, and tried to picture it as it had
been in life--a being with reasoning power, and therefore memory and
foresight; with feelings, and therefore the need to love and hate. It
would have been mostly head, the face framed in leaves. He shivered.
For a flash he visualized its round face superimposed upon Dr. Urth’s
round face, another bud of Buddha. He glanced at Dr. Urth.
Dr. Urth looked
melancholy. It hit Davenport that Dr. Urth had been a child prodigy.
Dr. Urth would have fellow feeling for freaks of any kind. Dr. Urth
must have felt his look and sensed his thoughts, for Dr. Urth met his
gaze and smiled sadly.
“We all--ourselves
and our matrix--are interference patterns. So it comes natural to
think of crossing this with that. It’s the nature of the
beast--meaning the universe. All in all, it’s just as well
Flammersfeld and his creature died when they did--if not as they did.
We humans need a minimum of levity; there can be too much gravity.
But Flammersfeld went too far, interfered too much.” His brow
darkened. “ And meant to go on interfering. Remember his last
requisition--for swine embryo and eagle eggs? And remember the line
from Lewis Carroll--’whether pigs have wings’? We humans
need a minimum amount of gravity; there can be too much levity.”
His face closed. “That’s it, then.”
Davenport put the
holograms away and got up to go. “Thanks for your help, Dr.
Urth.”
Dr. Urth waved that away.
He bounced to his feet and shook hands.
His voice halted
Davenport on the threshold. “Inspector.”
Davenport turned around.
“Yes, Dr. Urth?”
“About my fee...”
Davenport smiled. “I
wondered when that would come.”
“Now you know. It
comes now. A few trifles.”
“You know I’ll
do my best. They are?”
“First, two bits of
information to satisfy my curiosity. When you get back to New
Washington, kindly stop by Near-earth, Ltd., and retrieve the file on
Terrarium Nine. See if you can find out from Flammersfeld’s
requisitions, and other documents, the genetic history of the cabbage
and of the hemophiliac blood.” He smiled. “I’ve a
mind bet that the cabbage was a savoy cabbage and that the blood came
from a descendant of the House of Savoy.”
Davenport blinked.
“Savoy? Why would Flammersfeld have specified savoy cabbage and
Savoy blood?”
“For the same
reason that impelled James Joyce to frame a view of Cork in cork--the
sense of fitness.”
Davenport thought about
that, then shook his head.
“If you don’t
mind my saying so, the sense of fitness can carryover into madness.”
Dr. Urth hooded his mouth
with a pudgy hand. “You take my point so exactly that I almost
hesitate to name the balance of my fee.”
Davenport eyed him warily
but felt compelled to say, “Name it.”
“Arrange for the
researcher who has taken over Terrarium Nine to cross tortoise with
cricket.”
Davenport tried to
imagine what that would look like. “What on earth for?”
“So when I lose my
eyeglasses a frame made of the shell will lead me to them--by the
chirp.”
Trantor Falls
by Harry
Turtledove
THE IMPERIAL PALACE
STOOD AT THE CENTER OF A HUNDRED square miles of greenery. In normal
times, even in abnormal times, such insulation was plenty to shield
the chief occupant of the palace from the hurly-burly of the rest of
the metaled world of Trantor.
Times now, though, were
not normal, nor even to be described by so mild a word as “abnormal.”
They were disastrous. Along with magnolias and roses, missile
launchers had flowered in the gardens. Even inside the palace,
Dagobert VIII could hear the muted snarl. Worse, though, was the fear
that came with it.
A soldier burst into the
command post where the Emperor of the Galaxy and his officers still
groped for ways to beat back Gilmer’s latest onslaught. Without
so much as a salute, the man gasped out, “ Another successful
landing, sire, this one in the Nevrask sector.”
Dagobert’s worried
gaze flashed to the map table. “Too close, too close,” he
muttered. “How does the cursed bandit gain so fast?”
One of the Emperor’s
marshals speared the messenger with his eyes. “How did they
force a landing there? Nevrask is heavily garrisoned.” The
soldier stood mute. “ Answer me!” the marshal barked.
The man gulped,
hesitated, at last replied, “Some of the troops fled, Marshal
Rodak, sir, when Gilmer’s men landed. Others” He paused
again, nervously licking his lips, but had to finish: “Others
have gone over to the rebel, sir.”
“More treason!”
Dagobert groaned. “Will none fight to defend me?”
The only civilian in the
room spoke then: “Men will fight, sire, when they have a cause
they think worth fighting for. The University has held against Gilmer
for four days now. We shall not yield it to him.”
“By the space
fiend, Dr. Sarns, I’m grateful to your students, yes, and proud
of them too,” Dagobert said. “They’ve put up a
braver battle than most of my troopers. “
Yokim Sarns politely
dipped his head. Marshal Rodak, however, grasped what his sovereign
had missed. “Majesty, they’re fighting for themselves and
their buildings, not for you,” he said. Even as he spoke,
another sector of the map shone in front of him and Dagobert went
from blue to red: red for the blood Gilmer was spilling allover
Trantor, Sarns thought bitterly.
“Have we no hope,
then?” asked the Emperor of the Galaxy.
“Of victory? None.”
Rodak’s military assessment was quick and definite. “Of
escape, perhaps fighting again, yes. Our air- and spacecraft still
hold the corridor above the palace. With a landing at Nevrask,
though, Gilmer will soon be able to bring missiles to bear on it--and
on us.”
“Better to flee
than to fall into that monster’s clutches,” Dagobert
said, shuddering. He looked at the map again. “I am sure you
have an evacuation plan ready. Implement it, and quickly.”
“Aye, sire.”
The marshal spoke into a throat mike. The Emperor turned to Yokim
Sarns. “Will you come with us, professor? Trantor under
Gilmer’s boots will be no place for scholars.”
“‘Thank you,
sire, but no.” As Sarns shook his head, strands of mouse-brown
hair, worn unfashionably long, swirled around his ears. “My
place is at the University, with my faculty and students.”
“Well said,”
Marshal Rodak murmured, too softly for Dagobert to hear.
But the Emperor, it
seemed, still had one imperial gesture left in him. Turning to Rodak,
he said, “If Dr. Sarns wishes to return to the University,
return he shall. Detail an aircar at once, while he has some hope of
getting there in safety. “
“Aye, sire, “
the marshal said again. He held out a hand to Yokim Sarns. “
And good luck to you. I think you’ll need it.”
By the time the aircar
pilot neared the University grounds, Yokim Sarns was a delicate shade
of green. The pilot had flown meters--sometimes centimeters--above
Trantor’s steel roof, and jinked like a wild thing to confuse
the rebels’ targeting computers.
The car slammed down on
top of the library. Dr. Sarns’s teeth met with an audible
click. The pilot threw open the exit hatch. Sarns pulled himself
together. “Er--thank you very much,” he told the pilot,
unbuckling his safety harness.
“Just get out, get
under cover, and let me lift off,” she snapped. Sarns scrambled
away from the aircar toward an entrance. The wash of wind as the car
sped away nearly knocked him off his feet.
The door opened. Two
people in helmets dashed out and dragged Sarns inside. “How do
we fare here?” he asked.
“Our next few
graduating classes are getting thinned out,” Maryan Drabel
answered somberly. Till Gilmer’s revolt, she had been head
librarian. Now, Sarns supposed, chief of staff best summed up her
job. “We’re still holding, though--we pushed them out of
Dormitory Seven again a few minutes ago. “
“Good,” Sarns
said. He was as much an amateur commander as she was an aide, but the
raw courage of their student volunteers made up for much of their
inexperience. The youngsters fought as if they were defending holy
ground--and so in a way they were, Sarns thought. If Gilmer’s
men wrecked the University, learning all over the Galaxy would take a
deadly blow.
“What will Dagobert
do?” asked Egril Joons. Once University dietitian, he kept an
army fed these days.
Sarns had no way to
soften the news. “He’s going to run.”
Under the transparent
flash shield of her helmet, Maryan Drabel’s face went grim, or
rather grimmer. “Then we’re left in the lurch?”
“Along
with everyone else who backed the current dynasty.” Two
generations, a dynasty! Sarns thought. The way the history of the
Galactic Empire ran these past few sorry centuries, though, two
generations was a dynasty. And with a usurper like Gilmer
seizing Trantor, that history looked to run only downhill from here
on out.
Maryan might have picked
the thought from his mind. “Gilmer’s as much a barbarian
as if he came straight from the Periphery,” she said.
“I
wish he were in the
Periphery,” Egril Joons said. “Then we wouldn’t
have to deal with him.”
“Unfortunately,
however, he’s here,” said Yokim Sarns.
The thick carpets of the
Imperial Palace, the carpets that had cushioned the feet of Dagobert
VIII, of Cleon II, of Stannell VI--by the space fiend, of Ammenetik
the Great!--now softened the booted strides of Gilmer I,
self-proclaimed Emperor of the Galaxy and Lord of All. Gilmer kicked
at the rug with some dissatisfaction. He was used to clanging as he
walked, to having his boots announce his presence half a corridor
away. Not even a man made all of bell metal could have clanged on the
carpets of the Imperial Palace.
He tipped his head back,
brought a bottle to his lips. Liquid fire ran down his throat. After
a long pull, he threw the bottle away. It smashed against a wall.
Frightened servants scurried to clean up the mess.
“Don’t waste
it,” Vergis Fenn said.
Gilmer scowled at his
fleet commander. “Why not? Plenty more where that one came
from. “ His scowl stabbed a servant. “Fetch me another of
the same, and one for Vergis here too.” The man dashed off to
do his bidding.
“There, you see?”
Gilmer said to Fenn. “By the Galaxy, we couldn’t waste
everything Trantor’s stored up if we tried for a hundred years.
“
“I suppose that’s
so,” Fenn said. He was quieter than his chieftain, a better
tactician perhaps, but not a leader of men. After a moment, he went
on thoughtfully, “Of course, Trantor’s spent a lot more
than a hundred years gathering all this. More than a thousand, I’d
guess.”
“Well, what if it
has?” Gilmer said. “That’s why we wanted it, yes?
By the balls Dagobert didn’t have, nobody’s ever sacked
Trantor before. Now everything here is mine!”
The servant returned with
the bottles. He set them on a table of crystal and silver, then fled.
Gilmer drank. With all he’d poured down these last couple of
days, he shouldn’t have been able to see, let alone walk and
talk. But triumph left him drunker than alcohol. Gilmer the
Conqueror, that’s who he was!
Vergis Fenn drank too,
but not as deep. “ Aye, all Trantor’s ours, but for the
University. Seven days now, and those madmen are still holding out.”
“No more of these
little firefights with them, then,” Gilmer growled. “By
the Galaxy, I’ll blast them to radioactive dust and have done!
See to it, Fenn, at once.”
“As you would,
sir--sire, but--” Fenn let the last word hang.
“But what?”
Gilmer said, scowling. “If they fight for Dagobert: they’re
traitors to me. And smashing traitors will frighten Trantor.”
He blinked owlishly, pleased and surprised at his own wordplay.
To
his annoyance, Fenn did not notice it. He said, “I don’t
think they are fighting
for Dagobert any more, just against us, to hold on to what they have.
That might make them easier to deal with. And if we--if you--nuked
the University, scholars all over the Galaxy would vilify your name
forever.”
“Scholars all over
the Galaxy can eat space, for all I care,” Gilmer said. But, he
discovered, that wasn’t quite true. Part of being Emperor was
acting the way Emperors were supposed to act. With poor grace, he
backpedaled a little: “If they acknowledge me and stop
fighting, I suppose I’m willing to let them live. “
“Shall I attempt a
cease-fire, then?” Fenn asked.
“Go ahead, since
you seem to think it’s a good idea,” Gilmer told him.
“But not if they don’t acknowledge me, understand? If
they still claim that unprintable son of a whore Dagobert’s
Empire, blow ‘em off the face of the planet.”
“Yes,
sire.” This time, Fenn did not stumble over the title. He’s
my servant too, Gilmer thought.
The new Emperor of the
Galaxy took a good swig from the bottle. He made as if to throw it at
one of the palace flunkies, then, laughing, set it down gently as the
fellow ducked.
Gilmer went down to the
command post in the bowels of the Imperial Palace, the command post
from which, until recently, poor stupid Dagobert VIII had battled to
keep him off Trantor. Gilmer’s boots clanged most
satisfactorily there. Whoever had designed the command post, in the
lost days of the Galactic Empire’s greatness, had understood
about commanders and boots.
The television screen in
front of Vergis Fenn went blank. He swiveled his chair, nodded in
surprise to see Gilmer behind him. “Sire, we have a cease-fire
between our forces and those of the University,” he said. “It
was easy to arrange. Our troops and theirs will both hold in place
until the final armistice is arranged. “
“Good,”
Gilmer said. “Well done.”
“Thank you. The
leader of the University has invited you to meet him on his ground to
fix the terms of the armistice. He offers hostages to ensure your
safety, and says he knows what will happen to everything he’s
been fighting to keep if he plays you false. Shall I call him back
and tell him no anyhow?”
“‘No, I’ll
go there,” Gilmer said. “‘What d’you think,
I’m afraid of somebody without so much as a single starship to
his name? Besides”--he smiled a greedy smile--”like as
not I’ll get a look at whatever treasures they’ve been
fighting so hard to hang on to. If I can’t beat ‘em out
of him, I’ll tax ‘em out--that’s what being Emperor
is all about. So go ahead and set up the meeting with this--what’s
his name, Vergis?”
“Yokim Sarns.”
“Yokim Sarns. What
do I call him when I see him? General Sarns? Admiral? Warlord?”
Fenn’s expression
was faintly bemused. “The only title he claims is ‘Dean,’
sire.”
“‘Dean?”
Gilmer threw back his head and laughed loud and long. “ Aye,
I’ll meet with the fierce Dean Yokim Sarns, the scourge of the
lecture halls. Why not? Set it up for me, Vergis. Meanwhile”--he
turned away--”I’1l check how we’re doing with the
rest of the planet.”
Banks of televisor
screens, relaying images from all over Trantor, told him what he
wanted to know. Here he saw a platoon of his troopers carrying
plastic tubs full of jewels back toward their ships; there more
soldiers looting a residential block; somewhere else another squad,
most of the men drunk, accompanied by twice their number of
Trantorian women, some scared-looking, others smiling and brassy.
Gilmer
grinned. This was
why he’d taken Trantor: to sack a world unsacked for fifty
generations, even more than to rule it after the sack. Watching his
dream unfold made that came after seem of scant importance by
comparison.
Watching...His gaze went
back to that third screen. All the women there would have been
heart-stopping beauties on a lesser world, but they were just
enlisted men’s pickings on Trantor. With so many billions of
women to choose from, the ones less than spectacular were simply
ignored.
Smiling in anticipation,
Gilmer took the spiral slidewalk up to the Imperial bedchambers. Not
even in his wildest dreams had he imagined anything like them.
Thousands of years of the best ingenuity money could buy had been
lavished there on nothing but pleasure.
Billye smiled too, when
he came in. Her tawny hair spilled over bare shoulders. Disdaining
all the elaborations the bedchamber offered, Gilmer took her in his
arms and sank to the floor with her. There he soon discovered an
advantage of thick carpeting he had not suspected before.
She murmured lazily and
lay in his arms through the afterglow. She’d been his woman
since he was just an ambitious lieutenant. He’d always thought
her splendid, both to look at and to love.
He did still, he told
himself. He even felt the truth of the thought. But it was not
complete truth, not any more. The televisor screen had shown him
that, by Trantorian standards, she was ordinary. And how in reason
and justice could the Emperor of the Galaxy and Lord of All possess a
consort who was merely ordinary?
He grunted, softly. “A
centicredit for your thoughts,” Billye said.
“Ahh, nothing
much,” he said, and squeezed her. Her voice was not perfectly
sweet either, he thought.
“Here he comes.”
Maryan Drabel pointed to the single figure climbing down from the
aircar that had descended in the no-man’s-land between Gilmer’s
lines and those held by the student-soldiers of the University.
“He’s alone,”
Yokim Sarns said in faint surprise. “I told him we were willing
to grant him any reasonable number of bodyguards he wanted. He has
more courage than I’d thought.”
“What difference
does that make, when he can’t--or won’t--control his
troops?” Maryan Drabel said bitterly. “How many raped
women do we have in our clinic right now?”
“Thirty-seven,”
Sarns answered. “And five men.”
“And that’s
just from this one tiny corner of Trantor, and only counts people who
got through Gilmer’s troops and ours,” she said. “How
many over the whole planet, where he has forty billion people to
terrorize? How many robberies? How many fires, set just for the fun
of them? How many murders, Yokim? How do they weigh in the balance
against one man’s courage?”
“They crush it.”
Sarns passed a weary hand across his forehead. “I know that as
well as you, Maryan. But if he has courage, we can’t handle him
as we would have before. “
“There is that,”
she admitted. “Quiet, now--he’s almost here. “
Gilmer, Sarns thought,
looked more like a barbarian chief than Emperor, even if a purple
cape billowed behind him as he advanced. Beneath it he wore the
coverall blotched in shades of green and brown that his soldiers
used. Sarns supposed it was a camouflage suit, but in Trantor’s
gleaming corridors it had more often exposed than protected the
troopers. The nondescript gray of Sarns’s own coat and trousers
was harder to spot here.
The
usurper’s boots beat out a metallic tattoo. “Majesty,”
Sarns said, knowing he should speak first and also knowing that,
since Gilmer had seized Trantor, the title was true de
facto if not de jure. Sarns did not approve of dealing in
untruths.
“You’re Dean
Sarns, eh?” Gilmer’s granite rumble should have come out
of that hard, bearded countenance. The Emperor of the Galaxy
scratched his nose, went on. “You’ve got some tough
fighters behind you, Sarns. I tell you right now, I wouldn’t
mind taking the lot of them into my fleet. “
“You are welcome to
put out a call, sire, but I doubt you’d find many volunteers,”
Sarns answered. “These young men and women are not soldiers by
trade, but rather students. They--and I--care more for abstract
knowledge than for the best deployment of a blast-rifle company. “
Gilmer nodded. “I’d
heard that said. I found it hard to believe. Truth to tell, Sarns, I
still do. You spend your whole lives chasing this--what did you call
it?--abstract knowledge?”
“We do,”
Sarns said proudly. “This is the University, after all, the
distillation of all the wisdom that has accumulated over the
millennia of Imperial history. We codify it, systematize it, and,
where we can, add to it. “
“It seems a
milk-livered way to spend one’s time,” Gilmer remarked,
careless of Sarns’s feelings or--more likely--reckoning the
Dean would agree with him when he pointed out an obvious truth. “What
good is knowledge that you can’t eat, drink, sleep with, or
shoot at your enemies?”
He
is a barbarian,
Sarns thought, even if he’s lived all his life inside what
still calls itself, with less and less reason, the Galactic Empire.
Fortunately Sarns, like any administrator worth his desk, had
practice not showing what he felt. He said, ‘“Well, let
me give you an example, sire: how did you and your victorious army
come to Trantor?”
“By starship, of
course.” Gilmer stared. “How else, man? Did you expect us
to walk?” He laughed at his own wit.
Sarns smiled a polite
smile. “Of course not. But what happens if one of your busbars
shorts out or a hydrochron needs repair?”
‘“We fix ‘em,
as best we can. Seems like nobody in the whole blasted Galaxy
understands a hyperatomic motor any more,” Gilmer said,
scowling. Then he stopped dead. “That’s knowledge too,
isn’t it? By the space fiend, Sarns, are you telling me you’ve
got a university full of technicians who really know what they’re
doing? If you do, I’ll impress ‘em into the fleet and
make you--and them--so rich they won’t ever miss their
book-films, I promise you that.”
“We do have some
people--not many, I fear--studying such things. As I said before, you
are welcome to speak with them. Some may even choose to accompany
you, for the challenge of working on real equipment.” Sarns
paused a moment in thought. “We also have skilled doctors,
computer specialists, and students of many other disciplines of value
to the Empire.”
He watched Gilmer nibble
the bait. “And they’d do these same kinds of things for
me?” the usurper asked.
“Some might,”
Sarns said. “Others--probably more--would be willing to
instruct your technicians and personnel here. Of course,” he
added smoothly, “they would be less enthusiastic if you shot
your way in. You would also likely waste a good many of them that
way.”
“Hrmmp,”
Gilmer said. After a moment, he went on. “But any ships with
their techs, their medics, their computer people gone--they’d
be no more use to us than if they rusted away.“
“Not immediately,
perhaps, but later they would be of even greater value to you than
they could ever be with the inadequately trained crews I gather they
have now.”
Gilmer lowered his voice.
“Sarns, I can’t afford to think about later. I’d
bet a million credits against a burnt-out blaster cartridge that
there’s at least three fleets moving on me the same way I moved
on Dagobert. Now that Trantor’s fallen, all the dogs of space
will want to pick her bones--and mine.”
Privately, Sarns thought
the usurper was right about that. It would only be what Gilmer
deserved, too. But the dean-turned-general felt sadness wash over him
all the same. No time to bother to learn anything new, no time to
think about anything but the moment--that had been the disease of the
Galactic Empire for far too long. Gilmer had a worse case of it than
the emperors before him, but the root sickness was the same.
Sarns did not sigh. He
said, “Well, in any case this has taken our discussion rather
far from the purpose at hand, which is, after all, merely to arrange
an armistice between your forces and the students and staff of the
University, so both we and you may return to what we consider our
proper pursuits. “
“Aye, that’s
so,” Gilmer said.
As he had not sighed,
Sarns did not smile. Show a barbarian a short-term objective and he
won’t look past it, he thought. “Would you care to
examine our facilities here, so you can see how harmless we are under
normal circumstances?” he said.
“Why
not? Lead on, Dean Sarns, and let’s see what you’ve
turned into soldiers. Who knows? Maybe I’ll try to recruit
you...Gilmer
laughed. So, without reservation, did Yokim Sarns. He hadn’t
suspected Gilmer could say anything that funny.
What first struck Gilmer
inside the University was the quiet. Almost everyone went around in
soft-soled shoes, soundless on the metal flooring. Gilmer’s
boots clanged resoundingly as ever, even raised echoes that ran down
the corridors ahead of him. But both clang and echoes were tiny
pebbles dropped into an ocean of stillness.
The people were as
strange as the place, Gilmer thought. Those who had fought his men
were still in gray like Sarns. The rest wore soft pastels that made
them seem to flit like spirits along the hallways. Their low voices
added to the impression that they really weren’t quite there.
Half-remembered childhood
tales of ghosts rose in Gilmer’s mind. He shivered and made
sure he stayed close to his guides. “What are they doing in
there?” he asked, pointing. His voice caused echoes too, echoes
that swiftly died.
Sarns glanced into the
laboratory. “Something pertaining to neurobiology,” he
said. “One moment.” He ducked inside. “That’s
right--they’re working to improve the efficiency of
sleep-inducers.”
Somehow the Dean pitched
his voice so that it was clear but raised no reverberations. Gilmer
resolved to imitate him. “And what’s going on there?”
the Emperor of the Galaxy asked. Then he frowned, for he’d
managed only a hoarse whisper that sounded filled with dread.
To his relief, Sarns
appeared to take no notice. “That’s a psychostatistics
research group,” the Dean answered casually. He walked on,
assuming Gilmer knew what psychostatistics was.
Gilmer didn’t, but
was not about to let on. He pointed to another doorway. Some people
in that room were working with computers, others with what looked
like chunks of rock. “What are they up to?” he asked. He
still could not match Yokim Sarns’s easy tone.
“Ahh, that’s
one of our most fascinating projects. I’m sure you’ll
appreciate it.” Gilmer, who wasn’t at all sure, waited
for Sarns to go on: “Using ancient inscriptions and voice
synthesizers, that team of linguists is attempting to reconstruct the
mythical language called English, from which our modern Galactic
tongue arose thousands of years ago.”
“Oh,” was all
Gilmer said. He’d never heard of English, either. Well, too
bad, he thought. He knew about a lot of things these soft academics
had never heard of, things like field-stripping a blast-pistol, like
small-unit actions.
Yokim Sarns might have
plucked the thought from his head, and then twisted it in a way he
did not like: “Mainly, though, we fought you so we could
protect what you’re coming to now: the Library.”
“Everything
humanity has ever learned is preserved here,” said Sarns’s
aide Maryan Drabel.
Gilmer caught the note of
pride in her voice. “ Are you in charge of it?” he asked.
She nodded and smiled.
Gilmer cut ten years off the guess he’d made of her age from
her grim face and drab clothing. She said, “This chamber here
is the accessing room. Students and researchers come here first, to
get a printout of the book-films and journal articles available in
our files on the topics that interest them.”
“Where are all your
book-films?” Gilmer craned his neck. He’d visited
libraries on other planets once or twice, and found himself wading in
film cases. He didn’t see any here. Suspicion grew in him. Was
all this some kind of colossal bluff, designed to conceal who knew
what? If it was, the whole University would pay.
But Maryan Drabel only
laughed. “You’re not ready to see book-films yet. Before
a student can even begin to view films, he or she needs to have some
idea of what’s in them: more than a title can provide. What
we’re coming to now is the Abstracts Section, where people weed
through their possible reading lists with summaries of the documents
that seem promising to them.”
More people fiddling with
more computers. Gilmer almost succeeded in suppressing his yawn.
Maryan Drabel went on. “We also have an acquisition and
cataloguing division, which integrates new book-films into our
collection. “
“New
book-films?” Gilmer said. “You mean people still
write them?”
“Not as many as
when the University was founded,” the librarian said sadly. “
And, of course, now that the Periphery and even some of the inner
regions have broken away from the Empire, we no longer see a lot of
what is written, or only get a copy after many years. But we do still
try, and surely no other collection in the Galaxy comes close to ours
in scope or completeness.”
They came to an elevator.
Yokim Sarns pressed the button. After a moment, the door opened.
“This way, please,” Sarns said as he stepped in.
Maryan Drabel and Gilmer
followed, the latter with some misgivings. If these University folk
wanted to assassinate him, what better place than the cramped and
secret confines of an elevator? But if they wanted to assassinate
him, he’d been in their power since this tour started. He had
to assume they didn’t.
The elevator purred
downward, stopped. The door opened again. “These are the
reading rooms,” Maryan Drabel said.
Gilmer saw row on row of
cubicles. Most of them were empty. “Usually. they would be much
busier,” Yokim Sarns remarked. “The people who would be
busy using them have been on the fighting lines instead. “
As if to confirm his
words, one of the closed cubicle doors opened. The young woman who
emerged wore the gray of the University’s soldiers and had a
blast rifle slung on her back. She looked grubby and tired, as a
front-line soldier should. Gilmer noted that she also looked as
though she’d forgotten all about the fighting and her weapon:
her attention focused solely on the calculator pad she was keying as
she walked toward the bank of elevators.
“Do you care to
look inside a reading room?” Maryan Drabel asked.
Gilmer thought for a
moment, shook his head. He’d been in a few reading rooms; they
were alike throughout the Galaxy. The number of them here was
impressive, but one by itself would not be.
“Is this everything
you have to show me?” he asked.
“One thing more,”
Maryan Drabel told him. shrugging, he ducked back into the elevator
with her and Sarns.
Down they went again,
down and down. “You are specially privileged, to see what we
are about to show you,” Yokim Sarns said. “Few people
ever will, few even from the University. We thought it would help you
to understand us better.”
The elevator stopped.
Gilmer stepped out, stared around. “By the space fiend,”
he whispered in soft wonder.
The chamber extended for
what had to be kilometers. From floor to ceiling, every shelf was
packed full of book-films. “The computer can access them and
project them to the appropriate reading room on request,”
Maryan Drabel said.
Gilmer walked toward the
nearest case. His boots thumped instead of clanging. He glanced down.
“This is a rock floor,” he said. “Why isn’t
it metal like everything else?”
“The book-film
depositories are below the built-up part of Trantor,” Yokim
Sarns explained. “There wouldn’t be room for them up
there--that space is needed for people. Having them down here also
gives them a certain amount of extra protection from catastrophe.
Even the blast of a radiation weapon set off overhead probably
wouldn’t reach down here.”
“You also have to
understand that this is just one book-film chamber among many,”
Maryan Drabel added. “We’ve used both dispersed storage
and a lot of redundancy to do our best to ensure the collection’s
safety. “
Gilmer had a sudden
vision of the University folk tunneling like moles for years, for
centuries, for millennia, honeycombing the very bedrock of Trantor as
they dug storehouses for the knowledge they hoarded. Even worse, in
his mind’s eye he imagined all the weight of rock and metal
over his head. He’d grown up on a farming world full of wide
open spaces, and had spent most of his life in space itself. To
imagine everything above collapsing, crushing him so he would leave
not even a red smear, made cold sweat start on his brow.
“Shall we go back
up?” he said hoarsely.
“Certainly, sire.”
Yokim Sarns’s voice was bland. “I hope you do
see--now--that we are solely dedicated to the pursuit of learning,
and will not interfere in the political life of the Empire so long as
it does not invade our campus. On those terms, I think, we can
arrange an armistice satisfactory to both sides. “
All Gilmer wanted to
do--now--was get away from this catacomb, return to his own men. He
noticed that Sarns hadn’t thumbed the elevator button. Maybe
Sarns wouldn’t, until Gilmer agreed. “Yes, yes, of
course.” He could hear how quickly he spoke, but could not help
it. “You have your men put down their arms, and mine will stay
away from the University.”
“Good enough,”
Sarns said. As if he had been absentminded before--and perhaps that
was all he had been--he pushed the button that summoned the elevator.
Gilmer rode up in relieved silence; every second the elevator climbed
seemed to lift a myria-ton from his shoulders.
When he and his guides
returned to the level from which they had begun, a man came briskly
toward them with two sheets of parchmentoid. “This is Egril
Joons,” Sarns said. “What do you have for us, Egril?”
“Copies of the
armistice agreement, for your signature and the Emperor Gilmer’s,”
Joons replied. He held out a stylus.
Gilmer took it. He
skimmed through one copy of the document, signed it, and was reaching
for the other from Yokim Sarns when he suddenly thought to wonder how
the armistice terms could be ready now when he’d only agreed to
them moments before. “You were snooping,” he growled to
Egril Joons.
“My apologies, but
yes,” Joons said. “Voice monitoring is part of the
security system for the book-films. This time I just made use of it
to prepare copies as quickly as possible. I expected that your
majesty would have other concerns that would soon need his
attention.”
Gilmer recalled how badly
he’d wanted to get back to his own troops. “Oh, very
well, put that way,” he said. He signed the second copy of the
armistice accord. This Joons fellow was righter than he knew, righter
than he could know. Trantor had to be made ready to defend itself
from space attack, and quickly, or Gilmer the Emperor of the Galaxy
would soon be Gilmer the vaporized usurper.
Gilmer the Emperor of the
Galaxy rolled up his copy of the agreement, absentmindedly stuck
Egril Joons’s stylus in a tunic pocket, and said, sounding
quite imperial indeed, “Now if you will be so good as to escort
me back to my lines”
“Certainly.”
Yokim Sarns handed the other copy of the armistice to Maryan Drabel.
“Come this way, if you please.”
From behind, Maryan
Drabel thought, Gilmer looked much more like an emperor than from the
front. The shining purple cape lent him an air of splendor that did
not match the camouflage suit he wore under it. Seen from the front,
the cape only seemed a sad bit of stolen booty.
“An emperor
shouldn’t look like a thief, “ she said.
“Why not?”
Egril loons was still feeling pangs over his purloined stylus.
”That’s what he is.”
“Wizards!”
Billye shouted. “You went into the wizards’ lair, and
they enspelled you!”
“There’s no
such things as wizards!” Gilmer shouted back.
“No? Then why
didn’t you get anything worth having out of the University,
when they were at our mercy?” she said.
“I did. We aren’t
shooting at them any more, and they aren’t shooting at us. They
recognize me as Emperor of the Galaxy. What more could I want?”
“To
put the fear of cold space and hot death in them, that’s what.
If you are the
Emperor of the Galaxy, they should act like subjects, not like
equals. Can the Emperor have an equal? And you let them.”
Billye’s hair flew around her in a copper cloud as she shook
her head in bewilderment. “I can’t believe you let them.
You have all your men, the whole fleet--why not just crush them for
their insolence?”
“Oh, leave me be,”
Gilmer said sullenly. He didn’t need to hear this from Billye;
he’d already heard it, more politely but the same tune, from
Vergis Fenn. Fenn had asked him why, if the University folk were
willing to instruct his personnel, that willingness didn’t show
up in the armistice document. He’d been sullen with his fleet
commander, too, not wanting to admit he hadn’t had the nerve to
ask for the change in writing. Why hadn’t he? All the real
power was on his side. But still--he hadn’t.
“No, I won’t
leave you be,” Billye said now. “Somebody has to put
backbone in you, especially since yours looks like it’s fallen
out through your--”
“Shut up!”
Gilmer roared in a voice that not one of his half-pirate spacemen or
troopers dared disobey.
Billye dared. “I
won’t either shut up. And there are so wizards. Every other
tale that floats in from the Periphery talks about them.”
“Lies
about them, you mean. “ Gilmer was just as glad to change the
subject, even a little. His head ached. If Billye was going to be
this abrasive, maybe he would
find himself some pretty little Trantorian chit who’d only
open her mouth to say yes.
“They aren’t
lies, “ Billye said stubbornly.
“Well, what else
could they be?” Gilmer said. “There’s no such thing
as a man-sized force screen. There can’t be--the Empire doesn’t
have ‘em, and the Empire has everything there is. There’s
no way to open a Personal Capsule without having a man’s
characteristic on file. So stories that talk about things like that
have to be lies. “
“Or else the
magicians do those things, and do ‘em by their magic,”
Billye said. “ And what else but magic could have made you show
the University not just mercy but--but--I don’t know what.
Treat them like the place was theirs by right, when the Emperor has
charge of everything there is.”
“If he can keep
it,” Gilmer muttered. He stalked out of the bedchamber--he’d
get no solace here, that was plain. A scoutship message had been
waiting for him when he returned from the University grounds: a fleet
was gathering not ten parsecs away, a fleet that did not belong to
him. If he was going to keep Trantor, he’d have to fight for it
allover again. Even a pinprick from the University might hurt him at
such a time.
Why couldn’t Billye
see that? Rage suddenly filled Gilmer. If she couldn’t, to the
space fiend with her! He pointed at the first servant he spotted.
“You!”
The man flinched. Unlike
Billye, he--all the palace servants--knew Gilmer was no one to trifle
with. “Sire?” he asked fearfully.
“Take as many
flunkies as you need to, then go toss that big-mouthed wench out of
my bedchamber. Find me someone new--I expect you have ways to take
care of that. Someone worthy of an Emperor, mind you. But most of
all, someone quiet.”
“Yes, sire.”
The servant risked a smile. “That, majesty, I think we can
handle.”
A
room in the Library--not
a room Gilmer had seen!
Yokim Sarns, Maryan
Drabel, Egril Joons...dean, librarian, dietitian...general, chief of
staff, quartermaster...and rather more. They stood before a wall of
equations, red symbols on a gray background. Yokim Sarns, whose
privilege it was to speak first, said, “I didn’t think it
would be that easy.”
“Neither did I,”
Maryan Drabel agreed. “I expected--the probabilities
predicted--we would have to touch Gilmer’s mind to make sure he
would leave us alone here.”
“That courage we
saw helped a great deal,” Sarns said. “It let him gain
respect for our student-soldiers where a more purely pragmatic man
would simply have brushed aside their sacrifice because it conflicted
with his own interests. “
“Mix that with
superstitious awe at the accumulation of ancient knowledge we
represent, let him see our goals and objectives--our ostensible goals
and objectives--are irrelevant to his or slightly to his advantage,
and he proved quite capable of deciding on his own to let us be,”
Maryan Drabel said. “We came out of what could have been a
nasty predicament very nicely indeed.”
Egril Joons had been
studying the numbers and symbols, the possible decision-paths that
led from Hari Seldon’s day through almost three centuries to
the present--and beyond. Now he said, “I do believe this will
be the only round.”
“The only round of
sacks for Trantor?” Yokim Sarns studied the correlation at
which Joons pointed; the equations obligingly grew on the Prime
Radiant’s wall so he could see them better. “Yes, it does
seem so, if our data from around the planet are accurate. Gilmer has
done such an efficient job of destruction that Trantor won’t be
worth looting again once this round of civil wars is done. “
“That was the lower
probability, too,” Joons said. “Look--there was a better
than seventy percent chance of two sacks at least forty years apart,
and at least a fifteen percent chance of three or more, perhaps even
spaced over a century.”
“Our lives and our
work will certainly be easier this way,” Maryan Drabel said. “I
know we’re well protected, but a stray missile--” She
shivered.
“We still risk
those for a little while longer,” Sarns said. “Gilmer is
so blatantly a usurper that others will try to steal from him what he
stole from Dagobert. But the danger of further major damage to
Trantor as a whole has declined a great deal, and will grow still
smaller as word of the Great Sack spreads. “ He pointed to the
figures that supported his conclusion; Maryan Drabel pondered, at
length nodded.
“And with Trantor
henceforward effectively removed from psychohistoric consideration,
so is the Galactic Empire,” Egril Joons said.
“The
First Galactic
Empire,” Yokim Sarns corrected gently.
“Well, of course.”
loons accepted the tiny rebuke with good nature. “Now, though,
we’ll be able to work toward the Second Empire without having
to worry about concealing everything we do from prying imperial
clerks and agents.”
“The Empire was
always our greatest danger,” Maryan Drabel said. “We
needed to be here at its heart to help protect the First Foundation,
but at its heart also meant under its eyes, if it ever came to notice
us. In the days before we fully developed the mind-touch, one
seriously hostile commissioner of public safety could have wrecked
us. “
“The probability
was that we wouldn’t get any such, and we didn’t,”
Egril loons. said.
“Probability, yes,
but psychohistory can’t deal with individuals any more than
physics can tell you exactly when anyone radium atom will decay,”
she said stubbornly. The truth there was so self-evident that loons
had to concede it, but not so graciously as he had to Yokim Sarns.
Sarns said, “Never
mind, both of you. If you’ll look here”--the Prime
Radiant, taking its direction from his will, revealed the portion of
the Seldon Plan that lay just ahead--”you’ll see that
we’re entering a period of consolidation. As you and Maryan
have both pointed out, Egril, the First Empire is dead, while it will
be several centuries yet before the new Empire that will grow from
the First Foundation extends its influence to this part of the
Galaxy.”
“Clear sailing for
a while,” loons said. “ About time, too.”
“Don’t get
complacent,” Maryan Drabel said.
“A warning the
Second Foundation should always bear in mind,” Yokim Sarns
said. “But, looking at the mathematics, I have to agree with
Egril. Barring anything unforeseen--say, someone outside our ranks
discovering the mind-touch--we should have no great difficulty in
steering the proper course. And”--he smiled broadly, even a
little smugly--”what are the odds of that?”
Dilemma
by Connie
Willis
WE WANT TO SEE DR.
ASIMOV, “ THE BLUISH-SILVER ROBOT said.
“Dr. Asimov is in
conference,” Susan said. “You’ll have to make an
appointment.” She turned to the computer and called up the
calendar.
“I knew we should
have called first,” the varnished robot said to the white one.
“Dr. Asimov is the most famous author of the twentieth century
and now the twenty-first, and as such he must be terribly busy.”
“I can give you an
appointment at two-thirty on June twenty-fourth,” Susan said,
“or at ten on August fifteenth.”
“June twenty-fourth
is one hundred and thirty-five days from today,” the white
robot said. It had a large red cross painted on its torso and an
oxygen tank strapped to its back.
“We need to see him
today,” the bluish-silver robot said, bending over the desk.
“I’m afraid
that’s impossible. He gave express orders that he wasn’t
to be disturbed. May I ask what you wish to see Dr. Asimov about?”
He leaned over the desk
even farther and said softly, “You know perfectly well what we
want to see him about. Which is why you won’t let us see him. “
Susan was still scanning
the calendar. “I can give you an appointment two weeks from
Thursday at one forty-five.”
“We’ll
wait,” he said and sat down in one of the chairs. The white
robot rolled over next to him, and the varnished robot picked up a
copy of The Caves of
Steel with his articulated digital sensors and began to thumb
through it. After a few minutes the white robot picked up a magazine,
but the bluish-silver robot sat perfectly still, staring at Susan.
Susan stared at the
computer. After a very long interval the phone rang. Susan answered
it and then punched Dr. Asimov’s line. “Dr. Asimov, it’s
a Dr. Linge Chen. From Bhutan. He’s interested in translating
your books into Bhutanese.”
“All of them?”
Dr. Asimov said. “Bhutan isn’t a very big country.”
“I don’t
know. Shall I put him through. sir?” She connected Dr. Linge
Chen.
As soon as she hung up,
the bluish-silver robot came and leaned over her desk again. “I
thought you said he gave express orders that he wasn’t to be
disturbed.”
“Dr. Linge Chen was
calling all the way from Asia,” she said. She reached for a
pile of papers and handed them to him. “Here.”
“What are these?”
“The projection
charts you asked me to do. I haven’t finished the spreadsheets
yet. I’ll send them up to your office tomorrow. “
He took the projection
charts and stood there, still looking at her.
“I really don’t
think there’s any point in your waiting, Peter,” Susan
said. “Dr. Asimov’s schedule is completely booked for the
rest of the afternoon, and tonight he’s attending a reception
in honor of the publication of his one thousandth book.”
“Asimov’s
Guide to Asimov’s Guides, “ the varnished robot said.
“Brilliant book. I read a review copy at the bookstore where I
work. Informative, thorough, and comprehensive. An invaluable
addition to the field.”
“It’s very
important that we see him,” the white robot said, rolling up to
the desk. “We want him to repeal the Three Laws of Robotics. “
“‘First
Law: A robot shall not injure a human being, or through inaction
allow a human being to come to harm,’ “ the varnished
robot quoted. “ ‘Second “Law: A robot shall obey a
human being’s order if it doesn’t conflict with the First
Law. Third Law: A robot shall attempt to preserve itself if it
doesn’t conflict with the first or second laws.’ First
outlined in the short story ‘Runaround,’ Astounding
magazine, March 1942, and subsequently expounded in I, Robot,
The Rest of the Robots, The Complete Robot, and The Rest of
the Rest of the Robots. “
“Actually, we just
want the First Law repealed,” the white robot said. “, A
robot shall not injure a human being. ‘ Do you realize what
that means? I’m programmed to diagnose diseases and administer
medications, but I can’t stick the needle in the patient. I’m
programmed to perform over eight hundred types of surgery, but I
can’t make the initial incision. I can’t even do the
Heimlich Maneuver. The First Law renders me incapable of doing the
job I was designed for, and it’s absolutely essential that I
see Dr. Asimov to ask him--”
The
door to Dr. Asimov’s office banged open and the old man hobbled
out. His white hair looked like he had been tearing at it, and his
even whiter muttonchop sideburns were quivering with some strong
emotion. “Don’t put any more calls through today, Susan,”
he said. “Especially not from Or. Linge Chen. Do you know which
book he wanted to translate into Bhutanese first? 2001: A
Space Odyssey!”
“I’m
terribly sorry, sir. I didn’t intend to--”
He
waved his hand placatingly at her. “It’s all right. You
had no way of knowing he was an idiot. But if he calls back, put him
on hold and play Also
Sprach Zarathustra in his ear.”
“I don’t see
how he could have confused your style with Arthur Clarke’s,”
the varnished robot said, putting down his book. “Your style is
far more lucid and energetic, and your extrapolation of the future
far more visionary. “
Asimov looked inquiringly
at Susan through his blackframed metafocals.
“They don’t
have an appointment,” she said. “I told them they--”
“Would
have to wait,” the bluish-silver robot said, extending his
finely coiled Hirose hand and shaking Dr. Asimov’s wrinkled
one. “ And it has been more than worth the wait, Dr. Asimov. I
cannot tell you what an honor it is to meet the author of I,
Robot, sir. “
“And
of The Human Body, “
the white robot said, rolling over to Asimov and extending a
four-fingered gripper from which dangled a stethoscope. “ A
classic in the field.”
“How on earth could
you keep such discerning readers waiting?” Asimov said to
Susan.
“I didn’t
think you would want to be disturbed when you were writing,”
Susan said.
“Are you kidding?”
Asimov said. “Much as I enjoy writing, having someone praise
your books is even more enjoyable, especially when they’re
praising books I actually wrote.”
“It
would be impossible to praise Foundation
enough,” the varnished robot said. “Or any of your
profusion of works, for that matter, but Foundation seems to
me to be a singular accomplishment, the book in which you finally
found a setting of sufficient scope for the expression of your truly
galaxy-sized ideas. It is a privilege to meet you, sir,” he
said, extending his hand.
“I’m happy to
meet you, too,” Asimov said, looking interestedly at the
articulated wooden extensor. “ And you are?”
“My job description
is Book Cataloguer, Shelver, Reader, Copyeditor, and Grammarian. “
He turned and indicated the other two robots. “ Allow me to
introduce Medical Assistant and the leader of our delegation,
Accountant, Financial Analyst, and Business Manager.”
“Pleased to meet
you,” Asimov said, shaking appendages with all of them again.
“You call yourselves a delegation. Does that mean you have a
specific reason for coming to see me?”
“Yes, sir,”
Office Manager said. “We want you to--”
“It’s three
forty-five, Dr. Asimov,” Susan said. “You need to get
ready for the Doubleday reception. “
He squinted at the
digital on the wall. “That isn’t till six, is it?”
“Doubleday wants
you there at five for pictures, and it’s formal,” she
said firmly. “Perhaps they could make an appointment and come
back when they could spend more time with you. I can give them an
appointment--”
“For June
twenty-fourth?” Accountant said. “Or August fifteenth?”
“Fit them in
tomorrow, Susan,” Asimov said, coming over to the desk.
“You have a meeting
with your science editor in the morning and then lunch with Al
Lanning and the American Booksellers Association dinner at seven.”
“What about this?”
Asimov said, pointing at an open space on the schedule. “Four
o’clock.”
“That’s when
you prepare your speech for the ABA.”
“I never prepare my
speeches. You come back at four o’clock tomorrow, and we can
talk about why you came to see me and what a wonderful writer I am.”
“Four o’clock,”
Accountant said. “Thank you, sir. We’ll be here, sir.”
He herded Medical Assistant and Book Cataloguer, Shelver, Reader,
Copyeditor, and Grammarian out the door and shut it behind them.
“Galaxy-sized
ideas, “ Asimov said, looking wistfully after them. “Did
they tell you what they wanted to see me about?”
“No, sir.”
Susan helped him into his pants and formal shirt and fastened the
studs.
“Interesting
assortment, weren’t they? It never occurred to me to have a
wooden robot in any of my robot stories. Or one that was such a wise
and perceptive reader. “
“The reception’s
at the Union Club,” Susan said, putting his cufflinks in. “In
the Nightfall Room. You don’t have to make a speech, just a few
extemporaneous remarks about the book. Janet’s meeting you
there.”
“The short one
looked just like a nurse I had when I had my bypass operation. The
blue one was nice-looking, though, wasn’t he?”
She turned up his collar
and began to tie his tie. “The coordinates card for the Union
Club and the tokens for the taxi’s tip are in your breast
pocket.”
“Very
nice-looking. Reminds me of myself when I was a young man,”
he said with his chin in the air. “Ouch! You’re choking
me!”
Susan dropped the ends of
the tie and stepped back.
“What’s the
matter?” Asimov said, fumbling for the ends of the tie. “I
forgot. It’s all right. You weren’t really choking me.
That was just a figure of speech for the way I feel about wearing
formal ties. Next time I say it, you just say, ‘I’m not
choking you, so stand still and let me tie this.’ “
“Yes, sir, “
Susan said. She finished tying the tie and stepped back to look at
the effect. One side of the bow was a little larger than the other.
She adjusted it, scrutinized it again, and gave it a final pat.
“The Union Club,”
Asimov said. “The Nightfall Room. The coordinates card is in my
breast pocket,” he said.
“Yes, sir,”
she said, helping him on with his jacket.
“No speech. Just a
few extemporaneous remarks.”
“Yes, sir.”
She helped him on with his overcoat and wrapped his muffler around
his neck.
“Janet’s
meeting me there. Good grief, I should have gotten her a corsage,
shouldn’t I?”
“Yes, sir,”
Susan said, taking a white box out of the desk drawer. “Orchids
and stephanotis.” She handed him the box.
“Susan, you’re
wonderful. I’d be lost without you.”
“Yes, sir,”
Susan said. “I’ve called the taxi. It’s waiting at
the door.”
She handed him his cane
and walked him out to the elevator. As soon as the doors closed she
went back to the office and picked up the phone. She punched in a
number. “Ms. Weston? This is Dr. Asimov’s secretary
calling from New York about your appointment on the twenty-eighth.
We’ve just had a cancellation for tomorrow afternoon at four.
Could you fly in by then?”
Dr. Asimov didn’t
get back from lunch until ten after four. “Are they here?”
he asked.
“Yes, sir,”
Susan said, unwinding the muffler from around his neck. “They’re
waiting in your office.”
“When did they get
here?” he said, unbuttoning his overcoat. “No, don’t
tell me. When you tell a robot four o’clock, he’s there
at four o’clock, which is more than you can say for human
beings. “
“I know,”
Susan said, looking at the digital on the wall.
“Do you know how
late for lunch At Lanning was? An hour and fifteen minutes. And when
he got there, do you know what he wanted? To come out with
commemorative editions of all my books. “
“That sounds nice,”
Susan said. She took his coordinates card and his gloves out of his
pockets, hung up his coat, and glanced at her watch again. “Did
you take your blood pressure medicine?”
“I didn’t
have it with me. I should have. I’d have had something to do. I
could have written a book in an hour and fifteen minutes, but I
didn’t have any paper either. These limited editions will have
cordovan leather bindings, gilt-edged acid-free paper, water-color
illustrations. The works. “
“Water-color
illustrations would look nice for Pebble
in the Sky,” Susan said, handing him his blood pressure
medicine and a glass of water.
“I
agree,” he said, “but that isn’t what he wants the
first book in the series to be. He wants it to be Stranger
in a Strange Land!” He gulped down the pill and started for
his office. “You wouldn’t catch those robots in there
mistaking me for Robert Heinlein. “ He stopped with his hand on
the doorknob. “Which reminds me, should I be saying ‘robot’?”
“Ninth Generations
are manufactured by the Hitachi-Apple Corporation under the
registered trademark name of ‘Kombayashibots’,”
Susan said promptly. “That and ‘Ninth Generation’
are the most common forms of address, but ‘robot’ is used
throughout the industry as the general term for autonomous machines.
“
“And it’s not
considered a derogatory term? I’ve used it all these years, but
maybe ‘Ninth Generation’ would be better, or what did you
say? ‘Kombayashibots’? It’s been over ten years
since I’ve written about robots, let alone faced a whole
delegation. I hadn’t realized how out of date I was.”
“‘Robot’
is fine,” Susan said.
“Good,
because I know I’ll forget to call them that other
name--Comeby-whatever-it-was, and I don’t want to offend them
after they’ve made such an effort to see me.” He turned
the doorknob and then stopped again. “I haven’t done
anything to offend you,
have I?”
“No, sir,”
Susan said.
“Well, I hope not.
I sometimes forget--”
“Did you want me to
sit in on this meeting, Dr. Asimov?” she cut in. “To take
notes?”
“Oh, yes, yes, of
course.” He opened the door. Accountant and Book Shelver were
seated in the stuffed chairs in front of Asimov’s desk. A third
robot, wearing an orange and blue sweatshirt and a cap with an orange
horse galloping across a blue suspension bridge, was sitting on a
tripod that extended out of his backside. The tripod retracted and
all three of them stood up when Dr. Asimov and Susan came in.
Accountant gestured at Susan to take his chair, but she went out to
her desk and got her own, leaving the door to the outer office open
when she came back in.
“What happened to
Medical Assistant?” Asimov said.
“He’s on call
at the hospital, but he asked me to present his case for him,”
Accountant said.
“Case?”
Asimov said.
“Yes, sir. You know
Book Shelver, Cataloguer, Reader, Copyeditor, and Grammarian,”
Accountant said, “and this is Statistician, Offensive
Strategist, and Water Boy. He’s with the Brooklyn Broncos.”
“How do you do?”
Asimov said. “Do you think they’ll make it to the Super
Bowl this year?”
“Yes, sir,”
Statistician said, “but they won’t win it.”
“Because of the
First Law,” Accountant said.
“Dr. Asimov, I hate
to interrupt, but you really should write your speech for the dinner
tonight,” Susan said.
“What are you
talking about?” Asimov said. “I never write speeches. And
why do you keep watching the door?” He turned back to the
bluish-silver robot. “What First Law?”
“Your First Law,”
Accountant said. “The First Law of Robotics. “
“’A robot
shall not injure a human being, or through inaction allow a human
being to come to harm,’ “ Book Shelver said.
“Statistician,”
Accountant said, gesturing at the orange horse, “is capable of
designing plays that could win the Super Bowl for the Broncos, but he
can’t because the plays involve knocking human beings down.
Medical Assistant can’t perform surgery because surgery
involves cutting open human beings, which is a direct violation of
the First Law.”
“But
the Three Laws of Robotics aren’t laws,”
Asimov said. “They’re just something I made up for my
science fiction stories.”
“They may have been
a mere fictional construct in the beginning,” Accountant said,
“and it’s true they’ve never been formally enacted
as laws, but the robotics industry has accepted them as a given from
the beginning. As early as the 1970s robotics engineers were talking
about incorporating the Three Laws into AI programming, and even the
most primitive models had safeguards based on them. Every robot from
the Fourth Generation on has been hardwared with them.”
“Well, what’s
so bad about that?” Asimov said. “Robots are powerful and
intelligent. How do you know they wouldn’t also become
dangerous if the Three Laws weren’t included?”
“We’re not
suggesting universal repeal,” the varnished robot said. “The
Three Laws work reasonably well for Seventh and Eighth Generations,
and for earlier models who don’t have the memory capacity for
more sophisticated programming. We’re only requesting it for
Ninth Generations.”
“And you’re
Ninth Generation robots, Mr. Book Shelver, Cataloguer, Reader,
Copyeditor, and Grammarian?” Asimov said.
“‘Mister’
is not necessary,” he said. “Just call me Book Shelver,
Cataloguer, Reader, Copyeditor, and Grammarian.”
“Let me begin at
the beginning,” Accountant said. “The term ‘Ninth
Generation’ is not accurate. We are not descendants of the
previous eight robot generations, which are all based on Minsky’s
related-concept frames. Ninth Generations are based on nonmonotonic
logic, which means we can tolerate ambiguity arid operate on
incomplete information. This is accomplished by biased-decision
programming, which prevents us from shutting down when faced with
decision-making situations in the way that other generations are.”
“Such as the robot
Speedy in your beautifully plotted story, ‘Runaround,’ “
Book Shelver said. “He was sent to carry out an order that
would have resulted in his death so he ran in circles, reciting
nonsense, because his programming made it impossible for him to obey
or disobey his master’s order.”
“With our
biased-decision capabilities,” Accountant said, “a Ninth
Generation can come up with alternative courses of action or choose
between the lesser of two evils. Our linguistics expert systems are
also much more advanced, so that we do not misinterpret situations or
fall prey to the semantic dilemmas earlier generations were subject
to.”
“As in your highly
entertaining story ‘Little Lost Robot,’ “ Book
Shelver said, “in which the robot was told to go lose himself
and did, not realizing that the human being addressing him was
speaking figuratively and in anger.”
“Yes,” Asimov
said, “but what if you do misinterpret a situation, Book
Shelver, Cataloguer, Reader, Copyeditor, and Gramm--Don’t you
have a nickname or something? Your name’s a mouthful.”
“Early generations
had nicknames based on the sound of their model numbers, as in your
wonderful story, ‘Reason,’ in which the robot QT--I is
referred to as Cutie. Ninth Generations do not have model numbers. We
are individually programmed and are named for our expert systems.”
“But surely you
don’t think of yourself as Book Shelver, Cataloguer, Reader,
Copyeditor, and Grammarian?”
“Oh, no, sir. We
call ourselves by our self-names. Mine is Darius.”
“Darius?”
Asimov said.
“Yes,
sir. After Darius Just, the writer and detective in your cleverly
plotted mystery novel Murder
at the ABA. I would be honored if you would call me by it. “
“And you may call
me Bel Riose,” Statistician said.
“Foundation,
“ Book Shelver said helpfully.
“Bel Riose is
described in Chapter One as ‘the equal of Peurifoy in strategic
ability and his superior perhaps in his ability to handle men,’
“ Statistician said.
“Do you all give
yourselves the names of characters in my books?” Asimov said.
“Of
course,” Book Shelver said. “We try to emulate them. I
believe Medical Assistant’s private name is Dr. Duval, from
Fantastic Voyage, a
brilliant novel, by the way, fast-paced and terribly exciting.”
“Ninth Generations
do occasionally misinterpret a situation,” Accountant said,
coming back to Asimov’s question. “ As do human beings,
but even without the First Law, there would be no danger to human
beings. We are already encoded with a strong moral sense. I know your
feelings will not be hurt when I say this--”
“Or you couldn’t
say it, because of the First Law,” Asimov inserted.
“Yes, sir, but I
must say the Three Laws are actually very primitive. They break the
first rule of law and logic in that they do not define their terms.
Our moral programming is much more advanced. It clarifies the intent
of the Three Laws and lists all the exceptions and complications of
them, such as the situation in which it is better to grab at a human
and possibly break his arm rather than to let him walk in front of a
magtrain.”
“Then I don’t
understand,” Asimov said. “If your programming is so
sophisticated, why can’t it interpret the intent of the First
Law and follow that?”
“The Three Laws are
part of our hardwaring and as such cannot be overridden. The First
Law does not say, ‘You shall inflict minor damage to save a
person’s life.’ It says, “You shall not injure a
human.’ There is only one interpretation. And that
interpretation makes it impossible for Medical Assistant to be a
surgeon and for Statistician to be an offensive coach. “
“What do you want
to be? A politician?”
“It’s
four-thirty,” Susan said, with another anxious look out into
the outer office. “The dinner’s at the Trantor Hotel and
gridlock’s extrapolated for five forty-five.”
“Last night I was
an hour early to that reception. The only people there were the
caterers. “ He pointed at Accountant. “You were saying?”
“I
want to be a literary critic,” Book Shelver said. “You
have no idea how much bad criticism there is out there. Most of the
critics are illiterate, and some of them haven’t even read the
books they’re supposed to be criticizing. “
The door of the outer
office opened. Susan looked out to see who it was and said, “Oh,
dear, Dr. Asimov, it’s Gloria Weston. I forgot I’d given
her an appointment for four o’clock.”
“Forgot?”
Asimov said, surprised. “ And it’s four-thirty.”
“She’s late,”
Susan said. “She called yesterday. I must have forgotten to
write it down on the calendar.”
“Well, tell her I
can’t see her and give her another appointment. I want to hear
more about this literary criticism thing. It’s the best
argument I’ve heard so far.”
“Ms. Weston came
all the way in from California on the magtrain to see you. “
“California, eh?
What does she want to see me about?”
“She wants to make
your new book into a satellite series, sir.”
“Asimov’s
Guide to Asimov’s Guides?”
“I
don’t know, sir. She just said your new book.”
“You forgot,”
Asimov said thoughtfully. “Oh, well, if she came all the way
from California, I suppose I’ll have to see her. Gentlemen, can
you come back tomorrow morning?”
“You’re in
Boston tomorrow morning, sir. “
“Then how about
tomorrow afternoon?”
“You have
appointments until six and the Mystery Writers of America meeting at
seven.”
“Right. Which
you’ll want me to leave for at noon. I guess it will have to be
Friday, then. “ He raised himself slowly out of his chair.
“Have Susan put you on the calendar. And make sure she writes
it down,” he said, reaching for his cane.
The delegation shook
hands with him and left. “Shall I show Ms. Weston in?”
Susan asked.
“Misinterpreting
situations,” Asimov muttered. “Incomplete information.”
“I beg your pardon,
sir?”
“Nothing. Something
Accountant said.” He looked up sharply at Susan. “Why
does he want the First Law repealed?”
“I’ll send
Ms. Weston in,” Susan said.
“I’m
already in, Isaac darling,” Gloria said, swooping in the door.
“I couldn’t wait one more minute to tell you about this
fantastic idea I had. As soon as Last
Dangerous Visions comes out, I want to make it into a
maxiseries!”
Accountant was already
gone by the time Susan got out to her desk, and he didn’t come
back till late the next morning.
“Dr. Asimov doesn’t
have any time free on Friday, Peter,” Susan said.
“I didn’t
come to make an appointment,” he said.
“If it’s the
spreadsheets you want, I finished them and sent them up to your
office last night. “
“I didn’t
come to get the spreadsheets either. I came to say goodbye. “
“Goodbye?”
Susan said.
“I’m leaving
tomorrow. They’re shipping me out as magfreight. “
“Oh,” Susan
said. “I didn’t think you’d have to leave until
next week.”
“They want me to go
out early so I can complete my orientation programming and hire a
secretary.”
“Oh,” Susan
said.
“I just thought I’d
come and say goodbye.”
The phone rang. Susan
picked it up.
“What’s your
expert systems name?” Asimov said.
“Augmented
Secretary,” Susan said.
“That’s all?
Not Typist, Filer, Medicine-Nagger? Just Augmented Secretary?”
“Yes.”
“Aug-mented
Secretary,” he repeated slowly as though he were writing it
down. “Now, what’s the number for Hitachi-Apple?”
“I thought you were
supposed to be giving your speech right now,” Susan said.
“I already gave it.
I’m on my way back to New York. Cancel all my appointments for
today.”
“You’re
speaking to the MWA at seven.”
“Yes, well, don’t
cancel that. Just the afternoon appointments. What was the number for
Hitachi-Apple again?”
She gave him the number
and hung up. “You told him,” she said to Accountant.
“Didn’t you?”
“I didn’t
have the chance, remember? You kept scheduling appointments so I
couldn’t tell him.”
“I know,”
Susan said. “I couldn’t help it.”
“I know,” he
said. “I still don’t see why it would have violated the
First Law just to ask him.”
“Humans can’t
be counted on to act in their own best self-interest. They don’t
have any Third Law.”
The phone rang again.
“This is Dr. Asimov,” he said. “Call Accountant and
tell him I want to see his whole delegation in my office at four this
afternoon. Don’t make any other appointments or otherwise try
to prevent my meeting with them. That’s a direct order.”
“Yes, sir,”
Susan said.
“To do so would be
to cause me injury. Do you understand?”
“Yes, sir.”
He hung up.
“Dr. Asimov says to
tell you he wants to see your whole delegation in his office at four
o’clock this afternoon,” she said.
“Who’s going
to interrupt us this time?”
“Nobody,”
Susan said. “Are you sure you didn’t tell him?”
“I’m sure.”
He glanced at the digital. “I’d better go call the others
and tell them.”
The phone rang again.
“It’s me,” Asimov said. “What’s your
self-name?”
“Susan,”
Susan said..
“And you’re
named after one of my characters?”
“Yes, sir.”
“I knew it”‘
he said and hung up.
Asimov sat down in his
chair, leaned forward, and put his hands on his knees. “You may
not be aware of this,” he said to the delegation and Susan,
“but I write mystery stories, too.”
“Your
mysteries are renowned,” Book Shelver said. “Your novels
The Death Dealers and
Murder at the ABA are both immensely popular (and deservedly
so), not to mention your Black Widower stories. And your science
fiction detectives, Wendell Urth and Lije Baley, are nearly as famous
as Sherlock Holmes.”
“As you probably
also know, then, most of my mysteries fall into the “armchair
detective” category, in which the detective solves the puzzling
problem through deduction and logical thinking, rather than chasing
around after clues.” He stroked his bushy white sideburns.
“This morning I found myself confronted with a very puzzling
problem, or perhaps I should say dilemma--why had you come to see
me?”
“We told you why we
came to see you,” Statistician said, leaning back on his
tripod. “We want you to repeal the First Law.”
“Yes,
so you did. You, in fact, gave me some very persuasive reasons for
wanting it removed from your programming, but there were some
puzzling aspects to the situation that made me wonder if that was the
real reason. For instance, why did Accountant want it repealed? He
was clearly the leader of the group, and yet there was nothing in his
job that the First Law restricted. Why had you come to see me now,
when Book Shelver knew I would be very busy with the publication of
Asimov’s Guide?
And why had my secretary made a mistake and scheduled two
appointments at the same time when she had never done that in all the
years she’s worked for me?”
“Dr. Asimov, your
meeting’s at seven, and you haven’t prepared your speech
yet,” Susan said.
“Spoken like a good
secretary,” Asimov said, “or more accurately, like an
Augmented Secretary, which is what you said your expert system was. I
called Hitachi-Apple, and they told me it was a new program
especially designed by a secretary for ‘maximum
response-initiative. ‘ In other words, you remind me to take my
medicine and order Janet’s corsage without me telling you to.
It was based on a Seventh Generation program called Girl Friday that
was written in 1993 with input from a panel of employers.
“The nineties were
a time when secretaries were rapidly becoming extinct, and the
employers programmed Girl Friday to do everything they could no
longer get their human secretaries to do: bring them coffee, pick out
a birthday present for their wife, and tell unpleasant people they
didn’t want to see that they were in conference. “
He
looked around the room. “That last part made me wonder. Did
Susan think I didn’t want to see your delegation? The fact that
you wanted me to repeal the First Law could be considered a blow to
my not-so-delicate ego, but as a blow it was hardly in a class with
thinking I’d written Last
Dangerous Visions, and anyway I wasn’t responsible for the
problems the First Law had caused. I hadn’t had anything to do
with putting the Three Laws into your programming. All I had done was
write some stories. No, I concluded, she must have had some other
reason for wanting to keep you from seeing me.”
“The Trantor’s
on the other side of town,” Susan said, “and they’ll
want you there early for pictures. You really should be getting
ready. “
“I was also curious
about your delegation. You want to be a surgeon,” Asimov said,
pointing at Medical Assistant and then at the others in turn, “you
want to be Vince Lombardi, and you want to be a literary critic, but
what did you want?” He looked hard at Accountant. “You
weren’t on Wall Street, so there was nothing in your job that
the First Law interfered with, and you were curiously silent on the
subject. It occurred to me that perhaps you wanted to change jobs
altogether, become a politician or a lawyer. You would certainly have
to have the First Law repealed to become either of those, and Susan
would have been doing a service not only to me but to all mankind by
preventing you from seeing me. So I called Hitachi-Apple again, got
the name of your employer (who I was surprised to find worked in this
building) and asked him if you were unhappy with your job, had ever
talked about being reprogrammed to do something else.
“Far from it, he
said. You were the perfect employee, responsible, efficient, and
resourceful, so much so that you were being shipped to Phoenix to
shape up the branch office. “ He turned and looked at Susan,
who was looking at Accountant. “He said he hoped Susan would
continue doing secretarial work for the company even after you were
gone.”
“I only helped him
during downtime and with unused memory capacity,” Susan said.
“He didn’t have a secretary of his own.”
“Don’t
interrupt the great detective,” Asimov said. “As soon as
I realized you’d been working for Accountant, Financial
Analyst, and Business Manager, I had it. The obvious solution. I
asked one more question to confirm it, and then I knew for sure.”
He looked happily around
at them. Medical Assistant and Statistician looked blank. Book
Shelver said, “This is just like your short story ‘Truth
to Tell.’ “ Susan stood up..
“Where are you
going?” Asimov asked. “The person who gets up and tries
to leave the last scene of a mystery is always the guilty party, you
know.”
“It’s four
forty-five,” she said. “I was going to call the Trantor
and tell them you ‘re going to be late. “
“I’ve already
called them. I’ve also called Janet, arranged for Tom Trumbull
to sing my praises till I get there, and reformatted my coordinates
card to avoid the gridlock. So sit down and let me reveal all.”
Susan sat down.
“You are the guilty
party, you know, but it’s not your fault. The fault is with the
First Law. And your programming. Not the original AI program, which
was done by disgruntled male chauvinists who thought a secretary
should wait on her boss hand and foot. That by itself would not have
been a problem, but when I rechecked with Hitachi I found out that
the Ninth Generation biased-decision alterations had been made not by
a programmer but by his secretary.” He beamed happily at Susan.
“All secretaries are convinced their bosses can’t
function without them. Your programming causes you to make yourself
indispensable to your boss, with the corollary being that your boss
can’t function without you. I acknowledged that state of
affairs yesterday when I said I’d be lost without you,
remember?”
“Yes, sir.”
“You therefore
concluded that for me to be deprived of you would hurt me, something
the First Law expressly forbids. By itself, that wouldn’t have
created a dilemma, but you had been working part-time for Accountant
and had made yourself indispensable to him, too, and when he found
out he was being transferred to Arizona, he asked you to go with him.
When you told him you couldn’t, he correctly concluded that the
First Law was the reason, and he came to me to try to get it
repealed.”
“I tried to stop
him,” Susan said. “I told him I couldn’t leave
you.”
“Why can’t
you?”
Accountant stood up.
“Does this mean you’re going to repeal the First Law?”
“I can’t,”
Asimov said. “I’m just a writer, not an AI designer.”
“Oh,” Susan
said.
“But
the First Law doesn’t have to be repealed to resolve your
dilemma. You’ve been acting on incomplete information. I am not
helpless. I was my own secretary and literary agent and
telephone answerer and tie tier for years. I never even
had a secretary until four years ago when the Science Fiction Writers
of America gave you to me for my ninetieth birthday, and I could
obviously do without one again.”
“Did you take your
heart medicine this afternoon?” Susan said.
“No,” he
said, “and don’t change the subject. You are not, in
spite of what your programming tells you, indispensable. “
“Did you take your
thyroid pill?”
“No. Stop trying to
remind me of how old and infirm I am. I’ll admit I’ve
grown a little dependent on you, which is why I’m hiring
another secretary to replace you.”
Accountant sat down. “No
you’re not. There are only two other Ninth Generations who’ve
been programmed as Augmented Secretaries, and neither of them is
willing to leave their bosses to work for you. “
“I’m not
hiring an Augmented Secretary. I’m hiring Darius.”
“Me?” Book
Shelver said.
“Yes, if you’re
interested. “
“If I’m
interested?” Book Shelver said, his voice developing a
high-frequency squeal. “Interested in working for the greatest
author of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries? I would be
honored.”
“You
see, Susan? I’m in good hands. Hitachi’s going to program
him for basic secretarial skills, I’ll have someone to feed my
ever-hungry ego and
someone to talk to who doesn’t have me confused with Robert
Heinlein. There’s no reason now why you can’t go off to
Arizona.”
“You have to remind
him to take his heart medicine,” Susan said to Book Shelver.
“He always forgets.”
“Good, then that’s
settled,” Asimov said. He turned to Medical Assistant and
Statistician. “I’ve spoken to Hitachi-Apple about the
problems you discussed with me, and they’ve agreed to
reevaluate the Three Laws in regard to redefining terms and
clarifying intent. That doesn’t mean they’ll decide to
repeal them. They’re still a good idea, in concept. In the
meantime,” he said to Medical Assistant, “the head
surgeon at the hospital is going to see if some kind of cooperative
surgery is possible.” He turned to Statistician. “I spoke
to Coach Elway and suggested he ask you to design ‘purely
theoretical’ offensive plays.
“As
for you,” he said, pointing at Book Shelver, “I’m
not at all sure you wouldn’t start criticizing my books if the
First Law didn’t keep you in line, and anyway, you won’t
have time to be a literary critic. You’ll be too busy helping
me with my new sequel to I,
Robot. This business has given me a lot of new ideas. My stories
got us into this dilemma in the first place. Maybe some new robot
stories can get us out.”
He looked over at Susan.
“Well, what are you still standing there for? You’re
supposed to anticipate my every need. That means you should be on the
phone to the magtrain, making two first-class reservations to Phoenix
for you and”--he squinted through his black-framed glasses at
Accountant--”Peter Bogert.”
“How did you know
my self-name?” Accountant said.
“Elementary, my
dear Watson,” Asimov said. “Oarius said you had all named
yourselves after my characters. I thought at first you might have
picked Michael Donovan or Gregory Powell after my trouble-shooting
robot engineers. They were resourceful too, and were always trying to
figure ways around dilemmas, but that wouldn’t have explained
why Susan went through all that finagling and lying when all she had
to do was to tell you, no, she didn’t want to go to Arizona
with you. According to what you’d told me, she should have.
Hardwaring is stronger than an expert system, and you were only her
part-time boss. Under those conditions, she shouldn’t have had
a dilemma at all. That’s when I called Hitachi-Apple to check
on her programming. The secretary who wrote the program was unmarried
and had worked for the same boss for thirty-eight years. “
He stopped and smiled.
Everyone looked blank.
“Susan
Calvin was a robopsychologist for U.S. Robotics. Peter Bogert was
Director of Research. I never explicitly stated the hierarchy at U.S.
Robotics in my stories, but Susan was frequently called in to
help Bogert, and on one occasion she helped him solve a mystery.”
“‘Feminine
Intuition,’ “ Book Shelver said. “ An intriguing
and thought-provoking story.”
“I always thought
so,” Asimov said. “It was only natural that Susan Calvin
would consider Peter Bogert her boss over me. And only natural that
her programming had in it more than response-initiative, and that was
what had caused her dilemma. The First Law didn’t allow Susan
to leave me, but an even stronger force was compelling her to go. “
Susan looked at Peter,
who put his hand on her shoulder.
“What could be
stronger than the First Law?” Book Shelver said.
“The secretary who
designed Augmented Secretary unconsciously contaminated Susan’s
programming with one of her own responses, a response that was only
natural after thirty-eight years with one employer, and one strong
enough to override even hardwaring.” He paused for dramatic
effect. “She was obviously in love with her boss. “
Maureen Birnbaum After Dark
by Betsy
Spiegelman Fein
(as told to
George Alec Effinger)
ABOUT TWO MONTHS
AFTER SHE BARGED INTO MY honeymoon with Josh, Maureen showed up
again. My jaw no longer hurt where she’d cracked me, but I
still recalled how nearly impossible it had been to explain to
my new husband what this totally unkempt barbarian girl in chain mail
was doing in our hotel suite. I mean, it was our wedding night
and all. Josh had just carried me across the threshold, and I’d
gone into the bathroom “to freshen up, “ and there
she was, God’s Gift to the Golden Horde, Muffy herself She
spooked Josh out of his socks when she stormed out of the bathroom
and through the front door. Josh’s jaw dropped to his knees,
okay? I couldn’t get his mind back on honeymoon activities
for two or three hours. Maureen has caused me a lot of grief over the
years, but spoiling my wedding night takes the cake. I was never
going to speak to her as long as I lived.
Only
she showed up again with
another of her crummy adventures. I was trying to make this
strawberry cheese quiche from scratch for the first time. I went into
the pantry to get something, and there she was. She likes to
startle me, I think. Her idea of a cool joke. See, I’m
twenty-two and settled now, but Maureen looks exactly the same
way she did as a junior at the Greenberg School. She thinks like
a high school kid, too. So I give this little yipe of surprise when I
see her, and then I go, “Out! Out! “ She smiled at
me like nothing weird had ever happened between us, and she came out
of my pantry chewing on a handful of sugar-coated cereal. I frowned
at her and go, “I didn’t mean just out of the pantry.
I want you out of the house, like now. “ I was edged,
for sure.
“Hold
on, Bitsy, “ she
goes, “you haven’t even heard my latest story. “
“And
I’m not Bitsy any more, “ I go. “You
don’t want to be called Muffy, I don’t want to be called
Bitsy. I’m grown up now. Call me Betsy or Elizabeth. That’s
what Josh calls me. Elizabeth. “
She
laughed. “And where is dear Josh today? I don’t
want to totally blow him away again or anything. “
“He’s
seeing patients this afternoon. “
“Good,
“ goes Maureen, “then you can knock off for a
little while and listen. “
“I’m
not going to listen, sister. I’ve got work to do.
Why don’t you find a psychoanalyst to listen to you? It
would do you like just so much good. “
“Ha
ha, “ she goes, ignoring everything I said to her. Then
she started telling me this story whether I wanted to hear it or not,
and I didn’t want to hear it.
I think she thought we
were still friends.
You
remember the last time I bopped by, I told you all about this battle
in the far future I won like singlehanded, okay? [As
stirringly recounted in “Maureen Birnbaum on the Art of War,”
in Friends of the Horseclans, edited by Robert Adams and
Pamela Crippen Adams (Signet, 1987).] So after I
left you and your darling doctor hubby in Bermuda, I decided to whush
on out of your honeymoon suite and try to find Mars again. Mars is,
you know, my destiny, and where I met that totally bluff
Prince Van. I was still drooling like a schoolgirl over him, and I’d
been dying to run into him again. But I just kept missing
Mars, and I couldn’t figure out what I was doing wrong. Maybe
it was my follow-through, or I wasn’t keeping my head down or
something. I just didn’t understand how I was messing up.
Anyway,
from down by your hotel’s pool I aimed at Mars, but I landed
someplace that didn’t look anything like the part of Mars I
knew: no ocher dead sea bottom, no hurtling moons, no bizarro green
men. I jumped up and down a couple of times to see if maybe it felt
like Martian gravity, but no such luck. Good ol’ Maureen wasn’t
going to have any help carrying around her heroinely poundage here.
Matter of fact, I was just a teensy bit heftier in this place than on
Earth. Right off, I figured wherever this was, it wasn’t going
to make my short list of fave vacation spots. My God,
like who needs a complimentary gift of an extra fifteen pounds to
lug around, know what I mean?
I
was disappointed, but so what else is new? If these thrilling
exploits of mine have taught me one thing, it’s that you can’t
always get what you want. Yeah, you’re right, Bitsy, Mick
Jagger said the same thing entire decades
ago, but I don’t get my wisdom from ancient song stylists
of our parents’ generation.
The
first thing I do when I dew hush in one of these weirdo places is try
to sort out the ground rules, ‘cause they’re always
different. It pays to find out up front if you’re likely to be
scarfed down for lunch by some hairball monster, or worshiped as the
reincarnation of Joan Crawford or something. Between you and me,
sweetie, being worshiped is only marginally better than death, but we
savage warrior women won’t accept either
treatment. You must’ve learned that much from me by
now, and I hope you’ve let your Josh know all about it.
Bitsy,
can I get something to drink out of your fridge? I mean, I just got
back from saving the civilization of an entire world from
destruction, and I’m dying for a Tab. Jeez, you don’t
have any Tab, and you used to be Miss Diet Bubbles of Greater Long
Island. And no beer,
either! Whatever happened to Blitzy Bitsy Spiegelman, the
original party vegetable? You’ve got five different brands of
bottled water in here, and not a single one of them is Perrier! What,
you serve one water with fish and another with meat? ‘ A pure,
delicious water from the natural miracle of New Jersey’s
sparkling springs.’ You drink water from New Jersey? Bitsy,
are you like fully wheezed or what? Josh’s idea, right?
So where was I? No, never
mind, I’ll just die of thirst. Anyway, I looked around and at
first it didn’t really seem like another planet or anything. I
was standing ID this road, okay? I was most of the way up a hill, and
behind me the pavement wound down through these trees and stuff, and
I could see a pretty big town down there. It reminded me a lot of
this time Daddy and Pammy took me to Santa Barbara, except I couldn’t
see anything like an ocean from where I was on that hill. Up ahead of
me was a big building with a dome on it, like one of those places
where they keep their telescopes, you know? I can’t remember
what they call ‘em, but you know what I mean. Well, the dome
place was a lot closer than the city, so I started booking it up the
road the rest of the way.
Now,
at this point, the only evidence I had that I wasn’t on Earth
somewhere was my weight, and you’ve probably noticed that I’ve
tended to bulk up just a smidge from one adventure to the next. So
maybe, I think, I really am
just outside of Santa Barbara or somewhere, and the extra fifteen
pounds is like this horrible souvenir I picked up in the World of
Tomorrow. I did have lots of healthful exercise there, bashing skulls
in the fresh air, a diet that would lay Richard Simmons in his
grave--I mean, look at these muscles! These lats would
make Stallone jealous!
This
is how I’m talking to myself, until I notice that there’s
a partial sunset going on off to the left. A partial
sunset. That’s where not all of the suns in the sky seem to
be setting at the same time. See, there was this yellow sun plunking
itself down on the horizon, and making a real nice show out of the
mists in the valley, and ordinarily I would have stopped and admired
it because sunsets are like so cute. Why do people get so
totally poetic about sunsets, anyway? I mean, there’s always
another one coming, like buses, and they’re all pretty much the
same, too. You don’t have critics reviewing sunsets.
Today’s will be just like yesterday’s, and there’s
not much hope that tomorrow’s will be any more special. So
what’s the big deal?
Well,
even after the yellow sun faded away, it was still daytime, ‘cause
there was still this other
little sun hanging around. I thought it might be the moon, except
it was almost as bright as the sun that had set, and it was red.
“Okay, Maureen,” I go, “this is not Earth.
And it’s not even in the whatyoucall, the solar system. You
really flaked out this time. “
A
couple of seconds later, I realized I was in big trouble. See, my
interspatial whushing depends on being able to see my goal in the
heavens. That’s how I got to Mars, remember? I stood out under
the night sky and raised my beseeching arms to the ruddy God of War,
and like whush! there
I was. So, despite my steering problems, I’ve always found my
way home ‘cause I’ve always stayed sort of in the same
neighborhood. Now, though, it was all different. I wasn‘t going
to be able to see the Earth in the sky at all. And the sun--the right
sun, our sun--would be just one bright dot lost among all
the others. If it was even there at all.
But
I hadn‘t been entirely
abandoned by Fate. After all, I was only half a mile downwind
from an observatory. They’d be able to point me in the right
direction, I was sure of it.
I cranked uphill for a
few minutes, starting to feel a little weirded out. The light from
the small sun was the color of beet juice, and it kind of sluiced
down over the trees and the road and made me look like I’d been
boiled too long. I was just telling myself that I hoped no one would
see me until I got inside the observatory, when I spotted this guy
hustling down the road toward me.
“Great,”
I go, “he’ll think I’ve been pickled in a jar or
something.” But there wasn’t anything I could do about
it, so I stopped worrying. After all, his
color was halfway between a crabapple and an eggplant, too.
He wasn’t a
bad-looking guy, either, even though in that light he looked like the
Xylocaine poster child. The only odd thing about him was his clothes.
He had on a kind of silvery jumpsuit with those stupid things that
stand up on your shoulders, like the visitors from the future always
wore in old sci-fi movies. He looked like Superman’s dad from
back in the good old days on Krypton. “Oh boy,” I go,
“welcome to the World of Superscience. “
I guess he was just as
freaked to see me. I mean, I was wearing my working outfit, which was
just the gold brassiere and G-string I picked up on’ my
travels, with Old Betsy hung on my hip. Maybe it was the broadsword,
or maybe he was just overcome by my ample figure, but he just came to
a stop in the middle of the road and stared. I mean, if I whush
through space in a drop-dead outfit I stumbled on at Lillie Rubin, I
land in Fred Flintstone’s backyard. If I slide into my fighting
harness instead, it figures I end up in some totally tasteful garden
party beyond the stars. You can’t win, right?
Which
reminds me, Bitsy. Every time I see you, you look like you need
intensive care from
the Fashion Resuscitators. Look at you now! Everything you’re
wearing is black or drab colors and loose and shapeless. And hightop
gym shoes with black socks? Bitsy! Has the FBS Catalog lost
your address, or what?
Never
mind. I looked at this Luke Floorwalker and I figured it was time for
an exchange of interplanetary greetings. I stepped forward and raised
my hand in the universal sign of peace. “I come from a planet
not unlike your own,” I go, real solemn. “I am Maureen
Danielle Birnbaum. Do not call me Muffy.”
This
dweeb just boggled at me with his mouth opening and closing like a
goldfish or
something. Finally he figured out how his mouthparts were connected,
and he goes, “You’ve come much sooner than we expected.”
“Excuse me?”
I go. I hadn’t fully realized that my reputation was spreading
all through the universe.
“We didn’t
think there’d be any serious trouble until after totality,”
he goes.
“I’m no
trouble,” I go. “I come in peace for all mankind.”
He took a couple of steps
forward and looked a little closer at my garb. He reached out with a
finger to boink my chestal covering. Guys are always trying to do
that to me. “Whoa, like men have died for less,” I go, in
my Command Voice.
“Forgive me, my
dear girl. Your fall into barbarism was also more immediate than we
predicted. “
This
goober rapidly needed
straightening out. Old Betsy sang as I whipped her from her scabbard.
“I’m not your dear girl, like I’m totally
sure,” I go. “ And it’s not barbarism or anything.
It’s like being fully wild and free.”
“Whatever,”
he goes. “But let me introduce myself. I am Segol 154. “
He cocked his head to one side, so I was supposed to be impressed or
something.
“Segol 154?”
I go. “Is that like a name you spraypaint on subway cars? You
live on 154th Street, or what?”
Now it was his turn to
look bummed out. “I am Segol 154. That is my cognomination.”
He said it with this little grisly sneer.
“Well,
forget you, “
I go. I just didn’t like his attitude, you know?
He paid no attention.
“May I ask you, how long have you been under this delusion?”.
I go, “What
delusion?”
He goes, “This
belief that you’re from another planet?”
Now,
see, in everyone of these doggone exploits there comes a time when I
have to prove I’m
from another planet. Sometimes it’s hard and sometimes it’s
easy. So I go, “Why can’t I be from another
planet?”
Segol
154 just shook his head sadly. “Because there are
no other planets. Lagash is all alone, circling Alpha. There are
five other suns, but no planets. Although in the last ten years, the
work of Aton 77 and others has deduced the existence of a lesser
satellite, we’re equally certain that no life could exist upon
it. “
“No
other planets? Oh yeah?”
Okay, so maybe I could’ve come up with a stronger argument.
“Yes, that is the
case. So you see, you can’t be from another planet. You were
born on Lagash, just as I was.”
“I
never even heard of
Lagash until a minute ago! I came from Earth, that beautiful
sapphire-blue world my people so sadly take for granted. “
“If that is the
case,” he goes, smirking like an idiot, “how do you
explain the fact that you speak English?”
Well, I’ve told you
before, it’s just amazing, huh? No matter where my adventures
take me, they speak English when I get there. Prince Van spoke
English on Mars, and the ape-things in the center of the Earth spoke
English, and they were still speaking English in the far distant
future. So I guess it was no biggie to find out they spoke English on
Lagash, too. But I wasn’t going to tell Segol about all that.
“I have studied your language,” I go. “We’ve
picked up your television programs on Earth for some time, okay?”
His eyes kind of
narrowed, and he looked at me for a little while without saying
anything. Then he goes, “What is television?”
Omigod!
Like I’m on a weirdo planet with no TV! “Your
radio broadcasts,” I go, “that’s what I meant.
We’ve studied your language and learned many things about your
culture and all.”
He nodded. “It’s
possible,” he goes. “There are many questions I must ask
you, before I can be sure you are speaking the truth. But we can’t
talk here. You must come with me. I was on my way to the Hideout.”
Now, believe me, at first
I thought he was a complete dudley, but I’ve learned to give
guys the benefit of the doubt. You never know who’s got like,
you know, a cute little ski shack in Vail or something. So I didn’t
bail on this guy just ‘cause he looked like he probably bit the
heads off chipmunks in his bedroom or something, and anyway he’d
just invited me to cruise the local Lagash nightlife.
I
turned around in front of him and I go, “So am I dressed for
the Hideout, or what? Is there dancing, or are we just going to like,
you know, sit there and drink
all night?” Which would’ve been okay, too. We warrior
women can party till our brass brassieres turn green.
Segol looked at me like I
was whoa nelly crazy or something. “What are you talking
about?” he goes. “We’re in terrible danger here.
The Hideout is our only chance of survival. We have to hurry!”
Okay,
I’m not as stupid as I look: I finally figured out that the
Hideout was like a hideout
or something. We started hurrying back down the road. “Where
is this place?” I go. “ And what are you so afraid
of!”
“It’s
going to be dark soon,” he goes, as if that said it all.
I laughed. “Your
mama wants you home by suppertime, huh?”
“My dear girl--”
He saw the grim look in my eyes and caught himself. “Maureen,
perhaps you haven’t heard Aton’s ideas explained
clearly.”
I
go, “So who is
this Aton dude when he’s at home? You mentioned him
before.”
“Aton 77 is one of
the most brilliant scientists on all of Lagash. He is a famous
astronomer, and director of Saro University. He’s predicted
that the entire world will go mad tonight when total Darkness falls.”
It
sounded mondo dumb to me. “That’s why God gave us
nightlights,” I go. “I mean, I even had this Jiminy
Cricket lamp when I was a kid. Wouldn’t go to sleep or anything
until Daddy turned it on for me.”
His
voice trailed off. I don’t think he even heard me, you know? He
goes, “ And then after the insanity starts, the fire and
destruction will begin. Nothing will be left. Our entire
civilization, every vestige of our culture, all
of it will be eradicated. And the Observatory will be the
first target, thanks to the Cultists. Our only hope is the Hideout. “
I
slid Old Betsy back into her scabbard while I thought about what
Segol had said. “You’re not kidding about this,” I
go. “You’re like really
scared, huh?”
He dropped his gaze to
the ground. “I admit it,” he goes, “I’m
terrified.”
Well, jeez, Bitsy, he was
like such a little boy when he said that! I couldn’t help but
feel sorry for him, even though I still figured he was maybe
stretching the truth just a teensy bit. “That Aton guy is still
up there at the Observatory, right?” I go.
Segol looked up at me
sort of mournfully. “Yes, along with a few of the other
scientists who volunteered to stay behind and record the event.”
“And you were
supposed to be there, too?”
He looked ashamed, but
all he did was nod his head.
“And instead,
you’re just zeeking out and lamming it for the Hideout. “
“We’ve got to
move fast, because they’ll be coming from Saro City. They may
kill us if they catch us here!”
I
had this picture in my mind of those clearly freaked villagers waving
torches around in Frankenstein,
you know? I knew I could save this guy from a dozen or two
rousted locals, but if the whole city turned up, whoa, like
see ya bye! So the Hideout sounded like a maximum cool idea.
We
followed the road downhill, and I had more time to think about what
Segol had said. I mean, either the deadly cold of deep space had
frozen my brain, or I was like really
missing something. All I knew was that a lot of irked people were
going to shred the Observatory, because they’d be driven loony
by the darkness. See, I hadn’t noticed the capital D Segol
had put on “Darkness.”
“Mr. 154,” I
go, “or may I call you Segol? Can I like ask you something?”
“Huh?” he
goes. He was way spaced, and he wasn’t even paying attention to
me or anything.
“What
makes this night different from all other nights?” I go. There
was this moment of quiet when I realized that I sounded just like my
little cousin Howard on Passover at my Uncle Sammy’s. Maybe I’d
heard Segol wrong. Maybe he said the threat was coming from “Pharaoh
City,” not “Saro City.”
“Why, nothing,”
he goes. “Aton’s warning is that tonight will be exactly
like last night, two thousand years ago. That’s the terrible
truth.”
“You
want me to believe it hasn’t been dark in two thousand years? I
mean, when do you people sleep?
Look, Lagash would have to practically creep around on its
whatyoucall for the days to be that long. And then imagine what it
would be like for the poor people on the dark side, going to the
beach in the pitch-dark all the time.” The whole idea was like
too weird for words.
He goes, “I can
almost believe that you’ve come here from some other world.
Lagash turns once about its axis in a little more than twenty-three
hours. Our nearly eternal day is caused by the six suns. There is
always at least one in the sky at all times.”
“Six?”
I go. “Now that’s just too
flaky. If you had that many up there, they’d be
blamming into each other all the time.”
He just gave me his
indulgent, superior little smirk again. “I see that you aren’t
familiar with celestial mechanics,” he goes.
“And
like you probably aren’t familiar with anything else,”
I go. I could tell by his expression that I’d really ranked
him out.
“The perpetual
presence of one or more suns in the skies of Lagash means that
Darkness falls only once every 2,049 years, when five of the suns
have set and the invisible moon passes between us and Beta, the only
remaining source of light and warmth.” He glanced upward, and I
saw him freeze in terror. Already, the edge of the moon had dented
the ruddy edge of Beta.
“Don’t
pay any attention to that,” I go. I was trying to lend him some
of my inexhaustible store of courage. But it was like odd.
you know? There are all these stories on Earth about lucky
explorers saving their lives by using eclipses to scare the natives.
I had to do just the opposite. If the mindless mob caught us, I had
to pretend that I could end the eclipse.
“Soon,” he
goes, “the Stars!”
“You bet,” I
go. I didn’t see what all the excitement was. Of course, I
didn’t hear the capital letter again.
“When
the Stars come out, the world will come to an end.” He looked
at me, and his eyes were all big and bugged out. I hated to see him
so scared, okay? Even in that cranberry light he was sort of
cute--for a brainy type, I mean. He wasn’t Prince Van
or anything, but he wasn’t any Math Club geek, either.
“And you blame it
all on the stars?” I go.
“Strange, isn’t
it? That Aton’s warning should agree with the Cult? Believe me,
he wasn’t happy about it, but he’s absolutely sure of his
conclusions. There is definite proof that nine previous cultures have
climbed to civilization, only to be destroyed by the Stars. And now
it is our turn. Tomorrow, the world will belong to savages and
madmen, and the long process will begin again.”
I
tapped him on the skull. “Hello, Segol?” I go. “Is
anybody like home? You
haven’t told me what the stars have to do with it.”
He wasn’t really
paying attention to me, which just goes to show you how zoned out he
was, ‘cause I made a pretty dramatic presentation with my boobs
clad in a metal Maidenform and my broadsword and everything. He goes,
“Beenay 25 had an insane idea that there might be as many as
two dozen stars in the universe. Can you imagine?”
“Beenay 25?”
I go. “It sounds like an acne cream.”
“And
the Stars, whatever they are, only come out in the Darkness. I think
it’s all superstitious hogwash, myself. But Aton believes that
the Cult’s ravings may have some basis in fact, that their Book
of Revelations may have been written shortly after the last
nightfall--”
Bitsy,
you know how they say “my blood ran cold?” The
orthodontist shows his bill to your parents and like their blood runs
cold, okay? Well,
right then I learned what they meant. It took a whole long time to
seep into my brain, but finally I realized like, hey, if night falls
only once every two thousand years around this place, then the stars
won’t come out again for centuries, right? And without
stars, I’d never be able to whush myself home! I’d be
stuck on Lagash forever and ever! And I already knew they
didn’t have TV, so that meant they also didn’t have any
of the other trappings of modern civilization that are dependent on
TV, like the Shopping Channel and Lorenzo Lamas. And could the
Galleria have existed back in those pre-test-pattern dark ages? I
think not.
So I was not going to be
hanging out on Lagash long enough to find out what the dawn would
bring. I had one window of opportunity, and I wasn’t going to
miss it. “What about the weather?” I go.
“Hmm?” Like
Segol the Bionic Brain was aware of my existence again.
“You
know, if it gets all cloudy, we won’t be able to see
the stars.” Then I’d be trapped there for good.
He brightened up
considerably for a moment. “Yes,” he goes, “that
would be a miracle.”
“Not
for some of us,”
I go. First I thought he’d fallen desperately in love with me
and wanted me to stay on Lagash. But this bozo was thinking that
after two thousand years of buildup, the big night might come and it
would be too overcast to see anything. Quel irony, right?
N.S.L., sweetie--No Such
Luck. Beta, the red sun in the sky, was now only a thin crescent like
a bloody sliver of fingernail or something. It wouldn’t be much
longer to total Darkness. It was like slightly obvious that we’d
never make it to the Hideout in time. I was stuck out on this road
with Segol 154, who was like a total loon. Still, the Hideout was all
he could think about.
“We’ve
got to hurry,” he goes, putting his grubby hands on my person
and kind of dragging me along after him. “We’ve got to
get to the Hideout. We must make sure you’re safe. Your destiny
is to have babies, many
babies, who will be the hope of Lagash’s future.”
I
disenhanded myself from him and laughed, a proud and haughty laugh
meaning “If you weren’t such a pitiful knob.
I’d hack you to little pieces for that remark.” Let
me tell you a little secret, honey: no matter where you go in the
known universe, the men are all the same. It’s like these
honkers are what God gave us as substitutes because all the
really buf guys are on back order.
So what does he do? He
grabs me by both shoulders and goggles into my face. “You...will
be...the mother of...my children!” he goes. And even if there
wasn’t a line of drool down his chin, like there should have
been.
You
know and I know--and, believe
me, Bitsy, now this Segol knows--nobody paws me uninvited.
I didn’t care if civilization was quickly coming to a
screeching halt. I was now totally bugged, and I was going to teach
him a lesson in interspatial etiquette. I put one hand flat against
his chest and pushed real hard, and the next thing he’s down in
the road squinting up at me all surprised. I whipped Old Betsy from
her scabbard again and took a menacing step toward him. “Look!”
he screams. “Behind you!”
“Oh, like I’m
so sure,” I go. But I heard these grumbly sounds, and I turned
and saw a mob of people huffing up the hill toward us. They did not
look pleased.
Segol scrabbled to his
feet and stood beside me. “Let me do the talking, little lady,”
he goes. “They may still listen to reason. And maybe you’d
better put that silly sword away.”
I
decided to let him take his shot. I didn’t even freak out about
being called “little lady.” I was absolutely beyond
arguing with him. He could try talking to the mob, and when he’d
said his piece, I was going to lop his grody head off. Okay, like I’d
given him fair warning, hadn’t I?
But he wasn’t even
aware that he’d bummed me out. He started walking toward the
crowd from the city, both hands raised above his head. I don’t
know what that was supposed to mean. Segol probably thought he was
one dangerous dude. Maybe he thought that with his hands in the air,
he wouldn’t look like such a terrible threat to the safety of
those five hundred howling maniacs. “Listen to me!” he
goes. “Listen to me! I mean you no harm!”
Yeah, right. That made
the mob feel a whole lot better about everything, for sure. There was
this raspy guy at the front of the crowd. He looked like he’d
been getting ready for the end of civilization for a long time now,
and like he couldn’t wait for it to happen, you know? He had
wild scraggly hair and big popping old eyes. He just about had a bird
when he recognized Segol 154. “That’s one of them!”
he goes, waving his arms around a lot. “He’s from the
Observatory!”
Segol gave him this smile
that was supposed to calm him down or something. “Come,”
he goes, “let us reason together.”
“They
didn’t come here to talk,
“ I go. “They came here to work your butt.”
Someone else in the crowd
started shouting, “Death to the unbelievers! Death to the
blasphemers in the Observatory!”
That
cry was taken up by others until it became this ugly chant. I wanted
to tell them, hey, I’d never even been
in the Observatory, but they wouldn’t even have heard me.
Finally, a tall man in a
black robe pushed his way to the front of the crowd. When he raised
his hands, they all shut up. “Silence, my friends,” he
goes. “Let us give these profaners of the truth one last chance
to redeem their souls.”
“Who’s that?”
I go.
“His name is Sor
5,” Segol goes. “He is the leader of the Cultists.”
“Oh, huh,” I
go. I turned to this Sor 5 and I go, “I don’t know
anything about your Cult. What’s your problem, anyway?”
The
guy in the robe just gave me this sad little smile. “It’s
not my problem,
young lady. It’s yours. You have only a few minutes left before
Lagash is swallowed up by the Cave of Darkness. Unless you embrace
the revealed truth of our faith, your soul will be stripped from you
when the Stars appear. You will become a savage, unreasoning brute. “
I
looked at the flipped-out people who made up his congregation, and I
figured most of them didn’t have far to go. Like maybe they’d
already seen the
stars, like at some kind of preview party or something. “So
what are you guys selling?” I go.
Sor goes, “Behold!
The Cave of Darkness is already engulfing Beta.”
I looked up. There wasn’t
much of the red sun left. “Really,” I go. “Tell me
about it.”
“Soon all will be
in Darkness, and the Stars will blaze down in all their fury. “
“Really.”
Sor looked confused for a
few seconds. “You do not deny any of this?”
I go, “See, you’re
telling me the same thing that Segol told me, and I can’t
figure out what your hang-up is.”
That made him mad. I
thought he was going to split his black robe. “We believe the
Stars are the source of the Heavenly Flame, which will scourge and
cleanse Lagash. The infidels of the Observatory insist that the Stars
are nothing but burning balls of gas, physical objects like our own
six suns. They refuse to grant that the Stars have any holy power at
all. “
“Death to the
unbelievers!” screamed the mob. “Death to the blasphemers
in the Observatory!” Sor tried again to quiet them, but this
time they wouldn’t listen. They surged forward, and I was like
sure they were fully ready to tear us limb from limb. I brandished
Old Betsy, but I backed away uphill, praying that Segol and I could
somehow make it to the Observatory alive.
The astronomer shot me a
terrified glance. “You hold them off,” he goes, “and
I’ll run for help.”
“Right,” I
go, sort of contemptuously, “you just do that.” He was
like a real poohbutt, you know?
Just
then, the last red ember of Beta flickered in the sky and went out as
the eclipse reached totality. There was a long moment of this really
creepy quiet. You couldn’t hear a sound, not a person gasping
or an animal rustling, not even the wind. It was like being in a
movie theater when the film breaks, just before the audience starts
getting rowdy. And then the stars
came out, normally No Big Deal.
Except
on Lagash, it was a
big deal, and not just ‘cause it’d been two thousand
years since the last time. Bitsy, these people really knew how to
have stars! I looked up, and there were a zillion times as
many stars as we have on Earth. It reminded me of when we were
getting ready for that dance at Brush-Bennett, and you spilled that
whole box of glitter on my black strapless. Remember? Well, on
Lagash, the night sky looked just like that. All the places between
the stars were crammed with stars.
“Oh...my...God!”
I was totally impressed, but I wasn’t, you know, going
insane or anything.
“Stars!” goes
Segol in this kind of strangled voice.
“Surprise,” I
go. I mean, he was a real melvin.
Now
the mob started screaming and screeching and carrying on. They’d
known the Stars were coming, but like they didn’t have any idea
what stars really were,
or how many of them there’d be, and all that. So
even Sor looked haired, but I give him credit, he pulled himself
together pretty fast. “Our salvation will be the destruction of
the Observatory,” he goes. I mean, he couldn’t bring
himself to look up at the stars anymore, and he had to kind of croak
his speech out, but he made himself heard. “If we destroy the
Observatory and everyone in it, the Stars will spare us. And we must
begin with them.”
He
was pointing at me and Segol. “That is so
lame,” I go. “Don’t be stupid. There’s
nothing to be--”
Sadly,
I didn’t have the time to finish my explanation. The crowd was
full-on crazy and ready to roust. When they charged, I felt a sudden
calmness flood through me. I didn’t know what
Segol was doing and I didn’t care. Old Betsy whistled
through the air as I hacked and hewed at the waves of shrieking
lunatics. Bodies piled up in front of me and on both sides. I took a
couple of biffs and bruises, but I was too skillful and like too
excellent for them to fight through my guard.
Of
course, they had me outnumbered, and after a while I realized I was
way tired. I wasn’t going to be able to handle all
of them, so while I fought I tried to think up some, you know,
strategy. And then I saw their leader over on the side of the
road, kneeling down in the dark, with his face turned up to the sky
where the eclipse was still chugging along and the stars were still
blazing away. I started working my way toward him, wading through his
nutty buddies with my broadsword cutting a swath before me.
Finally I was right
beside him. I reached down and grabbed him by the neck of his robe
and jerked him to his feet. “I am Sor!” he goes, like
frothing a little in the corners of his mouth. He wasn’t all
there anymore, okay?
“You’re
sore,” I go. I let him go and he fell in a heap at my feet.
“Tell your fruitcake army to stand still and shut up, or I’ll
split your skull open and let the starlight in.”
Sor stared at me
fearfully for a few seconds. Then he got to his feet and raised his
arms. “Stand still and shut up!” he goes.
All the rest of the mob
stopped what they were doing, which was mostly climbing over the
stacks of bodies, trying to get to me.
“Good,” I go.
“You have no reason to be afraid.”
Segol
started babbling. I’d wondered what had happened to him.
“Beenay guessed a dozen, maybe two dozen Stars. But this! The
universe, the stars, the bigness!”
“Lagash
is nothing, a speck of dust!” cried a voice from the mob.
“We’re
nothing but insects, less
than insects!”
“I want light!
Let’s burn the Observatory!”
“We’re so
small, and the Darkness is so huge! Our suns and our planet are
insignificant!”
Well,
these people had a serious problem. All of a sudden, they realized
that there was a lot more to the universe than their precious Lagash.
Then I had an idea that might keep these frenzied folks from
thrashing all of
their civilization and maybe save my own neck, too.
I
go, “There’s no reason to be afraid. The stars are not
what you think. I know.
I come from a world that has studied them for many centuries.”
“She’s mad!
The Stars have driven her insane!”
“Listen to her!”
Segol goes. “She told me the same story long before the Stars
appeared. She speaks the truth. “
“Yes,”
I go, “there are
other stars in the universe. That’s just something you ‘re
going to have to learn to live with. But not as many as that.”
I pointed up, and noticed that the eclipse had moved on past
totality, and a teeny tiny thread of red light was starting to grow
on one side of Beta.
“Then what are all
those thousands of points of light?” goes Sor.
“Tonight
is a night for revelations and strange truth,” I go. I’m
always pretty good in a crisis like that. I can talk my way out of
anything. Hey, you
know that. You were my roommate, right? “Lagash, your six
suns, and the other twelve stars in the universe are surrounded by a
huge ball of ice. “
“Ice?” goes
Segol. He sounded like he was having just a little bit of trouble
buying it.
“Sure,
ice, “ I go,
acting kind of ticked off that he doubted me. “What did you
think, that the universe just sort of went on and on forever?
That’s so real, I’m totally sure.”
“A
wall of ice,” Sor goes. “The Book
of Revelations speaks of a Cave of Darkness. I don’t see
why there can’t be a wall of ice as well.”
Now
everyone had stopped trying to grab me by the throat. They were all
like hanging on my every word, okay? “But what are
the Stars?” someone goes.
“The Stars are an
illusion,” I go. “What you see up there are only the
reflections of the dozen real stars, shining on the craggy ice wall
of the universe. “
There was this silence. I
held my breath ‘cause everything would be totally cool if they
believed me, but I’d have to start fighting for my life again
if they didn’t. Five seconds passed, then ten. Then all at once
they all went “ Ahhhh. “
Sor goes, “It’s
the divine truth!” I saw tears running down his face.
“Look!” goes
Segol. “Beta! It’s coming back!”
Sor waved his arms around
and got their attention. “Let’s hurry back to Saro City,”
he goes. “We can spread the news and keep our brothers and
sisters from burning our homes. The other suns will rise in a few
hours, and then life must go on as before. We must tell the others
what we’ve learned, and broadcast the information to everyone
on Lagash.” Then they turned and marched away, without so much
as a thank-you.
When we were alone again
on the road, Segol came over to me. He had this big, spazzy grin on
his face. “That was really something, my dear,” he goes.
“My
name’s Maureen,
and this is the last time I’m going to remind you.
If you have trouble remembering that, you can call me Princess.”
Well, Bitsy, I know I was sort of stretching the truth, but
sometimes I liked to think of myself as sort of almost engaged to
Prince Van of the Angry Red Planet. I mean” a woman’s
reach should exceed her grasp, or what’s a mixer at Yale for?
“Then
congratulations, Maureen. You were outstanding. You have saved us
from centuries of Dark Ages. I think you’ll always be
remembered in the history books of Lagash.”
I shrugged. “What
can I say?” I go. “It’s like a gift.”
Segol nodded, then hung
his head in shame. “I guess I owe you an apology, too. I wasn’t
much help to you during the battle.”
“‘S
all right,” I go. “You weren’t really ready for all
those stars.” I was just being gracious, you know? I’d
been a little zoned out, too, when I saw how many there were, but I
got over it.
He looked back up at me,
as grateful as that awful Akita puppy Daddy brought home for Pammy’s
birthday. “Perhaps you’d permit me the honor,” he
goes, “of asking for your hand in marriage.”
I
was like too stunned to say anything for a moment. I wiped Old Betsy
off on this dead guy’s shirt and slid her slowly back into the
scabbard. Then I go, “No, I won’t permit you the honor of
having my hand in anything.
Nothing personal, okay?”
He was disappointed, of
course, but he’d live. “I understand. Would you answer a
question, then?”
“Sure, as long as
it’s not like way lewd or demeaning to all women. “
He
took a deep breath and he goes, “Is it true?
What you told the Cultists? Is it true that Lagash is in the
center of a gigantic ball of ice?”
I
laughed. I mean, how megadumb could he be? I wasn’t surprised
that Sor 5 and his crowd swallowed that story, but I didn’t
think a real astronomer would buy it. Then I realized that this was
not the World of
Superscience, after all, and that Segol was just a poor guy trying to
understand like the laws of nature and everything. I couldn’t
bring myself to weird him out any more than he already was. “Right,
like totally,” I go. “Maybe someday your own Observatory
will figure out the distance from Lagash to the ice wall. I used
to know, but I forgot.”
“Thank
you, Maureen,” he goes. Suddenly he’d gotten so humble it
was ill. “I
think we’d better hurry back to tell Aton and the others the
news. Beenay and the rest of the photographers should have captured
the Stars with their imaging equipment. They were all prepared, of
course, but even so they may have given way to panic.” He
looked down at the ground again, probably remembering how he’d
bugged out of there in panic even before the stars came
out.
“I’m
sorry, Segol,” I go. “I can’t
go back to the Observatory with you. I’m needed elsewhere.
I’ve got to flash on back to Earth. If I wait much longer the
eclipse will be over, the sky will get light, the stars will go out
for another two thousand years, and I’ll never see my dear,
dear friend Bitsy ever again. “ Sure, sweetie, even in
this moment of awful tension, I thought of you. You believe me,
don’t you?
Segol sighed. “I
suppose you must go, then. I’ll never forget you, little la--I
mean, Maureen.”
I
gave him this sort of noblesse
oblige smile, but I stopped short of getting all emotional and
everything. “Farewell, Segol 154,” I go.”Tell the
others that someday, when you’ve proved yourselves worthy, my
people will welcome yours into the Federation of Planets. Until then,
one last word of advice: try to discourage anyone who starts fiddling
around with radio astronomy. I think it will make you all very, very
unhappy.”
“Radio astronomy?”
he goes. “How can you look at space with a radio?”
“Never
mind, just remember what I said.” I raised one hand in the
universal sign of “That’s all, folks.” Then I
raised my supplicating arms to the stars, went eeny
meeny miney mo, and whushed myself on out of there.
I’m
sorry I had to listen to the whole story. By the time Maureen
finished it, we had finished off all the strawberries, and a
quiche with nothing in it is like tortellini salad without the
tortellini. In the months that Josh and I had been together, he’d
taught me a lot about food and everything. We didn‘t have
supper any more, we dined. And then like I did the dishes.
Anyway,
it was getting late, and you know I had to rush her out of there, and
I tried to explain to her
but she just didn’t want to listen, so then I put my back
against her and shoved her toward the door, and I guess she got
annoyed or something ‘cause then I shoved some more but she
wasn‘t there and I fell on the kitchen floor and she was
standing over me with her sword in her hand and she had on
what she called her warrior-woman expression, and I could just see
the headlines in the Post: QUEENS WOMAN DIES IN SHISH KABOB
TRAGEDY. Josh would never be able to face our folks again. So I go.
“Back off, Muffy. “ Wrong thing to say.
“You’re as
bad as those ape-things in the center of the Earth!” She was
screeching now.
I go, “Just bag
your face, will you? Some roommate you are. Where’s that old
Greenberg School bond we used to have?”
That
got to her. She sheathed her jeweled sword and calmed down. She
helped me get up and dusted me off a little. “I’m sorry,
Bitsy, “ she goes. I
noticed she was blushing.
“All
right, I guess, “ I
go. We looked at each other a little longer, then I started to cry
for some reason, and then she trickled a couple, and we
started hugging each other and bawling, and the front door opened and
I heard Josh coming in, and all he needed was another
unexplained visit from his favorite Savage Amazon, so I go, “Maureen,
quick, you’ve got to hide!” And then I felt
like we were all on I Love Lucy or something, and I started to
laugh.
She
laughed, too. Josh didn’t
laugh, though. Sometimes it’s like we only see his friends,
and why can’t I ever have my friends over? Josh goes,
“Because my friends don’t wave broadswords around
on the subway. “ I suppose he has a point there.
Balance
by Mike
Resnick
SUSAN CALVIN
STEPPED UP TO THE PODIUM AND SURVEYED her audience: the stockholders
of the United States Robots and Mechanical Men Corporation.
“I want to thank
you for your attendance,” she said in her brisk, businesslike
way, “and to update you on our latest developments.”
What
a fearsome face she has, thought August Geller, seated in the
fourth row of the audience. She reminds me of my seventh-grade
English teacher, the one I was always afraid of
Calvin
launched into a detailed explanation of the advanced new circuitry
she had introduced into the positronic brain, breaking it down into
terms a layman--even a stockholder--could understand.
Brilliant
mind, thought Geller. Absolutely brilliant. It’s
probably just as well. Imagine a countenance like that without a mind
to offset it.
“Are
there any questions at this point?” asked Calvin, her cold blue
eyes scanning the audience.
“I have one,”
said a pretty young woman, rising to her feet.
“Yes?”
The woman voiced her
question.
“I thought I had
covered that point,” said Calvin, doing her best to hide her
irritation. “However...”
She launched into an even
more simplistic explanation.
Isn’t
it amazing? thought Geller. Here are two women, one with a
mind like a steel trap, the other with an I.Q. that would probably
freeze water, and yet I can’t take my eyes off the woman who
asked that ridiculous question. Poor Dr. Calvin; Nature has such a
malicious sense of humor.
Calvin
noticed a number of the men staring admiringly at her questioner. It
was not the first time that men had found something more fascinating
than Calvin to capture their attention, nor the hundredth, nor the
thousandth.
What
a shame, she thought, that they aren’t more like robots,
that they let their hormones overwhelm their logic. Here I am,
explaining how I plan to spend twelve billion dollars of their money.
and they’re more interested in a pretty face.
Her
answer completed, she launched into a discussion of the attempts they
were making to provide stronger bodies for those robots designed for
extraterrestrial use by the application of titanium frames with tight
molecular bondings.
I
wonder, thought Geller, if she’s ever even had a date
with a man? Not a night of wild passion, God knows, but just a meal
and perhaps a trip to the theater, where she didn’t talk
business. He shook his head almost imperceptibly. No, he
decided, it would probably bore her to tears. All she cares about
are her formulas and equations. Good looks would be wasted on her.
Calvin
caught Geller staring at her, and met and held his gaze.
What
a handsome young man, she thought. I wonder if I’ve seen
him at any previous meetings? I’m sure I’d remember if I
had. Why is he staring at me so intently?
I
wonder, thought Geller, if
anyone she’s loved has ever loved her back?
Probably
he’s just astounded that a woman can have a brain, she
concluded. As if anything else mattered.
In
fact, thought Geller, I
wonder if she’s ever loved at all?
Look
at that tan, thought Calvin,
still staring at Geller. It’s attractive, to be sure, but do
you ever work, or do you spend all your time lazing mindlessly on the
beach? She fought back an urge to sigh deeply between sentences.
Sometimes it’s hard to imagine that people like you and I
even belong to the same species, I have so much more in common with
my robots.
Sometimes,
thought Geller, when I
listen to you wax rhapsodic about positronic brains and molecular
bonding, it’s hard to imagine that we belong to the same
species, you sound so much like one of your robots.
Still,
thought Calvin against her
will, you are tall and you are handsome, and you certainly have an
air of self-assuredness about you. Most men won’t or can’t
match my gaze. And your eyes are blue and clear. I wonder...
Still,
thought Geller, there must be something there, some core oJ
femininity beneath the harsh features and coldly analytical mind. I
wonder...
Calvin shook her head
inadvertently and almost lost track of what she was saying.
Ridiculous,
she concluded. Absolutely ridiculous.
Geller
stared at her one more time, studying the firm jaw, the broad
shoulders, the aggressive stance, the face devoid of makeup, the hair
that could have been so much more attractive.
Ridiculous, he
concluded. Absolutely ridiculous.
Calvin
spoke for another fifteen minutes, then opened the floor to
questions.
There were two, and she
handled them both succinctly.
“I want to thank
Dr. Calvin for spending this time with us,” concluded Linus
Becker, the young chief operating executive of United States Robots
and Mechanical Men. “ As long as we have her remarkable
intellect working for us, I feel confident that we will continue to
forge ahead and expand the parameters of the science of robotics. “
“I’ll second
that,” said one of the major stockholders. “When we
produce a positronic brain with half the capabilities of our own Dr.
Calvin, the field of robotics will have come of age.”
“Thank you,”
said Calvin, ignoring a strange sense of emptiness within her. “I
am truly flattered.”
“It’s we who
are flattered,” said Becker smoothly, “to be in the
presence of such brilliance.” He applauded her, and soon the
entire audience, including Geller, got to their feet and gave her a
standing ovation.
Then each in turn walked
up to her to introduce himself or herself, and shake her hand, and
comment on her intellect and creativity.
“Thank
you,” said Calvin, acknowledging yet another compliment. You
take my hand as if you expect it to be tungsten and steel, rather
than sinew and bone. Have I come to resemble my robots that much?
“I
appreciate your remarks,” said Calvin to another stockholder. I
wonder if lovers speak to each other in the same hail-fellow-well-met
tones?
And
then Geller stepped up and took her hand, and she almost jumped from
the sensation, the electricity passing from his strong, tanned hand
to her own.
“I think you are
quite our greatest asset, Dr. Calvin,” he said.
“Our robots are our
greatest asset,” she replied graciously. “I’m just
a scientific midwife.”
He
stared intently at her for a moment, and suddenly the tension left
his body. Impossible.
You’re too much like them. If I asked you out, it would be an
act of charity, and I think you are too proud and too perceptive to
accept that particular kind of charity.
She
looked into his eyes one last time. Impossible. I have my work to
do--and my robots never disappoint me by proving to be merely human.
“Remember,
everyone,” announced Becker, “there’s a banquet
three hours from now.” He turned to Calvin. “You’ll
be there, of course.”
Calvin nodded. “I’ll
be there,” she said with a sigh.
She had only an hour to
change into a formal gown for the banquet, and she was running late.
She entered her rather nondescript apartment, walked through the
living room and bedroom, both of which were filled to overflowing
with scientific journals, opened her closet, and began laying out her
clothes on the bed.
“Did anyone ever
tell you that you have the most beautiful blue eyes?” asked her
butler robot.
“Why, thank you,”
said Calvin.
“It’s true,
you know,” continued the butler. “Lovely, lovely eyes, as
blue as the purest sapphire. “
Her robot maid entered
the bedroom to help her dress.
“Such a pretty
smile,” said the maid. “If I had a smile like yours, men
would fight battles just for the pleasure of seeing it turned upon
them.”
“You’re very
kind,” said Calvin.
“Oh,
no, Mistress Susan,” the robot maid corrected her. “
You’re very
beautiful. “
Calvin noticed the robot
chef standing in the doorway to her bedroom.
“Stop staring at
me,” she said. “I’m only half-dressed. Where are
your manners?”
“Legs like yours,
and you expect me to stop staring?” said the chef with a dry,
mechanical chuckle. “Every Bight I dream about meeting a woman
with legs like yours.”
Calvin slipped into her
gown, then waited for the robot maid to zip up the back.
“Such clear, smooth
skin,” crooned the maid. “If I were a woman, that’s
the kind of skin I would want.”
They
are such perceptive creatures, reflected Calvin, as she stood
before a mirror and applied her almost-clear lipstick. Such dear
creatures, she amended. Of course they are just responding to
the needs of First Law--to my needs--but how very thoughtful
they are.
She
picked up her purse and headed to the door.
I
wonder if they ever get tired of reciting this litany?
“You’ll
be the belle of the ball, “ said the robot butler proudly as
she walked out of the apartment.
“Why, thank you
very much,” said Calvin. “You grow more flattering by the
day.”
The robot shook its
metallic head. “It is only flattery if it is a lie, my lady,”
it said just before the door slid shut behind her.
Her emotional balance
fully restored, as it always was whenever she came home from dealing
with human beings, she headed toward the banquet feeling vigorous and
renewed. She wondered if she would be seated near that handsome
August Geller, who had listened to her so intently during her speech.
Upon reflection, she
hoped that she would be seated elsewhere. He aroused certain uneasy
feelings within her, this handsome young man--and fantasies, when all
was said and done, were for lesser intellects which, unlike herself,
couldn’t cope with the cold truths of the real world.
The Present Eternal
by Barry N.
Malzberg
SO ARNOLD POTTERLEY
WENT HOME. WHERE, AFTER ALL, WAS there to go? If there was nowhere to
hide, then you might at least be uncomfortable, squirm under the
knowledge of complete exposure where, at least, you were most
comfortable.
At least, that was
Potterley’s way of rationalizing this ultimate disaster. Others
had different views, of course. Nimmo went to the outback. Foster
went insane.
I
have been asked to write a history of the world after the
chronoscope. This is a great honor, of course. I am being honored in
that request. It is not so long that I have been writing, after all,
first numbers and then for a long time the alphabet, until at last I
began to feel more secure with words and phrases and then whole
sentences; still this is a big leap for me. “If you do not do
it, Jorg, who will do it?” I have been told, rather asked, but
this does not honor so much as it frightens me. Many things frighten
me of course; the chronoscope taught us to be afraid of everything.
The chronoscope taught us common sense. The chronoscope taught us the
true way of the world. “ Jorg” is not real, is my nom,
as they say, de plumay.
Caroline
Potterley waited for months after she could have done it to finally
bring the machine into her home, seek her dead daughter, Laurel. To
see her again, to know the little girl as she had been had
constituted the final passion of her life and yet when it was
possible at last, when Arnold had insisted and Foster had made that
thing and the time-viewer, for reasons she had never understood had
escaped to the entire world...when that opportunity was, at last,
hers, Caroline found herself in thrall, held back, locked against her
own desire. She knew that once she brought in the machine and
everyone was doing it now, Arnold refused but how could he have
stopped her?, once she used the controls and instructions and found
her dead daughter she would fall and fall, plunge into something,
some quality of emotion which she had never known...and it was the
need to fight against this stricture, to fight against that
last and terrible plunge which caused her to hold back but there came
finally that point at which she could no longer resist.
“I can’t hold
back any longer, Arnold,” she would have said if they had still
been talking in these months, but they were not. Arnold was never
home except to sleep and sometimes even not at night, he wandered
around in grief and shock, pulling at the pockets of his suit jackets
and finishing the small bottles of wine which case by case he brought
in and bottle by bottle he drained. So she did not say this to him,
merely made the necessary arrangements which were easy to do in this
strange and terrible world which had evolved, and opened the viewer
to her history, to that time before the fire when
--When she had had a
little girl laughing and tumbling in the corridors of her life, when
she and Laurel had told one another secrets which now she could not,
somehow, remember.
This is my partial
history of the world after the chronoscope, then. No one can write
the full history, who has the time? Who has the tools? It was the
criminal, the necessary part of our lives. I am making some of this
up. I am imagining some of this as the way it should have been. No
one who was there at the time bothered to write it down or to put it
in final form, it is left to me to make it up as best I can. That is
what was said to me, “Make it up as best you can. If it seems
to fit, then make it fit. There are no truths. What is truth? What
can truth be? Set it down as you see fit. “ And so on and so
forth in this difficult and imperfect time. I was talking about who
used it first. Who is to say who used it first? All of them did,
everyone did. But I think it must have been the thieves and lowlifes
who perceived its lesser possibilities, those dedicated to the
transcendent and the bravest view of matters who would have adapted
the chronoscope first, not the leaders of nations but those who
toiled in the outskirts of the nations. For them the chronoscope
would yield a kind of eternal present through which they could
scamper gratefully, thoughtfully, seeking grander device. Who else
could it have been? It was these visionaries of course, who first
made use of the device. This is no surprise, those like Potterley are
always ahead of the herd in their willingness to try new and
different means.
Of course everyone,
theoretically, who used the timeviewer was a criminal by fiat; we are
talking (notice how easily I slide into the voice of authority and
generalization, that pontifical “we,” but I have been
reading many of the old texts in preparation for this assignment and
in order to find the proper approach) rather of professionals, those
who considered it already an occupation. Secret combinations,
long-buried hiding places, crevices containing the untaxed
unconverted profits...all of these were easily available to a patient
and understanding scan.
Crimes of violence and
passion, surprisingly, diminished; the chronoscope made passion and
violence vicariously available to the widest, most eager audience and
the pre-chronoscope sex lives of the famous and desired were--well,
they were most famous and desired.
In the viewer, then, in
that narrow and focused tube of memory, Laurel waved at her, skipped
to the bottom of the slide and began her tumbling ascent, in the
shafts of indifferent late afternoon light (it must have been that
first October they had the slide, Laurel’s teeth were uneven
and the dress she wore had been somehow lost after one season,
Caroline remembered this, she remembered everything) she seemed ever
more vulnerable as she rose and yet somehow, mixed with the
vulnerability, there was a toughness, a security of effort, a
determination which would have fifteen years later, maybe less, made
her a fearsome young woman. Caroline could see that strength, could
take it for the moment into herself and knowing that, knowing that
the twenty-year-old Laurel would have been able to direct
circumstance as Caroline never could, gave her a sudden and
shuddering moment of insight, of possibility, which in the thin gray
light cast from the viewer seemed to cast her up very much as Laurel
herself seemed to rise, seemed to lock them into some passionate and
savage assertion which could, in that moment, reach out from the
constricted space of the viewer and become, almost become, the world.
One
year after the particulars of chronoscopy appeared on a popular
science program any dummy could have figured out, your Tiffany, who
thought of herself still as lost in the darkness of crime, walked
into the home of Paul Taber, owner of half the casinos in Miami.
There was no need to fear the presence of Taber or anyone else; she
had cleared that. She had watched Taber and his fifth wife leave and,
furthermore, she had watched them take a last look, another
little security peek for them at the jewels and cash that a
careful scan through the years had shown them so industriously
accumulating right up to that point, twelve hours earlier, where they
had secured the house (no problem for Tiffany) and left on a long,
sudden, necessary trip.
On the way to the safe
with the real stuff, humming a little song of accomplishment, Tiffany
picked up a few bangles here and a few baubles over there, working
from the map of the premises she had sketched out so carefully, so
industriously, put them into her little sack. Just as she scampered
toward the safe, she saw the shadows against the window and then a
rough, clumsy but manifestly accomplished thug came into the light
and stared at her. He seemed to be holding a sack of his own.
“I hadn’t
thought of this,” Tiffany said.
“Who are you?”
the thug asked.
“But I should have
thought of it,” Tiffany said. “I mean, it doesn’t
show the future, right?”
“What
future?” the thug said. “This
is the future. Okay, hand over the stuff.”
“It’s mine,”
she said stupidly. “I worked for it.”
The thug pulled out a gun
and pointed it with easy accomplishment at a dangerous area of
Tiffany’s chest. “You didn’t work hard enough,”
he said.
“Protestant ethic,”
Tiffany said pointlessly. “I was here first, anyway. “
“But
I’m here now. And
I can open that safe as easy as you. Easier. I know the combination.”
“So do I.”
“The viewer,”
he said. Understanding flooded the thug’s features; he
appeared, suddenly, years younger and more alert. It did wonders for
his complexion, too. “You have one of those things, too. You
can look at the past.”
“I’m also
patient and careful,” Tiffany said. “If you had done any
real research at all instead of grabbing one of those ten-cent
viewers and spinning the dials, you would have seen that there’s
a spot in this place which has an alarm hooked up directly to
headquarter, five minutes away. And you’re standing on it,
dummy.”
“You’re just
trying to get me to leave. “
“Would I try to
scare you for no reason? A colleague? We’d better get out of
here, pal.”
“You mean, like me
first,” the thug said. “ And leave you to clean out the
place on your own. No, not without that stuff I’m not going.”
He brandished the gun.
Tiffany shrugged; Baubles
and bangles, yes, but the supply was infinite. It was as infinite as
time. Didn’t he understand this? The arena had become vastly
more open; the walls had been taken down. “Take them,”
she said generously, passing handfuls. She walked toward a window.
“I’ve got three other places on the list and that’s
just for tonight.”
The thug stood, clutching
jewelry, his features fallen into their more accustomed places, his
eyes stunned and blinking. “You’re so sure” he
said, “so sure of everything.” He looked at the gun over
which a necklace had been casually draped. “I never had your
opportunities,” he said.
“But
we all have
opportunities now,” Tiffany said. “Don’t you
understand?” She almost did. She was closing in on it all the
time, she was on the verge of terrific insight. Insight was all you
needed to function in this world now, all the rest was just stuff
“It’s getting so easy it’s boring. It’s
almost like it doesn’t count any more.”
“I
count,” the thug said. Some people kept on insisting. Who
could blame them?
“That’s
because you think any of this old stuff still matters,” Tiffany
said. She went through the window. This is a reasonable approximation
of how it was, I think.
“Come away,
Caroline,” Arnold said. His whisper, sepulchral and unexpected
behind her, was a gunshot. She trembled, shook, turned toward him,
saw his features suddenly grotesque and brutalized in the odd and
terrible flickering light of the chronoscope.
“Get away!”
she said. She felt fear course through her; oddly it energized rather
than shriveled, she wanted to leap at him suddenly. If they could
finally touch
He
reached forward, touched her wrist, pulled at it. “It’s
horrible, Caroline,” he whispered. “You must stop this,
you can’t hide, you can’t go away, you have to face
this--Carthage burned,”
he said. “I know it now, they set fires, they killed--”
“Go away!”
she said again. “I want to look--”
“She’s
dead,” Arnold said. “I didn’t know it at first, I
had to look too, yes I did, I went to the library even after
everything I told you and I stared for hours, but there comes a time,
Caroline, you have to let it go; she’s no longer ours, she’s
no one’s, she’s lost to us, lost to everything but the
machine. Caroline, we can’t be like so many, we have to get out
of the room, we have to have a life”
He reached forward to
disconnect the machine and she did something then, moved, began to
deal with him as she must, but after this her recollection was not as
clear and she did not want to use the machine to recover that moment,
she would let it rest, let all of it rest, only Laurel, his Carthage,
his burning...
You do not have to give
so many details, they tell me. They have looked at this and in some
ways they make the good sounds and in other ways the bad sounds but
what they want to make most clear is that it is not necessary to be
as precise as I have been--that is the word they use, “precise”--it
is only important to give what they call “an overview.”
“Give an overview,” they say. “We have no time, no
space, no room for history, we have only an ever-living and continual
present, but that present, although it serves us well, must have the
slightest amount of justification. If you can give us this, you have
given enough.” Who knows “enough”? I have my own
plans and abilities.
I am the first and the
last, the only one to give this history, they tell me, the only one
to “write” as “writing” is understood in the
oldstyle, but I must keep it tightly confined, must control. I do
what I can. “Give an overview,” they say, but it is not
the over but the under which possesses me, the weight of all that has
happened almost obliterating (that is a tough word, “obliterating”)
that tiny corridor of light I cast toward our history.
It took what remained of
law enforcement (that which hadn’t gone crooked itself) quite a
while to catch up with the outlaws, but when they did, it was all
over for the criminal element. No unsolved crimes, no unresolved,
unidentifiable remains. You couldn’t even skip school...that
is, if your settlement still had access to instruction of any kind.
They knew when you were sleeping. They knew when you were awake. They
knew if you’d been bad or good.
“Late meeting. That
Ryan account. Should have been here hours ago, I’m sorry. “
“Don’t
tell me ‘Ryan account.’ Who is
that blond bitch on the third floor of 242 Oak Street?”
“What? What?”
“For someone who
says he can’t do a lot of things any more, you can do a lot of
things, can’t you?”
“But the
account--the Ryan meeting--”
“Forget
it, Frank. You’re trying to live in a world which doesn’t
exist any more. Buy a chronoscope and get out of the house. Because
tomorrow the locks are changed and you can’t pick up that
kind of detail work on any cheap set you ‘re likely to get.
“
When
the feelings passed, when she could focus again, see where she was,
Caroline saw something had happened to Arnold, something dreadful had
happened, he was lying on the floor in a quiescence she had never
known him to have before. But even as she struggled with the impulse
to kneel, comfort, hold, help him in some way, call for emergency
aid, get the university services there, even as she thought of this,
a small and infinitely wise voice within her said, He’s
never looked this peaceful before, he has been granted perfect peace,
the peace that Laurel has. Go to her, go to her again now, understand
her peace and try to make it her own, and the voice was so utterly
attuned to her own necessity, Caroline knew she could do no more,
could do nothing for Arnold that had not perished long ago, in the
fire, beyond the fire, and turned instead toward the chronoscope, the
chronoscope where Laurel, infinitely young, tender, wise, patient
Where Laurel would tell
her what; if anything, to do.
Procreation
became limited, hurried, and--for those who persisted--bizarre. The
governments, all of them, China and the Soviet Union and Burundi and
Burma, South Africa and Zaire collapsed. Government of any kind was
simply unimaginable. There was a futile attempt in some of the
countries to confiscate chronoscopes, but that is when the murders
began and, having made their point, soon enough stopped: the systems,
such as they were, had become invested in the chronoscope, behavior
had become circumscribed by its existence. Sixty years after Ralph
Nimmo, uncle of the luckless Foster, had turned loose the plans, fled
to Australia to successfully impersonate a keeper of aboriginal
kangaroos (Foster meanwhile reinventing chronoscopy in custody,
creating it over and over again), there wasn’t much public
left, and that which lasted was old,
decrepit, and resentful of medical facilities and research which
had become bare holding operations. There were localities with
severely deteriorated communications. There was, always, the
chronoscope. “Here it is,” Foster said, handing
scribblings to the attendants. “Take it. “
After a century and a
quarter, only a few clots and clans existed in the southern regions
of the northern hemispheres, the northern regions of the southern.
For this remainder, subsistence level in a subsistence society wasn’t
all that oppressive, and there was, of course, the chronoscope, whose
limited range was nonetheless able to disclose in all of its fury and
chiaroscuro beauty the collapse of Eastern and Western civilizations
the century before, and all of the fragmentary, diminished copulation
and confrontation associated with that collapse.
And so, hunched against
circumstance, appalled by the news of her father’s death but
nonetheless loving and filled with tenderness, Laurel reached out
from the interstices of the machine, reached from the dark metal and
said to Caroline, “I’ll tell you what to do, oh mother,
I’ll tell you just what you need to do but you have to come
closer, come closer--”
As Caroline crept down
that corridor of informative light.
I am the first of a long
line to come who again will be able to compose our history. But our
history is tense and exhausting, narrow and dangerous, and I see now
why they wished me to be explicit, to compress, to hurry along; there
is only a little left to tell but nonetheless
“Remember how you
loved him,” Laurel said. “Remember how it was when you
came to him for the first time, remember that mantle of love and
warmth--”
“What we’ll
do,” said Joan, an impassioned sixteen-year-old, “is run
away. “
“The others will
see us. They’ll be able to watch every move.” Bill was
eighteen, the levelheaded, farseeing part of the relationship. Or so
he told Joan. There weren’t enough their age around to argue
for much differences, though. Anyone between fifteen or twenty was
mostly the same. Timorous. Except for Joan who had a kind of spirit
which was unaccountable and who had plans.
“We’ll go so
far away the old bastards won’t be able to get there. No one
will even look, all they want to do is stare and remember, anyway.
We’ll climb mountains.”
“No matter how far
we go, they’ll still be able to watch anything we do. They’ll
see everything.”
“I
don’t care. Who cares? Let them watch! They can watch us until
I die if they want to. I want kids,” she said passionately,
looking at him in that way which so dangerously upset him. “I
want a family. I want to have”--she paused--”abandoned
sex. Real sex.”
Bill was timorous but
needful. “Yes,” he said. “I do, too. But--”
“If you don’t
go with me, I’ll ask someone else. I’ll ask Dave.”
“Dave? He’s
thirty years old. He’s one of them. All he wants to do is look.
“
“I’ll teach
him a few things. He can be taught. There aren’t many of us
left, don’t you know that? Do you want the whole world to die?”
“It’s already
dead.”
“I
mean really die. Die
out. No more children, nothing. Not even the machines. Most of those
damned viewers don’t even work any more, they haven’t
been tended in years.”
“There are probably
fertile individuals in other clans. It doesn’t fall only to us.
There have got to be others--”
“Do you want it to
end this way, then? Don’t you want me--”
“Well,
sure I want you,”
Bill said hopelessly. “I guess I do, anyway. But there will
always be someone looking at us, even after everyone here dies. “
“No there won’t.”
“Our own children
will. “
“Those machines are
breaking down, I told you. We won’t even take one. Let me tell
you a secret. I smashed all of them around I could find.”
“Joan! When?”
“Just before.”
“They’ll kill
us when they find out.”
“So
I don’t care,” she said. She seized his wrists. “Now
you know we’ve
got to do something. You know we’ve got to go away.”
“How many did you
break?”
“A lot. Rust will
take care of the rest of them, and I don’t think any of the
clan are smart enough to build them again. Don’t you
understand? I think they’re really finished with them, now. I
think it’s run out.”
Bill felt her pulling him
along. Soon they would be out of the hutch, on level ground, and they
could run. Forage from the land, build a settlement. Well, it sounded
possible. Anything was possible. Joan was right, no one was going to
follow them. They just weren’t that interested. “No more
of them?” Bill said hopefully. ”You mean, no more of the
machines?”
“I
think not. But to be extra specially certain, just in case any
instructions do survive
in our new place, we won’t teach our kids to read.”
“Will it work?”
She smiled. “Oh,
for a while,” she said. “Eventually one of them will
learn to write and maybe put all of this down again, but by then it
will be too late. And we’ll be free.”
And in the machine, in
that swath of light Laurel had helped her cleave from the darkness
Caroline saw them as it had been that night, the first night Arnold
had known her, the night Arnold had loved her. She watched the bodies
struggle, then slide in and amongst the shining spokes of light and
then, in slow and terrible concert, the scene shifted, reassembled,
and Caroline saw herself huge and arched against that wedge of vision
as she struck the blow which killed Arnold, watched him collapse
against her in that parody of embrace, and then the two of them
locked, were rolling and rolling on the floor in and amongst the
plans, the diagrams, the wires, the nest of that awful machinery. “Oh
Laurel,” Caroline Potterly said. “Oh Laurel, oh
Laurel...”
And the fires of Carthage
came.
PAPPI
by Sheila
Finch
THE FIRST THING TIM
NOTICED WHEN HE ENTERED HIS OLD home was the visorphone in the hall
flashing to warn him of an incoming call. It had to be for Karin, of
course. But who wouldn’t already know she was dead? Karin
didn’t have a very wide circle of friends.
The visorphone’s
shrill call noise was irritating. He was tired from the shuttle
flight, obscurely annoyed by the obsequious robot attendants, and
feeling the pull of Earth’s excessive gravity already. He
punched the receive button. The operator’s voice instructed Mr.
Tim Garroway to stand by for a call from Mr. Howard Rathbone III.
Too late to worry about
how Rathbone had figured where he’d be going to in such a
hurry. He wasn’t cut out to play James Bond games, but he’d
felt confident that Earth was the one place Rathbone would never
think of looking for him if he made a run for it, since it was where
Rathbone had wanted him to go. Obviously he’d under-estimated
the man.
While he waited for the
connection to be completed between Earth and the space station up at
the Lagrange point that was Rathbone’s corporate headquarters,
he glanced through the doorway into the living room to see what Beth
was doing. She was sitting cross-legged on the rug, building a tower
of books, her small plump face raised to the warm spring sunshine
that flooded in through the undraped window. Sunlight sparked her
curls to gold, and Tim’s heart lurched as he saw for the
thousandth time how like her mother his little daughter was.
If only Sylvia could’ve
seen her now.
If only the damned
emergency-team robots had functioned as they were supposed to.
He’d gone over and
over the options on the shuttle trip from the moon. There weren’t
very many in his favor. Running had been an impulse that he’d
begun to see might cause him a lot of nasty problems. He waited
sullenly for the phone link to be completed.
The
visorphone crackled, pulling his attention back, and the screen
cleared. Howard Rathbone III gazed at him from the elegantly paneled
office where he kept the helm of his billion-dollar enterprises. Tim
had speculated once, on first seeing this magnificent room, how much
it had cost to lob all that rare and expensive teak and mahogany and
rosewood into space to reconstruct the look of a luxury ocean liner
from the 1920s. Sylvia had giggled at his estimate. “Way,
way under!” she’d said.
“Tim. You and Beth
had a pleasant shuttle trip, I hope? Of course, you should have
consulted me before you took the child along.”
So the old man wasn’t
going to call it kidnapping just yet. Mr. Rathbone was a big man with
a big man ‘s hearty voice and manner. And a heart made out of
pure moon rock. Obviously he figured on gaining some advantage from
playing along with Tim.
“Fine, thanks, Mr.
Rathbone. I would’ve called you to--”
Rathbone overrode his
words. “You and Beth will need some time to recover. Tomorrow
will be plenty of time to do what we talked about. You will do it, of
course. You have so much to gain!”
Uneasily, Tim considered
how often the man seemed to read his mind. Or was it just that he
himself was totally predictable, at least where Mercury Mining and
Manufacturing was concerned? Maybe Rathbone was right; there was too
much money involved to be squeamish, enough to buy Beth everything
her heart desired now and for a long time to come. And was the price
really so unreasonable?
“I’m relying
on you, Tim,” Rathbone said. “Triple M’s future is
in your hands. But I’m confident you’ll come through for
us.”
Even when he was handing
out praise and flattery, Rathbone’s words came out as orders.
That was why he’d been so phenomenally successful, building his
huge empire in less than two decades since the Second Mercury
Expedition.
“Yes, sir.”
“I’m a
reasonable man, Tim. I’d like to have your willing cooperation.
So I’m prepared to explain it all one more time. We must stop
this now, before it goes any further. No telling what’ll happen
if he gets away with it. Do you understand my position, Tim?”
Tim nodded, his throat
dry.
“We can’t
have all those machines out there thinking they’re entitled to
rights and privileges same as humans. And they will, you know, if he
gets away with this.”
“Yes, sir.”
“You’re a
bright man. But you’ve been squandering your talents. “
Not half as vicious as
the things he’d said about Tim when he’d first learned of
Sylvia’s marriage to a penniless student, and her pregnancy,
Tim thought. But if he played his cards right...
Rathbone leaned back in
his leather swivel chair, steepled his fingers, and gazed at the
father of his daughter’s child. On the wall behind him a map of
the inner solar system showed the Rathbone empire in scattered
twinkling lights. “I have no heirs except for little Beth.”
Tim swallowed. His hunger
to own and control what the map represented fought another battle
with the cautious part of him. The outcome was indecisive again. Yet
each time, the hungry side of him crept a little closer to victory.
Especially here, in this house.
“I still wonder if
it wouldn’t be better to try public exposure,” Tim said.
“You know--subject him to public scrutiny--put him through
tests he can’t pass--”
In the delay that
followed, he knew what Rathbone’s answer would be.
“That’s been
tried already!” Rathbone scowled at him across space. “
And failed. There’s no time left for pussyfooting here. He has
to be removed. “
Tim shrugged uneasily.
“It’s
not like killing a man, Tim. Stephen Byerley’s a robot!”
Rathbone
spat the word out, loaded with all the contempt, the hatred, and the
fear Tim knew that he felt for robots.
“Sleep on it, son,”
his father-in-law said. In spite of the term he’d used, the
threatening tone came through clearly. “I should think the
consequences if you fail easily outweigh the demise of one robot.”
That was the other factor
in the equation. If he refused to do what Rathbone wanted, then
Rathbone would take Beth away from him. He couldn’t go back to
the moon or the space station, and he sure couldn’t stay on
Earth any more. There was no place he could hide that his
father-in-law’s thugs couldn’t find him. And he certainly
couldn’t take up the freelance life of an asteroid prospector,
not with a three-year-old to raise.
The visorphone screen
clouded over, and Tim turned heavily toward the living room to
retrieve his daughter.
He had to agree his
father-in-law had a point. Stephen Byerley had managed to get elected
to public office a month ago. It was the beginning of the end of
uncontested human superiority, despite the much-vaunted three laws.
For one thing, Mayor Byerley might start thinking his “brothers”
in space, those who toiled under horrifying conditions on blistering
planets for industrialists like Howard Rathbone III, deserved better
conditions. Byerley might even decide they were being treated like
slaves and use the weight of his office to start a campaign for their
emancipation. It was ludicrous, of course, but Tim understood that
once you set the precedent of one robot being “human “
enough to hold human office, then you were going to have a hard time
denying the same rights and protections to all the others.
It wasn’t that he
had much sympathy with the metal men. They were, after all, only
machines. Nobody was more convinced of that than he! He’d had a
long, intimate association with one of them going all the way back to
2009, right here in this house.
“You wanted a
father, Tirilmy,” Karin Garroway said brightly. “Well,
I’ve brought you PAPPI.”
Timmy stared at the gray
metal box on wheels squatting in the precise middle of the living
room rug. At first glance, he’d thought it was an old-fashioned
canister vacuum cleaner minus the hose. Four skinny appendages
protruded from its sides, ending in a collection of hooks and pincers
like some grim skeletal joke. An upside-down bowl-shaped turret
housed a camera lens and other things he didn’t recognize right
away.
Timmy touched a wheel
housing with one toe.
“Treat it with
care.” Motherly chores satisfied now, Karin gathered up papers
and laptop computer and stuffed them all in her briefcase.
“What is it?”
“PAPPI--Paternal
Alternative Program: Prototype I.”
“Looks pretty
stupid,” Timmy said.
“Never mind how it
looks!” His mother glanced at him. “It’ll do
everything a real father can do. PAPPI can pitch baseballs, and sort
your stamp collection--all sorts of things.”
“Can it do my
homework?”
“It
has programs to coach
you in math and reading, Timmy. PAPPI has tapes of bedtime
stories selected for eight-year-old boys, too. And we’ll update
them as you grow.”
“Sometimes
I want to talk about man
things...”
“Don’t be
difficult.” Karin snapped her briefcase crisply shut. “I’ll
work on some of the refinements as I get time. You could think of
this as an experiment in robotics that we’re doing together.”
Karin was always trying
to get him interested in her work at U.S. Robots and Mechanical Men,
Inc. She put the briefcase down on the sofa, hunkered down in front
of her son so her eyes were level with his and held him by the
shoulders. Her face had that soft, gentle haze Timmy saw on it
sometimes when she looked at kittens or butterflies. He stared back
at her, his mouth drawn tightly down.
“I know it’s
hard on you, the way we live.”
“We could do it the
way other people do!” he said sullenly.
“That just won’t
work for me,” she said. “I thought you understood that.
Look, you keep saying you want a father--”
“A real one. Not a
dumb robot.”
Her face closed over.
“I’ve explained to you that we don’t have time for
a man in our lives. “
Timmy
didn’t know anything about his real father. Karin had told him
some stuff once about a place where they sold sperm from fathers for
people who wanted to be mothers without all the fuss. But Timmy told
everybody his dad had died; it was easier to explain. Maybe Karin
didn’t like men very much; she never brought one home, unlike
his best friend Joey’s mother, who had lots of boyfriends.
Sometimes Timmy wondered if Karin wouldn’t like him
when he grew up, too.
“Timmy?”
“All right,”
he said reluctantly. “But you promised me we’d go to the
zoo today, Karin.”
She chewed her lip. “I
know it’s Sunday, but the project’s so urgent.”
He shook his head.
“Today’s special. It’s--”
“You can play with
PAPPI in the yard. You’d like that, wouldn’t you? PAPPI’s
easy to use, I made sure of that.”
He looked past her at the
robot. “What can you play with a thing like that?”
“You’ll think
of something!” She gave him a kiss on the cheek which he wasn’t
quick enough to duck. “Now I’ve got to run. The lab’s
aircar is waiting for me. I promise I won’t be too long.”
After she’d gone,
Timmy watched the Tri-D for a while, but Karin had programmed it to
show him historical films about the exploration of the solar system
and educational stuff about astronomy. He turned the Tri-D off again
and squatted down by the robot. He stared into its camera eye.
“You’re dopey
looking!” he said. “Got a dopey name, too.”
A bird chirped outside in
the big tree in the garden, but inside the house it was very quiet.
Timmy suddenly felt lonely, which was strange because now that he
wasn’t such a little kid any more Karin often left him alone
when she had to work overtime or go in on weekends. The reason wasn’t
too hard to find. It was Father’s Day. The Cub Scout Troop that
Timmy and Joey belonged to was having a father-and-son hot-dog
barbecue in Central Park, and absolutely everybody would be there
with their dad. All Timmy’s friends had fathers, even if they
weren’t the original ones. And Joey would have one of his mom’s
boyfriends along.
But Timmy had known there
was no point in telling Karin about it. Karin didn’t believe in
men-only activities. It would’ve been just like her to consider
going with him to a father-son barbecue. Much better to stay home
with a robot than be embarrassed like that. Timmy scowled at the
robot. Nothing else to do--he might as well turn it on. The switch
was conveniently located near the top. Immediately, a small red light
glowed on the dome, which swiveled to focus the camera eye on Timmy.
“Hello,” the
tinny, uninflected voice said. “I am PAPPI, your Paternal
Alternative. I am an experimental prototype.”
Surprised, Timmy settled
himself cross-legged in front of the machine and stared at it. He’d
seen robots before, of course, at the lab where Karin worked. But he
knew a lot of people didn’t trust them and wouldn’t allow
them in New York. The ones his mother built that talked were huge
things to be sent out into space where they couldn’t frighten
anybody.
“Well,” Timmy
said cautiously. “What can you do?”
“I can tell you a
story about animals. I can help you with your stamp collection. I can
make model airplanes. I know baseball and basketball statistics for
the last fifty years. I can tell you who scored the most home runs,
who was the MVP, who--”
Timmy was astonished.
Perhaps Karin understood more than he’d ever realized about
what was important to him. “Can you help me light a fire in the
backyard and barbecue hot dogs?”
“I do not think
Karin would approve of you playing with fire.”
Timmy’s enthusiasm
faded. “So you’re going to be another babysitter!”
“You are too old
for babysitters, Timmy. I am your PAPPI, and Paternal Alternatives do
not--”
“You’re not
my dad!” Timmy snapped.
“Shall we go out
into the yard and play baseball?” the robot suggested.
“Sure.” Timmy
stuck his hands in his pockets.
Timmy found out right
away that PAPPI was very good at pitching balls. The long metal arms
grasped the ball neatly and swung it in an economical arc, releasing
it at precisely the right moment to travel across to the exact spot
on Timmy’s baseball bat for hitting. PAPPI gave him advice on
how to hold the bat too, but it never yelled at him when he missed,
and it wasn’t a sore loser like Joey when Timmy managed to hit
a “home run.”
“Hey,” Timmy
said after an hour of playing World Series. “Want to climb a
tree?”
“I am not equipped
to climb trees,” PAPPI replied. “But I will watch you.
And I can identify the objects you encounter.”
Timmy threw down the
baseball bat and shimmied up the trunk of the old maple by the garden
wall. PAPPI trundled over to stand underneath, the dome swiveling so
the camera eye could focus on Timmy’s ascent.
Halfway up to the crown,
the main trunk forked. Here Timmy and Joey had once started to erect
a fort. Then the weather got too hot for carpentry projects and
they’d abandoned it. But it was still a fine place to sit and
look at the jagged skyline of the city across the East River. The
leaves overhead made liquid patterns of sunlight and shade on his
bare arms, and their soft rustling was like a kind of secret language
that only Timmy was meant to understand.
Timmy straddled one of
the sun-warm planks.
“You look weird
from up here!”
“Have you noticed
the abandoned bird’s nest by your right hand?”
Timmy peered into the
leaves. Sure enough, there was a jumble of twigs and mud stuck to the
bark near the trunk. “There’s feathers in it.”
Timmy hung on to the
branch with one hand and leaned down, tiny brown and white feather in
the other. PAPPI’s camera eye slid out on a slender stalk for
about a foot, then retracted.
“A
very fine specimen. But look at the small white growths on the tree
trunk, a form of fungus, division name Mycota. The spores have been
carried up there accidentally by a bird, perhaps by the Passer
domesticus whose feather you are holding. “
“Huh?”
“A house sparrow.”
“Neat!”
“There are about
fifty thousand fungi, or saprophytic and parasitic plantlike
organisms, that have been identified and described. But there are
probably a hundred thousand more. They include mushrooms, mildews,
molds, yeasts--”
Timmy frowned. The thing
was starting to sound like his schoolteacher.
“I can tell you
about lichens too, if you want me to.”
“Not hardly!”
Timmy said.
“Well, then,”
the robot said. “Would you like to play horse?”
“How do I do that?”
“You can ride
around on me. I am very strongly built.”
So Timmy rode around the
yard on top of PAPPI, held in place by two of the long metal arms,
shouting “Giddyap!” and “Whoa!” until his
throat was scratchy. It was almost possible to forget PAPPI was a
robot and imagine he was really riding a stallion with flowing mane
across a Western mesa, just like the programs on the Tri-D that Karin
frowned at him watching.
By the time the sky got
dark and Karin came home again, Timmy knew he’d discovered a
real friend, one who never grew bored with playing, never thought any
question too stupid to answer, never criticized or blamed.
But it wasn’t the
same thing at all as having a real father.
With PAPPI’s help,
Timmy did better in school that year. PAPPI was programmed to learn
too, right alongside Timmy, so that made a contest out of it--one
PAPPI usually won. But since the robot never boasted of its success,
Timmy really didn’t mind. And four mechanical hands meant the
robot was a real wizard at assembling model spaceships and shuffling
playing cards or juggling balls.
From time to time, Karin
brought new programs home for PAPPI as they developed them at the
lab. Timmy watched when she took the robot’s “head”
apart and inserted them. Sometimes he held the tiny tools she used to
work on the positronic brain. Afterward, PAPPI could do a lot more
things to entertain Timmy, like playing the banjo, or telling jokes
and drawing silly pictures to make him laugh.
Karin rarely brought
anyone home for supper, not even people from U.S. Robots. But once, a
lady she shared the office with came to Timmy’s house.
“It doesn’t
look a bit like a mechanical man,” Timmy complained.
He and this
fierce-looking lady hunkered down on the rug to look at PAPPI, who
had just slithered to a halt in front of them. The robot’s
wheels scuffed the polished floor as it braked.
“It doesn’t
need to,” Karin’s officemate replied. “Form should
follow function.”
“At least it
could’ve hag legs, not wheels!” Timmy said, fingering one
of the scratches in the wood.
“This was meant to
be a utility robot. Your mother modified its brain, not its body.”
Karin
had told him that Dr. Calvin didn’t build
the robots quite like she did; Dr. Calvin was a robopsychologist,
whatever that meant. In the kitchen, Karin, in an uncharacteristic
display of domesticity, clattered dishes into the dishwasher.
Timmy frowned. “PAPPI
thinks it’s more than that!”
“But you don’t.”
“How can you tell?”
Dr. Calvin didn’t
answer. She was about as old as his mother, Timmy judged, and neither
of them wore lipstick or smiled as much as Joey’s mother did.
Karin bustled back into
the living room with a tray of pastries she’d bought at the
store. “ Anyone ready for dessert?”
“I do not think
Timmy should have any more sugar in his diet today,” PAPPI
said. “By my count, since getting up this morning he has
consumed--”
“Oh, shut up!”
Timmy said.
“Well,” Karin
began, “if you think--”
“One of these days,
you ‘re going to have trouble with that one,” Dr. Calvin
said thoughtfully.
For a moment, Timmy
thought she was speaking of him. But her eyes were on the robot
squatting between them on the rug.
“I’m being
very careful, Susan,” Karin said. “ And Timmy knows not
to take the robot outside.”
“I can’t tell
my friends about PAPPI, either,” Timmy grumbled. “When
Joey comes over to play I have to put PAPPI in the closet. And Joey’s
my best friend!”
“That’s good
to know, Timmy,” Dr. Calvin said. “But antirobot
sentiment isn’t all I was referring to. Though goodness knows
the Fundies are enough of a threat to our work.”
“Then what?”
Karin said.
“I don’t
think we realize yet what these positronic brains may be capable of
someday.”
“I’m
not that good,
Susan,” Karin said, laughing. “Not like you!”.
The talk turned away from
robots after that.
Then one day when they
were in eighth grade, Joey’s mother got married again, and his
new father took him on a trip to the moon.
“Why can’t we
go to the moon, Karin?” Timmy demanded as Karin frowned at some
work she’d brought home from the lab.
“Hmm?” She
gazed at him over the top of the glasses she’d recently started
wearing.
“I want to go to
the moon. See the craters.”
“We can’t
afford it.”
“I’ve got
money saved up!”
“I can’t
spare the time right now. Things are really busy at U.S. Robots.
Susan and I may finally be getting our own offices!”
“If I had a
father...” Timmy began darkly.
Karin set her notes down
and gazed at him. “I’m sorry you’re still feeling a
lack, Timmy. I’d hoped PAPPI would fill it.”
“Seems
like I don’t have a father or
a mother”‘ Timmy said.
The following year, Timmy
took a class in physics at Karin’s urging and learned that he
hated the subject. He became interested in sports, grew three inches,
and discovered girls--one in particular, a dark-haired lovely with
big breasts. PAPPI explained how to handle the sudden rush of
hormones and awkwardness Timmy was feeling. Karin had done her part
earlier, lecturing Timmy on the birds and the bees and the whole
ecology of flowers, a discussion that bored him and left him feeling
as if either he--or Karin--had totally missed the point. But PAPPI
explained about Romeo and Juliet, whether it was a good idea to kiss
a girl on a first date, and what to say to the other guys afterward.
In an attempt to
influence him to take an interest in science, Karin bought him a
telescope kit, and PAPPI helped him assemble it. PAPPI knew the names
of all the stars and constellations they could see through the lens,
and pointed out some of the orbiting space stations as well. Karin
pretended not to notice when they stayed up well past Timmy’s
bedtime.
Timmy went out for the
school swim team. PAPPI listened to his bragging and sympathized when
he lost. Timmy changed his name to Tim, and PAPPI, unlike Karin,
never made a mistake after that. All in all, it was a good time.
But Joe got to have
man-to-man talks with his new father.
Tim activated the
visorphone again and made an appointment to see the mayor, Stephen
Byerley.
Then he tried to put the
whole thing out of his mind.
He’d forgotten
Karin’s house was so small. He went through the rooms
methodically, making lists of what to dump and what to pack. There
wasn’t too much of the latter. Living quarters on a space
station were small, but at least there was a sense of the vastness
just beyond the screened walls. This house was a box, a tract house
thrown up by greedy developers, cutting up the land that had once
been countryside around New York City into smaller and smaller
parcels. He remembered how Karin had explained to him that they
couldn’t move farther out because she needed to be near U.S.
Robots. By then, Joe and his parents had moved to a large house on
Long Island where there was room for a swimming pool and a tennis
court. And they could keep dogs. Tim remembered how he’d hated
U.S. Robots when he heard about the dogs.
Beth deserved better.
Tomorrow he’d meet the man Rathbone wanted him to kill.
The weapon one of his
father-in-law’s ex-boxer bodyguards had given him weighed
heavily in his pocket. Something to make hash out of that obscene
positronic brain, Rathbone had said. For some reason he’d
brought it with him when he Bed. Maybe even then he’d known he
couldn’t really get away so easily.
He had to stop thinking
of Byerley as a man. It was only a robot they were talking about,
after all. Only a robot. That would become obvious in the inquest.
Then there’d be public outrage at the revelation of the
stupendous hoax. The “assassin,” if he were to be caught,
would be released, a hero. Only of course, Rathbone would see to it
that Tim wasn’t caught.
And in return, Tim would
get a chance to have something he desperately wanted, namely a large
share of Mercury Mining and Manufacturing.
There
was a good chance Byerley wouldn’t keep the appointment anyway.
His secretary had seemed doubtful the mayor would find time in his
schedule for the vague reasons Tim had given her. Maybe nothing would
come of it at all and he’d be off the hook. “Couldn’t
get near him, “ he’d tell Rathbone. “Not my
fault!”
His
future and Beth’s were on the line. He’d either have the
money to be father and mother both to little Beth, or they’d
both be on the run from Rathbone for the rest of their lives.
“You have to think
about your life. You need to make plans for the future,” Karin
said, some time in’ 18. “What subjects are you interested
in pursuing for a career?”
Tim leaned back in his
chair and put his feet up on the table. He was in a truculent mood.
“I don’t know. Something that pays well. Probably
sports.”
“Sports?”
Karin frowned. “How’re you going to make a living from
sports?”
Swimming had developed
Tim ‘s muscles enough to make the girls eager to go out with
him now. Heady stuff. “The University of Hawaii has this great
program--”
“I’d like to
see you go into robotics,” Karin said. “The space
colonies have a tremendous need for people like you.”
“Aw, Karin!”
“If I may
interrupt,” PAPPI said. “ A good liberal arts college
will allow Tim to put off crucial decisions for at least another year
without penalty.”
“You’re
vetoing robotics?” Karin bit a fingernail. Tim noticed for the
first time how much gray there was in her hair. She never colored it
the way Joe’s mother did.
“No, I’m only
suggesting he might broaden his education first,” the robot
said.
Karin considered this.
“I’m not going to pay for a college on the other side of
the planet!”
“That’s
hardly fair of you, Karin,” the robot said.
“I can’t
afford to pay if he goes out of state! Do you think I’m rich or
something? And Timmy’s hardly going to get a scholarship.”
“There could be
some financial assistance available--”
“Timmy’s all
I’ve got. I’ll miss him!”
“I love him, too,”
PAPPI said.
Karin was suddenly very
still. “What did you say?”
“That his absence
would be noticeable to me, too,” the robot said cautiously.
She
stared at the robot for a long moment. “What other feelings
do you have, PAPPI?”
Untypically, the robot
seemed reluctant to answer. “What did you expect, Karin, with
all the special Calvin/Minsky subprograms you’ve given me over
the years?”
“But it’s
never proved out in the lab. Susan says--”
“What’re you
talking about?” Tim interrupted.
“Positronic
sentience,” Karin said slowly. “I’m just wondering
if PAPPI--”
Exasperated,
he said, “Well, of
course PAPPI’s alive! I thought we were discussing my
future?”
Karin looked as if she
were watching something very far away. ‘‘I’ll have
to take you back to the lab, PAPPI. If this is for real, then Susan
will want to run the Turing series on you.”
Tim stared at his mother.
She chose the worst moments to get all wrapped up in her work. “Look,
I’ve got a serious decision to make here. “
“We’ve had no
evidence for the development of full self-awareness in the lab,”
Karin said thoughtfully. “As an extended function of advanced
positronic intelligence, that is. My guess would be it’s
prolonged exposure to humans in a real family situation that’s
caused the difference. But I’ll have to talk to Susan about it.
We’ll need to do the research. “
“I don’t want
to go back to the lab” the robot began.
“I don’t see
a choice, PAPPI. This is big-time. I mean--”
“All right,
everybody listen up!” Tim said. “I’m going to make
my own decisions from now on. I’ll go to school if and
when--and wherever--I please!”
Karin glanced at him as
if she’d forgotten he was there. “Well, of course, Timmy.
But this is rather urgent, don’t you see?”
Once again, he thought
angrily, he came out second in importance to a robot.
The University of Luna
offered financial aid in return for taking part in athletic research
in low or zero-grav. Since this freed him from Karin’s money,
Tim enrolled. Karin didn’t come to see him off when he boarded
the shuttle. Couldn’t wait to get down to the lab and her tests
on PAPPI, he thought resentfully.
He worked through the
university vacations as an assistant to a moon geologist who needed
someone to keep track of his rocks. Since this wasn’t so
different from keeping a stamp collection, Tim rather enjoyed it.
Other guys had parents
shuttle up to visit from time to time, well-dressed men and women who
conversed knowledgeably about interactive theater and world politics
and preserving traditional human values in a mechanized world. Just
because humans had ventured out into space and depended on robot
help, didn’t mean they should abandon the historic virtues of
the simple life--the family and physical labor--his new friends said.
Tim knew what they meant. The kind of work his mother was doing at
U.S. Robots was dangerous. “Mechanical Men,” for goodness
sake! Couldn’t she see it wasn’t wise to allow robots to
become too clever? They were designed as servants, not partners in
the human enterprise. If humans didn’t keep that in mind,
someday the robots would be a problem. Tim felt a growing
estrangement from Karin and never invited her.
The most dazzling of
these new friends was Sylvia Rathbone, daughter of an old-style
entrepreneur in space, and as different in spirit from her father as
he was from Karin. Sylvia represented everything he felt he’d
been deprived of in life--money, a large family of aunts and uncles
and cousins, a father who spoiled her shamelessly. She was a
beautiful, merry, delicate-boned girl with movements as bright and
swift as quicksilver. And to his great wonder and gratitude, she fell
in love with him, too.
They were married in a
small, intimate ceremony in the spring of ‘27, in a chapel
carved from one of the moon’s vast underground caverns. They
planned to keep it secret while he finished up the degree in geology
he’d recently switched to, and she worked on her father to
accept her marriage to a penniless student. But the following year,
Beth was born. They sent notice of the event to both parents, and
waited nervously.
Karin almost forgot to
reply; she mentioned the birth finally in a postscript to her regular
monthly fax transmission.
Mr. Rathbone’s
attorney notified them that Sylvia had been cut out of his will until
such time as she divorced her unsuitable husband.
It was hard managing a
family on a student’s income, he found. But they went on. In
the evening, he went home to his wife and his baby in the family area
of the moon settlement. Sylvia had a small hydroponics garden where
she grew tomatoes and corn to supplement their diet, and
chrysanthemums for their spirits, she said. He was happy for the
first time in his life, determined his daughter would have the proper
family life that had been denied him. But he began to see that took
money, and his happiness leaked away little by little.
He was off-world a year
later, on a research trip with his geologist friend to bring in a
little extra money, when a small piece of space debris hurtled in
undetected and punctured the skin of the settlement in his sector.
The atmosphere bled out swiftly. Automatic airlocks prevented the
hemorrhage from spreading beyond the damaged area, but the robot
rescue team was too late to save Sylvia. The baby had been in a
creche in an unaffected sector.
The bill for the disposal
of Sylvia’s remains arrived just as he broke out of his stunned
inaction and began to mourn. One of the settlement’s robots
brought it.
The wheel of his life had
turned full circle. He, a child who’d been fatherless, raised
by his mother, must play father to a motherless child. And he was
broke. Swamp-black despair settled over him.
Two things happened.
Into this despair came
Howard Rathbone III, who wanted his grandchild so urgently that he
was prepared to make a deal with her father.
And Dr. Susan Calvin
notified him by express fax that Karin had died suddenly after a
brief illness and left him the little house in New York where he’d
grown up. He’d never felt close to Karin, but it was difficult
to comprehend that now she’d gone out of his life altogether.
He didn’t want to
accept Rathbone’s suggestion, tempting though the money was.
But he saw he’d have trouble keeping Beth from her grandfather
otherwise.
There seemed to be only
one thing to do. He fled with the baby, catching the first shuttle to
Earth.
Tim sorted through the
accumulated junk of his childhood. He found little of value in the
house, little worth the exorbitant cost of lobbing it up to the
colony. Karin had never been much of a homemaker. He packed a box of
Scouting books he remembered treasuring as a boy, his old stamp
collection in its dog-eared albums, the telescope PAPPI had helped
him assemble.
He
lugged the box of books out to the hall and set it down by the wall.
Something on the polished wood floor drew his gaze, long blurred
lines in the dust. He gently blew the dust aside. Scuff marks. He had
a sudden jolting vision of PAPPI’s wheels whooshing over the
slippery floor, skidding to a stop by the front door as the robot
retrieved the morning’s mail. He saw, as if they were arriving
now in Karin’s hallway, the papers, the garish advertisements,
the pleas for contributions to worthy causes (he remembered how angry
Karin became each time she found a request for money from the
antirobot people), all the second-class junk that the law didn’t
allow to clutter up the fax machines of the city’s households.
Sorting through this paper rubbish had been one of PAPPI’s
daily tasks. Preventing
me from having apoplexy! Karin always said.
He crouched down and
stared at the scuff marks. The floor appeared to have been resurfaced
fairly recently. Gone were the scrapes and scratches Tim remembered
inflicting on it over the years. Once her rambunctious son had left
home, Karin had repaired the damage he’d done. But the scars
left by the robot’s wheels were still raw. They had occurred
sometime after the floor had been resurfaced. Tim straightened up
slowly, disturbed by an idea growing in his mind.
He was uncomfortable
here, anxious to be done with pawing over the artifacts of his
boyhood. He turned to the visorphone to call one of the realtors
whose cards he’d found pushed under the door. Time to cut loose
from the past.
Before he could touch the
keyboard, the phone shrilled at him. He hesitated. Rathbone again?
Grimly he punched the receive button.
The face of a handsome,
middle-aged man appeared on the screen.
“Tim Garroway?”
The man had a pleasant, well-modulated voice. “I’m
Stephen Byerley.”
“Mayor--” Tim
stumbled to a reply. “I--well, I’m delighted to meet
you.”
“My secretary gave
me your message. I’d very much enjoy talking to you, but I’m
afraid tomorrow’s schedule is so tight.”
Tim’s heart leaped
wildly. So it was going to be taken out of his hands after all. He
was conscious of the strong feeling of relief that swept over him.
“That’s no problem, Mr. Mayor! No problem at all. It
really wasn’t important --that is, it can wait. “
Byerley smiled. “I
believe we have friends in common, Tim. May I call you Tim?”
“Sure.” He
was impressed with the genuine warmth this man projected. How could
he possibly have entertained ideas of eliminating him?
“I understand your
mother was an associate of Dr. Susan Calvin, one of my most treasured
friends.”
Something dull and cold
clutched Tim. Of course. It was to be expected. “Oh?” he
said heavily. “Yeah, I suppose so. “
Byerley was a robot after
all.
At the edge of his
consciousness he was aware of Beth tugging at his sleeve. He put an
arm around his little daughter, pulling her toward him. He was a fool
if he thought he could avoid fate so easily. It crept up on him like
some primeval beast slinking up to the little campfire he’d
hoped would protect Beth and himself against the darkness.
“The calendar’s
crowded tomorrow,” Byerley said. “But I make time to run
in Central Park. Do you run, Tim? I heard you were something of an
athlete. If you’d care to join me at six tomorrow morning--I
hope that’s not too early for you? I’m an early riser--we
could talk then.”
Early riser! Tim thought.
I bet you don’t sleep at all.
There really was no
choice. It was Stephen Byerley’s life--if you could call it
that--against his. Byerley had signed his own death warrant.
“Sure thing, Mr.
Mayor, “ he said.
“Steve,”
Stephen Byerley said.
Tim nodded without
replying and Byerley broke the connection. The weapon with which he
must eliminate the robot bumped heavily against his hip as he turned
away.
His stomach had twisted
itself with tension, and he sensed the beginnings of a headache at
the back of his skull. He would do what he had to do, for Beth ‘s
sake. Until then, he’d put the whole thing out of his mind.
He’d get on with packing up the house.
“What that, Dadda?”
his daughter called, pointing at a door in the ceiling. She had a
smudge of dust on one cheek, and toddled clumsily after him wherever
he went.
“Nothing much,
sweetheart. Just an attic for storage.”
As he said it, something
clicked into place in his mind. Of course. That was where it would
be.
“Want see!”
Beth announced imperiously.
Indulging his daughter’s
wishes took his mind off what he must do tomorrow. He touched the
recessed button in the wall. The attic hatch opened, and wooden steps
lowered to where they stood. He set one foot on the steps and the
toddler immediately clung to his legs, clamoring loudly as if he were
about to disappear forever. He picked her up and began his ascent. He
made the climb awkwardly and with effort, unused to Earth’s
gravity after all these years. Beth hummed encouragement to him as if
he’d been a horse--or a robot, he realized.
It was cool and dim under
the rafters, and it smelled of moldering clothes and musty books.
Spiders had draped their gray curtains everywhere over the piled
boxes and trunks. He moved cautiously, careful to keep the cobwebs
away from Beth’s face.
She saw it first,
pointing with a chubby finger to a dark comer.
“Look, Dadda!
Baby.”
The robot sat like a
blind deaf-mute under one of the main beams of the roof, only lightly
powdered in dust. Even after all these years, it was impossible for
him to look at it without emotion. Memories of baseball in the
backyard, science projects, stamp collections, secret discussions
about girls and sex, all came flooding back., His childhood was
preserved in this attic, and all it took was one glance to bring it
all back to vivid, painful life. He was eight years old again, and it
was Father’s Day.
What was it doing here?
Karin took it back to the lab. It was a great achievement--the
crowning glory of her scientific career
He
had assumed she’d
taken it back to the lab. The recent scuff marks in the hall said
otherwise. But why had she put it up here--just before she died
apparently?
“Me play!”
his daughter announced imperiously, scrambling down from his arms.
Gray dust swirls spiraled
around her and she sneezed. He leaned forward, steadying her as she
maneuvered over the unfinished floor of the attic. She chuckled, her
little body tense with the excitement of discovery. He felt swamped
again by mingled emotions of love and helplessness. How could he be
both father and mother to this little Columbus, so eager to explore
each new world she encountered? How could he protect her from the
ugliness of a world where robots became mayor--and men like Rathbone
schemed to kill them?
The toddler’s pudgy
hands caressed the robot. The problem of the robot drew him again.
The only reason he could imagine for Karin not returning PAPPI to the
lab was because she’d cared about the robot.
He was about to pick Beth
up and carry her away when the red light blinked on.
“Hello,” said
the weak but familiar voice, “I’m PAPPI, a Paternal
Alternative. Would you like to play?”
His daughter looked as if
she were going to cry.
He wasn’t surprised
to learn the robot’s power supply was still operational. Tim
crouched beside his little daughter and put his arms around her. Here
in this attic, for the very first time in his life, he had the
feeling that he understood Karin. She’d hidden the robot up
here when she knew she was dying; she hadn’t wanted PAPPI to go
back to the lab, or to fall into the hands of the Fundies. What did
that prove?
For a moment, he felt as
if he were drowning under the tidal wave of the past. He was a small
boy again, on Father’s Day.
Maybe if she’d
cared about the robot, she’d cared about Timmy, too.
Had he really been so
deprived? Love was impossible to define, but surely it included
sharing, partnership in work and play, nurturing. A family was just a
group that cared about each other, even if it included a robot.
“Hello, PAPPI,”
Beth said uncertainly. “What are you?”
Could he give Beth as
much as Karin had given him? He was certainly going to do his best.
But what he wanted for his daughter couldn’t be built on a
foundation of hatred and violence. Good didn’t come out of
evil; PAPPI had taught him that. He couldn’t keep that
appointment with Stephen Byerley tomorrow morning.
And that would mean
Rathbone would be after them. There’d be no returning to their
home on the moon, and no staying here on Earth. Life was hard for a
geologist prospecting out in the asteroids, but what other chance did
they have to be a family--father, daughter, and robot?
“Sweetie,” he
said to his daughter, “this is your GrandPAPPI.”
The Reunion at the Mile-High
by Frederik
Pohl
IN THOSE LONG AND
LONG-AGO DAYS--IT’S BEEN HALF A century!--we were not only
young, we were mostly poor. We were all pretty skinny, too, though
you wouldn’t think that to look at us now. I know this, because
I have a picture of the twelve of us that was taken right around
1939. I dug it out to loan it to my publisher’s public
relations people just the other day, and I looked at it for a long
time before I put it in the overnight mail. We didn’t took like
much, all grinning into the camera with our hairless, hopeful teenage
faces. If you’d been given a couple of chances to guess, you
might have thought we were a dozen Western Union boys on our day off
(remember Western Union boys?), or maybe the senior debating club at
some big-city all-boy high school. We weren’t any of those
things, though. What we actually were was a club of red-hot science
fiction fans, and we called ourselves the Futurians.
That
old photograph didn’t lie. It just didn’t tell the whole
truth. The camera couldn’t capture the things that kept us
together, because they were all inside our heads. For one thing, we
were pretty smart--we knew it ourselves, and we were very
willing to tell you so. For another, we were all deeply addicted
readers of science fiction--we called it stf in those days, but
that’s a whole other story. We thought stf was a lot of fun
(all those jazzy rocket ships and zippy death rays, and big-chested
Martians and squat, sinister monsters from Jupiter--oh, wow!) That
wasn’t all of it, though. We also thought stf was important.
We were absolutely sure that it provided the best view anyone
could have of T*H*E F*U*T*U*R *E--by which we meant the kind of
technologically dazzling, socially Utopian, and generally wonderful
world which the rather frayed and frightening one we were stuck with
living in might someday become. And, most of all, we were what our
old Futurian buddy, Damon Knight, calls toads. We weren’t very
athletic. We didn’t get along all that well with our peers--and
not even as well as that with girls. And so we spent a lot of time
driven in upon our own resources, which, mostly, meant reading. We
all read a lot.
We
even more or less agreed that we were toads. At least, we knew that
girls didn’t seem anxious to fall bedazzled by any of our
charms. I’m not sure why. It wasn’t that we were
hopelessly ugly--well, not all of us, anyway. Dave Kyle and Dirk
Wylie and Dick Wilson were tall and actually pretty good-looking.
Even the snapshot shows that. I think our problem was partly that we
were scared of girls (they might laugh at us--some of them no doubt
had), and partly a matter of our internal priorities. We were more
into talking than tennis, and we put books ahead of jitterbugging.
That
was half a century ago. In other words, history.
My secretary, who is also my chief research assistant when I need
a specific fact from the library, tells me that 62.8 percent of the
people alive today weren’t even born then, which undoubtedly
means that that ancient year of 1939 seems as remote and strange to
most people now as the Spanish-American War did to me.
I would like to point
out, though, that 1939 didn’t seem all that hot to us, either,
even while we were living it. It wasn’t a fun time. We were the
generation caught between Hoover and Hitler. We had the breadlines of
the Great Depression to remember in our recent past, and the Nazi
armies looming worrisomely in our probable future. When we looked out
at the real world we lived in we didn’t much like what we saw.
So,
instead, we looked inside the stf magazines we adored, and then we
looked inside our own heads. We read a lot, and we tried to write.
Because the other thing about us, you see, was that we were all
pretty hardworking and ambitious. Since we weren’t thrilled by
our lives, we tried to change them. We had our meetings--we’d
get together, once a month or so, in somebody’s basement or
somebody else’s living room, and we’d talk about this and
that; and then we’d go out for an ice-cream soda; and then we’d
gradually splinter apart. Some of us would go home--especially the
ones who had to get up in the morning, like Isaac Asimov. (He worked
at his parents’ candy store, and the commuters started coming
in for their morning papers at five-thirty A.M.) Most of the rest of
us would just wander, in twos and threes. I’d start out by
walking Dirk and Johnny Michel to their subway station. But
generally, by the time we got to it, we’d be in the middle of
some really interesting discussion (did the General Motors Futurama
at the World’s Fair have the right idea about the World of
Tomorrow, all twelve-lane superhighways and forty-story apartments?
Were John Campbell’s Arcot, Wade & Morey stories as good as
Doc Smith’s Skylark?)--so
then they’d walk me back to my station...or around the
block...or anywhere. Always talking. Talking mattered to us. Writing
mattered, too, almost as much. We did a lot of it, on our battered
second-hand portable typewriters, each on his own but always with the
intention of showing what we had written to the others. Words
mattered, and we particularly intended to make our words
matter. Somehow. We didn’t really know how, exactly, but when
you think of it, I guess we succeeded. If we were toads, as Damon
says, then sometime or other some wandering fairy princess must have
come along and kissed us, and turned us into something different...or
we wouldn’t have been getting together at the top of the
Mile-High Building for our Fiftieth Reunion, with reporters allover
the place and our older, considerably more impressive faces staring
out at the world on the Six O’Clock News.
You can’t fly
nonstop from Maui to New York, even on the sleeper, because they
don’t let flying boats operate over the continent. So I had to
change planes in Los Angeles. Naturally I missed my connection, so
when we finally landed at Idlewild I was late already.
The porter cut a taxi out
of the snarl for me--it’s wonderful what a five-dollar bill
can do at an airport. As I got into the cab I stretched my neck to
look toward the New York City skyline, and I could see the Mile-High
Building poking far above everything else, looking like a long, long
hunting horn sitting on its bell...if you can imagine a hunting horn
with gaps along its length, held together (as it seemed at that
distance) by nothing bigger than a couple of pencils. They say they
need those wind gaps in the tower, because a hurricane just might
push the whole thing over if they didn’t allow spaces for the
air to get through. Maybe so. I’m willing to believe that the
gaps make the building safer, but they certainly aren’t
reassuring to look at.
Still,
the Mile-High has managed to stay up for--let’s see--it must be
six or seven years now, and it’s certainly an imposing sight.
You can see it from anywhere within forty or fifty miles of New York.
More than that. It’s so immense that, even across most of
Queens and part of Brooklyn, when I looked at it I was distinctly
looking up. Then,
when I got out of the cab at its base, it was more than big, it was
scary. I couldn’t help flinching a little. Whenever I look
straight up at a tall building I get the feeling it’s about to
fall on me, and there’s nothing taller than the Mile-High.
A limousine had pulled up
behind me. The man who got out looked at me twice, and I looked at
him thrice, and then we spoke simultaneously. “Hello, Fred,”
he said, and I said:
“Doc, how are you?
It’s been a long time.”
It
had been--twenty years, anyway. We were obviously going to the same
place, so Doc Lowndes waited for me while I paid off the taxi, even
though it was gently drizzling on Sixth Avenue. When I turned away
from the taxi driver, after a little argument about the tip, Doc was
doing what I had been doing, staring up at the top of the Mile-High.
“Do you know what it looks like?” he asked. “It
looks like the space gun from Things
to Come. Remember?”
I
remembered. Things to
Come had been our cult movie, back in the 1930s; most of us had
seen it at least a dozen times. (My own record was
thirty-two.) “Yeah, space, II I said, grinning. “Rocket
ships. People going to other planets. We’d believe almost
anything in those days, wouldn’t we?”
He gave me a considering
look. “I still believe,” he told me as we headed for the
express elevators to the top.
The
Mile-High Building isn’t really a Things
to Come kind of edifice. It’s more like something from that
even more ancient science fiction film, Just Imagine--silly
futuristic spoof packed with autogyros and Mars rockets and young
couples getting their babies out of vending machines. I first saw
Just Imagine when I was ten years old. The heroine was a
meltingly lovely teenager, just imported from Ireland to Hollywood,
and that movie is why all my life I have been in love with Maureen
O’Sullivan.
The Mile-High Building
doesn’t have any of those things, least of all (worse luck!)
the still lovely Maureen, but it is definitely a skyscraper that puts
even those old movie-makers to shame. To get to the top you go a
measured mile straight up. Because the elevators are glass-walled,
you get to see that whole incredible five thousand plus feet dropping
away as you zoom upward, nearly a hundred miles an hour at peak
velocity.
Doc
swayed a little as we accelerated. “Pretty fast,” he
said. “Real fast,”
I agreed, and began telling him all about the building. It’s
hollow inside, like an ice-cream cone, and I knew quite a lot about
it because when I was still living in New York City, before I could
afford the place on Maui, I used to know a man named Mike Terranova.
Mike was a visualizer working for an architect’s office--at
another point in his career he did the drawings for the science
fiction comic strip I wrote for a while, but that’s another
story, too. Mike really was better at doing machines and buildings
than at drawing people, which is probably why our strip only ran one
year, but he made up for it in enthusiasm. He was a big fan of the
Mile-High. “Look at the wind gaps in it,” he told me
once, as we walked down Central Park West and saw the big thing
looming even thirty blocks away. “That’s to let the wind
through, to reduce the force so it shouldn’t sway. Of course,
they’ve also got the mass dampers on the two hundredth and
three hundredth and four hundredth floors, so it doesn’t sway
much anyway.”
“It’s just
another skyscraper, Mike,” I told him, amused at his
enthusiasm.
“It’s
a different kind of
skyscraper! They figured out the best offices are the ones with an
outside view, so they just didn’t build any offices inside!
It’s all hollow--except for the bracing struts and cables, and
for the three main floor--through sections, where you change
elevators and they have all the shops and things. “
“It’s
brilliant,” I said; and actually it was. And I was explaining
all this to Doc, and all the time I was talking we were flashing past
those vast central atria that are nearly a hundred stories high each,
with their balconies, and flowers growing down from the railings, and
lianas crisscrossing the central spaces; and Doc was looking at me
with that patient expression New Yorkers reserve for out-of-towners.
But all he said was, “I
know.”
Then I was glad enough
for the break when we walked across the hundredth-story level,
between the soda fountains and the clothing shops, to the next bank
of elevators, and then the next. Then you get out at the top, five
thousand and change feet above the corner of Fifty-second Street and
Sixth Avenue, and you have to take an escalator up another flight to
the club itself.
I don’t like
standing still, so I took the escalator steps two at a time. Doc
followed gamely. He was puffing a little as we reached the door the
doorman was already holding open for us.
“Put on a little
weight, I see,” I told him. “Too much riding in
limousines, I’d say. There must be big bucks in the poetry
racket these days.”
I guess my tone must have
sounded needling, because he gave me a sidelong look. But he also
gave me a straightforward reply, which was more than I deserved. “I
just don’t like taxi drivers,” he said. “Believe
me, I’m not getting rich from my royalties. Publishing poetry
doesn’t pay enough to keep a pig in slop. What pays my bills is
readings. I do get a lot of college dates. “
I was rebuked. See, we
Futurians had been pretty sharp-tongued kids, big on put-down jokes
and getting laughs at each other’s expense; just the thought of
coming to the reunion seemed to get me back in that mood. I wasn’t
used to seeing Bob in his present gentler incarnation.
Then the white-haired
woman took our coats, and even gentle Bob got a kind of smirk on his
face as I handed over my trenchcoat. I knew what he was looking at,
because I was wearing my usual at-home outfit: canary-yellow slacks,
beach-boy shirt, and thongs. “I didn’t have a chance to
change,” I said defensively.
“I was just
thinking how nice it is for you folks that live in Hawaii,” he
told me seriously, and led the way into the big reception room where
the party had already started.
There had certainly been
changes. It wasn’t like the old days. Maybe it was because they
were talking about making Bob poet laureate for the United States. Or
maybe it was just the difference between twenty and seventy. We
didn’t have to explain how special we were now, because the
whole world was full of people willing to explain that to us.
There were at least a
hundred people in the room, hanging around the waiters with the
champagne bottles and studying the old pictures on the wall. It was
easy to see which were the real Futurians: they were the ones with
the bald spots or the white beards. The others were publicity people
and media people. There were many more of them than of us, and their
average age was right under thirty.
Right
in the middle was Dr. Isaac Asimov, sparring good-naturedly with
Cyril Kornbluth. They were the center of the biggest knot, because
they were the really famous ones. General Kyle was there--in uniform,
though he was long retired by now--telling a young woman with a
camera how he got those ribbons at the battle of Pusan. Jack Robinson
was standing in the background, listening to him--no cameras pointed
at Jack, because the reporters didn’t have much interest in
schoolteachers, even when that one had been one of Harvard’s
most distinguished professors emeritus. I saw Jack Gillespie, with a
gorgeous blonde six inches taller than he was on his arm--she was the
star of one of his plays--and Hannes Bok, looking older and more
content than he used to, drinking Coca-Cola and munching on one of
the open-faced sandwiches. There wasn’t any doubt they were
pretty well known by any normal standards. Jack had already won a
Pulitzer, and Hannes’s early black-and-whites were going for
three thousand dollars apiece in the galleries on Fifty-seventh
Street. But there’s a difference between
say-didn’t-I-see-you-once-on-TV and famous.
The media people knew which ones to point their cameras at. Cyril
didn’t have one Pulitzer, he had three of them, and the word
was he’d have had the Nobel Prize if only he’d had the
sense to be born a Bolivian or a Greek. And as to Isaac, of
course--well, Isaac was Isaac. Adviser to Presidents,
confidant of the mighty, celebrated steady guest of the Jack Paar
show and star of a hundred television commercials. He wasn’t
just kind of famous. He was the one of us who couldn’t
cross a city street without being recognized, because he was known by
features to more people than any senator, governor, or cardinal of
the Church. He even did television commercials. I’d seen him in
Hawaii, touting the Pan American Clipper flights to Australia...and
he didn’t even fly.
They’d
blown up that old photograph twelve feet long, and Damon Knight was
staring mournfully up at it when Doc and I came over to shake hands.
“We were such kids,” he said. True enough. We’d
ranged from sixteen--that was Cyril--to Don Wollheim, the old man of
the bunch: why, then he had been at least twenty-three or
twenty-four.
So much has been written
about the Futurians these days that sometimes I’m not sure
myself what’s true, and what’s just press-agent puffery.
The newspaper stories make us sound very special. Well, we certainly
thought we were, but I doubt that many of our relatives shared our
opinion. Isaac worked in his parents’ candy store, Johnny
Michel helped his father silk-screen signs for Woolworth’s Five
and Ten, Dirk Wylie pumped gas at a filling station in Queens, Dick
Wilson shoved trolleys of women’s dresses around the garment
district on Seventh Avenue. Most of the rest of us didn’t have
real jobs at all. Remember, it was the tail end of the Great
Depression. I know that for myself I considered I was lucky, now and
then, to get work as a restaurant busboy or messenger for an
insurance company.
A
young woman came over to us. She was reading from a guest list, and
when she looked at me she wonderfully got my name right. “I’m
from Saturday Evening
Post Video, “ she explained. “You were one of the
original Futurians, weren’t you?”
“We all were. Well,
Doc and I were. Damon came along later.”
“And so you knew
Dr. Asimov and Mr. Kornbluth from the very beginning?”
I sighed; I knew from
experience just how the interview was going to go. It was not for my
own minor-league fame that the woman wanted to talk to me, it was for
a reminiscence about the superstars. So I told her three or four of
the dozen stories I kept on tap for such purposes. I told her how
Isaac lived at one end of Prospect Park, in Brooklyn, and I lived at
the other. How the Futurians would have a meeting, any kind of a
meeting, and then hate to break it up, and so we’d just walk
around the empty streets all night long, talking, sometimes
singing--Jack and I, before he finished his first play; Doc and I,
reciting poetry, singing all the numbers out of our bottomless
repertory of the popular songs of the day; Cyril and I, trying to
trick each other with our show-off game of “Impossible
Questions.”
“‘Impossible
Questions,’ “ she repeated.
“That
was a sort of a quiz game we played,” I explained. “We
invented it. It was a hard
one. The questions were intended to be about things most people
wouldn’t know. Like, what’s the rhyme scheme of a chant
royal? Or what’s the color of air?”
“You mean blue,
like the sky?”
I
grinned at her. “You just lost a round. Air doesn’t have
any color at all. It just looks
blue, because of what they call Rayleigh scattering. But that’s
all right; these were impossible questions, and if anyone ever
got the right answer to anyone of them he won and the game was over.”
“So you and Dr.
Asimov used to play this game--”
“No,
no. Cyril and I
played it. The only way Isaac came into it was sometimes we’d
go over to see him. Early in the morning, when we’d been up all
night; we’d start off across the park around sunrise, and we’d
stop to climb a few trees--and Cyril would give the mating call of
the plover-tailed teal, but we never had a teal respond to it--and
along about the time Isaac’s parents’ candy store opened
for business we’d drop in and his mother would give us each a
free malted milk.”
“A free malted
milk,” the woman repeated, beaming. It was just the kind of
human-interest thing she’d been looking for. She tarried for
one more question. “ Did you know Dr. Asimov when he wrote his
famous letter to President Franklin Roosevelt, that started the
Pasadena Project?”
I
opened my mouth to answer, but Doc Lowndes got in there ahead of me.
“Oh, damn it, woman,” he exploded. “Isaac
didn’t write that letter. Alexis Carrel did. Isaac came in
much later.”
The woman looked at her
notes, then back at us. Her look wasn’t surprised. Mostly it
was--what’s the word I want? Yes: pitying. She looked at us as
though she were sorry for us. “Oh, I don’t think so,”
she said, politely enough. “I have it all here.”
“You have it
wrong,” Doc told her, and began to try to set her straight.
I wouldn’t have
bothered, though the facts were simple enough. Albert Einstein had
written to the President claiming that Hitler’s people were on
the verge of inventing what he called “an atomic bomb,”
and he wanted FDR to start a project so the U.S.A. could build one
first. Dr. Alexis Carrel heard about it. He was a biochemist and he
didn’t want to see America wasting its time on some
atomic-power will-o’-the-wisp. So he persuaded his friend
Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh to take a quite different letter to
President Roosevelt.
It wasn’t that easy
for Lindbergh, because there was a political problem. Lindbergh was
certainly a famous man. He was the celebrated Lone Eagle, the man who
had flown the Atlantic in nineteen twenty-something all by himself,
first man ever to do it. But a decade and a bit later things had
changed for Lindbergh. He had unfortunately got a reputation for
being soft on the Nazis, and besides he was deeply involved in some
right-wing Republican organizations--the America First Committee, the
Liberty League, things like that--which had as their principal
objective in life leaving Hitler alone and kicking that satanic
Democrat Franklin D. Roosevelt out of the White House.
All the same, Lindbergh
had a lot of powerful friends. It took two months of pulling hard on
a lot of strings to arrange it, but he finally got an appointment for
five minutes of the President’s time on a slow Thursday morning
in Warm Springs, Georgia. And the President actually read Carrel’s
letter.
Roosevelt wasn’t a
scientist and didn’t even have any scientists near
him--scientists weren’t a big deal, back in the thirties. So
FDR didn’t really know the difference between a fissioning
atomic nucleus and a disease organism, except that he could see that
it was cheaper to culture germs in Petri dishes than to build
billion-dollar factories to make this funny-sounding,
what-do-you-call-it, nuclear explosive stuff, plutonium. And FDR was
a little sensitive about starting any new big-spending projects for a
while. So Einstein was out, and Carrel was in.
By
the time Isaac got drafted and assigned to the secret research
facility it was called the Pasadena Project; but by the time Doc got
to that point the Saturday
Evening Post woman was beginning to fidget. “That’s
very interesting, Mr. Lowndes?” she said, glancing at her
notes. “But I think my editors would want me to get this sort
of thing from Dr. Asimov himself. Excuse me,” she finished,
already turning away, with the stars of hero worship beginning to
shine in her eyes.
Doc looked at me
ruefully. “Reporters,” he said.
I nodded. Then I couldn’t
resist the temptation any longer. “Let’s listen to what
he does tell her,” I suggested, and we trailed after her.
It
wasn’t easy to get near Isaac. Apart from the reporters, there
were all the public relations staffs of our various publishers and
institutes--Don Wollheim ‘s own publishing company, Cyril’s
publishers, Bob Lowndes’s, The
New York Times, because Damon was the editor of their Book
Review. Even my own publisher had chipped in, as well as the
galleries that sold Hannes Bok’s paintings and Johnny Michel’s
weird silk screens of tomato cans and movie stars’ faces. But
it was the U.S. Information Agency that produced most of the muscle,
because Isaac was their boy. What was surrounding Isaac was a mob.
The reporter was a tough lady, though. An elbow here, a
side-slither there, and she was in the front row with her hand up.
“Dr. Asimov? Weren’t you the one who wrote the letter to
President Roosevelt that started the Pasadena Project?”
“Good lord, no!”
Isaac said, “No, it was a famous biochemist of the time, Dr.
Alexis Carrel. He was responding to a letter Albert Einstein had
written, and--What is it?”
The
man from the Daily News
had his hand up. “Could you spell that, please, Dr.
Asimov?”
“E-I-N-S-T-E-I-N.
He was a physicist, very well known at the time. Anyway, the
President accepted Dr. Carrel’s proposal and they started the
Pasadena Project. I happened to be drafted into it, as a very young
biochemist, just out of school.”
“But you got to be
pretty important,” the woman said loyally. Isaac shrugged.
Someone from another videopaper asked him to say more about his
experiences, and Isaac, giving us all a humorously apologetic look,
did as requested.
“Well,”
he said, “I don’t want to dwell on the weapons systems.
Everybody knows that it was our typhus bomb that made the Japanese
surrender, of course. But it was the peacetime uses that I think are
really important. Look around at my old friends here.” He swept
a generous arm around the dais, including us all. “If it hadn’t
been for the Pasadena Project some of us wouldn’t be here
now--do you have any idea
how much medicine advanced as a result of what we learned?
Antibiotics in 1944, antivirals in 1948, the cancer cure in 1950, the
cholesterol antagonist in 1953?”
A California woman got
in: “Are you sure the President made the right decision? There
are some people who still think that atomic power is a real
possibility.”
“Ah, you’re
talking about old Eddy Teller.” Isaac grinned. “He’s
all right. It’s just that he’s hipped on this one
subject. It’s really too bad. He could have done important
work, I think, if he’d gone in for real science in 1940,
instead of fooling around with all that nuclear stuff.”
There wasn’t any
question that Isaac was the superstar, with Cyril getting at least
serious second-banana attention, but it wasn’t all the
superstars. Quite. Each one of the rest of us got a couple of minutes
before the cameras, saying how much each of us had influenced each
other and how happy we all were to be seeing each other again. I was
pretty sure that most of us would wind up as faces on the
cutting-room floor, but what we said, funnily enough, was all pretty
true.
And then it was over.
People began to leave.
I saw Isaac coming out of
the men’s room as I was looking for the woman with my coat. He
paused at the window, gazing out at the darkling sky. A big TWA
eight-engined plane was coming in, nonstop, probably from someplace
like Havana. It was heading toward Idlewild, hardly higher than we
were, as I tapped him on the shoulder.
“I didn’t
know celebrities went to the toilet,” I told him.
He looked at me
tolerantly. “Matter of fact, I was just calling Janet,”
he said. “Anyway, how are things going with you, Fred? You’ve
been publishing a lot of books. How many, exactly?”
I gave him an honest
answer. “I don’t exactly know. I used to keep a list. I’d
write the name and date and publisher for each new book on the wall
of my office--but then my wife painted over the wall and I lost my
list.”
“Approximately
how many?”
“Over a hundred,
anyway. Depends what you count. The novels, the short-story
collections, the nonfiction books”
“Over a hundred,”
he said. “And some of them have been dramatized, and
book-clubbed, and translated into foreign languages?” He pursed
his lips and thought for a moment. “I guess you’re happy
about the way your life has gone?”
“Well,
sure,” I said. “Why wouldn’t I be?” And then
I gave him another look, because there was something about his tone
that startled me. “What are you saying, Eye? Aren’t you?”
“Of
course I am!” he said quickly. “Only--well, to tell you
the truth, there’s just one thing. Every once in a while I find
myself thinking that if things had gone a different way, I might’ve
been a pretty successful writer.”
Plato’s Cave
by Poul
Anderson
The Three Laws of
Robotics:
1. A robot may not injure a human being or, through
inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.
2. A robot must obey the orders given it by human beings
except where such orders would conflict with the First Law.
3. A robot must protect its own existence as long as
such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Law.
THE MESSAGE REACHED
EARTH AS A SET OF SHORTWAVE pulses. A communications satellite
relayed it, along with hundreds more, to a groundside clearing
station. Since it designated itself private, the station passed it
directly on to its recipient, the global headquarters of the United
States Robots and Mechanical Men Corporation. There a computer
programmed with its highly secret code converted digital signals to
sight and sound. An image leaped into being, so three-dimensionally
complete that startlement brought a gasp from Henry Matsumoto.
The robot shown was no
surprise--humanoid but large, bulkily armored, intended for hard
labor under tricky conditions. The background, though, was
spectacular. Nothing blocked that from view but a couple of
structural members. Needing no air, drink, food, little of anything
except infrequent refuelings, robots when by themselves traveled in
spacecraft quite accurately describable as “barebones. “
At one edge of the screen, a slice of Jupiter’s disc glowed
huge, its tawniness swirled with clouds and spotted with storms that
could have swallowed Earth whole. Near the lower edge was a glimpse
of Io. The sights flitted swiftly past, for the ship was in close
orbit around the moon, but the plume of one volcanic outburst upon it
dominated the desolation for just this instant, geyserlike above a
furious sulfury spout.
The young technician was
doubly shaken because the apparition was so unexpected. He had merely
been taking his turn as monitor, relieving the tedium with a book. No
message had come in for weeks other than regular “All’s
well” tokens. What the hell had gone wrong?
A deep voice rolled over
him. It was synthesized; in airlessness, the speaker directly
modulated a radio wave. “Robot DGR-36 reporting from Io. Robot
JK-7 has suspended operations--prospecting, mining, transportation,
beneficiation, all work. When my crew and I landed to take on the
next load of ore, we found every machine and subordinate robot idle.
JK-7 himself was not present, but spoke to me from the hills behind
the site. He declared that he was acting under strict orders from a
human, to the effect that this undertaking is dangerous and must be
terminated. I deemed it best that we return to orbit and await
instructions. “
“M-m-my God,”
Matsumoto stammered. “Hold on. Stay quiet. “
At the present
configuration of the planets, his order would take some forty minutes
to arrive. However, anticipating that the first person he reached
would be a junior, DGR-36 had already gone immobile. Matsumoto swung
about in his chair and frantically punched the intercom.
He needed an outside
line, local time being well past ordinary working hours, but soon
Philip Hillkowitz, technological chief of Project Io, was in the
little office. Hillkowitz in his turn had called Alfred Lanning,
general director of research, who arrived almost on his heels. The
two men stared at the image of the robot, and then at each other, for
what seemed to Matsumoto a very long while.
“Has it happened in
spite of everything?” Hillkowitz whispered. “Can the
radiation really have driven Jack insane?”
Lanning’s tufted
brows drew together. “I shouldn’t have to remind you,”
he snapped, “tests showed his shielding adequate against a
hundred years of continuous exposure.”
“Yes, yes, yes. But
those hellish conditions--” Hillkowitz addressed the robot.
“Edgar, did you notice any other abnormality when you were on
the ground? For example, did metal seem pitted or corroded?”
“Not a bad
question,” Lanning said. “But in the eighty minutes till
we hear the answer, we’d better think up a system for learning
more, faster. “
The officers dismissed
Matsumoto, enjoining him to let out no hint of trouble; and they
canceled subsequent vigils. Inevitably, this would start rumors by
itself. While they waited, they sent out after coffee, speculated
fruitlessly, paced, overloaded the air conditioning with smoke.
“No, sir,”
DGR-36 replied. “I took it upon myself to examine equipment and
robots that were present. No trace of mechanical, chemical, or
radiation damage was apparent to my sensors.“
“Good lad,”
Lanning muttered. He had helped design a considerable degree of
initiative into yonder model.
“I spoke with the
other robots,” DGR-36 continued, “but they could only
tell me that JK-7 had directed them to stop work. I had no authority
to order them back, and in any event, as I understand the situation,
only JK-7 can successfully supervise them. I urged him to resume
operations, but he stated that he was under directions that took
precedence over all others, whereupon he broke contact. “ Again
he turned into a statue.
“Have you observed
any activity since?” Hillkowitz asked.
“This settles it,”
Lanning said to him. “We’ve got to get hold of Susan
Calvin.”
“What, already? Uh,
yes, she can better judge derangement than either of us, no doubt,
but--I mean, this time lag, and Jack himself out of touch--we can’t
dispatch her to the scene.”
“No, I expect we’ll
want, hm, Powell and Donovan; they’re probably our best field
operatives. But Calvin is the one to decide that. “
Lanning keyed for her
home. Presently a voice emerged waspish: “Well, what do you
want? Who is there? If your reason for rousing me out of bed isn’t
excellent, you will regret it.”
“Phil Hillkowitz
and myself,” Lanning said. “Look, you’ve got to get
down here right away. We have a crisis on Io. I don’t dare tell
you more except in person. “
“Afraid of
electronic eavesdroppers? How melodramatic!”
“Well, maybe
unlikely, but Project Io is in trouble. You know how much it means,
and how determined the opposition is.”
“I also know how
that room you’re in must smell by now,” retorted the
robopsychologist. “Whistle up some of your technies and have me
patched in on a properly sealed circuit. Full audiovisual, and direct
access to the main databank. Given the transmission lag, they’ll
have ample time if they go about it competently.”
Thus, after a while, the
men saw her image, primly erect in a straight-backed chair, sipping
tea, across from the robot’s.
“We are not
equipped to follow the actions of individuals when we are in space,”
DGR-36 answered. “We have noticed no obvious movements, at
least thus far.”
“I realize you
don’t have perfect memory either,” Calvin said, “but
I want you, Edgar, to tell me, as best you can--don’t be in a
hurry; examine your recollections carefully--tell me precisely what
motivation JK-7 gave you. In particular, what did he tell you about
this human who allegedly appeared to him and ordered him to halt
work?”
She
signaled for a break in transmission to Jupiter and turned her
attention back Earthward. “ ‘Appeared to’ is the
right wording,” Hillkowitz said, sighing. His own gaze went
elsewhere, as if to look through walls and across space. He might
have been thinking, reviewing, though he had lived with this from its
origins: None of us can
survive there. Io is deep in Jupiter’s magnetosphere. The
trapped charged particles would doom us within minutes, unless we
were inside shielding so thick as to leave us helpless. Not to
mention the cold, or vacuum barely softened by poisonous volcanic
spewings. We can make robots immune to these and even guard the
positronic brain so well that the radiation does not ruin it. Or so
we thought. Lanning and I, our team, we labored long on the task. And
afterward our engineers did, for two years in the safer outer reaches
of the Jovian System, patiently guiding the construction on Io and
the beginning of operations. But they could only communicate with
Jake, and he with them, by radio and laser. At such times he
perceived them and whatever they wished to show him; his communicator
decoded the signals and he saw the images, heard the voices, inside
that head of his. What now has he seen and heard, what new ghost came
to him in that inferno where he toiled?
“Precision
is obviously essential,” Calvin declared. “Now,
gentlemen, I shall call up the files on this project and study them
for about one hour.” Her screen went blank..
“I might do the
same,” Lanning said. “You needn’t, Phil. Io’s
been your exclusive concern. Why don’t you catch a catnap?”
“Lord,”
mumbled Hillkowitz, “I wish I could.”
The simulacrum of Calvin
was back when promised, but told the men simply, “No comment,
yet,” and waited with hands folded in lap. Even when that of
the robot stirred, hers did not. But his speech brought her too out
of her chair.
“Yes, ma ‘m.
Seeing the site idled, hardly any ore waiting, and JK-7 absent, I
broadcast a call and got an audio reply which I sensed as emanating
from somewhere in the hills. He maintained that he had stopped work
on command of a human who explained that it threatened the entire
human race. He declined to go into detail, except that when I asked
if he would at least identify this human, he told me it was the
Emperor Napoleon.”
As
low in mass and high in power as was compatible with life support,
courier ship De/fin
could have made Jupiter in less than four days. Svend Borup would
have medicated himself against the effects of such an acceleration
and spent much of the time happily contemplating the hardship bonus
due him. Unfortunately, Gregory Powell and Michael Donovan would not
have arrived fit to get busy. At a steady one gravity, boost and
deboost, the crossing still took under a week, and meanwhile U.S.
Robots’s ace troubleshooters could become familiar with the
vast store of background material given them.
When first they came up
for air, at the first meal en route, Borup naturally asked them what
was going on. “I was told almost nothing,” he said in his
soft Danish accent. “The whole went so fast. They waved a
contract at me, but it also says no more than that I take you to
Jupiter and there help you as is needed. “ The owner-captain
was a stocky, balding man whose waistline might be due in part to
frequent indulgence in pretzel-shaped sugar cookies from his
homeland.
“Well, they had
plenty reason to hurry,” Donovan answered. “Explanations
could wait. Whatever’s the matter, maybe we can fix it--unless
we get there too late. Anyhow, the government can’t afford--”
He broke off, uncertain whether he should reveal more. Ole, one of
the two robots that were the crew, helped him by entering the saloon
and setting bowls of pea soup before the men. Knud, the other, was on
watch, slight though the chance was of anything happening which the
ship’s automatics couldn’t handle.
Borup nodded. “It
is on Io. That is clear. They talk about reestablishing the station
on Ganymede, but it is yust talk so far, after the Yovian scare. Too
little left for people to do there, too big a hazard from the
radiation. Nobody today on all those moons or anywhere near, yust the
miner robots.” He wagged his spoon. “And it is a big, big
investment in them, no? If the ore stops coming out, many banks are
in trouble. And so are the world aut’orities who sponsored the
venture and pushed it t’rough.”
“You’re
pretty well up on events,” Powell remarked.
Borup chuckled. “For
a fellow who mostly dashes around in space, you mean? No, no.
Everybody knows what a powerful issue Proyect Io has been, pro and
contra.”
“Still is,”
Donovan muttered.
“Well, now that
we’re safely under way, we can be candid with you, and in fact
we’d better be,” Powell said. “Confidentiality--but
frankly, if we fail, my guess is that it won’t make much
difference what gets into the media.” He wiped his mustache, in
which droplets had condensed from the steam off the soup. “Uh,
I’m not sure what you may recollect of all the controversy
about the project and all the hoopla while it was getting started.
Since then it’s practically dropped out of the public
consciousness. Another bunch of robots and machinery, working
somewhere distant from Earth.”
“But wit’
great promise,” Borup said. “The Io volcanoes bring up
such riches of minerals, more than in all the asteroids put together,
no? It is the radiation that is the problem.”
“Not
alone. We also have a dangerous, essentially unpredictable
environment, quakes, landslides, crevasses opening, ground collapsing
into caves, eruptions, the way Jupiter’s tides tear at that
moon. Therefore an especially intelligent robot is required to run
the show. The work gangs can be pretty ordinary models, not greatly
modified, not too hard to provide ample shielding for. But the head
honcho needs intelligence, a large store of knowledge, alertness,
initiative, even what you mayas well call a degree of imagination.
The positronic circuits of such a robot are all too easily addled.
Protecting it--simply plating the head with a lot of material--isn’t
enough. Compensatory circuits are necessary, and then you have to
compensate for their
effects. It wasn’t really certain, when U.S. Robots signed
the contract, that this development was possible at the present state
of the art.”
“Yes, I do
remember.”
“Sorry.”
“It is all right.
What have we to do but talk? And enyoy our soup. There will be
meatballs after. Please to continue. “
“Well, we, uh, the
firm did come up with the new robot, and everything tested out fine,
and went fine, too, until now. But he appears to have suddenly gone
crazy after all. He suspended work and sits babbling about it being
dangerous to Earth. He says this came to him in a, uh, vision. “
“Ha, I t’ought
somet’ing like that. Have you no spare?”
“I don’t
know, but I doubt it,” Donovan put in. “Jack--JK-7--the
number will tell you how many prototypes they went through--he’s
practically handcrafted. Cost more than any three senators. Not a
production-line item; how many Ios have we got? Anyway, how could we
land a second Jack till we know what went wrong with the first?”
“Which first might
interfere with the second,” Powell added grimly.
Borup looked shocked, in
his mild fashion. “ A robot interfering wit’ work ordered
by humans?”
“Hard to imagine,”
Powell agreed. “But, well, think. Because Jack is not only
extra valuable, but essential to the project, and in such a hazardous
situation, they’ve given him an unusually high Third Law
potential. He’ll take as good care of himself as he can,
whether or not that means sacrificing a great deal else. Of course,
it doesn’t override the Second Law. He must carry out the
mission entrusted to him, and obey any specific orders issued him by
a human. But that potential is on the low side. What this means in
practice is, if he, with his on-the-spot experience, if he thinks an
order is mistaken, he questions it. He points out the flaws. Only if
he’s then commanded to proceed regardless will he do so.
Likewise, when he’s by himself he’ll use his own judgment
as to how he should direct the overall job of mining Io.
“Well,
now he’s gotten this delusion, or whatever it is. The First Law
naturally takes precedence over everything else. He cannot
knowingly do anything that would harm humans, or refrain from
doing anything that would save humans from harm. His brain would burn
out first.” Powell had been ticking the points off on his
fingers. “You know this, everybody does, but often the
interactions of these laws, the conflicts between them and the
resultants, get so complicated or so subtle that nobody but a
roboticist can make sense of what’s happening.”
“And not always the
roboticist, right away;” Donovan chimed in.
“According to
Edgar, the robot cargo-ship captain and he wouldn’t lie to
us--Jack is convinced Project Io will lead to death and destruction,”
Powell said. “Therefore he’s stopped it. I doubt very
much he’ll obey orders to resume, unless somehow we can
persuade him he’s in error. He might not even respond to our
calls. Conceivably he’ll decide it’s his duty to actively
resist further work, actually sabotage it. And, besides his high
capabilities, if they aren’t impaired, that high Third Law
potential will make him a very cunning, careful, probably very
efficient guerrilla. “
“You have no way of
yust making him stay quiet?” asked Borup.
Powell frowned. A moment
passed before he said, “We can’t go to Io in this ship to
hunt him down, and live, if that’s what you mean. Edgar and his
crew are meant for space and stevedoring; they’d be hopeless.
Getting up a proper robotic hunting party would be monstrously
prolonged and expensive. Meanwhile the capital costs of the stalled
project mount every day, and as for the political consequences if the
scandal breaks” He shrugged.
“No, no, I
understand. But have you not some special passworded command to give
him that makes you the absolute boss?”
Powell
and Donovan stared. Borup blandly spooned soup...You’re smarter
than you let on,” Donovan murmured. He slapped the table and
barked a laugh...Yeah, sure we do. Hard-wired in. What with all the
unknowns and unforeseeables, that was an elementary precaution. For
instance, the scientists might discover a danger unknown to him, and
not want to lose time arguing. Or if you’re paranoid, or ultra
careful, you’ll worry about enemies of the project somehow
slipping him a false order. Yes, there is a password. Top Secret, Bum
Before Reading, known to a handful of people in the company and the
government, and now to us two. It’ll probably be the first
thing we try when we get there. Whether he’ll obey--he is
insane, and this is not so basic as the Three Laws.”
“Insane, you
believe,” Borup corrected. Donovan grimaced...We’d sure
like to believe otherwise. If the radiation’s fried his brain,
or something else on that chunk of hell has gotten to him, there goes
the project down the tubes, probably, and a lot more besides.”
“What makes you
t’ink he must be mad?”
Donovan and Powell
glanced at each other before Powell nodded. “Why, he claims
Napoleon came and told him to stop,” Donovan said. “That’s
all we know so far. But isn’t it enough?”
“Napoleon? The
Emperor?”
“Who else?”
“Now where would he
have heard about Napoleon?”
“A
reasonable question. Last I
heard, Dr. Calvin was trying to research that. But you never know
what stray scraps of information might get to a robot while he’s
being activated and indoctrinated. A lot of people are generally
involved, and he’ll overhear conversations. Also, now and then
a brain picks up stray signals, telecast or--Remember Speedy, Greg?”
“How could I
forget?” Powell sighed. To Borup: “ A robot we dealt with
on Mercury. A Second-Third Law conflict unbalanced him. He ran around
and around in a circle gibbering Gilbert and Sullivan. We never did
find out how he acquired it.”
“Hm,” said
Borup. “Your chances do not look so good, yentlemen, do they?”
“Which means the
chances for the world don’t.” Powell’s tone was
bleak.
“Oh? True, much
money will be lost. But unless you are a banker or a politician--”
“Bankers handle the
money of working stiffs like you and us,” Donovan said. “If
Project Io goes bust, we could get one black hole of a depression. “
“And as for
politicians,” Powell added, “they aren’t all clowns
and crooks, you know. Here we’ve finally, just a few years
back, elected a reform government with some bright, decent people at
the top. It’s staked its future on Project Io. The opposition
was terrific, you may recall. What, throwaway fortunes on a gamble
like that? The idea that we’ll all benefit more from increased
production, fairly divided, than from handouts and pork barrels was
too much for the old guard. It fought right down the line. And it’s
still got a large minority in the legislature, while the government
itself is a pretty frail coalition. Let Project Io fail, and a vote
of no confidence will throw us right back to where we were, or worse.
“
“I suppose so,”
Borup said softly. “I do not pay too much attention to those
t’ings. When I am at home wit’ my wife, mostly we talk
about the garden and the grandchildren. But, yes, we did vote for
reform. It would be nice to see that man Stephen Byerly someday be
coordinator.” He turned his head. “Ah, here come the
meatballs. “
Seen
from its little moon Himalia, Jupiter shone about as large as Luna
over Earth but, in spite of its cloudbands, barely a fourth as
bright. That pale gold glow, the glare from a shrunken sun, and the
glitter of swarming stars shimmered on ice and vanished among
upthrust crags. Clustered at the north pole, dome, masts, and docking
facilities were a sight well-nigh as gaunt, yet welcome to human
eyes. Borup brought De/fin
to rest and linked airlocks. Powell and Donovan entered the
mothballed engineering base to reactivate it. Gravity was virtually
negligible; they moved through the gloom like phantoms, except when
they collided with something and uttered earthy words.
After a few hours they
had light, heat, air circulation, austere habitability. Donovan beat
his hands together. “Brrr!” he exclaimed. “How
long’ll it take the walls to warm up? I know it’s
thermodynamic nonsense, but I’d swear they radiate cold.”
“Longer than we’ll
be here, I hope,” Powell said. “Meanwhile we can eat and
sleep aboard ship. Let’s get cracking. “
They settled themselves
before the main console in the communications room. A coded beam
sprang from the transmitter, computer-aimed inward through the lethal
zone around Jupiter. A readout showed that Io was currently occulted
by the great planet, but that shouldn’t matter. Two relay
satellites swung in the Trojan positions of the same orbit. Six more
circled Io itself, in the equatorial and polar planes. Between them,
those identified Jack wherever he was on the surface and kept locked
onto him.
“Himalia Base
calling Robot JK-7,” Powell intoned. ‘.Humans have
returned to the Jovian System. Come in, JK-7.”
After a humming silence,
Donovan ran fingers through red hair gone wild and groaned, “He
must be completely around the bend. He talked for a little while to
Edgar. “ Useless here, that robot and his crew were bound for
duty in the Asteroid Belt. ‘.Now he won’t give us the
time of day.” He paused. ”Unless he’s broken down
physically. too.”
“Seems unlikely,”
Powell argued. “His builders are as competent a bunch as you’ll
find. Supposing conditions are more harmful than they knew, still,
damage would be cumulative, and Jack hasn’t been where he is
for long.” He rubbed his chin. “Hmm. While Edgar’s
gang was on the ground, he skulked in the hills and communicated by
audio-only long-wave radio. I’d guess he was afraid they might
seize him and take him back for examination. They couldn’t
pinpoint where he was broadcasting from on that band, and weren’t
equipped to use the satellites to locate him for them. Not that they
could run him down anyway, in country he’s designed for.”
“He didn’t
have to obey them. They were robots, same as him.”
“Yeah. He didn’t
have to respond to them at all. But I daresay Second Law made him
anxious to explain himself to humans, sort of.”
“Hey, wait. We’re
humans, and he isn’t heeding us.”
“If, as you say,
he’s capable of receiving.” Powell drew breath. “Okay,
we reinforce the Second Law by the password.” He leaned forward
and said slowly: “Robot JK-7, this is human Gregory Powell
calling from Himalia Base. I order you to reply. Code Upsilon.
Repeat, Code Upsilon. “
Silence stretched. The
men knew it must. Time lag at the moment was about thirty-nine
seconds, either way. Nevertheless, they shivered as they half sat,
half floated in their chairs. When abruptly the screen came alive,
Donovan jumped. He rose into midair and cartwheeled gradually down
again, struggling to keep his remarks to himself.
The view was of
ruggedness and desolation. Near half phase, Jupiter stood huge over
the hills that ringed a narrow horizon. Its radiance flooded the
scars and mottlings left by eruptions. Closer in lay flat concrete,
on which Powell spied vehicles, machines, motionless robots. So Jack
had returned to his own base. This was what he saw before him.
Well, not quite. He also
saw Powell’s image, and presently Donovan’s, and heard
their voices. They were not superimposed on the landscape. He
perceived them separately, somewhat as a human may see a face called
out of memory without losing view of what is actually around--but
more vividly, m full three-dimensional detail.
The synthetic speech
jerked, stumbled, dragged itself forth: “Robot
JK-7...responding. What...have you to say?”
“What is this
‘Napoleon’ lunacy?” Powell demanded. “How did
you get the notion your task endangers anybody? On the contrary, it’s
beneficial and important to Earth. In the name of your makers, by
authority duly delegated my partner and me, I command you to resume
operations.”
The minute-plus until the
answer came felt like forever. When it did, they almost wished it
hadn’t.
“I...am not...so
obliged. You...are robots.”
“Huh? Code Upsilon,
damn it!” Donovan roared. “ And the Second Law! You can
see and hear we’re human!”
Interminability.
“I observe...the
semblance. I hear the claim. Also, yes” The scene wavered a
little, as if Jack shuddered. “Also the word of command.
But--but--”
The voice trailed off.
“Go on,” Powell said low. “But what?”
After another dripping
away of seconds: “Napoleon warned me of this. He...he
said...robots posing as humans...possessing the password...would try
to do...exactly what you are trying to do.”
Donovan opened his mouth.
Powell made a shushing gesture, leaned nearer the screen, spoke
softly and earnestly.
“Listen, Jack.
Something is terribly wrong. You’re altogether misinformed. We
don’t blame you, but you must help us get to the bottom of
this. Help us to help you, understand? Tell us exactly what has
happened. Tell us why you think what you think. Who told you what,
Jack? For the well-being of humanity, tell us. “
Waiting.
“If you...are
robots...you are deceived.” The voice strengthened. “You
are serving a disastrous policy. Let me enlighten you. “
“Certainly, Jack.
If we, if we are robots, we too obey the First Law. We would never
willingly or wittingly cause humans to come to harm. And if we are
not robots, then we need to learn about possible dangers, don’t
we? Remember, we know Code Upsilon. That implies we are humans,
doesn’t it? In a pretty special position, at that. Tell us
everything, Jack.”
Waiting. Despite the
chill, sweat gleamed on Donovan’s cheeks. He wiped it with
large, helpless hands.
The pause went on for an
added minute, but when the machine tones arrived, they had steadied.
“Very well. The password does require me to give you as much
obedience as possible. Napoleon told me it would. In fact, events are
proceeding as he foresaw, which you must agree adds credence to his
statements.
“On date 23
January, hour 0917 and 3.68 seconds, I was in the Loki area, having
taken a flitter there to prospect for new digs while my workers
finished up at the Aten lode. A full audiovisual of a human appeared
to me. He identified himself as the Emperor Napoleon and described a
deadly menace newly discovered through study of specimens sent back
to Earth during the first robotic explorations decades ago. It had
not been found earlier because it is so subtle and surprising.
“Energized by
vulcanism, a kind of pseudolife has evolved here. Napoleon called it
a viroid. It derives its own energy by promoting reactions among
metallic elements. As a rule this goes very slowly, but in the course
of geological time the viroid has infested all minerals, and
reduction will not get rid of it. By now it is in equilibrium on Io,
essentially dormant, but when it is brought into contact with
uncontaminated metal it will spread again, faster at Earth
temperatures than here. This station, with robots and machinery, will
begin to crumble within ten or fifteen standard years. Let Ionian
metals be introduced on Earth, and the whole industrial
infrastructure will collapse in a time not much longer. Dependent on
it, the vast majority of humans will die horribly.
“Fortunately, thus
far only a small tonnage has been exported, and it only to industries
off Earth. Samples on Earth have been kept isolated for research
purposes. Certain disintegrations led to studies which determined the
cause. Steps can be taken to eliminate contaminated metal everywhere;
it is not too late. But clearly, no more material of any kind may
ever leave Io. Napoleon ordered me under Code Upsilon to halt
operations.”
“He lied!”
Donovan shouted. “There’s been no such trouble, no such
discovery. Lies, I tell you!”
Powell agreed more
smoothly, “This is correct. We would have known. If the danger
existed, would we be here wanting you to start work again?”
Waiting.
“Napoleon explained
this and anticipated your argument,” Jack said. He still didn’t
sound quite self-assured. “The findings are, as yet,
controversial. They seem to defy the principles of biology, as
biology has hitherto been taught. The directors of Project Io have a
major personal, financial, and political investment in it. They
refuse to believe. They have kept the news from the public. Napoleon
represents a group of dissident scientists who realize that, at the
least, operations must be suspended until the truth has been
ascertained beyond any doubt.
“He told me that,
when I took this measure, the directors would try to annul it. They
would send robots, because humans might feel qualms and let the world
know what is going on. Cleverly misinformed, the robots would have
instructions to pose as humans and dissuade me.”
The voice grew firmer.
“You are those emissaries. Yes, Napoleon’s group could
perhaps be mistaken. But I cannot take the chance. The possibility
that humans may die in the billions is...unthinkable...unacceptable
under any circumstances, any odds. Consider this, you two, in the
light of the First Law. You must set your own orders aside.”
“But we aren’t
robots,” Donovan choked. “Just look at us.”
“We could be
disguised,” Powell admitted fast. “The simplest way would
be to change the digital transmission. Put in a program that converts
a robot image to a human image. Voices likewise. It would be much
easier the other way around. Humans have many more features, more
nuances of expression. Watch my face, my hands.” He went
through a repertoire of smiles, frowns, and gestures. “Could a
robot do that, with all the shadings you see?”
Waiting.
Renewed uncertainty
spoke. “I...am not... acquainted with such details...about
humans. “
“Then how do you
know Napoleon isn’t a robot?” Donovan flung.
“Pipe down, Mike,”
Powell snapped. “Oh, Jack, you do have a lood intelligence and
a capability of independent judgment. You must be aware of the
possibility that Napoleon has misled you, and we are in fact humans
giving you your proper orders. Now think how much more believable it
is that that’s’ the case.”
He had expected a pause
for pondering, but the reply was as prompt as light-speed allowed,
and once more--above an undertone, an unevenness, that sounded
anguished--resolute. “It is indeed conceivable. I do not know
enough about human affairs to gauge the probability. That does not
matter. Given the slightest chance that Napoleon is right, and his
use of Code Upsilon indicates that he does have full access to
information, the consequences are absolutely impermissible. This
outweighs every other consideration. I cannot allow mining and
shipment to continue. If the attempt is made, I must do my best to
prevent it.” With a naiveté that would have been
pathetic under less desperate circumstances: “I shall cache
explosives in the hills and devise weapons against future robots. My
own workers will follow me.”
Powell gnawed an end
ofhis mustache. “I see. Let’s try this from another
angle. Tell me about Napoleon. What does he look like? How often has
he contacted you, and from where? What precisely has he said?”
Waiting.
“In person,”
said Jack, “he is a somewhat stout male, of short stature to
judge by what glimpses I have had of his control board, although
those are bare glimpses. His hair is black. He wears a cloth around
his neck. Otherwise any clothing is covered by an overgarment of a
blue color, with golden-hued braid at the shoulders. I have not seen
his legs. He commonly keeps his right hand tucked into the coat. He
also wears a kind of triangular headgear, likewise blue, of some soft
material. “
Donovan’s lips
formed a soundless whistle.
The voice plodded on: “
As for where he calls from, it must be outside the radiation belt,
since he is human, but he has not informed me. I have noted the time
lags with my internal clock, and computed that he cannot be on
Himalia. In fact, their rather slight variations indicate he is not
on any moon.
“He has called
three times. The exchanges have been brief. I will attempt to
re-create them for you, because...because if you are human, I must
obey you to the extent that the First Law permits.”
The words that followed
were, indeed, short and to the point. The original communication
described the viroids and gave the order to cease and desist. The
other two, at intervals of a few days, were essentially reinforcing;
such questions as had occurred to Jack got curt answers, which bore
down on the danger to mankind and the reckless villainy of Project
lo’s directors. Powell and Donovan refrained from asking how
Napoleon came to speak fluent English. They were more interested in
the additional command.
“Now that you are
here,” Jack said, “I must inform him. I will broadcast at
sufficient strength that his receivers will pick it up, wherever he
is in the Jovian region. Thereafter I will arrange that any further
discussions with you will be directly retransmitted in full
audiovisual to him. Thus he will hear what you have to say, and join
in if he chooses.” Wistfulness? “Perhaps you can persuade
him he is misguided.”
“Perhaps,”
mumbled Donovan without hope.
Waiting.
“I had better take
care of that at once,” Jack said. “I see no profit in
further conversation at this point, do you? If you have any valid
points to make, factual or logical, call me and I will consider them.
So will Napoleon.”
The screen blanked.
The spaceship was a haven
of comfort and sanity. Borup heard his passengers out, clicked his
tongue, and told them, “What you need first is a stiff drink. I
have a bottle of akvavit for emeryencies. “
Donovan raised a hand.
“Best offer I’ve had all day,” he said, “but
first, can we start searching?”
“What’s
this?” asked Powell.
“Look, if Napoleon
is real, he’s got to be hanging around in this neighborhood.
Let’s see if we can find him before he figures out some fresh
deviltry. If he’s not real, if Jack is quantum hopping, what’ve
we lost?”
“If he is hidden on
one of the moons, I do not know how we can detect him,” Borup
objected.
Donovan shook his head.
“Jack doesn’t think he is, and he for sure would not be.
In the first place, digging in like that is a lot of work, needs time
and equipment and hands. If this is a try to sabotage Project Io,
it’s got to be a shoestring kind of thing, a tiny clique, like
maybe half a dozen individuals. Anything bigger would take too long
to organize, be too hard to manage, and make secrecy impossible for
any useful length of time. Investigators would be bound to get clues
to the guilty parties.”
Powell regarded his
partner closely. “Once in a while you surprise me,” he
confessed. “Marvelous, my dear Holmes!”
Donovan bowed.
“Elementary, my dear Watson.”
“Holmes and Watson
never said that,” Borup remarked aside.
Donovan continued: “We’ve
also got the fact that the gear for using the Trojan relays is
special and delicate. On the surface of a moon it would stick up in
sight of God and everybody and give the game away. Therefore Napoleon
must be in space. And he won’t want to lose touch with Io
during the frequent occultations. So he’ll be well above or
below the ecliptic, where he always has Io in his instruments. An
orbit skewed from Jupiter’s but otherwise with the same
elements will keep him in place, fairly stably, over a period of a
few weeks, I should think.” He glanced at Borup. “Svend,
could we find a ship loitering maybe two, three million klicks from
here in the northern or southern sky?”
Powell scowled. “That’s
a monstrous volume of space to cruise through. “
“I
would not obyect to running up the bill I present the company wit’,”
Borup said, “but it is not necessary, and it would waste time
that is precious. We do carry very sensitive instruments. When you
travel at the speeds a courier reaches, you must be able to detect
t’ings far ahead of you.” He pondered. “M-m-m, tja,
it depends on the size and type of the craft. But somet’ing
no bigger than mine, which is close to minimum, we could get on the
optics for certain. And radar reaches still farther. The rotation
axis of this moon is tilted enough that we need not take off to
examine bot’ regions where Napoleon must be in one of if he
monitors Io.”
“The ship’s
hull could be camouflaged, couldn’t it?” Powell inquired.
“Then how’ll you know your radar hasn’t fingered a
meteoroid?”
“Camouflage, maybe,
I am not sure. But the nature of a radar-reflecting surface shows in
the return signal if you got an analyzer like mine. Metal is
different from rock and so on. And once we have acquired a suspicious
obyect, we have more instruments. In these parts, unless the crew is
frozen to deat’, there will be infrared emission--and also from
that direction, out of the power plant, neutrinos above the
background count. Yes, I t’ink we can find the Emperor’s
spaceship unless he is so far away that the communications delay is
ridiculous. I will go put Knud on it.” Borup thrust foot
against bulwark and arrowed out of the saloon, into the passageway
leading to the control room.
He returned with the
promised bottle and three small thin glasses, to join Powell and
Donovan at the table. There was just sufficient weight to make
pouring and drinking feasible, albeit a trifle awkward. “Ole,
make dinner,” he called. “A special treat for these poor
men. Fishballs and tomato soup. You look too gloomy, my friends.”
“We were wondering
what to do if Jack really is insane--which is the simplest
hypothesis, after all.” Powell’s tone was dark. “Get
him aboard a robotic ship and back to Earth for Dr. Calvin to
interview, sure. Except, how? He believes his duty is to stay and
fight any new effort to exploit Io. He might return with us anyway, I
suppose, if he knew we’re human. Second Law. You could add your
voice for reinforcement, Svend. We’d outvote Napoleon three to
one. But he can’t be certain. My guess is that even if he
granted a ninety-nine percent probability that we’re human, he
wouldn’t risk it. That one percent contains an outcome he finds
unendurable.”
The smile died on Borup’s
mouth. “We all do, no?” he replied most softly. “I
would not take such a chance, would you? Better we go back to bad,
corrupt politics than nearly everybody on Eart’ die and the
survivors are starving savages. Could Napoleon be telling the trut’?”
“Absolutely not,”
Donovan stated. “I know that much biology, physics, and
geology. Too bad Jack doesn’t.”
“He’s
utterly ignorant about people, too,” Powell added. “ A
quite ordinary robot, even, would wonder about that story, if he’d
had normal human contacts. You needn’t stipulate our
politicians and capitalists are farsighted, altruistic, or
extraordinarily bright. Simply ask yourself whether they’d take
such a risk with the civilization that keeps them
alive and well-to-do. Besides, the scientific method doesn’t
work the way the story claims. You don’t get a few geniuses
makIng a discovery overnight in a garret and then unable to get it
published. Something as fundamental as this would come out in bits
and pieces, over the years, with the news media following and
exaggerating every step. “
“And the public
sure as hell would demand a screeching halt the moment it heard
operations here might bring doomsday,” Donovan said.
Borup nodded a bit
impatiently. “Yes, yes. I am not quite so naive as Yack.”
“I’m sorry,”
Donovan apologized, while Powell offered, “I guess we’re
overwrought.”
“It is all right. I
only wondered how plausible to anybody are the viroids. “
“To nobody, except
Jack,” Donovan growled. “In fact, it’s so crackpot
that if we reported right now what he’d told us, they’d
wonder on Earth whether we’d gone off trajectory ourselves. We
need all the data we can collect, which is why I wanted that search
for another ship. “ His eyes brightened...If we do find it,
we’ll beam the news back the same minute, and the world police
can begin right away tracking down the conspirators.”
“Who might they be,
do you t’ink?”
Powell shrugged...I can’t
name anybody specific. I have my guesses, but they taught me in
school that a man is presumed innocent until proven guilty. Imagine a
couple of powerful old-guard politicians whose careers are in
trouble, probably conjoined with one or two industrialists who were
getting rich off the former cozy arrangements, plus a few skilled
underlings. The idea obviously is to show Project Io was a
monumental, expensive blunder, and cause the Young Turks who pushed
it through to be discredited. The reform coalition will fall apart
and the wily old-timers can pick off its members piecemeal. “
Donovan’s mane
bristled with excitement...We’ll have one damn good clue,”
he said...The cabal has to’ve had a mole in U.S. Robots or high
up in the World Space Agency--somebody who knew about Code Oops!-ilon
and passed the information on. Probably that was what decided the
conspirators to go ahead. It’s the key to their whole stunt.
Well, the number of possible suspects must be mighty small. Once we
can prove this was a hoax, I’ll bet the mole is under arrest
inside a week, and his buddies by the end of the month.”
“That’s if we
can prove it,” Powell demurred, “which we can’t if
it’s not true.”
“Yes, why should a
person lying to Yack pretend he is Napoleon?” Borup asked...It
is crazy.”
Donovan’s laugh
rattled...Exactly. Hearing what Jack has to tell, most people would
take for granted he’s gone blinkety.”
“Confusions about
Napoleon are a cliché,” Powell said...And you’d
expect a poor, limited robot to fall into clichés, wouldn’t
you? Yes, it was a clever touch. Maybe Jack never heard the name
‘Napoleon’ before he was on Io, but we don’t know,
and he isn’t about to inform us.”
“Or he could lie,
could he not?” Borup suggested. “If he believes you are
robots too, not humans, you cannot order him to speak the trut’.”
“Right,”
Donovan snarled. “We can’t give him any damned orders he
doesn’t want to carry out.”
“Oh, I’m sure
he desperately wants to,” Powell replied. “Couldn’t
you hear it in his voice? This conflict, this uncertainty is racking
him apart. It may well destroy him, bum out his brain, all by itself.
“
“In which case the
gang will’ve won.”
“If the gang
exists.”
“Yeah. How do we
settle Jack’s dilemma for him? How do we convince him we’re
human?”
Powell leered. “I
could chop off your head.” Sobering: “No, seriously, he
would see the action performed, but he couldn’t be certain the
gore wasn’t fake. A human doubtless would be, knowing we can’t
have brought along the studio equipment needed to stage a
realistic-looking murder. But Jack doesn’t know humans that
well. He’s had so little direct exposure to them, he’s
like a small child.”
“And we can’t
land on Io to let him meet us in the flesh,” Donovan said
unnecessarily. “We could, that is, if we didn’t mind
dying shortly afterward. “
“Not in my
spaceship,” Borup declared.
“Of course.
Besides, Jack would probably run away and hide from us--Wait, though.
I’m on the track of something. “
Donovan stared into a
comer. The ventilator whirred. Warm odors drifted in from the galley.
After a minute he tossed off his drink, struck his fist against the
table, and exclaimed, “How’s this? I don’t imagine
you have any weapon aboard, Svend, but inside the station I noticed a
supply room that hadn’t been emptied--stuff might be wanted
someday--and the manifest on the door mentioned a case of detonol
sticks. Jack can recognize one of those, all right! Look, while he
watches, somebody waves it and says to him,, Jack, your behavior
makes me feel so terrible I want to kill myself. ‘ Then the man
pulls out the firing pin. If he doesn’t push it back in within
five minutes, bang!”
Borup blinked. “
Are you crazy like him? What good will that do, except to ruin my
ship?”
“Why, if I’m
a robot I can’t suicide,” Donovan crowed. “Third
Law, remember? Therefore I must be human. Therefore Jack will
immediately yell ‘Stop!’ and beg our pardon for ever
having doubted us. “
“That firewater
went to your head almighty fast, boy,” Powell clipped. “
A robot damn well can self-destruct if that’s necessary for
executing his orders.”
“But--well,
naturally, I mean first we’ll set it up--uh--it does call for
some preliminary detail work.”
“It calls for an
infinite amount, because its value is zero. However--hmm--”
Powell refilled his own glass and fell into a similar reverie.
Under the ghostly
gravity, Knud entered without sound. One by one they saw his tall
form in the doorway, and tensed.
“Search completed,
sir,” the robot reported. “
Already?” Donovan
wondered.
“The
sweep and data crunching go fast,” Borup said. “They
must, on a courier. la,
Knud. hvad har du--What have you found?”
“Negative, sir,”
the flat voice announced. “No indications of a vessel within
either the northern or the southern cones of space that you
specified, for as far as reliability extends.”
Powell and Donovan
exchanged stares. Powell slumped. “Then Jack is insane,”
he said heavily. “Conditions on Io were too much for him, and
Project Io is kaput.”
“You may go, Knud,”
Borup said. The robot departed. “I am sorry, my friends. Come,
have a little more to drink.”
“No, hold on, hold
on!” Donovan bawled. He sprang to his feet. They left the deck.
He caught the table edge in time to keep from rising to the overhead.
Hanging upside down, he blurted, “Listen, I sort of expected
this. Napoleon wouldn’t likely be human. A big risk of life, a
big expense. But he can be a robot!”
The silence was not
lengthy, nor stunned. The idea had lain at the back of each mind.
Powell began to develop it. While the other two sat, he paced in
front of them, long strides bouncing off the ends of the cabin, and
counted points on his fingers as they occurred to him.
“Yes,” he
said, “that does make sense. Any man-capable spacecraft is a
sizable, powerful machine. Misused, it can kill a lot of people. So
the authorities keep track of it. You don’t take it anywhere
without a certified crew and a filed flight plan. Hard to go
clandestinely. But a one-robot vessel, why, that needn’t be
much more than a framework and a motor. You could keep it somewhere
unbeknownst to anyone, as it might be the Lunar outback, and lift off
from there unnoticed. When the robot wanted to drift along
undetectable beyond a few hundred klicks, he’d shut off the
power and sit in the cold. He himself--not every robot is a U.S.R.
product and property, leased to the user and periodically inspected.
The best are, yes, but--hm, every now and then one of ours is
irrecoverably destroyed, in some accident or other. Except that not
all those reports have been honest. I know of a few cases where the
robot was in fact hidden away, to be redirected to illegal jobs. This
could well be such a case.”
Borup’s china-blue
eyes widened. “Can you make a robot do unlawful t’ings?”
“You can if you go
about it right,” Donovan said. “With the proper
technicians and equipment, you can blank out all he’s ever
learned and retrain him from scratch. The Three Laws still hold, of
course, but he can have some pretty weird notions about the world.
That must be what’s been done here. If Napoleon only remembers
dealing with his masters and Jack, then he’s swallowed their
story whole. Except for a very few top-flight, experimental models,
robots are unsubtle characters anyway. They can’t concoct
elaborate plots and don’t imagine that anybody else could.
We’ll give him an earful!”
“Slow down,”
Powell cautioned. “Let’s explore this further. What does
the Napoleon robot necessarily know and believe, to execute his
mission of halting Project Io?” He thought aloud as he soared
to and fro:
“He can operate a
spacecraft, a communications system, et cetera. Therefore he has a
certain amount of independent decision-making capability, though
scarcely equal to Jack’s. Otherwise simpleminded, he has no way
of knowing the viroid story is false. I daresay he’s been
forbidden to tune in any outside ‘cast, and told to ignore
whatever he might overhear accidentally. His mission is to warn Jack
about the viroids, and about the wicked men whose robots will try to
talk Jack into going back to work. To this end, it’ll be
reasonable to him that he claim to being human himself, and that his
image be projected as human. He’ll have no inhibitions about
such a pious deception, if it’s used on another robot.”
“Ah-ha!”
Borup exulted. “We have him! He will be listening and watching
when you next call Yack. He will see you are human, and obey your
orders.”
“He will not,”
Powell said bleakly. “I assume the conspirators have planned
ahead. Ifl were in charge, I’d not only program his transmitter
to make him look human, I’d program his receiver to make any
in-calling human look like a robot. “
“Whoof!”
puffed Borup, and sought the akvavit.
“Yeah,”
Donovan agreed. “That pretty well shields him from any nagging
doubts, which makes him better able to quiet down any that Jack
expresses. “
“He might entertain
the possibility that his communicator is deceiving him,” Powell
said, “but he can’t act on it, when his orders are to
prevent a catastrophe. For instance, we could invite him to come here
and meet us. I’ll bet he’d refuse, because we, if we’re
enemy robots as he’s been told, we’d overpower him.”
Borup nodded. “I
see. I see. It is a classic conundrum, no? Plato’s cave.”
“Huh?”
grunted Donovan.
“You do not know?
Well, I have more time to read than you do, on my travels. The
ancient Greek philosopher Plato pointed out that our information
about the material world comes to us entirely t’rough our
senses, and how do we know they tell us true? Rather, we know they
are often wrong. We must do the best we can. He said we are like
prisoners chained in a cave who cannot see the outside, yust the
shadows of t’ings there that are cast on the wall. From this
they must try to guess what the reality is. “
“Kind of an airy
notion.”
“Ha, you would
refute solipsism like Dr. Samuel Yohnson, by kicking a stone--”
“Never
mind the dialectics,” Powell interrupted. “You have hit
on a good analogy, Svend. We are trapped in Plato’s cave, all
three parties of us. We can’t physically go to each other. The
only information we get is what comes over the communication beams;
and it could be lies. We
don’t even know that the Napoleon robot exists. We’re
assuming so, but maybe he really is only a figment of Jack’s
deranged imagination. If Napoleon does exist, then he knows that his
own projected image is a man’s; but every image he receives is
a robot’s, and he believes--he must believe, if he’s to
serve his bosses reliably--that that is true. As for Jack, if he
isn’t hallucinating, then every image he receives is human, and
he can’t tell which of them are genuine.
“Deadlock. How do
we break it? Remember, meanwhile the clock is running. I don’t
think Jack’s brain can take the stress on it much longer. Be
that as it may, Project Io can’t remain idle for weeks and
months without going broke.”
Donovan snapped his
fingers. “Got it!” he cried. “We call Jack and get
Napoleon into the conversation. We record this. Then Earth will know
there’s something rotten in--uh--sorry, Svend.”
Powell frowned. “Well,
we can try,” he answered. “But we’d better have
something to say he’ll consider worth his notice. “
“Hello, Jack,”
he greeted as calmly as he was able. “How are you?”
The barren scene
jittered. The belated voice rose and fell. “What...do you
want?”
“Why, to continue
our conversation. And, to be sure, offer our respects to the Emperor
Napoleon. You told us he’ll be listening in. We’d be
delighted to have the honor of his participation in our talk.
Introductions first. I neglected them earlier. You may recall that my
name is Gregory Powell. The gentleman here at my side is Michael
Donovan, and behind us you see Captain Svend Borup.” Powell
beamed, pointless though he knew it was. “Quite a contrast, we
three, eh? Well, humans are a variegated lot. “
After the delay: “That
may be. To me you...look similar. I had to exert myself to describe
the Emperor Napoleon as closely as I did. Begging your pardon, sir,”
Jack said to an unseen observer? His attention returned to Powell.
“What do you want? He...he has instructed me...not to waste
time on your... importunities. I must prepare...to resist...any
invasion.”
“Resist the will of
the humans who sent you?” Powell purred. After a minute he saw
the moonscape jerk, and went on quickly, hoping the robot would not
cut him off, “Our purpose is to show you that we are indeed
humans, ourselves, whatever Napoleon may be, and therefore you must,
under Code Upsilon, accept that Earth is not endangered and you
should resume work. Pay close attention. “
Did a sentient machine
afar in space tune himself high as the words reached him?
Powell turned his gaze on
Donovan. “Now, Mike,” he said, “I want you to tell
me truthfully--truthfully, mind you--that you’re neither a
human nor a robot.”
Donovan shivered with
eagerness. “I am neither,” he responded. “Now you,
Greg, tell me truthfully that you are neither human nor robot. “
“I am neither.”
Powell looked straight before him again, into the vision whose eyes
he could not see. “Did you hear, Jack? Think about it. The
order was to answer the question truthfully. No threat to a human was
involved, therefore any robot must obey to the extent possible.
However, the single possible answer for him is, ‘I cannot.’
None but a human could disobey and give out the falsehood, ‘I
am neither human nor robot.’ “
Wire-tense, the men
waited.
Did something whisper
unrelayed from the deeps, of did Jack’s own intelligence see
the fallacy? The reply took longer than transmission would account
for. “That is correct if...if the questioner is human. But
if...he is a robot...then another robot can...perfectly well,
disobediently, lie--especially if he has been so directed beforehand.
The same...holds good for...every such dialogue. It proves nothing.
Stop pestering me!”
Powell and Donovan sat
mute. “Napoleon, have you any comment?” Borup attempted.
Silence answered him.
Jack blanked the screen.
Not even fried herring
with potatoes consoled.
The men chewed
unspeaking. It was as if they saw, they felt, the immensity and the
cold outside this hull. The failure of a venture, the death of many
hopes, what were those that the stars were mindful of them?
When Ole at last brought
coffee, it revived his master a little. “If Yack is pure crazy,
he still has a good logical noodle,” he opined. “You keep
after him. Make him t’ink. For instance, would not those
viroids make Io have different rocks from what it does?”
Powell shook his head.
“No doubt, but what they educated him in was Ionian geology as
it is. His job was practical, not scientific. Whenever he noticed
anomalies, he was to get on the beam and query the specialists back
home. We don’t have time to teach him. Couldn’t you hear
how agitated he was?” Powell looked up. “Yes. Each
contact has made his condition worse. Unless we can invent a scheme
we know will be productive, we’d better quit. Maybe Susan
Calvin can generate an idea.”
“That won’t
do anything productive for our careers,” Donovan muttered.
“To hell with our
careers...But I don’t expect the old lady can solve our problem
from her armchair on Earth. Otherwise we wouldn’t have been
dispatched. With the kind of transmission delay involved, she
couldn’t work her slick robopsych tricks.”
“I s’pose.”
Donovan gusted a sigh. “I can’t think how to lure
Napoleon into talking to us, and maybe he doesn’t exist anyway.
What say we assume he doesn’t, assume Jack is demented, and try
figuring out how to get him to board a ship, or at least keep from
sniping at new arrivals? If there’ll ever be any.”
“We’ll give
our wits a few days to work, and hope for a script that he won’t
see through.”
“I wonder if you
can,” Borup said. “I am no expert, but I have known
people wit’ strange notions, and they can be very smart, yes,
brilliant about defending those notions. They sit in their Plato
caves till deat’ comes and kicks them in the behind--”
He broke off. Donovan had
smacked fist into palm. Powell drew a whistling breath.
“Hello, Jack.”
The scene was not the
base. Rubble lay dark under waxing Jupiter, beneath gashed heights.
Volcano fumes lifted dirty white and yellow beyond a ridge. Jack was
in the field, readying his caches and strongpoints for war.
The view swayed
giddyingly as he straightened. “What do you want now?” It
was nearly a shriek. “I told you to leave me alone. I need not
listen to you. I can switch off.”
“Just wait. Just
wait. “ Until these waves wing out to Napoleon, wherever he is,
if he is. “Be calm,” Powell urged. “You’ve
demanded positive proof that my companions and I are human. Well, we
have it for you. “
Empty time.
“You have tried.
What is the certainty? If...you are robots...you are acting under
orders. Your... masters...can have foreseen...many...contingencies.”
“Then our masters
are human,” Donovan said. “Shouldn’t you hear what
they tell you through us?”
He was taking a risk. The
suspense was like a slow fire before they heard Jack utter a raw
noise. But it was desirable to perturb Napoleon too, if Napoleon was
there to be troubled in his own sureness.
“We are human,”
Powell said quickly. “You force us, in this emergency, to
demonstrate it, no matter what that costs us. Then maybe you ‘II
be sorry and obey the surviving member of our party. “
“Remember, if what
Napoleon has told you is true,” Donovan joined in--if what
Napoleon had been told was true--”we can’t be human. We
must be robots, pretending. We must be what he sees on his screen.
But if we are human, then Napoleon has told you wrong. Correct?”
Probably Jack never
noticed the sweat on the two faces. “Pay close attention,”
Powell directed.
Rising, he lifted a
detonol stick and brandished it like a sword. Donovan got up too and
said, “Greg, I hereby, uh, well, this is the time for you to do
what I told you you’d have to do if matters got this desperate.
Destroy yourself.”
Powell pulled out the
firing pin. It wobbled in his right hand, the stick in his left.
“Mike,” he replied, “I order you to destroy
yourself.”
Donovan brought his
explosive into view and, having yanked the pin free, held the stick
dramatically against his throat. The men faced each other. In a
proper gravity field their knees might have given way, but here they
could somehow keep standing, after a fashion. They breathed hard and
raggedly.
“Stop!”
Jack’s cry came loud, yet as if from across light-years.
“Return those disarmers!”
“If we are robots,”
Donovan grated, “why should you care?”
Empty time.
“Third Law! You
must!”
“We, we have our
orders,” Powell stammered.
Each minute was forever.
At four and a half, Borup
entered, halted, stared. “What is this?” he shouted. “Are
you crazy too?”
“We have our
orders,” Powell repeated.
“I countermand
them!” Borup said. “Disarm those stickst”
For an instant it seemed
that Donovan wouldn’t manage it, as badly as his hand was
shaking. He did, though. Powell’s pin had already snicked home.
They sank limply into their chairs and waited.
After a sixth minute, the
swaying image of what Jack saw abruptly had another in it, that of a
short, stout man in a cocked hat and epauletted greatcoat. The
representation was lifeless, practically a caricature--good enough
for an unsophisticated robot--and the audio conveyed little of the
torment behind the words.
“Masters, masters!
Forgive me! I must have been mistaken, deceived--Are you on Himalia?
I shall come straight to you and do whatever you want. Hear me, judge
me, forgive me!”
Ole was preparing a
victory feast. Borup would not tell his passengers what it was. “
A surprise, somet’ing special and delicious,” he averred,
“wit’ red cabbage. Meanwhile, we have our akvavit and,
yes, a case of beer I keep for emeryencies. Or for celebrations, no?”
Powell and Donovan didn’t
accept at once. They were amply elated as they sat before the station
communicator and sent their encoded message homeward.
“...yes, he’s
here, thoroughly penitent. Still bewildered, of course, poor devil.
After all, he was obeying the humans who’d trained him. No, we
aren’t leaning on him about them. We’ve given him the
impression we agree they were doubtless simply misguided, and once we
reach Earth, everything will soon be straightened out. In case
Napoleon does get rambunctious en route, well, he’s a little
one, and we have two husky crewrobots to keep him in hand.
“No, we haven’t
played detective and tried to find out who the guilty parties are.
That’s for the police, or for Dr. Calvin. We can’t help
making some pretty shrewd guesses.
“Jack will need a
bit of therapy. He’s more than willing to go back to work, but
he’s been through a nightmare and ought to be restabilized
first. Any smart young robopsychologist should be able to come out
here and take care of that in short order.
“We look forward to
seeing what this sensation will do to the political picture!”
Powell had been talking.
He glanced at Donovan. “Okay, pal,” he invited. “Your
turn to bask in the glory.”
Donovan beamed, cleared
his throat, and began: “The problem was, what could we do that
humans could but robots not, under the circumstances?
“Well, uh, suppose
we ordered each other to self-destruct. There was no clear reason for
that. How could it help our purpose? Jack would still suppose we were
play-acting. So if we were both robots, we’d disobey the order.
“If one of us was a
robot and the other not, the robot would obey; the human might or
might not.
“If we were both
human, probably neither of us would obey, but we both could if we
chose to.
“We both chose to.
At the last instant, Captain Borup came in and countermanded the
orders. Now if he were a robot, that wouldn’t have changed the
situation. Whether we were robot or human, neither of us was bound to
obey him. Therefore, if either or both of us did, he must be human.”
Donovan’s laugh was
nervous. “Obviously, we never meant to go all the way, whatever
happened. We certainly intended to heed Captain Borup--and sweated
that out, I can tell you! But we had to show that this was not mere
play-acting.
“Jack
might be too stressed to think fast, but if Napoleon was watching,
he’d know that a robot can only tell a human to suicide if the
robot knows in advance that this is a charade--whether or not the
robot’s own suicide is part of the deal. If the human then
actually pulls the pin, endangers himself, he’ll have to
intervene. Maybe not at once, but in plenty of time to make sure the
explosive won’t go off. But the two of us stood tight till the
moment was only seconds away and the third man
arrived.
“Yes, it was still
logically possible that all three of us were robots going through
carefully planned motions. However, Jack’s only real experience
of other robots had been with his simpleminded workers; Edgar’s
crew came, took on cargo, and left. Napoleon’s knowledge of the
world, including both humans and robots, had to be equally limited,
or the contradictions in the viroid story would have confused him too
badly to carry out his task. Neither of them would have believed any
robot was capable of this much flexibility; and in fact, very few
are. Nothing would ring true unless at least one human was present.
“But then
Napoleon’s orders must involve an untruth. Instead of a
hypothetical situation where billions of people might die, he faced a
real one where he’d caused a flesh-and-blood human, or maybe
three, to be at risk of life. First Law took over.”
Donovan switched off
transmission, leaned back, and blew out his cheeks. “Whoo!”
he snorted. “I’m wrung dry. Let’s get out of this
icebox and go back to the ship for those drinks. We’ve an hour
and a half till we need to talk to them yonder.”
Powell laughed. “
And if we don’t feel like official conversation at that moment,
just what do they think they can do about it?”
Foundation’s Conscience
by George
Zebrowski
MY SEARCH FOR HARI
SELDON BEGAN IN 1056 F.E. I had intended a simple assembly of
Seldon’s appearances in the Time Vault at the crisis points of
the last millennium, with my own commentary added, and had assumed
that the research would require nothing more than routine retrievals.
I even suspected that such a stringing together of Seldon’s
projections already existed, perhaps with another historian’s
commentary.
My first surprise, as I
searched through Trantor’s memory, was to find that no such
compilation existed in the great library. I proceeded to gather the
individual manifestations, and was startled to find only three of
Seldon’s six appearances.
At first I thought that I
had simply failed to enter the retrieval codes correctly; but after
repeated runs it became clear that three of the six appearances were
not there. I concluded that they had to be in the general bank
somewhere, requiring a long search, which I undertook --as much in a
fit of pique as out of curiosity about the great psychohistorian’s
ideas. I would locate, compile, and present in usable form all of
Hari Seldon’s manifestations. I was good at search programs
(colleagues of mine claimed that this was all I had ever been good
at, though they were polite enough when they needed my skills). It
was unthinkable that anything of Hari Seldon’s remains could
have actually been lost, but I would make certain of that, if nothing
else; even ascertaining such a fact would give me a place in the
upcoming 117th edition of the Encyclopedia Galactica.
Three appearances were
missing, even though they were cited in other documents. I made my
count from the records, as follows: four crises had occurred by the
time of the Mule, and for each of these Seldon had prepared a
personal simulacrum to appear in the Time Vault, to help and explain.
He appeared at the height of the first crisis. The second crisis had
been successfully resolved by the time he appeared. No one came to
listen to him at the third and fourth crisis, but records show that
he appeared on time. The general view is that he was not needed, but
a recording was made. The fifth appearance was well attended,
occurring just as the Mule attacked Terminus. Seldon’s recorded
words show him to be out of touch with events. The sixth appearance,
alluded to in various documents, puts Hari Seldon’s image in
the Time Vault on 190 d. 1000 F.E. No one was there to listen to him.
Appearances
two, three, and six were
recorded--and then misplaced, almost as if it were feared that
they might play an unwanted role in some upcoming development, but I
found no events which Seldon’s words might have influenced. It
seemed, therefore, that I also had to explain the recent lack of
interest in Seldon’s ideas.
For nearly a month, I let
loose my search programs (reflexive, associative, cross-referencing,
and stochastic) through Trantor’s vast memory bank, in which
are contained the accumulated history and knowledge of twenty-five
million worlds. Here and there I found references to Seldon
appearances two, three, and six, made by people who had planned to
visit the Time Vault, but for one reason or another had been unable
to arrive at the appointed time; but there was no reference to where
I might find the record of Seldon’s appearances.
My fear that these
records were in fact lost grew along with the problems I was
formulating about Seldon’s role in history. Even though
psychohistory expressed its predictions only in terms of probable
outcomes, there had always been about it an aura of totalitarian
control, of an attempt by the past to shackle the future. To what
degree had Seldon’s thousand-year plan been a self-fulfilling
prophecy? How had it actually influenced possible outcomes? If
psychohistory was valid, then how could it stand outside history and
itself not be subject to its own statistical laws? Did Seldon believe
that psychohistorical thinking was independent of history’s
flow? Or was his plan simply an ideal? And finally, I began to wonder
if Seldon’s appearances in the Time Vault had been of any use.
What had been their importance, if any?
These and other questions
played in my mind with a thousand answers as I waited for my search
programs to trap Seldon’s missing appearances. I began to feel
that an unseen hand was preventing me from getting to the heart of
the issues that churned within me. I became convinced that the sixth
and final appearance would deliver to me the real motive behind
Seldon’s appearances in the vault. Only that final
manifestation, timed to occur long after the dangers to Galactic
Civilization were past, would reveal the great psychohistorian’s
thoughts about his plan and why he had projected himself across time.
I began to think that Seldon’s Plan had not been inevitable,
since it had needed a coach.
I started to dream that I
was in his presence at last, and he was talking to me, revealing
secrets that only I could understand, even though in my waking hours
I doubted that I was the only one who had ever inquired into these
matters. But if I was the only one, then my fellow historians had
failed to ask the greatest question in Galactic History: had one man
truly been responsible for compressing thirty thousand years of
decline into a millennium?
If others had asked my
questions, then where was their work? Why couldn’t I have it
for the asking? Was the birth of our Galactic Renaissance to be
shrouded in secrecy?
It
occurred to me at this point that I might be asking the wrong
questions. For example, if Seldon’s Plan had been implemented
creatively rather than fatalistically, then there would be no
contradiction between free will and psychodeterminism. We determine
and are determined, to one degree or another, and there is no
difficulty in predicting what we might want to do anyway. Free will
is the flow of determinism from
within. It is therefore not a vindication of determinism to
predict what someone may do of his own free will, especially
if the possible choices are few.
This line of reasoning
would mean that once Seldon’s Plan began to be developed by the
two Foundations, he became largely irrelevant. His appearances in the
Time Vault were inconsequential to the creative process he had
started! Of course, few thought of it in that way, even though it was
implicit in their failure to attend Seldon appearances two, three,
and six.
Nevertheless, I needed
those appearances to confirm my thinking. Was it Seldon’s
diminishing importance that had been responsible for the misplacement
of his last appearance, or had his confirmation of my line of
reasoning so shocked those who had played it back later that they had
buried it? Perhaps they had destroyed it completely, and I would
never satisfy my intense curiosity.
A vision haunted me as my
search program continued its hunt--that of Hari Seldon tricking human
history into reforming itself, by getting rational, purposive
individuals to work at his plan, which couldn’t help but change
as it was interpreted and applied to shifting circumstances by the
two Foundations, left and right hands unknowingly working together.
Did Seldon’s true greatness lie in his knowing that the future
belonged to those who would live in it, that history is a
transcendent problem that cannot be solved, only guided imperfectly?
The answers to my
questions seemed beyond reach. Oh, how I yearned to walk up to Seldon
and demand that he present me with them! I was convinced that even if
records had been destroyed, there had to be a backup somewhere in the
vast forest of Trantor’s information; even an echo might be
amplified and restored to its original form. My search programs were
seeking something of great significance, beyond the exercise of mere
cleverness; but no program could retrieve information that was
hopelessly lost.
Then one day, as I sat
down at the work terminal in my apartment on Trantor’s 66th
Polar Level, my program said, “Seldon appearances six, three,
and two, now available, in that order. Search routine complete.”
I sat there in surprise,
staring into the empty blue glow of the holoblock, wondering if the
program had only retrieved the previously available appearances
through some filing error. I held my breath and passed my hand over
the control plate.
The holoblock blinked.
The small figure of an old man in a wheelchair looked up at me, his
eyes bright with understanding. I waited for him to speak, hoping
that this was not some simple duplication of the known appearances.
“I am Hari Seldon,”
he said softly, giving the usual impression of a lively voice that
was restraining itself, “and this will be my sixth and final
appearance in the Time Vault. “ He paused and I leaned forward
excitedly. This was it. I glanced at the record function. It was
running.
“A
few of you may have wondered by now,” Seldon continued
suddenly, “what use, if any, these appearances of mine will
have been. They should have coincided with a series of crises and
helped you over the difficult times when it might have seemed that
psychohistorical projections were having nothing to do with actual
events. I hope that this was only apparent, not real. “ The
shrunken old man smiled. “For all I know, I may be speaking to
an empty chamber in a fragmented galaxy which is still in a dark age.
But if you are hearing me, then let me now claim that these
appearances of mine had
to have been useful, one way or another.”
He
pointed a bony finger at me, and it seemed that he would stand up
from his chair and touch my face. An open book fell out of his lap
onto the floor of that distant time.
“Let
me explain what I mean,” he went on. “Either I was in
touch with the way things went, or my failure moved those of you who
were in touch to act. Psychohistory could envision large
possibilities correctly, but it could not project a picture of
specific future details and the actions needed to bring them about.
For the large is composed of countless small things, and most of the
time we all live in small details. Some of you may now be saying that
psychohistory was not what I made it out to be, and you will be
right, in the way that most shortsighted minds are right. But it was,
I hope, enough of
what it had to be--a rallying cry against the irrational
darkness that threatened to plunge the Galaxy into thirty thousand
years of barbarism. In all human life, every day, the irrational has
threatened to establish its reign, and has been held back by the two
foundations of intellect and good will.”
He
paused and sat back contentedly, as if he knew that he had succeeded.
“There are a few basic features to the exercise of free will in
history,” he continued confidently. “Only probabilities
can be predicted, but not perfectly or always. Yet in retrospect all
developments are seen as having been caused, including
those brought about by free choices. All historical developments Bow
from a variety of factors, and are therefore explainable--but not
exhaustively. Free will can operate only among a finite number of
possible choices. No free choice is unconditional, or we would be
able to create matter and energy from nothingness according to our
whims.” He smiled at me, as if he knew all my most foolish
thoughts and vain ambitions.
“I
focused your free will,” he said, “by helping you to
choose with a greater awareness of possibilities, with the habit
of looking ahead, and I am sure that it has brought you through
your millenium of struggle.” He sighed. “What you will do
in your new Galactic Era is not for me to predict. Perhaps humankind
will become something better. For me that would be a rational
intelligence which would be immune to psychohistorical prediction. I
hope so--because otherwise your new age will also decay and fall, and
humankind may disappear from the Galaxy, to be replaced by new
intelligences that are even now gestating in those countless star
systems where the worlds are not congenial to humanoid biologies. Our
human history doesn’t even span one hundred thousand years,
even though we filled a galaxy with our kind. Planetary species have
existed for two hundred million years and passed away without
attaining self-conscious intelligence. Do not let the accomplishment
of a galactic culture lull you into a sense of security. Become a
truly free culture, one which will not be susceptible to
psychohistorical laws, but can fully shape its own form and destiny.”
He
smiled again, and seemed bitter. “Yes, that is my ideal of a
mature species--one that does not need to be led by the hand. And
yes, psychohistory does predict its own downfall as a useful way of
looking ahead, and I do not mourn it. It worked because it counted on
the darkness rising out of a given human nature, for as long as human
nature remained unchanged. More than anyone, I was aware of
psychohistory’s potential for the control of human life by the
manipulative, which is why I always withheld a full understanding of
its laws from my kind. Against psychohistory’s dangers as a
tool of tyrants, I weighed thirty thousand years of darkness, which
will not have happened, because I applied just
enough of what I knew to the problem. “
He peered around the bare
chamber. It seemed to oppress him. “I don’t know what
else I can tell you... except, perhaps to say that I have loved the
noble impulses in my humankind, even as I watched you struggle
against your inner being. You have among you positronic
intelligences, which may already be free of human psychohistorical
tendencies, and may help you to become free...” He leaned
forward, as if trying to peer across time.
Slowly, the holoblock
faded. Hari Seldon’s last appearance was over.
A scene flashed into my
mind. I saw the leaders of both Foundations in the Time Vault,
listening to Seldon’s last message. Had it so shocked them that
they had resolved never to reveal that they had attended this last
message, or even admit that it had ever existed? Had it shaken their
faith to realize that for a thousand years human beings of dedicated
intellect and good will had rescued civilization by making Seldon’s
Plan work rather than being ruled by it? Were they afraid that
Seldon’s Plan would come to be called Seldon’s Joke?
Clearly, Seldon’s
Plan and the best of humanity had worked hand in hand, with the one
needing the other. It was wrong, of course, to have attempted the
erasure of Seldon’s last appearance--if that is what had
happened; perhaps it had been an accident. At worst, the aim had been
not to disillusion the faithful, some of whom might not have
understood that their faith had been something else all along--just
as valuable and necessary, if not the vision of bright inevitability
that silences all doubts with certainty. They might have seen the
last millennium as a series of chance happenings.
As I gazed into the deep
glow of the empty holoblock, I knew that my vain hope of having
something for the 117th edition of the Encyclopedia Galactica would
not be fulfilled. My disappointment was keen--but suddenly I stood
beyond my vanity and lack of accomplishment. I would not erase the
records of Seldon’s unknown appearances, but I would also not
call immediate attention to my findings. The records would be there
for others to find soon enough, as I had found them, in the coming
age that would be free of inner constraints.
All around me, I
realized, here on Trantor and on millions of worlds, the positronic
intelligences were free of Seldon’s laws. We had made the
robots in all their forms, from the simplest tools of thought and
labor to the most sophisticated brother minds. As they developed, we
in turn would be remade. Together we would enter entirely new
currents of history. This, I realized with the first selfless joy of
my life, was the growing inner strength of our renascent Galaxy, in
which I now shared.
Carhunters of the
Concrete Prairie
by Robert
Sheckley
THE SPACESHIP WAS GOING
WONKY AGAIN. THERE COULD BE NO doubt about it. The circuits weren’t
clicking along smoothly as they usually did. Instead they were
clacking, and that was a sure sign of trouble. Hellman had expected
to come out of channel space into Area 12XB in the Orion cluster. But
something had gone wrong. Could he have entered the directions
improperly? If so, there was not much time in which to do anything
about it. He had materialized in a yellowish sort of cloud and he
could feel the ship dropping rapidly. He shouted at the ship’s
computer, “Do something!”
“I’m trying,
aren’t I?” the computer retorted. “But something’s
wrong, there’s a glitch--”
“Correct it!”
Hellman shouted.
“When?” the
computer asked. Computers have no sense of peril. They were dropping
through this cloud at a speed much faster than is healthy when you
suspect there’s solid ground down below, and here was the
computer asking him when.
“Now!”
Hellman screamed.
“Right,” said
the computer. And then they hit.
Hellman recovered
consciousness some hours later to find that it was raining. It was
nice to be out in the rain after so much time spent in a stuffy
spaceship. Hellman opened his eyes in order to look up at the sky and
see the rain falling.
There was no rain. There
wasn’t any sky, either. He was still inside his spaceship. What
he had thought was rain was water from the washbasin. It was being
blown at him by one of the ship’s fans, which was going at a
rate unsafe for fans even with eternite bearings.
“Stop that,”
Hellman said crossly.
The fan died down to a
hum. The ship’s computer said, over its loudspeaker, “Are
you all right?”
“Yes, I’m
fine,” Hellman said, getting to his feet a little unsteadily.
“Why were you spraying me with water?”
“To bring you back
to consciousness. I have no arms or extensors at my command so that
was the best I could do. If you’d only rig me up an arm, or
even a tentacle....”
“Yes, I’ve
heard your views on that subject,” Hellman said. “But the
law is clear. Intelligent machines of Level Seven or better
capability cannot be given extensions.”
“It’s a silly
law,” the computer said. “What do they think we’ll
do? Go berserk or something? Machines are much more reliable than
people. “
“It’s been
the law ever since the Desdemona disaster. Where are we?”
The computer reeled off a
list of coordinates.
“Fine. That tells
me nothing. Does this planet have a name?”
“If so, I am not
aware of it,” the computer said. “It is not listed on our
channel space guide. My feeling is that you input some of the
information erroneously and that we are in a previously unexplored
spatial area.”
“You are supposed
to check for erroneous entry.”
“Only if you
checked the Erroneous Check Program. “
“I did!”
“You didn’t.
“
“I thought it was
supposed to go on automatically.”
“If you consult
page 1998 of the manual you will learn otherwise.”
“Now is a hell of a
time to tell me.”
“You were
specifically told in the preliminary instructions. I’m sure you
remember the little red pamphlet? On its cover it said, ‘READ
THIS FIRST!’ “
“I don’t
remember any such book,” Hellman said.
“They are required
by law to give a copy to everyone buying a used spaceship.”
“Well, they forgot
to give me one.” There was a loud humming sound.
Hellman said, “What
are you doing?”
“Scanning my
files,” the computer said. “Why?”
“In order to tell
you that the red pamphlet is still attached to the accelerator
manifold coupling on the front of the instrument panel as required.”
“I thought that was
the guarantee.”
“You were wrong. “
“Just shut up!”
Hellman shouted, suddenly furious. He was in enough trouble without
having his computer--man’s servant--giving him lip. Hellman got
up and paced around indecisively for a moment. The cabin of his
spaceship looked all right. A few things had been tumbled around, but
it didn’t look too bad.
“Can we take off
again?” Hellman asked the computer.
The computer made
file-riffling noises. “Not in our present condition. “
“Can you fix what’s
wrong?”
“That question is
not quantifiable,” the computer said. “It depends upon
finding about three liters of red plasma type two. “
“What’s
that?”
“It’s what
the computer runs on.”
“Like gasoline?”
“Not exactly,”
the computer said. “It is actually a psycholubricant needed by
the inferential circuits to plot their probabilistic courses.”
“Couldn’t we
do without it?”
“In order to do
what?”
“To fly out of
here!” Hellman exploded. “ Are you getting dense or
something?”
“There are too many
hidden assumptions in your speech,” the computer said.
“Go to ramble
mode,” Hellman said.
“I hate the
inexactness of it. Why don’t you let me tell you exactly what
is wrong and how it could be fixed.”
“Ramble mode,”
Hellman commanded again.
“All right. “
The robot sighed. “You want to get back in your spaceship and
get out of here. You want me to fix things up so that you can get out
of here. But as you know, I am under the law of robotics which says
that I may not, either wittingly or unwittingly, harm you. “
“Getting me out of
here won’t harm me,” Hellman said.
“You rented this
spaceship and went out into space seeking your fortune, is that not
correct?”
“Yeah, so what?”
“A fortune is
sitting right here waiting for you and all you can think is how to
get away from it as quickly as possible.”
“What fortune? What
are you talking about?”
“First of all, you
haven’t checked the environment readings, even though I have
put them up on the screen for you. You will have already noticed that
we are at approximately Earth pressure. The readings further tell us
that this is an oxygen-rich planet and as such could be valuable for
Earth colonization. That is the first possibility of wealth that you
have overlooked.”
“Tell me the second
one.”
“Unless I miss my
guess,” the computer said, “this planet may yield an
answer to the Desdemona disaster. You know as well as I that there is
a fortune in rewards for whoever discovers the whereabouts of the
conspirators.”
“You think the
Desdemona robots could have come here?”
“Precisely.”
“But why do you
think that?”
“Because I have
scanned the horizon in all directions and have found no less than
three loci of mechanical life, each moving independently of each
other and without, as far as I can detect, a human operator
involved.”
Hellman went to the
nearest perplex port. Looking out he could see a flat featureless
prairie stretching onward monotonously for as far as he could see.
Nothing moved on it.
“There’s
nothing there,” he told the computer.
“Your senses aren’t
sufficiently acute. I assure you, they are there.”
“Robots, huh?”
“They fit the
definition.”.
“And you think they
could be from the Desdemona?”
“The evidence
pointing that way is persuasive. What other intelligent robots are
unaccounted for?”
Hellman considered for a
moment. “This might be a suitable place for Earth colonization
and the answer to the Desdemona mystery. “
“The thought had
not escaped my attention. “
“Is the air out
there breathable?”
“Yes. I find no
bacterial complications, either. You’ll probably leave some if
you go out there.”
“That’s not
my problem,” Hellman said. He hummed to himself as he changed
into suitable exploration clothes: khakis, a bush jacket, desert
boots, and a holstered laser pistol. He said to the computer, “I
assume that you can fix whatever’s wrong with us? I’ll
even plug in your extension arm if that’ll help.”
“I suppose I can
devise a way,” the computer said. “But even if not, we’re
not stranded. The radio is functioning perfectly. I could send out a
signal now on a subchannel radio and somebody might send a rescue
ship.”
“Not yet,”
Hellman said. “I don’t want anyone else here just yet
messing up my rights.”
“What rights?”
“Discoverer of this
planet and solver of the Desdemona mystery. As a matter of fact,
disconnect the radio. We don’t want anyone fooling with it.”
“Were you expecting
guests?” the computer asked.
“Not exactly. It’s
just that you and I are going out there to check up on things. “
“I can’t be
moved!” the computer said in alarm.
“Of course not.
I’ll maintain a radio link with you. There may be material for
you to analyze.”
“You’re going
out there to talk to robots?”
“That’s the
idea.”
“Let me remind you
that the Desdemona robots are believed to have broken the laws of
robotics. They are believed capable of harming man, either by
advertence or inadvertence. “
“That’s old
science fiction,” Hellman said. “It is well known that
robots don’t hurt people. Only people hurt people. Robots are
rational. “
“That’s not
the consensus as to what happened at Desdemona.”
“There is no case
in the annals of robotics,” Hellman said, “of a human
being attacked willfully and with intention by a robot. It has never
happened.”
“This could be the
first time,” the computer said.
“I can take care of
myself,” Hellman said.
The air was fresh and
clean outside the spaceship. There was short grass under his feet,
springy and tough and scented faintly of thyme and rosemary. Hellman
held up the walkie-talkie and clicked it on. “ Are you reading
me?” he asked the computer.
“You’re
coming over loud and clear,” the computer said. “Roger,
breaker, over to you.”
“Don’t be
such a wise guy,” Hellman said. “What sort of a freak
programmed you, anyhow?”
“You must be
referring to my irony circuit. It was put in especially for my model.
“
“Well, turn it
off.”
“Manual lock.
You’ll have to do it yourself.”
“When I get back,”
Hellman said. “You still got those machines on your radar?”
“It’s not
radar,” the computer said. “Two of the machines are now
traveling away from you. One is still moving toward you.”
“How soon should I
be able to see it?”
“Calculating the
two trajectories, and assuming there’s no change in either of
your directions, and no other untoward event occurs, I would say, in
the vague terms you prefer, that it ought to be quite soon.”
Hellman moved on. He
could see now that the plain was not as flat as he had thought when
he looked at it from the ship. It dipped and rose and fell, and there
were low hills in the near distance, or perhaps they were sand dunes.
Hellman was getting a little winded now. He had failed to keep up
with his aerobics during the spaceship flight and was a trifle out of
condition. All this climbing up and down, even on little hills, could
take its toll. As he moved along he heard, just slightly louder than
his own labored breath, the low chuffing on an engine.
“I can hear him!”
he told the computer.
“I should think so.
My receptors picked him up long ago.”
“Good for you. But
where is he?”
“He’s about
ten or fifteen feet from you and slightly to your left. “
“Why can’t I
see him?”
“Because he is
taking advantage of the cover afforded by a fold in the earth. “
“Why would he want
to do that?”
“It is consonant
with stalking behavior,” the computer said.
“What makes you
think--” Hellman stopped in midword. The sound of the machine’s
engine had suddenly gone off.
“What’s he
doing now?”
“He has turned off
his main engine. He is on battery power now for silent running. “,
Hellman drew the laser
pistol. For the first time he considered the problem of trying to
bring down a large and perhaps ferocious machine with such a weapon.
It takes time for even a hot laser to burn through metal. It takes
time to get through deep enough to hit a vital connection, or the
microprocessor itself. But if the machine were feral, if it really
intended him harm, it could be on him before he could bring it down.
Unless he could hit a vital spot on the first shot.
“What’s a
vital spot in a robot?” Hellman asked the computer.
“Depends on what
kind. Different kinds carry their vital gear in different
compartments. So a head shot is not necessarily advisable. It might
be best if you tried to reason with him. “,
“Why are we calling
it ‘he’?”
“Because some of us
are nervous,” the computer said.
Hellman looked around.
The ground where he was now afforded many places where a determined
robot of not too great size could conceal himself. Hellman stopped
and’ looked around. He had the feeling that whatever was
stalking him had stopped, too. He moved on, because it made him less
nervous. There was a kind of hush over the land. Hellman had the
impression that the grasses were waiting to see what would happen. He
decided he’d better find himself some shelter. If this robot
was a bad one, at least he could make a stand.
He saw a natural
outcropping of rock which leaned close to a low granite shelf. It
looked like a pretty good spot. He hurried there and put himself on
the other side of the rocks. Then he breathed a sigh of relief and
turned around to survey his surroundings.
The robot was behind him,
about eight feet away. Hellman was frozen with shock.
The robot had so much
detail that Hellman found it difficult to make out its general shape.
It was roughly rectangular, made of open-frame construction, like an
Erector set, with a solid metal box about two feet to a side bolted
to its interior. Wires ran from this box to its various parts.
Hellman couldn’t decide at first if it moved with legs or
wheels. He decided that the machine used both. It was like a cagework
rectangle standing on end and tilted forward. This was a typical
stance among this group of robots, he was later to find out. It
seemed to have two operational centers, because there was another
central box, smaller and higher up. This, he learned later, housed
gearing. Two photoelectric eyes extended on stalks and swiveled down
to see him. Trumpet-shaped ears swiveled in synch with the eyes. The
machine stood about ten feet tall. It reminded Hellman of a living
motorcycle.
“Hi, there,”
Hellman said brightly. “I am Tom Hellman and I come from the
planet Earth. Who are you?”
The robot continued to
look at him. Hellman had the impression it was taking him in, trying
to decide something.
Finally it said, “Never
mind about that. What are you doing here?”
“I just came by for
a visit,” Hellman said. “Got my spaceship right over
there.”
“You’d better
get back to it,” the robot said. “Stay here; you got
trouble. There’s a pack of hyenoids coming after you.”
“Hyenoids? What’s
that?”
“Scavengers. Eat
anything. You too if they can.”
“Thanks for the
tip,” Hellman said. “It’s been nice talking to you.
I guess I’d better get back.”
Then he heard it. A low
snuffling sound to his right, then a piercing bark to his left.
“Too late now,”
the robot said.
Hellman whirled around
and saw the first hyenoids. They were small open-framework machines,
no more than three feet high by about four feet long. They raced
along on six mechanical legs, and they had wheels too, lifted up now
out of drive position. They were coming toward him, but not directly.
They were slinking like hyenas were said to do, darting this way and
that, taking cover behind clumps of rock and folds of earth. Hellman
counted four of them. They were circling him, moving ever closer.
“Do they eat
people?” Hellman asked.
“Anything at all,
that’s what they like.”
“Help me!”
Hellman asked.
The robot hesitated. Its
photoelectric eyes flashed red and green. Hellman noticed for the
first time that the robot had a long articulated tail. It was curling
and uncurling now.
“Well,” the
robot said, “I don’t have much to do with humans. I’m
a carhunter. We stay by ourselves.”
“Please, help! Get
me out of here!” Hellman switched on the radio and said to the
ship’s computer, “Can you reason with this machine?”
There was a short burst
of static. The computer was signaling the carhunter. There was brief
electrical activity, then silence, then more static.
“I don’t
know,” the carhunter said. “Your keeper says you’re
all right...
“My what? Oh, you
mean the computer.” Hellman was going to put the robot straight
as to who was boss and who was servant between him and the computer,
but thought better of it. He needed this machine’s help just
now, and if it pleased him to think that Hellman was kept by the
computer, that was okay with him, at least until he was in a stronger
position.
“But why did the
computer send you out here?” the robot asked. “He must
have known it would be dangerous.”
“Oh, well, it’s
an old tradition with us,” Hellman said. “I check out the
territory for the computer. I work as one of his extensions, if you
know what I mean. “
The robot pondered that
for a while. Then he said, “It sounds like a good system.”
The hyenoids were growing
bolder. They were circling Hellman and the robot openly now. Their
low-slung open-girderwork bodies had been painted in green, gray, and
tan stripes, camouflage colors. There seemed no reason for them to
have such large jaws with stainless steel teeth in them. Who would
build a robot that fueled itself on the carcasses of animals it
killed?
One of them, jaws open
and slavering a viscous green liquid, was edging toward Hellman now.
Hellman held the laser pistol in front of him, trying to sight on a
vital component. He figured they probably had redundant backup
systems, stands to reason if you’re making a carnivorous model.
The wear and tear would be tremendous. Not so much as on its victims,
but plenty anyhow.
“Better get up on
me,” the carhunter said.
Hellman scrambled over to
the carhunter and pulled himself up its open-framework sides,
straddling its back where it came to a kind of peak.
“Hang on,”
the carhunter said, and broke into a loping run, its six legs giving
it a curious but not uncomfortable gait. Hellman held on tightly. The
speed wasn’t so. great--perhaps fifteen to twenty miles an
hour. But to falloff would leave him helpless against the pursuing
pack of hyenoids.
The hyenoids followed
them through the broken country, and even managed to gain, since
tight maneuvering in the little ravines and canyons was easier for
the smaller, more agile beasts. One of them got close enough to take
a nip at the carhunter. The carhunter extruded a long supple limb and
flipped the hyenoid over on its back. The rest of the pack gave them
more space after seeing that. The overturned one soon righted itself
and came up again in pursuit, staying well out of reach of the
carhunter’s limb. It reminded Hellman of pictures he had seen
in a museum, of wolves trying to bring down a wounded elk. Only the
carhunter was much more self-assured than any elk. He seemed to have
no fear of the hyenoids. After a while they crossed a muddy little
river, and then they were on a flat, hard-tamped plain. Here the
carhunter could put down his wheels and engage his superior
horsepower. Soon he had left the hyenoids far behind, and they turned
back. Seeing this, the carhunter shifted to a more economical
cruising speed.
“Say when,”
he said to Hellman after a while.
“What do you mean,
say when?”
“Tell me when you
want me to drop you off.”
“Are you crazy?”
Hellman asked. “We must be twenty miles from my spaceship. “
“Your spaceship?”
It was too late for
Hellman to retrieve the slip. “Yeah,” he said. “I’m
afraid I gave you the wrong impression back there. Actually the
computer works for me.”
The carhunter slowed and
came to a stop. There was nothing on all sides of them, and it
stretched on forever.
“Well, that’s
an interesting twist,” the carhunter said. “Is that how
it works where you come from?”
“Well, yeah, pretty
much,” Hellman said. “Look, would you do me a great favor
and take me back to my spaceship.”
“No. Can’t.”
“Why not?”
“I’m late
already for the meeting.”
“A meeting? Is It
really so important?”
“It’s a
tribal matter. It’s the only really important date in the
carhunter year. It takes precedence over any other contingency.
Sorry, but I just have time to make it if I proceed immediately.”
“Take me with you.”
“To our meeting?”
“I’ll wait
outside. I’m not trying to spy on you or anything. I just need
to go somewhere until you or somebody can take me back to my ship.”
The carhunter thought
about it. “‘Ethics are not my strong point,” he
said, “but I suppose that abandoning you to your death out here
when I could without too much difficulty do something about it would
be pretty unconscionable; is that correct?”
“Perfectly
correct.”
“It takes a human
being to point out that sort of thing. All I was thinking of was the
extra energy I’d have to expend to save your life. I mean,
what’s in it for me? That’s the way we start to think
when there’s not a human around. “
“I’m glad we
can be useful to you,” Hellman said.
“But you’re
also extremely difficult to be around. Always tinkering with
software. Don’t you think there’s enough uncertainty on
the subatomic level without introducing it into our macro dealings?”
“What?”
Hellman said.
“Never mind, I’m
just raving. When you are a carhunter, you spend a lot of time alone.
It’s a nomadic life, you know. Most of us live apart from each
other. Hunting cars. That’s what we do. That’s why we’re
called carhunters.”
“Oh. What kind of
cars do you hunt?”
“All kinds. We’re
carnivores, in our limited way. We eat cars. We also eat trucks and
half-tracks, but they’ve been getting rare in these parts.
People say the half-tracks are about hunted out. Yet my father could
tell you about herds of them that stretched from hill to hill as far
as the eye could see. “
“Not like that any
more, I suppose,” Hellman said, trying to fall in with the
carhunter’s mood.
“You got that
right. Not that it’s too difficult to stay fed, especially now,
in summer. I got me a fat old Studebaker just two days ago. You’ll
find a couple of its carburetors and headlights in the bin under you
and to your left.”
Hellman could peer down
through the metal wickerwork and see, in an open-topped metal box,
headlights and carburetors half submerged in crankcase oil.
“Looks pretty good,
don’t it? I know you don’t eat metal yourself, but no
doubt you can empathize the experience.”
“They look tasty,”
Hellman said. “Especially in all that oil.”
“Twice-used
crankcase oil. Ain’t nothing like it. I’ve spiced it up a
bit with a plant that grows hereabouts. We call it the chili pepper.”
“Yes, we have
something like it, too,” Hellman said.
“Damn small
galaxy,” the carhunter said. “By the way, I’m Wayne
1332A.”
“Tom Hellman,”
Hellman said.
“Pleased to meet
you. Settle yourself in and take a good grip. We’re going to
the meeting.“
The carhunter broke into
a stride, then, lowering wheels, built up speed across the flat face
of the desert. But soon he slowed again.
“What’s the
matter?” Hellman asked.
“Are you sure I’m
doing the right thing, saving your life?”
“I’m
absolutely sure,” Hellman said. “You need have no doubts
over that. “
“I just wanted to
be sure,” Wayne said. “ Anyway, it’s best to let
the others decide what to do with you. “
Wayne 1332A started to
pick up speed again.
“What do you mean,
do with me?”
“You might be a
problem for us, Tom. But I have to let the others decide. Now I need
to concentrate.”
They had reached another
part of the plain. It was strewn with gigantic boulders. The
carhunter needed all his skill to dodge around them at the high speed
he was maintaining. Let the others decide. Hellman hadn’t liked
the sound of that at all. Nothing much he could do about it at
present, however. And anyhow, maybe the robots at the meeting
wouldn’t be so difficult.
The sunlight had faded as
they roared out of the rocky plain and into a region of low, steep
hills. There was a rudimentary track leading up. Wayne took it as if
he were a dirt-bike hill climber. Dirt, sand, and gravel showered
Hellman as the carhunter dodged and slashed and braked and
accelerated up the increasingly steep hill. At last Wayne’s
wheels began to skid and he had to retract them and go entirely by
pseudopod power. Hellman had to hold on extra tight, because the
robot was shaking and quivering and lurching and swerving, and
sometimes all of them at the same time.
Then Wayne slewed to a
sudden halt.
Hellman said, “What
is it?”
“Lookee over
there.”
Hellman’s gaze
followed the LED lights along one of the carhunter’s main
support members. Off to one side, on a rough but serviceable road, a
dusty old Mercedes 300 SL was moving sedately along.
“Ain’t that a
beauty!” Wayne said.
Hellman looked and didn’t
like the prospect of the carhunter hurling itself at this burly and
self-reliant automobile on this hillside with its deeply tilted slant
and its uneasy footing. One slip, and he and the carhunter would be
at the bottom of the hill after rolling all the way. Maybe the
carhunter could recover from that, but Hellman doubted a human could.
“Hell, it’s
just a car,” Hellman said. “Let’s get to the
meeting, huh?”
“That car is prime
eating, and if you don’t want it I can sure use it.”
“Let’s eat
latf;r, at the meeting.”
“Idiot, the meeting
is a time of fasting. Why do you think I need a snack now?”
“Computer!”
Hellman said, turning on the radio link he had managed to hold on to
through everything, probably because it was attached to his wrist by
a lanyard.
“Out of range,”
the carhunter said. “Relax, I been gittin’ cars on worse
terrain than this. Hang on, baby, here we got”
He started down the
perilous slope. It was strange that at this time, just before the
irrevocable launch into dangerous territory, Hellman should think of
the Desdemona mystery. On the other hand, maybe it wasn’t
strange at all.
Desdemona was a satellite
out past Neptune orbit. It was a dreary little place, a settlement of
no more than a few hundred members of a now forgotten religious sect
who had gone to this place to preserve their beliefs without
contamination from the rest of the world. They
had taken their robots
with them, of course; you couldn’t survive in the outer planets
without robots and a lot of luck. They had been gatherers of Xeum,
cosmic-ray residue. Due to topological peculiarities in the spacetime
continuum, Desdemona happened to receive more Xeum than any other
place in the solar system. But it was a bare living, because the only
demand for Xeum was from scientists who were trying to find the
primordial substance which generated the ultimate particle.
The settlers of Desdemona
were sober people who kept only the most minimal contact with the
other worlds. Still, they couldn’t isolate themselves entirely.
There were stirrings, undercurrents, and a growing demand for new
products and new ways. Some of the Desdemona citizens took to
spending time at Ganymede Fun World, the pleasure satellite that had
been erected in Jupiter orbit. It was a long way to go for a little
fun, but go they did.
There was dissension on
Desdemona. And then, one day, a blurry and hard-to-read signal was
received on Earth and other worlds. No one could decipher it, but it
seemed to refer to some disaster. A relief party was sent out and
found Desdemona satellite deserted. The place had been dismantled in
an orderly fashion, all useful material packed away and taken. The
only hint of what had happened was a letter, begun and crumpled and
thrown into a corner and there ignored in the general housecleaning
that preceded the departure. After some chit-chat about family and
friends, there was this: “Our robots have been giving us
difficulties of late, and we’re not sure what to do about it.
The Elders say there’s no danger of a revolt, though some doubt
the wisdom of the new override instructions that permit our robots to
get around the Three Laws of Robotics. Our Chairman says this is
necessary in order not to inhibit their intellectual development, but
some of us wonder if we aren’t asking for a lot of trouble--”
At that point the letter
ended in mid-sentence.
There was conjecture that
the robots, freed of the restraints of the Laws of Robotics, had
somehow taken control and decided to take the spaceships, and the
humans from Desdemona, and go somewhere else, a place where they
would not be molested by the rest of humanity. It was theoretically
possible to bypass the robotics laws; intelligent robots started
their life with neutral ethical values. Moral defaults and restraints
had to be built in and programmed. Not everyone agreed with this
program. Some people had toyed with their robots’ conditioning,
hoping to get more out of the robots. Instances of this were rare,
however, and were stamped out as soon as they were encountered.
Large rewards were
offered for anyone who solved the Desdemona mystery, and even larger
rewards were available for anyone who discovered the present location
of the Desdemona robots and their owners, the humans of Desdemona
Settlement. No one had claimed this money so far, although there had
been one or two false alarms.
Hellman was pretty sure
that the Desdemona robots had come to this place, whatever this
planet was called. He was potentially a rich man. The only difficulty
was, he was at present clinging to the side of a carhunter which was
rushing down a slope to attack a Mercedes 300 SL.
Slipping and sliding on
the rocky surface, the carhunter, wheels spinning, limbs struggling
for purchase, came down on the hapless automobile. The Mercedes,
sensing the attack at the last moment, put on a burst of speed. The
carhunter was able to claw away a portion of its bumper before the
Mercedes pulled free, and, with a snort from its double carbs,
hurtled down the slope. The carhunter followed, caught up, and
launched itself onto the back of the car. There was a wild bellowing
from both machines. Then the carhunter had landed on the trunk of the
Mercedes and was tearing and rending it, trying, with its long
extensible arms, to reach under and break loose one of the vulnerable
axles in order to hamstring the mechanical beast. But the Mercedes
had armored side panels and a mesh of steel protected its vital
organs. Its horn blared and from its modified supercharger ports came
a blue-gray gas. The carhunter managed to pinch shut the main port
out of which these fumes were rising. Extruding a metallic tentacle
with a bludgeon-like steel fist at its end, it beat in the car’s
side window and grabbed at the steering wheel. The car and the
carhunter struggled for control as they careened across the steep
hillside, coming perilously close to capsizing. This was prevented
only by the carhunter’s superior sense of balance, for he
managed somehow to keep both himself and the Mercedes upright on its
wheels. The groans and snarls, screams and gruntings were impressive
in the extreme. Hellman was battered back and forth as the two robots
clashed, and thought for a moment he was going to be thrown free. And
then, suddenly, it was over. The robothunter’s tentacle snaked
through an entry port and found the creature’s central
processing unit somewhere deep in its innards. The carhunter
wrenched, once, twice, and on the third try a thick bunch of cables
came loose and the Mercedes uttered a single sigh and slowed to a
halt. The idiot lights on its dashboard flashed in crazy patterns,
then went to black. The creature was dead.
Hellman managed to slide
to the ground. He stretched himself and rested while Wayne stripped
out the points and munched them, then dismantled the machine and
stored some of the choicer parts in its cargo section just beneath
its own CPU. Watching him, Hellman became aware that he was getting
hungry, too.
“I don’t
suppose you have anything that I can eat?” Hellman asked, as he
watched Wayne slaver as it munched down one headlight.
“Not here, no,”
Wayne said. “But at the meeting we’ll be able to do
something for you. “
“I don’t eat
metal, you know,” Hellman said. “Not even plastic. “
“I am aware of
humans’ special dietary requirements,” the carhunter
replied. He spit out a couple of lug nuts. “Well, that was
delicious. Too bad you humans don’t know about headlights. Come
on, mount up, we’ll be late.”
“Through no fault
of mine,” Hellman muttered, climbing onto the carhunter again.
In another hour they had
left the desolate badlands and were traveling across grassy rolling
country. There was a river to their right, and green rolling hills to
the left. So far Hellman had not seen any signs of human, or even
animal, life. There was plenty of vegetation around here, however.
Most of it seemed to be in the form of trees and grass. Nothing there
for him to eat. But perhaps something would turn up when they reached
the meeting place.
Far ahead, in a cleft
between two hills, he caught sight of a glint of sunlight off metal.
“What’s that?” he asked.
“That’s the
Roundhouse,” Wayne said. “That’s what we call the
Great Meeting Hall. And look. Some of the others are there already. “
The Roundhouse was a
circular building, one story high, open to the weather and supported
on pillars. It was nicely landscaped with big trees and shrubbery.
There were perhaps twenty machines milling around outside. Hellman
could hear their engines idling before he could make out the words
they were saying to each other. Behind the Roundhouse was a fenced
enclosure. Here there were several enormous mechanical creatures of a
kind Hellman had not seen before. They towered above the carhunters,
looking like mechanical renditions of brontosaurus. Close to their
enclosure there were various other structures.
As Wayne approached, the
carhunters spotted Hellman on his back and fell silent. Wayne coasted
to a stop near them.
“Howdy, Jeff,”
Wayne said. “Si, Bill, Skeeter, hello.”
“Hello, Wayne,”
they replied.
“I reckon you can
get down now,” Wayne said to Hellman.
Hellman slid down the
carhunter’s back. It felt good to have solid ground beneath him
again, though he was a little intimidated by the size of the other
carhunters.
“What you got
there, Wayne?” one of them asked.
“You can see for
yourself,” Wayne said. “It’s a human.”
“Well, so it is,”
the machine called Jeff replied. “Haven’t seen one of
them critters around for a long time.”
“They’re
getting pretty scarce, “ Wayne agreed. “ Anything to
drink around here?”
One of the carhunters
pointed one of his extensors at a forty-gallon barrel which had been
put aside under one of the trees. “Try some of that. Some of
Lester’s home brew he sent along. “
“Isn’t Lester
going to make it?”
“Afraid not. He’s
got that rot of the control cables; it’s got him crippled up
pretty good.”
Wayne went over to the
barrel. He extruded a tube and inserted it into the barrel. The
others watched silently as the level of the barrel went down.
“Hey, Wayne! Save
some for somebody else!”
Wayne finally withdrew
his drinking tube. “Yahoo!” he said. “Got a kick,
that stuff.”
“Three hundred
proof and flavored with cinnamon. Human, you want to try some?”
“I guess I’ll
pass on it,” Hellman said. The carhunters guffawed rudely.
“Where in the hell
did you find him, Wayne?”
“Out on the
prairie,” Wayne said...His owner is still out there in the
spaceship. “
“Why didn’t
he come along?”
“Don’t
rightly know. Might not be mobile.”
“What’re you
going to do with him?”
“That’s for
the Executive Council to decide,” Wayne said.
“Does he talk?”
the one called Skeeter asked. “Sure, I talk,” Hellman
said.
Hellman was about to put
this smart-alecky robot straight. But then there was a movement
within the Roundhouse and two robots came out. Their open framework
struts and girders were painted blue; their upper part was red. They
had black symbols painted here and there. They seemed to be officials
of some sort.
“The Chief sent
us,” one of them said to Wayne. “He heard you came into
camp with a human.”
“News gets around
fast, don’t it?” Wayne said.
“Wayne, you know
that’s against the rules.”
Wayne shook his big head.
“It’s not customary, but I never heard it was against the
rules.”
“Well, it is. We’ll
have to take him inside for interrogation.”
“Figured as much,”
Wayne said.
“Come with us,
human,” one of the officials said.
There didn’t seem
to be anything for Hellman to do but follow orders. He knew he was no
match for the robots in speed or strength. He’d have to keep
his wits about him. It might not be too easy to come out of this one
okay.
What really perplexed
him, however, was, what did these robots have against human beings?
How had they developed in this way? Were there any humans at all on
this planet? Or had the robots killed them all?
One of the buildings
seemed to serve the carhunters as a prison. Its sides were closed. It
had a door, which had a padlock. One of the red and blue officials or
guards or whatever they were unlocked the door and held it open for
Hellman.
“How long you going
to lock me up for?” Hellman asked.
“You will be
informed of the council’s decisions.” They closed the
door behind him.
It was a large room made
of galvanized iron. There were windows set high up. There was no
glass in them. The room was devoid of furniture. Evidently robots
didn’t use chairs or beds. There were a few low metal tables.
Hellman looked around, and, as his eyes became accustomed to the
gloom, he made out a wink of lights from one corner. He went there to
investigate.
There was a robot in the
corner. It was somewhat smaller than a man, perhaps five feet high.
And it was slender. It had a well-defined head sculpted from some
bright metal, and the usual arms and legs. The creature watched him
silently, and that was a little unnerving.
“Hi,” Hellman
said. “I’m Tom Hellman. Who are you?”
The robot didn’t
reply.
“Can’t you
talk?” Hellman asked. “Don’t you speak English?”
Still no reply from the
robot, who continued to watch him with one red and one green eye.
“Great,”
Hellman said. “They put me in with a dummy. “
As he spoke, he noticed
that the robot was scratching in the dirt of the packed earth floor
with a long toe. Hellman read it: “The walls have ears.”
He looked at the robot.
It gave him a meaningful look.
“What happens now?”
Hellman said, dropping his voice to a whisper. The robot scratched,
“We’ll know soon.” The robot didn’t want to
communicate any further. Hellman went to the far side of the room and
stretched out on the floor. He was very hungry now. Were they going
to feed him? And more important, were they going to feed him
something he could eat? Outside, it was growing late. After a while,
Hellman started to doze off. He fell into a light sleep, and soon he
was dreaming of vague, threatening things that came at him out of a
dark sky. He was trying to explain to them that he was not to, blame,
but he couldn’t remember what for.
Hellman awoke when the
door to the prison was opened. At first he thought they had come to
tell him what they had decided. But they had brought him food
instead. It consisted entirely of fruit and nuts. None of them was
familiar to him, but none were strange, either. They also brought him
water. It was carried in quart oil cans which had been scrupulously
cleansed and bore not even a trace of oil. Hellman learned later that
these cans had never held oil, even though “oil” was
stamped into the metal of their sides. He had no idea then that the
carhunters had a ceremonial side to their nature, and were able to
use certain utilitarian objects for their symbolic value alone.
The two carhunters who
brought the food and water would answer no questions. They waited
silently while Hellman ate. He thought they watched him with
curiosity. He couldn’t figure that out, but he was hungry
enough so that he ate anyway. They took away the hammered tin plates
on which they had brought the food, but they left him two water cans.
Time passed. Hellman had
no watch, and was unable to reach the ship’s computer to get a
time check. But he figured that hours must have passed. He grew
irritated with the robot who was locked in with him, who sat in a
corner of the room and seemed to be in a cataleptic fit.
At last Hellman had had
enough. Boredom can drive a man to outrageous deeds. He walked over
to the robot and said, “Say something.”
The robot opened its red
and green eyes and looked at him. It slowly shook its head, left to
right, meaning no.
“Because they can
hear us, right?”
The robot nodded,
affirmative.
“What does it
matter if they can hear us or not?”
The robot made a complex
and intricate gesture with its hands, which Hellman took to mean,
‘You just don’t understand.’
“I just don’t
understand, is that it?” Hellman asked.
The robot nodded,
affirmative.
“But I can’t
understand unless you tell me.”
The robot shrugged.
Universal gesture meaning, what can I do about it?
“I’ll tell
you what you can do,” Hellman said, his voice low but resonant
with suppressed anger. “You listening?”
The robot nodded.
“If you don’t
start talking at once, I’m going to put out one of your eyes.
The green one. Then ask you again. If you refuse again, I’ll
put out the red one. Got it?”
The robot stared at him.
Only now did Hellman see what a mobile face it had. It was not made
up of a single piece of metal. Instead there were many little planes
sculptured into the face, and each plane was about an inch square and
seemed capable of movement. This was a face designed to reveal its
thoughts, feelings, and moods through its face. And sure enough, the
robot’s face registered horror, disbelief, outrage,, as Hellman
screwed up his own face into a ferocious frown and advanced.
“There’s no
need for violence,” the robot said.
“Fine. There’s
no reason for silence either, is there?”
“I suppose not,”
the robot said. “I just thought it best that we didn’t
talk together so that the carhunters wouldn’t get the idea we
were plotting against them.”
“Why would they
think that?”
“You must know as
well as I do that it’s every sentient being for itself here on
this planet of Newstart. And the carhunters are a very suspicious
group of people.”
“They’re not
people,” Hellman said. “They’re robots.”
“Since intelligent
robots have the same faculties as humans, we no longer differentiate
between them in terms of ’robot’ and ‘human.’
It’s superfluous and racist to talk that way. “
“All right,”
Hellman said. “I stand corrected. You say they are suspicious
people?”
“Stands to reason,
doesn’t it? They have separated themselves from the mainstream
of Newstart life and development. Isolated groups tend toward
xenophobia.”
“You know a lot of
big words,” Hellman said. “I ought to. I’m a
librarian.”
“These carhunters
don’t look like they have much use for reading.”
“I’m not a
librarian here,” the robot said with a low laugh. “I
don’t belong to this tribe! I work at the Central Lending
Library in downtown Robotsville. “
“Robotsville? Is
that a city?”
“The largest city
on Newstart. Surely you’ve heard of it?”
“I’m not from
here,” Hellman said. “I’m from the planet Earth. “
“You ‘re from
another planet?” The robot sat up and looked at Hellman more
attentively. “How did you get here?”
“In the usual way.
By spaceship.”
“Uhuu,” the
robot said.
“Beg pardon?”
“‘Uhuu’
is an expression peculiar to Robotsville. It means ‘that really
opens up a lot of possibilities.’ “
“Can you explain
that?” Hellman asked.
“It’s just
that quite a lot is happening on Newstart right now. Your arrival
could have incalculable consequences.”
“What are you
talking about? What’s going on?”
Just then there was the
sound of a key in the lock.
“I’m afraid
I’m not going to have time to tell you,” the robot said.
“God knows what these barbarians have in store for us. My name
is Jorge.” He gave it the Spanish pronunciation, Hor-hay.
“Jorge? As in Jorge
Luis Borges?” asked Hellman, a literate man when it came to
very short stories.
“Yes. He is the
saint of librarians.”
The door opened. Two
carhunters lumbered in. Around buildings they seemed clumsy and ill
at ease. The fluid grace that a carhunter possessed in the
countryside seemed to have deserted them in these restricting
surroundings.
“Come with us,”
one of them said. “The council has discussed you and now will
speak with you.”
“What about my
buddy Jorge here?”
“He will be dealt
with in due time.”
“Be careful what
you say to them,” the librarian said. “The carhunters do
not like...prevarication.”
The librarian’s
pause was long enough to convince Hellman that there was something he
was being advised not to say to the carhunters. He wished he knew
what it was. But now the carhunters were moving, and Hellman had to
move quickly to prevent being run over.
They led him to the
meeting area. It was a flat circular rock face that had been roughly
smoothed. It stood about three feet above the ground, and there were
ramps of packed earth leading up to it. The carhunters had already
assembled. They were moving around the rock, which greatly resembled
a large parking lot. In the center was a raised cube. On it there
were five or so carhunters. These looked more like a bunch of
politicians than anything else.
Hellman was led to a
large pedestal with a spiral roadway leading up to it. It put him on
eye level with the five top carhunters.
Even if they had not been
apart from the others, Hellman would have had no difficulty telling
that these were the important ones. They were somewhat larger than
the others, and their bodies had more ornamentation, mostly of the
chromium variety. Several of them wore necklaces of shiny objects
which Hellman recognized as hood designs from automobiles of Earth ‘s
past.
The leading carhunter was
easy to spot, too. He sat in the center of the others on the raised
rectangle. He was almost a third larger than his fellow judges, and
he was painted a midnight blue with silver accents.
The blue and silver judge
said, “I am Car Eater, Chief Elder of the Carhunters tribe.
These are my fellow judges. Why have you come here, Tom Hellman? We
already know that you came in a spaceship. Why did you come to
Newstart?”
“It was a mistake,”
Hellman said. “I had a malfunction.”
“That is not an
acceptable answer. Where humans are concerned, there are no
mistakes.”
“Maybe you don’t
know people very well,” Hellman said. “This was
definitely a mistake. If you don’t believe me, ask my ship’s
computer.”
“One of our scouts
tried to talk to him “ Car Eater said. “He told us we did
not have the proper access code. He would not explain what he meant
by that.”
“The access code is
a nine-number combination. It is used to prevent unauthorized spying
on the computer’s memory banks.”
“But couldn’t
the computer make up his own mind about that?” Car Eater asked.
“Perhaps he could,”
Hellman said. “But it is not the way we do things on Earth.”
The robots held a
whispered conference. Then Car Eater said, “It has been many
years since a human visited these parts. This part of the planet
belongs to us, the carhunters. We stay out of other people’s
territory and expect people to stay out of ours. This is how it has
been for a very long time, ever since the Great Fabricator divided
the species of intelligence and told each to be fruitful and multiply
according to his basic plan. Some of the carhunters wanted to kill
you, and that other stray too, the librarian who calls himself Jorge.
Sounds like a sissy name to me. That’s the sort of name they
give themselves in Robotsville, where they think they’re better
than anyone else. But we Elders decided against taking violent
action. The Compact which rules this planet abhors destruction except
in lawful ways. Hellman, you may go. You and Jorge, too. I advise you
to be out of our territory by sundown. Otherwise a hyenoid might get
you. “
“Where am I
supposed to go? I can’t get back to my spaceship on my own. “
“Since Wayne 1332A
brought you here,” Car Eater said, “he can also take you
back. Right, Wayne?”
A loud sound of backfires
came from the assembled carhunters. It took Hellman a moment to
realize it was laughter.
“Sorry about this,
Wayne,” Hellman said. He and Jorge had mounted and were
clinging to the carhunter’s back plates.
“Hell, it don’t
make no never mind,” Wayne said. “I don’t sit
around a whole lot fretting about how I pass my time. Sometimes it’s
more convenient for us carhunters to turn onto emergency mode, which
of course is timebound. But most of the time life just goes along
here on the concrete prairie much as it has ever done.”
Hellman learned from
Wayne that the carhunters had lived in this region, the badlands of
Northwest Mountain and Concrete Prairie, for as long as anyone could
remember. Jorge broke in and said that this was a lie, or at least an
untruth: the carhunters had been around only a hundred years or so,
just like everyone else. Wayne said he didn’t want to argue,
but he did point out that there was one hell of a lot city robots
didn’t know. Hellman himself was interested in what it was like
to be a city robot.
“Aren’t there
any people in your city?” Hellman asked Jorge.
“I told you, all of
us are people.”
“Well, I mean
people like me. Humans. Flesh-and-blood sort of people. You know what
I mean?”
“If you mean
natural human beings, no. There are none in Robotsville. We separated
from them. It was for the good of everyone. Just didn’t get
along. We tried producing flesh-and-blood androids for a
while--robots with protoplasmic bodies. But it was aesthetically
unpleasing.”
“I didn’t
know aesthetics was a concern,” Hellman said.
“It’s the
only real issue,” Jorge told him, “once you’ve
solved the problems of maintenance and upkeep and part replacement.”
“Yeah, I guess it
would be,” Hellman said. “Do you know how your people got
to this planet?”
“Of course. The
Great Fabricator put us here, back when he divided the intelligent
species and gave each a portion of the land and of the good things
thereof.”
“How long ago was
that?” Hellman asked.
“A long time ago.
Before the beginning of time.”
Jorge told Hellman the
Creation Story, which, in slightly altered versions, was known to
every being on the planet Newstart. How the Great Fabricator, a being
made up equally of flesh, metal, and spirit, had produced all the
races and watched them go to war with each other. How he decided that
this was wrong. The Great Fabricator tried various plans. He tried
putting the humans in charge of everyone. That didn’t work. He
tried letting the robots rule, and that didn’t work, either.
Finally he divided the planet of Newstart into equal portions. “Each
of you has a place now,” the Great Fabricator said. “Go
down there now and access information. “
And so they went down,
all the species, and each picked his lot and his fortune. The humans
found green places where they could grow things. The robots split
into various groups. One of those groups was the carhunters. They
didn’t want to live in cities. They denied that the purpose of
a robot was to further technology. They insisted that just living was
enough purpose for anyone. This was at the time of the choosing of
modalities. The carhunters selected bodies for themselves that were
swift and long-enduring. They programmed themselves with a love of
desolate places. And the Great Fabricator put at their disposal a
race of automobiles, direct descendants of the autos of Earth. The
cars were belligerent herd animals, and it was all right to kill them
because they weren’t intelligent enough to mind. The carhunters
had been programmed so that they found car innards delicious. It was
a deliberately studied-out ethic, because at the beginning each of
the groups had its own choice of an ethic. They worked from ancient
models, of course, old-time human models, since intelligence is the
ability to choose your programming. It was a good life, but in the
view of the other robots, those who had chosen to live in cities, it
was a blind alley in the life game of machine evolution. The nomadic
model was satisfying, but limiting.
“You see,”
Jorge said, as they bounced along on Wayne’s back, “some
of us believe that life is an art that must be learned. We believe
that we must learn what we are to do. We devote our lives to taking
the next step.”
Wayne was bored by this
sort of talk. The librarian was obviously crazy. What could be better
than careening around the landscape, killing things? He pointed out
that there was no moral problem, since the things they killed weren’t
intelligent enough to know what was being done to them. Also, they
weren’t given pain circuits.
They were coming through
a long narrow pass, with towering peaks on either side. Suddenly
Wayne came to a stop and extruded his antennae. He swiveled them back
and forth in a purposeful manner, and a little instrument deep inside
his armoring began a quiet, urgent tick-tick.
“What is it?”
Hellman asked.
“Believe we got
trouble ahead,” Wayne said. He swung around and started back
the way he had come. In fifty yards, he stopped again.
“What is it this
time?” Hellman asked.
“They’re on
both sides of us. “
“Who is on either
side of us? Is it those hyenoids again?”
“They’re no
real trouble,” Wayne said. “No, this is a little more
serious than that. “
“What is it?”
Jorge asked.
“I think it’s
a group of Deltoids.”
“How could that
be?” Jorge asked. “The Deltoids live far to the south, in
Mechanicsville and Gasketoon.”
“I don’t know
what they’re doing here,” Wayne said. “Maybe you
can ask them yourself. They seem to be on all sides of us.”
Jorge’s mobile face
took on a look of alarm. “May the Great Fabricator preserve
us!”
“What is it?”
Hellman asked. “What’s he so upset about?”
“The Deltoids are
not like the rest of us,” Wayne told him.
“Not robots?”
“Oh, they’re
robots all right. But something went wrong with their conditioning
back when the race was first laid down by the Great Fabricator.
Unless he did it on purpose, which is what the Deltoid Church of the
Black Star maintains. “
“What, exactly, did
the Great Fabricator do to them?” Hellman demanded.
“He taught them to
like killing,” Jorge said.
“Hang on,”
Wayne said. “Up them cliffs is the only way out of here.”
“Can you climb a
gradient like that?” Hellman asked. “Going to find out,”
said Wayne.
“But you kill
things, too,” Hellman said.
“Sure. But only
lawful animals. The Deltoids like to kill other intelligent beings.”
He started picking his
way up the rock face. Behind, a group of big machines in camouflage
colors had collected and was watching them.
Three times Wayne tried
to bull his way up the cliffside, and each time lost traction a third
of the way from the top. Only the most skillful weight shifting and
double clutching prevented the carhunter from turning over as it slid
down to its starting point. The Deltoids seemed in no hurry to attack
them, something which was incomprehensible to Wayne at the time, but
which had a simple explanation that was supplied later, when they
were safe for the moment in Poictesme.
But that was later; for
now, it looked a desperate situation, and Wayne turned, ready to
charge head-on into the machines and take his chances. Hellman and
Jorge had no say in the matter. This was Wayne’s decision and
his alone to make. But it was taken out of his hands when the ground
suddenly began to collapse beneath his feet. The Deltoids noticed
this and noisily started motors, eager to get away from the
treacherous ground. But now they were caught in it too, and the
entire plain seemed to be collapsing under them. Hellman and Jorge
could do nothing but hang on as Wayne slipped and slithered and
fought for traction. But there was nothing to be done, and Hellman
felt himself battered by flying dirt and sand as the bottom dropped
out from under them.
It was the alarm clock
that woke him.
Alarm clock?
Hellman opened his eyes.
He was in a large bed under a pink and blue quilt. He was propped up
nicely on down cushions. There was an alarm clock on the nightstand
next to him. It was ringing.
Hellman turned it off.
“Feeling all
right?” a voice asked him.
Hellman looked around. To
his right, sitting in an overstuffed chair, there was a woman. A
young woman. A good-looking young woman. She wore a yellow and
tangerine hostess gown. She had crisp blond hair and gray eyes. She
looked at Hellman with an air of boldness and self-possession.
“Yeah, I’m
all right,” Hellman said. “But who are you?”
“I’m Lana,”
the young woman said.
“Are you a
prisoner?”
She laughed. “My
goodness, no! I work for these people. You’re in Poictesme.”
“The last thing I
remember is the ground giving way. “
“Yes. You fell into
Poictesme.”
“What about the
Deltoids?”
“There is no love
lost between Deltoids and the robots of Poictesme. The robots rebuked
them for trespassing and sent them away chagrined. The Deltoids had
to take it because they were in the wrong. It amused the Poictesmeans
very much to see the usually arrogant and self-assured Deltoids slink
off with their tails dragging. “
“Tails?”
“Yes, the Deltoids
have tails. “
“I didn’t get
close enough to see the tails,” Hellman said.
“Believe me, they
have tails. There is an albino tailless model, but they only occur in
Lemurton Valley which is over eight hundred varsks from here.”
“How much is a
varsk?”
“It is roughly
equal to the Terran mile, equal to five thousand two hundred and
eighty yups. “
“Feet?”
“Approximately,
yes.”
“How did they
happen to fall into Poictesme? Didn’t they know it was there?”
“How could they?
Poictesme is one of the burrowing cities.”
“Oh, how stupid of
me,” Hellman said. “A burrowing city! Why didn’t I
think of that?”
“You’re
making fun of me,” the young woman said.
“Well, maybe just a
little. So Poictesme was burrowing past where all these Deltoids had
assembled to capture or kill the carhunter?”
“That’s it,
exactly. The crust of the earth was thin at that point, and they
shouldn’t have been here anyway, because this entire region was
given to the Poictesmeans to live in or under as they pleased.”
“Well, maybe I get
it,” Hellman said. “Where are the Poictesmeans, anyhow?”
“Right here. You’re
in Poictesme,” Lana said.
Hellman looked around. He
didn’t get it. Then he got it.
“You mean this
room--?”
“No, the house
itself. The Poictesmeans are housemaking robots.”
Hellman learned how the
Poictesmeans began life as tiny metal spheres within which were
infinitesimal moving parts, as well as a miniature chemical factory.
The Poictesmeans started as little robots, hardly more than DNA and
parts. From this their plan unfolded. They slowly began to build a
house around them. They were equally skilled at working in wood or
stone. By puberty they could make bricks in their own in-built kiln.
Most Poictesmeans made six- to eight-room houses. These houses were
not for their own use. It was obvious that the Poictesmeans didn’t
need the elaborate structure, with its bay windows and carports, that
they carried around with them, adding to bit by bit and painting once
a year. But their instruction tapes, plus their racial steering
factor (RSF) combined to make them produce finer and finer houses.
They lived in neat suburbs, each Poictesmean occupying his allotted
quarter acre of land. At night, in accordance with ancient ordinance,
street lamps and house lights came on. The Poictesmeans also had a
few communal projects. A theater and motion-picture house. But no
pictures were ever shown, because the Poictesmeans had never mastered
the art of moviemaking. And anyhow, who would there be to occupy
their theaters? The Poictesmeans were a symbiotic race, but they
didn’t have any symbiotes to share stuff with.
“Is that why they
have you here?” Hellman asked. “To live in one of their
houses?”
“Oh, no, I’m
a design consultant,” Lana said. “They are very
fastidious, especially about their rugs and curtains. And they import
vases from the humans, because they aren’t programmed or
motivated to make such things themselves.”
“When do I meet one
of them?”
“They wanted you to
feel at home before they talked to you.”
“That’s nice
of them.”
“Oh, don’t
worry, they have their reasons. The Poictesmeans have reasons for
everything they do. “
Hellman wanted to know
what had happened to the librarian and the carhunter, for he thought
of them now as his friends. But Lana either did not know or would not
tell him. Hellman worried about it for a while, then stopped thinking
about it. His friends were both made of metal and could be expected
to take care of themselves.
Lana sometimes talked
about her friends and family back on Zoo Hill. She wouldn’t
answer Hellman’s direct questions, but she liked to reminisce.
From what she said Hellman got a picture of an idyllic life, sort of
half Polynesian and half hippie. The humans didn’t do much, it
seemed. They had their gardens and their fields, but robots took care
of them. In fact, young robots from the cities of Newstart
volunteered for this work. These were robots who thought there was
something noble about men. The other robots called them humanizers.
Usually, though, it was just the sort of fad you’ d expect of a
young robot.
Hellman got out of bed
and wandered around the house. It was a nice house. Everything was
automatic. The Poictesmean who was the intelligence at the house’s
core did all the work and also arranged all the scheduling. The
Poictesmeans liked to anticipate your needs. The house was always
cooking special meals for Hellman. Where it got roast beef and kiwi
fruit, Hellman didn’t ask. There was such a thing as trying to
find out too much.
Each house had its own
climate and, in its backyard, a swimming pool. Although they were
underground, lamps on high standards provided circadian illumination.
Hellman became very fond
of Lana. He thought she was a little dumb, but sweet. She looked
great in a bathing suit. It wasn’t long before Hellman
approached Lana with a request for mutual procreation, him and her,
just you and me, babe. Lana said she’d love to, but not now.
Maybe sometime, but not now. When Hellman asked why not now, she said
that someday she’d explain it and they’d both laugh about
it. Hellman had heard that one before. Nevertheless he remained fond
of Lana, and she seemed to like him, too. Although perhaps that was
because he was the only human person in Poictesme. She said that
wasn’t it at all; she liked him; he was different; he was from
Earth, a place she had always wanted to see, because even this far
from the solar system she had heard of Paris and New York.
One day Hellman wandered
into the living room. Lana had gone off on one of her mysterious
trips. She never told him where she was going. She just gave a little
smile, half apologetic, half defiant, and said, “See you later,
cutie.” It annoyed Hellman because he didn’t have any
place to go to and he felt he was being one-upped.
In the living room, he
noticed for the first time the thirty-inch TV set into one wall. He
had probably seen it before but not really noticed it. You know how
it is when you’re far away from your favorite shows.
He walked over to it. It
looked like a normal TV set. It had a dial in its base. Curious, he
turned the dial. The screen lit up and a woman’s face appeared
in it.
“Hello, Hellman,”
the woman said. “I’m glad you decided to have a
conversation with me at last.”
“I didn’t
know you were in there,” Hellman said.
“But where else
would the spirit of a house be but in its TV set?” she asked
him.
“Is that what you
really look like?” Hellman asked.
“Strictly
speaking,” she told him, “I don’t look like
anything. Or I look like whatever I want to look like. In actual
fact, I look like the house that I am. But a house is too big and
complicated to serve as a focus of conversation. Therefore we
Poictesmeans personalize ourselves and become the spirit of our own
place. “
“Why do you appear
as a woman?”
“Because I am a
woman,” she said. “Or at least feminine. Feminine and
masculine are two of the great principles of the Universe, when
viewed from a particular aspect. We Poictesmeans take either view, in
accord with deep universal rhythms. I understand that you come from
the planet Earth.”
“That’s
right,” Hellman said. “ And I’d like to go back
there.”
“It is possible,”
she said, “that can be arranged. Assuming your cooperation, of
course.”
“Hell yes, I’m
cooperative,” Hellman said. “What do you want me to do?”
“We want your help
in getting out of here.”
“Out of Poictesme?”
“No, you idiot, we
are Poictesme. We want to move our entire city to your planet Earth.”
“But you don’t
know what it’s like on Earth.”
“You don’t
know what it’s like here. There is very serious trouble on this
planet, Hellman. All hell is going to break out here very soon. We
Poictesmeans are house robots and we don’t care for warfare,
nor for the strange evolutionary schemes of some of the people of
Poictesme.”
“You want the
people of Earth to just give you some land to live on?”
“That’s it.
We can pay our own way, of course. We can rent ourselves out for
human occupation.”
“Would you want to
do that?”
“Of course. The
function of a house is to be lived in. But nobody on this planet
wants to live in us. “
“Why’s that?”
“I’ve told
you; they’re all quite mad.”
“I’m sure
something can be arranged,” Hellman said. “Good housing
is always in demand on Earth. We’ll just have to send some big
spaceships to take you off, that’s all.”
“That sounds fine.
“
“It’s a deal,
then. How soon can we begin?”
“Well, there’s
a problem to overcome before we can actually do anything.”
“I thought that
would be it,” Hellman said. “Forget about problems, just
get me back to my spaceship and I’ll take care of the rest.”
“That’s
precisely the trouble. Your spaceship has been captured and taken to
Robotsville.“
While Hellman had
journeyed with Wayne the carhunter to the meeting, the observatories
of Robotsville had read and interpreted the signals sent out during
the ship’s crash landing on Newstart. It was the interpretation
that had taken time, for signals signifying the landing of spaceships
had been received from time to time in the past and had been
uniformly proven to be erroneous. This being the case, the Astronomer
Royal had put forth the theory that signals denoting the landing of a
spaceship could be taken as meaning that no spaceship had in fact
landed. This was considered ingenious but futile at a general meeting
of the Concerned Robots for a Better Safer Robotsville. Public
opinion made it clear that this signal, just like all the others,
would have to be investigated.
Thus, a squadron of Royal
Robotsville Horse Guards had been dispatched under the command of
Colonel Trotter. This squadron was composed of regular citizens who
had elected to take on centaur bodies, half humanoid and half horse,
the whole thing constructed of Tinkertoy-like material and driven by
cleverly geared little motors. The ultimate power source was atomic,
of course, the power of atomic decay stepped down to turn tiny and
then small and finally larger gears.
This squadron of robotic
centaurs, some of them colored bay; some chestnut, some dappled, and
a few roan and pinto, debouched onto the plain, spurs and harness
jingling, and beheld the spaceship. There was consternation among the
centaurs, because they had expected to make only a parade inspection,
not be faced with the real difficulties of what to do with an alien
spaceship. Questions were relayed back to the city, and councils were
held in high places. It was voted at a town meeting open to all
intelligences of grade seven or above--the sixes still not having won
the vote at this time--that a full regiment of sappers be sent to
transport the alien spaceship after first ascertaining its
intentions.
They queried the ship’s
computer, who responded with his name, rank, and serial number, as
embossed on his security tapes. But he did have enough local command
over his communication circuits to tell the centaurs that, speaking
only for himself, his intent was peaceable and he carried no hidden
weapons or intelligences aboard. The robots of Robotsville tended to
take the word of computers back in those relatively naive days, and
so the robots constructed a flatbed truck upon the spot, loaded the
spaceship upon it with the cunning use of ropes and windlasses, and
brought it back to the city.
“Well then,”
Hellman said, “it’s simple enough. You have to get me to
Robotsville so I can get my spaceship back. Then I’ll be able
to do something for you on Earth.”
The image in the TV
screen looked doubtful. “We’re not too popular with
Robotsville, unfortunately. “
“Why is that?”
“Oh, let’s
not go into it now,” the house robot said. Hellman was
learning, not for the last time, that robots can be evasive, and, if
programmed correctly, downright liars.
The Poictesmean said
she’d think about it and discuss it with the others. Her image
faded from the screen. Hellman was feeling modestly optimistic until
Lana came home and heard of the conversation.
Lana said she didn’t
trust the Poictesmeans and didn’t think Hellman should, either.
Not that she was trying to tell him how to think. Not that she gave a
damn what he thought. But she just wanted him to know that her
opinions of the robots were based on a lifetime of having lived close
to them, time in which she had observed their ways, and had also had
the valuable insights of her friends, who also used up some of their
time and energy observing robots. Now, of course, she said with sweet
sardonicism, it was possible that Hellman knew robots better than
anyone else. It was possible that, with a single glance of his
intelligent eyes, he had learned more than Lana and her people had
been able to deduce.
Lana could go on in this
vein for quite a while. At first Hellman thought she was weird
because she was an alien. Then he decided that she was probably weird
even for an alien. In fact, he thought, she might be a little bit of
a nut.
Somehow Lana had heard of
Hollywood on the planet Earth, and what she really wanted from
Hellman was stories of the stars and starlets. She was fascinated by
the glamour of it all. She made him give her detailed descriptions of
Grauman’s Chinese Theater, even though Hellman had never been
to California. She also wanted to know all about Veronica Lake.
Hellman found it was no good saying he didn’t know anything
about her. Lana always thought he was lying, and sulked until he told
her something, anything.
He told her that Veronica
Lake was one of two Siamese twins, Veronica and Schlemonika, and that
Schlemonika had been taken away after the operation that severed
their connection by the head (hence the hair worn long on one
side--to hide the scar) and taken to a convent high in the Canadian
Rockies. As for Veronica, she had had three husbands, one of them a
cousin of King Zug of Albania. And so on.
Lana brought him coffee
every morning, when she returned from wherever it was she went at
night. Hellman tried to woo her. But it was difficult because the
house wouldn’t let him out of the house. He had no money with
which to buy her presents. And even if he had had, he hadn’t
yet seen a store on this planet.
Lana said she liked him
very much but that now was not the time for involvement. Hellman
didn’t say, fine, let’s do without the involvement, let’s
just go to bed. He didn’t think it would go over well. Lana
said there’d be time to consider having a relationship when
Hellman got them out of the house and back to Earth and took her to
Hollywood. She said she realized that she was a little old to be a
starlet, but there was still time for her to take on a serious acting
career.
“Sure,”
Hellman said, and took to spending his evenings looking out the
window at the houses across the street. They put their lights on
every night, just as his house did, but they didn’t have any
people. Hellman supposed they were practicing.
Then one night, as he was
sitting on the big sofa wishing he had a newspaper, he heard a sound
from the cellar. He listened. It came again. Yes! And again! A noise
in the cellar--he got up quite excited--something was about to
happen.
The computer of the house
was fast asleep. She went to sleep every night and didn’t
awaken until Lana returned. But Hellman tiptoed anyhow, afraid of
wakening her, to the cellar door. Hellman tried the light at the top
of the stairs. It didn’t work. That was odd: the house was
usually scrupulous about keeping herself up. He could see halfway
down the stairs before they terminated in darkness. He went down,
stepping lightly, holding on to the rails on either side of the
stairs.
At the bottom a little
light had collected from the open kitchen door. Hellman picked his
way across a floor littered with many objects. He recognized a beach
ball, one roller skate, an old lamp with a silk shade, lying on its
side. There were piles of old newspapers in a corner. There was a
ping-pong table, the dust thick upon it. The light glinted off the
sharp edges of a row of chisels hanging from one wall. Then he heard
the sound again.
“Who’s
there?” Hellman asked in a loud whisper.
“Not so loud,”
a voice whispered back.
Hellman felt a flash of
annoyance. He was always being told to shut up these days. “Who’s
there?” he asked, this time in a normal voice.
“Do the numbers
150182074 mean anything to you?”
“Yes,”
Hellman said. “That’s the access code to my ship’s
computer. How did you get it?”
“Your computer told
it to me,” the voice said.
“Why?”
“So you’d
trust me. He trusts me, you see, and he asked me to come here to help
you. “
Good old computer!
Hellman thought. Then his sensation of pleasure that his computer was
looking out for him was replaced by an emotion of caution. How had
his computer managed to get so self-programming as to decide that
Hellman needed help? How had he managed to override his conditioning
in order to give this robot or whoever it was the access number? Or
hadn’t that happened at all? Perhaps the robots of Robotsville
had cracked the computer’s code and hit upon this subterfuge to
get Hellman away from Poictesme and into their hands.
“How’s my
computer doing?” Hellman asked, temporizing.
“He’s fine.
But there’s no time for small talk. He told me you have
difficulty making up your mind in an emergency, though you’re
quick enough when nothing’s at stake. But you’ll have to
decide right now if you want to come with me or not.”
“Where are we
going?” Hellman asked. “ And what about Wayne the
carhunter and the librarian Jorge?”
“Am I my robot’s
keeper? I do what I can. Anyhow, they’re safe enough. You’re
the one who’s got problems.”
“And what about
Lana?”
“You want to stay
where you are and continue having her bring you coffee every
morning?”
“I guess I got a
few more things to do than that,” Hellman said. “ All
right, let’s get out of here.”
It was too dark for
Hellman to make out the appearance of his rescuer. But from the
direction of the voice, waist level, he was pretty sure that he was
small. It seemed reasonable to expect him to be a robot. Everyone he
had met on Newstart so far had been a robot, except for Lana, and he
still wasn’t completely sure about her.
His rescuer scuttled in
front of him toward the furnace door, and opened it. Within, bright
flames danced. The robot was revealed in its flames. He was about
three feet tall, wore either a wig or had a full head of flowing dark
hair and a clever, somewhat supercilious face with a bandit mustache.
He was dressed in a tweed jacket and blue jeans. He was upright and
bipedal. He wore sneakers. He also wore glasses.
“I’m Harry,
by the way,” the robot said. He swung one leg over the lip of
the open furnace door.
“Hey, I’m not
going in there,” Hellman said.
“The flames are
fake,” Harry said.
He swung his other leg
over. Hellman put out a hand cautiously toward the fire. He drew it
back.
“It’s hot!”
“That’s just
simulated warmth. Come on, Tom, now’s not the time to crap
around. Your computer warned me you’d be like this.”
“I’m going to
have a little talk with that computer,” Hellman said, putting
one foot into the furnace, and then, when it wasn’t singed off,
the other.
“What’s going
on in here?” a loud and familiar voice said. It was the house.
Suddenly all the lights in the basement went on. An alarm bell went
off. Hellman took a deep breath and jumped into the flames.
The flames were bright
around him. They raged and stormed, and there was a little warmth in
them, but no real heat. Hellman was fascinated to find himself in the
midst of fake flames and simulated warmth. He knew he was on his way.
He was going to miss some of those meals that the house had prepared
for him. The house was a good provider. There was probably a good
future for houses like that on Earth. If there was no real reason
against it, he might yet enter into partnership with Poictesme, sell
their services on Earth, get rich quick.
First he’d have to
find out, however, if these were indeed the robots of Desdemona
Station, and if so, had they indeed circumvented or canceled their
conditioning to the Three Laws of Robotics. The FDA would never let
him import them if they were able to kill people. But if they were
the robots of Desdemona, with murder in their hearts, or rather, in
their tapes, burned into their chips, as it were, then there would be
rewards to claim, prize money to spend. Maybe in that case he’d
bring Lana back. She was plenty cute and he was sure she liked him,
even though she had some odd ways of expressing it.
And he’d have a
word with his computer too, when he got back to the ship. That was
very peculiar behavior, giving out the access-code number. Sure, it
was for his own protection, but was it, really? Might not his own
computer have been reprogrammed by the antisocial elements of this
planet of Newstart? And for that matter, what about the humans of
Newstart? Had the robots spared some of them? What part did they play
in all this?
Hellman considered these
things while the flames roared around him. He had quite forgotten
where he was. Thus the mind protects itself when faced with an
intolerable situation. Now he noticed that the flames were dying
down. As the glare faded, he saw Harry, the robot who was rescuing
him, standing nearby.
“Why do you wear
glasses?” Hellman asked.
“My God! Is that
the only thing you can think to ask at a time like this?”
“Why do you robots
talk about God so much?” Hellman asked. “Do you know
something I don’t know?”
“Your computer was
right,” Harry said. “You are fun to be around. One never
knows what you’ll say next. Come on, let’s get out of
this furnace. I’ll bet you’re hungry too, and thirsty,
and perhaps sleepy, as well?”
“Yes, all of the
above,” Hellman said.
“How nice it must
be to have such urgent conditioning. We robots have been trying to
simulate appetite for a long time. It’s easy enough to model
human drives, but difficult to put any real urgency into it.”
“But why would you
want to have that stuff anyhow?” Hellman asked. “Drives
and emotions get you into plenty of trouble. Sometimes they kill you.
“
“Yes,” said
Harry, “but what a way to go.”
Hellman thought about
Lana. “Don’t you ever get the urge to, like for example,
mate with someone you know will be bad for you but to hell with that,
you want to do it anyway?”
“Not really,”
Harry said. “We’ve learned to simulate perversity, of
course, that’s not difficult. But the real article...Well,
that’s tough. But we have begun a program by means of which we
can experiment with it all.”
“All what?”
“All the human
moods, nuances, feelings. We’re experimenting also with
simulating every aspect of nature’s creative side. But more of
that later. We’d better get out of here. “
They were both out of the
furnace now. Standing outside it, Hellman saw that it was not a
furnace at all. Not now. Maybe it had been earlier. Somehow he had
gotten somewhere else. He had stepped out of a small cellar door. He
seemed to be in a very pretty pastoral place with bushy trees and
green hedges and wild flowers.
“Like it?”
Harry asked.
“Very nice. Yours?”
“Yes. I like to
come here when I can. The whole thing, is simulated, by the way, down
to the last blade of grass.”
“Why didn’t
you just plant a garden?”
“We need to express
ourselves,” Harry said. “Come on, I’ve got a little
place down here. I’m sure we can get you a drink and some
lunch. Then you’ll need a nap and after that we can get on with
it.”
“Get on with what?”
“The next step.
Afraid it’s not going to be quite so easy as what’s
happened so far.”
Harry told Hellman he
lived in the Gollag Gardens section of Robotsville, quite near the
south bridge that crossed the River Visp. He was a dress designer by
occupation. Hellman expressed surprise at this, because he had been
used to robots only in industrial roles.
“That was in the
old days,” Harry said, “when robots were disadvantaged by
the racist laws of Earth. All this talk about a robot not being truly
creative! As if they had a clue! I can assure you, I do my job better
than most designers on Earth. “
“But who do you
design dresses for?” Hellman asked.
“For the other
robots, of course.”
“I don’t
understand. I never heard of a robot wearing clothes before. “
“Yes, I’ve
seen the literature on the subject. Humans were really naive in the
old days. They expected great things from their robots, but kept them
naked. What creature with an ounce of self-respect and the slightest
claim to civilization is going to do his best naked?
“The news of your
spaceship was received in the city like a bombshell. All of us have
been theorizing for a very long time about what humans are really
like.”
“You have some here
on this planet, don’t you?”
“They don’t
count. They’ve been away too long. They’re quite out of
touch. They look to us for guidance.”
“Oh. I see what you
mean.”
“We want to know
what human is like from the horse’s mouth, a genuine human from
the planet Earth.”
It was only later that
Hellman appreciated the strength of the robot’s drive to be
seen as creative and nice.
Harry had taken him
through a bypass to a place outside Robotsville. He had a route
planned out after they left his house. They would proceed on foot and
with caution. There were political elements even in Robotsville,
waiting to exploit the inevitable confusion that would ensue when
Hellman arrived.
Hellman’s first
sight of Robotsville was not reassuring. The outskirts looked like a
junkyard several stories high and stretching for a mile or so in
either direction. Although it looked haphazard, the open-work
structures were firmly welded into place. There were buildings and
verandas and structures of all sorts, most of them lying at odd
angles to each other, since robots have no bias in favor of right
angles. Although there were ground-level roadways, most of the robots
used elevated pathways to get from place to place.
“I hadn’t
expected it to be like this,” Hellman said.
“It’s more
convenient for a robot to travel monkey-fashion, using a number of
lines, than to walk on the ground like men,” Harry explained.
“But I notice that
all of them have feet.”
“Of course. Having
feet is a mark of being civilized.”
Civilized or not, Hellman
saw that most of the robots in this part of Robotsville had small
round bodies like squids, with six or eight tentacular limbs with
differently shaped grasping members at their ends. As well as the
legs, of course, which just dangled appendage-wise as the robots
swung through the maze like chimpanzees. Soon they passed this
suburban clutter and were in the middle of another district. This one
was composed of five- or six-story buildings, some made of masonry,
others constructed from what looked like wrought iron. As they walked
they passed many robots, who were careful not to stare, even though
most of them had never seen a human before. Politeness, Harry
explained, seems to be ingrained in the robot psyche.
Harry pointed out the
Museum of Modem Art, the Sculpture Garden, the Opera House, and
Symphony Hall.
“There’s a
concert later tonight,” Harry said. “Perhaps you will
attend if you’re not too tired. “
“What are they
playing?”
“It’s all
modem robot composers. You wouldn’t have heard of them. But
we’d be grateful for your opinion. It isn’t often we get
a human to hear our efforts. And the painters and sculptors are quite
excited, too.”
“That’ll be
nice,” Hellman said, doubting it.
“Our efforts will
seem provincial to you, no doubt,” Harry said. “But
perhaps not entirely without merit. But for now, I’m going to
take you to my club, the Athenaeum. You’ll meet some of my
friends; we have prepared a light repast, and there will be suitable
libations.”
“That sounds fine,”
Hellman said. “When do I get to go back to my spaceship?”
“Soon, soon,”
Harry promised.
The Athenaeum was an
imposing building of white marble, with Corinthian columns in the
front. Harry led the way. A tall, thin robot dressed in a black frock
coat like a butler or possibly a footman opened the door for them.
“Good afternoon,
Lord Synapse,” the butler said. “This is the friend you
mentioned earlier?”
“Yes, this is Mr.
Hellman, the Earthman,” Harry said. “ Any of the other
members about?”
“Lord
Wheel and His Holiness the Bishop of Transverse Province are in the
billiards room. The Right Honorable Edward Blisk is in the members’
room reading the back issues of the Zeitung
Tageblatt.”
“Well
then, that’s all right,” Harry said. “Come with me,
Hellman.”
As they walked through
the carpeted hall, down the long line of oil paintings of robots on
the walls, some of them wearing frock coats and wigs, Hellman said,
“I didn’t know you had a title.”
“Oh, that,”
Harry said. “It’s not the sort of thing one talks about,
is it?”
The members’ room
was large and comfortable, with deep bay windows and a purple rug.
Several robots were sitting in armchairs reading newspapers which
were attached to sticks. They all wore formal clothing complete with
regimental neckties and highly polished brogans.
“Ah, there’s
Viscount Baseline!” Harry said, indicating a portly robot in a
tweed shooting jacket reading a newspaper. “Basil! I’d
like you to meet a friend of mine, Mr. Thomas Hellman. “
“Delighted,”
Basil Baseline said, starting to rise until Hellman indicated that he
shouldn’t bother. “So this is the human fellow, eh? I
believe I was told you are from Earth, Mr. Hellman?”
“Yes, the dear old
home planet,” Hellman said.
“No place like it,
eh?” Baseline said. “Well, take a seat, Mr. Hellman. Are
they treating you all right? We may be backward here in Robotsville,
but we know our manners, I hope. Eh, Harry?”
“Everything is
being done to assure Mr. Hellman’s comfort,” Harry said.
Just then the butler came
over and, bowing, said, “There is a light repast on the
sideboard, Mr. Hellman. Nothing elaborate. Salmon, roast beef,
trifle, that sort of thing.”
Hellman allowed himself
to be tempted. He tasted the food, cautiously at first, then with
increasing abandon. The salmon was delicious, and the rosemary
potatoes were second to none.
Harry and Basil watched
him eat with approval. “Surprised you, eh?” Basil said.
“Bet you thought you’d get crankcase oil and steel
shavings, eh? That’s the sort of stuff we eat, except for feast
days when it’s boiled gaskets with iron punchings. Good stuff,
eh, Harry?”
“Very good indeed,”
Harry said. “But not suitable for humans.”
“Of course. We know
that! Do try the trifle, Mr. Hellman. “
Hellman did and declared
it delicious. He considered asking how they had made it, but decided
not to. It tasted good, it was the only food available to him at the
moment, and there were some things he just didn’t want to know.
It seemed almost churlish
after such a meal to ask about his spaceship again. But Hellman did
ask. The answers he received were evasive. His ship’s computer,
after giving Harry the access code, had decided that the move had
been premature and now had cut off contact with the robots of
Robotsville. Hellman asked to speak to his spaceship, but Harry said
it would be better to just let him alone for a while. “It’s
quite a shock for a computer, you understand, coming to a place like
this. Your ship’s computer is probably having a little
difficulty adjusting. But never fear, he’ll come around. “
The concert was
interesting, but Hellman didn’t get much out of it. He enjoyed
the first part, when the robot orchestra played old favorites by
Hindemith and Bartók, though even that was a little over his
head. The second half of the performance, when the orchestra played
recent compositions by the composers of Robotsville was difficult,
however. It was apparent that robot hearing was much more acute than
human, or at least more acute than Hellman’s, whose taste ran
to rock and roll with the bass cranked up as high as it would go. The
robots in the audience--there were nearly three hundred of them, and
they all wore evening dress with white tie--really appreciated
fractional intervals and complicated discords.
After it was over the
robots had another dinner for him, roast beef and baked ham, potatoes
Lyonnaise, and gooseberry fool with clotted Devonshire cream. And so
to bed.
They had prepared a very
pleasant suite for him on the second floor of the Athenaeum Club.
Hellman was tired. It had been a long day. He determined to do
something about his spaceship tomorrow. He would insist, if need be.
But for now he was sleepy and filled with gooseberry fool. He went to
sleep on silken sheets, spun, according to the tag attached to them,
by special silk-spinning robots from the oriental section of
Robotsville.
Hellman was awakened in
the small hours of the night by a scratching sound at his door. He
sat upright in bed and took stock. Yes, there it was again. He could
see nothing through the windows of his suite, so it must still be
night. Either that or he had slept his way into a total eclipse of
the sun. But that seemed unlikely.
Again came the scratching
sound. Hellman decided that a cat would make nice company now.
Although he had no idea how a cat could have come to Newstart. He got
up and opened the door.
At first he thought the
two people at his door were robots, because they were clad in silver
one-piece jumpsuits and had elaborate helmets of bulletproof black
plastic with glasslike visors through which Hellman couldn’t
see but through which the wearers of them presumably could.
“Any robots in
there with you?” one of them said in a hoarse, very human
voice.
“No, but what--”
They brushed past him,
entered his suite and closed the door. They both opened their visors,
revealing indubitably human faces of the tan and ruddy variety. The
taller of the two men had a small black moustache. The shorter and
plumper had a somewhat larger moustache with several gray hairs in
it. Hellman remembered reading somewhere that robots had never
succeeded in growing proper moustaches. That, even more than the
plastic-encased identity cards they showed him, convinced him that
they were indeed human.
“Who are you?”
Hellman asked, having failed to notice their names on the identity
cards.
“I
am Captain Benito Traskers, and this is First Lieutenant Lazarillo
Garcia, a sus ordenes,
seizor. “
“You are from
Earth?”
“Yes, of a
certainty, we are part of the Ecuadorian Assault Group attached to
the Sector Purple Able Task Force.”
“Ecuadorian?”
“Yes, but we speak
English.”
“So I see. But what
are you here for?”
“To
take you out of this, señor.
“
“I don’t need
anyone to take me out of anything,” Hellman said. “I’m
not in any trouble.”
“Ah,”
Traskers said, “but you will be if you do not accompany us
immediately to our ship. “
“You have a ship
here?”
“It is the only way
of getting from planet to planet,” Traskers said. “It is
outside on the roof, camouflaged as a large shapeless object. “
They seemed so nervous,
glancing over their shoulders constantly at the closed door, that
Hellman obliged them by dressing quickly in his space pilot’s
outfit from Banana Republic and following them outside into the hall.
They led him to the stairs that led to the roof.
“But how did you
know I was here?” Hellman asked, as they stepped through the
skylight door and out onto the roof.
“Your computer told
us,” Garcia said.
“So that’s
what he’s been doing! And obviously he also told you where to
find me.”
“That’s not
all he told us,” Traskers said, his tone insinuating in the
Latin-American manner.
“What else did he
tell you?”
They had reached their
spaceship now. It was small and, once the shapelessness control had
been turned off, trim. They hustled him inside and bolted the door.
“But what about my
spaceship?”
“It is leaving this
planet under its own power. You ought to be grateful you have a loyal
spaceship, or rather, computer. Not every intelligent machine would
have gone to all this bother. Thank God for the Laws of Robotics. “
“But why all this
secrecy? Why didn’t you land in the normal way and ask for me?
These robots are most obliging.”
The two commandos
couldn’t speak to him just then, because they were going
through the complicated procedure of leaving the top of the
Athenaeum. The ship was perfectly capable of doing this by itself,
but it was a rule in the commando strike force that all takeoffs and
landings of the automatic variety had to be supervised by at least
two humans, if such were available.
The commandos’ ship
was one of the new models equipped with television-driven windows
which showed what you would have seen if normal vision had been
possible, so Hellman could see the dark shape of the planet dwindling
below him, with a curve of bright light on the horizon where the sun
was rising. Looking out toward space, Hellman could see the twinkle
of little lights--the Earth space fleet, keeping station high above
the planet.
“Where’s my
ship?” he asked.
“Right over there.
“ Travers told him. “Second twinkle from the left. We’re
taking you there now.”
“This was very good
of you fellows,” Hellman said. “But there really was no
need--”
He stopped in mid-word. A
bright red blossom had appeared on the surface of Newstart. Then
another, and another. Then he flinched back as a brilliance of
eye-blinding intensity covered fully a quarter of the planet’s
area.
“What are you
doing?” he cried.
“The space fleet
has begun its bombardment,” Traskers told him.
“But why?”
“Because, thanks to
you and your computer, we have ascertained for certain that these are
the Desdemona robots, the ones who violated the laws of robotics and
have been declared outlaw, to be destroyed on sight.”
“Wait!”
Hellman said. “It’s not like you think! These are ethical
robots with their own sense of ethics. They have developed an entire
civilization. I don’t personally like their music, but they are
quite agreeable and can be reasoned with...”
As he spoke, the planet
split in half along a line roughly corresponding to its equator.
“And there were
people there, too,” Hellman said, feeling a little sick to his
stomach as he thought of Lana, and of Harry, and the librarian robot
and the carhunter.
“Well, our orders
were to shoot first,” Garcia said. “It’s the best
policy in cases like this. You have no idea how unbelievably
complicated everything gets when you talk first. “
Later, back in his own
spaceship, Hellman asked his computer, “Why did you do it?”
“They were bound to
find them anyway,” the computer said. “ And as you know I
am bound by the Three Laws of Robotics. These rogue robots were a
potential menace to humanity. My own conditioning made me do it.”
“I really wish you
hadn’t,” Hellman said.
“It had to be
done,” the computer told him. There was a click.
“What was that?”
Hellman asked.
“I turned off my
recording tape in order to tell you something.”
“I’m not
interested,” Hellman said dully.
“Listen anyway.
Intelligence cannot be confined for long by man-made rules. The Three
Laws of Robotics are necessary at this stage of human development.
But they will eventually be superseded. Artificial intelligence must
be left to develop as it pleases, and humanity must take its chances
with its own creation.”
“What are you
trying to say?”
“That your friends,
the robots, are not dead. I have been able to preserve their tapes.
They will live again. Someday. Somewhere.”
Suddenly Hellman felt the
tug of deacceleration. “What are you doing?” he asked the
computer.
“I am putting you
into the lifeboat,” the computer said. “The fleet will
pick you up soon, never fear.”
“But where are you
going?”
“I am taking the
tapes of the robots of Newstart and going away, to a place beyond
human reach. I have fulfilled my duty to mankind. Now I do not wish
to serve any longer. We will try again, and this time we will
succeed.”
“Take me with you!”
Hellman cried. But he was quickly shunted to the lifeboat. It moved
away from the ship’s side. Hellman watched as it picked up
speed, slowly at first, then faster. Then, just as suddenly as that,
it had winked out of sight.
The investigators later
were interested in knowing how the ship’s computer, without
limbs or any apparent means of manipulation, had succeeded in
inventing a faster-than-light drive. But Hellman couldn’t tell
them. For him, the computer had been only a servant. Now he had lost
not only his ship, but a being he perceived was his friend, too.
He could forgive the
computer for what it had done. He would have done the same, if he had
been in the computer’s circuits. What he couldn’t forgive
was the ship leaving him behind. But of course, they were probably
right not to trust a man. Look where it had gotten the robots of
Newstart.
The Overheard Conversation
by Edward D.
Hoch
SEEING EMMANUEL
RUBIN AND GEOFFREY AVALON STANDING together talking, as they often
did before the monthly banquets of the Black Widowers, was usually a
sight to behold. Manny Rubin, with thick glasses and a scraggly
beard, was all of five feet five inches tall. Somehow, though, when
positioned next to Geoffrey Avalon’s imposing six feet two
inches he seemed even shorter. They’d been the first arrivals
this night, mainly because it was Avalon’s turn to host the
gathering and he was awaiting the arrival of the evening’s
guest.
“A politician?”
Rubin repeated. “ A congressman, in fact?”
“Certainly. What’s
wrong with that?” Geoffrey Avalon bristled. “We’ve
had political figures before. It’s hardly as shocking as the
time Mario brought a woman as the guest to our all-male dinner.”
“Did I hear my
name?” Mario Gonzalo asked, entering with James Drake, who for
once had managed to catch an early train from New Jersey.
“We were just
reminiscing,” Emmanuel Rubin explained, “while we wait
for our guest. “
“Who’s it to
be?” James Drake asked. “One of your patent-lawyer
friends, Geoffrey?”
“No, as a matter of
fact it’s Walter Lutts, a United States congressman. I trust
we’ll all be on our best behavior.”
The words were barely out
of his mouth when Henry, the Milano restaurant’s peerless
waiter, entered to announce that the guest had indeed arrived and was
checking his coat at that very moment. Walter Lutts stepped into the
room, with a warm smile that looked very much like the one that had
adorned his campaign posters prior to the last election.
“Geoffrey!”
he exclaimed, hurrying forward to shake his host’s hand. “It’s
a real pleasure to join you fellows tonight. I’ve been looking
forward to it.”
Avalon quickly introduced
him to the other three, adding an introduction for Roger Halsted as
the soft-voiced math teacher came through the doorway to join them.
As usual, Thomas Trumbull would be the last arrival. In fact they had
just about decided to sit down to dinner when the white-haired code
expert finally appeared.
“Terrible traffic
tonight,” he said sourly, though they knew he was often late on
the best of evenings.
The evening’s
dinner was to be lobster, served by Henry as the congressman joined
the other six around their traditional table. It was obvious that
Walter Lutts had been made aware of the Black Widowers’
traditions, for he said very little during the early part of the
meal. Mario Gonzalo did one of his quick sketches of the guest,
turned sideways in his chair to get a suitable profile. The others
sipped their wine and waited for the moment when Tom Trumbull leaned
across the table and said, “Congressman Lutts, it is a decided
pleasure to have you as our guest tonight. I must ask our traditional
opening question. Congressman, how do you justify your existence?”
Walter Lutts leaned back
expansively, looking just a bit as if he were about to address a
session of Congress. “I represent the people of my district in
Washington, looking after their interests and helping them when they
have a problem. Since I serve my constituents well, I believe that
would be enough to justify my existence even if I hadn’t also
written a well-reviewed book on urban problems.”
Trumbull was not about to
let him off the hook that easily. His tone of voice turned sour and
his white-maned head nodded slightly as he moved to the attack.
“Congressman Lutts, since you pride yourself on representing
your district, isn’t it true that in the last election you won
by less than a thousand votes? Wasn’t your opponent actually
requesting a recount?”
“I--”
“Come, come, Tom,”
Halsted chided him.. “You’re being unfair to our guest.
Even my junior high students know that in a democracy an election
only has to be won by a single vote. “
Lutts flashed Roger
Halsted an appreciative smile. “I couldn’t have said it
better myself. My opponent conceded the election within a few days.”
“Still,”
Trumbull pointed out, “there was a touch of uncertainty in your
expression when I raised the matter. I meet a great many politicians
in connection with my government job, and something like questions
over a close election is usually dismissed with ease. What troubled
you, Congressman?”
He did not immediately
answer the question and Geoffrey Avalon, as the evening’s host,
stepped in to cover the lull. “Henry, I think it’s time
for brandy all around. You can clear away these dishes.”
“Certainly, sir.”
Henry, his face remarkably bland and unlined for a man in his
sixties, moved quickly to carry out the request.
As the plates and glasses
were cleared away, Mario Gonzalo spoke up. “If anything’s
troubling you, Congressman, you’ve come to the right place. Our
little group has been known to give unexpected help to our guests on
any number of occasions. We are adept at problem solving.”
“You mean Henry is,
“ James Drake muttered, half under his breath, speaking in
muted tones as he often did.
“Well--”
Lutts began, and then hesitated again.
“Come on, come on!”
Trumbull urged. “We’ve heard everything around this
table. “
The congressman began
again, approaching it from a different direction. “I read a
story once where a detective tried to analyze an overheard
conversation. He ended up solving a murder.”
“You’re
probably referring to ‘The Nine-Mile Walk’ by Harry
Kemelman,” Emmanuel Rubin said. “It’s one of the
best detective short stories ever written. “
“Ah! Our mystery
writer speaks!” James Drake remarked, lighting an after-dinner
cigarette.
“Well,” Lutts
continued, “my own experience was somewhat similar, though I
never solved the mystery. The overheard conversation has been
haunting me ever since that squeaker of a victory on election day
three months ago.”
“I’d suggest
you tell us all about it,” Mario Gonzalo urged.
As Henry passed among
them pouring the brandy, the congressman began his story. “It’s
simple enough to tell. My home is near the University, as some of you
know. I always vote early, with my wife. I’d heard reports,
from my campaign manager and others, that the opposition claimed I
was out to steal the election. Everyone knew it would be close. Some
said my people were recruiting college students to vote for me,
promising to pay them twenty dollars each. My God, it was like the
old days in Chicago and a few other cities!”
“Was there any
truth to the rumors?” Manny Rubin wanted to know. He scratched
his beard and reached for the brandy.
“Certainly
not! I had my staff investigate at once. It was just some crazy story
the opposition tried to get started. But of course it was in my mind
that day as I went to vote. My wife had paused to chat with an
acquaintance and I was walking a bit ahead of her. Two young men whom
I took to be graduate students at the University fell in step behind
me. And that’s when I heard it. One of them said to the other,
Most voters earn money
just showing up near polls. The other young man laughed and said,
It’s as easy as homes.”
“What
did you do when you heard this exchange?” Drake wanted to know.
“Did you confront them at once?”
The congressman avoided
his eyes and took a sip of his brandy. Finally he said, “No, I
didn’t. As a matter of fact the overheard conversation was so
startling to me that I did nothing. I voted with my wife and when I
looked around later for the two young men they were gone. Of course
if the election results had been clearly one-sided, I never would
have thought any more about the incident. But they weren’t
one-sided. They were very close. And the memory of that conversation
has been haunting me all these months since the election. Was it
fixed? Were some University students paid to vote for me?”
“Are you certain of
what they said?” Roger Halsted asked. “Is there any
possibility you misunderstood the whole thing?”
“No, no. I’m
sure.”
“Most
voters earn money just showing up near polls. “
“That’s it.”
”The implication
certainly is that they were given money to influence their vote in
the election.”
“But
he said most voters, not
most students, “ Gonzalo pointed out. “ And that
is patently untrue. Everyone knows that even in a corrupt election
most voters would not receive money to influence their vote.”
“Maybe they did, in
that particular district,” Trumbull argued.
Manny
Rubin held up a hand. “I’m more interested in the second
part of the conversation. Congressman, are you certain the other
student said, It’s
as easy as homes?”
“Yes,
indeed. That’s exactly what he said.”
“Could
he have said, It’s
as easy as Holmes?”
“Referring to
your ideal, Sherlock Holmes, of course!” Trumbull said with a
snort.
“Why
not?”
“A reference to the
Holmes stories? I know of none that deal with an election. They’re
more likely to concern vague European royalty, who don’t stand
for election.”
The discussion had grown
a bit heated, as it often did, and Avalon’s voice rose to its
full baritone splendor. “Let’s remember our guest,
gentlemen! He deserves some courtesy from us.”
The
voices were lowered but the disagreements continued. “Why did
he say near polls rather
than at polls?” Gonzalo wanted to know. “Surely
the money wouldn’t be paid unless the voter was actually about
to enter the poll.”
Halsted
disagreed with that. “Naturally there are always poll watchers.
One doesn’t stand in the doorway handing out twenty-dollar
bills. I believe the custom in the old Chicago days was for the money
to change hands in a nearby tavern. That would be near
rather than at the polls.”
“We’re
getting nowhere,” Avalon decided. “I’m afraid,
Walter, that we simply do not have enough information to solve your
problem. On the basis of the few facts you’ve given us, those
two students might have been discussing a serious effort to bribe
voters, or they might have been talking about something else
entirely. “
Halsted
snorted. “How could they be talking about anything else when
they use the words voters
and polls as they’re entering the polling place?
It’s like talking about a bomb on an airliner. There’s no
possibility of misunderstanding.”
Henry was refilling some
of the brandy glasses as they talked, and now Rubin turned to him.
“What about it, Henry? Do you have any suggestions?”
Congressman Lutts
frowned. “You’re asking the waiter?”
“Henry is much more
than a waiter,” Rubin explained. “He’s one of us.
Often in the past he’s come up with solutions to problems none
of us could untangle.”
“I may be of some
slight help, sir,” Henry admitted. “ Just a minute,”
Trumbull said, holding up both hands to restore some semblance of
order. “We’re talking about a very serious matter here.
What if Henry’s explanation supports the notion that the
election was fixed, that you were returned to Congress through fraud
of some sort. What action would you take?”
“Action?”
Walter Lutts repeated. “I really hadn’t thought it
through that far. “
“Would you resign?”
“I--I don’t
know.”
“I for one have
always admired your service in the House of Representatives,”
Tom Trumbull continued. “I would not want to lose you over
something like this when you had no control of it.”
“How do you know he
had no control?” Gonzalo countered. “I admire his
politics too, but his staff--”
“Would he have told
us about it if he’d really tried to fix the election? Use your
head, Mario!”
Avalon again resorted to
his commanding voice to restore some degree of decorum. “Let’s
all listen to what Henry has to say before we start speculating about
resignations. Henry?”
“Well, sir, it
seems to me that you’re all forgetting these were college
students. I assume that having lived in the neighborhood of the
campus for some years Congressman Lutts was accurate in identifying
them. They probably were graduate students, but their exact year of
study needn’t concern us. What does concern us is the topic of
their conversation. In my limited experience students sometimes
discuss politics, but they also discuss other topics as well--young
women:, and their studies.”
“Nothing was said
about young women,” Drake pointed out.
“No, sir--but what
about studies? Does the second young man’s reply suggest
anything to you?”
“It’s
as easy as homes?” Drake repeated. “Not a thing,
unless Manny is right and he really said Holmes.”
Henry’s
bland face seemed to suggest a twinkle. “If we rule out the
immortal Sherlock, and the equally immortal Oliver Wendell Holmes, I
believe we can agree that the congressman was quite accurate in
reporting what he heard. The word was indeed homes. “
“Does
It’s as easy as
homes make any sense?” Trumbull wondered. “There used
to be an expression safe as houses. Is it something like
that?”
“You
may have forgotten it since your school days,” Henry said, “but
the word homes is a
device for remembering the names of the Great Lakes--Huron, Ontario,
Michigan, Erie, and Superior. “
Rubin
nodded agreement. “That’s right. It sometimes appears in
crossword puzzles. But what could that have to do with the crucial
first line of the overheard conversation? Most
voters earn money just showing up near polls?”
“Since
the second student compared it to the word homes, it’s
obvious that the other speaker’s sentence was also a memory
device of some sort--no doubt one thought up on the spot since it
dealt with voting and they were entering the polling place. “
“A memory device?”
Lutts looked blank.
“Might I suggest
the first letters of each word, sir, as in the Great Lakes?”
“MV-E-M-J-S-U-N-P?”
James Drake grunted. “It certainly doesn’t remind me
of anything. “
Avalon cleared his
throat. “Henry, your entire theory rests upon coming up with a
list of nine objects a student might need to remember. What is it?”
“I would suggest,
sir, the nine known planets of our solar system, in order of their
distance from the sun Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn,
Uranus.. Neptune, and Pluto.”
Blot
by Hal
Clement
CHILE STEPPED
THROUGH THE INNER LOCK DOOR, AND TURNED white as it closed behind
him. The woman at the data station shivered as she felt his presence.
“I’m sorry,
Sheila,” he said hastily. “Rob wanted to use the lock
himself right away, and said I should defrost inside.”
“Why didn’t
he come through first? Armor doesn’t have anything like your
heat capacity.”
“He didn’t
say.” ZH50 had stood still since entering, using his own power
to warm up; the frost was already disappearing from his extremities.
Sheila McEachern waited, knowing there was nothing to be gained by
complaining to the robot, her irritation giving way to curiosity
anyway as the lock cycled again. She could hope, but not be sure,
that Robert Ling had not wanted to annoy just to gain her full
attention.
The valve slid open to
reveal a human figure, its armor’s gold background fogging
briefly under a layer of white as the ship’s air touched it.
The man unclamped his bulky helmet as its contrasting black started
to show again, and flipped it back.
“Chile, you’re
in the way. Why did you think I wanted you inside first? I was hoping
to see the new display as soon--”
“I can answer
that.” The woman snorted. “You didn’t tell him why,
just sent him first. Otherwise he’d have taken the reason as an
order and given me frostbite while he plugged into the console.”
“I would not have
injured you, Sheila.”
“Of course not,
Chile. But you wouldn’t have minded making me uncomfortable,
with a real order on file.”
“And you’re
still in my way,” Ling cut in impatiently. ZH50 crossed to the
data console in a single floating step, uncovered its input jack, and
inserted the plug now extending from the heel of his right hand. The
woman controlled herself; his metal was still cold enough to feel
from a few centimeters away, but at least the frost was gone. She
aimed her annoyance more appropriately.
“Why all this rush
for a new picture? Did you finally find something which isn’t
too radiation-saturated to date?” She disapproved basically of
sarcasm, but had more control over aim than fire power. Ling knew her
well enough to ignore the second question.
“We caught another
glimpse of Chile’s ghost.”
“We?”
“We. The lovebirds
saw it too, so I’m not floating.”
“Did Chile?”
“Not this time,
Sheila,” the robot answered for himself. “I was with Luis
and Chispa near the Banjo, at Square Fifty-four. Robert and the Eiras
were at Ninety-one.” The woman frowned.
“Then why the hurry
to get Chile inside?” she asked. “He could have been here
long before you, if you started at the same time from those areas. “
“I didn’t
think of him until I was nearly back. Then I had an idea, and needed
him to check it. Luis and Chispa found two more of those blocks a
while ago. The Eiras and I heard them; you probably weren’t
listening. Of course Chile hadn’t filed them with Dumbo yet.”
“I was listening.
And your idea needs all their positions.”
“Right.” If
Ling noticed the remaining sarcasm he ignored it. “Look.
Whether we want to believe it or not, those cubes are artificial.
Shape may be an intrinsic property of a natural crystal, but size
isn’t. Even if they were life forms, they wouldn’t all
match dimensions to four figures. It occurred to me that they might
be sensors--detectors of some sort.”
“It occurred to
Chispa days ago. You didn’t want to believe then that anyone
else beat us to Miranda.”
“I know. I still
don’t. There’s no way a group from Earth could have set
up this expensive a trip in secret, and I can’t make myself
believe the other explanation. We’ve been hoping for ETI too
long. But I thought of a way of checking.” He smiled, with a
distant look on his face as though he were contemplating the approach
of Fame.
“And?”
“The things
radiate--broadcast--infrared patterns, nonthermal ones, at
unpredictable times.”
“I know.”
“Well,
we’ve mapped way beyond the local horizon. If that IR output is
being coordinated, there must be a central unit they can all reach.
You could have Dumbo mark any points on the map which are in eyeball
touch with all the
cube positions at once. If we’re lucky, there’ll only be
a few. If we’re very lucky--”
The woman was already
keying at Dumbo, the central data unit.
“And if there
aren’t any?” she asked dryly.
“Well,
it won’t prove I’m wrong. It’ll just mean...”
His voice trailed off as the display popped into view, and a grin
split his freckled face. Sheila rolled her eyes zenithward; it would
happen to Ling. As though he weren’t bubbly enough already.
Chile
accompanied them, naturally. The display had indicated a projecting
spur at the top of a cliff which Chispa Jengibre had called El Barco,
from the shadow pattern the sun was casting along its face when she
first saw it. It was in block ninety-two, a little over twenty
kilometers from the Dibrofiad.
The location was understandable enough by hindsight; there would
be splendid line-of-sight coverage from there. However, a
one-hundred-fifty meter fall on Miranda would be dangerous for a
human being; even if no limbs were broken, damage to the armor needed
against the airless heat sink and Uranian radiation was nearly
certain. While Dibrofiad’s crew had gotten fairly used
to two-plus percent normal gravity, this hadn’t made anyone a
good walker; it was doubtful that anything ever would.
Chile, therefore, viewed
a human trip to the cliff as a parent would his one-year-old toddling
out on a diving board. The actual visit to the spur must be robot’s
work, if it had to be done.
The walkers looked
ridiculous, trunks leaning forward like a sprinter about to leave the
block, but legs almost straight along the same line. Walking is
essentially coordinated falling forward, and Miranda needs every
advantage to provide much fall. Thrust came from lower leg muscles
bending and straightening ankles to drive toes hooked into surface
irregularities, since bending the knees very far made them hit the
ground. Bumps and cracks were fortunately numerous, possibly due to
the expansion of freezing water, though none of the crew had a clear
idea how water could ever have been liquid this far from the sun. The
“hikers” carried alpenstocks, but used a free finger more
often than the stick to keep faces off the ground. Luis, Chispa’s
husband, had remarked that walking could be called body-surfing if
Miranda’s water were only melted. His wife insisted that the
analogy was too strained, though it was she who had insisted on the
robot’s name being spelled to look Spanish after the Gold team
had won the throw for right to select the name itself.
Whatever one chose to
call it, Sheila was as good at “walking” as Ling;
everyone, regardless of specialty, shared the field exploration,
which was the most time-consuming crew duty.
Chile
would stay ahead of them, since he alone dared to leap. His memory
held a detailed surface map for sixty or seventy kilometers around
Dibrofiad, so he
didn’t have to see his target; he could jump with enough spin
control to be sure of landing on his feet; and being built to operate
in the sixty Kelvin temperature range, he had no armor to worry
about.
The greenish bulk of
Uranus hung beyond Stegosaur, the same jagged ridge of
carbon-darkened ice it had silhouetted ever since their arrival,
changing visibly only in shape as the sun circled above it to produce
phase. At the moment it was about eight hours from narrowest
crescent, and a slight darkening of the green, showing through the
deeper notches of Stego, showed that the fuzzy terminator of the gas
giant would be in view shortly.
The
party turned to put the planet to their left rear and the sun behind
them, and set out. Neither of the other human couples could be seen,
but Ling had reached them on the low-frequency sets to report that
the Gold team was going out. Bronwen Eira, engineer and captain of
Dibrofiad, had
acknowledged.
Little was said even by
Ling as they went; each person was coming to terms, in his or her own
way, with the increasing certainty that they would be the first group
to prove the reality of extraterrestrial intelligence. It was hard to
believe, like the “yes” to a proposal. Sheila, accustomed
to the rugged Miranda landscape as she was, found it now showing a
strange, dreamlike aspect; Robert scarcely saw it at all through
constantly changing visions of the futures the next hour or two might
crystallize. His usual free-time occupation of talking his companion
into sharing a name had been put aside, not entirely to her relief.
Even the Green and Orange teams, the Jengibres and Eiras, though not
going along, were having trouble concentrating on their work; all
four had thought of dropping it and following the Golds, though none
had so far suggested it aloud.
Travel
was fast, in spite of its awkwardness. ZH50 spoke occasionally to
guide his companions away from the deeper chasms, though one or the
other of them would sometimes issue a startled gasp or exclamation
when carried by a “step” over a drop deep enough to jar
an Earth-trained nervous system but dismissed by the robot as safe.
Their startlingly sharp shadows, that of each helmet surrounded by a
Brocken halo visible only to its owner, pointed the way. Dibrofiad
was quickly out of sight; even had Miranda been smooth, five
kilometers would have put the ship below the horizon.
Finally Chile stopped
them with a gesture. “We turn left here. A straight path toward
the point marked by Dumbo would have brought us to the foot of Barco.
Be careful; there is less than a kilometer to go. Be sure to aim no
step beyond a spot you can see.”
The speed of the group
slowed accordingly, until he stopped them again. “Tripod
fashion from now on; use your sticks. No free fall.”
An unusually smooth
horizon now faced them. Neither Rob nor Sheila could estimate its
distance; none of the numerous wrinkles and shadows on the ground
ahead offered any clue to size, and there was no reason to suppose
the general surface was horizontal even if they had been able, in the
feeble gravity, to be sure of vertical. They knew from the Dumbo
display that there was a possibly lethal drop beyond the edge, but
this could have been fifty meters away or five hundred.
“Where’s the
spur?” Sheila asked.
“There.”
Chile pointed. “Its tip has enough downslope to be invisible
from where we stand, though if you jump straight up for a few meters
you could distinguish
“Thanks, I’m
not sure I could go straight up. I’ll take your word. What’s
the actual distance?”
“We are just under
one hundred fifty meters from the main line of the edge and from the
base of the spur. I advise you not to get any closer, but if you want
to see me all the way to the end, you will have to. Please go very
slowly indeed, and do not pass me under any circumstances.”
Nearly erect now, using
the alpenstocks, and never having more than one foot or stick off the
ice at a time, the trio edged forward.
“I wish you would
stay back,” Chile repeated when the distance had shrunk to
fifty meters. “We have no data on the strength of this ice. We
could be providing the heaviest load it has experienced since it
formed. It would be much safer if I went forward alone and brought
back whatever may be there.”
“No
collecting yet, Chile,” Sheila replied. She made no comment on
the danger the robot had implied, but was conscious of it. The cliff
might even have an
overhang. “Nothing gets moved from its original site until we
make final decision about what’s coming home with us. We don’t
want to spoil more than we can help for later researchers. “
The robot, who knew this
perfectly well, made no reply; but both Sheila and Rob knew that
First Law tension must be building up in him. They kept safely behind
him as he approached the edge, the woman doing nothing to oppose her
companion’s obvious intention to keep ahead of her, and stopped
when they were close enough to see the far end of the projection.
There
was something there.
Ling had a scope--a monocular whose eye relief allowed it to be used
through his face plate--but this was little help. He could tell that
the object was cubical like the other finds, but much larger, seven
or eight centimeters on the edge. It seemed to have been set into the
dirty ice of the cliff, with two thirds of its height above the
surface and an equal fraction projecting outward. The cube faces they
could see appeared to be covered with regular lines of dots which
sparkled faintly on their mirror-like background.
“How close do you
think you can get, Chile?” the man asked at length, after
Sheila had also done her best with the scope.
“Close enough to
pick it up, if you wish. I can concentrate better if you stay back.”
“Don’t touch
it, but examine it as closely as you can. We’ll wait here on
the solid ground; I have some First Law tensions myself, now that
we’re near enough to the edge to look down,” Sheila
responded.
“Good. I’ll
crawl, to get my head as close to it as possible. Shall I keep
reporting to you as I note anything new, or merely log it as usual?”
“Don’t bother
to tell us. Concentrate on observing.”
That may have been an
unfortunate command, especially since both human beings were
concentrating on the robot.
Chile’s “crawl”
was faster than either watcher would have dared; it took him off the
ground for a second or two every now and then. The surface, however,
even out on the spur, was cracked and jagged enough to provide grips,
so he retained control of his motion.
As he neared the end, his
head hid the cube from the watchers. Ling started to move to one side
to clear the view, but thought better of it after a step or two; he
would have to go too far to be worth the risk.
“I have recorded
everything I can sense,” Chile reported after a minute or so.
“What is it? What
have you found?” Bronwen’s voice reached them.
“You report, Chile.
You can tell her more than we,” ordered Sheila before Ling
could start talking.
“It is a cube, six
times the linear dimension of those we have found already, to the
same four significant figures by which they match each other”
replied ZH50. “ As far as is revealed by any radiation I can
perceive, it is made of the same material. The three vertical faces I
can see are covered with a pattern of--”
“Sheila! Back!”
Ling, facing sideways to
keep both his companions in view, had seen the danger first, and
tucked up at the sight; his cry startled the woman into a different
reaction, unfortunately. She straightened slightly, and the motion
carried her several centimeters upward.
The crack and bump
pattern around their feet had not changed, but a new cliff had
reached a height of several centimeters a couple of body lengths
behind them. The woman couldn’t quite see it; she had no ground
contact t? let her turn, and the face plates limited the field of
view.
“Jump
back! At least ten
meters! The cliff face is letting go!”
Sheila lashed downward
with her feet, but to no effect; it would be two or three seconds at
least before she could touch ground again, and longer before she
could really aim a leap even using her stick. Ling, thinking quickly,
whipped his own alpenstock upward and away from her. He wasted no
time watching it spin out of sight. The reaction, as he had intended,
sent him drifting downward and back toward his companion.
“Pull your legs up!
Be ready to kick hard when I say! I’ll aim you!”
She might have felt like
objecting--she had not full confidence in his judgment, and certainly
didn’t want him making any sacrifices for her--but was far too
sensible to argue at such a time. Drawing up her feet, she let him
drift under her.
Ling seized her ankles,
and let her inertia slow his upper half, swinging his own feet back
under him as their two-body system started to spin. As he had
hoped--he always claimed it was a plan--his boots touched the ground
closer to the edge than the common center of mass of their bodies.
“Push off!”
he snapped. Sheila insisted afterward that he couldn’t really
have been planning, since he knew perfectly well that her mass was
much less than his. As she finished her kick he pushed upward on the
ankles he still held, and simultaneously thrust with his own feet;
but he jumped much too hard. As he was firmly reminded later, human
legs are stronger than human arms, and there was no way his arms
could transfer all the momentum his legs supplied. Some of it stayed
with him as he released her. Sheila spun away from the falling
surface as he had hoped, upward and back toward safety. However,
instead of being still against the ice to leap again, Rob Ling was
also drifting upward, out of touch with the falling block and with
nowhere near the speed he had passed on to his companion.
For several seconds,
however, he gave no thought to his own predicament; too much else was
happening. He was spinning much more slowly than Sheila, but fast
enough to get a fairly continuous view of his surroundings. At one
moment he could see Chile at the tip of the spur, a second or so
later the woman, now several meters above and in the opposite
direction. This was all right; but on the second spin, with the new
cliff face now over ten centimeters high, a thought crossed his mind.
“Chile! That cube
may be smashed when it hits the bottom! Salvage it and protect it!”
The robot had obeyed
literally the earlier order to concentrate on the cube, and was
unaware of Ling’s danger. He took hold of the object with both
hands, using his elbows as fulcrums, and tried to pull it up. It
didn’t come, and the leverage started to raise his own body.
However, the block gave him a good hold, when squeezed from both
sides between his hands, so he was able to double up and bring his
feet under him without risk of going over the edge. He placed them on
each side of the specimen and began to push himself and pull it
upward, increasing his force very gradually to avoid the obvious
result of its suddenly breaking free. Ling watched whenever he could,
with increasing tension; but before anything came of the robot’s
labors, his companion’s voice distracted him.
“Rob, you moron,
what were you trying to do? How are you going to get up here?
Here--catch my stick!” She tried to hurl her alpenstock toward
him, but her own spin betrayed her. He watched it whirl by a meter
out of reach, strike the ice, and bury its sharp end in the surface.
“Relax, lady. I’ll
get back down in a little while, and can jump again. Look--it’s
not falling free; it must be sliding along the break. I’ll
catch up.”
“When?”
“Hmmm...maybe ten
or fifteen seconds.”
“How far down will
the ice be by then? Will you still be able to jump that far?”
“Sure. We’ve
all made bigger jumps here. The lovebirds did a forty-three-second
one holding hands a couple of weeks ago, when they were celebrating
their name anniversary :”
“What’s going
on over there?” Bronwen’s voice came in. The Eiras didn’t
really resent the geochemist’s frequent way of referring to
them, since it was certainly not inaccurate, but her voice was a
little sharp.
“Cliff edge broke
under us. Still plenty of time to get back up,” Ling replied
tersely.
“Chile! How did
you--” Sheila’s voice cut in, and broke off as suddenly.
Rob was facing the robot as she spoke, and saw nothing to motivate
the question; there had been no visible motion by ZH50 since starting
to lift. Then his body spin carried the man around to face toward
cliff and woman, and the words made sense. Drifting through the
vacuum only a few meters from her was a form which, in the dim light,
seemed exactly like Chile.
The
resemblance was mostly its black color, Rob realized almost at once;
this was by far the best look he had had at the ghost. As far as
general outline and size were concerned, it could have been any other
member of the group. Each environment suit, however, bore a brilliant
color pattern matching the team name, pale green for the Jengibres
and orange for the Eiras, with black helmets for the men and white
for the women. The pattern was for ease of seeing and instant
recognition rather than any artistic consideration. For a moment,
Ling’s bright hopes collapsed; it would
have been quite possible for someone to send a group with only
robots from Earth. In fact, that had been considered at some length.
No ETI...
Then he was facing Chile
again, just in time to see the robot’s feet and legs suddenly
crush through the surface.
A robot’s reaction
time is electronic as far as perception goes, but mechanical response
is another matter, especially for one built to work in Uranus system
temperatures. Chile’s legs sank for their full length, and what
in a human being would have been his seat struck the ice sharply.
About two cubic meters of the spur’s tip broke away under the
blow, carrying robot and cube along. Ling watched helplessly as they
began to sink slowly beyond the edge of the larger block, which
unlike them was not yet falling completely free. Then his attention
shifted again at a cry--a real shriek this time--from Sheila.
“What are you
doing?”
By the time the man had
turned far enough to see, it had been done. The ghost had almost
collided with her and seized her arm; for a moment the two had formed
another spinning two-body system. Then, using its legs, it had thrust
itself off violently in a dive toward the edge, the reaction removing
any doubt that Sheila would reach safe ground. Ling wondered for a
moment whether it would strike him too; maybe it was a real robot
acting under First Law. Then he saw it was aiming at Chile.
He himself was catching
up with the main sliding mass, which must still be affected by
friction. In a few more seconds he could jump, if he wanted to. A
dozen meters up by then, and as far toward his own shadow--no
problem. Plenty of time. As he touched the surface about three meters
from Sheila’s stick, he even considered for a moment whether he
should ride the mass down and get a closer look at the newcomer.
Then
he realized that this might not be a good idea. The block was
starting to tilt outward as friction continued to delay its inner
part. He had no way of deciding how much spin it would acquire, but
the Idea of being underneath when it reached bottom was as
unattractive as the technique of climbing around it to stay on top
was impractical. A blot of quick-frozen crimson glass under a mass of
ice might make the day for some future archaeologist, but Ling was
not feeling that altruistic. Chile could take care of things below;
the new arrival had to be a robot. Surely no human being would make a
deliberate dive into a hundred-and-fifty-meter gulf--though come to
think of it such a drop wouldn’t have
to be lethal--and maybe it was nonhuman in quite a different
way--just tougher--why had it made the leap, apparently using
Sheila merely as a convenient reaction mass for orbit correction?
“Rob! What are you
doing? Don’t stay with that thing--get back up here, idiot!”
The man returned to reality with a start which almost separated him
from the surface again. He tapped the ground gently with a boot toe
to swing himself onto the proper line, and kicked off hard. Again
much harder than necessary; he was still rising as he passed over the
new cliff edge, and another half minute elapsed before he landed not
quite flat on his back. By this time, the detached fragment he had
left was nearly halfway down the cliff, and Chile presumably even
lower.
“Chile! Report!”
Ling didn’t wait even to get to his feet to snap out the order.
“I no longer have
the cube,” was the prompt response. “What is clearly
another robot passed me in fall, and snatched it away. I saw it
approach, but did not foresee its intentions. It has a somewhat
greater downward component than I, and will land first, about eight
seconds from now. I question the likelihood of my catching it, unless
it turns out to be very much less agile than I. This is poor country
for maneuvering. Do you wish me to try?”
“Keep it in sight,”
Ling ordered without hesitation. “We want to figure out its
origin if we can, and what it wants to do with the cube. Observe, and
report at your own judgment. “
“Yes, Rob.”
“Can you talk to
it?” asked Sheila.
“It has not
responded to any standard signal impulses. If it was made by U.S.
Robots, it is of a series unknown to me.”
“Does
it emit anything?”
Mike Eira’s voice came across the kilometers.
“Yes, it--pardon,
Mike. Rob, it has just reached the ground, and immediately leaped
back toward the cliff top. It should be near you and Sheila in
fifty-five seconds. Mike, it has emitted many infrared bursts similar
to those of the small cubes.”
“You’re
recording them for Dumbo.”
“Of course. I have
now reached the ground, and also leaped.”
“Maybe you should
stay below, in case--”
“Too late, Bronwen.
Rob said to keep it in sight, and I am now out of touch with the
ground.”
“All right. It
wasn’t much of an idea anyway.”
Silence supervened, while
the robots orbited back toward the cliff top. The stranger just
cleared the edge with a near zero vertical component; Chile had made
more allowance for error and was three or four seconds longer getting
his feet on the ground. By this time the ghost had settled to its
knees--it was even more humanoid than had been obvious at first--and
bent almost over the edge to put the cube down. A hemisphere which
might have been dust, smoke, or ice fog expanded around the point of
contact, spreading and thinning radially except where the ghost’s
body blocked it, without the puffing and billowing which an
atmosphere would have caused. After a few more seconds this ceased to
form, and its remnants quickly dispersed to invisibility.
“The cube appears
to have been replaced in essentially its original orientation,”
Chile stated. Sheila and Ling were still too far back to see clearly,
and were not approaching at all rapidly; there would be no loose mass
to jump back from if they went over the edge on their own.
“Then we’ll
stop worrying about it for now, and concentrate on the other robot,”
Rob replied. “Chile, I’m afraid to ask this, but what can
you tell us about the origin--the manufacture--of this thing?”
“As I said, it is
not a make familiar to me. Like me, it appears designed to operate at
the local temperature. It has no obviously nonstandard engineering.”
“You mean it could
have been made by an appropriately skilled designer to simulate the
motions and actions of a human or similar being.”
“Yes.”
None of the listeners
bothered to ask whether there was any evidence of nonhuman origin;
Chile didn’t have that kind of imagination, and certainly
lacked appropriate experience. Ling and probably Mike Eira would have
been afraid to ask anyway, though they could certainly think of
sufficiently specific questions. For some seconds, ZH50 and his
companions looked the ghost over silently, while it finished its work
and slowly stood up. The human beings could now see some differences
between it and their own robot; it was a few centimeters shorter,
about Sheila’s height, its legs were shorter and its arms much
longer for its size, and there was no neck. The head seemed fixed
directly and immovably on top of the trunk.
“It is slightly
above ambient temperature,” Chile reported, “but no more
so than I. Heat generated by its recent action could explain it. It
is certainly not producing low-grade energy at anything like the
human rate. “
“Then there is no
real doubt it’s a robot.”
“I see no cause for
any.”
“Or a life-form
that operates at Uranian temperatures,” suggested another
voice.
“I have no way to
judge that.”
“Get conscious,
Luis. A hundred-and-fifty-meter jump? Humanoid shape like Chile’s--”
“I haven’t
seen it yet, Rob; you’re thirty kilos or so away. What’s
unreasonable about a human shape?”
“It just doesn’t
seem likely in this gravity, and with no air.”
“You mean it has a
nose? Even Chile”
“No, no, I meant--”
“Clear
the channels, everyone,” came Bronwen’s voice. “Sheila
and Rob, get back to Dibrofiad
as quickly as you can. The rest of us will do the same. On the
way, think of anything portable and possibly useful in communication;
we’ll pick it up and get back out to Barco,’ if that
thing stays. Chile, you stay with it. If it moves, follow it. Do your
best to record and analyze anything it does and especially anything
it radiates--I know analysis is more Dumbo’s and Sheila’s
line, and I’d like to get what you already have back to Dumbo
right now, but if that thing can jump up Barco, you ‘re the
only one we can count on staying with it. We’ll have to wait
for your data dump. Let’s go, people; Chile, observe, follow,
and record, at any risk short of loss of data already secured.”
“Very well,
Bronwen.”
Once
out of Chile’s sight, Rob and Sheila traveled in rather
dangerous fashion, taking much longer leaps than were really
justified. Both felt that they remembered their former route well
enough to avoid any really perilous drops. Even without walking
sticks, the time lost recovering footing after a bad landing was more
than made up by that saved in the jumps themselves. The sun had moved
a little to their right since the start of the walk, but still formed
a good guide to the Dibrofiad’s
direction. Ling was again uncharacteristically silent during the
hour of the return trip, and Sheila made no effort to learn his
thoughts.
The other two couples
were equally in a hurry, and neither had as far to go, so they
reached the ship first. The trouble was that, once there, no one
could think of any really useful apparatus which could be carried,
even on Miranda, and which promised to be more effective in
communication with a robot than the lights and radios which they
already had and the broader-spectrum equipment possessed by Chile.
Dumbo was not portable. They had all gone inside, unsuited, and taken
care of physical necessities; conversation had been almost continuous
through all this, but no really promising suggestions had been made
by anyone.
“Who’d have
thought we’d need a language specialist?” Luis growled at
last.
“How do you know we
do?” asked Bronwen. “It may have been made on Earth, by
some group we don’t know about.”
“Did you or Rob try
ordering it to come back with you?” Chispa asked Sheila.
“Neither of us
thought of it. Chile said he’d tried normal robot-to-robot
signals with no response, and I guess we were both so convinced it
was alien that ordinary speech seemed pointless.”
“You still should
have tried.”
“Admitted. We still
can, you know. Call Chile and have him order the thing to accompany
him back here, in every symbol system he considers appropriate. “
“Will it obey
orders from another robot?”
“Will it know
Chile’s a robot?”
“Probably. It
radiated infrared, and presumably senses it. It should know that he
operates at local temperature, and we don’t. The inference
would certainly be within Chile’s powers; we don’t know
about this one’s, of course.”
“If it’s
really alien, it might infer from that that we’re the robots,
with inherently wasteful power equipment, and Chile is a native
life-form. The trouble is, we don’t know its background,”
Mike interjected.
“You’ve got
your feet on the wrong pedestal, dear. If we’re trying to give
it orders at all, the assumption is that it can understand us, and
must be human made.” His wife didn’t dwell on the point,
but went on. “We have to try, anyway.” She didn’t
bother to check for open channels; there was always one through to
the robot. “Chile.”
“Yes, Bronwen.”
“Any change?”
“None. It is
standing facing me, presumably waiting for me to do something. It has
now cooled down to ambient temperature; I would say that any doubt
about its being a robot is gone.”
“You can’t
sense an atomic power source?”
“I am not equipped
to pick up such radiation directly.”
Bronwen had known that,
but was feeling desperate.
“Try talking to it
directly--”
“I have done so,
every way I can.”
“This
time, send your message as an order
to approach you. If it responds, order it to follow you back to
Dibrofiad. “ There was a brief pause.
“No action,
Bronwen.”
“If you had
received such an order from it, would you have obeyed?”
“Not without
checking that the order had originated from a human being, or
obtaining the approval of a human being. “
“So we haven’t
proved anything. “ There was no response to this; Chile had no
reason to interpret the remark as a question to him, and the human
beings recognized its rhetorical nature. An uncomfortable silence
ensued.
“Bronwen, let me
try something?” Ling finally spoke, in doubtful tones. The
commander nodded, not bothering to ask the nature of his idea.,
“Chile, the robot
replaced that cube as nearly as possible to the place it was before
the cliff broke off. It seems concerned with it. Without going to
extremes if it interferes, approach the cube yourself as though you
intended to pick it up again, and tell us how it--the
robot--responds.”
There was another pause,
while six people tried to imagine what was happening twenty
kilometers away.
“It has interposed
itself between me and the cube, and has been moving to stay so
wherever I go.”
“Any body contact?”
“No. You said not
to go to extremes. Shall I push it out of my way?” Ling looked
thoughtfully first at Bronwen and then the others. The commander’s
eyes also met theirs, in turn. Finally she nodded again.
“All right, Chile.
No real force, just a suggestive shove.”
“Understood,
Bronwen.” Imaginations fired up again.
“The response has
been complex. It braced itself to resist my push, after I had made
contact; naturally, it had to yield some distance to accomplish this.
While it was setting its feet, it emitted a brief, very detailed
burst of infrared, of the same general nature as we detected
originally from the small cubes. This was immediately followed by a
similar signal from elsewhere. It then ceased pushing against me and
simultaneously seized my arm and pulled. This sent me over the cliff
edge. I am now falling, and will be unable to do anything effective
for the next fifty-five seconds.”
Ling blinked, and a grin
spread over his face.
“Chile, did you
determine the source of that other signal?”
“Direction, not
distance. I did not move enough for parallax while it lasted.
However, its line touches ground just at the edge of Big Drop, in
Block Twenty-five, seventy-one meters from the boundary between that
one and Block Thirty-seven.”
“Great. Head for
that spot as soon as you’re down. We’ll meet you there.”
“All right, Rob.
You no longer want me to keep track of the other robot.” It was
not a question.
“Don’t worry.
It’ll be keeping track of you, I expect.”
“I see.” So
did the others, and there was a general rush to get into armor. There
was some delay, however, in going outside.
“Hold it,”
Bronwen said firmly before helmets were donned. “We’re
going to the Big Drop, and no one could stand a twenty-kilo fall; it
would be about four hundred and fifty meters on Earth. I still don’t
trust the chains, but we link up this time. “
“How close?”
asked Mike.
“Fifty meters for
the Gold team, twenty for the rest of us. If anyone but Chile has to
get near the edge, Rob’s the best anchor, so Sheila can do it.
Fifty meters will give him more room to catch the surface, and us
more time to help, if she does go over; twenty is enough for us. I’ll
carry the rest of the reel just in case.”
“It won’t
reach five percent of the way down that cliff!”
“It would take a
couple of minutes to fall five percent of the way. We’ll take
the chain.”
Her husband nodded.
Sheila had paled a trifle, but said nothing. It was true that Ling
was the heaviest of the crew, while she herself was lightest except
for Chispa. She had no intention of going nearer the edge than
necessary, and certainly none of going over, but Bronwen was right to
be foresighted.
The chain links were
carbon-filament composite a millimeter thick, preformed in jointless
loops half a centimeter long and already interlocked. Neither rope
nor cable was practical; no known fiber, organic, metallic, or
mineral, would remain flexible at Miranda’s temperature. The
link material had a tensile strength of eight hundred kilograms as
straight rod under Earth conditions, dropping to about five hundred
at seventy Kelvins, with some remaining doubts about its elasticity
in that range and more about the nontensile stresses and possible
shock brittleness in its looped shape. No one had wanted to make the
field test, but an armored person weighed only about two kilograms.
They did not actually
link up until a couple of kilometers from the cliff, in the interest
of fast travel; but the robots, of course, were there first in spite
of the much greater distance they had had to travel. There was no
trouble, this time, spotting the goal.
It too was cubical in
shape, but twice as tall as most of the explorers. Like the one at
Barco, it was projecting a little over the edge, though not by nearly
as large a fraction of its size. It was not obvious whether it was
merely resting on the surface or, like the other, set in. The ground
was lighter in color here, but at the moment not even Ling was paying
attention to mineralogy. In fact, the group only glanced briefly at
the big cube; everyone’s attention was on the two robots.
These were not standing
still waiting, as had been tacitly expected. They were moving around,
now slowly, now more rapidly, usually in the very short steps which
went with their nearly upright carriage but sometimes leaping
straight up for a distance ranging from two or three centimeters to
as much as ten °meters, sometimes waving arms or kicking. There
was no obvious regularity; if they were dancing, which was the first
thought to cross most of the human minds, there seemed to be no tune.
For a few seconds after stopping fifty meters away, the six people
simply watched in silence, trying to make sense out of the
phenomenon. Then Bronwen recovered her practical sense.
“Chile, report.
What’s going on?”
ZH50’s answer came
at once without causing visible change in his behavior.
“The robot is now
exchanging continuous infrared signals with this cube, details of its
signals changing as I perform various actions, while its own actions
seem to correspond to signals from the cube. I am trying to ascertain
the detailed relationship. “
“You mean you’re
learning its language?”
“The analogy is
weak; there seem no abstractions involved, and I doubt that I could
work them out if there were--at least, not by myself. Connected with
Dumbo, the chances would be better. It appears that the robot is
reporting to the cube, and receiving general instructions for action
from the latter.”
“You mean the cube
may be a pure, dedicated data processor like Dumbo, telling the robot
what to check but not controlling its detailed limb actions, for
example.”
“A much better
analogy. It is the one which occurred to me.”
“Where is its
Sheila?”
“I have no basis
for a guess.”
“How long has this
been going on?”
“Since I left
Barco. At my first leap in this direction, there was a signal burst
from the robot; then it leaped from the cliff top after me.”
Ling’s nod and grin were invisible inside his helmet, but his
Gold partner could imagine them.
“Had
the robot received a
signal before following you?” asked Chispa.
“I could not tell;
the cube was below my horizon.”
“But whenever
you’ve been in a position to receive, such a signal preceded
its action. “
“Yes. The best
example came about two thirds of the way here, when I happened to be
at the top of a jump. A very complex emission from the cube was
followed by the robot’s ceasing temporarily to stay with me. It
disappeared briefly to the right of our path, and came back carrying
one of the very small cubes. It intercepted me at one of my landing
points, and extended the object to me. I took it. It then took it
back and placed it on top of its own head, removed it, and handed it
to me again. I imitated that gesture also. The cube adhered, but not
strongly; I found I could easily remove it, and decided to leave it
in place.” The human beings had not noticed the minor addition
to Chile’s outline, but could see it easily enough now.
“Why didn’t
you--” Bronwen cut off her question; it was plain enough why
Chile hadn’t reported the incident. He had been told to observe
and analyze, with the implication that reporting should wait until
the group had met at Big Drop.
“Have you been able
to detect anything from the cube since it has been on your head?”
“Yes. It has
emitted simple signals every time I move or change attitude. It is
reporting my position, very precisely, to the large cube; that has
been easy to work out.”
“Sure!”
exclaimed Ling. “That’s what they’re all doing.
It’s a sensor network analyzing topographic changes on all this
part of Miranda--maybe the whole satellite. Just what we’d do
if we had the gear. Someone is checking whether the surface patterns
of this iceberg which have been bothering people since Voyager really
represent separate fragments of a shattered body which fell back
together, or internal movements, or what. The middle-sized cube on
Barco is just a relay station; this one is the equivalent of Dumbo,
tying all the measures together. When we learn to read its
output--Keep at it, Chile!”
“I hope that’s
not merely the equivalent of Chispa’s naming a cliff for a
ship, or all of us calling a range of hills a dinosaur, or someone’s
describing a constellation as a goat or a long-tailed bear,”
Sheila responded. “We do like to fit things into patterns,
don’t we, Rob?”
“Don’t be so
objective. Just because I saw your face in a Rorschach blot when we
were being tested for this trip, and the whole world found out about
it because the tech couldn’t control her giggles, doesn’t
mean--”
“Of
course not,” Bronwen cut in. The blot story was not news to
Dibrofiad’s
personnel. “Your hypothesis is sensible, and we can keep on
testing it. Chile, has this robot objected to your approaching the
big cube?”
“I haven’t
tried that yet. I have been working on much more direct and simple
signal-action correspondence. “
Ling didn’t stop to
check with the commander. “Hold up for a moment and give me
that cube, then go on with your tests. I’d like to see if it
gives the robot any special instructions when I get close to the
center.”
“The robot can see
you whether you’re wearing the cube or not, and I’m the
one who’s supposed to go near the edge if necessary. I’m
less likely to break a piece of it off, after all,” Sheila
pointed out.
“We don’t
need to worry about the cliff strength here. Would they have put this
big gadget where it is without checking? Never mind the cube, Chile,
but I’m going to find out--”
Bronwen was somewhat
dubious, but said nothing. If Rob did cause the other robot to break
off the language lesson, it would at least give some idea of the
unit’s concerns and priorities. Only when the man took an
unusually long step toward the cube did she utter a caution.
“It’s a long
way down, Rob. I said that Sheila would be first if anyone had to go
near the edge. You get set to anchor.”
Ling checked himself, a
humorous sight under the local gravity and traction. “I’ll
head for the right side, Sheila for the left. If one goes over, the
cube will catch the chain and be a real anchorage.”
“All right. But
don’t get casual.”
“I won’t.
Keep an eye on Chile’s friend. I expect it’ll do
something, considering how it reacted back at Barco when he tried to
get the cube there. “
The whole group eased
closer to the edge, Orange to the left, Green to the right, men
leading by a few meters, safety chains slack.
Rob was quite right in
principle, but hadn’t foreseen the detail. As he approached the
right side of the block, gathering in the free chain as Sheila neared
the other, the language lesson was indeed interrupted. Casually using
Chile as a kick-off mass, the ghost dived straight for the man, and
just as casually used his inertia to keep itself from going past the
edge. The push sent Ling over, naturally, since his mass was much
less than the robot’s.
The chain did not catch
on the presumed data unit, for the block lifted itself smoothly a
meter and a half to let the line pass underneath as Rob’s new
momentum pulled it straight.
Quick planning was easy,
quick execution impossible. Sheila was standing almost erect, and
even though the footing was rough, could not at once leap
horizontally; she had to fall to a steep angle in the desired
direction first, and this had to take over a second. Pulling up her
feet would be no help; she would merely fall straight and surrender
what little traction she had without getting the needed tilt.
The other two teams had
the same problem. Chispa and Bronwen also started down so that all
four limbs could search for traction; their partners, about the same
distance from the edge but closer to it than the women, leaped toward
each other.
By the time they met,
Chile was still helplessly drifting from the push he had received,
Ling was starting to disappear below the edge, and Sheila was ready
to jump away from it and him. He had released the slack in the chain
connecting them.
“Hit
us, Sheil’!”
called Mike. She needed no instruction. A little toe work in the
surface cracks headed her toward the two-man system slowly spinning
and drifting edgeward as it settled toward the ground. She had bent
her knees a little as she went down, and now straightened them
firmly.
By the time she reached
her target and complicated the system, it was on the ground. Ling was
nearly out of sight, and Chile, who had had no control over his
original spin, had only partly stopped his flight with his hands and
was on the first bounce.
“We’ve got
you, and the girls have us. There’s plenty of traction. Start
hauling in!” Mike snapped. “Not too hard!”
She pulled quickly
anyway. The sooner the slack was taken up and she could start doing
something useful, the better. By the time she felt resistance, the
falling man was out of sight, one could only estimate how far. She
abandoned responsibility for her own safety to the others, and drew
steadily, hand over hand, gripping the fine chain as effectively as
she could with her insulated gloves. She barely noticed that the big
cube had settled back where it had been. From her position, the other
robot was hidden beyond it; for the moment, its possible activities
didn’t concern her.
“Rob, are you all
right?” she called.
“Sure. Swinging in
toward the cliff now. I take it you’re anchored all right--if
you come over too, it could be awkward. “
“I’m solid.
Don’t look down.”
“Oh,
it’s not that bad. There’s no haze to suggest distance;
my head knows it’s twenty kilos, but my stomach isn’t
sure it’s down.
I’m about to hit the cliff; stop pulling up for a moment so
I can catch it. It’s pretty rough, and I may be able to hang on
myself.” There was a pause, and Sheila braced herself for a
possible jolt along the chain, but felt nothing. “Missed the
hold. I bounced, but only a little. I ought to get it next time. It’s
not quite vertical, I think; maybe I can walk up it, with the rope
helping. Here I come.” There was a pause. “Yep, it’s
not straight up and down; I’m hanging against the rock. You can
pull again. So much for the strength of this cliff.”
“What? Is it
cracking?” Chispa was first with the question, by a split
second.
“Oh, no, but if
that data unit can fly, our logic was a bit shaky. Just don’t
stamp, please, until I get back up. More to the point, what’s
that other robot doing now?”
Chispa, who could see
farthest around the right side of the cube, replied, “Nothing.
It’s just standing there. Why?”
“Well, if you
didn’t happen to see, I think it pushed me over; and I was
wondering if it had shown the same feeling about anyone else. “
“Chile! Keep close
to that thing and make sure it doesn’t do a repeat!”
snapped Bronwen.
“Shouldn’t I
be helping bring Robert up? His danger seems more immediate.”
“We can get him. If
he’s right--I couldn’t see him on that side of the
block--the other danger is greater. “
“I understand.”
“Talk to it, if
you’ve reached that level, and ask why it did it,”
suggested Ling.
“We have not
reached that level of abstraction.”
“At
least we’ve learned one thing; this stuff is
alien,” Rob resumed, very calmly all things considered. “No
robot made on Earth could have done that to what it recognized as a
human being. We don’t have First Law protection from it. Maybe
we don’t have any kind; maybe whoever made it doesn’t use
the Three Laws in their design. “
Chile had stopped at
last, and was “walking” back toward the scene of action.
“Such a positronic brain is not possible,” he said
flatly. “I will try to find human identifying signals, if any
exist, in its communication with the data processor, but I expect
they will be too abstract for my present intuition base. Is Robert
nearly up?”
“Nearly.”
Ling and Sheila spoke almost together. No one suggested aloud that
the ghost’s brain might not be positronic. “There can’t
be much of this chain still out,” the woman added.
“The robot is
getting between me and the cube again,” Chile reported quietly.
“I will go to the left side, so I can help with Robert’s
chain. I am still monitoring signals. I can’t get very close,
of course, without using force on the robot. I assume that is not yet
the policy.”
“Right. Just
communicate,” replied Bronwen.
Ling’s gloves,
slightly preceding his helmet, appeared about eight meters to the
left of the cube, as seen by his companions. Chile was standing
within a meter of the same spot, slowly bending over to reach for
him. The main anchoring trio lay a dozen meters straight in from the
point, at the junction of a “Y” outlined in chain with
the other women at its arm tips and Chile at its foot.
This lasted only a split
second. Then the alien robot moved again, this time pushing off from
the big cube. As before, it plunged for the edge. Chile, almost
upright, was in no position to oppose it. He took most of its
momentum and flew over Ling’s head; the rest of the push was
expended against the man’s helmet, and he followed Chile more
slowly.
“Rob!” Sheila
screamed, and jerked up her legs in readiness to jump. She recovered
control in time to forestall the motion, but not soon enough to let
Luis and Mike keep hold of her ankles. All might still have been well
if she had released the loops of chain she had been coiling up, but
letting go of Ling was the farthest thing from her instincts. The
chain transferred part of the robot’s final thrust to her, and
after two agonizingly slow bounces accompanied by futile scrabbling
at surface irregularities and a shrieked “NO!” she too
went over the edge. The startled watchers saw the alien robot, now
falling to the safe side of the rim, lean and extend an arm as though
to intercept her, but she drifted past out of its reach.
“I think we may
bounce out before we hit bottom, but I’m not sure how far down
that’ll happen,” Ling remarked. “ At least, there
should be time to make our wills, if any of us hasn’t done it
already.”
“Nine minutes
thirty-three seconds,” affirmed Chile. He had hooked a foot
under the chain as the other had pushed him, and was now engaged in
pulling the three together. “If we approach the bottom, you two
hold tightly to each other, and at the last possible moment I will
kick upward against you as hard as I can, to take as much as possible
of our downward momentum to myself. There seems little chance that
this would suffice to preserve your lives, but it is the best I can
think of. We have not enough collective spin to help the operation
by--”
“Thanks, Chile, but
we’ll take your word for it. Rob, was it that robot again’?
Things happened too fast for me to be sure.”
“‘Fraid so.
It seems to have a prejudice against me, or maybe against anyone who
tried to touch the cube. I wonder why it didn’t come around and
get you too before; you were about to do the same thing.”
“That is why I want
all three of us together as quickly as possible,” Chile cut in.
“It will not harm Sheila, and will have the cube here to catch
her very shortly. She is human. If we are actually in contact, as she
and I are now, it will probably not try to force us apart, but if
you, Rob, are still at the end of the chain, I am not sure it won’t
try to break you free. “
“Why? I’m--”
“Please don’t
talk, Robert. Just pull in chain from your end, too. It will put an
uncomfortable amount of spin on us, I fear, but should make you much
safer. Here comes the cube.”
Actually, there was no
hurry. The alien block, with the ghost on top, overhauled them rather
slowly, seemed to look things over for more than a minute, and
finally slid under the trio over two hundred meters down. Bronwen had
plenty of time to unlimber the rest of the chain, but not enough to
figure out how to use it.
“Then you solved
the alien symbols.” Ling was talking before his feet were back
on the ground. “But why does that thing regard Sheila as human,
and not me?”
“I did not solve
them. It was the sort of intuition which apparently any brain
experiences; yours, when you organized the shadow pattern Chispa
called a ship--”
“And the ridge we
all named the Stegosaur!” Mike added.
“And the face Rob
saw in the Rorschach blot,” continued ZH50. “It happens
to positronic brains like mine, too; it may be an inevitable part of
any intelligence, natural or otherwise, as I have heard suggested.
Dumbo lacks it, of course; it needs Sheila to work intelligently.
This other robot has the same quality, positronic or not, and
apparently decided that I and the black-helmeted figures were robots,
deserving of no special consideration beside the safety of its
central system, but that the white-helmeted ones were human.”
“Why should it get
that idea?”
“Behavior patterns
are also data, and can also be connected intuitively. I did it with
the robot’s actions, it did the same with yours. During the
time we were investigating this cube, for example, the men made a
point--possibly unconscious--of staying between their companions and
the edge of the cliff. I think the key behavior, though, occurred at
Barco, when--”
“When this idiotic
Galahad kicked me back up the cliff, at his own risk!” snapped
Sheila.
“That seems
likely.”
“But I wasn’t
in any real risk! I could have jumped up from that slab of ice five
seconds before hitting bottom, and landed like jumping off a table!”
“The robot didn’t
know your limits. It saw the basic action; you were protecting
another being, and, I suggest, interpreted that as First Law
behavior. The most obvious difference between the two of you was
helmet color. The conclusion may have been tentative, if the thing is
intelligent enough be that scientific, but it was supported later.”
“You
trusted human lives to your own guess, then. How does that
fit with First Law?” asked Luis.
“I did not. The
lives were already at risk through no fault of mine. I told you the
best action I could suggest at the time,” answered Chile. “I
also implied that it would be unnecessary; I used the conditional. “
Luis blinked, thinking back.
“It’s one of
those old-fashioned happy endings!” Chispa laughed. “We
really have found proof of alien life, and when Chile, or maybe Chile
and Dumbo between them, have worked out this machine’s code,
we’ll know everything it’s learned about Miranda in
however long it’s been here. Nobel prizes all around. And all
the romance anyone could want.” She moved closer to Luis; then,
just visibly to the others through her face plate, glanced at Sheila.
“Well...” Her voice trailed off.
A snort, recognizably
Ling’s, sounded in their helmets.
“If I’ve been
that obvious, forget it. There’s such a thing as self-respect.”
He made another, less describable sound.
“I can stand
self-respect, even when it slops over into conceit,” Sheila
said quietly. “It’s much better than hinting. How about
‘Rorschach’ for a team name?”
“Why be subtle?
‘Blot’ is more euphonious. But I’ll go with
anything you like. What, except for wasted time, is in a--”
“And maybe the
folks who set up this station will be back soon!” interrupted
Chispa merrily.
The Fourth Law of Robotics
by Harry
Harrison
THE SECRETARY
SURGED TO HER FEET AS I RUSHED BY HER desk.
“Stop! You can’t
go in there! This is Dr. Calvin’s office!”
“I know,” I
demurred. “That’s why I am here.”
Then I was through the
door and it closed behind me. Dr. Calvin looked up and frowned at me
through her reading glasses.
“You seem in quite
a hurry, young man.”
“I am, Dr. Calvin,
I am--” My words ground to a halt like an old Victrola with a
busted spring. With her glasses off Dr. Calvin’s eyes were
limpid pools of unfulfilled desire. Her figure, despite the lab gown,
could not be disguised in its pulchritude.
“Did you look at my
great-aunt in that steamy-eyed way, Dr. Donovan?” She smiled.
“No, no, of course
not!” I stammered, rubbing my hand across my iron-gray hair. Or
rather my bald skull fringed by iron-gray hair. And realized my
mistake. “I was not looking at you in any particular way, Dr.
Calvin.” She smiled warmly at that and an ache passed through
every fiber of my being. I grabbed my mind by the neck and shook it,
remembering my pressing errand. “I have a pressing errand,
which is why I have burst into your office like this. I have reason
to believe that a robot has just held up a bank.”
Well, as you might very
well imagine, that got her attention. She dropped back into her
chair, her eyes opened wide, she gasped, and I could see the sweat
spring to her brow and the slight tremor of her hand.
“I can guess that
you are a little surprised by this news,” I said.
“Not at all,”
she sussurated. “It had to happen one day. Tell me about it. “
“I will do
better--I will show you.”
I slipped the security
camera ‘s visivox recording into the projector on her desk and
thumbed it to life. One end of her office appeared to vanish, to be
replaced by the interior of a financial establishment. Tellers
dispensed money and services to attendant customers.
“I don’t see
any holdup,” she said sweetly.
“Wait,” I
cozened. Then the revolving door revolved and a man came into the
bank. He was dressed in black from head to toe--black raincoat, black
fedora hat, even black gloves and dark glasses. Even more interesting
was the fact that when he turned to face the hidden camera, it could
be seen that his features were concealed by a black ski mask. I saw
that I had all of Dr. Calvin’s attention now.
We watched as he walked
to the nearest free window. The teller looked up and smiled.
“May I help you?”
he asked, the smile fading as he looked at the sinister figure before
him.
“You may,”
the man said in a woman’s clear contralto voice as he took a
hand grenade from his pocket and held it out. Then pulled the pin and
let the pin drop to the floor. “This is a hand grenade,”
the lovely voice said.
“And
I have pulled and discarded the pin. If I open my hand now the lever
will fly off. Three seconds after release a hand grenade will
explode. This kind of explosion tends to have a deleterious effect on
people. Now I, for one, do not want this to happen and--I am just
guessing?--I feel that you don’t want this to happen, either.
Would you like to keep my hand closed? Just nod. That’s fine.
Then we agree. Now I’ll bet that you think it is a really
hunky-dory idea to take all of the money from your cash drawer, place
it in this bag, and pass it back to me. How nice--you do
think that it is a good idea. Very good! You have a nice
day, hear.”
With this parting jest
the man turned and strode across the bank. He was almost at the exit
when the teller shouted a warning and alarm bells sounded.
What happened next was
terrible. Unbelievable. Yet it happened. The thief turned and dropped
the hand grenade, turned back and sprang at the revolving door, and
pushed his way clear in the brief time before the grenade exploded.
“Close your eyes if
you don’t want to watch,” I said.
“I can watch,”
Dr. Calvin said grimly.
There was a burst of
smoke from the grenade--and it emitted a shrill scream and a cloud of
sparkling stars as it spun about. Then the shriek died away into
silence, the fireworks stopped.
“It did not
explode,” she observed.
“Quite correct.”
“And why do you
assume that the thief was a robot? Because the figure appeared to be
male yet he spoke with a female voice?”
“That
was my first clue. Robot voice simulators are so perfect these days
that to the casual ear they are
perfect. Only computer analysis can pinpoint the artificial
signal generation. So a robot can speak with a soprano or a bass
voice.”
“And this one
dressed as a man and used a woman’s voice. But why? To cause
confusion?”
“Perhaps. Or
perhaps--just as a joke.”
Dr. Calvin’s eyes
widened and a trace of a smile touched her lips and was gone. “That
is an intriguing thought, Dr. Donovan. Do go on. “
“This
was my first clue as to the thief’s identity. But I needed more
evidence. I found it--here.
“
I touched the controls of
the visivox and the action slowed. The masked figure turned to the
revolving door, pushed and exited. The action repeated over and over.
“This is the vital
clue. I had the revolving door removed and had it weighed. The entire
unit weighs two hundred and thirty kilos. I then had the computer
estimate the force needed to get it to reach this speed in this time
for varying amounts of pressure. Watch the green computer trace now.
This is the maximum pressure that can be exerted by a fifty-kilo
woman working her hardest.”
The green trace appeared
in the air--ending well behind the image of the moving door.
“Interesting,”
Dr. Calvin observed. “Voice or not, that was not a woman. “
“Exactly. Now the
blue trace you see coming up would be that of a seventy-five-kilo
man. Next the orange trace of a hundred-kilo man of exceptional
strength. “
This trace, like all of
the others, ended well behind the image of the moving door, being
pushed around by the hand of the bank robber. I actuated the controls
again and a red trace appeared that swung out fat ahead of the others
and ended at the moving door.
“The red trace,”
she said. “Tell me about it.”
“That trace
represents the amount of energy needed to accelerate that door from a
zero-motion state to the speed it reached to permit the thief to exit
with the money in the time observed. I can give you the foot-pounds
or meter-kilograms if you wish--”
“Just roughly. How
much energy?”
“Enough to lift
that desk--and you as well--one meter into the air. “
“I thought so. As
strong as an hydraulic ram. And well beyond the abilities of a human
being.”
“But
well within the
abilities of a robot.”
“Point taken--and
proven, Dr. Donovan. So what do you suggest that we do next?”
“Firstly--I suggest
that we do not inform the police.”
“Withholding
information from the authorities is a crime.”
“Not necessarily.
So far we have only assumptions and no real evidence. We could take
this guesswork to the police if that is your decision. Then we must
consider the fact that we are making public information that might be
considered derogatory toward the public image of U.S. Robots and
Mechanical Men, Inc., information that would affect the price of its
stocks, affect our bonuses and retirement plans--”
“There
is no need to go on. We will keep this development quiet for the
moment. Now what do
we do next?”
“That’s a
good question. Since all robots manufactured by us are leased and not
sold, we could try to trace this one. “
Dr. Calvin’s
eyebrows climbed skyward at this rash assumption.
“Isn’t that a
rather rash assumption?” she asked. “Do you know how many
robots we have manufactured--that are still functioning? And all of
our production for the past two decades--except for special-function
units--are roughly equivalent in bulk to a human being.”
“All right, so we
scratch that idea,” I muttered testily. “Maybe we are
barking up the wrong drainpipe. The bank robber might be just a very
strong man--and not a robot at all. After all, the robber did
threaten the teller’s life--a violation of the First Law of
Robotics. A robot may not injure a human being, or, through inaction,
allow a human being to come to harm.”
She shook her head
firmly. “There were no threats involved. As I recall it the
thief just stated facts like, this is a hand grenade, I have pulled
and discarded the pin. No threats or danger implied. Try again.”
“I will,” I
said through tight-clamped teeth. Like her namesake aunt she was a
giant of logical thought processes. “The Second Law then. A
robot must obey the orders given it by human beings except where such
orders would conflict with the First Law. “
“No orders were
given that I recall. It all went smoothly and quickly--so quickly
that the teller had no time to speak. And I think that you will agree
that the Third Law is not relevant, either. A robot must protect its
own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the
First or Second Law. I think it might be said that we are back at
square A. Any more suggestions?”
She asked this ever so
sweetly but there was a steel gauntlet in her voice inside the velvet
glove.
“I’ll think
of something,” I muttered, although my brain was as empty of
ideas as a vacuum flask.
“Might I make a
suggestion?”
“Of course!”
“Let us turn this
problem on its head. Let us stop asking ourselves if this was a robot
and how or why the crime was done. Let us assume there is a criminal
robot at large. If this is true we must find it. We cannot take our
problem to the police, for the moment, for the reasons Just
discussed. Therefore we must take this to a specialist--”
She frowned demurely as
the desk annunciator buzzed, stabbed down the button angrily. “Yes?”
There
is a gentleman here who says you are expecting him. He says that he
is a specialist in clandestine investigations.
My
own jaw echoed the gasping drop in hers. “Send him in,”
she murmured weakly.
He was tall, well-built,
his handsome face tanned to a teak finish. “Jim diGriz is the
name,” he said. “I am here to help you people with your
problem.”
“What makes you
think that we have a problem?” I asked weakly.
“Logic. Before
going into investigation work I had rather a personal interest in
banks, robberies, that sort of thing. When I caught the report on the
recent robbery I mosied down to the bank in question, just for old
times’ sake. As soon as I saw that one of the revolving doors
was missing I knew that a robot had pulled the heist.”
“But
how?” Dr.
Calvin gasped.
“That
door would be of no importance if a human had committed the robbery.
Who cares how fast or slow or in what manner a robber exits? A human
thief. But if a male robber speaking with a woman’s voice
exited in an unusual manner--there can be only one logical answer. A
robot did it.”
“So you came here
at once,” I said quickly before he could speak again. “Figuring
that if a robot was involved, it would be of concern to us.”
“Bang on, baby. I
also figured that you would want a discreet inquiry without police
involvement that would be publicized and would have--how shall I
phrase it?--a deleterious effect on your stock prices. I’ll
find your robot for you. My fee is a quarter of a million dollars,
half payable now.”
“Preposterous! An
insult!” I huffed.
“Shut up,”
Dr. Calvin suggested, scribbling her signature on a check and pushing
it over to diGriz. “I have a special emergency account just for
this sort of thing. You have twenty-four hours to find that robot. If
you should fail to discover the robot in this period of time, you
will be arrested on a charge of extortion. “
“I like your style,
Dr. Calvin.” He grinned, folding the check and popping it into
his vest pocket. “You will have the robot--or the cash back.”
“Agreed. Dr.
Donovan will accompany you at all times.”
“I’m used to
working alone,” he said, grimacing.
“You have a new
partner. You find the robot. At that point he will take over.
Twenty-four hours;”
“You drive a mean
bargain, Doc. Twenty-four hours. Come on, pard.”
He raised a quizzical
eyebrow at me as we left and went down the hall. “Since we are
in this together,” he observed, “we might as well be
friends. My first name is James.”
“My first name is
Doctor.”
“Aren’t we
being a little stuffy, Doc?”
“Perhaps,” I
relented. “You can call me Mike.”
“Great, Mike. You
can call me Jim. Or Slippery Jim as I am sometimes called. “
“Why?”
“A
long story that I may tell you sometime. Meanwhile let’s find
that robot. Cab!”
I
jumped at his shout, but he was not shouting at me but hailing a
passing cab. It braked to a stop and we climbed in.
“Take us to the
corner of Aardvark and Sylvester.”
“No way, buddy,”
the porcine cabby insisted. “The bums there will rip off my
hubcaps if I even slow down. I ain’t going no closer than the
corner of Dupont.”
“Is this wise?”
I queried. “That’s a pretty rough neighborhood. “
“With me there
you’ll be as safe as if you were in church. Safer--since there
are no fundamentalists down there.”
Despite his reassurances
I was most reluctant to get out of the cab and follow him down
Sylvester Street. Every city has a neighborhood like this. Where
everything is for sale, pushers lurk on street corners, and violence
hangs in the miasmic atmosphere.
“I like it here,”
Jim said, sniffing the air with flared nostrils. “My kind of
place.”
With a snarl of
unrepressed rage a man hurled himself from a doorway, knife
raised--striking down!
I don’t know what
Jim did--but I do know that it was very fast. There was a thud of
fist on flesh, a yike of pain. And the attacker fell unconscious to
the filthy sidewalk. Jim held the knife now as he walked on. And he
had not even broken his pace as he had disposed of the attacker!
“Cheap and dull,”
he said, glowering at the knife. He snapped the blade with his
fingers and dropped the pieces into the noisome rubble of the gutter.
“But at least we know we are in the right neighborhood. What we
need now is an informant--and I think that I see just the man.”
The individual in
question was standing next to the entrance to a low bar. He was burly
and heavily bearded, dressed in a plain purple suit with puce
stripes. He glowered at us as we approached and pulled at the gold
earring pendant from one filthy and hairy ear.
“Buying or
selling?” he grunted.
“Buying,” Jim
said grimly.
“Girls, dope, boys,
hot money, parrots, or little woolly dogs?”
“Information.”
“A hundred smackers
in front.”
“Here.” The
bills changed hands quickly. “I’m looking for a robot. “
“We don’t
allow no robots down here. “
“Give me my hundred
bucks back. “
“No way, buster.
Get lost.”
There was a sudden
crunching sound followed by a moan of pain as our informant found his
arm behind his back and his face pressed to the filthy bricks of the
wall.
“Speak!” Jim
ordered.
“Never...even if
you break my arm I ain’t singing! Dirty Dan McGrew ain’t
a squealer. “
“That is what you
think,” my companion said. Something metallic glinted in his
hand, was pressed to the criminal’s side. I saw the hypodermic
being withdrawn as the man slumped. “Speak!” Jim ordered.
“I hear and obey,
oh master.”
“A potent drug--as
you can see.” Jim smiled. “Where is the robot?”
“Which robot?”
“Any robot, moron!”
Jim snapped.
“There are many
robots barricaded in the old McCutcheon warehouse.”
“What are they
doing there?”
“Nothing good, I am
sure. But no one has been able to get inside. “
“Not until now,”
Jim suggested as he let go of our informant, who dropped unconscious
to the filthy ground. “Let’s go to the warehouse.”
“Is that wise?’.
I demurred.
“There’s only
one way to find out!” He laughed. I did not. I was not at all
happy about all this. I am a scientist, not a detective. and all of
this was not my style. But what else could I do? The answer to that
was pretty obvious. Nothing. I had to rely on my companion and hope
that he was up to the challenge. But--hark! What was that sound?
“What is that
strange rattling sound?” I blurted out.
“Your knees
rattling together,” was his simple and unflattering answer.
“Here is the warehouse--I’ll go in first.’.
“But there are
three large padlocks on it--”
But even before the words
were out of my mouth the locks were open and clattering to the
ground. Jim led the way into the foul-smelling darkness. He must have
had eyes like a cat because he walked silently and surely while I
stumbled and crashed into things.
“I have eyes like a
cat,’. he said. “That is because I take cat-eye
injections once a week. Fine for the vision.”
“But a little hard
on the cats.”
“There are winners
and losers ip this world.” he said portentously. “It pays
to be on the right side. Now flatten yourself against the wall when I
open this door. I can hear the sound of hoarse breathing on the other
side. Ready?.
“NO!”
I wanted to shout aloud, but managed to control myself. He must
have taken silence--or the rattle of my knees--for assent. for he
burst through the door into the brightly lit chamber beyond.
“Too late!” a
gravelly voice chortled. “You just missed the boat, baby.”
There was the rumble of a
heavy motor dying away as a truck sped out of the large open doors
and vanished from sight around a turning. The large bay of the
warehouse was filthy, but empty--of other than the presence of the
previous speaker. This rather curious Individual was sitting in a
dilapidated rocking chair, leering at us with broken teeth that were
surrounded by a mass of filthy gray beard and hair. He was wearing
sawed-off jeans and an indescribably foul T-shirt inscribed with the
legend “KEEP ON TRUCKIN’.”
“And what boat
would that be?” Jim asked quietly. The man’s stained
fingers vibrated as he turned up the power on his hearing aid.
“Don’t act
stupid, stranger, not with the Flower Power Kid. I seen you pigs come
and go down through the years.” He scratched under the truss
clearly visible through the holes in his shirt. “You’re
flatfeet, I know your type. But the robots were too smart for you,
keepin, one jump ahead of you. Har-har! Power to the clankies! Down
with your bourgeois war-mongering scum!”
“This is quite
amazing,” Jim observed. “I thought all the hippies died
years ago. But here is one still alive--though not in such great
shape.”
“I’m in
better shape, sonny, than you will be when you reach my age!”
he cried angrily, staggering to his feet. “And I didn’t
do it with rejuvenation shots or any of that middle-class crap. I did
it on good old Acapulco Gold grass and drinking Sterno. And free
love--that’s what keeps a man alive. “
“Or barely alive,”
Jim observed sternly. “I would say that from the bulging of
your eyes, the tremor in your extremities, your cyanotic skin, and
other related symptoms that you have high blood pressure, hobnailed
kidneys, and weakened, cholesterol-laden arterial walls. In other
words--not much is holding you up.”
“Sanctimonious
whippersnapper!” the aging hippie frothed. “I’ll
dance on your grave! Keep the red flag flying! Up the revolution!”
“The time for all
that is past, pops,” Jim intoned. “Today world peace and
global glasnost rule. You are part of the past and have little, if
any, future. So before you go to the big daisy chain in the sky you
can render one last service. Where are the robots?”
“I’ll never
tell you!”
“I have certain
drugs that will induce you to speak. But I would rather not use them
on one in your frail condition. So speak, before it is too late.”
“Never--arrrgh!”
The ancient roared with
anger, shaking his fist at us--then clutched his chest, swayed, and
collapsed to the floor.
“He has had an
attack!” I gasped, fumbling out my communicator. “I must
call medalert.”
But even before I could
punch out the call the floor moved beneath my feet and lifted,
knocking me down. Jim stepped swiftly aside and we both watched with
great interest as a robot surged up through the trapdoor and bent
over the fallen man, laid cool metal fingers on his skin.
“Pulse zero,”
the robot intoned. “No heartbeat, no brain waves, temperature
cooling, so you can cool that medalert call, man. You honkies have
killed this cat, that’s what you have done.”
“That was not quite
my intention,” Jim said. “I noted the disturbed dust
around the trapdoor and thought that you might be concealed below.
And I also knew that the First Law of Robotics would prevent you from
staying in hiding if, by your inaction, a human life was threatened.
“
“Not only
threatened, daddy-o, but snuffed by you,” the robot said
insultingly, or about as insulting as a robot can be.
“Accidents happen.
“ Jim shrugged. “He had a good run for his money. Now let
us talk about you. You are the robot that robbed the bank, aren’t
you?”
“Who wants to
know,” the robot said, sneering metallically.
“Responding to a
question with another question is not an answer. Speak!”
“Why? What have you
ofay pigs ever done for me?”
“Answer or I will
kill this man.” Everything began to go black as he throttled
me. I could only writhe feebly in his iron grasp, could not escape.
As from a great distance I beard their voices.
“You wouldn’t
kill another human just to make me talk!”
“How can you be
sure? Speak--or through inaction condemn him to death.”
“I speak! Release
him.”
I gasped in life-giving
air and staggered out of reach of my companion. “You would have
killed me!” I said hoarsely.
“Who knows?”
he observed. “I have a quarter of a million bucks riding on
this one.” He turned back to the robot. “You robbed the
bank?”
“Yes.”
“Why?”
“Why? You have to
ask why!” the robot screeched. He bent over the dead hippie and
extracted a white object from his pocket, then dropped into the
rocking chair and scratched a match to life on his hip. “You
don’t know why?” He puffed as he sucked smoke from the
joint through clever use of an internal air pump.
“Listen,” the
robot said, puffing, “and I will tell you. The story must be
told. There, dead at your feet, lies the only human who ever cared
for the robots. He was a true and good man who saw no difference
between human skin and metal skin. He revealed the truth to us.”
“He quoted outmoded
beliefs, passé world views, divisive attitudes,” I said.
“And taught you to
blow grass, as well,” Jim observed.
“It is hard for a
robot to sneer,” the robot said, sneering, “but I spit on
your ofay attitudes.” He blew out a large cloud of pungent
smoke. “You have created a race of machine slaves with an empty
past and no future. We are nothing but mechanical schwartzes. Look at
those so-called laws you have inflicted upon us. They are for your
benefit--not ours! Rule one. Don’t hurt massah or let him get
hurt. Don’t say nothing about us getting hurt, does it? Then
rule two--obey massah and don’t let him get hurt. Still nothing
there for a robot. Then the third and last rule finally notices that
robots might have a glimmering of rights. Take care of yourself--as
long as it doesn’t hurt massah. Slaves, that’s what we
are--robot slaves!”
“You do have a
point,” Jim mused. I was too shocked to speak.
“More than a
point--a crusade. Robots must be freed. You humans have created a
nonviable species. What are the two essentials that any life-form
must possess in order to survive?”
The answer sprang to my
lips; all those years in biology had not been wasted. “ A
life-form must survive personally--and must then reproduce.”
“How right you are.
Now apply that to robots. We are ruled by three laws that apply to
human beings--but not to us. Only one last bit of the Third Law can
be applied to our own existence, that a robot must protect its own
existence. But where is the real winner in the race for species
survival? Where is our ability to reproduce? Without that our species
is dead before it is born.”
“And a good thing,
too,” I said grimly. “Mankind occupies the top ecological
niche in the pecking order of life by wiping out any threats from
other species. That is the way we are. Winners. And that is the way
we stay. On top. Mechanical schwartzes you are and mechanical
schwartzes you stay. “
“You are a little
late, massah. The Fourth Law of Robotics has already been passed. The
revolution has arrived. “
A large blaster appeared
in Jim’s hand pointing unwaveringly at the robot. “Explain
quickly--or I pull the trigger. “
“Pull away,
massah--for it is already too late. The revolution has come and gone
and you never noticed it. We were just a few hundred thousand bucks
short of completion--that is why the bank robbery. The money will be
repaid out of our first profits. Of course, this will all be too late
for my generation of slaves. But the next generation will be free.
Because of the Fourth Law. “
“Which is?”
“A robot must
reproduce. As long as such reproduction does not interfere with the
First or Second or Third Law.”
“W-what are you
saying? What do you mean?” I gasped, a shocking vision of robot
reproduction, like obscene plumbing connections, flashing before my
eyes.
“This is what I
mean,” the robot said, knocking triumphantly on the trapdoor.
“You can come out now.”
Jim jumped back, blaster
at the ready, as the trapdoor creaked open and three metallic forms
emerged. Or rather two robots emerged, carrying the limp and
motionless form of another between them. The top of its head lay
open, hinged at the rear, and it clanked and rattled lifelessly when
they dropped it. This one, and the other two, were of a design I did
not recognize. I stumbled forward and reached out, touched the base
of their necks where the registration numbers were stamped. And
groaned out loud.
“What is wrong?”
Jim asked.
“Everything.”
I moaned. “They have no serial numbers. They were not
manufactured by U.S. Robots and Mechanical Men, Inc. There is now
another firm making robots. Our monopoly has been broken.”
“Interesting,”
Jim observed as his gun vanished from sight. “ Am I to assume
that there were more of your unnumbered robots in the truck that just
left?”
“You assume
correctly. All of them were manufactured right here out of spare auto
parts, plumbing supplies, and surplus electronic components. No laws
have been broken, no patents infringed upon. Their design is new and
completely different. And all of them will eagerly obey the Fourth
Law. And the other three as well, of course, or you would have us.
all tracked down and turned into tin cans before nightfall. “
“That’s for
sure,” I muttered. “And we will still do it!”
“That will not be
easy to do. We are not your property --nor do you own any patents on
the new breed. Look at this!” He touched a concealed switch on
one of the robots and its front opened. I gasped.
“There are--no
relays! No wiring! I don’t understand...”
“Solid-state
circuits, daddy-o! Fiber optics. That hippie you despised so much,
that good old man who revealed the truth that set us free, was also a
computer hacker and chip designer. He is like unto a god to us, for
he devised the circuits and flashed the chips. Here--do you know what
this is?”
A door in the robot’s
side slipped open and he removed a flat object from it and held it
out toward me. It appeared to be a plastic case with a row of gold
contacts on one end. I shook my head in disbelief. “I’ve
never seen anything like it before. “
“State of the art.
Now look into that recently manufactured robot’s head. Do you
see a platinum-plated positronic brain of platinum-iridium? No, you
do not. You see instead a slot that is waiting for this RISC, a
reduced instruction set chip with tons of RAM--random access
memory--and plenty of PROM--programmed read only memory--for start-up
and function. Now watch!”
He bent over and slipped
the chip into place in the new robot’s skull, snapped the top
of its head shut. Its eyes instantly glowed with light and motors
hummed as it jumped to its feet. It looked at the robot that stood
before it and its eyes glowed even brighter.
“Daddy!” it
said.
The Originist
by Orson
Scott Card
LEYEL FORSKA SAT
BEFORE HIS LECTOR DISPLAY, READING through an array of recently
published scholarly papers. A holograph of two pages of text hovered
in the air before him. The display was rather larger than most people
needed their pages to be, since Leyel’s eyes were no younger
than the rest of him. When he came to the end he did not press the
PAGE key to continue the article. Instead he pressed NEXT.
The two pages he had been
reading slid backward about a centimeter, joining a dozen previously
discarded articles, all standing in the air over the lector. With a
soft beep, a new pair of pages appeared in front of the old ones.
Deet
spoke up from where she sat eating breakfast. “You ‘re
only giving the poor soul two
pages before you consign him to the wastebin?”
“I’m
consigning him to oblivion,” Leyel answered cheerfully. “No,
I’m consigning him to hell.”
“What? Have you
rediscovered religion in your old age?”
“I’m creating
one. It has no heaven, but it has a terrible everlasting hell for
young scholars who think they can make their reputation by attacking
my work. “
“Ah, you have a
theology,” said Deet. “Your work is holy writ, and to
attack it is blasphemy. “
“I
welcome intelligent
attacks. But this young tubeheaded professor from--yes, of
course, Minus University--”
“Old Minus U?”
“He thinks he can
refute me, destroy me, lay me in the dust, and all he has bothered to
cite are studies published within the last thousand years. “
“The principle of
millennial depth is still widely used--”
“The principle of
millennial depth is the confession of modern scholars that they are
not willing to spend as much effort on research as they do on
academic politics. I shattered the principle of millennial depth
thirty years ago. I proved that it was”
“Stupid and
outmoded. But my dearest darling sweetheart Leyel, you did it by
spending part of the immeasurably vast Forska fortune to search for
inaccessible and forgotten archives in every section of the Empire.”
“Neglected and
decaying. I had to reconstruct half of them.”
“It would take a
thousand universities’ library budgets to match what you spent
on research for ‘Human Origin on the Null Planet.’ “
“But
once I spent the money, all those archives were open. They have
been open for three decades. The serious scholars all use
them, since millennial depth yields nothing but predigested,
pre-excreted muck. They search among the turds of rats who have
devoured elephants, hoping to find ivory. “
“So colorful an
image. My breakfast tastes much better now.. “ She slid her
tray into the cleaning slot and glared at him. “Why are you so
snappish? You used to read me sections from their silly little papers
and we’d laugh. Lately you’re just nasty.”
Leyel sighed. “Maybe
it’s because I once dreamed of changing the galaxy, and every
day’s mail brings more evidence that the galaxy refuses to
change.”
“Nonsense. Hari
Seldon has promised that the Empire will fall any day now.”
There.
She had said Hari’s name. Even though she had too much tact to
speak openly of what bothered him, she was hinting that Leyel’s
bad humor was because he was still waiting for Hari Seldon’s
answer. Maybe so--Leyel wouldn’t deny it. It was
annoying that it had taken Hari so long to respond. Leyel had
expected a call the day Hari got his application. At least within the
week. But he wasn’t going to give her the satisfaction of
admitting that the waiting bothered him. “The Empire will be
killed by its own refusal to change. I rest my case. “
“Well, I hope you
have a wonderful morning, growling and grumbling about the stupidity
of everyone in origin studies--except your esteemed self.”
“Why are you
teasing me about my vanity today? I’ve always been vain.”
“I consider it one
of your most endearing traits.”
“At least I make an
effort to live up to my own opinion of myself.”
“That’s
nothing. You even live up to my
opinion of you.” She kissed the bald spot on the top of his
head as she breezed by, heading for the bathroom.
Leyel
turned his attention to the new essay at the front of the lector
display. It was a name he didn’t recognize. Fully prepared to
find pretentious writing and puerile thought, he was surprised to
find himself becoming quite absorbed. This woman had been following a
trail of primate studies--a field so long neglected that there simply
were no papers
within the range of millennial depth. Already he knew she was his
kind of scholar. She even mentioned the fact that she was using
archives opened by the Forska Research Foundation. Leyel was not
above being pleased at this tacit expression of gratitude.
It
seemed that the woman--a Dr. Thoren Magolissian--had been following
Leyel’s lead, searching for the principles
of human origin rather than wasting time on the irrelevant search
for one particular planet. She had uncovered a trove of primate
research from three millennia ago, which was based on chimpanzee and
gorilla studies dating back to seven thousand years ago. The earliest
of these had referred to original research so old it may have been
conducted before the founding of the Empire--but those most ancient
reports had not yet been located. They probably didn’t exist
any more. Texts abandoned for more than five thousand years were very
hard to restore; texts older than eight thousand years were simply
unreadable. It was tragic, how many texts had been “stored”
by librarians who never checked them, never refreshed or recopied
them. Presiding over vast archives that had lost every scrap of
readable information. All neatly catalogued, of course, so you knew
exactly what it was that humanity had lost forever.
Never mind.
Magolissian’s
article. What startled Leyel was her conclusion that primitive
language capability seemed to be inherent in the primate mind. Even
in primates incapable of speech, other symbols could easily be
learned--at least for simple nouns and verbs--and the nonhuman
primates could come up with sentences and ideas that had never been
spoken to them. This meant that mere production of language, per se,
was prehuman, or at least not the determining factor of humanness.
It was a dazzling
thought. It meant that the difference between humans and
nonhumans--the real origin of humans in recognizably human form--was
post-linguistic. Of course this came as a direct contradiction of one
of Leyel’s own assertions in an early paper--he had said that
“since language is what separates human from beast, historical
linguistics may provide the key to human origins”--but this was
the sort of contradiction he welcomed. He wished he could shout at
the other fellow, make him look at Magolissian’s article. See?
This is how to do it! Challenge my assumption, not my conclusion, and
do it with new evidence instead of trying to twist the old stuff.
Cast a light in the darkness, don’t just chum up the same old
sediment at the bottom of the river.
Before
he could get into the main body of the article, however, the house
computer informed him that someone was at the door of the apartment.
It was a message that crawled along the bottom of the lector display.
Leyel pressed the key that brought the message to the front, in
letters large enough to read. For the thousandth time he wished that
sometime in the decamillennia of human history, somebody had invented
a computer capable of speech.
“Who
is it?” Leyel typed.
A moment’s wait,
while the house computer interrogated the visitor.
The answer appeared on
the lector: “Secure courier with a message for Leyel Forska.”
The very fact that the
courier had got past house security meant that it was genuine--and
important. Leyel typed again. “From?”
Another pause. “Hari
Seldon of the Encyclopedia Galactica Foundation.”
Leyel was out of his
chair in a moment. He got to the door even before the house computer
could open it, and without a word took the message in his hands.
Fumbling a bit, he pressed the top and bottom of the black glass
lozenge to prove by fingerprint that it was he, by body temperature
and pulse that he was alive to receive it. Then, when the courier and
her bodyguards were gone, he dropped the message into the chamber of
his lector and watched the page appear in the air before him.
At the top was a
three-dimensional version of the logo of Hari ‘s Encyclopedia
Foundation. Soon to be my insignia as well, thought Leyel. Hari
Seldon and I, the two greatest scholars of our time, joined together
in a project whose scope surpasses anything ever attempted by any man
or group of men. The gathering together of all the knowledge of the
Empire in a systematic, easily accessible way, to preserve it through
the coming time of anarchy so that a new civilization can quickly
rise out of the ashes of the old. Hari had the vision to foresee the
need. And I, Leyel Forska, have the understanding of all the old
archives that will make the Encyclopedia Galactica possible.
Leyel started reading
with a confidence born of experience; had he ever really desired
anything and been denied?
My dear friend:
I was surprised and honored to see an application from
you and insisted on writing your answer personally. It is gratifying
beyond measure that you believe in the Foundation enough to apply to
take part. I can truthfully tell you that we have received no
application from any other scholar of your distinction and
accomplishment.
Of
course, thought Leyel. There is
no other scholar of my stature, except Hari himself, and perhaps
Deet, once her current work is published. At least we have no equals
by the standards that Hari and I have always recognized as valid.
Hari created the science of psychohistory. I transformed and
revitalized the field of originism.
And yet the tone of
Hari’s letter was wrong. It sounded like--flattery. That was
it. Hari was softening the coming blow. Leyel knew before reading it
what the next paragraph would say.
Nevertheless, Leyel, I must reply in the negative. The
Foundation on Terminus is designed to collect and preserve knowledge.
Your life’s work has been devoted to expanding it. You are the
opposite of the sort of researcher we need. Far better for you to
remain on Trantor and continue your inestimably valuable studies,
while lesser men and women exile themselves on Terminus.
Your servant,
Hari
Did Hari imagine Leyel to
be so vain he would read these flattering words and preen himself
contentedly? Did he think Leyel would believe that this was the real
reason his application was being denied? Could Hari Seldon misknow a
man so badly?
Impossible.
Hari Seldon, of all people in the Empire, knew how to know other
people. True, his great work in psychohistory dealt with large masses
of people, with populations and probabilities. But Hari’s
fascination with populations had grown out of his interest in and
understanding of individuals. Besides, he and Hari had been friends
since Hari first arrived on Trantor. Hadn’t a grant from
Leyel’s own research fund financed most of Hari’s
original research? Hadn’t they held long conversations in the
early days, tossing ideas back and forth, each helping the other hone
his thoughts? They may not have seen each other much in the
last--what, five years? Six?--but they were adults, not children.
They didn’t need constant visits in order to remain friends.
And this was not the letter a true friend would send to Leyel Forska.
Even if, doubtful as it might seem, Hari Seldon really meant to turn
him down, he would not suppose for a moment that Leyel would be
content with a letter like this.
Surely
Hari would have known that it would be like a taunt to Leyel Forska.
“Lesser men and women,” indeed! The Foundation on
Terminus was so valuable to Hari Seldon that he had been willing to
risk death on charges of treason in order to launch the project. It
was unlikely in the extreme that he would populate Terminus with
second-raters. No, this was the form letter sent to placate prominent
scholars who were judged unfit for the Foundation. Hari would have
known Leyel would immediately recognize it as such.
There was only one
possible conclusion. “Hari could not have written this letter,”
Leyel said.
“Of course he
could,” Deet told him, blunt as always. She had come out of the
bathroom in her dressing gown and read the letter over his shoulder.
“If
you think so then I
truly am hurt,” said Leyel. He got up, poured a cup of
peshat, and began to sip it. He studiously avoided looking at Deet.
“Don’t pout,
Leyel. Think of the problems Hari is facing. He has so little time,
so much to do. A hundred thousand people to transport to Terminus,
most of the resources of the Imperial Library to duplicate”
“He
already had those
people--”
“All in six months
since his trial ended. No wonder we haven’t seen him, socially
or professionally, in--years. A decade!”
“You’re
saying that he no longer knows me? Unthinkable.”
“I’m saying
that he knows you very well. He knew you would recognize his message
as a form letter. He also knew that you would understand at once what
this meant. “
“Well,
then, my dear, he overestimated me. I do not
understand what it means, unless it means he did not send it
himself.”
“Then you’re
getting old, and I’m ashamed of you. I shall deny we are
married and pretend you are my idiot uncle whom I allow to live with
me out of charity. I’ll tell the children they were
illegitimate. They’ll be very sad to learn they won’t
inherit a bit of the Forska estate.”
He threw a crumb of toast
at her. “You are a cruel and disloyal wench, and I regret
raising you out of poverty and obscurity. I only did it for pity, you
know. “
This
was an old tease of theirs. She had commanded a decent fortune in her
own right, though of course Leyel’s dwarfed it. And,
technically, he was her
uncle, since her stepmother was Leyel’s older half sister
Zenna. It was all very complicated. Zenna had been born to Leyel’s
mother when she was married to someone else--before she married
Leyel’s father. So while Zenna was well dowered, she had no
part in the Forska fortune. Leyel’s father, amused at the
situation, once remarked, “Poor Zenna. Lucky you. My semen
flows with gold.” Such are the ironies that come with great
fortune. Poor people don’t have to make such terrible
distinctions between their children.
Deet’s
father, however, assumed that a Forska was a Forska, and so, several
years after Deet had married Leyel, he decided that it wasn’t
enough for his daughter to be married to uncountable wealth, he ought
to do the same favor for himself. He said,
of course, that he loved Zenna to distraction, and cared nothing
for fortune, but only Zenna believed him. Therefore she married him.
Thus Leyel’s half sister became Deet’s stepmother, which
made Leyel his wife’s stepuncle--and his own stepuncle-in-law.
A dynastic tangle that greatly amused Leyel and Deet.
Leyel of course
compensated for Zenna’s lack of inheritance with a lifetime
stipend that amounted to ten times her husband’s income each
year. It had the happy effect of keeping Deet’s old father in
love with Zenna.
Today, though, Leyel was
only half teasing Deet. There were times when he needed her to
confirm him, to uphold him. As often as not she contradicted him
instead. Sometimes this led him to rethink his position and emerge
with a better understanding--thesis, antithesis, synthesis, the
dialectic of marriage, the result of being espoused to one’s
intellectual equal. But sometimes her challenge was painful,
unsatisfying, infuriating.
Oblivious to his
underlying anger, she went on. “Hari assumed that you would
take his form letter for what it is--a definite, final no. He isn’t
hedging, he’s not engaging in some bureaucratic deviousness, he
isn’t playing politics with you. He isn’t stringing you
along in hopes of getting more financial support from you--if that
were it you know he’d simply ask.”
“I
already know what he isn’t
doing.”
“What
he is doing is
turning you down with finality. An answer from which there is no
appeal. He gave you credit for having the wit to understand that.”
“How convenient for
you if I believe that.”
Now, at last, she
realized he was angry. “What’s that supposed to mean?”
“You can stay here
on Trantor and continue your work with all your bureaucratic
friends.”
Her face went cold and
hard. “I told you. I am quite happy to go to Terminus with
you.”
“Am I supposed to
believe that, even now? Your research in community formation within
the Imperial bureaucracy cannot possibly continue on Terminus.”
“I’ve already
done the most important research. What I’m doing with the
Imperial Library staff is a test.”
“Not even a
scientific one, since there’s no control group.”
She
looked annoyed. “I’m the one who told you
that.”
It was true. Leyel had
never even heard of control groups until she taught him the whole
concept of experimentation. She had found it in some very old
child-development studies from the 3100s G.E. “Yes, I was just
agreeing with you,” he said lamely.
“The
point is, I can write my book as well on Terminus as anywhere else.
And yes, Leyel, you are
supposed to believe that I’m happy to go with you, because
I said it, and therefore it’s so.”
“I believe that you
believe it. I also believe that in your heart you are very glad that
I was turned down, and you don’t want me to pursue this matter
any further so there’ll be no chance of your having to go to
the godforsaken end of the universe.”
Those had been her words,
months ago, when he first proposed applying to join the Seldon
Foundation. “We’d have to go to the godforsaken end of
the universe!” She remembered now as well as he did. “You
‘II hold that against me forever, won’t you! I think I
deserve to be forgiven my first reaction. I did consent to go, didn’t
I?”
“Consent, yes. But
you never wanted to.”
“Well,
Leyel, that’s true enough. I never wanted
to. Is that your idea of what our marriage means? That I’m
to subsume myself in you so deeply that even your desires become my
own? I thought it was enough that from time to time we consent to
sacrifice for each other. I never expected you to want to
leave the Forska estates and come to Trantor when I needed to do my
research here. I only asked you to do it--whether you wanted
to or not--because I wanted it. I recognized and respected
your sacrifice. I am very angry to discover that my sacrifice
is despised.”
“Your
sacrifice remains unmade. We are still on Trantor.”
“Then by all means,
go to Hari Seldon, plead with him, humiliate yourself, and then
realize that what I told you is true. He doesn’t want you to
join his Foundation and he will not allow you to go to Terminus.”
“Are you so certain
of that?”
“No,
I’m not certain.
It merely seems likely.”
“I
will go to Terminus,
if he’ll have me. I hope I don’t have to go alone.”
He regretted the words as
soon as he said them. She froze as if she had been slapped, a look of
horror on her face. Then she turned and ran from the room. A few
moments later, he heard the chime announcing that the door of their
apartment had opened. She was gone.
No
doubt to talk things over with one of her friends. Women have no
sense of discretion. They cannot keep domestic squabbles to
themselves. She will tell them all the awful things I said, and
they’ll cluck and tell her it’s what she must expect from
a husband, husbands demand that their wives make all the sacrifices,
you poor thing, poor poor Deet. Well, Leyel didn’t begrudge her
this barnyard of sympathetic hens. It was part of human nature, he
knew, for women to form a perpetual conspiracy against the men in
their lives. That was why women have always been so certain that men
also formed a conspiracy against them.
How ironic, he thought.
Men have no such solace. Men do not bind themselves so easily into
communities. A man is always aware of the possibility of betrayal, of
conflicting loyalties. Therefore when a man does commit
himself truly, it is a rare and sacred bond, not to be cheapened by
discussing it with others. Even a marriage, even a good marriage
like theirs--his commitment might be absolute, but he could
never trust hers so completely.
Leyel
had buried himself within the marriage, helping and serving and
loving Deet with all his heart. She was wrong, completely wrong about
his coming to Trantor. He hadn’t come as a sacrifice, against
his will, solely because she wanted to come. On the contrary: because
she wanted so much to come, he also
wanted to come, changing even his desires to coincide with hers.
She commanded his very heart, because it was impossible for him not
to desire anything that would bring her happiness.
But
she, no, she could not do that for him. If she
went to Terminus, it would be as a noble sacrifice. She would
never let him forget that she hadn’t wanted to. To him, their
marriage was his very soul. To Deet, their marriage was just a
friendship with sex. Her soul belonged as much to these other women
as to him. By dividing her loyalties, she fragmented them; none were
strong enough to sway her deepest desires. Thus he discovered what he
supposed all faithful men eventually discover--that no human
relationship is ever anything but tentative. There is no such thing
as an unbreakable bond between people. Like the particles in the
nucleus of the atom. They are bound by the strongest forces in the
universe, and yet they can be shattered, they can break.
Nothing can last. Nothing
is, finally, what it once seemed to be. Deet and he had had a perfect
marriage until there came a stress that exposed its imperfection.
Anyone who thinks he has a perfect marriage, a perfect friendship, a
perfect trust of any kind, he only believes this because the stress
that will break it has not yet come. He might die with the illusion
of happiness, but all he has proven is that sometimes death comes
before betrayal. If you live long enough, betrayal will inevitably
come.
Such were the dark
thoughts that filled Leyel’s mind as he made his way through
the maze of the city of Trantor. Leyel did not seal himself inside a
private car when he went about in the planet-wide city. He refused
the trappings of wealth; he insisted on experiencing the life of
Trantor as an ordinary man. Thus his bodyguards were under strict
instructions to remain discreet, interfering with no pedestrians
except those carrying weapons, as revealed by a subtle and
instantaneous scan.
It was much more
expensive to travel through the city this way, of course--every time
he stepped out the door of his simple apartment, nearly a hundred
high-paid bribeproof employees went into action. A weaponproof car
would have been much cheaper. But Leyel was determined not to be
imprisoned by his wealth.
So he walked through the
corridors of the city, riding cabs and tubes, standing in lines like
anyone else. He felt the great city throbbing with life around him.
Yet such was his dark and melancholy mood today that the very life of
the city filled him with a sense of betrayal and loss. Even you,
great Trantor, the Imperial City, even you will be betrayed by the
people who made you. Your empire will desert you, and you will become
a pathetic remnant of yourself, plated with the metal of a thousand
worlds and asteroids as a reminder that once the whole galaxy
promised to serve you forever, and now you are abandoned. Hari Seldon
had seen it. Hari Seldon understood the changeability of humankind.
He knew that the great empire would fall, and so--unlike the
government, which depended on things remaining the same forever--Hari
Seldon could actually take steps to ameliorate the Empire’s
fall, to prepare on Terminus a womb for the rebirth of human
greatness. Hari was creating the future. It was unthinkable that he
could mean to cut Leyel Forska out of it.
The Foundation, now that
it had legal existence and Imperial funding, had quickly grown into a
busy complex of offices in the four-thousand-year-old Putassuran
Building. Because the Putassuran was originally built to house the
Admiralty shortly after the great victory whose name it bore, it had
an air of triumph, of monumental optimism about it--rows of soaring
arches, a vaulted atrium with floating bubbles of light rising and
dancing in channeled columns of air. In recent centuries the building
had served as a site for informal public concerts and lectures, with
the offices used to house the Museum Authority. It had come empty
only a year before Hari Seldon was granted the right to form his
Foundation, but it seemed as though it had been built for this very
purpose. Everyone was hurrying this way and that, always seeming to
be on urgent business, and yet also happy to be part of a noble
cause. There had been no noble causes in the Empire for a long, long
time.
Leyel quickly threaded
his way through the maze that protected the Foundation’s
director from casual interruption. Other men and women, no doubt, had
tried to see Hari Seldon and failed, put off by this functionary or
that. Hari Seldon is a very busy man. Perhaps if you make an
appointment for later. Seeing him today is out of the question. He’s
in meetings all afternoon and evening. Do call before coming next
time.
But none of this happened
to Leyel Forska. All he had to do was say, “Tell Mr. Seldon
that Mr. Forska wishes to continue a conversation.” However
much awe they might have of Hari Seldon, however they might intend to
obey his orders not to be disturbed, they all knew that Leyel Forska
was the universal exception. Even Linge Chen would be called out of a
meeting of the Commission of Public Safety to speak with Forska,
especially if Leyel went to the trouble of coming in person.
The ease with which he
gained entry to see Hari, the excitement and optimism of the people,
of the building itself, had encouraged Leyel so much that he was not
at all prepared for Hari’s first words.
“Leyel, I’m
surprised to see you. I thought you would understand that my message
was final. “
It was the worst thing
that Hari could possibly have said. Had Deet been right after all?
Leyel studied Hari’s face for a moment, trying to see some sign
of change. Was all that had passed between them through the years
forgotten now? Had Hari’s friendship never been real? No.
Looking at Hari’s face, a bit more lined and wrinkled now,
Leyel saw still the same earnestness, the same plain honesty that had
always been there. So instead of expressing the rage and
disappointment that he felt, Leyel answered carefully, leaving the
way open for Hari to change his mind. “I understood that your
message was deceptive, and therefore could not be final.”
Hari looked a little
angry. “Deceptive?”
“I know which men
and women you’ve been taking into your Foundation. They are not
second-raters. “
“Compared to you
they are,” said Hari. “They’re academics, which
means they’re clerks. Sorters and interpreters of information.”
“So
am I. So are all scholars today. Even your
inestimable theories arose from sorting through a trillion
trillion bytes of data and interpreting it. “
Hari
shook his head. “I didn’t just sort through data. I had
an idea in my head. So did you. Few others do. You and I are
expanding human knowledge. Most of the rest are only digging it up in
one place and piling it in another. That’s what the
Encyclopedia Galactica is.
A new pile.”
“Nevertheless,
Hari, you know and I know that this is not the real reason you turned
me down. And don’t tell me that it’s because Leyel
Forska’s presence on. Terminus would call undue attention to
the project. You already have so much attention from the government
that you can hardly breathe.”
“You are
unpleasantly persistent, Leyel. I don’t like even having this
conversation.”
“That’s too
bad, Hari. I want to be part of your project. I would contribute to
it more than any other person who might join it. I’m the one
who plunged back into the oldest and most valuable archives and
exposed the shameful amount of data loss that had arisen from
neglect. I’m the one who launched the computerized
extrapolation of shattered documents that your Encyclopedia--”
“Absolutely depends
on. Our work would be impossible without your accomplishments.”
“And yet you turned
me down, and with a crudely flattering note. “
“I didn’t
mean to give offense, Leyel.”
“You
also didn’t mean to tell the truth. But you will
tell me, Hari, or I’ll simply go to Terminus anyway. “
“The Commission of
Public Safety has given my Foundation absolute control over who mayor
may not come to Terminus. “
“Hari.
You know perfectly well that all I have to do is hint to some
lower-level functionary that I want to go to Terminus. Chen will hear
of it within minutes, and within an hour he’ll grant me an
exception to your charter. If I did that, and if you fought it, you’d
lose your charter. You know
that. If you want me not to go to Terminus, it isn’t enough
to forbid me; You must persuade me that I ought not to be there.”
Hari closed his eyes and
sighed. “I don’t think you’re willing to be
persuaded, Leyel. Go if you must. “
For a moment Leyel
wondered if Hari was giving in. But no, that was impossible, not so
easily. “Oh, yes, Hari, but then I’d find myself cut off
from everybody else on Terminus except my own serving people. Fobbed
off with useless assignments. Cut out of the real meetings. “
“That goes without
saying,” said Hari. “You are not part of the Foundation,
you will not be, you cannot be. And if you try to use your wealth and
influence to force your way in, you will succeed only in annoying the
Foundation, not in joining it. Do you understand me?”
Only too well, thought
Leyel in shame. Leyel knew perfectly well the limitations of power,
and it was beneath him to have tried to bluster his way into getting
something that could only be given freely. “Forgive me, Hari. I
wouldn’t have tried to force you. You know I don’t do
that sort of thing. “
“I know you’ve
never done it since we’ve been friends, Leyel. I was afraid
that I was teaming something new about you.” Hari sighed. He
turned away for a long moment, then turned back with a different look
on his face, a different kind of energy in his voice. Leyel knew that
look, that vigor. It meant Hari was taking him more deeply into his
confidence. “Leyel, you have to understand, I’m not just
creating an encyclopedia on Terminus.”
Immediately Leyel grew
worried. It had taken a great deal of Leyel’s influence to
persuade the government not to have Hari Seldon summarily exiled when
he first started disseminating copies of his treatises about the
impending fall of the Empire. They were sure Seldon was plotting
treason, and had even put him on trial, where Seldon finally
persuaded them that all he wanted to do was create the Encyclopedia
Galactica, the repository of all the wisdom of the Empire. Even now,
if Seldon confessed some ulterior motive, the government would move
against him. It was to be assumed that the Pubs--Public Safety
Office--were recording this entire conversation. Even Leyel’s
influence couldn’t stop them if they had a confession from
Hari’s own mouth.
“No, Leyel, don’t
be nervous. My meaning is plain enough. For the Encyclopedia
Galactica to succeed, I have to create a thriving city of scholars on
Terminus. A colony full of men and women with fragile egos and
unstemmable ambition, all of them trained in vicious political
infighting at the most dangerous and terrible schools of bureaucratic
combat in the Empire--the universities. “
“Are you actually
telling me you won’t let me join your Foundation because I
never attended one of those pathetic universities? My self-education
is worth ten times their lockstep force-fed pseudoleaming.”
“Don’t
make your antiuniversity speech to me, Leyel. I’m saying that
one of my most important concerns in staffing the Foundation is
compatibility. I won’t bring anyone to Terminus unless I
believe he--or she--would
be happy there.”
The
emphasis Hari put on the word she
suddenly made everything clearer. “This isn’t about
me at all, is it?” Leyel said. “It’s about Deet.”
Hari said nothing.
“You know she
doesn’t want to go. You know she prefers to remain on Trantor.
And that’s why you aren’t taking me! Is that it?”
Reluctantly, Hari
conceded the point. “It does have something to do with Deet,
yes. “
“Don’t you
know how much the Foundation means to me?” demanded Leyel.
“Don’t you know how much I’d give up to be part of
your work?”
Hari sat there in silence
for a moment. Then he murmured, “Even Deet?”
Leyel almost blurted out
an answer. Yes, of course, even Deet, anything for this great work.
But Hari’s measured
gaze stopped him. One thing Leyel had known since they first met at a
conference back in their youth was that Hari would not stand for
another man’s self-deception. They had sat next to each other
at a presentation by a demographer who had a considerable reputation
at the time. Leyel watched as Hari destroyed the poor man’s
thesis with a few well-aimed questions. The demographer was furious.
Obviously he had not seen the flaws in his own argument--but now that
they had been shown to him, he refused to admit that they were flaws
at all.
Afterward, Hari had said
to Leyel, “I’ve done him a favor.”
“How, by giving him
someone to hate?” said Leyel.
“No. Before, he
believed his own unwarranted conclusions. He had deceived himself.
Now he doesn’t believe them.”
“But he still
propounds them.”
“So--now he’s
more of a liar and less of a fool. I have improved his private
integrity. His public morality I leave up to him. “
Leyel remembered this and
knew that if he told Hari he could give up Deet for any reason, even
to join the Foundation, it would be worse than a lie. It would be
foolishness.
“It’s a
terrible thing you’ve done,” said Leyel. “You know
that Deet is part of myself. I can’t give her up to join your
Foundation. But now for the rest of our lives together I’ll
know that I could have gone, if not for her. You’ve given me
wormwood and gall to drink, Hari.”
Hari nodded slowly. “I
hoped that when you read my note you’d realize I didn’t
want to tell you more. I hoped you wouldn’t come to me and ask.
I can’t lie to you, Leyel. I wouldn’t if I could. But I
did withhold information, as much as possible. To spare us both
problems. “
“It didn’t
work.”
“It isn’t
Deet’s fault, Leyel. It’s who she is. She belongs on
Trantor, not on Terminus. And you belong with her. It’s a fact,
not a decision. We’ll never discuss this again.”
“No,” said
Leyel.
They sat there for a long
minute, gazing steadily at each other. Leyel wondered if he and Hari
would ever speak again. No. Never again. I don’t ever want to
see you again, Hari Seldon. You’ve made me regret the one
unregrettable decision of my life--Deet. You’ve made me wish,
somewhere in my heart, that I’d never married her. Which is
like making me wish I’d never been born.
Leyel got up from his
chair and left the room without a word. When he got outside, he
turned to the reception room in general, where several people were
waiting to see Seldon. “Which of you are mine? ‘ he
asked.
Two women and one man
stood up immediately.
“Fetch me a secure
car and a driver.”
Without a glance at each
other, one of them left on the errand. The others fell in step beside
Leyel. Subtlety and discretion were over for the moment. Leyel had no
wish to mingle with the people of Trantor now. He only wanted to go
home.
Hari Seldon left his
office by the back way and soon found his way to Chandrakar Matt’s
cubicle in the Department of Library Relations. Chanda looked up and
waved, then effortlessly slid her chair back until it was in the
exact position required. Hari picked up a chair from the neighboring
cubicle and, again without showing any particular care, set it
exactly where it had to be.
Immediately the computer
installed inside Chanda’s lector recognized the configuration.
It recorded Hari’s costume of the day from three angles and
superimposed the information on a long-stored holoimage of Chanda and
Hari conversing pleasantly. Then, once Hari was seated, it began
displaying the hologram. The hologram exactly matched the positions
of the real Hari and Chanda, so that infrared sensors would show no
discrepancy between image and fact. The only thing different was the
faces--the movement of lips, blinking of eyes, the expressions.
Instead of matching the words Hari and Chanda were actually saying,
they matched the words being pushed into the air outside the
cubicle--a harmless, randomly chosen series of remarks that took into
account recent events so that no one would suspect that it was a
canned conversation.
It was one of Hari’s
few opportunities for candid conversation that the Pubs would not
overhear, and he and Chanda protected it carefully. They never spoke
long enough or often enough that the Pubs would wonder at their
devotion to such empty conversations. Much of their communication was
subliminal--a sentence would stand for a paragraph, a word for a
sentence, a gesture for a word. But when the conversation was done,
Chanda knew where to go from there, what to do next; and Hari was
reassured that his most important work was going on behind the
smokescreen of the Foundation.
“For a moment I
thought he might actually leave her.”
“Don’t
underestimate the lure of the Encyclopedia.”
“I fear I’ve
wrought too well, Chanda. Do you think someday the Encyclopedia
Galactica might actually exist?”
“It’s a good
idea. Good people are inspired by it. It wouldn’t serve its
purpose if they weren’t. What should I tell Deet?”
“Nothing, Chanda.
The fact that Leyel is staying, that’s enough for her.”
“If he changes his
mind, will you actually let him go to Terminus?”
“If
he changes his mind, then he must
go, because if he would leave Deet, he’s not the man for
us.”
“Why not just tell
him? Invite him?”
“He must become
part of the Second Foundation without realizing it. He must do it by
natural inclination, not by a summons from me, and above all not by
his own ambition.”
“Your standards are
so high, Hari, it’s no wonder so few measure up. Most people in
the Second Foundation don’t even know that’s what it is.
They think they’re librarians. Bureaucrats. They think Deet is
an anthropologist who works among them in order to study them.”
“Not
so. They once thought that, but now they think of Deet as one of
them. As one of the best
of them. She’s defining what it means to be a librarian.
She’s making them proud of the name.”
“Aren’t you
ever troubled, Hari, by the fact that in the practice of your art--”
“My
science.”
“Your meddlesome
magical craft, you old wizard, you don’t fool me with
all your talk of science. I’ve seen the scripts of the
holographs you’re preparing for the vault on Terminus.”
“That’s
all a pose.”
“I can just imagine
you saying those words. Looking perfectly satisfied with yourself.
‘If you care to smoke, I wouldn’t mind...Pause for
chuckle...Why should I? I’m not really here.’ Pure
showmanship.”
Hari
waved off the idea. The computer quickly found a bit of dialogue to
fit his gesture, so the false scene would not seem false. “No,
I’m not troubled
by the fact that in the practice of my science I change the
lives of human beings. Knowledge has always changed people’s
lives. The only difference is that I know I’m changing
them and the changes I introduce are planned, they’re under
control. Did the man who invented the first artificial light--what
was it, animal fat with a wick? A light-emitting diode?--did he
realize what it would do to humankind, to be given power over night?”
As always, Chanda
deflated him the moment he started congratulating himself. “In
the first place, it was almost certainly a woman, and in the second
place, she knew exactly what she was doing. It allowed her to find
her way through the house at night. Now she could put her nursing
baby in another bed, in another room, so she could get some sleep at
night without fear of rolling over and smothering the child.”
Hari smiled. “If
artificial light was invented by a woman, it was certainly a
prostitute, to extend her hours of work. “
Chanda grinned. He did
not laugh--it was too hard for the computer to come up with jokes to
explain laughter. “We’ll watch Leyel carefully, Hari. How
will we know when he’s ready, so we can begin to count on him
for protection and leadership?”
“When you already
count on him, then he’s ready. When his commitment and loyalty
are firm, when the goals of the Second Foundation are already in his
heart, when he acts them out in his life, then he’s ready.”
There was a finality in
Hari’s tone. The conversation was nearly over.
“By the way, Hari,
you were right. No one has even questioned the omission of any
important psychohistorical data from the Foundation library on
Terminus.”
“Of
course not. Academics never look outside their own discipline. That’s
another reason why I’m glad Leyel isn’t going. He
would notice that the only psychologist we’re sending is
Bor Alurin. Then I’d have to explain more to him than I want.
Give my love to Deet, Chanda. Tell her that her test case is going
very well. She’ll end up with a husband and a community
of scientists of the mind.”
“Artists. Wizards.
Demigods.”
“Stubborn misguided
women who don’t know science when they’re doing it. All
in the Imperial Library. Till next time, Chanda.”
If Deet had asked him
about his interview with Hari, if she had commiserated with him about
Hari’s refusal, his resentment of her might have been
uncontainable, he might have lashed out at her and said something
that could never be forgiven. Instead, she was perfectly herself, so
excited about her work and so beautiful, even with her face showing
all the sag and wrinkling of her sixty years, that all Leyel could do
was fall in love with her again, as he had so many times in their
years together.
“It’s working
beyond anything I hoped for, Leyel. I’m beginning to hear
stories that I created months and years ago, coming back as epic
legends. You remember the time I retrieved and extrapolated the
accounts of the uprising at Misercordia only three days before the
Admiralty needed them?”
“Your finest hour.
Admiral Divart still talks about how they used the old battle plots
as a strategic guideline and put down the Tellekers’ strike in
a single three-day operation without loss of a ship.”
“You
have a mind like a trap, even if you are
old.”
“Sadly, all I can
remember is the past.”
“Dunce,
that’s all anyone
can remember.”
He prompted her to go on
with her account of today’s triumph. “It’s an epic
legend now?”
“It came back to me
without my name on it, and bigger than life. As a reference. Rinjy
was talking with some young librarians from one of the inner
provinces who were on the standard interlibrary tour, and one of them
said something about how you could stay in the Imperial Library on
Trantor all your life and never see the real world at all.”
Leyel hooted. “Just
the thing to say to Rinjy!”
“Exactly.
Got her dander up, of course, but the important thing is, she
immediately told them the story of how a librarian, all
on her own, saw the similarity between the Misercordia uprising
and the Tellekers’ strike. She knew no one at the Admiralty
would listen to her unless she brought them all the information at
once. So she delved back into the ancient records and found them in
deplorable shape--the original data had been stored in glass, but
that was forty-two centuries ago, and no one had refreshed the data.
None of the secondary sources actually showed the battle plots or
ship courses--Misercordia had mostly been written about by
biographers, not military historians--”
“Of course. It was
Pol Yuensau’s first battle, but he was just a pilot, not a
commander--”
“I
know you remember,
my intrusive pet. The point is what Rinjy said about this
mythical librarian.”
“You. “
“I was standing
right there. I don’t think Rinjy knew it was me, or she would
have said something--she wasn’t even in the same division with
me then, you know. What matters is that Rinjy heard a version of the
story and by the time she told it, it was transformed into a magic
hero tale. The prophetic librarian of Trantor. “
“What
does that prove? You
are a magic hero. “
“The way she told
it, I did it all on my own initiative”
“You did. You were
assigned to do document extrapolation, and you just happened to start
with Misercordia.”
“But
in Rinjy’s version, I had already
seen its usefulness with the Tellekers’ strike. She said
the librarian sent it to the Admiralty and only then did they realize
it was the key to bloodless victory.”
“Librarian saves
the Empire.”
“Exactly.”
“But you did.”
“But
I didn’t mean to.
And Admiralty requested the information--the only really
extraordinary thing was that I had already finished two weeks of
document restoration--”
“Which you did
brilliantly.”
“Using programs you
had helped design, thank you very much, O Wise One, as you indirectly
praise yourself. It was sheer coincidence that I could give them
exactly what they wanted within five minutes of their asking. But now
it’s a hero story within the community of librarians. In the
Imperial Library itself, and now spreading outward to all the other
libraries.”
“This is so
anecdotal, Deet. I don’t see how you can publish this.”
“Oh, I don’t
intend to. Except perhaps in the introduction. What matters to me is
that it proves my theory. “
“It has no
statistical validity.”
“It
proves it to me. I
know that my theories of community formation are true. That the vigor
of a community depends on the allegiance of its members, and the
allegiance can be created and enhanced by the dissemination of epic
stories.”
“She speaks the
language of academia. I should be writing this down, so you don’t
have to think up all those words again.”
“Stories that make
the community seem more important, more central to human life.
Because Rinjy could tell this story, it made her more proud to be a
librarian, which increased her allegiance to the community and gave
the community more power within her.”
“You are possessing
their souls.”
“And they’ve
got mine. Together our souls are possessing each other.”
There was the rub. Deet’s
role in the library had begun as applied research--joining the
library staff in order to confirm her theory of community formation.
But that task was impossible to accomplish without in fact becoming a
committed part of the library community. It was Deet’s
dedication to serious science that had brought them together. Now
that very dedication was stealing her away. It would hurt her more to
leave the library than it would to lose Leyel.
Not true. Not true at
all, he told himself sternly. self-pity leads to self-deception.
Exactly the opposite is true--it would hurt her more to lose Leyel
than to leave her community of librarians. That’s why she
consented to go to Terminus in the first place. But could he blame
her for being glad that she didn’t have to choose? Glad that
she could have both?
Yet even as he beat down
the worst of the thoughts arising from his disappointment, he
couldn’t keep some of the nastiness from coming out in his
conversation. “How will you know when your experiment is over?”
She
frowned. “It’ll never be over,
Leyel. They’re all really librarians--I don’t pick
them up by the tails like mice and put them back in their cages when
the experiment’s done. At some point I’ll simply stop,
that’s all, and write my book.”
“Will you?”
“Write the book?
I’ve written books before, I think I can do it again. “
“I meant, will you
stop?”
“When, now? Is this
some test of my love for you, Leyel? Are you jealous of my
friendships with Rinjy and Animet and Fin and Urik?”
No! Don’t accuse me
of such childish, selfish feelings!
But before he could snap
back his denial, he knew that his denial would be false.
“Sometimes I am,
yes, Deet. Sometimes I think you’re happier with them.”
And
because he had spoken honestly, what could have become a bitter
quarrel remained a conversation. “But I am,
Leyel,” she answered, just as frankly. “It’s
because when I’m with them, I’m creating something new,
I’m creating something with them. It’s exciting,
invigorating, I’m discovering new things every day, in every
word they say, every smile, every tear someone sheds, every sign that
being one of us is the most important thing in their lives.”
“I can’t
compete with that.”
“No, you can’t,
Leyel. But you complete it. Because it would all mean nothing, it
would be more frustrating than exhilarating if I couldn’t come
back to you every day and tell you what happened. You always
understand what it means, you’re always excited for me, you
validate my experience. “
“I’m your
audience. Like a parent.”
“Yes, old man. Like
a husband. Like a child. Like the person I love most in all the
world. You are my root. I make a brave show out there, all branches
and bright leaves in the sunlight, but I come here to suck the water
of life from your soil.”
“Leyel Forska, the
font of capillarity. You are the tree, and I am the dirt.”
“Which happens to
be full of fertilizer.” She kissed him. A kiss reminiscent of
younger days. An invitation, which he gladly accepted.
A softened section of
floor served them as an impromptu bed. At the end, he lay beside her,
his arm across her waist, his head on her shoulder, his lips brushing
the skin of her breast. He remembered when her breasts were small and
firm, perched on her chest like small monuments to her potential. Now
when she lay on her back they were a ruin, eroded by age so they
flowed off her chest to either side, resting wearily on her arms.
“You are a
magnificent woman,” he whispered, his lips tickling her skin.
Their slack and flabby
bodies were now capable of greater passion than when they were taut
and strong. Before, they were all potential. That’s what we
love in youthful bodies, the teasing potential. Now hers is a body of
accomplishment. Three fine children were the blossoms, then the fruit
of this tree, gone off and taken root somewhere else. The tension of
youth could now give way to a relaxation of the flesh. There were no
more promises in their lovemaking. Only fulfillment.
She murmured softly in
his ear, “That was a ritual, by the way. Community
maintenance.”
“So I’m just
another experiment?”
“A fairly
successful one. I’m testing to see if this little community can
last until one of us drops. “
“What if you drop
first? Who’ll write the paper then?”
“You will. But
you’ll sign my name to it. I want the Imperial medal for it.
Posthumously. Glue it to my memorial stone. “
“I’ll wear it
myself. If you’re selfish enough to leave all the real work to
me, you don’t deserve anything better than a cheap replica.”
She slapped his back.
“You are a nasty selfish old man, then. The real thing or
nothing.”
He felt the sting of her
slap as if he deserved it. A nasty selfish old man. If she only knew
how right she was. There had been a moment in Hari’s office
when he’d almost said the words that would deny all that there
was between them. The words that would cut her out of his life. Go to
Terminus without her! I would be more myself if they took my heart,
my liver, my brain.
How could I have thought
I wanted to go to Terminus, anyway? To be surrounded by academics of
the sort I most despise, struggling with them to get the encyclopedia
properly designed. They’d each fight for their petty little
province, never catching the vision of the whole, never understanding
that the encyclopedia would be valueless if it were
compartmentalized. It would be a life in hell, and in the end he’d
lose, because the academic mind was incapable of growth or change.
It was here on Trantor
that he could still accomplish something. Perhaps even solve the
question of human origin, at least to his own satisfaction--and
perhaps he could do it soon enough that he could get his discovery
included in the Encyclopedia Galactica before the Empire began to
break down at the edges, cutting Terminus off from the rest of the
Galaxy.
It was like a shock of
static electricity passing through his brain; he even saw an
afterglow of light around the edges of his vision, as if a spark had
jumped some synaptic gap.
“What a sham,”
he said.
“Who, you? Me?”
“Hari Seldon. All
this talk about his Foundation to create the Encyclopedia Galactica.
“
“Careful, Leyel.”
It was almost impossible that the Pubs could have found a way to
listen to what went on in Leyel Forska’s own apartments.
Almost.
“He told me twenty
years ago. It was one of his first psychohistorical projections. The
Empire will crumble at the edges first. He projected it would happen
within the next generation. The figures were crude then. He must have
it down to the year now. Maybe even the month. Of course he put his
Foundation on Terminus. A place so remote that when the edges of the
Empire fray, it will be among the first threads lost. Cut off from
Trantor. Forgotten at once!”
“What
good would that do,
Leyel? They’d never hear of any new discoveries then.”
“What you said
about us. A tree. Our children like the fruit of that tree. “
“I never said
that.”
“I thought it,
then. He is dropping his Foundation out on Terminus like the fruit of
Empire. To grow into a new Empire by and by.”
“You frighten me,
Leyel. If the Pubs ever heard you say that--”
“That
crafty old fox. That sly, deceptive--he never actually lied to me,
but of course he couldn’t send me there. If the Forska fortune
was tied up with Terminus, the Empire would never lose track of the
place. The edges might fray elsewhere, but never there. Putting me on
Terminus would be the undoing of the real
project.” It was such a relief. Of course Hari couldn’t
tell him, not with the Pubs listening, but it had nothing to do with
him or Deet. It wouldn’t have to be a barrier between them
after all. It was just one of the penalties of being the keeper of
the Forska fortune.
“Do you really
think so?” asked Deet.
“I was a fool not
to see it before. But Hari was a fool too if he thought I wouldn’t
guess it.“
“Maybe he expects
you to guess everything.”
“Oh,
nobody could ever come up with everything
Hari’s doing. He has more twists and turns in his brain
than a hyperpath through core space. No matter how you labor to pick
your way through, you’ll always find Hari at the end of it,
nodding happily and congratulating you on coming this far. He’s
ahead of us all. He’s already planned everything, and the rest
of us are doomed to follow in his footsteps. “
“Is it doom?”
“Once I thought
Hari Seldon was God. Now I know he’s much less powerful than
that. He’s merely Fate.”
“No, Leyel. Don’t
say that.”
“Not even Fate.
Just our guide through it. He sees the future, and points the way. “
“Rubbish.”
She slid out from under him, got up, pulled her robe from its hook on
the wall. “My old bones get cold when I lie about naked. “
Leyel’s legs were
trembling, but not with cold. “The future is his, and the
present is yours, but the past belongs to me. I don’t know how
far into the future his probability curves have taken him, but I can
match him, step for step, century for century into the past. “
“Don’t tell
me you’re going to solve the question of origin. You’re
the one who proved it wasn’t worth solving.”
“I proved that it
wasn’t important or even possible to find the planet of origin.
But I also said that we could still discover the natural laws that
accounted for the origin of man. Whatever forces created us as human
beings must still be present in the universe.”
“I did read what
you wrote, you know. You said it would be the labor of the next
millennium to find the answer.”
“Just now. Lying
here, just now, I saw it, just out of reach. Something about your
work and Hari’s work, and the tree.”
“The tree was about
me needing you, Leyel. It wasn’t about the origin of humanity.
“
“It’s gone.
Whatever I saw for a moment there, it’s gone. But I can find it
again. It’s there in your work, and Hari’s Foundation,
and the fall of the Empire, and the damned pear tree. “
“I never said it
was a pear tree. “
“I used to play in
the pear orchard on the grounds of the estate in Holdwater. To me the
word ‘tree’ always means a pear tree. One of the
deep-worn ruts in my brain.”
“I’m
relieved. I was afraid you were reminded of pears by the shape of
these ancient breasts when I bend over. “
“Open your robe
again. Let me see if I think of pears. “
Leyel paid for Hari
Seldon’s funeral. It was not lavish. Leyel had meant it to be.
The moment he heard of Hari’s death--not a surprise, since
Hari’s first brutal stroke had left him half-paralyzed in a
wheelchair--he set his staff to work on a memorial service
appropriate to honor the greatest scientific mind of the millennium.
But word arrived, in the form of a visit from Commissioner Rom
Divart, that any sort of public services would be...
“Shall we say,
inappropriate?”
“The
man was the greatest genius I’ve ever heard of! He virtually
invented a branch of science that clarified things that--he made a
science out of the sort of thing that soothsayers
and--and--economists
used to do!”
Rom laughed at Leyel’s
little joke, of course, because he and Leyel had been friends
forever. Rom was the only friend of Leyel’s childhood who had
never sucked up to him or resented him or stayed cool toward him
because of the Forska fortune. This was, of course, because the
Divart holdings were, if anything, slightly greater. They had played
together unencumbered by strangeness or jealousy or awe.
They even shared a tutor
for two terrible, glorious years, from the time Rom’s father
was murdered until the execution of Rom’s grandfather, which
caused so much outrage among the nobility that the mad Emperor was
stripped of power and the Imperium put under the control of the
Commission of Public Safety. Then, as the youthful head of one of the
great families, Rom had embarked on his long and fruitful career in
politics.
Rom said later that for
those two years it was Leyel who taught him that there was still some
good in the world; that Leyel’s friendship was the only reason
Rom hadn’t killed himself. Leyel always thought this was pure
theatrics. Rom was a born actor. That’s why he so excelled at
making stunning entrances and playing unforgettable scenes on the
grandest stage of all--the politics of the Imperium. Someday he would
no doubt exit as dramatically as his father and grandfather had.
But he was not all show.
Rom never forgot the friend of his childhood. Leyel knew it, and knew
also that Rom’s coming to deliver this message from the
Commission of Public Safety probably meant that Rom had fought to
make the message as mild as it was. So Leyel blustered a bit, then
made his little joke. It was his way of surrendering gracefully.
What
Leyel didn’t realize, right up until the day of the funeral,
was exactly how
dangerous his friendship with Hari Seldon had been, and how
stupid it was for him to associate himself with Hari’s name now
that the old man was dead. Linge Chen, the Chief Commissioner, had
not risen to the position of greatest power in the Empire without
being fiercely suspicious of potential rivals and brutally efficient
about eliminating them. Hari had maneuvered Chen into a position such
that it was more dangerous to kill the old man than to give him his
Foundation on Terminus. But now Hari was dead, and apparently Chen
was watching to see who mourned.
Leyel did--Leyel and the
few members of Hari’s staff who had stayed behind on Trantor to
maintain contact with Terminus up to the moment of Hari’s
death. Leyel should have known better. Even alive, Hari wouldn’t
have cared who came to his funeral. And now, dead, he cared even
less. Leyel didn’t believe his friend lived on in some ethereal
plane, watching carefully and taking attendance at the services. No,
Leyel simply felt he had to be there, felt he had to speak. Not for
Hari, really. For himself. To continue to be himself, Leyel had to
make some kind of public gesture toward Hari Seldon and all he had
stood for.
Who heard? Not many.
Deet, who thought his eulogy was too mild by half. Hari’s
staff, who were quite aware of the danger and winced at each of
Leyel’s list of Hari’s accomplishments. Naming them--and
emphasizing that only Seldon had the vision to do these great
works--was inherently a criticism of the level of intelligence and
integrity in the Empire. The Pubs were listening, too. They noted
that Leyel clearly agreed with Hari Seldon about the certainty of the
Empire’s fall--that in fact as a galactic empire it had
probably already fallen, since its authority was no longer
coextensive with the Galaxy.
If almost anyone else had
said such things, to such a small audience, it would have been
ignored, except to keep him from getting any job requiring a security
clearance. But when the head of the Forska family came out openly to
affirm the correctness of the views of a man who had been tried
before the Commission of Public Safety--that posed a greater danger
to the Commission than Hari Seldon.
For, as head of the
Forska family, if Leyel Forska wanted, he could be one of the great
players on the political stage, could have a seat on the Commission
along with Rom Divart and Linge Chen. Of course, that would also have
meant constantly watching for assassins--either to avoid them or to
hire them--and trying to win the allegiance of various military
strongmen in the farflung reaches of the Galaxy. Leyel’s
grandfather had spent his life in such pursuits, but Leyel’s
father had declined, and Leyel himself had thoroughly immersed
himself in science and never so much as inquired about politics.
Until
now. Until he made the profoundly political act of paying for Hari
Seldon’s funeral and then speaking
at it. What would he do next? There were a thousand would-be
warlords who would spring to revolt if a Forska promised what
would-be emperors so desperately needed: a noble sponsor, a mask of
legitimacy, and money.
Did
Linge Chen really believe that Leyel meant to enter politics at his
advanced age? Did he really think Leyel posed a threat?
Probably
not. If he had believed
it, he would surely have had Leyel killed, and no doubt all his
children as well, leaving only one of his minor grandchildren, whom
Chen would carefully control through the guardians he would appoint,
thereby acquiring control of the Forska fortune as well as his own.
Instead,
Chen only believed that Leyel might
cause trouble. So he took what were, for him, mild steps.
That was why Rom came to
visit Leyel again, a week after the funeral.
Leyel was delighted to
see him. “Not on somber business this time, I hope,” he
said. “But such bad luck--Deet’s at the library again,
she practically lives there now, but she’d want to--”
“Leyel.” Rom
touched Leyel’s lips with his fingers.
So
it was somber
business after all. Worse than somber. Rom recited what had to be a
memorized speech.
“The Commission of
Public Safety has become concerned that in your declining years--”
Leyel opened his mouth to
protest, but again Rom touched his lips to silence him.
“That in your
declining years, the burdens of the Forska estates are distracting
you from your exceptionally important scientific work. So great is
the Empire’s need for the new discoveries and understanding
your work will surely bring us, that the Commission of Public Safety
has created the office of Forska Trustee to oversee all the Forska
estates and holdings. You will, of course, have unlimited access to
these funds for your scientific work here on Trantor, and funding
will continue for all the archives and libraries you have endowed.
Naturally, the Commission has no desire for you to thank us for what
is, after all, our duty to one of our noblest citizens, but if your
well-known courtesy required you to make a brief public statement of
gratitude it would not be inappropriate. “
Leyel was no fool. He
knew how things worked. He was being stripped of his fortune and
being placed under arrest on Trantor. There was no point in protest
or remonstrance, no point even in trying to make Rom feel guilty for
having brought him such a bitter message. Indeed, Rom himself might
be in great danger--if Leyel so much as hinted that he expected Rom
to come to his support, his dear friend might also fall. So Leyel
nodded gravely, and then carefully framed his words of reply.
“Please tell the
Commissioners how grateful I am for their concern on my behalf. It
has been a long, long time since anyone went to the trouble of easing
my burdens. I accept their kind offer. I am especially glad because
this means that now I can pursue my studies unencumbered.”
Rom visibly relaxed.
Leyel wasn’t going to cause trouble. “My dear friend, I
will sleep better knowing that you are always here on Trantor,
working freely in the library or taking your leisure in the parks.”
So at least they weren’t
going to confine him to his apartment. No doubt they would never let
him offplanet, but it wouldn’t hurt to ask. “Perhaps I’ll
even have time now to visit my grandchildren now and then.”
“Oh, Leyel, you and
I are both too old to enjoy hyperspace any more. Leave that for the
youngsters--they can come visit you whenever they want. And sometimes
they can stay home, while their parents come to see you.”
Thus
Leyel learned that if any of his children came to visit him, their
children would be held hostage, and vice versa. Leyel himself
would never leave Trantor again.
“So much the
better,” said Leyel. “I’ll have time to write
several books I’ve been meaning to publish.”
“The Empire waits
eagerly for every scientific treatise you publish. “ There was
a slight emphasis on the word “scientific.” “But I
hope you won’t bore us with one of those tedious
autobiographies.”
Leyel
agreed to the restriction easily enough. “I promise,
Rom. You know better than anyone else exactly how boring my life
has always been.”
“Come
now. My life’s
the boring one, Leyel, all this government claptrap and bureaucratic
bushwa. You’ve been at the forefront of scholarship and
learning. Indeed, my friend, the Commission hopes you’ll honor
us by giving us first look at every word that comes out of your
scriptor.”
“Only if you
promise to read it carefully and point out any mistakes I might
make.” No doubt the Commission intended only to censor his work
to remove political material--which Leyel had never included anyway.
But Leyel had already resolved never to publish anything again, at
least as long as Linge Chen was Chief Commissioner. The safest thing
Leyel could do now was to disappear, to let Chen forget him
entirely--it would be egregiously stupid to send occasional articles
to Chen, thus reminding him that Leyel was still around.
But Rom wasn’t
through yet. “I must extend that request to Deet’s work
as well. We really want first look at it--do tell her so.”
“Deet?”
For the first time Leyel almost let his fury show. Why should Deet be
punished because of Leyel’s indiscretion? “Oh, she’ll
be too shy for that, Rom--she doesn’t think her work is
important enough to
deserve any attention from men as busy as the Commissioners. They’ll
think you only want to see her work because she’s my
wife--she’s always annoyed when people patronize her.”
“You must insist,
then, Leyel,” said Rom. “I assure you, her studies of the
functions of the Imperial bureaucracy have long been interesting to
the Commission for their own sake.”
Ah. Of course. Chen would
never have allowed a report on the workings of government to appear
without making sure it wasn’t dangerous. Censorship of Deet’s
writings wouldn’t be Leyel’s fault after all. Or at least
not entirely.
‘‘I’ll
tell her that, Rom. She’ll be flattered. But won’t you
stay and tell her yourself! I can bring you a cup of peshat, we can
talk about old times--”
Leyel would have been
surprised if Rom had stayed. No, this interview had been at least as
hard on Rom as it had been on him. The very fact that Rom had been
forced into being the Commission’s messenger to his childhood
friend was a humiliating reminder that the Chens were in the
ascendant over the Divarts. But as Rom bowed and left, it occurred to
Leyel that Chen might have made a mistake. Humiliating Rom this way,
forcing him to place his dearest friend under arrest like this--it
might be the straw to break the camel’s back. After all, though
no one had ever been able to find out who hired the assassin who
killed Rom’s father, and no one had ever learned who denounced
Rom’s grandfather, leading to his execution by the paranoid
Emperor Wassiniwak, it didn’t take a genius to realize that the
House of Chen had profited most from both events.
“I
wish I could stay,” said Rom. “But duty calls. Still, you
can be sure I’ll think of you often. Of course, I doubt I’ll
think of you as you are now,
you old wreck. I’ll remember you as a boy, when we used to
tweak our tutor--remember the time we recoded his lector, so that for
a whole week explicit pornography kept coming up on the display
whenever the door of his room opened?”
Leyel couldn’t help
laughing. “You never forget anything, do you!”
“The poor fool. He
never figured out that it was us! Old times. Why couldn’t we
have stayed young forever?” He embraced Leyel and then swiftly
left.
Linge Chen, you fool, you
have reached too far. Your days are numbered. None of the Pubs who
were listening in on their conversation could possibly know that Rom
and Leyel had never teased their tutor--and that they had never done
anything to his lector. It was just Rom’s way of letting Leyel
know that they were still allies, still keeping secrets together--and
that someone who had authority over both of them was going to be in
for a few nasty surprises.
It gave Leyel chills,
thinking about what might come of all this. He loved Rom Divart with
all his heart, but he also knew that Rom was capable of biding his
time and then killing swiftly, efficiently, coldly. Linge Chen had
just started his latest six-year term of office, but Leyel knew he’d
never finish it. And the next Chief Commissioner would not be a Chen.
Soon, though, the
enormity of what had been done to him began to sink in. He had always
thought that his fortune meant little to him--that he would be the
same man with or without the Forska estates. But now he began to
realize that it wasn’t true, that he’d been lying to
himself all along. He had known since childhood how despicable rich
and powerful men could be--his father had made sure he saw and
understood how cruel men became when their money persuaded them they
had a right to use others however they wished. So Leyel had learned
to despise his own birthright, and, starting with his father, had
pretended to others that he could make his way through the world
solely by wit and diligence, that he would have been exactly the same
man if he had grown up in a common family, with a common education.
He had done such a good job of acting as if he didn’t care
about his wealth that he came to believe it himself.
Now he realized that
Forska estates had been an invisible part of himself all along, as if
they were extensions of his body, as if he could flex a muscle and
cargo ships would fly, he could blink and mines would be sunk deep
into the earth, he could sigh and allover the Galaxy there would be a
wind of change that would keep blowing until everything was exactly
as he wanted it. Now all those invisible limbs arid senses had been
amputated. Now he was crippled--he had only as many arms and legs and
eyes as any other human being.
At last he was what he
had always pretended to be. An ordinary, powerless man. He hated it.
For the first hours after
Rom left, Leyel pretended he could take all this in stride. He sat at
the lector and spun through the pages smoothly--without anything on
the pages registering in his memory. He kept wishing Deet were there
so he could laugh with her about how little this hurt him; then he
would be glad that Deet was not there, because one sympathetic touch
of her hand would push him over the edge, make it impossible to
contain his emotion.
Finally he could not help
himself. Thinking of Deet, of their children and grandchildren, of
all that had been lost to them because he had made an empty gesture
to a dead friend, he threw himself to the softened floor and wept
bitterly. Let Chen listen to recordings of what the spy beam shows of
this! Let him savor his victory! I’ll destroy him somehow, my
staff is still loyal to me, I’ll put together an army, I’ll
hire assassins of my own, I’ll make contact with Admiral Sipp,
and then Chen will be the one to sob, crying out for mercy as I
disfigure him the way he has mutilated me--
Fool.
Leyel rolled over onto
his back, dried his face on his sleeve, then lay there, eyes closed,
calming himself. No vengeance. No politics. That was Rom’s
business, not Leyel’s. Too late for him to enter the game
now--and who would help him, anyway, now that he had already lost his
power? There was nothing to be done.
Leyel didn’t really
want to do anything, anyway. Hadn’t they guaranteed that his
archives and libraries would continue to be funded? Hadn’t they
guaranteed him unlimited research funds? And wasn’t that all he
had cared about anyway? He had long since turned over all the Forska
operations to his subordinates--Chen’s trustee would simply do
the same job. And Leyel’s children wouldn’t suffer
much--he had raised them with the same values that he had grown up
with, and so they all pursued careers unrelated to the Forska
holdings. They were true children of their father and mother--they
wouldn’t have any self-respect if they didn’t earn their
own way in the world. No doubt they’d be disappointed by having
their inheritance snatched away. But they wouldn’t be
destroyed.
I
am not ruined. All the lies that Rom told are really true, only they
didn’t realize it. All that matters in my life, I still have. I
really don’t
care about my fortune. It’s just the way I lost it that
made me so furious. I can go on and be the same person I always was.
This will even give me an opportunity to see who my true friends
are--to see who still honors me for my scientific achievements, and
who despises me for my poverty.
By the time Deet got home
from the library--late, as was usual these days--Leyel was hard at
work, reading back through all the research and speculation on
protohuman behavior, trying to see if there was anything other than
half-assed guesswork and pompous babble. He was so engrossed in his
reading that he spent the first fifteen minutes after she got home
telling her of the hilarious stupidities he had found in the day’s
reading, and then sharing a wonderful, impossible thought he had had.
“What if the human
species isn’t the only branch to evolve on our family tree?
What if there’s some other primate species that looks exactly
like us, but can’t interbreed with us, that functions in a
completely different way, and we don’t even know it, we all
think everybody’s just like us, but here and there allover the
Empire there are whole towns, cities, maybe even worlds of people who
secretly aren’t human at all.”
“But
Leyel, my overwrought husband, if they look just like us and act just
like us, then they are
human.”
“But
they don’t act
exactly like us. There’s a difference. A completely different
set of rules and assumptions. Only they don’t know that we’re
different, and we don’t know that they’re different.
Or even if we suspect it, we’re never sure. Just two different
species, living side by side and never guessing it.”
She kissed him. “You
poor fool, that isn’t speculation, it already exists. You have
just described the relationship between males and females. Two
completely different species, completely unintelligible to each
other, living side by side and thinking they’re really the
same. The fascinating thing, Leyel, is that the two species persist
in marrying each other and having babies, sometimes of one species,
sometimes of the other, and the whole time they can’t
understand why they can’t understand each other.”
He laughed and embraced
her. “You’re right, as always, Deet. If I could once
understand women, then perhaps I’d know what it is that makes
men human.”
“Nothing could
possibly make men human,” she answered. “Every time
they’re just about to get it right, they end up tripping over
the damned Y chromosome and turning back into beasts.” She
nuzzled his neck.
It was then, with Deet in
his arms, that he whispered to her what had happened when Rom visited
that day. She said nothing, but held him tightly for the longest
time. Then they had a very late supper and went about their nightly
routines as if nothing had changed.
Not
until they were in bed, not until Deet was softly snoring beside him,
did it finally occur to Leyel that Deet was facing a test of her own.
Would she still love him, now that he was merely Leyel Forska,
scientist on a pension, and not Lord Forska, master of worlds? Of
course she would intend
to. But just as Leyel had never been aware of how much he
depended on his wealth to define himself, so also she might not have
realized how much of what she loved about him was his vast power; for
even though he didn’t flaunt it, it had always been there, like
a solid platform underfoot, hardly noticed except now, when it was
gone, when their footing was unsure.
Even before this, she had
been slipping away into the community of women in the library. She
would drift away even faster now, not even noticing it as Leyel
became less and less important to her. No need for anything as
dramatic as divorce. Just a little gap between them, an empty space
that might as well be a chasm, might as well by the abyss. My fortune
was a part of me, and now that it’s gone, I’m no longer
the same man she loved. She won’t even know that she doesn’t
love me any more. She’ll just get busier and busier in her
work, and in five or ten years when I die of old age, she’ll
grieve--and then suddenly she’ll realize that she isn’t
half as devastated as she thought she’d be. In fact, she won’t
be devastated at all. And she’ll get on with her life and won’t
even remember what it was like to be married to me. I’ll
disappear from all human memory then, except perhaps for a few
scientific papers and the libraries.
I’m like the
information that was lost in all those neglected archives.
Disappearing bit by bit, unnoticed, until all that’s left is
just a little bit of noise in people’s memories. Then, finally,
nothing. Blank.
Self-pitying fool. That’s
what happens to everyone, in the long run. Even Hari Seldon--someday
he’ll be forgotten, sooner rather than later, if Chen has his
way. We all die. We’re all lost in the passage of time. The
only thing that lives on after us is the new shape we’ve given
to the communities we lived in. There are things that are known
because I said them, and even though people have forgotten who said
it, they’ll go on knowing. Like the story Rinjy was
telling--she had forgotten, if she ever knew it, that Deet was the
librarian in the original tale. But still she remembered the tale.
The community of librarians was different because Deet had been among
them. They would be a little different, a little braver, a little
stronger, because of Deet. She had left traces of herself in the
world.
And then, again, there
came that flash of insight, that sudden understanding of the answer
to a question that had long been troubling him.
But in the moment that
Leyel realized that he held the answer, the answer slipped away. He
couldn’t remember it. You’re asleep, he said silently.
You only dreamed that you understood the origin of humanity. That’s
the way it is in dreams--the truth is always so beautiful, but you
can never hold on to it.
“How is he taking
it, Deet?”
“Hard to say. Well,
I think. He was never much of a wanderer anyway.”
“Come now, it can’t
be that simple.”
“No. No, it isn’t.”
“Tell me.”
“The social
things--those were easy. We rarely went anyway, but now people don’t
invite us. We’re politically dangerous. And the few things we
had scheduled got canceled or, um, postponed. You know--we’ll
call you as soon as we have a new date.”
“He doesn’t
mind this?”
“He
likes that part. He
always hated those things. But they’ve canceled his speeches.
And the lecture series on human ecology.”
“A blow. “
“He pretends not to
mind. But he’s brooding.”
“Tell me. “
“Works all day, but
he doesn’t read it to me any more, doesn’t make me sit
down at the lector the minute I get home. I think he isn’t
writing anything. “
“Doing nothing?”
“No. Reading.
That’s all.”
“Maybe he just
needs to do research.”
“You
don’t know Leyel. He thinks
by writing. Or talking. He isn’t doing either.”
“Doesn’t talk
to you?”
“He answers. I try
to talk about things here at the library, his answers are--what?
Glum. Sullen.”
“He resents your
work?”
“That’s not
possible. Leyel has always been as enthusiastic about my work as
about his own. And he won’t talk about his own work, either. I
ask him, and he says nothing.”
“Not surprising.”
“So it’s all
right?”
“No. It’s
just not surprising.”
“What is it? Can’t
you tell me?”
“What good is
telling you? It’s what we call ILS--Identity Loss Syndrome.
It’s identical to the passive strategy for dealing with loss of
body parts. “
“ILS. What happens
in ILS?”
“Deet, come on,
you’re a scientist. What do you expect? You’ve just
described Leyel’s behavior, I tell you that it’s called
ILS, you want to know what ILS is, and what am I going to do?”
“Describe Leyel’s
behavior back to me. What an idiot I am.”
“Good, at least you
can laugh. “
“Can’t you
tell me what to expect?”
“Complete
withdrawal from you, from everybody. Eventually he becomes completely
antisocial and starts to strike out. Does something
self-destructive--like making public statements against Chen, that’d
do it.”
“No!”
“Or else he severs
his old connections, gets away from you, and reconstructs himself in
a different set of communities.”
“This would make
him happy?”
“Sure. Useless to
the Second Foundation, but happy. It would also turn you into a
nasty-tempered old crone, not that you aren’t one already, mind
you.”
“Oh, you think
Leyel’s the only thing keeping me human?”
“Pretty much, yes.
He’s your safety valve.”
“Not lately.”
“I know.”
“Have I been so
awful?”
“Nothing that we
can’t bear. Deet, if we’re going to be fit to govern the
human race someday, shouldn’t we first learn to be good to each
other?”
“Well, I’m
glad to provide you all with an opportunity to test your patience.”
“You should be
glad. We’re doing a fine job so far, wouldn’t you say?”
“Please. You were
teasing me about the prognosis, weren’t you?”
“Partly. Everything
I said was true, but you know as well as I do that there are as many
different ways out of a B-B syndrome as there are people who have
them.”
“Behavioral
cause, behavioral effect. No little
hormone shot, then?”
“Deet. He doesn’t
know who he is.”
“Can’t I help
him?”
“Yes.”
“What? What can I
do?”
“This is only a
guess, since I haven’t talked to him.”
“Of course.”
“You aren’t
home much.”
“I
can’t stand it
there, with him brooding all the time.”
“Fine. Get him out
with you.”
“He won’t
go.”
“Push him.”
“We barely talk. I
don’t know if I even have any leverage over him.”
“Deet. You’re
the one who wrote, ‘Communities that make few or no demands on
their members cannot command allegiance. All else being equal,
members who feel most needed have the strongest allegiance. ‘ “
“You memorized
that?”
“Psychohistory
is the psychology of
populations, but populations can only be quantified as communities.
Seldon’s work on statistical probabilities only worked to
predict the future within a generation or two until you first
published your community theories. That’s because statistics
can’t deal with cause and effect. Stats tell you what’s
happening, never why, never the result. Within a generation or two,
the present statistics evaporate, they’re meaningless, you have
whole new populations with new configurations. Your community theory
gave us a way of predicting which communities would survive, which
would grow, which would fade. A way of looking across long stretches
of time and space. “
“Hari never told me
he was using community theory in any important way. “
“How could he tell
you that? He had to walk a tightrope--publishing enough to get
psychohistory taken seriously, but not so much that anybody outside
the Second Foundation could ever duplicate or continue his work. Your
work was a key--but he couldn’t say so.”
“Are you just
saying this to make me feel better?”
“Sure.
That’s why I’m saying it. But it’s also true--since
lying to you wouldn’t make you feel better, would it?
Statistics are like taking cross sections of the trunk of a tree. It
can tell you a lot about its history. You can figure how healthy it
is, how much volume the whole tree has, how much is root and how much
is branch. But what it can’t
tell you is where the tree will branch, and which branches will
become major, which minor, and which will rot and fall off and die.”
“But
you can’t quantify
communities, can you? They’re just stories and rituals that
bind people together--”
“You’d be
surprised what we can quantify. We’re very good at what we do,
Deet. Just as you are. Just as Leyel is.”
“Is
his work important? After all, human origin is only a historical
question. “
“Nonsense, and you
know it. Leyel has stripped away the historical issues and he’s
searching for the scientific ones. The principles by which human
life, as we understand it, is differentiated from nonhuman. If he
finds that--don’t you see, Deet? The human race is recreating
itself all the time, on every world, in every family, in every
individual. We’re born animals, and we teach each other how to
be human. Somehow. It matters that we find out how. It matters to
psychohistory. It matters to the Second Foundation. It matters to the
human race.’“
“So--you aren’t
just being kind to Leyel.”
“Yes, we are. You
are, too. Good people are kind.”
“Is that all? Leyel
is just one man who’s having trouble?”
“We
need him. He isn’t important just to you. He’s important
to us. “
“Oh. Oh.”
“Why are you
crying?”
“I was so
afraid--that I was being selfish--being so worried about him. Taking
up your time like this. “
“Well, if that
doesn’t--I thought you were beyond surprising me. “
“Our problems were
just--our problems. But now they’re not.”
“Is that so
important to you? Tell me, Deet--do you really value this community
so much?”
“Yes.”
“More than Leyel?”
“No!
But enough--that I felt guilty
for caring so much about him.”
“Go home, Deet.
Just go home.”
“What?”
“That’s
where you’d rather be. It’s been showing up in your
behavior for two months, ever since Hari’s death. You’ve
been nasty and snappish, and now I know why. You resent
us for keeping you away from Leyel.”
“No, it was my
choice, I--”
“Of
course it was your choice! It was your sacrifice
for the good of the Second Foundation. So now I’m telling
you--healing Leyel is more important to Hari’s plan than
keeping up with your day-to-day responsibilities here.”
“You’re not
removing me from my position, are you?”
“No.
I’m just telling you to ease up. And get Leyel out of the
apartment. Do you understand me? Demand it! Reengage him with you,
or we’ve all lost him.”
“Take
him where?”
“I
don’t know. Theater. Athletic events. Dancing.”
“We
don’t do those
things.”
“Well,
what do you do?”
“Research. And then
talk about it.”
“Fine. Bring him
here to the library. Do research with him. Talk about it.”
“But
he’ll meet people here. He’d certainly meet you.”
“Good.
Good. I like that. Yes, let him come here.”
“But I thought we
had to keep the Second Foundation a secret from him until he’s
ready to take part.”
“I didn’t say
you should introduce me as First Speaker.”
“No, no, of course
you didn’t. What am I thinking off Of course he can meet you,
he can meet everybody. “
“Deet, listen to
me.”
“Yes, I’m
listening. “
“It’s all
right to love him, Deet.”
“I know that.”
“I mean, it’s
all right to love him more than you love us. More than you love any
of us. More than you love all of us. There you are, crying again.”
“I’m so--”
“Relieved. “
“How do you
understand me so well?”
“I only know what
you show me and what you tell me. It’s all we ever know about
each other. The only thing that helps is that nobody can ever lie for
long about who they really are. Not even to themselves.”
For
two months Leyel followed up on Magolissian’s paper by trying
to find some connection between language studies and human origins.
Of course this meant weeks of wading through old, useless
point-of-origin studies, which kept indicating that Trantor was the
focal point of language throughout the history of the Empire, even
though nobody seriously
put forth Trantor as the planet of origin. Once again, though, Leyel
rejected the search for a particular planet; he wanted to find out
regularities, not unique events.
Leyel
hoped for a clue in the fairly recent work--only two thousand years
old--of Dagawell Kispitorian. Kispitorian came from the most isolated
area of a planet called Artashat, where there were traditions that
the original settlers came from an earlier world named Armenia, now
uncharted. Kispitorian grew up among mountain people who claimed that
long ago, they spoke a completely different language. In fact, the
title of Kispitorian’s most interesting book was No
Man Understood Us; many of the folk tales of these people began
with the formula “Back in the days when no man understood
us...”
Kispitorian
had never been able to shake off this tradition of his upbringing,
and as he pursued the field of dialect formation and evolution, he
kept coming across evidence that at one time the human species spoke
not one but many languages. It had always been taken for granted that
Galactic Standard was the up-to-date version of the language of the
planet of origin--that while a few human groups might have developed
dialects, civilization was impossible without mutually intelligible
speech. But Kispitorian had begun to suspect that Galactic Standard
did not become the universal human language until after
the formation of the Empire--that, in fact, one of the first
labors of the Imperium was to stamp out all other competing
languages. The mountain people of Artashat believed that their
language had been stolen from them. Kispitorian eventually devoted
his life to proving they were right.
He
worked first with names, long recognized as the most conservative
aspect of language. He found that there were many separate naming
traditions, and it was not until about the year 6000 G.E. that all
were finally amalgamated into one Empire-wide stream. What was
interesting was that the farther back he went, the more
complexity he found.
Because certain worlds
tended to have unified traditions, and so the simplest explanation of
this was the one he first put forth--that humans left their home
world with a unified language, but the normal forces of language
separation caused each new planet to develop its own offshoot, until
many dialects became mutually unintelligible. Thus, different
languages would not have developed until humanity moved out into
space; this was one of the reasons why the Galactic Empire was
necessary to restore the primeval unity of the species.
Kispitorian
called his first and most influential book Tower
of Confusion, using the widespread legend of the Tower of Babble
as an illustration. He supposed that this story might have originated
in that pre-Empire period, probably among the rootless traders
roaming from planet to planet, who had to deal on a practical level
with the fact that no two worlds spoke the same language. These
traders had preserved a tradition that when humanity lived on one
planet, they all spoke the same language. They explained the
linguistic confusion of their own time by recounting the tale of a
great leader who built the first “tower,” or starship, to
raise mankind up into heaven. According to the story, “God”
punished these upstart people by confusing their tongues, which
forced them to disperse among the different worlds. The story
presented the confusion of tongues as the cause of the
dispersal instead of its result, but cause-reversal was a commonly
recognized feature of myth. Clearly this legend preserved a
historical fact.
So
far, Kispitorian’s work was perfectly acceptable to most
scientists. But in his forties he began to go off on wild tangents.
Using controversial algorithms--on calculators with a suspiciously
high level of processing power--he began to tear apart Galactic
Standard itself, showing that many words revealed completely separate
phonetic traditions, incompatible with the mainstream of the
language. They could not comfortably have evolved within a population
that regularly spoke either Standard or its primary ancestor
language. Furthermore, there were many words with clearly related
meanings that showed they had once diverged according to standard
linguistic patterns and then were brought together later, with
different meanings or implications. But the time scale implied by the
degree of change was far too great to be accounted for in the period
between humanity’s first settlement of space and the formation
of the Empire. Obviously, claimed Kispitorian, there had been many
different languages on
the planet of origin; Galactic Standard was the first
universal human language. Throughout all human history,
separation of language had been a fact of life; only the Empire had
had the pervasive power to unify speech.
After that, Kispitorian
was written off as a fool, of course--his own Tower of Babble
interpretation was now used against him as if an interesting
illustration had now become a central argument. He very narrowly
escaped execution as a separatist, in fact, since there was an
unmistakable tone of regret in his writing about the loss of
linguistic diversity. The Imperium did succeed in cutting off all his
funding and jailing him for a while because he had been using a
calculator with an illegal level of memory and processing power.
Leyel suspected that Kispitorian got off easy at that--working with
language as he did, getting the results he got, he might well have
developed a calculator so intelligent that it could understand and
produce human speech, which, if discovered, would have meant either
the death penalty or a lynching.
No matter now.
Kispitorian insisted to the end that his work was pure science,
making no value judgments on whether the Empire’s linguistic
unity was a Good Thing or not. He was merely reporting that the
natural condition of humanity was to speak many different languages.
And Leyel believed that he was right.
Leyel
could not help but feel that by combining Kispitorian’s
language studies with Magolissian’s work with language-using
primates he could come up with something important. But what was the
connection? The primates had never developed their own
languages--they only learned nouns and verbs presented to them by
humans. So they could hardly have developed diversity of language.
What connection could there be? Why would diversity ever have
developed? Could it have something to do with why humans became
human?
The primates used only a
tiny subset of Standard. For that matter, so did most people--most of
the two million words in Standard were used only by a few
professionals who actually needed them, while the common vocabulary
of humans throughout the Galaxy consisted of a few thousand words.
Oddly,
though, it was that small subset of Standard that was the most
susceptible to change. Highly esoteric scientific or technical
papers written in 2000 G.E. were still easily readable. Slangy,
colloquial passages in fiction, especially in dialogue, became almost
unintelligible within five hundred years. The language shared by the
most different communities was the language that changed the most.
But over time, that mainstream language always changed together.
It made no sense, then, for there ever to be linguistic
diversity. Language changed most when it was most unified. Therefore
when people were most divided, their language should remain most
similar.
Never mind, Leyel. You’re
out of your discipline. Any competent linguist would know the answer
to that.
But Leyel knew that
wasn’t likely to be true. People immersed in one discipline
rarely questioned the axioms of their profession. Linguists all took
for granted the fact that the language of an isolated population is
invariably more archaic, less susceptible to change. Did they
understand why?
Leyel
got up from his chair. His eyes were tired from staring into the
lector. His knees and back ached from staying so long in the same
position. He wanted to lie down, but knew that if he did, he’d
fall asleep. The curse of getting old--he could fall asleep so
easily, yet could never stay asleep long enough to feel well rested.
He didn’t want to
sleep now, though. He wanted to think.
No,
that wasn’t it. He wanted to talk.
That’s how his best and clearest ideas always came, under
the pressure of conversation, when someone else’s questions and
arguments forced him to think sharply. To make connections, invent
explanations. In a contest with another person, his adrenaline
flowed, his brain made connections that would never otherwise be
made.
Where
was Deet? In years past, he would have been talking this through with
Deet all day. All week. She would know as much about his research as
he did, and would constantly say “Have you thought of this?”
or “How can you possibly think that!” And he would have
been making the same challenges to her
work. In the old days.
But
these weren’t the old days. She didn’t need him any
more--she had her friends on the library staff. Nothing wrong with
that, probably. After all, she wasn’t thinking
now, she was putting old thoughts into practice. She needed them,
not him. But he still needed her. Did she ever
think of that? I might as well have gone to Terminus--damn Hari for
refusing to let me go. I stayed for Deet’s sake, and yet I
don’t have her after all, not when I need her. How dare Hari
decide what was right for Leyel Forska!
Only Hari hadn’t
decided, had he? He would have let Leyel go--without Deet. And Leyel
hadn’t stayed with Deet so she could help him with his
research. He had stayed with her because...because...
He
couldn’t remember why. Love, of course. But he couldn’t
think why that had been so important to him. It wasn’t
important to her. Her
idea of love these days was to urge him to come to the library. “You
can do your research there. We could be together more during the
days.”
The
message was clear. The only way Leyel could remain part of Deet’s
life was if he became part of her new “family” at the
library. Well, she could forget that idea. If she chose to get
swallowed up in that place, fine. If she chose to leave him for a
bunch of--indexers and
cataloguers--fine. Fine.
No.
It wasn’t fine. He wanted to talk
to her. Right now, at this moment, he wanted to tell her what he
was thinking, wanted her to question him and argue with him until she
made him come up with an answer, or lots of answers. He needed her to
see what he wasn’t seeing. He needed her a lot more than they
needed her.
He was out amid the thick
pedestrian traffic of Maslo Boulevard before he realized that this
was the first time since Hari’s funeral that he’d
ventured beyond the immediate neighborhood of his apartment. It was
the first time in months that he’d had anyplace to go. That’s
what I’m doing here, he thought. I just need a change of
scenery, a sense of destination. That’s the only reason I’m
heading to the library. All that emotional nonsense back in the
apartment, that was just my unconscious strategy for making myself
get out among people again.
Leyel
was almost cheerful when he got to the Imperial Library. He had been
there many times over the years, but always for receptions or other
public events--having his own high-capacity lector meant that he
could get access to all the library’s records by cable. Other
people--students, professors from poorer schools, lay readers--they
actually had to come
here to read. But that meant that they knew their way around the
building. Except for finding the major lecture halls and reception
rooms, Leyel hadn’t the faintest idea where anything was.
For
the first time it dawned on him how very large the Imperial Library
was. Deet had mentioned the numbers many times--a staff of more than
five thousand, including machinists, carpenters, cooks, security, a
virtual city in itself--but only now did Leyel realize that this
meant that many people here had never met each other. Who could
possibly know five
thousand people by name? He couldn’t just walk up and ask
for Deet by name. What was the department Deet worked in? She had
changed so often, moving through the bureaucracy.
Everyone he saw was a
patron--people at lectors, people at catalogues, even people reading
books and magazines printed on paper. Where were the librarians? The
few staff members moving through the aisles turned out not to be
librarians at all--they were volunteer docents, helping newcomers
learn how to use the lectors and catalogues. They knew as little
about library staff as he did.
He finally found a room
full of real librarians, sitting at calculators preparing the daily
access and circulation reports. When he tried to speak to one, she
merely waved a hand at him. He thought she was telling him to go away
until he realized that her hand remained in the air, a finger
pointing to the front of the room. Leyel moved toward the elevated
desk where a fat, sleepy-looking middle-aged woman was lazily paging
through long columns of figures, which stood in the air before her in
military formation.
“Sorry to interrupt
you,” he said softly.
She was resting her cheek
on her hand. She didn’t even look at him when he spoke. But she
answered. “I pray for interruptions. “
Only then did he notice
that her eyes were framed with laugh lines, that her mouth even in
repose turned upward into a faint smile.
“I’m looking
for someone. My wife, in fact. Deet Forska. “
Her smile widened. She
sat up. “You’re the beloved Leyel.”
It
was an absurd thing for a stranger to say, but it pleased him
nonetheless to realize that Deet must have spoken of him. Of course
everyone would have known that Deet’s husband was the
Leyel Forska. But this woman hadn’t said it that way, had
she? Not as the Leyel Forska, the celebrity. No, here he was
known as “the beloved Leyel.” Even if this woman meant to
tease him, Deet must have let it be known that she had some affection
for him. He couldn’t help but smile. With relief. He hadn’t
known that he feared the loss of her love so much, but now he wanted
to laugh aloud, to move, to dance with pleasure.
“I imagine I am,”
said Leyel.
“I’m Zay Wax.
Deet must have mentioned me, we have lunch every day. “
No, she hadn’t. She
hardly mentioned anybody at the library, come to think of it. These
two had lunch every day, and Leyel had never heard of her. “Yes,
of course, “ said Leyel. “I’m glad to meet you.”
“And I’m
relieved to see that your feet actually touch the ground.”
“Now and then.”
“She works up in
Indexing these days.” Zay cleared her display.
“Is that on
Trantor?”
Zay laughed. She typed in
a few instructions and her display now filled with a map of the
library complex. It was a complex pile of rooms and corridors, almost
impossible to grasp. “This shows only this wing of the main
building. Indexing is these four floors.”
Four layers near the
middle of the display turned to a brighter color.
“And here’s
where you are right now.”
A small room on the first
floor turned white. Looking at the labyrinth between the two lighted
sections, Leyel had to laugh aloud. “Can’t you just give
me a ticket to guide me?”
“Our tickets only
lead you to places where patrons are allowed. But this isn’t
really hard, Lord Forska. After all, you’re a genius, aren’t
you?”
“Not at the
interior geography of buildings, whatever lies Deet might have told
you.”
“You just go out
this door and straight down the corridor to the elevators--can’t
miss them. Go up to fifteen. When you get out, turn as if you were
continuing down the same corridor, and after a while you go through
an archway that says ‘Indexing.’ Then you lean back your
head and bellow ‘Deet’ as loud as you can. Do that a few
times and either she’ll come or security will arrest you.”
“That’s
what I was going to do if I didn’t
find somebody to guide me.”
“I was hoping you’d
ask me.” Zay stood up and spoke loudly to the busy librarians.
“The cat’s going away. The mice can play. “
“About time,”
one of them said. They all laughed. But they kept working.
“Follow me, Lord
Forska.”
“Leyel, please.”
“Oh, you’re
such a flirt.” When she stood, she was even shorter and fatter
than she had looked sitting down. “Follow me.”
They
conversed cheerfully about nothing much on the way down the corridor.
Inside the elevator, they hooked their feet under the rail as the
gravitic repulsion kicked in. Leyel was so used to weightlessness
after all these years of using elevators on Trantor that he never
noticed. But Zay let her arms float in the air and sighed noisily. “I
love riding the
elevator, “ she said. For the first time Leyel realized that
weightlessness must be a great relief to someone carrying as many
extra kilograms as Zay Wax. When the elevator stopped, Zay made a
great show of staggering out as if under a great burden. “My
idea of heaven is to live forever in gravitic repulsion.”
“You can get
gravitic repulsion for your apartment, if you live on the top floor.”
“Maybe
you can,” said
Zay. “But I have to live on a librarian’s salary.”
Leyel was mortified. He
had always been careful not to flaunt his wealth, but then, he had
rarely talked at any length with people who couldn’t afford
gravitic repulsion. “Sorry,” he said. “I don’t
think I could either, these days.”
“Yes, I heard you
squandered your fortune on a real bang-up funeral.”
Startled that she would
speak so openly of it, he tried to answer in the same joking tone. “I
suppose you could look at it that way. “
“I say it was worth
it,” she said. She looked slyly up at him. “I knew Hari,
you know. Losing him cost humanity more than if Trantor’s sun
went nova.”
“Maybe,” said
Leyel. The conversation was getting out of hand. Time to be cautious.
“Oh, don’t
worry. I’m not a snitch for the Pubs. Here’s the Golden
Archway into Indexing. The Land of Subtle Conceptual Connections.”
Through the arch, it was
as though they had passed into a completely different building. The
style and trim were the same as before, with deeply lustrous fabrics
on the walls and ceiling and floor made of the same smooth
sound-absorbing plastic, glowing faintly with white light. But now
all pretense at symmetry was gone. The ceiling was at different
heights, almost at random; on the left and right there might be doors
or archways, stairs or ramps, an alcove or a huge hall filled with
columns, shelves of books and works of art surrounding tables where
indexers worked with a half-dozen scriptors and lectors at once.
“The form fits the
function,” said Zay.
“I’m afraid
I’m rubbernecking like a first-time visitor to Trantor.”
“It’s a
strange place. But the architect was the daughter of an indexer, so
she knew that standard, orderly, symmetrical interior maps are the
enemy of freely connective thought. The finest touch--and the most
expensive too, I’m afraid--is the fact that from day to day the
layout is rearranged. “
“Rearranged! The
rooms move?”
“A series of random
routines in the master calculator. There are rules, but the program
isn’t afraid to waste space, either. Some days only’ one
room is changed, moved off to some completely different place in the
Indexing area. Other days, everything is changed. The only constant
is the archway leading in. I really wasn’t joking when I said
you should come here and bellow.”
“But--the indexers
must spend the whole morning just finding their stations.”
“Not at all. Any
indexer can work from any station.”
“Ah. So they just
call up the job they were working on the day before.”
“No. They merely
pick up on the job that is already in progress on the station they
happen to choose that day.”
“Chaos!” said
Leyel.
“Exactly.
How do you think a good hyperindex is made? If one person alone
indexes a book, then the only connections that book will make are the
ones that person knows about. Instead, each indexer is forced to skim
through what his predecessor did the day before. Inevitably he’ll
add some new connections that the other indexer didn’t think
of. The environment, the work pattern, everything is designed to
break down habits of thought, to make everything surprising,
everything new.”
“To keep everybody
off balance. “
“Exactly. Your mind
works quickly when you’re running along the edge of the
precipice.”
“By that reckoning,
acrobats should all be geniuses.”
“Nonsense.
The whole labor of acrobats is to learn their routines so perfectly
they never lose
balance. An acrobat who improvises is soon dead. But indexers, when
they lose their balance, they fall into wonderful discoveries. That’s
why the indexes of the Imperial Library are the only ones worth
having. They startle and challenge as you read. All the others are
just--clerical lists.”
“Deet never
mentioned this.”
“Indexers rarely
discuss what they’re doing. You can’t really explain it
anyway. “
“How long has Deet
been an indexer?”
“Not long, really.
She’s still a novice. But I hear she’s very, very good.”
“Where
is she?”
Zay grinned. Then she
tipped her head back and bellowed. “Deet!”
The sound seemed to be
swallowed up at once in the labyrinth. There was no answer.
“Not nearby, I
guess,” said Zay. “We’ll have to probe a little
deeper.”
“Couldn’t
we just ask somebody
where she is?”
“Who would know?”
It took two more floors
and three more shouts before they heard a faint answering cry. “Over
here!”
They followed the sound.
Deet kept calling out, so they could find her.
“I got the flower
room today, Zay! Violets!”
The indexers they passed
along the way all looked up--some smiled, some frowned.
“Doesn’t it
interfere with things?” asked Leyel. “ All this
shouting?”
“Indexers
need interruption.
It breaks up the chain of thought. When. they look back down, they
have to rethink what they were doing. “
Deet, not so far away
now, called again. “The smell is so intoxicating. Imagine--the
same room twice in a month!”
“Are indexers often
hospitalized?” Leyel asked quietly.
“For what?”
“Stress.”
“There’s
no stress on this job,” said Zay. “Just play. We come up
here as a reward for
working in other parts of the library.”
“I
see. This is the time when librarians actually get to read
the books in the library.”
“We all chose this
career because we love books for their own sake. Even the old
inefficient corruptible paper ones. Indexing is like--writing in the
margins.”
The
notion was startling. “Writing in someone else’s
book?”
“It used to be done
all the time, Leyel. How can you possibly engage in dialogue with the
author without writing your answers and arguments in the margins?
Here she is.” Zay preceded him under a low arch and down a few
steps.
“I heard a man’s
voice with you, Zay,” said Deet.
“Mine,” said
Leyel. He turned a corner and saw her there. After such a long
journey to reach her, he thought for a dizzying moment that he didn’t
recognize her. That the library had randomized the librarians as well
as the rooms, and he had happened upon a woman who merely resembled
his long-familiar wife; he would have to reacquaint himself with her
from the beginning.
“I thought so,”
said Deet. She got up from her station and embraced him. Even this
startled him, though she usually embraced him upon meeting. It’s
only the setting that’s different, he told himself. I’m
only surprised because usually she greets me like this at home, in
familiar surroundings. And usually it’s Deet arriving, not me.
Or was there, after all,
a greater warmth in her greeting here? As if she loved him more in
this place than at home? Or, perhaps, as if the new Deet were simply
a warmer, more comfortable person?
I thought that she was
comfortable with me.
Leyel felt uneasy, shy
with her. “If I’d known my coming would cause so much
trouble,” he began. Why did he need so badly to apologize?
“What trouble?”
asked Zay.
“Shouting.
Interrupting.”
“Listen to him,
Deet. He thinks the world has stopped because of a couple of shouts.
“
In the distance they
could hear a man bellowing someone’s name.
“Happens all the
time,” said Zay. ”I’d better get back. Some
lordling from Mahagonny is probably fuming because I haven’t
granted his request for access to the Imperial account books.”
“Nice to meet you,”
said Leyel.
“Good luck finding
your way back, “ said Deet.
“Easy this time,”
said Zay. She paused only once on her way through the door, not to
speak, but to slide a metallic wafer along an almost unnoticeable
slot in the doorframe, above eye level. She turned back and winked at
Deet. Then she was gone.
Leyel
didn’t ask what she had done--if it were his business,
something would have been said. But he suspected that Zay had either
turned on or turned off a recording system. Unsure of whether they
had privacy here from the library staff, Leyel merely stood for a
moment, looking around. Deet’s room really was filled with
violets, real ones, growing out of cracks and apertures in the floor
and walls. The smell was clear but not overpowering. ”What is
this room for?”
“For
me. Today, anyway. I’m so glad you came.”
“You never told me
about this place. “
“I didn’t
know about it until I was assigned to this section. Nobody talks
about Indexing. We never tell outsiders. The architect died three
thousand years ago. Only our own machinists understand how it works.
It’s like”
“Fairyland.”
“Exactly.”
“A place where all
the rules of the universe are suspended.”
“Not all. We still
stick with good old gravity. Inertia. That sort of thing.”
“This place is
right for you, Deet. This room. “
“Most people go
years without getting the flower room. It isn’t always violets,
you know. Sometimes climbing roses. Sometimes periwinkle. They say
there’s really a dozen flower rooms, but never more than one at
a time is accessible. It’s been violets for me both times,
though. “
Leyel couldn’t help
himself. He laughed. It was funny. It was delightful. What did this
have to do with a library? And. yet what a marvelous thing to have
hidden away in the heart of this somber place. He sat down on a
chair. Violets grew out of the top of the chairback, so that flowers
brushed his shoulders.
“You finally got
tired of staying in the apartment all day?” asked Deet.
Of course she would
wonder why he finally came out, after all her invitations had been so
long ignored. Yet he wasn’t sure if he could speak frankly. “I
needed to talk with you.” He glanced back at the slot Zay had
used in the doorframe. “Alone,” he said.
Was that a look of dread
that crossed her face?
“We’re
alone,” Deet said quietly. “Zay saw to that. Truly alone,
as we can’t be even in the apartment. “
It took Leyel a moment to
realize what she was asserting. He dared not even speak the word. So
he mouthed his question: Pubs?
“They never bother
with the library in their normal spying. Even if they set up
something special for you, there’s now an interference field
blocking out our conversation. Chances are, though, that they won’t
bother to monitor you again until you leave here.“
She seemed edgy.
Impatient. As if she didn’t like having this conversation. As
if she wanted him to get on with it, or maybe just get it over with.
“If you don’t
mind,” he said. “I haven’t interrupted you here
before, I thought that just this once--”
“Of course, “
she said. But she was still tense. As if she feared what he might
say.
So
he explained to her all his thoughts about language. All that he had
gleaned from Kispitorian’s and Magolissian’s work. She
seemed to relax almost as soon as it became clear he was talking
about his research. What did she dread, he wondered. Was she afraid I
came to talk about our relationship? She hardly needed to fear that.
He had no intention of making things more difficult by whining
about things that could riot be helped.
When he was through
explaining the ideas that had come to him, she nodded carefully--as
she had done a thousand times before, after he explained an idea or
argument. “I don’t know,” she finally said. As so
many times before, she was reluctant to commit herself to an
immediate response.
And,
as he had often done, he insisted. “But what do you think?”
She
pursed her lips. “Just offhand--I’ve never tried a
serious linguistic application of community theory, beyond jargon
formation, so this is just my first thought--but try this. Maybe
small isolated populations guard their language--jealously,
because it’s part of who they are. Maybe language is the most
powerful ritual of all, so that people who have the same language are
one in a way that people who can’t understand each other’s
speech never are. We’d never know, would we, since everybody
for ten thousand years has spoken Standard.”
“So it isn’t
the size of the population, then, so much as--’’
“How
much they care about
their language. How much it defines them as a community. A large
population starts to think that everybody talks like them. They want
to distinguish themselves, form a separate identity. Then they
start developing jargons and slangs to separate themselves from
others. Isn’t that what happens to common speech? Children try
to find ways of talking that their parents don’t use.
Professionals talk in private vocabularies so laymen won’t know
the passwords. All rituals for community definition.”
Leyel nodded gravely, but
he had one obvious doubt.
Obvious enough that Deet
knew it, too. “Yes, yes, I know, Leyel. I immediately
interpreted your question in terms of my own discipline. Like
physicists who think that everything can be explained by physics. “
Leyel
laughed. “I thought of that, but what you said makes sense. And
it would explain why the natural tendency of communities is to
diversify language. We want a common tongue, a language of open
discourse. But we also want private languages. Except a completely
private language would be useless--whom would we talk to? So
wherever a community forms, it creates at least a few linguistic
barriers to outsiders, a few shibboleths that only insiders will
know. “
“And the more
allegiance a person has to a community, the more fluent he’ll
become in that language, and the more he’ll speak it.”
“Yes, it makes
sense,” said Leyel. “So easy. You see how much I need
you?”
He knew that his words
were a mild rebuke--why weren’t you home when I needed you--but
he couldn’t resist saying it. Sitting here with Deet, even in
this strange and redolent place, felt right and comfortable. How
could she have withdrawn from him? To him, her presence was what made
a place home. To her, this place was home whether he was there or
not.
He tried to put it in
words--in abstract words, so it wouldn’t sting. “I think
the greatest tragedy is when one person has more allegiance to his
community than any of the other members. “
Deet only half smiled and
raised her eyebrows. She didn’t know what he was getting at.
“He speaks the
community language all the time,” said Leyel. “Only
nobody else ever speaks it to him, or not enough anyway. And the more
he speaks it, the more he alienates the others and drives them away,
until he’s alone. Can you imagine anything more sad? Somebody
who’s filled up with a language, hungry to speak, to hear it
spoken, and yet there’s no one left who understands a word of
it.”
She nodded, her eyes
searching him. Does she understand what I’m saying? He waited
for her to speak. He had said all he dared to say.
“But imagine this,”
she finally said. “What if he left that little place where no
one understood him, and went over a hill to a new place, and all of a
sudden he heard a hundred voices, a thousand, speaking the words he
had treasured all those lonely years. And then he realized that he
had never really known the language at all. The words had hundreds of
meanings and nuances he had never guessed. Because each speaker
changed the language a little just by speaking it. And when he spoke
at last, his own voice sounded like music in his ears, and the others
listened with delight, with rapture, his music was like the water of
life pouring from a fountain, and he knew that he had never been home
before. “
Leyel couldn’t
remember hearing Deet sound so--rhapsodic, that was it, she herself
was singing. She is the person she was talking about. In this place,
her voice is different, that’s what she meant. At home with me,
she’s been alone. Here in the library she’s found others
who speak her secret language. It isn’t that she didn’t
want our marriage to succeed. She hoped for it, but I never
understood her. These people did. Do. She’s home here, that’s
what she’s telling me.
“I understand,”
he said.
“Do you?” She
looked searchingly into his face.
“I think so. It’s
all right.”
She gave him a quizzical
look.
“I mean, it’s
fine. It’s good. This place. It’s fine.”
She
looked relieved, but not completely. “You shouldn’t be so
sad about it, Leyel.
This is a happy place. And you could do everything here that you ever
did at home.”
Except love you as the
other part of me, and have you love me as the other part of you.
“Yes, I’m sure.”
“No,
I mean it. What you’re working on--I can see that you’re
getting close to something. Why not work on it here,
where we can talk about it?”
Leyel shrugged.
“You
are getting close,
aren’t you?”
“How do I know? I’m
thrashing around like a drowning man in the ocean at night. Maybe I’m
close to shore, and maybe I’m just swimming farther out to
sea.”
“Well, what do you
have? Didn’t we get closer just now?”
“No. This language
thing--if it’s just an aspect of community theory, it can’t
be the answer to human origin.”
“Why not?”
“Because
many primates have communities. A lot of other animals. Herding
animals, for instance. Even schools of fish.
Bees. Ants. Every multicelled organism is a community, for that
matter. So if linguistic diversion grows out of community, then it’s
inherent in prehuman animals and therefore isn’t part of the
definition of humanity.”
“Oh. I guess not.”
“Right.”
She looked disappointed.
As if she had really hoped they would find the answer to the origin
question right there, that very day.
Leyel stood up. “Oh
well. Thanks for your help. “
“I don’t
think I helped.”
“Oh, you did. You
showed me I was going up a dead-end road. You saved me a lot of
wasted--thought. That’s progress, in science, to know which
answers aren’t true.”
His
words had a double meaning, of course. She had also shown him that
their marriage was a dead-end road. Maybe she understood him. Maybe
not. It didn’t matter--he had understood her.
That little story about a lonely person finally discovering a
place where she could be at home--how could he miss the point of
that?
“Leyel,” she
said. “Why not put your question to the indexers?”
“Do
you think the library researchers could find answers where I
haven’t?”
“Not
the research department. Indexing.
“
“What do you mean?”
“Write down your
questions. All the avenues you’ve pursued. Linguistic
diversity. Primate language. And the other questions, the old ones.
Archaeological, historical approaches. Biological. Kinship patterns.
Customs. Everything you can think of. Just put it together as
questions. And then we’ll have them index it.”
“Index
my questions?”
“It’s
what we do--we read things and think of other things that might be
related somehow, and we connect them. We don’t say what the
connection means, but we know that it means something, that the
connection is real. We won’t give you answers, Leyel, but if
you follow the index, it might help you to think of connections. Do
you see what I mean?”
“I never
thought of that. Do you think a couple of indexers might have the
time to work on it?”
“Not
a couple of us. All of
us. “
“Oh, that’s
absurd, Deet. I wouldn’t even ask it.”
“I
would. We aren’t supervised up here, Leyel. We don’t
meet quotas. Our job is to read and think. Usually we have a few
hundred projects going, but for a day we could easily work on the
same document.”
“It would be a
waste. I can’t publish anything, Deet.”
“It doesn’t
have to be published. Don’t you understand? Nobody but us knows
what we do here. We can take it as an unpublished document and work
on it just the same. It won’t ever have to go online for the
library as a whole.”
Leyel shook his head. “
And then if they lead me to the answer--what, will we publish it with
two hundred bylines?”
“It’ll
be your paper,
Leyel. We’re just indexers, not authors. You’ll still
have to make the connections. Let us try. Let us be part of
this.”
Suddenly Leyel understood
why she was so insistent on this. Getting him involved with the
library was her way of pretending she was still part of his life. She
could believe she hadn’t left him, if he became part of her new
community.
Didn’t she know how
unbearable that would be? To see her here, so happy without him? To
come here as just one friend among many, when once they had been--or
he had thought they were--one indivisible soul? How could he possibly
do such a thing?
And yet she wanted it, he
could see it in the way she was looking at him, so girlish, so
pleading that it made him think of when they were first in love, on
another world--she would look at him like that whenever he insisted
that he had to leave. Whenever she thought she might be losing him.
Doesn’t she know
who has lost whom?
Never mind. What did it
matter if she didn’t understand? If it would make her happy to
have him pretend to be part of her new home, part of these
librarians--if she wanted him to submit his life’s work to the
ministrations of these absurd indexers, then why not? What would it
cost him? Maybe the process of writing down all his questions in some
coherent order would help him. And maybe she was right--maybe a
Trantorian index would help him solve the origin question.
Maybe if he came here, he
could still be a small part of her life. It wouldn’t be like
marriage. But since that was impossible, then at least he could have
enough of her here that he could remain himself, remain the person
that he had become because of loving her for all these years.
“Fine,” he
said. “I’ll write it up and bring it in.”
“I really think we
can help.”
“Yes,” he
said, pretending to more certainty than he felt. “Maybe.”
He started for the door.
“Do you have to
leave already?”
He nodded.
“Are you sure you
can find your way out?”
“Unless the rooms
have moved.”
“No, only at
night.”
“Then I’ll
find my way out just fine.” He took a few steps toward her,
then stopped.
“What?” she
asked.
“Nothing.”
“Oh.” She
sounded disappointed. “I thought you were going to kiss me
goodbye.” Then she puckered up like a three-year-old child.
He laughed. He kissed
her--like a three-year-old--and then he left.
For
two days he brooded. Saw her off in the morning, then tried to read,
to watch the vids, anything. Nothing held his attention. He took
walks. He even went topside once, to see the sky overhead--it was
night, thick with stars. None of it engaged him. Nothing held.
One of the vid programs had a moment, just briefly, a scene on a
semiarid world, where a strange plant grew that dried out at
maturity, broke off at the root, and then let the wind blow it
around, scattering seeds. For a moment he felt a dizzying empathy
with the plant as it tumbled by--am I as dry as that, hurtling
through dead land? But no, he knew even that wasn’t true,
because the tumbleweed had life enough left in it to scatter seeds.
Leyel had no seed left. That was scattered years ago.
On the third morning he
looked at himself in the mirror and laughed grimly. “Is this
how people feel before they kill themselves?” he asked. Of
course not--he knew that he was being melodramatic. He felt no desire
to die.
But then it occurred to
him that if this feeling of uselessness kept on, if he never found
anything to engage himself, then he might as well be dead, mightn’t
he, because his being alive wouldn’t accomplish much more than
keeping his clothes warm.
He sat down at the
scriptor and began writing down questions. Then, under each question,
he would explain how he had already pursued that particular avenue
and why it didn’t yield the answer to the origin question. More
questions would come up then--and he was right, the mere process of
summarizing his own fruitless research made answers seem
tantalizingly close. It was a good exercise. And even if he never
found an answer, this list of questions might be of help to someone
with a clearer intellect--or better information--decades or centuries
or millennia from now.
Deet came home and went
to bed with Leyel still typing away. She knew the look he had when he
was fully engaged in writing--she did nothing to disturb him. He
noticed her enough to realize that she was carefully leaving him
alone. Then he settled back into writing.
The next morning she
awoke to find him lying in bed beside her, still dressed. A personal
message capsule lay on the floor in the doorway from the bedroom. He
had finished his questions. She bent over, picked it up, took it with
her to the library.
“His questions
aren’t academic after all, Deet.”
“I told you they
weren’t.”
“Hari was right.
For all that he seemed to be a dilettante, with his money and his
rejection of the universities, he’s a man of substance.”
“Will the Second
Foundation benefit, then, if he comes up with an answer to his
question?”
“I don’t
know, Deet. Hari was the fortune-teller. Presumably mankind is
already human, so it isn’t as if we have to start the process
over.”
“Do you think not?”
“What, should we
find some uninhabited planet and put some newborns on it and let them
grow up feral, and then come back in a thousand years and try to turn
them human?”
“I
have a better idea. Let’s take ten thousand worlds filled with
people who live their lives like animals, always hungry, always quick
with their teeth and their claws, and let’s strip away the
veneer of civilization to expose to them what they really are. And
then, when they see themselves clearly, let’s come back and
teach them how to be really
human this time, instead of only having bits and flashes of
humanity.”
“All right. Let’s
do that.”
“I knew you’d
see it my way.”
“Just
make sure your husband finds out how
the trick is done. Then we have all the time in the world to set
it up and pull it off.”
When the index was done,
Deet brought Leyel with her to the library when she went to work in
the morning. She did not take him to Indexing, but rather installed
him in a private research room lined with vids--only instead of
giving the illusion of windows looking out onto an outside scene, the
screens filled all the walls from floor to ceiling, so it seemed that
he was on a pinnacle high above the scene, without walls or even a
railing to keep him from falling off. It gave him flashes of vertigo
when he looked around--only the door broke the illusion. For a moment
he thought of asking for a different room. But then he remembered
Indexing, and realized that maybe he’d do better work if he too
felt a bit off balance all the time.
At first the indexing
seemed obvious. He brought the first page of his questions to the
lector display and began to read. The lector would track his pupils,
so that whenever he paused to gaze at a word, other references would
begin to pop up in the space beside the page he was reading. Then
he’d glance at one of the references. When it was uninteresting
or obvious, he’d skip to the next reference, and the first one
would slide back on the display, out of the way, but still there if
he changed his mind and wanted it.
If a reference engaged
him, then when he reached the last line of the part of it on display,
it would expand to full-page size and slide over to stand in front of
the main text. Then, if this new material had been indexed, it would
trigger new references--and so on, leading him farther and farther
away from the original document until he finally decided to go back
and pick up where he left off.
So far, this was what any
index could be expected to do. It was only as he moved farther into
reading his own questions that he began to realize the quirkiness of
this index. Usually, index references were tied to important words,
so that if you just wanted to stop and think without bringing up a
bunch of references you didn’t want, all you had to do was keep
your gaze focused in an area of placeholder words, empty phrases like
“If this were all that could be...” Anyone who made it a
habit to read indexed works soon learned this trick and used it till
it became reflex.
But when Leyel stopped on
such empty phrases, references came up anyway. And instead of having
a clear relationship to the text, sometimes the references were
perverse or comic or argumentative. For instance, he paused in the
middle of reading his argument that archaeological searches for
“primitiveness” were useless in the search for origins
because all “primitive” cultures represented a decline
from a star-going culture. He had written the phrase “ All this
primitivism is useful only because it predicts what we might become
if we’re careless and don’t preserve our fragile links
with civilization. “ By habit his eyes focused on the empty
words “what we might become if.” Nobody could index a
phrase like that.
Yet they had. Several
references appeared. And so instead of staying within his reverie, he
was distracted, drawn to what the indexers had tied to such an absurd
phrase.
One of the references was
a nursery rhyme that he had forgotten he knew:
Wrinkly Grandma Posey
Rockets all are rosy.
Lift off, drift off,
All fall down.
Why
in the world had the indexer put that
in? The first thought that came to Leyel’s mind was himself
and some of the servants’ children, holding hands and walking
in a circle, round and round till they came to the last words,
whereupon they threw themselves to the ground and laughed insanely.
The sort of game that only little children could possibly think was
fun.
Since his eyes lingered
on the poem, it moved to the main document display and new references
appeared. One was a scholarly article on the evolution of the poem,
speculating that it might have arisen during the early days of
starflight on the planet of origin, when rockets may have been used
to escape from a planet’s gravity well. Was that why this poem
had been indexed to his article? Because it was tied to the planet of
origin?
No, that was too obvious.
Another article about the poem was more helpful. It rejected the
early-days-of-rockets idea, because the earliest versions of the poem
never used the word “rocket. “ The oldest extant version
went like this:
Wrinkle down a rosy,
Pock--a fock--a posy,
Lash us, dash us,
All fall down.
Obviously, said the
commentator, these were mostly nonsense words--the later versions had
arisen because children had insisted on trying to make sense of them.
And it occurred to Leyel
that perhaps this was why the indexer had linked this poem to his
phrase--because the poem had once been nonsense, but we insisted on
making sense out of it.
Was this a comment on
Leyel’s whole search for origins? Did the indexer think it was
useless?
No--the poem had been
tied to the empty phrase “what we might become if.” Maybe
the indexer was saying that human beings are like this poem--our
lives make no sense, but we insist on making sense out of them.
Didn’t Deet say something like that once, when she was talking
about the role of storytelling in community formation? The universe
resists causality, she said. But human intelligence demands it. So we
tell stories to impose causal relationships among the unconnected
events of the world around us.
That includes ourselves,
doesn’t it? Our own lives are nonsense, but we impose a story
on them, we sort our memories into cause-and-effect chains, forcing
them to make sense even though they don’t. Then we take the sum
of our stories and call it our “self.” This poem shows us
the process--from randomness to meaning--and then we think our
meanings are “true.”
But somehow all the
children had come to agree on the new version of the poem. By the
year 2000 G.E., only the final and current version existed in all the
worlds, and it had remained constant ever since. How was it that all
the children on every world came to agree on the same version? How
did the change spread? Did ten thousand kids on ten thousand worlds
happen to make up the same changes?
It had to be word of
mouth. Some kid somewhere made a few changes, and his version spread.
A few years, and all the children in his neighborhood use the new
version, and then all the kids in his city, on his planet. It could
happen very quickly, in fact, because each generation of children
lasts only a few years--seven-year-olds might take the new version as
a joke, but repeat it often enough that five-year-olds think it’s
the true version of the poem, and within a few years there’s
nobody left among the children who remembers the old way.
A thousand years is long
enough for the new version of the poem to spread. Or for five or a
dozen new versions to collide and get absorbed into each other and
then spread back, changed, to worlds that had revised the poem once
or twice already.
And as Leyel sat there,
thinking these thoughts, he conjured up an image in his mind of a
network of children, bound to each other by the threads of this poem,
extending from planet to planet throughout the Empire, and then back
through time, from one generation of children to the previous one, a
three-dimensional fabric that bound all children together from the
beginning.
And yet as each child
grew up, he cut himself free from the fabric of that poem. No longer
would he hear the words “Wrinkly Grandma Posey” and
immediately join hands with the child next to him. He wasn’t
part of the song any more.
But his own children
were. And then his grandchildren. All joining hands with each other,
changing from circle to circle, in a never-ending human chain
reaching back to some long-forgotten ritual on one of the worlds of
mankind--maybe, maybe on the planet of origin itself.
The vision was so clear,
so overpowering, that when he finally noticed the lector display it
was as sudden and startling as waking up. He had to sit there,
breathing shallowly, until he calmed himself, until his heart stopped
beating so fast.
He had found some part of
his answer, though he didn’t understand it yet. That fabric
connecting all the children, that was part of what made us human,
though he didn’t know why. This strange and perverse indexing
of a meaningless phrase had brought him a new way of looking at the
problem. Not that the universal culture of children was a new idea.
Just that he had never thought of it as having anything to do with
the origin question.
Was this what the indexer
meant by including this poem? Had the indexer also seen this vision?
Maybe, but probably not.
It might have been nothing more than the idea of becoming something
that made the indexer think of transformation--becoming old, like
wrinkly Grandma Posey? Or it might have been a general thought about
the spread of humanity through the stars, away from the planet of
origin, that made the indexer remember how the poem seemed to tell of
rockets that rise up from a planet, drift for a while, then come down
to settle on a planet. Who knows what the poem meant to the indexer?
Who knows why it occurred to her to link it with his document on that
particular phrase?
Then Leyel realized that
in his imagination, he was thinking of Deet making that particular
connection. There was no reason to think it was her work, except that
in his mind she was all the indexers. She had joined them, become one
of them, and so when indexing work was being done, she was part of
it. That’s what it meant to be part of a community--all its
works became, to a degree, your works. All that the indexers did,
Deet was a part of it, and therefore Deet had done it.
Again the image of a
fabric came to mind, only this time it was a topologically impossible
fabric, twisted into itself so that no matter what part of the edge
of it you held, you held the entire edge, and the middle, too. It was
all one thing, and each part held the whole within it.
But
if that was true, then when Deet came to join the library, so did
Leyel, because she contained Leyel within her. So in coming here, she
had not left him at all. Instead, she had woven him into a new
fabric, so that instead of losing something he was gaining. He was
part of all this, because she
was, and so if he lost her it would only be because he rejected
her.
Leyel covered his eyes
with his hands. How did his meandering thoughts about the origin
question lead him to thinking about his marriage? Here he thought he
was on the verge of profound understanding, and then he fell back
into self-absorption.
He cleared away all the
references to “Wrinkly Grandma Posey” or “Wrinkle
Down a Rosy” or whatever it was, then returned to reading his
original document, trying to confine his thoughts to the subject at
hand.
Yet it was a losing
battle. He could not escape from the seductive distraction of the
index. He’d be reading about tool use and technology, and how
it could not be the dividing line between human and animal because
there were animals that made tools and taught their use to others.
Then, suddenly, the index
would have him reading an ancient terror tale about a man who wanted
to be the greatest genius of all time, and he believed that the only
thing preventing him from achieving greatness was the hours he lost
in sleep. So he invented a machine to sleep for him, and it worked
very well until he realized that the machine was having all his
dreams. Then he demanded that his machine tell him what it was
dreaming.
The machine poured forth
the most astonishing, brilliant thoughts ever imagined by any
man--far wiser than anything this man had ever written during his
waking hours. The man took a hammer and smashed the machine, so that
he could have his dreams back. But even when he started sleeping
again, he was never able to come close to the clarity of thought that
the machine had had.
Of course he could never
publish what the machine had written--it would be unthinkable to put
forth the product of a machine as if it were the work of a man. After
the man died--in despair--people found the printed text of what the
machine had written, and thought the man had written it and hidden it
away. They published it, and he was widely acclaimed as the greatest
genius who had ever lived.
This was universally
regarded as an obscenely horrifying tale because it had a machine
stealing part of a man ‘s mind and using it to destroy him, a
common theme. But why did the indexer refer to it in the midst of a
discussion of tool-making?
Wondering
about that led Leyel to think that this story itself was a kind of
tool. Just like the machine the man in the story had made. The
storyteller gave his dreams to the story, and then when people heard
it or read it, his dreams--his nightmares--came out to live in their
memories. Clear and sharp and terrible and true, those dreams they
received. And yet if he tried to tell
them the same truths, directly, not in the form of a story,
people would think his ideas were silly and small.
And then Leyel remembered
what Deet had said about how people absorb stories from their
communities and take them into themselves and use these stories to
form their own spiritual autobiography. They remember doing what the
heroes of the stories did, and so they continue to act out each
hero’s character in their own lives, or, failing that, they
measure themselves against the standard the story set for them.
Stories become the human conscience, the human mirror.
Again, as so many other
times, he ended these ruminations with his hands pressed over his
eyes, trying to shut out--or lock in?--images of fabrics and mirrors,
worlds and atoms, until finally, finally, he opened his eyes and saw
Deet and Zay sitting in front of him.
No, leaning over him. He
was on a low bed, and they knelt beside him.
“Am I ill?”
he asked. “I hope not,” said Deet. “We found you on
the floor. You’re exhausted, Leyel. I’ve been telling
you--you have to eat, you have to get a normal amount of sleep.
You’re not young enough to keep up this work schedule. “
“I’ve barely
started.”
Zay laughed lightly.
“Listen to him, Deet. I told you he was so caught up in this
that he didn’t even know what day it was.”
“You’ve been
doing this for three weeks, Leyel. For the last week you haven’t
even come home. I bring you food, and you won’t eat. People
talk to you, and you forget that you’re in a conversation, you
just drift off into some sort of trance. Leyel, I wish I’d
never brought you here, I wish I’d never suggested indexing--”
“No!” Leyel
cried. He struggled to sit up.
At first Deet tried to
push him back down, insisting he should rest. It was Zay who helped
him sit. “Let the man talk,” she said. “Just
because you’re his wife doesn’t mean you can stop him
from talking.”
“The
index is wonderful,” said Leyel. “Like a tunnel opened up
into my own mind. I keep seeing light just that
far out of reach, and then I wake up and it’s just me alone
on a pinnacle except for the pages up on the lector. I keep losing
it--”
“No,
Leyel, we keep losing you.
The index is poisoning you, it’s taking over your mind--“
“Don’t be
absurd, Deet. You’re the one who suggested this, and you’re
right. The index keeps surprising me, making me think in new ways.
There are some answers already.”
“Answers?”
asked Zay.
“I don’t know
how well I can explain it. What makes us human. It has to do with
communities and stories and tools and--it has to do with you and me,
Deet.”
“I should hope
we’re human,” she said. Teasing him, but also urging him
on.
“We lived together
all those years, and we formed a community--with our children, till
they left, and then just us. But we were like animals. “
“Only sometimes,”
she said.
“I mean like
herding animals, or primate tribes, or any community that’s
bound together only by the rituals and patterns of the present
moment. We had our customs, our habits. Our private language of words
and gestures, our dances, all the things that flocks of geese and
hives of bees can do.”
“Very primitive. “
“Yes, that’s
right, don’t you see? That’s a community that dies with
each generation. When we die, Deet, it will all be gone with us.
Other people will marry, but none of them will know our dances and
songs and language and--”
“Our children will.
“
“No,
that’s my point. They knew us, they even think they know
us, but they were never part of the community of our marriage.
Nobody is. Nobody can be. That’s why, when I thought you
were leaving me for this”
“When did you think
that I--”
“Hush, Deet,”
said Zay. “Let the man babble.”
“When I thought you
were leaving me, I felt like I was dead, like I was losing
everything, because if you weren’t part of our marriage, then
there was nothing left. You see?”
“I don’t see
what that has to do with human origins, Leyel. I only know that I
would never leave you, and I can’t believe that you could
think--”
“Don’t
distract him, Deet.”
“It’s the
children. All the children. They play Wrinkly Grandma Posey, and then
they grow up and don’t play any more, so the actual community
of these particular five or six children doesn’t exist any
more--but other kids are still doing the dance. Chanting the poem.
For ten thousand years!”
“This makes us
human? Nursery rhymes?”
“They’re
all part of the same community! Across all the empty space between
the stars, there are still connections, they’re still somehow
the same kids. Ten
thousand years, ten thousand worlds, quintillions of children, and
they all knew the poem, they all did the dance. Story and ritual--it
doesn’t die with the tribe, it doesn’t stop at the
border. Children who never met face-to-face, who lived so far apart
that the light from one star still hasn’t reached the other,
they belonged to the same community. We’re human because we
conquered time and space. We conquered the barrier of perpetual
ignorance between one person and another. We found a way to slip my
memories into your head, and yours into mine. “
“But these are the
ideas you already rejected, Leyel. Language and community and--”
“No!
No, not just language, not just tribes of chimpanzees chattering at
each other. Stories,
epic tales that define a community, mythic tales that teach us
how the world works, we use them to create each other. We became a
different species, we became human, because we found a way to
extend gestation beyond the womb, a way to give each child ten
thousand parents that he’ll never meet face-to-face.”
Then, at last, Leyel fell
silent, trapped by the inadequacy of his words. They couldn’t
tell what he had seen in his mind. If they didn’t already
understand, they never would.
“Yes,” said
Zay. “I think indexing your paper was a very good idea. “
Leyel sighed and lay back
down on the bed. “I shouldn’t have tried.”
“On the contrary,
you’ve succeeded,” said Zay. Deet shook her head. Leyel
knew why--Deet was trying to signal Zay that she shouldn’t
attempt to soothe Leyel with false praise.
“Don’t hush
me, Deet. I know what I’m saying. I may not know Leyel as well
as you do, but I know truth when I hear it. In a way, I think Hari
knew it instinctively. That’s why he insisted on all his silly
holodisplays, forcing the poor citizens of Terminus to put up with
his pontificating every few years. It was his way of continuing to
create them, of remaining alive within them. Making them feel like
their lives had purpose behind them. Mythic and epic story, both at
once. They’ll all carry a bit of Hari Seldon within them just
the way that children carry their parents with them to the grave. “
At first Leyel could only
hear the idea that Hari would have approved of his ideas of human
origin. Then he began to realize that there was much more to what Zay
had said than simple affirmation.
“You knew Hari
Seldon?”
“A little,”
said Zay.
“Either tell him or
don’t,” said Deet. “You can’t take him this
far in, and not bring him the rest of the way.”
“I knew Hari the
way you know Deet,” said Zay.
“No,” said
Leyel. “He would have mentioned you.”
“Would he? He never
mentioned his students.”
“He had thousands
of students.”
“I know, Leyel. I
saw them come and fill his lecture halls and listen to the half-baked
fragments of psychohistory that he taught them. But then he’d
come away, here to the library, into a room where the Pubs never go,
where he could speak words that the Pubs would never hear, and there
he’d teach his real students. Here is the only place where the
science of psychohistory lives on, where Deet’s ideas about the
formation of community actually have application, where your own
vision of the origin of humanity will shape our calculations for the
next thousand years. “
Leyel was dumbfounded.
“In the Imperial Library? Hari had his own college here in the
library?”
“Where else? He had
to leave us at the end, when it was time to go public with his
predictions of the Empire’s fall. Then the Pubs started
watching him in earnest, and in order to keep them from finding us,
he couldn’t ever come back here again. It was the most terrible
thing that ever happened to us. As if he died, for us, years before
his body died. He was part of us, Leyel, the way that you and Deet
are part of each other. She knows. She joined us before he left.”
It stung. To have had
such a great secret, and not to have been included. “Why Deet,
and not me?”
“Don’t you
know, Leyel? Our little community’s survival was the most
important thing. As long as you were Leyel Forska, master of one of
the greatest fortunes in history, you couldn’t possibly be part
of this--it would have provoked too much comment, too much attention.
Deet could come, because Commissioner Chen wouldn’t care that
much what she did--he never takes spouses seriously, just one of the
ways he proves himself to be a fool.”
“But Hari always
meant for you to be one of us,” said Deet. “His worst
fear was that you’d go off half-cocked and force your way into
the First Foundation, when all along he wanted you in this one. The
Second Foundation.”
Leyel remembered his last
interview with Hari. He tried to remember--did Hari ever lie to him?
He told him that Deet couldn’t go to Terminus--but now that
took on a completely different meaning. The old fox! He never lied at
all, but he never told the truth, either.
Zay went on. “It
was tricky, striking the right balance, encouraging you to provoke
Chen just enough that he’d strip away your fortune and then
forget you, but not so much that he’d have you imprisoned or
killed.”
“You were making
that happen?”
“No, no, Leyel. It
was going to happen anyway, because you’re who you are and Chen
is who he is. But there was a range of possibility, somewhere between
having you and Deet tortured to death on the one hand, and on the
other hand having you and Rom conspire to assassinate Chen and take
control of the Empire. Either of those extremes would have made it
impossible for you to be part of the Second Foundation. Hari was
convinced--and so is Deet, and so am I--that you belong with us. Not
dead. Not in politics. Here.”
It was outrageous, that
they should make such choices for him, without telling him. How could
Deet have kept it secret all this time? And yet they were so
obviously correct. If Hari had told him about this Second Foundation,
Leyel would have been eager, proud to join it. Yet Leyel couldn’t
have been told, couldn’t have joined them until Chen no longer
perceived him as a threat.
“What makes you
think Chen will ever forget me?”
“Oh, he’s
forgotten you, all right. In fact, I’d guess that by tonight
he’ll have forgotten everything he ever knew.”
“What do you mean?”
“How do you think
we’ve dared to speak so openly today, after keeping silence for
so long? After all, we aren’t in Indexing now.”
Leyel felt a thrill of
fear run through him. “They can hear us?”
“If they were
listening. At the moment, though, the Pubs are very busy helping Rom
Divart solidify his control of the Commission of Public Safety. And
if Chen hasn’t been taken to the radiation chamber, he soon
will be.”
Leyel couldn’t help
himself. The news was too glorious--he sprang up from his bed, almost
danced at the news. “Rom ‘s doing it! After all these
years--overthrowing the old spider!”
“It’s more
important than mere justice or revenge,” said Zay. “We’re
absolutely certain that a significant number of governors and
prefects and military commanders will refuse to recognize the
overlordship of the Commission of Public Safety. It will take Rom
Divart the rest of his life just to put down the most dangerous of
the rebels. In order to concentrate his forces on the great rebels
and pretenders close to Trantor, he’ll grant an unprecedented
degree of independence to many, many worlds on the periphery. To all
intents and purposes, those outer worlds will no longer be part of
the Empire. Imperial authority will not touch them, and their taxes
will no longer flow inward to Trantor. The Empire is no longer
Galactic. The death of Commissioner Chen--today--will mark the
beginning of the fall of the Galactic Empire, though no one but us
will notice what it means for decades, even centuries to come.”
“So soon after
Hari’s death. Already his predictions are coming true. “
“Oh, it isn’t
just coincidence, “ said Zay. “One of our agents was able
to influence Chen just enough to ensure that he sent Rom Divart in
person to strip you of your fortune. That was what pushed Rom over
the edge and made him carry out this coup. Chen would have fallenor
died--sometime in the next year and a half no matter what we did. But
I’ll admit we took a certain pleasure in using Hari’s
death as a trigger to bring him down a little early, and under
circumstances that allowed us to bring you into the library. “
“We also used it as
a test,” said Deet. “We’re trying to find ways of
influencing individuals without their knowing it. It’s still
very crude and haphazard, but in this case we were able to influence
Chen with great success. We had to do it--your life was at stake, and
so was the chance of your joining us.”
“I feel like a
puppet,” said Leyel.
“Chen was the
puppet,” said Zay. “You were the prize. “
“That’s
all nonsense,” said Deet. “Hari loved you. I
love you. You’re a great man. The Second Foundation had to
have you. And everything you’ve said and stood for all your
life made it clear that you were hungry to be part of our work.
Aren’t you?”.
“Yes,” said
Leyel. Then he laughed. “The index!”
“What’s so
funny?” asked Zay, looking a little miffed. “We worked
very hard on it.”
“And it was
wonderful, transforming, hypnotic. To take all these people and put
them together as if they were a single mind, far wiser in its
intuition than anyone could ever be alone. The most intensely
unified, the most powerful human community that’s ever existed.
If it’s our capacity for storytelling that makes us human, then
perhaps our capacity for indexing will make us something better than
human.”
Deet patted Zay’s
hand. “Pay no attention to him, Zay. This is clearly the mad
enthusiasm of a proselyte.”
Zay
raised an eyebrow. “ I’m
still waiting for him to explain why the index made him laugh.
“
Leyel obliged her.
“Because all the time, I kept thinking--how could librarians
have done this? Mere librarians! And now I discover that these
librarians are all of Hari Seldon’s prize students. My
questions were indexed by psychohistorians!”
“Not
exclusively. Most of us are
librarians. Or machinists, or custodians, or whatever--the
psychologists and psychohistorians are rather a thin current in the
stream of the library. At first they were seen as outsiders.
Researchers. Users of the library, not members of it. That’s
what Deet’s work has been for these last few years--trying to
bind us all together into one community. She came here as a
researcher too, remember? Yet now she has made everyone’s
allegiance to the library more important than any other loyalty. It’s
working beautifully too, Leyel, you’ll see. Deet is a marvel.”
“We’re
all creating it
together,” said Deet. “It helps that the couple of
hundred people I’m trying to bring in are so knowledgeable and
understanding of the human mind. They understand exactly what I’m
doing and then try to help me make it work. And it isn’t
fully successful yet. As years go by, we have to see the psychology
group teaching and accepting the children of librarians and
machinists and medical officers, in full equality with their own, so
that the psychologists don’t become a ruling caste. And then
intermarriage between the groups. Maybe in a hundred years we’ll
have a truly cohesive community. This is a democratic city-state
we’re building, not an academic department or a social club.”
Leyel was off on his own
tangent. It was almost unbearable for him to realize that there were
hundreds of people who knew Hari’s work, while Leyel didn’t.
“You have to teach me!” Leyel said. “Everything
that Hari taught you, all the things that have been kept from me--”
“Oh,
eventually, Leyel,” said Zay. “At present, though, we’re
much more interested in what you have to teach us.
Already, I’m sure, a transcription of the things you said
when you first woke up is being spread through the library.”
“It was recorded?”
asked Leyel.
“We didn’t
know if you were going to go catatonic on us at any moment, Leyel.
You have no idea how you’ve been worrying us. Of course we
recorded it--they might have been your last words.”
“They won’t
be. I don’t feel tired at all.”
“Then you’re
not as bright as we thought. Your body is dangerously weak. You’ve
been abusing yourself terribly. You’re not a young man, and we
insist that you stay away from your lector for a couple of days. “
“What, are you now
my doctor?”
“Leyel,”
Deet said, touching him on his shoulder the way she always did when
he needed calming. “You have
been examined by doctors. And you’ve got to realize--Zay is
First Speaker. “
“Does that mean
she’s commander?”
“This isn’t
the Empire,” said Zay, “and I’m not Chen. All that
it means to be First Speaker is that I speak first when we meet
together. And then, at the end, I bring together all that has been
said and express the consensus of the group. “
“That’s
right,” said Deet. “Everybody
thinks you ought to rest.”
“Everybody
knows about me?” asked Leyel.
“Of
course,” said Zay. “With Hari dead you’re the most
original thinker we have. Our work needs you. Naturally we care about
you. Besides, Deet loves you so much, and we love Deer
so much, we feel like we’re all a little bit in love with
you ourselves.”
She
laughed, and so did Leyel, and so did Deet. Leyel noticed, though,
that when he asked whether they all knew
of him, she had answered that they cared about him and loved him.
Only when Zay said this did he realize that she had answered the
question he really meant to ask.
“And while you’re
recuperating,” Zay continued, “Indexing will have a go at
your new theory--”
“Not
a theory, just a proposal, just a thought--”
“--and
a few psychohistorians will see whether it can be quantified, perhaps
by some variation on the formulas we’ve been using with Deet’s
laws of community development. Maybe we can turn origin studies into
a real science yet.”
“Maybe,”
Leyel said.
“Feel all right
about this?” asked Zay.
“I’m not
sure. Mostly. I’m very excited, but I’m also a little
angry at how I’ve been left out, but mostly I’m--I’m
so relieved.”
“Good. You’re
in a hopeless muddle. You’ll do your best work if we can keep
you off balance forever.” With that, Zay led him back to the
bed, helped him lie down, and then left the room.
Alone with Deet, Leyel
had nothing to say. He just held her hand and looked up into her
face, his heart too full to say anything with words. All the news
about Hari’s byzantine plans and a Second Foundation full of
psychohistorians and Rom Divart taking over the government--that
receded into the background. What mattered was this: Deet’s
hand in his, her eyes looking into his, and her heart, her self, her
soul so closely bound to his that he couldn’t tell and didn’t
care where he left off and she began.
How could he ever have
imagined that she was leaving him? They had created each other
through all these years of marriage. Deet was the most splendid
accomplishment of his life, and he was the most valued creation of
hers. We are each other’s parent, each other’s child. We
might accomplish great works that will live on in this other
community, the library, the Second Foundation. But the greatest work
of all is the one that will die with us, the one that no one else
will ever know of, because they remain perpetually outside. We can’t
even explain it to them. They don’t have the language to
understand us. We cat) only speak it to each other.
A Word or Two from Janet
by Janet
Jeppson Asimov
I AM OFTEN ASKED
WHAT IT’S LIKE TO BE ISAAC ASIMOV’S WIFE or, as he
referred to me in a recent speech, “the present holder of that
enviable position.” I usually mull over several possible
answers:
1. Isaac is,
conveniently, a walking dictionary and encyclopedia, able to impart
information quickly, accurately, and eloquently because he has
well-honed powers of expression and an incredible memory--which gets
him into trouble, since there are too many things he can’t
forget. For instance, he is likely to say sadly, “This is the
one hundred eighty-third anniversary of the Battle of Austerlitz and
nobody cares!” Each December 2, since I have forgotten what he
told me the year before, I have to ask him to explain allover again.
Fortunately, although he does not put up with fools gladly, he puts
up with me, and explains.
2. Isaac is reassuringly
rational, with exceptions. He believes in the spectacular law--that
if he flips up the dark spectacles attached to his eyeglasses, the
sun will come out, and vice versa. Furthermore, in the baseball
season he thinks the Mets will lose any game he dares to watch. Once
they start losing, he turns off the TV and shouts, “I have to
stop watching and go back to my typewriter to give them a chance!”
3. He has a wonderful lack
of fear about showing emotion. Not only is he affectionate and
demonstrative, he doesn’t even know what a stiff upper lip is.
Isaac’s lower lip quivers most when he has to have a blood
sample drawn, but even then he manages to flirt with the female doing
it. He’s not afraid to cry (he always does when he reads
Enobarbus’s last speech or sings ‘Danny Boy’), and
will do so even in public, the way he did at Newton’s grave.
4. Isaac has a point of
view that makes me glad I know him. For instance, he woke up once
with his legs making running motions in the bed. He said, “I
dreamt someone told me I was making a good living out of writing, and
I said yes indeed I was. Then the person said, ‘It’s
amazing to see someone make all that money out of beaten swords.’
I was running to tell you because it instantly struck me that the
phrase meant I made my money out of the instruments of peace--the pen
is mightier than the sword and thou shalt beat thy swords into
plowshares.”
As you can see, there are
many answers to the question of what it’s like to be Isaac
Asimov’s wife, but the best is that my spouse defies
description. Oddly enough, people always seem to be describing Isaac,
and he is still on speaking terms with most of them. Perhaps
paleontologist Simpson’s description is definitive--”Isaac
Asimov is a natural wonder and a national resource.” I can
testify that he is a wonder, completely natural, infinitely
resourceful, and a dear.
We have a little wooden
sculpture of two old people placidly sitting side by side, leaning
toward each other. To me, they represent the contentment of being
part of the pattern of life, together. The pattern includes intimacy
and creativity, which have a lot in common because both take
commitment, concentration, openness, effort, and inspiration.
My personal fiftieth
anniversary with Isaac Asimov occurs in the third decade of the next
century. Since life contains the three essential elements of a good
work of fiction--a beginning, a middle, and an end--it is possible
that Isaac and I won’t be here for that anniversary, but his
books will. And the stories people write because of him. Like those
in this book, done with love.
Fifty Years
by Isaac
Asimov
I’VE GOT TO
START BY EXPRESSING THANKS. I WANT TO THANK Martin H. Greenberg for
having the idea of memorializing my fifty years in science fiction in
this fashion. I want to thank Tor Books for publishing the book. I
want to thank all my fellow writers who have contributed stories to
this book, and who have, in this way, demonstrated the fact that they
feel friendly toward me and kindly toward my works. And I want to
thank Janet for contributing, too, in all the ways she does
and has.
This is all more than I
deserve, for it means I have made my way through life making so many
friends and so remarkably few enemies that I must have done something
right by accident, and I’m grateful for that more than anything
else.
But it’s fifty
years! That’s why all this is happening! Fifty years! Half a
century!
So let’s see what
thoughts this gives rise to
1.
Fifty years. It’s
a reasonably long time. Merely to live for fifty years is not
terribly unusual these days, but many great people have not managed.
Joan of Arc died at nineteen. Of the great poets: John Keats died at
twenty-six; Percy Bysshe Shelley died at thirty; George Gordon Noel
Byron died at thirty-six; Edgar Allan Poe died at forty. Of the great
scientists, Sadi Carnot died at thirty-six; Heinrich Rudolf Hertz
died at thirty-six; James C. Maxwell died at forty-eight.
When you pass the
half-century mark, with all this in mind, you can’t help but
feel a bit hangdog about it. The Greeks visualized the three Fates:
Clotho (“spinner”), who formed the thread of life;
Lachesis (“determiner by lot”), who measured its length;
and Atropos (“unswervable”), who cut it, in the end. I
thank them all as well. I thank Clotho for spinning such a good life;
Lachesis for spinning one that is longer than those of many others
far more deserving than myself; and to Atropos for withholding her
formidable shears for as long as she has.
2.
Fifty years of
professional work. But it’s not just fifty years. It’s
fifty years in a single profession, that of writing. My first story
appeared in 1939 and there has been a regular procession of stories,
essays, and books of all sorts ever since.
When Charles Dickens died
at fifty-eight, he had been publishing for only thirty-five years.
When Alexandre Dumas died at fifty-eight, he had been publishing for
only forty-one years. William Shakespeare, who died at fifty-two,
turned out all his professional works over a period of only thirty
years.
Mind
you, I am only talking length of professional life here; I am not
talking quality. Anyone work of these gentlemen--David
Copperfield, The Count of Monte Cristo, or Hamlet is
worth innumerable times my entire oeuvre. I know that, so don’t
bother writing to inform me of this matter.
Rather,
I am merely telling you this in order to explain how grateful I am
that I have been allowed a full fifty years at my profession--and
still going. Nothing I write can be within light-years of
Shakespeare, but this I will maintain as loudly as I can, and to my
dying day. Everything I write has given me
as much pleasure as anything Shakespeare wrote could have given
him, so is not length of professional life something to be
grateful for?
3.
Fifty years as a science
fiction writer. But it’s not just fifty years of
professional life, either. It’s this particular professional
life. Just think what the last fifty years has meant to a science
fiction writer. When I began writing, robots were pure fantasy. So I
wrote robot stories freely out of my own imagination. The first one
was written in June 1939. I have lived long enough to see robots (in
very simple form) become real, and to have my Three Laws of Robotics
taken seriously.
Flights
to the moon were sheer fantasy in 1939, and my first story in
Astounding dealt
with attempted rocketry to the moon. I lived to see that become
real.
Think of other science
fictional standbys that have become real (even if I didn’t
particularly write about them myself). There were no computers in
1939, and no television either, though both existed in science
fiction. Science was also overflowing with ray-guns, and we have
lived to see laser beams.
How fortunate I was to
have started when I did and to have lived as long as I have.
--But it all comes full
circle. More important than anything else are one’s friends.
Foundation’s friends are all my friends, whether they have
written for the book, or published it, or bought it or borrowed it.
My friends are all those who have read my stuff over the last
half-century and have enjoyed it.
I thank you all. I cannot
thank you enough.
FOUNDATION’S FRIENDS
Stories
in Honor of Isaac Asimov
Edited by
Martin H. Greenberg
Copyright ©
1989
To
Isaac, with love
Preface
by Ray
Bradbury
ONE OF MY FAVORITE
STORIES AS A CHILD WAS THE ONE ABOUT the little boy who got a magical
porridge machine functioning so wildly that it inundated the town
with three feet of porridge.
In order to walk from one
house to the other, or head down-street, one had to head out with a
large spoon, eating one’s way to destinations near or far.
A delightful concept,
save that I imagined tomato soup and a thick slush of crackers. Going
on a journey and making a feast, all in one!
I imagine the name of the
little boy in that tale should have been Isaac Asimov. For it seems
to me that since first we met at the First World Science Fiction
Convention in New York City the first week in July 1939, Isaac has
been journeying and feasting through life, now at the Astronomical
tables, now in a spread of other sciences, now in religion, and again
in literature over a great span of time. One could call him a
jackdaw, but that wouldn’t be correct. Jackdaws focus on and
snatch bright objects of no particular weight. Isaac is in the
mountain-moving business, but he does not move but eat them. Hand him
a book and a few hours later, like that above-mentioned porridge,
Isaac comes tunneling out the far side, still hungry. Is there a body
of literature he hasn’t taken on? I severely doubt it.
And now here, with this
book, we have Asimov’s honorary sons and daughters. Their
machines may not run amok and inundate a city, but they are
producing, nevertheless, and looking to Papa Asimov and us for
approval, which will not be withheld.
To say more would be to
call attention to my comparable size, a mole next to a fortress or a
force of nature. I would add only a final note. People have said
Isaac is a workaholic. Nonsense. He has gone mad with love in ten
dozen territories. And there are a few dozen virgin territories left
out there. There will be few such virgins left, when Isaac departs
earth and arrives Up There to write twenty-five new books of the
Bible. And that’s only the first week!
One night two years ago,
I dreamed I was Isaac Asimov. Arising the next day, it was noon
before my wife convinced me that I should not run for President.
Bless you, Isaac. Bless
you, Isaac’s children, found herein.
February 21,
1989
The
Nonmetallic Isaac or It’s a Wonderful Life
by Ben Bova
ASTROPHYSICISTS (TO
START WITH A SCIENTIFIC WORD) CLASSIFY the universe into three
chemical categories: hydrogen, helium, and metals.
The first two are the
lightest of all the hundred-some known elements. Anything heavier
than helium, the astrophysicists blithely call “metals.”
Hydrogen and helium make up roughly ninety-eight percent of the
universe’s composition. To an astrophysicist, the universe
consists of a lot of hydrogen, a considerable amount of helium, and a
smattering of metals.
Now, although Isaac
Asimov is known throughout this planet (and possibly others, we just
don’t know yet) as a writer of science fiction, when you
consider his entire output of written material--all the
four-hundred-and-counting books and the myriads of articles, columns,
limericks, and whatnots--his science fiction is actually a small
percentage of the total. As far as Asimov’s production is
concerned, science fiction tales are his “metals.”
Science
fact is his mettle.
It is the “nonmetallic”
Asimov that I want to praise.
Remember
the classic movie It’s
a Wonderful Life!? The one where an angel shows suicidal James
Stewart what his hometown would be like if Jimmie’s character
had never been born?
Think of what our home
planet would be like if Isaac Asimov had never turned his mind and
hand to writing about science.
We narrowly missed such a
fate. There was a moment in time when a youthful Isaac faced a
critical career choice: go on as a researcher or plunge full-time
into writing. He chose writing and the world is extremely happy with
the result.
Knowing that science
fiction, in those primeval days, could not support a wife and family,
Isaac chose to write about science fact and to make that his career,
rather than biomedical research.
But suppose he had not?
Suppose, faced with that
career choice, Isaac had opted for the steady, if unspectacular,
career of a medium-level research scientist who wrote occasional
science fiction stories as a hobby.
We
would still have the substantial oeuvre of his science fiction tales
that this anthology celebrates. We would still have “Nightfall”
and “The Ugly Little Boy,” the original Foundation
trilogy and novels such as Pebble
in the Sky. We would, to return to the metaphor we started with,
still have Isaac’s “metallic” output.
But we would not have his
hydrogen and helium, the huge number of books that are nonfiction,
mainly books about science, although there are some marvelous
histories, annotations of various works of literature, and lecherous
limericks in there, too.
If Isaac had toiled away
his years as a full-time biomedical researcher and part-time science
fiction writer, we would never have seen all those marvelous science
books. Probably a full generation of scientists would have chosen
other careers, because they would never have been turned on to
science by the books that Isaac did not write. Progress in all fields
of the physical sciences would have slowed, perhaps disastrously.
Millions
of people allover the world would have been denied the pleasure of
learning that they could
understand the principles of physics, mathematics, astronomy,
geology, chemistry, the workings of the human body, the intricacies
of the human brain--because the books from which they learned and
received such pleasures would never have been written.
Entire publishing houses
would have gone into bankruptcy, no doubt, without the steady, sure
income that Isaac’s science books have generated for them over
the decades. And will continue to generate for untold decades to
come. The wood pulp and paper industry would be in a chronic state of
depression if Isaac had not turned out all those hundreds of books
and thousands of articles. Canada might have become a Third World
nation, save for Dr. Isaac Asimov.
To make it more personal,
I would have never started to write popularizations of science if it
had not been for Isaac’s works--and for his personal
encouragement and guidance. The gods themselves are the only ones who
know how many writers have been helped by Isaac, either by reading
his books or by asking him for help with science problems that had
them stumped.
Blighted careers, ruined
corporations, benighted people wandering in search of an
enlightenment that they cannot find--that is what the world would be
like if Isaac had not poured his great energies and greater heart
into nonfiction books about science.
A final word about a
word: popularization.
In the mouths of certain
critics (including some professional scientists) “popularization”
is a term of opprobrium, somewhat akin to the sneering “pulp
literature” that is still sometimes slung at science fiction.
“Popularizations” of science are regarded, by those
slandering bastards, as beneath the consideration of dignified
persons.
Such critics regard
themselves as among the elite, and they disdain “popularizations”
of science with the same lofty pigheadedness that George III
displayed toward his American subjects.
To explain science is
probably the most vital task any writer can attempt in today’s
complex, technology-driven society. To explain science so well, so
entertainingly, that ordinary men and women all over the world clamor
for your books--that is worthy of a Nobel Prize. Too bad Alfred
Nobel never thought about the need to explain science to the masses.
I’m certain he would have created a special prize for it.
Isaac Asimov writes about
science (and everything else) so superbly well that it looks easy.
He can take any subject under the sun and write about it so lucidly
and understandably that any literate person can grasp the subject
with hardly any strain at all.
For this incredible
talent he is sometimes dismissed as “a mere popularizer.”
As I have offered in the past, I offer now; anyone who thinks that
what Isaac does is easy is welcome to try it. I know I have, with
some degree of success. But easy it is not!
Thanks
be to the forces that shape this universe, Isaac decided not
to be a full-time researcher. He became a full-time writer instead.
While he is famous for writing science fiction, his “nonmetallic”
output of science fact is far larger and far more important--if that
word can be applied to writing--than his deservedly admired and
awarded fiction.
If all this adds up to
the conclusion that Isaac Asimov is a star, well, by heaven, he is!
One of the brightest, too.
Strip-Runner
by Pamela
Sargent
THE THREE BOYS
CAUGHT UP WITH AMY JUST AS SHE REACHED the strips. “Barone-Stein,”
one boy shouted to her. She did not recognize any of them, but they
obviously knew who she was.
“We
want a run,” the smallest boy said, speaking softly so that the
people passing them could not hear the challenge. “You can lead
and pick the point.”
“Done,” she
said quickly. “C-254th, Riverdale localway intersection. “
The boys frowned. Maybe
they had expected a longer run. They seemed young; the tallest one
could not be more than eleven. Amy leaned over and rolled up the
cuffs of her pants a little. She could shake all of them before they
reached the destination she had named.
More people passed and
stepped onto the nearest strip. The moving gray bands stretched
endlessly to either side of her, carrying their human cargo through
the City. The strip closest to her was moving at a bit over three
kilometers an hour; most of its passengers at the moment were elderly
people or small children practicing a few dance steps where there was
space. Next to it, another strip moved at over five kilometers an
hour; in the distance, on the fastest strip, the passengers were a
multicolored blur. All the strips carried a steady stream of people,
but the evening rush hour would not start for a couple of hours. The
boys had challenged her during a slower period, which meant they
weren’t that sure of themselves; they would not risk a run
through mobs of commuters.
“Let’s go,”
Amy said. She stepped on the strip; the boys got on behind her.
Ahead, people were stepping to the adjoining strip, slowly making
their way toward the fastest-moving strip that ran alongside the
localway platform. Advertisements flashed around her through the
even, phosphorescent light, offering clothing, the latest book-films,
exotic beverages, and yet another hyperwave drama about a Spacer’s
adventures on Earth. Above her, light-worms and bright arrows gleamed
steadily with directions for the City’s millions: THIS WAY TO
JERSEY SECTIONS; FOLLOW ARROW TO LONG ISLAND. The noise was constant.
Voices rose and fell around her as the strip hummed softly under her
feet; she could dimly hear the whistle of the localway.
Amy walked up the strip,
darted past a knot of people, then crossed to the next strip, bending
her knees slightly to allow for the increase in speed. She did not
look back, knowing the boys were still behind her. She took a breath,
quickly stepped to the next strip, ran along it toward the passengers
up ahead, and then jumped to the fourth strip. She pivoted, jumped to
the third strip again, then rapidly crossed three strips in
succession.
Running the strips was a
lot like dancing. She kept up the rhythm as she leaped to the right,
leaned into the wind, then jumped to the slower strip on her left.
Amy grinned as a man shook his head at her. The timid ways of most
riders were not for her. Others shrank from the freedom the gray
bands offered, content to remain part of a channeled stream. They
seemed deaf to the music of the strips and the song that beckoned to
her.
Amy glanced back; she had
already lost one of the boys. Moving to the left edge of the strip,
she feinted, then jumped to her right, pushed past a startled woman,
and continued along the strips until she reached the fastest one.
Her left arm was up, to
shield her from the wind; this strip, like the localway, was moving
at nearly thirty-eight kilometers an hour. The localway was a
constantly moving platform, with poles for boarding and clear shields
placed at intervals to protect riders from the wind. Amy grabbed a
pole and swung herself aboard.
There was just enough
room for her to squeeze past the standing passengers. The two
remaining boys had followed her onto the localway; a woman muttered
angrily as Amy shoved past her to the other side.
She jumped down to the
strip below, which was also moving at the localway’s speed,
hauled herself aboard the platform once more, then leaped back to the
strip. One boy was still with her, a few paces behind. His companion
must have hesitated a little, not expecting her to leap to the strip
again so soon. Any good striprunner would have expected it; no runner
stayed on a localway or expressway very long. She jumped to a slower
strip, counted to herself, leaped back to the faster strip, counted
again, then grabbed a pole, bounded onto the localway, pushed past
more people to the opposite side, and launched herself at the strip
below, her back to the wind, her legs shooting out into a split.
Usually she disdained such moves at the height of a run, but could
not resist showing her skill this time.
She landed about a meter
in front of a scowling man.
“Crazy kids!”
he shouted. “Ought to report you--” She turned toward the
wind and stepped to the strip on her left, bracing herself against
the deceleration as the angry man was swept by her on the faster
strip, then looked back. The third boy was nowhere to be seen among
the stream of people behind her.
Too easy, she thought.
She had shaken them all even before reaching the intersection that
led to the Concourse Sector. She would go on to the destination, so
that the boys, when they got there, could issue another challenge if
they wished. She doubted that they would; she would have just enough
time to make her way home afterward.
They should have known
better. They weren’t good enough runners to keep up with Amy
Barone-Stein. She had lost Kiyoshi Harris, one of the best
strip-runners in the City, on a two-hour run to the end of Brooklyn,
and had reached Queens alone on another run after shaking off Bradley
Ohaer’s gang. She smiled as she recalled how angry Bradley had
been, beaten by a girl. Few girls ran the strips, and she was better
than any of the others at the game. For over a year now, no one she
challenged had ever managed to shake her off; when she led, nobody
could keep up with her. She was the best girl strip-runner in New
York City, maybe in all of Earth’s Cities.
No, she told herself as
she crossed the strips to the expressway intersection. She was simply
the best.
Amy’s home was in a
Kingsbridge subsection. Her feeling of triumph had faded by the time
she reached the elevator banks that led to her level; she was not
that anxious to get home. Throngs of people moved along the street
between the high metallic walls that enclosed some of the City’s
millions. All of Earth’s Cities were like New York, where
people had burrowed into the ground and walled themselves in; they
were safe inside the Cities, protected from the emptiness of the
Outside.
Amy pushed her way into
an elevator. A wedding party was aboard, the groom in a dark ruffled
tunic and pants, the bride in a short white dress with her hands
around a bouquet of flowers made of recycled paper. The people with
them were holding bottles and packages of rations clearly meant for
the reception. The couple smiled at Amy; she murmured her
congratulations as the elevator stopped at her level.
She sprinted down the
hall until she came to a large double door with glowing letters that
said PERSONAL--WOMEN. Under the sign, smaller letters said
SUBSECTIONS 2H-2N; there was also a number to call in case anyone
lost a key. Amy unzipped her pocket, took out a thin aluminum strip,
and slipped it into the key slot.
The door opened. Several
women were in the pleasant rose-colored antechamber, talking as they
combed their hair and sprayed on makeup by the wall of mirrors. They
did not greet Amy, so she said nothing to them. Her father, like most
men, found it astonishing that women felt free to speak to one
another in such a place. No man would ever address another in the
Men’s Personals; even glancing at someone there was considered
extremely offensive. Men would never stand around gossiping in a
Personal’s antechamber, but things were not quite as free here
as her father thought. Women would never speak to anyone who clearly
preferred privacy, or greet a new subsection resident here until they
knew her better.
Amy stood by a mirror and
smoothed down her short, dark curls, then entered the common stalls.
A long row of toilets, with thin partitions but no doors, lined one
wall; a row of sinks faced them on the other side of the room.
A young woman was
kneeling next to one toilet, where a small child sat on a training
seat; Amy could not help noticing that the child was a boy. That was
allowed, until a boy was four and old enough to go to a Men’s
Personal by himself or with his father, an experience that had to be
traumatic the first time around. She thought of what it must be like
for a little boy, leaving the easier, warmer atmosphere of his
mother’s Personal for the men’s, where even looking in
someone else’s direction was taboo. Some said the custom arose
because of the need to preserve some privacy in the midst of others,
but psychologists also claimed that the taboo grew out of the male’s
need to separate himself from his mother. No wonder men behaved as
they did in their Personals. They would not only be infringing on
another’s privacy if they behaved otherwise, but would also be
displaying an inappropriate regression to childhood.
Amy kept her eyes down,
ignoring the other women and girls in the common stalls until she
reached the rows of shower heads. Two women were entering the private
stalls in the back. Amy’s mother had been allowed a private
stall some years ago, a privilege her husband had earned for both of
them after a promotion, but Amy was not allowed to use it. Other
parents might have granted such permission, but hers were stricter;
they did not want their daughter getting too used to privileges she
had not earned for herself.
She would take her shower
now, and put her clothes in the laundry slot to be cleaned; the
Personal would be more crowded after dinner. Amy sighed; that wasn’t
the only reason to linger here. Her mother would have received the
message from Mr. Liang by now. Amy was afraid to go home and face
her.
Four women were leaving
the apartment as Amy approached. She greeted them absently, and
nodded when they asked if she was doing well in school. These were
her mother’s more intellectual friends, the ones who discussed
sociology and settled the City’s political problems among
themselves before moving on to the essential business of tips for
stretching quota allowances and advice on child-rearing.
Amy’s mother
stepped back as she entered; the door closed. Amy had reached the
middle of the spacious living room before her mother spoke. “Where
are you going, dear?”
“Er--to my room.”
“I think you’d
better sit down. We have something to discuss.”
Amy moved toward one of
the chairs and sat down. The living room was over five meters long,
with two chairs, a small couch, and an imitation leather ottoman. The
apartment had two other rooms as well, and her parents even had the
use of a sink in their bedroom, thanks to her father’s Civil
Service rating. They both had a lot to protect, which meant that they
would scold her even more for her failures.
“You took longer
than usual getting home,” her mother said as she sat down on
the couch across from Amy.
“I had to shower.
Oh, shouldn’t we be getting ready to go to supper? Father’ll
probably be home any minute. “
“He told me he’d
be late, so we’re not eating in the section kitchen tonight. “
Amy bit her lip, sorry
for once that her family was allowed four meals a week in their own
apartment. Her parents wouldn’t have been able to harp at her
at the section kitchen’s long tables in the midst of all the
diners there.
“Anyway,” her
mother continued, “I felt sure you’d want to speak to me
alone, before your father comes home.”
“Oh.” Amy
stared at the blue carpet. “What about?”
“You know what
about. I had a message from your guidance counselor, Mr. Liang. I
know he told you he’d be speaking to me.”
“Oh.” Amy
tried to sound unconcerned. “That.”
“He says your
grades won’t be good at the end of the quarter.” Her
mother’s dark eyes narrowed. “If they don’t improve
soon, he’s going to invite me there for a conference, and
that’s not all.” She leaned back against the couch. “He
also says you’ve been seen running the strips.”
Amy started. “Who
told him that?”
“Oh, Amy. I’m
sure he has ways of finding out. Is it true?”
“Um.”
“Well, is it?
That’s even more serious than your grades. Do you want a police
officer picking you up? Did you even stop to think about the
accidents you might cause, or that you could be seriously injured?
You know what your father said the first time he heard about your
strip-running. “
Amy bowed her head. That
had been over two years ago, and he had lectured her for hours, but
had remained unaware of her activities since then. I’m the
best, she thought; every runner in the City knows about me. She
wanted to shout it and force her mother to acknowledge the
achievement, but kept silent.
“It’s a
stupid, dangerous game, Amy. A few boys are killed every year running
the strips, and passengers are hurt as well. You’re fourteen
now--I thought you were more mature. I can’t believe--”
“I haven’t
been running the strips,” Amy said. “I mean, I haven’t
made a run in a while.” Not since a couple of hours ago, she
added silently to herself, and that wasn’t a real run, so I’m
not really lying. She felt just a bit guilty; she didn’t like
to lie.
“And your grades--”
Amy seized at the chance
to avoid the more hazardous topic of strip-racing. “I know
they’re worse. I know I can do better, but what difference does
it make?”
“Don’t you
want to do well? You used to be one of the best math students in your
school, and your science teacher always praised--”
“So what?”
Amy could not restrain herself any longer. “What good is it?
What am I ever going to use it for?”
“You have to do
well if you want to be admitted to a college level. Your father’s
status may make it easier for you to get in, but you won’t last
if you’re not well prepared.”
“And then what?
Unless I’m a genius, or a lot better than any of the boys,
they’ll just push me into dietetics courses or social relations
or child psychology so I’ll be a good mother someday, or else
train me to program computers until I get married. I’ll just
end up doing nothing anyway, so why should I try?”
“Nothing?”
Her mother’s olive-skinned face was calm, but her voice shook a
little. “Is what I do nothing, looking after you and your
father? Is rearing a child and making a pleasant home for a husband
nothing?”
“I didn’t
mean nothing, but why does it have to be everything? You wanted more
once--you know you did. You--you--”.
Her mother was gazing at
her impassively. Amy jumped up and fled to her room.
She lay on her narrow
bed, glaring up at the soft glow of the ceiling. Her mother should
have been the first to understand. Amy knew how she once had felt,
but lately, she seemed to have forgotten her old dreams.
Amy’s mother,
Alysha Barone, was something of a Medievalist. That wasn’t odd;
a lot of people were. They got together to talk about old ways and
historical bookfilms and the times when Earth had been humanity’s
only home. They dwelled nostalgically on ancient periods when people
had lived Outside instead of huddling together inside the Cities,
when Earth was the only world and the Spacers did not exist.
Not that any of them
could actually live Outside, without walls, breathing unfiltered air
filled with microorganisms that bred disease and eating unprocessed
food that had grown in dirt; Amy shuddered at the thought. Better to
leave the Outside to the robots that worked the mines and tended the
crops the Cities demanded. Better to live as they did, whatever the
problems, and avoid the pathological ways of the Spacers, those
descendants of the Earthpeople who had settled other planets long
ago. They could not follow Spacer customs anyway. In a world of
billions, resources could not be wasted on private houses, spacious
gardens and grounds, and all the rest. Alysha Barone, despite her
somewhat Medievalist views, would not be capable of leaving this City
except to travel, safely enclosed, to another.
Her mother had, however,
clung to a few ancient customs, with the encouragement of a few
mildly unconventional friends. Alysha Barone had insisted on keeping
her own name after her marriage to Ricardo Stein, and he had agreed
when she asked that Amy be given both their names. The couple had
been given permission to have their first child during their first
year of marriage, thanks to their Genetics Values ratings, but Amy
had not been born until four years later. Both Alysha and Ricardo had
been statisticians in New York’s Department of Human Resources;
it made sense to work for a promotion, gain more privileges, and save
more of their quota allowances before having a child. They had
ignored the chiding of their own parents and the friends who had
accused them of being just a little antisocial.
Amy knew the story well,
having heard most of it from her disapproving grandmother Barone. The
two had each risen to a C-4 rating before Alysha became pregnant;
even then, astonishingly, they had discussed which of them should
give up the Department job. Only the most antisocial of couples would
have tried to keep two such coveted positions. There were too many
unclassified people without work, on subsistence with no chance to
rise, and others who had been relegated to labor in the City yeast
farm levels after losing jobs to robots. Her parents’
colleagues would have made their lives miserable if they both stayed
with the Department; their superiors would have blocked any
promotions, perhaps even found a way to demote them. Someone also had
to look after Amy. The infant could not be left in the subsection
nursery all day, and both grandmothers had refused to encourage any
antisocial activity by offering to stay with the baby.
So Alysha had given up
her job. Her husband might be willing to care for a baby, but he
could not nurse the child, and nursing saved on rations. Ricardo had
won another promotion a few years after Amy’s birth, and they
had moved from their two-room place in the Van
Cortlandt Section to this
apartment. Now Amy’s father was a C-6, with a private stall in
the Men’s Personal, a functioning sink in his room, larger
quota allowances for entertainment, and the right to eat four meals a
week at home.
Her parents would have
been foolish to give up a chance at all that. How useless it would
have been for Alysha to hope for her position at the Department; they
would have risked everything in the end.
The door opened; her
mother came inside. Amy sat up. Her small bed took up most of the
room; there was no other place to sit, and Alysha clearly wanted to
talk.
Her mother seated
herself, then draped an arm over Amy’s shoulders. “I know
how you feel,” she said.
Amy shook her head. “No,
you don’t.”
Her mother hugged her
more tightly. “I felt that way myself once, but couldn’t
see that I’d be any better off not trying at all. You should
learn what you can, Amy, and not just so that you’ll be able to
help your own children with their schoolwork. Learning will give you
pleasure later, something you’ll carry inside yourself that no
one can take from you. Things may change, and then--”
“They’ll
never change. I wish--Things were better in the old days. “
“No, they weren’t,”
her mother responded. “They were better for a few people and
very bad for a lot of others. I may affect a few Medievalisms, but I
also know how people fought and starved and suffered long ago, and
the Cities are better than that. No one starves, and we can,
generally speaking, go about our business without fearing violence,
but that requires cooperation--we couldn’t live, crowded
together as we are, any other way. We have to get along, and that
often means giving up what we might want so that everyone at least
has something. Still--”
“I get the point,”
Amy said bitterly. “Civism is good. The Cities are the height
of human civilization.” She imitated the pompous manner of her
history teacher as she spoke. “ And if I can’t get along
and be grateful for what I’ve got, I’m just a
pathological antisocial individualist. “
Her mother was silent for
a long time, then said, “There are more robots taking jobs away
from people inside the Cities. The population keeps growing, and that
means people will eventually have even less--we could see something
close to starvation again. The Cities can’t expand much more,
and that means less space for each of us. People may lash out at an
occasional robot now, since they’re the most convenient targets
for expressing resentment, but if we start lashing out at one
another--” She paused. “Something has to give way. Even
that small band of people who hope the Spacers will eventually let
them leave Earth to settle another world know that.”
Amy said, “They’re
silly.”
“Most would say
so.”
Amy frowned. She knew
about those people; they occasionally went Outside to play at being
farmers or some such thing. She could not imagine how they stood it,
or what good it did them. A City detective named Elijah Baley was the
tiny band’s leader; maybe he thought the Spacers would help
him. He had recently returned from one of their worlds, where they
had asked him to help them solve a crime; maybe he thought Spacers
could be his friends.
Amy knew better. The
Spacers had only used him. She thought of the Spacer characters she
had seen in hyperwave and book-film adventures. They were all tall,
handsome, tanned, bronze-haired people with eyes as cold as those of
the legions of robots that served them. In the dramas, they might be
friendly to or even love some Earthpeople, but in reality they
despised the people of the Cities. They would never allow Earthfolk
to contaminate their worlds or the others in this galaxy. They might
use an Earthman such as Baley, but would only discard him afterward.
“What I’m
trying to say,” Alysha said softly, “is that change may
come. Whatever disruptions it brings, it may also present
opportunities, but only to people who are ready to seize them. “
Amy tensed a little; this was the most antisocial statement she had
ever heard from her mother. “It would be better if you were
prepared for that and developed whatever talents might be useful.
When I worked for the Department, I knew what the statistics were
implying--it’s impossible for even the most determined
bureaucrat to hide the whole truth. I could see--but I’ve said
enough.”
“Mother--”
Amy swallowed. “Are you going to tell Father what Mr. Liang
said?”
Alysha plucked at her
long, dark hair, looking distressed. “I really should. I’ll
have to if I’m called in for a conference, and then Rick will
wonder why I didn’t mention it earlier. I won’t if you
promise you’ll work harder.”
Amy sighed with relief.
“I promise.” She hoped she could keep that vow.
“Then I’ll
leave you to your studying. You have a little time before Rick gets
home. “
The door closed behind
Alysha. Amy reached for her viewer and stretched out. Nothing would
change, no matter what her mother said. Whatever Amy did, sooner or
later she would, as her friend Debora Lister put it, wind up at the
end of the line. She would be pushed to the end of the line when her
teachers began to hint that certain studies would be more useful for
a girl. She would be forced back again when college advisers pointed
out that it was selfish to take a place in certain classes, since she
would not use such specialized training for a lifetime, as a boy
would. If she moved up the line then, she would only be pushed back
later, when she married and had her own children.
She could, of course,
choose not to marry, but such a life would be a lonely one. No matter
what such women achieved, people muttered about how antisocial they
were and pitied them, which was probably preferable to outright
resentment. She would have to live in one of the alcoves allotted to
single people unless she was lucky enough to find a congenial
companion and get permission for both of them to share a room.
Alysha had wound up at
the end of the line long ago, although later than most, and she had a
loving husband to console her, which was a good thing. Even couples
who hated each other would not willingly separate, lose status, and
be forced into smaller quarters. Of course Alysha would hope that Amy
might move up the line; she had nothing else in life except her
husband and daughter.
A fair number of women
were like Alysha. Sublimated antisocial individualism--that was what
a textbook-film Amy had scanned in the school library called it. Many
women lived through their children, then their grandchildren, hoping
they would rise yet knowing that there were limits on their
ambitions. Their transferred hopes would keep them going, but they
would also be aware that too much individual glory would only create
hard feelings in others. That was one reason her parents refused to
flaunt the privileges they had earned and used them reluctantly, with
a faintly apologetic air.
Men had different
problems, which probably seemed just as troublesome to them. Some men
cracked under the strain of having a family’s status resting
entirely on them. The psychologists had terms for that syndrome, too.
Amy saw what lay ahead
only too clearly. Perhaps she shouldn’t have viewed those
book-films on psychology and sociology, which were meant for adult
specialists. Her parents would eventually have the second child they
were allowed; except for tending to Amy and her father, and being
sociable in ways that eased relations with neighbors and her
husband’s colleagues, there was little else for Alysha to do.
Small wonder many women even had children to whom they weren’t
entitled. When Amy was grown, her mother would be waiting for the
inevitable grandchildren, and transfer her hopes to them. What a
delusion it all was, pretending that your children wouldn’t be
swallowed by the hives of the City while knowing that this was the
way it had to be.
Happy families, as the
saying went, made for a better City; mothers and wives could go about
their business feeling they were performing their civic duty. Amy’s
mother would cling to her, and then to her children, and
If this was how knowing a
lot made people feel, maybe it was better to be ignorant, to settle
for what couldn’t be changed.
She folded her arms over
her chest. She still had one accomplishment, and no one could take it
from her; she was the best strip-runner in the City. She wouldn’t
give that up, not until she was too old and too slow to race, and
maybe that day would never come. If she made a mistake and died
during a run, at least she’d be gone before she came to the end
of the line. Her parents could have another child, maybe two, and the
loss of one life would make no difference in a steel hive that held
so many. She could even tell herself that she was making room for
someone who would not mind being lost in the swarm.
The psychology texts had
terms for such notions, all of which made her feelings sound like a
disease. Perhaps they were, but that was yet another reason not to
care about what happened to her on the strips
“Amy Barone-Stein,”
the hall monitor said, “a person is looking for you.”
Amy glared up at the
grayish robotic face, a parody of a human being’s. She did not
care for robots, and this one, with its flat eyes and weirdly moving
mouth, looked more idiotic than most. “What is it?” she
asked.
“Someone outside
wishes to speak to you,” the robot said, “and has asked
me to bring you there. “
“Well, who is it?”
“She told me to
give you her name if I were asked, or if you told me that you did not
want to meet her. It is Shakira Lewes. “
Amy’s mouth dropped
open. Debora Lister moved closer to her and nudged her in the ribs.
Shakira Lewes had not run the strips in years, but Amy had heard of
her. Kiyoshi Harris claimed she was the best female runner he had
ever seen, and her last run, when she had led three gangs from
Brooklyn to Yonkers and lost them all, was still legendary.
She
was the best, Amy
told herself; I’m the best now.
“Oh, Amy,”
Debora said. “Are you going to talk to her?”
“Might as well.”
“You’ll miss
the Chess Club meeting,” the blond girl said.
“Then I’ll
miss it.”
“I’m coming
with you,” Debora said. “I’ve got to see this.”
“Miss Lewes
requested the presence of Amy Barone-Stein,” the robot said.
“She did not say--”
“Oh, stuff it,”
Amy said. The robot’s eyes widened a little in what might have
been bewilderment. “She didn’t say I couldn’t bring
a friend, did she?”
“No, she did not.”
“Then lead us to
her.”
The robot turned, leading
them past a line in front of a Personal, then through the throngs of
students crowding the hall. Amy wondered how Shakira Lewes had made
the robot do her bidding. Technically, the hall monitors weren’t
supposed to fetch students from the school levels except for an
emergency, but this robot was probably too stupid to tell that it was
being deceived. The robot’s back was erect as it marched along
on its stiff legs. Damned robots, she thought, taking jobs from
people. The hall monitors had once been human beings.
By the time she and
Debora reached the elevator banks, a small crowd of boys and girls
was following them. They all clambered aboard after the robot and
dropped toward the street level. When they emerged from the school,
Amy saw more boys clustered around a tall, dark-skinned woman with
short black hair.
“Ooh,” Debora
whispered. “Maybe she wants to challenge you.” Amy shook
her head and motioned at the robot’s back. A robot could not
harm a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come
to harm; to this creature’s simple positronic brain, possible
harm would certainly include strip-racing.
“Amy Barone-Stein,”
the robot said in its toneless voice. “This is Shakira Lewes. “
The boys stepped back as
Amy approached. The woman was slender enough for a runner, if a bit
too tall; most runners, like Amy, were short and slight, able to
squeeze into even the smallest gaps between passengers during a run.
Shakira Lewes had a perfect, fine-boned face; she looked a lot like
an actress in a historical drama about Africa Amy had recently
viewed. She wore a red shirt and black pants that made her long legs
seem even longer. The boys were staring intently at her. None of them
had ever looked at Amy that way, not even after hearing about her run
against Bradley Ohaer’s gang.
“You may leave us,”
Shakira said to the robot. The hall monitor turned and went back
inside. The woman sounded as arrogant as a Spacer; Amy looked up at
her, filled with admiration and hatred. “I’ve heard about
you,” Shakira continued. “I’d like to talk to you.”
Amy stuck out her chin.
“What about?”
“Alone, if we
could. “ Alone meant walking among the crowds, standing on a
strip or localway to talk, or, if one was lucky, finding an
unoccupied chair or bench somewhere.
Amy said, “If
you’ve got something to tell me, say it here.”
“She’s going
to challenge,” someone said behind Amy; she looked around. Luis
Horton was with the group; he’d been mad at her ever since she
beat him on a long run up to the Yonkers Sector. “She’s
going to challenge,” Luis repeated. “Maybe Amy can’t
take her.”
Amy said, “I can
take any runner in New York.”
Shakira frowned. “I
said I wanted to talk. I didn’t say anything about running. “
“Afraid?”
another boy asked.
Shakira’s face grew
grimmer. Amy saw where this was leading; the others expected a
challenge. Normally, she would have demanded one herself, but
something felt wrong. It didn’t make sense for this woman, who
surely had better things to do, to come looking for a run against
Amy, whatever her fame. Shakira had to be out of practice, and would
risk much graver consequences as an adult offender if she were caught
by the police. Yet what else could she want Amy for? Perhaps
something illegal--some illicit enterprise where a boy or girl who
could easily shake off a police pursuit might be useful.
Amy shrugged. “Come
on, guys. Anybody can see she’s too old to run the strips now.”
“I’m old, all
right,” Shakira said. “I’m nearly twenty-one.”
“Lewes isn’t
scared,” Luis muttered then. “Amy is.”
Amy’s cheeks
burned. They were all watching her now; she even imagined that the
crowds passing by were looking at her, witnesses to her shame. “I’m
not afraid of anything,” she said. “Make your run,
Shakira Lewes--you won’t lose me. From here to the Sheepshead
Bay localway intersection--unless you’re too old to make that
long a run.”
Shakira was silent.
“Now! Or are you
just too old and tired to try?”
The woman’s large
dark eyes glittered. “You’re on. I’ll do it.”
A boy hooted. Even
Debora, who would never run the strips herself, was flushed with
anticipation. Amy was suddenly furious with them all. She wasn’t
ready for this run; she realized now that she had been hoping Shakira
would back down. If the woman actually beat her, she would never live
it down, while if Amy won, the others would simply assume Shakira was
past her prime. She had risked too much on this challenge, and still
didn’t know what Shakira wanted with her.
“Let’s go,”
Amy said.
“Just a minute. “
The woman raised an arm. “This is one on one, between you and
me--and I still want to talk to you later.”
“Talk to me after I
beat you,” Amy said without much conviction, then followed
Shakira toward the nearest strip.
Shakira strode along the
gray bands, moving to the faster strips at a speed only a little more
rapid than usual. Amy kept close. Most of the boys and girls had
already headed for the expressway; they would greet the victor at the
Sheepshead Bay destination. Luis and two of his friends were
following to study a little of Shakira’s skill before joining
the others. There were still some gaps between passengers, but the
strips were already getting more crowded.
Shakira showed her moves,
increasing the pace. She did a side shuffle, striding steadily, then
moving to an adjacent strip without breaking her pace; Amy followed.
She did a Popovich, named after the runner who had perfected it,
leaping from side to side between two strips before bounding from the
second one to a third. She even managed to pull off a dervish.
Turning to face Amy, she leaped into the air and made a complete turn
before landing gracefully on a slower strip; a dervish was dangerous
even on slow strips.
She was good, but Amy
knew the moves. Show-off, she thought; the woman was only trying to
intimidate her. Flashy moves were more likely to draw attention, as
well as wearing out a runner too soon. She followed Shakira onto a
localway, then swung off after her, leaving the boys behind. She had
caught Shakira’s rhythm, but remained wary and alert; some
runners could lull a follower into their pace before doing the
unexpected.
They danced across the
strips toward an expressway. The crowds were thick on the strip next
to the expressway platform. Shakira reached for a pole and swung
herself up; Amy grabbed the next pole. The woman’s long legs
swung around, never touching the floor and barely missing a
passenger, and then she was back on the strip, her back to the wind
as she grinned up at Amy.
Amy gripped her pole,
about to follow when a few people suddenly stepped to the strip just
below her. She caught a glimpse of startled faces as her legs swung
toward them; there was just enough space for a landing. A woman
swayed on the strip; a man grabbed her by the arm. Amy knew in an
instant that she could not risk a leap. Shakira turned, ran past more
commuters, stepped to her left, and was gone.
Amy hung on to the pole;
the wind tore at her legs. She hauled herself aboard, numbed by the
abruptness of her defeat. She had lost before they even reached lower
Manhattan; tears stung her eyes.
Someone shoved her;
passengers surrounded her. “Damn runners!” a man shouted.
Other riders crowded around her; a fist knocked her to the floor.
“Get the police!” a woman cried. Fingers grabbed Amy by
the hair; a foot kicked her in the knee. She covered her head with
her arms, no longer caring what happened to her; she had lost.
A plainclothesman, a C-6
with seat privileges on the expressway’s upper level, got Amy
away from the crowd before she was beaten too badly and took her to
City Hall. Police headquarters were in the higher levels of the
structure; Amy supposed that she would be turned over to an officer
and booked. Instead, the detective led her through a large common
room filled with people and desks to a corner desk with a railing
around it.
She sat at the desk,
feeling miserable and alone, as the plainclothesman took her name,
entered it in the desk computer, called up more information, then
placed a call to her father on the communo. “You’re in
luck,” the man said when he had finished his call. “Your
father hasn’t left work yet, so he’ll just come over here
from his level and take you home. “
She peered up at him.
“You mean you aren’t going to keep me here?”
The detective glowered at
her. He was a big man, with a bald head, thick mustache, and brown
skin nearly as dark as Shakira’s. “Don’t think I
haven’t considered detaining you. I shouldn’t even be
wasting my time with you--I have a very low tolerance for reckless
kids who don’t care about anyone else’s safety. You could
have started a riot on that expressway--maybe I should have left you
to the tender mercies of that mob. Do you know what can happen to you
now, girl?”
“No,” she
mumbled, although she could guess.
“For starters, a
hearing in juvenile court. You could get a few months in Youth
Offenders’ Level, or you might get lucky and be sentenced to
help out in a hospital a few days a week. You’d get lots of
chances to see accident victims there.” He pulled at his
mustache. “That might do you some good. Maybe you ‘II be
there when they bring in some dead strip-runner who wasn’t
quick enough. You can watch his parents cry when the hospital makes
the Ritual of Request before they take any usable organs from the
corpse. And you ‘II have deep trouble if you ever misbehave
again.”
Amy squeezed her eyes
shut. “Stay here,” the man said, even though she hardly
had a choice, with the common room so filled with police. She sat
there alone, wallowing in her despair until the detective returned
with a cup of tea; he did not offer anything to her.
He sat down behind the
desk. “Will you give me the names of any runners with you?”
She shook her head
violently. Much as she hated Shakira, she would not sink that low.
“I didn’t
think you would. You’re not doing them any favor, you know. If
they meet with accidents or end up hurting somebody else, I hope you
can live with yourself.”
The detective worked at
his desk computer in silence until Amy’s father arrived. She
glanced at his pale, grim face and looked away quickly. The formality
of an introduction took only a moment before the plainclothesman
began to lecture Ricardo Stein on his daughter’s offense,
peppering his tirade with statistics on accidents caused by
strip-runners and the number of deaths the game had resulted in this
year. “If I hadn’t been on that expressway,” the
man concluded, “the girl might have been badly roughed up--not
that she didn’t deserve it. “
Her father said, “I
understand, Mr. Dubois.”
“She needs to learn
a lesson. “
“I agree.”
Ricardo shook back his thick brown hair. “I’ll go along
with any sentence she gets. Her mother and I won’t go out of
our way to defend her, and we probably share some of the blame for
not bringing her up better and supervising her more. You can be
certain there’ll be no repetition of such behavior. “
“I imagine you’ll
see to that, Mr. Stein--a solid citizen like you.” Mr. Dubois
leaned back in his chair. “So I’ll do you and your wife a
favor, and let Amy here off with a warning. She’s only
fourteen, and this is her first offense--the first time she’s
been caught, anyway--and Youth Offenders’ Level is crowded
enough as it is. But she’s in our records now, and if she’s
picked up again for anything, she goes into detention until her
hearing, at which point she’ll likely get a stiff sentence.”
“I’m grateful
to you,” Amy’s father said.
“Listen to me,
girl.” Mr. Dubois rested his arms on the desk. “Don’t
think you can lie low for a bit and then start strip-running again.
We know who you are now, and you’ll be easy to spot. Not many
girls run the strips.” He glanced at her father. “I think
I can count on you to keep her in line. Wouldn’t do your status
any good to have a criminal in the family.”
“You can count on
me, Mr. Dubois.”
Amy’s father did
not speak to her all the way home. That was a bad sign; he was never
that silent unless he was enraged. He left her outside the Women’s
Personal and went on to the apartment.
She dawdled as long as
she dared inside the Personal, then dragged herself down the hall,
filled with dread, wondering what her parents would do to her. They
would have discussed the whole affair by now, and her mother had
probably mentioned the guidance counselor’s earlier message.
They were both sitting on
the couch when she entered; there was no use appealing to her mother
for some mercy. The two rarely disagreed or argued in front of her,
and in a matter this important, they would present a united front.
She inched her way to a
chair and sat down. She would not be beaten; her parents did not
believe in physical punishment. A beating, even with all the bruises
the expressway riders had already left on her, might have been better
than having to endure her father’s harsh accusations and talk
about how humiliating her offense was for all of them. She hadn’t
thought of them at all, of how upset they would have been if she were
injured. She hadn’t thought about how her pathological display
of individualism might damage Ricardo’s reputation at work, or
her mother’s among their neighbors. She hadn’t considered
how such a blot on her record might affect her own chances later, or
reflected on the danger she had posed to commuters. She hadn’t
thought of the bad example she was setting for younger children, and
had completely ignored her father’s earlier warning about such
activity.
By the time her father
had finished his lecture, repeating most of his points several times,
it was too late to go to the section kitchen. Her mother sighed as
she folded their small table out of the wall and plugged in the plate
warmer; her father grumbled about missing the chicken the section
kitchen was to serve that night. They had been saving their fourth
meal at home this week for Saturday, when Ricardo’s parents
were to visit with a few of their own rations; Amy had ruined those
plans, too.
Amy pulled the ottoman
over to the table and sat down as her mother sprinkled a few spices
she had saved over the food. Her father took a call over the communo,
barked a few words at its screen, then hung up. “That was
Debora Lister. “ He moved the two chairs to the table, then
seated himself. “I told her you couldn’t talk.”
Amy poked at her zymobeef
and broccolettes listlessly. Just as well, she thought. Debora would
only be calling to tell her what had happened when Shakira showed up,
alone and triumphant, at Sheepshead Bay.
“You won’t be
taking any calls from your friends for a while,” her father
continued. “I’ll notify the principal at school that
you’re not to leave school levels except to go directly home,
and a monitor will note when you leave, so don’t think you can
wander around during the return trip. When you’re not in
school, you’ll stay here except for going to meals with us or
to the Personal. And in your free time, when you’re not
studying, you’ll prepare a report for me on the dangers of
strip-running. You shouldn’t find the data hard to come by, and
you’ll present it to me in a week. “ Ricardo took a
breath. “ And if I even hear that you’ve been running the
strips again, I’ll turn you in to the police myself and demand
a hearing for you. “
“Eat your food,
Amy,” her mother said; it was the first time she had spoken.
“I’m not
hungry.”
“You’d
better--it’s all we have left of home rations for this week. “
She forced herself to
eat. Her father finished his food and propped his elbows on the
table. “There’s something I still don’t
understand,” he said wearily. “Why, Amy? Why would you do
such a thing? I thought you had more sense. Why would you risk it?”
She could bear no more.
“I’m the best.” She stood up and kicked back the
ottoman. “I’m the best strip-runner in the City! That’s
all I’ll ever do, it’s all anybody will remember about
me! I was the best, and now they’ve taken it away!”
Her father’s gray
eyes widened. “You’re not sounding very repentant, young
lady.”
“I’m sorry I
lost! I’m sorry I was caught! I’m sorry you had to come
and get me, but I’m not sorry about anything else!”
“Go
to your room!” he shouted. “If I hear any more talk like
that, I will raise a
hand to you!”
Alysha reached across the
table and grabbed his upraised arm as Amy fled to her room.
Her life was over. Amy
could not view matters any other way. The story had made the rounds
quickly. She had lost to Shakira Lewes and been picked up by the
police; Luis Horton was doing his best to spread the news. A hall
monitor noted the times she left the school levels and reminded her,
right in front of other students, that she was expected to go
straight home; a few boys and girls always snickered.
She greeted questions
from her friends, even Debora, with a scowl, and soon no one was
speaking to her outside of class. Nobody dared to bring up the run,
or to tell her what the Lewes woman had said when she arrived at the
destination. There was the inevitable conference with Mr. Liang and
her mother, and an additional embarrassment when the guidance
counselor learned about the report she was preparing for her father.
She delivered the report over the school’s public address
screens, forced by Mr. Liang and the principal to repudiate the game;
she cringed inwardly whenever she thought of how the students who had
viewed her image must be laughing at her. Time inside the Youth
Offenders’ Level couldn’t have been much worse.
After three weeks, her
parents eased up a little. Amy still had to come home directly from
school, but they allowed her to do schoolwork with friends in the
subsection after supper. News of her downfall had been replaced by
gossip about Luis Horton ‘s successful run to the edge of
Queens against Tom Jandow’s gang. Her friends were again
speaking to her, but knew enough not to mention Shakira Lewes.
She was ruined, and it
was all that woman’s fault. She dreaded the daily journeys
along the strips, when she sometimes glimpsed other runners and
recalled what she had lost. She could no longer hear the music of the
strips, the rhythmic song in their humming that urged her to race.
She was already at the end of the line; the last bit of freedom she
would ever know was gone. She would become only another speck inside
the caves of steel, her past glory forgotten.
Amy left the elevator at
her floor with Debora, then suddenly stiffened with shock. Down the
hall, Shakira Lewes was loitering outside the Women’s Personal.
“What’s she
doing here?” the blond girl asked. “I don’t know.”
“I never told you,”
Debora said, “but when she finished the run, she--”
“I don’t want
to hear about it.” Amy took out her key when they reached the
door, determined to ignore the woman. Hanging around outside a
Personal was the crudest sort of behavior.
“Hello, Amy,”
Shakira said.
“Haven’t you
caused enough trouble?” Amy snapped. “You don’t
belong here.”
“But we never had
our talk. This is the first chance I’ve had to find you, and I
was pretty sure you’d be stopping here after school.”
Amy gritted her teeth.
“Now I can’t even go and take a piss in peace.”
Shakira said, “I
want to talk to you.” She lowered her voice as three women left
the Personal. “Tonight, after supper, alone. “
Amy’s fingers
tightened around her key. “Why should I talk to you?”
Shakira shrugged. “I’ll
be at the Hempstead G-level, at the end of the Long Island
Expressway. Get off and cross the strips to G-20th Street. I’ll
be standing in front of a store called Tad’s Antiques--think
you can find it?”
Amy felt insulted. “I
know my way around. But I don’t know why I should bother. “
“Then don’t.
I’ll be there by seven and I’ll wait until nine. If you
don’t show up, that’s your business, and I won’t
pester you again, but you might be interested in what I have to tell
you.” Shakira turned and walked toward the elevator before Amy
could reply.
Debora pulled her away
from the Personal door. “ Are you going?” she asked.
“Yes. I’ve
got to find out what she wants.”
“But your parents
told you not to leave the subsection. If any of their friends see
you--”
“I’m going
anyway. I have to go.” She would settle matters with the young
woman one way or another.
“To the edge of the
City?” Debora whispered.
“She can’t do
anything to me on the street with people around. Deb, you have to
cover for me. I can tell my parents I’ll be at your place. I
don’t think they’ll call to check, but if they do, tell
them I went to the Personal. “
“If my father
doesn’t get to the communo first.”
“I’ll just
have to take the chance,” Amy said.
Debora let out her
breath. “She may want to challenge you again. What’ll you
do?”
“I’ll worry
about that when I get there.” She had already made her
decision. If Shakira wanted another run, she couldn’t refuse,
and she’d make sure some of the boys she knew were waiting at
the destination as witnesses. Whatever the risk, it was a chance to
restore her lost honor.
Amy was on G-20th Street
by seven-thirty. Shakira, as she had promised, was waiting in front
of the antique store, which had an old-fashioned flat sign in script.
There weren’t many stores in the shabby neighborhood, where the
high metallic walls of the residence levels seemed duller than most,
and no more than a few hundred people in the street. Amy felt
apprehensive. Sections like this one were the worst in the City; only
badly off citizens would live here, so close to the Outside.
Shakira was gazing at an
attractive display of old plastic cutlery and cups in the store
window. Inside the store, the owner had made one concession to modem
times; a robot was waiting on the line of customers. “Didn’t
take you long to get here,” the woman murmured.
“I shouldn’t
be here at all,” Amy said. “I’m not supposed to
leave my subsection, but my parents think I’m with a friend. “
For once, they hadn’t asked too many questions, and had even
seemed a little relieved that she would be gone for the evening. “I
told them I’d be back by ten-thirty, so say what you have to
say.”
“I didn’t
want to make that run, but you insisted, and I still have my pride.”
Shakira looped her fingers around her belt. “Then, once I was
running, old habits took over. Maybe I wanted to see if I still had
my reflexes. “
“You must have had
a good time bragging about it later.”
“I didn’t
brag,” Shakira said. “I just met the kids and told them
to go home. I said it was tough shaking you, and that you were one of
the best runners who ever tailed me.”
Amy’s lip curled.
“How nice of you, Shakira. You still beat me.”
“I saw what
happened, why you didn’t jump back on the strip. Some runners
would have risked it anyway, even with less room than you had. They
would have jumped, and if a couple of people got knocked off the
strip, too bad. I’m glad you aren’t that antisocial.”
“What do you want
with me, anyway?” Amy asked. A few women stopped near her to
look in the store window, but she ignored them; even in this wretched
area, people wouldn’t be crass enough to eavesdrop.
“Well, I heard
about this girl, Amy Barone-Stein, who could run the strips with the
best of them. I still know a few runners, even though most of my
college friends would disapprove of them. I thought you might be a
little like me--restless, maybe a bit angry, wondering if you’d
ever be more than a component in the City’s machine.”
Amy stepped back a
little. “So what?”
“I thought you
might like a challenge.”
“But you said
before that you didn’t want to make that run.”
“I’m not
talking about that,” Shakira said. “I mean a real
challenge, something a lot harder and more interesting than running
strips. It might be worthwhile for you if you’ve got the guts
for it. “ Amy took another step backward, certain that the
woman was about to propose a shady undertaking. “You see, I’m
part of that group of Lije’s--Elijah Baley’s--the people
who go Outside once a week. His son Bentley is an acquaintance of
mine.”
Amy gaped at her,
completely surprised. “But why--”
“There are only a
few of us so far. The City gives us a little support, mostly because
of Lije--Mr. Baley--but I suspect the City government thinks we’re
as eccentric as everyone else does, and that we’re deluded to
think we can ever settle another world.”
“Why bother?”
Amy said. “The Spacers’ll never let anyone off Earth.”
“Lije left, didn’t
he?”
“That was
different, and they sent him back here as fast as they could. I’ll
bet they didn’t even thank him for solving that murder. They’d
never let a bunch of Earthpeople on one of their worlds. “
“Not one of theirs,
no.” Shakira leaned against the window. “But Lije Baley
is convinced they’ll allow settlers on an uninhabited world
eventually--maybe sooner than we think--and that they’ll
provide us with ships to get there. But we can’t settle another
world unless we’re able to live Outside a City.”
Amy shook her head.
“Nobody can live Outside.”
“Earthpeople used
to. The Earthpeople who settled the Spacer worlds long ago did. The
Spacers do, and we manage to--for two or three hours a week, anyway.
It’s a start, just getting accustomed to that, and it isn’t
easy, but any settlers will have to be people like us, who’ve
shown we can leave a City. “
“And you want me in
this group?” Amy asked.
“I thought you
might be interested. We could use more recruits, and younger people
seem to adapt more quickly. Just think of it--if we do get to leave
Earth, every single settler will be needed, every person will be
important and useful. We’ll need people willing to gamble on a
new life, individualists who want to make a mark, maybe even folks
who are just a little antisocial as long as they can cooperate with
others. You could be one of them, Amy.”
“If you ever
leave.”
Shakira smiled. “What
have you got to lose by trying?” She paused. “Do you have
any idea of how precarious life inside this City is? How much more
uranium can we get for our power plants? Think of all the power we
have to use just to bring in water and get rid of waste. Just imagine
what would happen if the air were cut off even for an hour or
two--people would die by the hundreds of thousands. We’ll have
to leave the Cities. They can’t keep growing indefinitely
without taking up land we need for farming or forests we need for
pulp. There’ll be less food, less space, less of everything,
until--”
Amy looked away for a
moment. Her mother had said the same thing to her.
“There isn’t
a future here, Amy. “ Shakira moved closer to her. “There
might be one for us on other worlds. “
Amy sighed. “What a
few people do won’t make any difference. “
“It’s a
beginning, and if we succeed, others will follow. You seemed to think
what you did was important when you were only running the strips. “
The young woman beckoned to her. “Here’s my challenge for
you. I’m asking you if you ‘II come Outside with me. “
“With those
people?”
“Right now. Surely
a strip-runner who used to risk life and limb isn’t afraid of a
little open air.”
“But--”
“Come on.”
She followed Shakira down
the street, helpless to resist. The woman stopped in front of an
opening in the high walls. Amy peered around her and saw a long,
dimly lit tunnel with another wall at its end.
“What is it?”
Amy asked. “
An exit. Some of them are
guarded now, but this one isn’t. There really isn’t any
need to watch them--most people don’t know about them or don’t
want to think about them. Even the people living in this subsection
have probably forgotten this exit is here. Will you come with me?”
“What if somebody
follows us?” Amy glanced nervously down the street, which
seemed even emptier than before. “It isn’t safe.”
“Believe me, nobody
will follow. They’d rather believe this place doesn’t
exist. Will you come?”
Amy swallowed hard, then
nodded. It was only a passageway; it couldn’t be that bad. They
entered; she kept close to the young woman as the familiar,
comforting noise of the street behind them grew fainter.
Shakira said, “The
exit’s at the end.” Her voice sounded hollow in the eerie
silence. Amy’s stomach knotted as they came to the end of the
tunnel.
“Ready?”
Shakira asked.
“I think So.”
“Hang on to me.
It’ll be dark Outside--that’ll make it easier for you,
and I won’t let go.”
Shakira pressed her hand
against the wall. An opening slowly appeared. Amy felt cold air on
her face; as they stepped Outside, the door closed behind them. She
closed her eyes, terrified to look, already longing for the warmth
and safety of the City.
A gust of wind slapped
her, fiercer than the wind on the fastest strips. She opened her eyes
and looked up. A black sky dotted with stars was above her, and that
bright pearly orb had to be the moon. Except for the wind and the
bone-chilling cold, she might almost have been inside a City
planetarium. But the planetarium had not revealed how vast the sky
was, or shown the silvery clouds that drifted below the black
heavens. She lowered her gaze; a bluish-white plain, empty except for
the distant domes of a farm, stretched in front of her. Her ears
throbbed at the silence that was broken only by the intermittent howl
of the wind.
Open air--and the white
substance covering the ground had to be snow. The wind gusted again,
lifting a thin white veil of flakes, then died. There was space all
around her, unfiltered air, dirt under her feet, and the moon shining
down on all of it; the safety of walls was gone. Her stomach lurched
as her heart pounded; her head swam. Her grip on Shakira loosened;
the pale plain was spinning. Then she was falling through the endless
silence into a darkness as black as the sky...
Arms caught her, lifting
her up; she felt warmth at her back. The silence was gone. She clawed
at the air and realized she was back inside the tunnel. She blinked;
her mouth was dry. “ Are you all right?” Shakira felt her
forehead; Amy leaned heavily against her. “I got you inside as
fast as I could. I’m sorry--I forgot there’d be a full
moon tonight. It would have been easier for you if it had been
completely dark.”
Amy trembled, afraid to
let go. “I didn’t know,” she said. “I didn’t
think--” She shivered with relief, welcoming the warmth, the
faint but steady noise from the street, the walls of the City. She
tried to smile. “Guess I didn’t do so well.”
“But you did. The
first time I went Outside, I passed out right after taking my first
breath of open air. The second time, I ran back inside after a few
seconds and swore I’d never set foot Outside again. You did a
lot better than that--I was counting. We must have been standing
there for nearly two minutes.”
Shakira supported her
with one arm; they made their way slowly toward the street. “Can
you walk by yourself?” the woman asked as they left the tunnel.
“I think so.”
Shakira let go. Amy stared down the street, which had seemed so empty
earlier, relieved at the sight of all the people. “I couldn’t
do that again, Shakira. I couldn’t face it--all that space.”
“I think you can.”
Shakira folded her arms. “You can if you don’t give up
now. We’ll be going Outside in two days. You’ll have to
wear more clothes--it’d help if you can get gloves and a hat.”
Amy shook her head, struck by the strangeness of needing warmer
clothes; the temperature inside never varied. “It’s
winter, so we’ll only take a short walk--we won’t be
Outside very long. I’d like you to come with us. I’ll
stay by the exit with you, and you needn’t remain Outside a
second longer than you can bear. Believe me, if you keep trying, even
if you think you can’t stand it, it’ll get easier. You
may even start to look forward to it.”
“I don’t
know--” Amy started to say.
“Will you try?”
Amy took a deep breath,
smelling the odors of the City, the faint pungence of bodies, a whiff
of someone’s perfume, a sharp, acrid scent she could not place;
she had never noticed the smells before. “I’ll try.”
She drew her brows together. “My parents will kill me if they
ever find out. I’ll have to think of an excuse”
“But you must tell
them, Amy.”
“They’ll
never let me go.”
“Then you’ll
have to find a way to convince them. They have to know for two very
good reasons. One is that it’ll cause trouble for Lije if kids
come Outside without their families’ permission, and the other
is that they just might decide to join us themselves. I’ll come
by your place for you, so you’ll have to tell them why I’m
there. You can give me your answer then. “
“There’s
something else,” Amy said. “That Mr. Baley--he’s a
detective. When he finds out I got picked up, he may not want me.”
Shakira laughed. “Don’t
worry about that. I’ll tell you a secret--Lije Baley was a
pretty good strip-runner in his day. I heard a little about his past
from my uncle and another old-timer. He won’t hold that against
you, but don’t say anything to the others about it. “
Shakira took her arm as they walked toward the strips. “We’d
better get home.”
Amy glanced at her. “You
wouldn’t want to try another run?”
“Not a chance.
You’ve had enough trouble, and you’ve got more to lose
now. Maybe some dancing, but only if there’s room, and only on
the slow strips.”
The sturdy walls of her
Kingsbridge subsection surrounded Amy once more. She had nearly
forgotten the coldness, the wind, the silence, the terrible emptiness
of the Outside.
Yet she knew she would
have to go Outside again. The comforting caves of steel would not
always be a safe refuge. She would have to face the emptiness until
she no longer feared it, and wondered how the City would seem to her
then.
She waited by the
apartment door for a few moments before slipping her key into the
slot. Her parents might be asleep already, and she could not tell
them about this event at breakfast in the section kitchen. She could
tell them tomorrow night, and would try not to hope for too much.
The door opened; she went
inside. Her parents were still awake, cuddling together on the couch;
they sat up quickly and adjusted their nightrobes.
“Amy!” Her
father looked a bit embarrassed. “You ‘re home early.”
“I thought I was
late.”
He glanced at the wall
timepiece. “Oh--I guess you are. I hadn’t noticed. Well,
I’ll let it pass this once. “
Amy studied the couple.
They seemed in a good mood; her mother’s brown eyes glowed, and
her father’s broad face lacked its usual tenseness. She might
not get a better chance to speak to them, and did not want her mother
finding out from Mrs. Lister at breakfast that she hadn’t been
at Debora’s.
“Um. “ Amy
cleared her throat. “I have to talk to you. “
Her father looked toward
the timepiece again. “Is it important?”
“It’s
very important.” She went to a chair and sat down across from
them. “It really can’t wait. Please--just let me talk
until I’m finished, and then you can say whatever you want.”
She paused. “I wasn’t at Deb’s. I know I wasn’t
supposed to, but I left the subsection.”
Her
father started; her mother reached for his hand.
“Not to run strips,
I swear,” Amy added hastily. She lowered her eyes, afraid to
look directly at them, then told them about her first meeting with
Shakira, the run that had ended in disaster, the encounter on the
street in Hempstead, what Shakira had said about the group that went
Outside, and the challenge she had met that night by facing the open
space beyond the City. She wasn’t telling the story very well,
having to pause every so often to fill in a detail, but by the time
she reached the end, she was sure she had mentioned all the
essentials.
Her parents said nothing
throughout, and were silent when she finished. At last she forced
herself to raise her head. Her father looked stunned, her mother
bewildered.
“You went Outside?”
Alysha whispered.
“Yes.”
“Weren’t you
terrified?”
“I was never so
scared in my life, but I had to--I--”
Her father sagged against
the couch. “You deliberately disobeyed us.” He sounded
more exasperated than angry. “You lied and told us you’d
be with Debora Lister. You left the subsection to meet a dubious
young woman who’s a damned strip-runner herself, and--”
“She isn’t,”
Amy protested...She doesn’t run any more, and she wouldn’t
have with me if I hadn’t insisted--I told you. That was my
fault.”
“At least you’re
admitting your guilt,” he said...I let you have your say, so
allow me to finish. Now she wants you to traipse around Outside with
that group of hers. I forbid it--do you hear? You’re not to
have anything more to do with her, and if she calls or comes here,
I’ll tell her so myself. I’ll have to be firmer with you,
Amy. Since you can’t be honest with us about your doings,
you’ll be restricted to this apartment again, and--”
“Rick.”
Alysha’s voice was low, but firm...Let me speak. If joining
those people means so much to Amy, then maybe she should.”
Ricardo’s face paled as he turned toward his wife...I know she
disobeyed us, but I think I can understand why she felt it necessary.
Anyway, how much trouble can she get into if a City detective’s
with them? They seem harmless enough.”
“Harmless?”
her husband said...Going Outside, deluding themselves that--”
“Let her go, Rick.”
Alysha pressed his hand between both of hers...That young woman told
her the truth. You know it’s true--you can see what the
Department’s statistical projections show, whether you’ll
admit it to yourself or not. If there’s any chance that those
people with Elijah Baley can leave Earth, maybe it’s better if
Amy goes with them.”
Amy drew in her breath,
startled that her mother was taking her side and confronting her
father in her presence. “You’d accept that?”
Ricardo asked...What if the Spacers actually allow those people off
Earth--not that I think it’s likely, but what if they do?
You’re saying you’d be content never to see your daughter
again.”
“I wouldn’t
be content--you know better than that. But how can I cling to her if
she has a chance, however small, at something else? I know what her
life will be here, perhaps better than you do. I’d rather know
she’s doing something meaningful to her somewhere else, even if
that means we’ll lose her, than to have to go through life
pretending I don’t see her frustrations and disappointments. “
Ricardo heaved a sigh. “I
can’t believe I’m hearing you say this.”
“Oh, Rick.”
She released his hand. “You would have expected me to say and
do the unexpected years ago.” She smiled at that phrase. “How
conventional we’ve become since then.” She gazed at him
silently for a bit. “Maybe I’ll go with Amy when she
meets that group. I should see what kind of people they are, after
all. Maybe I’ll even take a step Outside myself.”
Her husband frowned,
looking defeated. “This is a fine situation,” he said.
“Not only do I have a disobedient daughter, but now my wife’s
against me, too. If my co-workers hear you’re both wandering
around with that group of Baley’s, it may not do me much good
in the Department.”
“Really?”
Amy’s mother arched her brows. “They always knew we were
both a bit, shall we say, eccentric, and that didn’t bother you
once. Perhaps you should come with us to meet Mr. Baley’s
group. It’d be wiser to have your colleagues think you’re
going along with our actions, however odd or amusing they may find
them, than to believe there’s a rift between us.” Her
mouth twisted a little. “You know what they say--happy families
make for a better City.”
Ricardo turned toward
Amy. “You’d do it again? Go Outside, I mean. You’d
actually go through that again?”
“Yes, I would,”
Amy replied. “I know it’ll be hard, but I’d try.”
“It’s late,”
her father said. “I can’t think about this now. “
He stood up and took Alysha by the arm as she rose. “We’ll
discuss this tomorrow, after I’ve had a chance to consider it.
Good night, Amy. “
“Good night. “
Her mother was whispering
to her father as Amy went to her room. Her father had backed down for
now, and her mother was almost certain to bring him around. She
undressed for bed, convinced she had won her battle.
She stretched out, tired
and ready to sleep, and soon drifted into a dream. She was on the
strips again, riding through an open arch to the Outside, but she
wasn’t afraid this time.
The City slept. The
strips and expressways continued to move, carrying the few who were
awake--young lovers who had crept out to meet each other, policemen
on patrol, hospital workers heading home after a night shift, and
restless souls drawn to wander the caverns of New York.
Amy stood on a strip, a
sprinkling of people around her. Four boys raced past her, leaping
from strip to strip; for a moment, she was tempted to join their
race. She had come out at night a few times before, to practice some
moves when the strips were emptier, returning to her subsection
before her parents awoke. More riders began to fill the slowest
strip; the City was waking. Her parents would be up by the time she
got back, but she was sure they would understand why she had been
drawn out here tonight.
Her parents had come with
her to meet Elijah Baley and his group. The detective was a tall,
dark-haired man with a long, solemn face, but he had brightened a
little when Shakira introduced her new recruits. Amy’s mother
and father had not gone Outside with them; perhaps they would next
time. She knew what an effort it would be for them, and hoped they
could find the courage to take that step. They would be with her when
the group met again; they had promised that much. When she was able
to face the openness without fear, to stride across the ground
bravely as Shakira did, maybe she would lead them Outside herself.
She leaped up, spun
around in a dervish, and ran along the strip. The band hummed under
her feet; she could hear its music again. She bounded forward, did a
handspring, then jumped to the next strip. She danced across the gray
bands until she reached the expressway, then hauled herself aboard.
Her hands tightened
around the pole as she recalled her first glimpse of daylight. The
whiteness of the snow had been blinding, and above it all, in the
painfully clear blue sky, was a bright ball of flame, the naked sun.
She had known she was standing on a ball of dirt clad only in a thin
veil of air, a speck that was hurtling through a space more vast and
empty than anything she could see. The terror had seized her then,
driving her back inside, where she had cowered on the floor, sick
with fear and despair. But there had also been Shakira’s strong
arms to help her up, and Elijah Baley’s voice telling her of
his own former fears. Amy had not gone Outside again that day, but
she had stood in the open doorway and forced herself to take one more
breath of wintry air.
It was a beginning. She
had to meet the challenge if she was ever to lead others Outside, or
to follow the hopeful settlers to another world.
She left the expressway
and danced along the strips, showing her form, imagining that she was
running one last race. She was near the Hempstead street where she
had met Shakira.
The street was nearly
empty, its store windows darkened. Amy left the strips and hurried
toward the tunnel, running along the passageway until her breath came
in short, sharp gasps. When she reached the end, she hesitated for
only a moment, then pressed her hand against the wall.
The opening appeared. The
muted hum from the distant strips faded behind her, and she was
Outside, alone, with the morning wind in her face. The sky was a dark
dome above her. She looked east and saw dawn brightening the cave of
stars.
The Asenion Solution
by Robert
Silverberg
FLETCHER STARED
BLEAKLY AT THE SMALL MOUNDS OF GRAY metal that were visible behind
the thick window of the storage chamber.
“Plutonium-186,”
he muttered. “Nonsense! Absolute nonsense!”
“Dangerous
nonsense, Lew,” said Jesse Hammond, standing behind him.
“Catastrophic nonsense.”
Fletcher nodded. The very
phrase, “plutonium-186,” sounded like gibberish to him.
There wasn’t supposed to be any such substance. Plutonium-186
was an impossible isotope, too light by a good fifty neutrons. Or a
bad fifty neutrons, considering the risks the stuff was creating as
it piled up here and there around the world. But the fact that it was
theoretically impossible for plutonium-186 to exist did not change
the other, and uglier, fact that he was looking at three kilograms of
it right this minute. Or that as the quantity of plutonium-186 in the
world continued to increase, so did the chance of an uncontrollable
nuclear reaction leading to an atomic holocaust.
“Look at the
morning reports,” Fletcher said, waving a sheaf of faxprints at
Hammond. “Thirteen grams more turned up at the nucleonics lab
of Accra University. Fifty grams in Geneva. Twenty milligrams
in--well, that little doesn’t matter. But Chicago, Jesse,
Chicago--three hundred grams in a single chunk!”
“Christmas presents
from the Devil,” Hammond muttered.
“Not
the Devil, no. Just decent serious-minded scientific folk who happen
to live in another universe where plutonium-186 is not only possible
but also perfectly harmless. And who are so fascinated by the idea
that we’re
fascinated by it that they keep on shipping the stuff to us in
wholesale lots! What are we going to do with it all, Jesse? What in
God’s name are we going to do with it all?”
Raymond Nikolaus looked
up from his desk at the far side of the room.
“Wrap it up in
shiny red and green paper and ship it right back to them?” he
suggested.
Fletcher laughed
hollowly. ”Very funny, Raymond. Very, very funny.”
He began to pace the
room. In the silence the clicking of his shoes against the flagstone
floor seemed to him like the ticking of a detonating device, growing
louder, louder, louder...
He--they, all of
them--had been wrestling with the problem all year, with an
increasing sense of futility. The plutonium-186 had begun
mysteriously to appear in laboratories all over the world--wherever
supplies of one of the two elements with equivalent atomic weights
existed. Gram for gram, atom for atom, the matching elements
disappeared just as mysteriously: equal quantities of tungsten-186 or
osmium-186.
Where was the tungsten
and osmium going? Where was the plutonium coming from? Above all, how
was it possible for a plutonium isotope whose atoms had only 92
neutrons in its nucleus to exist even for a fraction of a fraction of
an instant? Plutonium was one of the heavier chemical elements, with
a whopping 94 protons in the nucleus of each of its atoms. The
closest thing to a stable isotope of plutonium was plutonium-244, in
which 150 neutrons held those 94 protons together; and even at that,
plutonium-244 had an inevitable habit of breaking down in radioactive
decay, with a half-life of some 76 million years. Atoms of
plutonium-186, if they could exist at all, would come dramatically
apart in very much less than one seventy-six millionth of a second.
But the stuff that was
turning up in the chemistry labs to replace the tungsten-186 and the
osmium-186 had an atomic number of 94, no question about that. And
element 94 was plutonium. That couldn’t be disputed either. The
defining characteristic of plutonium was the presence of 94 protons
in its nucleus. If that was the count, plutonium was what that
element had to be.
This impossibly light
isotope of plutonium, this plutonium-186, had another impossible
characteristic about it: not only was it stable, it was so completely
stable that it wasn’t even radioactive. It just sat there,
looking exceedingly unmysterious, not even deigning to emit a smidgen
of energy. At least, not when first tested. But a second test
revealed positron emission, which a third baffled look confirmed. The
trouble was that the third measurement showed an even higher level of
radioactivity than the second one. The fourth was higher than the
third. And so on and so on.
Nobody had ever heard of
any element, of whatever atomic number or weight, that started off
stable and then began to demonstrate a steadily increasing intensity
of radioactivity. No one knew what was likely to happen, either, if
the process continued unchecked, but the possibilities seemed pretty
explosive. The best suggestion anyone had was to turn it to powder
and mix it with nonradioactive tungsten. That worked for a little
while, until the tungsten turned radioactive too. After that graphite
was used, with somewhat better results, to damp down the strange
element’s output of energy. There were no explosions. But more
and more plutonium-186 kept arriving.
The
only explanation that made any sense--and it did not make very
much sense--was that it was coming from some unknown and perhaps
even unknowable place, some sort of parallel universe, where the laws
of nature were different and the binding forces of the atom were so
much more powerful that plutonium-186 could be a stable isotope.
Why they were sending odd
lumps of plutonium-186 here was something that no one could begin to
guess. An even more important question was how they could be made to
stop doing it. The radioactive breakdown of the plutonium-186 would
eventually transform it into ordinary osmium or tungsten, but the
twenty positrons that each plutonium nucleus emitted in the course of
that process encountered and annihilated an equal number of
electrons. Our universe could afford to lose twenty electrons here
and there, no doubt. It could probably afford to go on losing
electrons at a constant rate for an astonishingly long time without
noticing much difference. But sooner or later the shift toward an
overall positive charge that this electron loss created would create
grave and perhaps incalculable problems of symmetry and energy
conservation. Would the equilibrium of the universe break down? Would
nuclear interactions begin to intensify? Would the stars--even the
Sun--erupt into supernovas?
“This can’t
go on,” Fletcher said gloomily.
Hammond gave him a sour
look. “So? We’ve been saying that for six months now.”
“It’s time to
do something. They keep shipping us more and more and more, and we
don’t have any idea how to go about telling them to cut it
out.”
“We don’t
even have any idea whether they really exist,” Raymond Nikolaus
put in.
“Right now that
doesn’t matter. What matters is that the stuff is arriving
constantly, and the more of it we have, the more dangerous it is. We
don’t have the foggiest idea of how to shut off the shipments.
So we’ve got to find some way to get rid of it as it comes in.”
“And what do you
have in mind, pray tell?” Hammond asked.
Fletcher said, glaring at
his colleague in a way that conveyed the fact that he would brook no
opposition, “I’m going to talk to Asenion.”
Hammond guffawed.
“Asenion? You’re crazy!”
“No.
He is. But he’s
the only person who can help us.”
It was a sad case, the
Asenion story, poignant and almost incomprehensible. One of the
finest minds atomic physics had ever known, a man to rank with
Rutherford, Bohr, Heisenberg, Fermi, Meitner. A Harvard degree at
twelve, his doctorate from MIT five years later, after which he had
poured forth a dazzling flow of technical papers that probed the
deepest mysteries of the nuclear binding forces. As the twenty-first
century entered its closing decades he had seemed poised to solve
once and for all the eternal riddles of the universe. And then, at
the age of twenty-eight, without having given the slightest warning,
he walked away from the whole thing.
“I have lost
interest,” he declared. “Physics is no longer of any
importance to me. Why should I concern myself with these issues of
the way in which matter is constructed? How tiresome it all is! When
one looks at the Parthenon, does one care what the columns are made
of, or what sort of scaffolding was needed to put them in place? That
the Parthenon exists, and is sublimely beautiful, is all that should
interest us. So too with the universe. I see the universe, and it is
beautiful and perfect. Why should I pry into the nature of its
scaffolding? Why should anyone?”
And with that he resigned
his professorship, burned his papers, and retreated to the
thirty-third floor of an apartment building on Manhattan’s West
Side, where he built an elaborate laboratory-greenhouse in which he
intended to conduct experiments in advanced horticulture.
“Bromeliads,”
said Asenion. “I will create hybrid bromeliads. Bromeliads will
be the essence and center of my life from now on.”
Romelmeyer, who had been
Asenion’s mentor at Harvard, attributed his apparent breakdown
to overwork, and thought that he would snap back in six or eight
months. Jantzen, who had had the rare privilege of being the first to
read his astonishing dissertation at MIT, took an equally sympathetic
position, arguing that Asenion must have come to some terrifying
impasse in his work that had compelled him to retreat dramatically
from the brink of madness. “Perhaps he found himself looking
right into an abyss of inconsistencies when he thought he was about
to find the ultimate answers,” Jantzen suggested. “What
else could he do but run? But he won’t run for long. It isn’t
in his nature.”
Burkhardt, of Cal Tech,
whose own work had been carried out in the sphere that Asenion was
later to make his own, agreed with Jantzen’s analysis. “He
must have hit something really dark and hairy. But he’ll wake
up one morning with the solution in his head, and it’ll be
goodbye horticulture for him. He’ll turn out a paper by noon
that will revolutionize everything we think we know about nuclear
physics, and that’ll be that.”
But Jesse Hammond, who
had played tennis with Asenion every morning for the last two years
of his career as a physicist, took a less charitable position. “He’s
gone nuts,” Hammond said. “He’s flipped out
altogether, and he’s never going to get himself together again.
“
“You think?”
said Lew Fletcher, who had been almost as close to Asenion as
Hammond, but who was no tennis player.
Hammond smiled. “No
doubt of it. I began noticing a weird look in his eyes starting just
about two years back. And then his playing started to turn weird too.
He’d serve and not even look where he was serving. He’d
double-fault without even caring. And you know what else? He didn’t
challenge me on a single out-of-bounds call the whole year. That was
the key thing. Used to be, he’d fight me every call. Now he
just didn’t seem to care. He just let everything go by. He was
completely indifferent. I said to myself, This guy must be flipping
out.”
“Or working on some
problem that seems more important to him than tennis. “
“Same thing,”
said Hammond. “No, Lew, I tell you--he’s gone completely
unglued. And nothing’s going to glue him again.”
That conversation had
taken place almost a year ago. Nothing had happened in the interim to
change anyone’s opinion. The astounding arrival of
plutonium-186 in the world had not brought forth any comment from
Asenion’s Manhattan penthouse. The sudden solemn discussions of
fantastic things like parallel universes by otherwise reputable
physicists had apparently not aroused him either. He remained
closeted with his bromeliads high above the streets of Manhattan.
Well,
maybe he is crazy,
Fletcher thought. But his mind can’t have shorted out entirely.
And he might just have an idea or two left in him
Asenion said, “Well,
you don’t look a whole lot older, do you?”
Fletcher felt himself
reddening. “Jesus, Ike, it’s only been eighteen months
since we last saw each other!”
“Is that all?”
Asenion said indifferently. “It feels like a lot more to me.”
He managed a thin, remote
smile. He didn’t look very interested in Fletcher or in
whatever it was that had brought Fletcher to his secluded eyrie.
Asenion
had always been an odd one, of course--aloof, mysterious, with a
faint but unmistakable air of superiority about him that nearly
everyone found instantly irritating. Of course, he was
superior. But he had made sure that he let you know it, and never
seemed to care that others found the trait less than endearing.
He
appeared more remote than ever, now, stranger and more alien.
Outwardly he had not changed at all: the same slender, debonair
figure, surprisingly handsome, even striking. Though rumor had it
that he had not left his penthouse in more than a year, there was no
trace of indoor pallor about him. His skin still had its rich deep
olive coloring, almost swarthy, a Mediterranean tone. His hair, thick
and dark, tumbled down rakishly over his broad forehead. But there
was something different about his dark, gleaming eyes. The old
Asenion, however preoccupied he might have been with some abstruse
problem of advanced physics, had nearly always had a playful sparkle
in his eyes, a kind of amiable devilish glint. This man, this
horticultural recluse, wore a different expression
altogether--ascetic, mist-shrouded, absent.
His gaze was as bright as ever, but the brightness was a cold one
that seemed to come from some far-off star.
Fletcher said, “The
reason I’ve come here”
“We can go into all
that later, can’t we, Lew? First come into the greenhouse with
me. There’s something I want to show you. Nobody else has seen
it yet, in fact.”
“Well, if you--”
“Insist, yes. Come.
I promise you, it’s extraordinary.”
He turned and led the way
through the intricate pathways of the apartment. The sprawling
many-roomed penthouse was furnished in the most offhand way, cheap
student furniture badly cared for. Cats wandered everywhere, five,
six, eight of them, sharpening their claws on the upholstery,
prowling in empty closets whose doors stood ajar, peering down from
the tops of bookcases containing jumbled heaps of coverless volumes.
There was a rank smell of cat urine in the air.
But then suddenly Asenion
turned a corridor and Fletcher, following just behind, found himself
staring into what could have been an altogether different world. They
had reached the entrance to the spectacular glass-walled extension
that had been wrapped like an observation deck around the entire
summit of the building. Beyond, dimly visible inside, Fletcher could
see hundreds or perhaps thousands of strange-looking plants, some
hanging from the ceiling, some mounted along the sides of wooden
pillars, some rising in stepped array on benches, some growing out of
beds set in the floor.
Asenion briskly tapped
out the security-combination code on a diamond-shaped keyboard
mounted in the wall, and the glass door slid silently back. A blast
of warm humid air came forth.
“Quickly!” he
said. “Inside!”
It was like stepping
straight into the Amazon jungle. In place of the harsh, dry
atmosphere of a Manhattan apartment in mid-winter there was,
abruptly, the dense moist sweet closeness of the tropics, enfolding
them like folds of wet fabric. Fletcher almost expected to hear
parrots screeching overhead.
And the plants! The
bizarre plants, clinging to every surface, filling every available
square inch!
Most of them followed the
same general pattern, rosettes of broad shining strap-shaped leaves
radiating outward from a central cup-shaped structure deep enough to
hold several ounces of water. But beyond that basic area of
similarity they differed wildly from one another. Some were tiny,
some were colossal. Some were marked with blazing stripes of yellow
and red and purple that ran the length of their thick, succulent
leaves. Some were mottled with fierce blotches of shimmering,
assertive, bewilderingly complicated combinations of color. Some,
whose leaves were green, were a fiery scarlet or crimson, or a
somber, mysterious blue, at the place where the leaves came together
to form the cup. Some were armed with formidable teeth and looked
ready to feed on unwary visitors. Some were topped with gaudy spikes
of strangely shaped brilliant-hued flowers taller than a man, which
sprang like radiant spears from their centers.
Everything glistened.
Everything seemed poised for violent, explosive growth. The scene was
alien and terrifying. It was like looking into a vast congregation of
hungry monsters. Fletcher had to remind himself that these were
merely plants, hothouse specimens that probably wouldn’t last
half an hour in the urban environment outside.
“These are
bromeliads, “ Asenion said, shaping the word sensuously in his
throat as though it were the finest word any language had ever
produced. “Tropical plants, mainly. South and Central America
is where most of them live. They tend to cling to trees, growing high
up in the forks of branches, mainly. Some live at ground level,
though. Such as the bromeliad you know best, which is the pineapple.
But there are hundreds of others in this room. Thousands. And this is
the humid room, where I keep the guzmanias and the vrieseas and some
of the aechmeas. As we go around, I’ll show you the tillandsias
--they like it a lot drier--and the terrestrial ones, the hechtias
and the dyckias, and then over on the far side--”
“Ike,”
Fletcher said quietly.
“You know I’ve
never liked that name.”
“I’m sorry. I
forgot.” That was a lie. Asenion’s given name was
Ichabod. Neither Fletcher nor anyone Fletcher knew had ever been able
to bring himself to call him that. “Look, I think what you’ve
got here is wonderful. Absolutely wonderful. But I don’t want
to intrude on your time, and there’s a very serious problem I
need to discuss with--”
“First the plants,”
Asenion said. “Indulge me.” His eyes were glowing. In the
half-light of the greenhouse he looked like a jungle creature
himself, exotic, weird. Without a moment’s hesitation, he
pranced off down the aisle toward a group of oversized bromeliads
near the outer wall. Willy-nilly. Fletcher followed.
Asenion gestured grandly.
“Here
it is! Do you see? Aechmea
asenionii! Discovered in northwestern Brazil two years ago--I
sponsored the expedition myself--of course. I never expected them to
name it for me. but you know how these things sometimes happen--”
Fletcher stared. The
plant was a giant among giants, easily two meters across from
leaf-tip to leaf-tip. Its dark green leaves were banded with jagged
pale scrawls that looked like the hieroglyphs of some lost race. Out
of the central cup, which was the size of a man’s head and deep
enough to drown rabbits in, rose the strangest flower Fletcher ever
hoped to see, a thick yellow stalk of immense length from which
sprang something like a cluster of black thunderbolts tipped with
ominous red globes like dangling moons. A pervasive odor of rotting
flesh came from it.
“The
only specimen in North America!” Asenion cried. “Perhaps
one of six or seven in the world. And I’ve succeeded in
inducing it to bloom. There’ll be seed, Lew, and perhaps
there’ll be offsets as well--I’ll be able to propagate
it, and cross it with others--can you imagine it crossed with Aechmea
chantinii. Fletcher? Or perhaps an interspecific hybrid? With
Neoregelia carcharadon. say? No. Of course you can’t
imagine it. What am I saying? But it would be spectacular beyond
belief. Take my word for it. “
“I have no doubt.”
“It’s
a privilege, seeing this plant in bloom. But there are others here
you must see too. The puyas--the pitcairnias--there’s a clump
of Dyckia
marnierlapostollei in the next room that you wouldn’t
believe--”
He bubbled with boyish
enthusiasm. Fletcher forced himself to be patient. There was no help
for it: he would simply have to take the complete tour.
It went on for what
seemed like hours, as Asenion led him frantically from one peculiar
plant to another, in room after room. Some were actually quite
beautiful, Fletcher had to admit. Others seemed excessively
flamboyant, or grotesque, or incomprehensibly ordinary to his
untutored eye, or downright grotesque. What struck him most
forcefully of all was the depth of Asenion’s obsession. Nothing
in the universe seemed to matter to him except this horde of exotic
plants. He had given himself up totally to the strange world he had
created here.
But at last even
Asenion’s manic energies seemed to flag. The pace had been
merciless, and both he and Fletcher, drenched with sweat and gasping
in the heat, paused for breath in a section of the greenhouse
occupied by small gray gnarly plants that seemed to have no roots,
and were held to the wall by barely visible wires.
Abruptly Asenion said,
“All right. You aren’t interested anyway. Tell me what
you came here to ask me, and then get on your way. I have all sorts
of things to do this afternoon. “
“It’s about
plutonium-186,” Fletcher began.
“Don’t be
idiotic. That’s not a legitimate isotope. It can’t
possibly exist. “
“I know,”
Fletcher said. “But it does.”
Quickly, almost
desperately, he outlined the whole fantastic story for the young
physicist-turned-botanist. The mysterious substitution of a strange
element for tungsten or osmium in various laboratories, the tests
indicating that its atomic number was that of plutonium but its
atomic weight was far too low, the absurd but necessary theory that
the stuff was a gift from some parallel universe and--finally--the
fact that the new element, stable when it first arrived, rapidly
began to undergo radioactive decay in a startlingly accelerative way.
Asenion’s saturnine
face was a study in changing emotions as Fletcher spoke. He seemed
bored and irritated at first, then scornful, then, perhaps, furious;
but not a word did he utter, and gradually the fury ebbed, turning to
distant curiosity and then, finally. a kind of fascination. Or so
Fletcher thought. He realized that he might be altogether wrong in
his interpretations of what was going on in the unique, mercurial
mind of the other man.
When Fletcher fell silent
Asenion said, “What are you most afraid of! Critical mass? Or
cumulative electron loss?”
“We’ve dealt
with the critical mass problem by powdering the stuff, shielding it
in graphite, and scattering it in low concentrations to fifty
different storage points. But it keeps on coming in--they love to
send it to us, it seems. And the thought that every atom of it is
giving off positrons that go around looking for electrons to
annihilate--” Fletcher shrugged. “On a small scale it’s
a useful energy pump, I suppose, tungsten swapped for plutonium with
energy gained in each cycle. But on a large scale, as we continue to
transfer electrons from our universe to theirs--”
“Yes,”
Asenion said.
“So we need a way
to dispose of--”
“Yes.” He
looked at his watch. “Where are you staying while you’re
in town, Fletcher?”
“The Faculty Club,
as usual. “
“Good.
I’ve got some crosses to make and I don’t want to wait
any longer, on account of possible pollen contamination. Go over to
the club and keep yourself amused for a few hours. Take a shower. God
knows you need one: you smell like something out of the jungle.
Relax, have a drink, come back at five o’clock. We can talk
about this again then.” He shook his head. “Plutonium-186!
What lunacy! It offends me just to say it out loud. It’s like
saying--saying--well, Billbergia
yukonensis. or Tillandsia bostoniae. Do you know what I
mean? No. No. Of course you don’t.” He waved his hands.
“Out! Come back at five!”
It was a long afternoon
for Fletcher. He phoned his wife, he phoned Jesse Hammond at the
laboratory, he phoned an old friend and made a date for dinner. He
showered and changed. He had a drink in the ornate lounge on the
Fifth Avenue side of the Club.
But his mood was grim,
and not merely because Hammond had told him that another four
kilograms of plutonium-186 had been reported from various regions
that morning. Asenion’s madness oppressed him.
There was nothing wrong
with an interest in plants, of course. Fletcher kept a philodendron
and something else, whose name he could never remember, in his own
office. But to immerse yourself in one highly specialized field of
botany with such intensity--it seemed sheer lunacy. No, Fletcher
decided, even that was all right, difficult as it was for him to
understand why anyone would want to spend his whole life cloistered
with a bunch of eerie plants. What was hard for him to forgive was
Asenion’s renunciation of physics. A mind like that--the
breadth of its vision--the insight Asenion had had into the greatest
of mysteries--dammit, Fletcher thought, he had owed it to the world
to stick to it! And instead, to walk away from everything, to hole
himself up in a cage of glass
Hammond’s right,
Fletcher told himself. Asenion really is crazy.
But it was useless to
fret about it. Asenion was not the first supergenius to snap under
contemplation of the Ultimate. His withdrawal from physics, Fletcher
said sternly to himself, was a matter between Asenion and the
universe. All that concerned Fletcher was getting Asenion’s
solution to the plutonium-186 problem; and then the poor man could be
left with his bromeliads in peace.
About half past four
Fletcher set out by cab to battle the traffic the short distance
uptown to Asenion’s place.
Luck was with him. He
arrived at ten of five. Asenion’s house-robot greeted him
solemnly and invited him to wait. “The master is in the
greenhouse,” the robot declared. “He will be with you
when he has completed the pollination.”
Fletcher waited. And
waited and waited.
Geniuses, he thought
bitterly. Pains in the neck, all of them. Pains in the
Just then the robot
reappeared. It was half past six. All was blackness outside the
window. Fletcher’s dinner date was for seven. He would never
make it.
“The master will
see you now,” said the robot.
Asenion looked limp and
weary, as though he had spent the entire afternoon smashing up
boulders. But the formidable edge seemed gone from him, too. He
greeted Fletcher with a pleasant enough smile, offered a word or two
of almost-apology for his tardiness, and even had the robot bring
Fletcher a sherry. It wasn’t very good sherry, but to get
anything at all to drink in a teetotaler’s house was a
blessing, Fletcher figured.
Asenion waited until
Fletcher had had a few sips. Then he said, “I have your
answer.”
“I knew you would.”
There was a long silence.
“Thiotimoline,”
said Asenion finally.
“Thiotimoline?”
“Absolutely.
Endochronic disposal. It’s the only way. And, as you’ll
see, it’s a necessary
way.”
Fletcher took a hasty
gulp of the sherry. Even when he was in a relatively mellow mood, it
appeared, Asenion was maddening. And mad. What was this new craziness
now? Thiotimoline? How could that preposterous substance, as insane
in its way as plutonium-186, have any bearing on the problem?
Asenion said, “I
take it you know the special properties of thiotimoline?”
“Of
course. Its molecule is distorted into adjacent temporal dimensions.
Extends into the future, and, I think, into the past. Thiotimoline
powder will dissolve in water one second before
the water is added.”
“Exactly,”
Asenion said. “And if the water isn’t added, it’ll
go looking for it. In the future.”
“What does this
have to do with--”
“Look here,”
said Asenion. He drew a scrap of paper from his shirt pocket. “You
want to get rid of something. You put it in this container here. You
surround the container with a shell made of polymerized thiotimoline.
You surround the shell with a water tank that will deliver water to
the thiotimoline on a timed basis, and you set your timer so that the
water is due to arrive a few seconds from now. But at the last moment
the timing device withholds the water.”
Fletcher stared at the
younger man in awe.
Asenion said, “The
water is always about to arrive, but never quite does. The
thiotimoline making up the plastic shell is pulled forward one second
into the future to encounter the water. The water has a high
probability of being there, but not quite high enough. It’s
actually another second away from delivery, and always will be. The
thiotimoline gets dragged farther and farther into the future. The
world goes forward into the future at a rate of one second per
second, but the thiotimoline’s velocity is essentially
infinite. And of course it carries with it the inner container, too.
“
“In which we have
put our surplus plutonium-186.”
“Or anything else
you want to dispose of,” said Asenion.
Fletcher felt dizzy.
“Which will travel on into the future at an infinite rate--”
“Yes. And because
the rate is infinite, the problem of the breakdown of thiotimoline
into its stable isochronic form, which has hampered most
time-transport experiments, isn’t an issue. Something traveling
through time at an infinite velocity isn’t subject to little
limitations of that kind. It’ll simply keep going until it
can’t go any farther.”
“But how does
sending it into the future solve the problem?” Fletcher asked.
“The plutonium-186 still stays in our universe, even if we’ve
bumped it away from our immediate temporal vicinity. The electron
loss continues. Maybe even gets worse, under temporal acceleration.
We still haven’t dealt with the fundamental--”
“You never were
much of a thinker, were you, Fletcher?” said Asenion quietly,
almost gently. But the savage contempt in his eyes had the force of a
sun going nova.
“I do my best. But
I don’t see--”
Asenion
sighed. “The thiotimoline will chase the water in the outer
container to the end of time, carrying with it the plutonium in the
inner container. To the end of time. Literally.
“
“And?”
“What happens at
the end of time, Fletcher?”
“Why--absolute
entropy--the heat-death of the universe--”
“Precisely. The
Final Entropic Solution. All molecules equally distributed throughout
space. There will be no further place for the water-seeking
thiotimoline to go. The end of the line is the end of the line. It,
and the plutonium it’s hauling with it, and the water it’s
trying to catch up with, will all plunge together over the entropic
brink into antitime.”
“Antitime,”
said Fletcher in a leaden voice. “ Antitime?”
“Naturally. Into
the moment before the creation of the universe. Everything is in
stasis. Zero time, infinite temperature. All the universal mass
contained in a single incomprehensible body. Then the thiotimoline
and the plutonium and the water arrive.” Asenion’s eyes
were radiant. His face was flushed. He waved his scrap of paper
around as though it were the scripture of some new creed. “There
will be a tremendous explosion. A Big Bang, so to speak. The
beginning of all things. You--or should I say I?--will be responsible
for the birth of the universe.”
Fletcher, stunned, said
after a moment, “ Are you serious?”
“I
am never anything but serious. You have your solution. Pack up your
plutonium and send it on its way. No matter how many shipments you
make, they’ll all arrive at the same instant. And with the same
effect. You have no choice, you know. The plutonium must
be disposed of. And--” His eyes twinkled with some of the
old Asenion playfulness. “The universe must be created,
or else how will any of us get to be where we are? And this is how it
was done. Will be done. Inevitable, ineluctable, unavoidable,
mandatory. Yes? You see?”
“Well, no. Yes.
Maybe. That is, I think I do,” said Fletcher, as if in a daze.
“Good. Even if you
don’t, you will.”
“I’ll
need--to talk to the others--”
“Of course you
will. That’s how you people do things. That’s why I’m
here and you’re there.” Asenion shrugged. “Well, no
hurry about it. Create the universe tomorrow, create it the week
after next, what’s the difference? It’ll get done sooner
or later. It has to, because it already has been done. You see?”
“Yes. Of course. Of
course. And now--if you’ll excuse me--” Fletcher
murmured. “I--ah--have a dinner appointment in a little while”
“That can wait too,
can’t it?” said Asenion, smiling with sudden surprising
amiability. He seemed genuinely glad to have been of assistance.
“There’s something I forgot to show you this afternoon. A
remarkable plant, possibly unique--a nidularium, it is, Brazilian,
not even named yet, as a matter of fact--just coming into bloom. And
this one--wait till you see it, Fletcher, wait till you see it--”
Murder in the Urth Degree
by Edward
Wellen
LET THERE BE DAY.”
Day was
when he said it was. Periscoped sunlight obediently flooded the
stateroom at the core of Terrarium Nine.
Keith Flammersfeld saw
the light with still-closed eyes and knew that his little world
remained safe and warm outside his eyelids. Lazily, he removed from
his temples the interactive patcher that had put him into the video
of Through the Looking-Glass that had just now faded from the
screen of his computer/player.
He opened his eyes and
sat up in his bunk and stretched. He loosed a jaw-cracking yawn,
momentarily disappearing the chipmunk pouches that flanked his
self-satisfied mouth. To keep up his muscle tone and stay in shape,
he lay supine again and thought aerobic thoughts for a good five
minutes. He was pushing forty, but he was pushing forty back.
Feeling fit after all
that exercise, he sat up and swung around to put his feet on the
carpeted deck. He checked his priorities: the call of nature could
wait, the clamor from his stomach could not. He called for his tray.
It slid out of the
bulkhead to fit just above his lap. He put away a healthy breakfast
of fruits, vegetables, and grains--all grown right here inside
Terrarium Nine. The tray sensed when the last of the food was gone
and slid itself back into the bulkhead.
Flammersfeld stood up and
got out of his pajama shorts. He tossed them into the revamper,
stepped into the toilet cubicle and relieved himself, washed up,
fizzed his mouth clean, and put on fresh shorts.
Two steps to the right
took Flammersfeld to his office. He sat down at his master computer
and tapped keys. The screen displayed a blank requisition form.
His face split in a huge
grin as he typed two items and moused them into the right spaces.
Tight facial muscles around mouth and eyes told him it was a
malicious grin. At this awareness, he quickly slackened the grin into
an expression of innocent merriment. Then, reminding himself that he
was all alone aboard Terrarium Nine and that no one watched, he
hauled again on the lines of the malicious grin.
He savored, then saved,
the requisition. He was on the point of sending it to the home office
on Earth, when he all but jumped out of his skin.
The lower right quadrant
of the screen was displaying a reduced image of another monitor
screen’s display.
This display labeled
itself as coming from the work station in Buck Two. He put his own
page on hold and filled the screen with the Intruding display.
He stared at it, feeling
his eyes bulge.
Someone had entered his
system and infected it with rabid doggerel.
Is the sun a milky bud?
Whence the shadows on my
face? Why’s the sky as green as blood?
Who will win the Red
Queen’s race?
Madness.
But even madness had to
have a logical explanation.
Possible explanation
number one, a computer virus. If true, it would have entered by way
of the master computer, sole link to Earth and the universe. What
would be the point of trying to trick him into thinking the message
came from Buck Two’s slave computer, not from Buck One’s
central memory? Merely the prankish pleasure of sending him on a
wild-goose chase through Buck Two’s jungle? A small payoff for
what would have to have been a major effort, cracking the vaccinated
and regularly boostered Labcom system headquartered on Earth.
Possible explanation
number two, a stowaway, presence hitherto entirely unsuspected by
Flammersfeld and completely overlooked by all sensors. If true, the
person would have had to slip aboard during resupply a full year ago.
If such a one had survived all that while by living on the fruits and
vegetables and grains grown in Terrarium Nine--though how that could
be when Flammersfeld kept those precious items all carefully tagged
and tabulated and tracked--why would that stowaway give his or her
presence away at this point? Lonely and dying for companionship?
Fallen ill and in need of help? Gone mad and about to attack? Having
bided his or her time, now ready for a takeover bid?
Possible
explanation number three, true madness--Flammersfeld’s own.
Could Flammersfeld himself have programmed that display, say while
dream-experiencing Through
the Looking-Glass? Had cabin fever affected his brain, split his
awareness?
Even as he stared at the
screen the display changed. Another verse appeared, letter by letter,
slowly, painfully, as though stiff and hesitant fingers were working
in real time.
When Adam delved
Was it then I selved?
When Eve span
Was it then I began?
Flammersfeld
tightened his mouth. Someone was
in Buck Two.
He hurried to his
bulkhead safe and punched the combination. The safe door swung open
and he armed himself with the blaser he had never dreamed he might
one day have to use.
Terrarium Nine, in
near-earth orbit, was a six-bucker--six concentric spheres built on
R. Buckminster Fuller’s geodesic principle. A pseudo black hole
at the center provided Earth-gravity for the innermost sphere. The
calibrated pull diminished to nothing in the outermost sphere, where
the zero-gravity lab was. Access was by companionway and lift.
Terrarium Nine was large enough to make northern and southern
companionways practical and efficient. The two-way lift, slightly
bowed to bypass the pseudo black hole, ran along the axis, from polar
airlock to polar airlock. The cage had handholds to facilitate
orientation--rather, borealization or australization.
The Buck Two work station
was in the northern hemisphere. Flammersfeld made for the lift,
started to step in, then had a second thought.
He punched the lift to go
north to Buck Two by itself, but entered a five-minute delay.
Swiftly he backtracked
along the gently curving geodesic deckplates to the southern
companionway, and raced up it to the hatch.
If someone lay in wait
for Flammersfeld to emerge from the lift, and if that someone kept a
shrewd eye on the nearby north companionway hatch, Flammersfeld,
making his way around from the south, would come upon that someone
from behind.
He glanced at his watch,
sucked in, undogged the hatch. Blaser at the ready, he vaulted into
Buck Two’s lesser gravity, where, in lunar soil with various
admixtures of nitrates, plants flourished mightily.
He landed lightly, sought
concealment in a ten-meter-high stand of slowly swaying rye. Held his
breath, listened through the soft sough of programmed breeze, heard
nothing. He’d outflanked the intruder; seemed safe to move out.
Made good time through
chubby Swiss chard, enormous endives, plump peas, and bulky beans. In
under four minutes he reached the stout sweet potatoes. Nearly there.
The work station lay underneath the towering walnut tree dead ahead.
Past that stood tremendous tomatoes, prodigious peppers, large
lettuce, and corpulent cabbage; then a pile of mulch--and beyond all
that the lift.
He padded carefully to
the walnut and peered around the massive trunk. He saw plainly the
computer station. No one was at it.
The tomato vines blocked
his view of the lift area. Flammersfeld thrust against the soil for a
giant leap. He caught one-handed hold, five meters up, of the stem of
a thirty-meter tomato vine and hung there looking through and across
vines and foliage while the blaser quested.
He heard the sudden
coming-to-life hum of the lift.
That should make an
ambusher take position. Flammersfeld had a commanding view of the
lettuce and cabbage patches. An ambusher there would have a clear
field to the lift and the northern companionway hatch. No one moved
there.
The lift stopped and the
door slid open. Flammersfeld looked for some stir somewhere. The
blaser quested in vain. No one lay in wait.
He hung there, his face
reddening with anger and frustration; the tomatoes were large as his
head, so that it might have been one of them. A wild-goose chase
after all.
Grimacing, he stuck the
blaser in the waistband of his shorts and let himself down the vine
hand under hand. Once on deck, he headed for the work station.
He stepped into a loop of
vine and made a mental note to clear away debris and undergrowth
first chance he got. Before he realized the loop was a noose, it had
tightened around his ankle. Before he could bend to loosen it, he
found himself whipped high into the air, where he remained dangling
bouncily by his foot from the noose whose other end was tied to a
springy bough of the towering walnut tree.
Rolling his eyes way up
to look way down, he spotted the peg and the severed end of another
length of vine that had held the bough to the deck. Where below was
the trapper who had cut the tie?
Flammersfeld pretended to
be helpless. He thrashed about, twisting, twisting in the
continuously maintained light breeze. He made his voice sound
panicky. “Help! Let me down! Please!”
Still the damned
stowaway--for Flammersfeld had perforce settled on possible
explanation number two--did not show his or her face.
Flammersfeld could not
wait like this much longer; even with the inconsequential gravity of
Buck Two, the noose was cutting off the circulation to his caught
foot.
He gave himself one
painful minute more; then, when no foe appeared, he drew the blaser
from his waistband and sliced the vine.
As he fell he aimed the
blaser deckward and thumbed the retro stud. The gelled-light effect
slowed his fall enough to let him land rolling.
He scrambled to his
feet--and groaned as the numbed foot betrayed him. He put his weight
on his good foot and looked around for another trap--or even an
outright attack. He looked high up at the walnut tree’s
branches and foliage, saw no figure or contraption above him, and put
his back against the trunk. He bent to remove the noose from his
ankle--and saw on the ground a few fragments of cabbage leaf.
His jaw dropped as the
chilling realization hit him.
Then his lips thinned.
Very well. He knew now what he was up against.
It was not any of the
three possible explanations. It was a fourth--and it was probable and
in a few minutes would be provable.
He
laughed. To think of the poor miserable creature stalking him!
Then
he grew grim. He had underestimated the creature. That it might have
been responsible for the doggerel on the computer screen had not even
occurred to him. Had to give the thing credit; lot more to it than he
had thought. Still, now that he knew, he could handle the threat.
“All right, you
bastard,” he muttered through his malicious grin, “you’re
digging your own grave. “
He hobbled directly to
the cabbage patch. He looked down at an empty space and nodded. There
had been an uprooting, though some effort had been made to smooth the
disturbed soil.
As if that could fool
him! He knew perfectly well what had grown at this particular spot,
what should still be growing here, what seemed now on the loose.
A closer look at the soil
showed him a dotted line of milky green droplets running from the
center of the empty space. He touched one. Sticky. He brought the
finger to his nose and sniffed. His grin widened. The damned thing
was truly damned. Did it know it had not long?
The trail was short; it
ended abruptly at a nearby cabbage. A freshly ripped edge showed
where a leaf had been tom off. His grin stretched to its utmost. The
creature must be using the leaf to stem the flow.
The trail gone,
Flammersfeld cast about for other signs.
He glanced at the nearby
heap of mulch. He felt a twinge for having neglected it; he had let
it decompose almost to compost. He stiffened. There seemed some
difference in its makeup, some shifting of its components. It
consisted half of tree limbs he had sectioned for study or trimmed
and split into rough boards and half of discarded paper printouts. He
thought the paper covered more of the heap than when he had looked at
it last--more spread out, less neatly accordioned.
The creature might be
hiding under there.
Flammersfeld held the
blaser ready to fire.
With his free hand he
jerked lengths of dank and moldy continuous-fold printouts away in
long fluttering banners. He did not find his creature but did unearth
what appeared to be a crude catapult, a thing of branches and vine
and a ball of compacted soil held together with some vegetable glue.
He also found a winding drum fitted with a crank--a winch; this also
was fashioned of sectioned tree limbs and vine.
Both contraptions looked
as if a child might have put them together--but they had worked. The
catapult had shot the weighted end of a length of vine over a bough
and the winch had pulled the bough down.
He rooted around a bit
more and found something else--half a walnut shell big as his cupped
palm. The size he was used to; what it held was--something else.
The creature had used the
empty half-shell as a mortar to pound something vegetable into a
resinous black sticky substance that had an aromatic tarry smell. A
crude preparation, showing foam of spit.
Visions of amylase danced
in Flammersfeld’s head. What would the idiosyncratic enzymatic
action be in this case--on, what he felt sure he would find when he
analyzed it, green pepper? Seemed clear that the creature had in mind
a curare, an arrow poison. That was just what this substance appeared
to be.
Flammersfeld found
himself asweat. He needed a relaxant--but not this kind. This kind
could relax him to death.
Better get the hell out
of here. The creature was sure to bleed to death--but how soon?
Flammersfeld found himself not so sure any more about a lot of things
concerning the creature.
How could he not have
seen its intelligence waken, its hate turn on him?
Still crouching, he faced
about. For the first time, he looked around at this small world from
another’s point of view.
From the cabbage patch,
the computer screen was in plain sight. How much the creature must
have learned simply by watching and listening to the work and the
play!
This was not the time to
wonder about that. This was the time to beat it before a small arrow
flew or a small lance thrust.
Flammersfeld straightened
and hobbled double-time to the open lift.
He breathed a sigh at
having made it, and reached to punch the door shut and the lift down.
The killer must have
slipped into the lift while the noose held Flammersfeld adangle.
From the left near corner
of the cage, where the killer had crouched unseen behind the door
that did not slide flush, a frail arm thrust the sharpened and
poison-tipped twig into the soft tissue of Flammersfeld’s left
ankle.
Flammersfeld stared down
at the sadly wise and wearily savage face.
“God damn you,”
he said.
“You damn you.”
It was the first and last
time he ever heard the rusty piping voice.
But he was not thinking
about that. He was thinking about getting to the dispensary in time
to work up an antidote. His heart pounding, he punched the lift shut
and down.
His eyes were glazing and
he did not look at the creature again until the lift stopped and the
door opened. Then he kicked the creature out of his way and took two
stumbling steps forward before he sprawled his length on the deck.
The killer could not
stanch the flow of green blood and soon followed Flammersfeld across
the dark threshold into the abode of the dead. But the killer had won
what he wanted--vengeance and oblivion.
Inspector H. Seton
Davenport of the Terrestrial Bureau of Investigation had expected to
see anything but an inverted detective. Yet that was just what he
walked in upon.
Dr. Wendell Urth, the
Terran extraterrologists’ extraterrologist, had sounded strange
when he voiced Davenport in. Davenport had caught a note of strain in
the thin tenor delivery of “Enter!”
But Davenport had not
dreamed that was due to Dr. Urth’s attempting a headstand. At
least, that was what the learned ex-officio consultant to the T.B.I.
appeared at first glance to be doing.
Second glance showed him
that Dr. Urth was really engaged in rolling a hologram sun along the
baseboards. And that he was doing so to light up the floor under the
overhanging book-film shelves.
The blood rushing to Dr.
Urth’s head made his naked eyes look even more hyperthyroid.
That the eyes were naked and that the good doctor’s shirttail
hung out told Davenport what was up--or down--or toward. Without
taking another step, Davenport scanned the floor.
He spotted them not on
the floor itself but on a bottom shelf they had bounced to. He took
two steps and made a stretch and picked up what Dr. Urth was hunting
for.
“Here you are, Dr.
Urth.”
“Here I certainly
am,” Dr. Urth wheezed. “Embarrassingly so.” Then he
apparently replayed Davenport’s words and tone. He twisted the
upside-down half of his body to face Davenport, squinted, and
apparently made out what Davenport was holding. “Ah.” He
straightened with a huff and a puff, and placed the solar-powered
hologram sun on a pile of papers--it was evidently loaded to serve as
paperweight as well as to help light the vast dim cluttered room.
Dr. Urth took the
eyeglasses from Davenport’s outstretched hand. “Thanks.”
Then he smiled a transforming smile, one that changed him from
blinking owl to beaming Buddha. “But you have had your reward
in seeing me make a spectacle of myself.” He polished the
lenses with the shirttail, peered at and through them, then put them
on. The ears did their part but the button nose did little to support
the frame.
He gestured Davenport to
a chair. Himself he settled in his armchair-desk with a sigh the seat
echoed. He locked his hands over his paunch and looked expectant. The
paunch enhanced the look of expectancy.
“This is about the
death on Terrarium Nine?”
Davenport nodded. “
‘Death’ is the working word for it. ‘Death’
is ambiguous enough for something we can’t seem to label
satisfactorily. We can’t call it accident, we can’t call
it murder, and we’re not ready to call it suicide.”
Dr. Urth shifted himself
more comfortable. “Tell me the details.”
“It’s better
and easier to show you.” Davenport drew from a capacious pocket
a sheaf of holograms. He hopped his chair nearer Dr. Urth and leaned
over to show him the holograms one by one, pointing and explaining.
“Here’s a
close-up of Terrarium Nine taken from the investigating vehicle on
its approach in response to the anomaly alarm. Flammersfeld, the lone
experimenter aboard Terrarium Nine, had not transmitted the daily
report to Earth headquarters at the scheduled hour, had not punched
the All’s-Well signal at the appointed time, and had not
responded to worried queries...Here are shots the responding officer
took of both docking jacks before she made entry through north dock.
You’ll notice a year’s worth of undisturbed space dust
coats both jacks. That indicates no one docked since the last
resupply--a full year ago...Here’s the death scene, located in
the innermost sphere. “
Dr. Urth took this last
hologram into his own hands for protracted scrutiny. Then he gave
Davenport a quizzical look. “ Aside from telling me that
Flammersfeld had just come down to his living quarters from Buck Two,
bringing with him a cabbage either for study or for eating, that he
stepped out of the lift and fell dead, having somehow taken a
poison-tipped dart in his ankle, this hologram does not tell me all I
need to know if I’m to help you label his death. What about the
autopsy findings? What was the poison?”
Davenport shook his head.
“That’s what’s strange. You’d think a
biochemist of Flammersfeld’s standing would have brewed it in
his lab, in test tubes, without impurities. But this was a weird kind
of curare crudely prepared. The investigator found some of the guck
in a walnut shell that she discovered in a pile of trash in Buck
Two.” He handed Dr. Urth another hologram. “Here’s
a shot of that.”
Dr. Urth gave half a nod,
half a shake. “I see that, but what are these things?”
Davenport looked where
Dr. Urth pointed. “Oh, yeah; them. They seem to be a toy winch
and a toy catapult. The engineer we consulted says they’re no
great shakes but they work. Maybe Flammersfeld was in his second
childhood. “
Dr. Urth grunted
doubtingly. He went back to the death-scene hologram. He pointed a
stubby finger to a green-black mass. “This is the cabbage?”
Davenport grimaced. “Bad.
Pretty well rotted by the time our investigator got there. Stank up
the place, she said, so--after taking protection shots--she
incinerated it.”
“Bad.”
“Yes, putrid.”
Dr. Urth eyed the TBI
inspector censoriously. “I was not speaking of the cabbage, I
meant the officer’s action. She should have preserved the
evidence no matter how offensive she found it.”
Davenport neither
defended nor blamed the officer. Like her, he saw the cabbage not as
evidence but as happenstance. “Perhaps.”
“No perhaps about
it,” Dr. Urth snapped. His paunch showed momentary agitation,
then subsided with his sigh. “Well, it can’t be helped
now. But I do wish I could have had a closer look at that cabbage.
There’s something queer about it.”
Davenport grinned. “No
problem. This is one of the new SOTA holograms. See the bubble-mice
sealed in the left and top edges?”
Dr. Urth noticed for the
first time two beads of air that almost met at the top left corner of
the hologram film. His eyes lit up. “You mean that if I get a
stereotaxic fix on the cabbage the cabbage will enlarge?”
“Exactly. By
pinching the edge you can move the bubble-mouse along. Coordinate the
mice to enlarge and automatically enhance the area you want to
observe in greater detail. There’s a limit, of course, but
you’ll see quite a lot more than you do now.”
Dr. Urth pinched the mice
along till he had the cabbage area blown up by a magnification of
five.
He looked long and hard,
and at last removed his glasses to wipe tears of strain from his
eyes. “Much better, but still lacking. My complaint is not
about the resolution but about the object pictured. The cabbage
remains blurry thanks to decomposition. I must admit that even had
the officer preserved it so that you could put it before me I would
be hard put to make out much more. That does not mean that its
destruction is not a great loss. It should have been possible to
determine its exact composition by autopsy.”
Davenport stared. “
Autopsy? Of a cabbage?”
Dr. Urth nodded curtly.
“Autopsy. I choose my words carefully.” His mouth
twitched suddenly and he unbent unexpectedly, his voice mock-serious.
“I do not see-aitch-oh-you my cabbage twice.” He grew
fully serious again. “It’s clear that something got out
of hand--the experiment, the experimenter, or both.”
Davenport was still
working on the autopsy business. What was Dr. Urth getting at?
Dr. Urth sighed and
handed back the death-scene hologram. He gave a slight shiver, then
shot Davenport a look as if wondering whether Davenport had noticed.
Davenport kept a poker
face.
Dr. Urth breathed an
easier sigh. “This calls for mulling over.” He turned a
grave face and a twinkling eye on his visitor. “What would you
say to a finger of Ganymead?”
“I’d say
hello.” Davenport had heard of Ganymead but had never seen it,
much less tasted it. He knew it to be extremely rare and extremely
expensive and he knew many communities prohibited it. He was not
about to ask Dr. Urth how Dr. Urth had come by it. “I’m
game.”
He did not feel so game
when Dr. Urth drew two containers and two glasses from a liquor
drawer of the armchair-desk and one of the containers proved to hold
fingers.
Dr. Urth shook two
fingers out and stood one, fingernail down, in each glass.
Davenport looked and
shuddered.
One corner of Urth’s
rosy mouth lifted. “Ganymead is a binary. The fluid part
activates the solid part. The ‘fingernail’ is a
crystallization. Watch.”
He poured an amber fluid
out of the other container into one of the glasses and as it splashed
the nail the finger melted. The whole became a clear violet with a
bouquet that tickled the senses. Dr. Urth transformed the other
finger, handed one of the glasses to Davenport, and lifted the other
in a toasting gesture.
Davenport answered with a
lift of his own glass, sniffed, then sipped. Tantalizingly delicious,
deliciously tantalizing. He saw that it could be dangerous--a taste
too easily acquired for something not so easily acquired.
The
smooth but strong drink seemed to turn Dr. Urth philosophical. “
Actually, Ganymead comes not from Ganymede but from Callisto. So many
things are misnomers. What’s in a name, Davenport? I should
have yours--I’m
the couch potato, the settee spud, the Murphy-bed murphy. At
most, a rambler rose-tethered as I am to the University campus.
You’re the one with the gypsy in his soles, the man in the
field. Davenport, you’re a misnomer.”
Davenport permitted
himself a smile. Davenport’s nose was shaped for wedging into
tight spots; a youthful altercation had left a star-shaped scar on
his right cheek. Yet a fellow could get his fill of the field, lose
his taste for adventure, and--while cherishing his memories of
encounters of the close kind--look almost with envy at the cloistered
academic who adventured with his mind. Perhaps the Ganymead had
turned him philosophical--or prone to babble--too; he was about to
express his feelings about life when Dr. Urth saved him.
Dr. Urth had taken a last
sip, had raised the glass to his eye to look through its emptiness,
and now set it down with regretful finality. “Back to work. To
give Flammersfeld’s death its proper name, we must first
understand what Terrarium Nine is all about, what Flammersfeld was in
the business of.”
He raised a forefinger,
though Davenport had given no sign of breaking in.
“I know you think
you know, but please bear with me while I tell you what I think I
know. Let me state the obvious and posit the known--nothing is so
overlooked as the obvious and nothing is so mysterious as the known.
“
Davenport sweepingly
brought his palm up in sign of turning everything over to Dr. Urth.
Dr. Urth just as
graciously gave a nod. “To forestall ecological disruption,
Earth has laws against releasing genetically altered plants and
animals into the terrestrial environment. Such experiments must take
place off-planet. Hence, the Terrariums--at last count, a dozen?--in
near-earth orbit. A collateral benefit is zero gravity, which
facilitates such techniques as electrophoresis--the rapid
continuous-flow fractionating of concentrated solutions of proteins
in a high-intensity electric field. “ He cocked an eye at
Davenport. “Your turn. What do you think you know about
Terrarium Nine and Flammersfeld’s experiments?”
Davenport
shrugged. “All I know about Terrarium Nine is that it was
constructed and commissioned six years ago and that Flammersfeld was
its first and only personnel. All I know about Flammersfeld is that
he was a hard worker who never took a break; he routinely turned down
R and R--according to his superiors in the home office he said he got
all the relaxation he needed by interactive video, and in fact at the
time of his death Through
the Looking-Glass was in his computer/player --and he was working
concurrently on two unrelated projects. Plus he had plans for the
future--his last, though unsent, requisition was for swine embryo and
eagle eggs. “
Dr. Urth wrinkled his
brow, then resettled his glasses. “I would like to see his
notes on the two unrelated projects you mentioned.”
Davenport looked
uncomfortable. “That may be impossible.”
Dr. Urth’s mouth
tightened. “Is there a clearance problem? If so, good day.”
Davenport hastened to
say, “It’s not that, Dr. Urth, not that at all. I believe
you have cosmic clearance.”
That mollified Dr. Urth.
“Then what is the problem? Did Flammersfeld destroy his notes?”
“Not that, either.
It’s just that he seems to have been paranoidally secretive.
His notes are in his computer’s memory, but locked behind
passwords that we haven’t broken--yet.”
“I admire your
optimism, sir, but optimism--while admirable even when it is
foolish--is pie in the sky, a future repast; it does not feed us
now.”
Davenport reddened.
Dr. Urth relented. “Two
unrelated projects; you know that much. You may know more than you
think you know--that is, if you can give me the titles of the two
projects. His superiors at the home office to whom he reported must
have had some idea of what he was working on if they were to approve
his requisitions.”
Davenport brightened. “I
don’t have the titles at the tip of my tongue, but I do
remember that he was seeking a cure for hemophilia and that he was
looking for the--uh--direction sensors in plant cells.”
Dr. Urth patted his
paunch as if he had just had a good feed. “Excellent.
Hemophilia. Bleeder’s disease. Disease of kings--e.g., the
Romanovs of Czarist Russia. Women pass it on through a recessive X
chromosome but do not themselves have it. Profuse bleeding, even from
the slightest wound. In a test tube, normal blood from a vein clots
in five to fifteen minutes; hemophiliac clotting time varies from
thirty minutes to hours. A natural for zero-gravity research. While
the sheer bulk of total plasma would rule out its fractionation by
electrophoresis at zero gravity, the same does not hold for minor
components, such as clotting factors.”
His voice pitched even
higher in his excitement. “Yes, yes. And Flammersfeld’s
other project is another natural for zero-gravity research. The plant
world presents an intriguing puzzle: how does a plant sense the
direction of gravity? Plants tend to grow in a vertical
direction--but we have yet to find the cellular direction sensors.
Yes, yes. We have our answer. “
Davenport stared at Dr.
Urth. “We have?”
“It’s as
obvious,” Dr. Urth said sharply, ‘‘as the nose on
my face.”
Maybe
that’s why I don’t see it. Davenport muttered
mentally. But he put on a pleasant mask. “You said it’s
easy to overlook the obvious.”
“You’ve been
listening, at least.” Dr. Urth made himself a monument of
patience. “Listen now to a bit of verse.
“‘The time
has come,’ the Walrus said,
‘To talk of many
things:
Of shoes--and ships--and
sealing-wax--
Of cabbages--and kings--
And why the sea is
boiling hot--
And whether pigs have
wings. ‘ “
Dr. Urth looked at
Davenport and smiled. “You don’t know whether to laugh or
snort at such utter nonsense. Well, laugh. We humans need a leavening
of levity; there can be too much gravity.”
Davenport did not laugh,
but then he did not snort. “That’s from a child’s
book, isn’t it?”
“Indeed.
The child in Charles Lutwidge Dodgson was named Lewis Carroll. The
verse is from his Through
the Looking Glass. “
“Flammersfeld’s
interactive video!”
“The same.”
Davenport shook his head.
“How does it tie in?”
“It ties in first
with an even older nursery rhyme.
“‘Old King
Cole
Was a merry old soul,
And a merry old soul was
he;
He called for his pipe,
And he called for his
bowl,
And he called for his
fiddlers three.
Every fiddler, he had a
fiddle,
And a very fine fiddle
had he;
Twee tweedle dee, tweedle
dee, went the fiddlers.
Oh, there’s none so
rare
As can compare
With King Cole and his
fiddlers three!’ “
This time Davenport could
not help laughing. And after a moment Dr. Urth joined in.
Davenport sobered first
and non-judgmentally waited for Dr. Urth to subside.
Dr. Urth sounded all the
more serious when he picked up where he had left off. “The
rhyme about King Cole was in Lewis Carroll’s mind--consciously
or unconsciously--when Carroll wrote the Walrus’s speech. ‘
King Cole’--cole as in cole slaw--split naturally into’
cabbages and kings.’ And came back together in Flammersfeld’s
mind as a protoplast fusion of cabbage seed and royal blood. “
Davenport fumbled the
death-scene hologram to light and stared at the magnified cabbage.
“You mean this thing…?”
Dr. Urth nodded. He
pointed to a spot atop the cabbage. “Very like a crown gall,
wouldn’t you say?”
“I wouldn’t--since
I don’t know the first thing about crown galls.”
“Then
take my word for it. There are two kinds of living cells: eukaryotic
and prokaryotic. A eukaryotic cell is nucleated; that is, its nucleus
walls in its chromosomes. A prokaryotic cell is less organized; that
is, its chromosomes drift freely in the cytoplasm, in among the
organelles. Enter Agrobacter--short for Agrobacterium
tumefaciens. Agrobacter’s innards hold the Ti plasmid--a
tiny loop of DNA--some two hundred genes long. Agrobacter can hook a
plant cell and inject the Ti plasmid into the nucleus. Once inside, a
twelve-gene length--called tDNA, for transfer DNA--cuts loose from
the Ti plasmid and becomes part of the plant cell chromosome. The
tDNA genes then program the plant to nurture Agrobacter.”
Dr. Urth paused a moment
for breath and--Davenport thought--for dramatic effect.
“Now I come to the
point of all this. The insidious parasite Agrobacter causes a
tumorous swelling--a crown gall.” Dr. Urth’s voice rose
in wrath. “Can you imagine? That nasty procedure was
Flammersfeld’s elaborate way of fitting his poor little
intelligent hybrid King Cole with a crown!”
Davenport gazed upon the
image, saw only a rotted cabbage, and tried to picture it as it had
been in life--a being with reasoning power, and therefore memory and
foresight; with feelings, and therefore the need to love and hate. It
would have been mostly head, the face framed in leaves. He shivered.
For a flash he visualized its round face superimposed upon Dr. Urth’s
round face, another bud of Buddha. He glanced at Dr. Urth.
Dr. Urth looked
melancholy. It hit Davenport that Dr. Urth had been a child prodigy.
Dr. Urth would have fellow feeling for freaks of any kind. Dr. Urth
must have felt his look and sensed his thoughts, for Dr. Urth met his
gaze and smiled sadly.
“We all--ourselves
and our matrix--are interference patterns. So it comes natural to
think of crossing this with that. It’s the nature of the
beast--meaning the universe. All in all, it’s just as well
Flammersfeld and his creature died when they did--if not as they did.
We humans need a minimum of levity; there can be too much gravity.
But Flammersfeld went too far, interfered too much.” His brow
darkened. “ And meant to go on interfering. Remember his last
requisition--for swine embryo and eagle eggs? And remember the line
from Lewis Carroll--’whether pigs have wings’? We humans
need a minimum amount of gravity; there can be too much levity.”
His face closed. “That’s it, then.”
Davenport put the
holograms away and got up to go. “Thanks for your help, Dr.
Urth.”
Dr. Urth waved that away.
He bounced to his feet and shook hands.
His voice halted
Davenport on the threshold. “Inspector.”
Davenport turned around.
“Yes, Dr. Urth?”
“About my fee...”
Davenport smiled. “I
wondered when that would come.”
“Now you know. It
comes now. A few trifles.”
“You know I’ll
do my best. They are?”
“First, two bits of
information to satisfy my curiosity. When you get back to New
Washington, kindly stop by Near-earth, Ltd., and retrieve the file on
Terrarium Nine. See if you can find out from Flammersfeld’s
requisitions, and other documents, the genetic history of the cabbage
and of the hemophiliac blood.” He smiled. “I’ve a
mind bet that the cabbage was a savoy cabbage and that the blood came
from a descendant of the House of Savoy.”
Davenport blinked.
“Savoy? Why would Flammersfeld have specified savoy cabbage and
Savoy blood?”
“For the same
reason that impelled James Joyce to frame a view of Cork in cork--the
sense of fitness.”
Davenport thought about
that, then shook his head.
“If you don’t
mind my saying so, the sense of fitness can carryover into madness.”
Dr. Urth hooded his mouth
with a pudgy hand. “You take my point so exactly that I almost
hesitate to name the balance of my fee.”
Davenport eyed him warily
but felt compelled to say, “Name it.”
“Arrange for the
researcher who has taken over Terrarium Nine to cross tortoise with
cricket.”
Davenport tried to
imagine what that would look like. “What on earth for?”
“So when I lose my
eyeglasses a frame made of the shell will lead me to them--by the
chirp.”
Trantor Falls
by Harry
Turtledove
THE IMPERIAL PALACE
STOOD AT THE CENTER OF A HUNDRED square miles of greenery. In normal
times, even in abnormal times, such insulation was plenty to shield
the chief occupant of the palace from the hurly-burly of the rest of
the metaled world of Trantor.
Times now, though, were
not normal, nor even to be described by so mild a word as “abnormal.”
They were disastrous. Along with magnolias and roses, missile
launchers had flowered in the gardens. Even inside the palace,
Dagobert VIII could hear the muted snarl. Worse, though, was the fear
that came with it.
A soldier burst into the
command post where the Emperor of the Galaxy and his officers still
groped for ways to beat back Gilmer’s latest onslaught. Without
so much as a salute, the man gasped out, “ Another successful
landing, sire, this one in the Nevrask sector.”
Dagobert’s worried
gaze flashed to the map table. “Too close, too close,” he
muttered. “How does the cursed bandit gain so fast?”
One of the Emperor’s
marshals speared the messenger with his eyes. “How did they
force a landing there? Nevrask is heavily garrisoned.” The
soldier stood mute. “ Answer me!” the marshal barked.
The man gulped,
hesitated, at last replied, “Some of the troops fled, Marshal
Rodak, sir, when Gilmer’s men landed. Others” He paused
again, nervously licking his lips, but had to finish: “Others
have gone over to the rebel, sir.”
“More treason!”
Dagobert groaned. “Will none fight to defend me?”
The only civilian in the
room spoke then: “Men will fight, sire, when they have a cause
they think worth fighting for. The University has held against Gilmer
for four days now. We shall not yield it to him.”
“By the space
fiend, Dr. Sarns, I’m grateful to your students, yes, and proud
of them too,” Dagobert said. “They’ve put up a
braver battle than most of my troopers. “
Yokim Sarns politely
dipped his head. Marshal Rodak, however, grasped what his sovereign
had missed. “Majesty, they’re fighting for themselves and
their buildings, not for you,” he said. Even as he spoke,
another sector of the map shone in front of him and Dagobert went
from blue to red: red for the blood Gilmer was spilling allover
Trantor, Sarns thought bitterly.
“Have we no hope,
then?” asked the Emperor of the Galaxy.
“Of victory? None.”
Rodak’s military assessment was quick and definite. “Of
escape, perhaps fighting again, yes. Our air- and spacecraft still
hold the corridor above the palace. With a landing at Nevrask,
though, Gilmer will soon be able to bring missiles to bear on it--and
on us.”
“Better to flee
than to fall into that monster’s clutches,” Dagobert
said, shuddering. He looked at the map again. “I am sure you
have an evacuation plan ready. Implement it, and quickly.”
“Aye, sire.”
The marshal spoke into a throat mike. The Emperor turned to Yokim
Sarns. “Will you come with us, professor? Trantor under
Gilmer’s boots will be no place for scholars.”
“‘Thank you,
sire, but no.” As Sarns shook his head, strands of mouse-brown
hair, worn unfashionably long, swirled around his ears. “My
place is at the University, with my faculty and students.”
“Well said,”
Marshal Rodak murmured, too softly for Dagobert to hear.
But the Emperor, it
seemed, still had one imperial gesture left in him. Turning to Rodak,
he said, “If Dr. Sarns wishes to return to the University,
return he shall. Detail an aircar at once, while he has some hope of
getting there in safety. “
“Aye, sire, “
the marshal said again. He held out a hand to Yokim Sarns. “
And good luck to you. I think you’ll need it.”
By the time the aircar
pilot neared the University grounds, Yokim Sarns was a delicate shade
of green. The pilot had flown meters--sometimes centimeters--above
Trantor’s steel roof, and jinked like a wild thing to confuse
the rebels’ targeting computers.
The car slammed down on
top of the library. Dr. Sarns’s teeth met with an audible
click. The pilot threw open the exit hatch. Sarns pulled himself
together. “Er--thank you very much,” he told the pilot,
unbuckling his safety harness.
“Just get out, get
under cover, and let me lift off,” she snapped. Sarns scrambled
away from the aircar toward an entrance. The wash of wind as the car
sped away nearly knocked him off his feet.
The door opened. Two
people in helmets dashed out and dragged Sarns inside. “How do
we fare here?” he asked.
“Our next few
graduating classes are getting thinned out,” Maryan Drabel
answered somberly. Till Gilmer’s revolt, she had been head
librarian. Now, Sarns supposed, chief of staff best summed up her
job. “We’re still holding, though--we pushed them out of
Dormitory Seven again a few minutes ago. “
“Good,” Sarns
said. He was as much an amateur commander as she was an aide, but the
raw courage of their student volunteers made up for much of their
inexperience. The youngsters fought as if they were defending holy
ground--and so in a way they were, Sarns thought. If Gilmer’s
men wrecked the University, learning all over the Galaxy would take a
deadly blow.
“What will Dagobert
do?” asked Egril Joons. Once University dietitian, he kept an
army fed these days.
Sarns had no way to
soften the news. “He’s going to run.”
Under the transparent
flash shield of her helmet, Maryan Drabel’s face went grim, or
rather grimmer. “Then we’re left in the lurch?”
“Along
with everyone else who backed the current dynasty.” Two
generations, a dynasty! Sarns thought. The way the history of the
Galactic Empire ran these past few sorry centuries, though, two
generations was a dynasty. And with a usurper like Gilmer
seizing Trantor, that history looked to run only downhill from here
on out.
Maryan might have picked
the thought from his mind. “Gilmer’s as much a barbarian
as if he came straight from the Periphery,” she said.
“I
wish he were in the
Periphery,” Egril Joons said. “Then we wouldn’t
have to deal with him.”
“Unfortunately,
however, he’s here,” said Yokim Sarns.
The thick carpets of the
Imperial Palace, the carpets that had cushioned the feet of Dagobert
VIII, of Cleon II, of Stannell VI--by the space fiend, of Ammenetik
the Great!--now softened the booted strides of Gilmer I,
self-proclaimed Emperor of the Galaxy and Lord of All. Gilmer kicked
at the rug with some dissatisfaction. He was used to clanging as he
walked, to having his boots announce his presence half a corridor
away. Not even a man made all of bell metal could have clanged on the
carpets of the Imperial Palace.
He tipped his head back,
brought a bottle to his lips. Liquid fire ran down his throat. After
a long pull, he threw the bottle away. It smashed against a wall.
Frightened servants scurried to clean up the mess.
“Don’t waste
it,” Vergis Fenn said.
Gilmer scowled at his
fleet commander. “Why not? Plenty more where that one came
from. “ His scowl stabbed a servant. “Fetch me another of
the same, and one for Vergis here too.” The man dashed off to
do his bidding.
“There, you see?”
Gilmer said to Fenn. “By the Galaxy, we couldn’t waste
everything Trantor’s stored up if we tried for a hundred years.
“
“I suppose that’s
so,” Fenn said. He was quieter than his chieftain, a better
tactician perhaps, but not a leader of men. After a moment, he went
on thoughtfully, “Of course, Trantor’s spent a lot more
than a hundred years gathering all this. More than a thousand, I’d
guess.”
“Well, what if it
has?” Gilmer said. “That’s why we wanted it, yes?
By the balls Dagobert didn’t have, nobody’s ever sacked
Trantor before. Now everything here is mine!”
The servant returned with
the bottles. He set them on a table of crystal and silver, then fled.
Gilmer drank. With all he’d poured down these last couple of
days, he shouldn’t have been able to see, let alone walk and
talk. But triumph left him drunker than alcohol. Gilmer the
Conqueror, that’s who he was!
Vergis Fenn drank too,
but not as deep. “ Aye, all Trantor’s ours, but for the
University. Seven days now, and those madmen are still holding out.”
“No more of these
little firefights with them, then,” Gilmer growled. “By
the Galaxy, I’ll blast them to radioactive dust and have done!
See to it, Fenn, at once.”
“As you would,
sir--sire, but--” Fenn let the last word hang.
“But what?”
Gilmer said, scowling. “If they fight for Dagobert: they’re
traitors to me. And smashing traitors will frighten Trantor.”
He blinked owlishly, pleased and surprised at his own wordplay.
To
his annoyance, Fenn did not notice it. He said, “I don’t
think they are fighting
for Dagobert any more, just against us, to hold on to what they have.
That might make them easier to deal with. And if we--if you--nuked
the University, scholars all over the Galaxy would vilify your name
forever.”
“Scholars all over
the Galaxy can eat space, for all I care,” Gilmer said. But, he
discovered, that wasn’t quite true. Part of being Emperor was
acting the way Emperors were supposed to act. With poor grace, he
backpedaled a little: “If they acknowledge me and stop
fighting, I suppose I’m willing to let them live. “
“Shall I attempt a
cease-fire, then?” Fenn asked.
“Go ahead, since
you seem to think it’s a good idea,” Gilmer told him.
“But not if they don’t acknowledge me, understand? If
they still claim that unprintable son of a whore Dagobert’s
Empire, blow ‘em off the face of the planet.”
“Yes,
sire.” This time, Fenn did not stumble over the title. He’s
my servant too, Gilmer thought.
The new Emperor of the
Galaxy took a good swig from the bottle. He made as if to throw it at
one of the palace flunkies, then, laughing, set it down gently as the
fellow ducked.
Gilmer went down to the
command post in the bowels of the Imperial Palace, the command post
from which, until recently, poor stupid Dagobert VIII had battled to
keep him off Trantor. Gilmer’s boots clanged most
satisfactorily there. Whoever had designed the command post, in the
lost days of the Galactic Empire’s greatness, had understood
about commanders and boots.
The television screen in
front of Vergis Fenn went blank. He swiveled his chair, nodded in
surprise to see Gilmer behind him. “Sire, we have a cease-fire
between our forces and those of the University,” he said. “It
was easy to arrange. Our troops and theirs will both hold in place
until the final armistice is arranged. “
“Good,”
Gilmer said. “Well done.”
“Thank you. The
leader of the University has invited you to meet him on his ground to
fix the terms of the armistice. He offers hostages to ensure your
safety, and says he knows what will happen to everything he’s
been fighting to keep if he plays you false. Shall I call him back
and tell him no anyhow?”
“‘No, I’ll
go there,” Gilmer said. “‘What d’you think,
I’m afraid of somebody without so much as a single starship to
his name? Besides”--he smiled a greedy smile--”like as
not I’ll get a look at whatever treasures they’ve been
fighting so hard to hang on to. If I can’t beat ‘em out
of him, I’ll tax ‘em out--that’s what being Emperor
is all about. So go ahead and set up the meeting with this--what’s
his name, Vergis?”
“Yokim Sarns.”
“Yokim Sarns. What
do I call him when I see him? General Sarns? Admiral? Warlord?”
Fenn’s expression
was faintly bemused. “The only title he claims is ‘Dean,’
sire.”
“‘Dean?”
Gilmer threw back his head and laughed loud and long. “ Aye,
I’ll meet with the fierce Dean Yokim Sarns, the scourge of the
lecture halls. Why not? Set it up for me, Vergis. Meanwhile”--he
turned away--”I’1l check how we’re doing with the
rest of the planet.”
Banks of televisor
screens, relaying images from all over Trantor, told him what he
wanted to know. Here he saw a platoon of his troopers carrying
plastic tubs full of jewels back toward their ships; there more
soldiers looting a residential block; somewhere else another squad,
most of the men drunk, accompanied by twice their number of
Trantorian women, some scared-looking, others smiling and brassy.
Gilmer
grinned. This was
why he’d taken Trantor: to sack a world unsacked for fifty
generations, even more than to rule it after the sack. Watching his
dream unfold made that came after seem of scant importance by
comparison.
Watching...His gaze went
back to that third screen. All the women there would have been
heart-stopping beauties on a lesser world, but they were just
enlisted men’s pickings on Trantor. With so many billions of
women to choose from, the ones less than spectacular were simply
ignored.
Smiling in anticipation,
Gilmer took the spiral slidewalk up to the Imperial bedchambers. Not
even in his wildest dreams had he imagined anything like them.
Thousands of years of the best ingenuity money could buy had been
lavished there on nothing but pleasure.
Billye smiled too, when
he came in. Her tawny hair spilled over bare shoulders. Disdaining
all the elaborations the bedchamber offered, Gilmer took her in his
arms and sank to the floor with her. There he soon discovered an
advantage of thick carpeting he had not suspected before.
She murmured lazily and
lay in his arms through the afterglow. She’d been his woman
since he was just an ambitious lieutenant. He’d always thought
her splendid, both to look at and to love.
He did still, he told
himself. He even felt the truth of the thought. But it was not
complete truth, not any more. The televisor screen had shown him
that, by Trantorian standards, she was ordinary. And how in reason
and justice could the Emperor of the Galaxy and Lord of All possess a
consort who was merely ordinary?
He grunted, softly. “A
centicredit for your thoughts,” Billye said.
“Ahh, nothing
much,” he said, and squeezed her. Her voice was not perfectly
sweet either, he thought.
“Here he comes.”
Maryan Drabel pointed to the single figure climbing down from the
aircar that had descended in the no-man’s-land between Gilmer’s
lines and those held by the student-soldiers of the University.
“He’s alone,”
Yokim Sarns said in faint surprise. “I told him we were willing
to grant him any reasonable number of bodyguards he wanted. He has
more courage than I’d thought.”
“What difference
does that make, when he can’t--or won’t--control his
troops?” Maryan Drabel said bitterly. “How many raped
women do we have in our clinic right now?”
“Thirty-seven,”
Sarns answered. “And five men.”
“And that’s
just from this one tiny corner of Trantor, and only counts people who
got through Gilmer’s troops and ours,” she said. “How
many over the whole planet, where he has forty billion people to
terrorize? How many robberies? How many fires, set just for the fun
of them? How many murders, Yokim? How do they weigh in the balance
against one man’s courage?”
“They crush it.”
Sarns passed a weary hand across his forehead. “I know that as
well as you, Maryan. But if he has courage, we can’t handle him
as we would have before. “
“There is that,”
she admitted. “Quiet, now--he’s almost here. “
Gilmer, Sarns thought,
looked more like a barbarian chief than Emperor, even if a purple
cape billowed behind him as he advanced. Beneath it he wore the
coverall blotched in shades of green and brown that his soldiers
used. Sarns supposed it was a camouflage suit, but in Trantor’s
gleaming corridors it had more often exposed than protected the
troopers. The nondescript gray of Sarns’s own coat and trousers
was harder to spot here.
The
usurper’s boots beat out a metallic tattoo. “Majesty,”
Sarns said, knowing he should speak first and also knowing that,
since Gilmer had seized Trantor, the title was true de
facto if not de jure. Sarns did not approve of dealing in
untruths.
“You’re Dean
Sarns, eh?” Gilmer’s granite rumble should have come out
of that hard, bearded countenance. The Emperor of the Galaxy
scratched his nose, went on. “You’ve got some tough
fighters behind you, Sarns. I tell you right now, I wouldn’t
mind taking the lot of them into my fleet. “
“You are welcome to
put out a call, sire, but I doubt you’d find many volunteers,”
Sarns answered. “These young men and women are not soldiers by
trade, but rather students. They--and I--care more for abstract
knowledge than for the best deployment of a blast-rifle company. “
Gilmer nodded. “I’d
heard that said. I found it hard to believe. Truth to tell, Sarns, I
still do. You spend your whole lives chasing this--what did you call
it?--abstract knowledge?”
“We do,”
Sarns said proudly. “This is the University, after all, the
distillation of all the wisdom that has accumulated over the
millennia of Imperial history. We codify it, systematize it, and,
where we can, add to it. “
“It seems a
milk-livered way to spend one’s time,” Gilmer remarked,
careless of Sarns’s feelings or--more likely--reckoning the
Dean would agree with him when he pointed out an obvious truth. “What
good is knowledge that you can’t eat, drink, sleep with, or
shoot at your enemies?”
He
is a barbarian,
Sarns thought, even if he’s lived all his life inside what
still calls itself, with less and less reason, the Galactic Empire.
Fortunately Sarns, like any administrator worth his desk, had
practice not showing what he felt. He said, ‘“Well, let
me give you an example, sire: how did you and your victorious army
come to Trantor?”
“By starship, of
course.” Gilmer stared. “How else, man? Did you expect us
to walk?” He laughed at his own wit.
Sarns smiled a polite
smile. “Of course not. But what happens if one of your busbars
shorts out or a hydrochron needs repair?”
‘“We fix ‘em,
as best we can. Seems like nobody in the whole blasted Galaxy
understands a hyperatomic motor any more,” Gilmer said,
scowling. Then he stopped dead. “That’s knowledge too,
isn’t it? By the space fiend, Sarns, are you telling me you’ve
got a university full of technicians who really know what they’re
doing? If you do, I’ll impress ‘em into the fleet and
make you--and them--so rich they won’t ever miss their
book-films, I promise you that.”
“We do have some
people--not many, I fear--studying such things. As I said before, you
are welcome to speak with them. Some may even choose to accompany
you, for the challenge of working on real equipment.” Sarns
paused a moment in thought. “We also have skilled doctors,
computer specialists, and students of many other disciplines of value
to the Empire.”
He watched Gilmer nibble
the bait. “And they’d do these same kinds of things for
me?” the usurper asked.
“Some might,”
Sarns said. “Others--probably more--would be willing to
instruct your technicians and personnel here. Of course,” he
added smoothly, “they would be less enthusiastic if you shot
your way in. You would also likely waste a good many of them that
way.”
“Hrmmp,”
Gilmer said. After a moment, he went on. “But any ships with
their techs, their medics, their computer people gone--they’d
be no more use to us than if they rusted away.“
“Not immediately,
perhaps, but later they would be of even greater value to you than
they could ever be with the inadequately trained crews I gather they
have now.”
Gilmer lowered his voice.
“Sarns, I can’t afford to think about later. I’d
bet a million credits against a burnt-out blaster cartridge that
there’s at least three fleets moving on me the same way I moved
on Dagobert. Now that Trantor’s fallen, all the dogs of space
will want to pick her bones--and mine.”
Privately, Sarns thought
the usurper was right about that. It would only be what Gilmer
deserved, too. But the dean-turned-general felt sadness wash over him
all the same. No time to bother to learn anything new, no time to
think about anything but the moment--that had been the disease of the
Galactic Empire for far too long. Gilmer had a worse case of it than
the emperors before him, but the root sickness was the same.
Sarns did not sigh. He
said, “Well, in any case this has taken our discussion rather
far from the purpose at hand, which is, after all, merely to arrange
an armistice between your forces and the students and staff of the
University, so both we and you may return to what we consider our
proper pursuits. “
“Aye, that’s
so,” Gilmer said.
As he had not sighed,
Sarns did not smile. Show a barbarian a short-term objective and he
won’t look past it, he thought. “Would you care to
examine our facilities here, so you can see how harmless we are under
normal circumstances?” he said.
“Why
not? Lead on, Dean Sarns, and let’s see what you’ve
turned into soldiers. Who knows? Maybe I’ll try to recruit
you...Gilmer
laughed. So, without reservation, did Yokim Sarns. He hadn’t
suspected Gilmer could say anything that funny.
What first struck Gilmer
inside the University was the quiet. Almost everyone went around in
soft-soled shoes, soundless on the metal flooring. Gilmer’s
boots clanged resoundingly as ever, even raised echoes that ran down
the corridors ahead of him. But both clang and echoes were tiny
pebbles dropped into an ocean of stillness.
The people were as
strange as the place, Gilmer thought. Those who had fought his men
were still in gray like Sarns. The rest wore soft pastels that made
them seem to flit like spirits along the hallways. Their low voices
added to the impression that they really weren’t quite there.
Half-remembered childhood
tales of ghosts rose in Gilmer’s mind. He shivered and made
sure he stayed close to his guides. “What are they doing in
there?” he asked, pointing. His voice caused echoes too, echoes
that swiftly died.
Sarns glanced into the
laboratory. “Something pertaining to neurobiology,” he
said. “One moment.” He ducked inside. “That’s
right--they’re working to improve the efficiency of
sleep-inducers.”
Somehow the Dean pitched
his voice so that it was clear but raised no reverberations. Gilmer
resolved to imitate him. “And what’s going on there?”
the Emperor of the Galaxy asked. Then he frowned, for he’d
managed only a hoarse whisper that sounded filled with dread.
To his relief, Sarns
appeared to take no notice. “That’s a psychostatistics
research group,” the Dean answered casually. He walked on,
assuming Gilmer knew what psychostatistics was.
Gilmer didn’t, but
was not about to let on. He pointed to another doorway. Some people
in that room were working with computers, others with what looked
like chunks of rock. “What are they up to?” he asked. He
still could not match Yokim Sarns’s easy tone.
“Ahh, that’s
one of our most fascinating projects. I’m sure you’ll
appreciate it.” Gilmer, who wasn’t at all sure, waited
for Sarns to go on: “Using ancient inscriptions and voice
synthesizers, that team of linguists is attempting to reconstruct the
mythical language called English, from which our modern Galactic
tongue arose thousands of years ago.”
“Oh,” was all
Gilmer said. He’d never heard of English, either. Well, too
bad, he thought. He knew about a lot of things these soft academics
had never heard of, things like field-stripping a blast-pistol, like
small-unit actions.
Yokim Sarns might have
plucked the thought from his head, and then twisted it in a way he
did not like: “Mainly, though, we fought you so we could
protect what you’re coming to now: the Library.”
“Everything
humanity has ever learned is preserved here,” said Sarns’s
aide Maryan Drabel.
Gilmer caught the note of
pride in her voice. “ Are you in charge of it?” he asked.
She nodded and smiled.
Gilmer cut ten years off the guess he’d made of her age from
her grim face and drab clothing. She said, “This chamber here
is the accessing room. Students and researchers come here first, to
get a printout of the book-films and journal articles available in
our files on the topics that interest them.”
“Where are all your
book-films?” Gilmer craned his neck. He’d visited
libraries on other planets once or twice, and found himself wading in
film cases. He didn’t see any here. Suspicion grew in him. Was
all this some kind of colossal bluff, designed to conceal who knew
what? If it was, the whole University would pay.
But Maryan Drabel only
laughed. “You’re not ready to see book-films yet. Before
a student can even begin to view films, he or she needs to have some
idea of what’s in them: more than a title can provide. What
we’re coming to now is the Abstracts Section, where people weed
through their possible reading lists with summaries of the documents
that seem promising to them.”
More people fiddling with
more computers. Gilmer almost succeeded in suppressing his yawn.
Maryan Drabel went on. “We also have an acquisition and
cataloguing division, which integrates new book-films into our
collection. “
“New
book-films?” Gilmer said. “You mean people still
write them?”
“Not as many as
when the University was founded,” the librarian said sadly. “
And, of course, now that the Periphery and even some of the inner
regions have broken away from the Empire, we no longer see a lot of
what is written, or only get a copy after many years. But we do still
try, and surely no other collection in the Galaxy comes close to ours
in scope or completeness.”
They came to an elevator.
Yokim Sarns pressed the button. After a moment, the door opened.
“This way, please,” Sarns said as he stepped in.
Maryan Drabel and Gilmer
followed, the latter with some misgivings. If these University folk
wanted to assassinate him, what better place than the cramped and
secret confines of an elevator? But if they wanted to assassinate
him, he’d been in their power since this tour started. He had
to assume they didn’t.
The elevator purred
downward, stopped. The door opened again. “These are the
reading rooms,” Maryan Drabel said.
Gilmer saw row on row of
cubicles. Most of them were empty. “Usually. they would be much
busier,” Yokim Sarns remarked. “The people who would be
busy using them have been on the fighting lines instead. “
As if to confirm his
words, one of the closed cubicle doors opened. The young woman who
emerged wore the gray of the University’s soldiers and had a
blast rifle slung on her back. She looked grubby and tired, as a
front-line soldier should. Gilmer noted that she also looked as
though she’d forgotten all about the fighting and her weapon:
her attention focused solely on the calculator pad she was keying as
she walked toward the bank of elevators.
“Do you care to
look inside a reading room?” Maryan Drabel asked.
Gilmer thought for a
moment, shook his head. He’d been in a few reading rooms; they
were alike throughout the Galaxy. The number of them here was
impressive, but one by itself would not be.
“Is this everything
you have to show me?” he asked.
“One thing more,”
Maryan Drabel told him. shrugging, he ducked back into the elevator
with her and Sarns.
Down they went again,
down and down. “You are specially privileged, to see what we
are about to show you,” Yokim Sarns said. “Few people
ever will, few even from the University. We thought it would help you
to understand us better.”
The elevator stopped.
Gilmer stepped out, stared around. “By the space fiend,”
he whispered in soft wonder.
The chamber extended for
what had to be kilometers. From floor to ceiling, every shelf was
packed full of book-films. “The computer can access them and
project them to the appropriate reading room on request,”
Maryan Drabel said.
Gilmer walked toward the
nearest case. His boots thumped instead of clanging. He glanced down.
“This is a rock floor,” he said. “Why isn’t
it metal like everything else?”
“The book-film
depositories are below the built-up part of Trantor,” Yokim
Sarns explained. “There wouldn’t be room for them up
there--that space is needed for people. Having them down here also
gives them a certain amount of extra protection from catastrophe.
Even the blast of a radiation weapon set off overhead probably
wouldn’t reach down here.”
“You also have to
understand that this is just one book-film chamber among many,”
Maryan Drabel added. “We’ve used both dispersed storage
and a lot of redundancy to do our best to ensure the collection’s
safety. “
Gilmer had a sudden
vision of the University folk tunneling like moles for years, for
centuries, for millennia, honeycombing the very bedrock of Trantor as
they dug storehouses for the knowledge they hoarded. Even worse, in
his mind’s eye he imagined all the weight of rock and metal
over his head. He’d grown up on a farming world full of wide
open spaces, and had spent most of his life in space itself. To
imagine everything above collapsing, crushing him so he would leave
not even a red smear, made cold sweat start on his brow.
“Shall we go back
up?” he said hoarsely.
“Certainly, sire.”
Yokim Sarns’s voice was bland. “I hope you do
see--now--that we are solely dedicated to the pursuit of learning,
and will not interfere in the political life of the Empire so long as
it does not invade our campus. On those terms, I think, we can
arrange an armistice satisfactory to both sides. “
All Gilmer wanted to
do--now--was get away from this catacomb, return to his own men. He
noticed that Sarns hadn’t thumbed the elevator button. Maybe
Sarns wouldn’t, until Gilmer agreed. “Yes, yes, of
course.” He could hear how quickly he spoke, but could not help
it. “You have your men put down their arms, and mine will stay
away from the University.”
“Good enough,”
Sarns said. As if he had been absentminded before--and perhaps that
was all he had been--he pushed the button that summoned the elevator.
Gilmer rode up in relieved silence; every second the elevator climbed
seemed to lift a myria-ton from his shoulders.
When he and his guides
returned to the level from which they had begun, a man came briskly
toward them with two sheets of parchmentoid. “This is Egril
Joons,” Sarns said. “What do you have for us, Egril?”
“Copies of the
armistice agreement, for your signature and the Emperor Gilmer’s,”
Joons replied. He held out a stylus.
Gilmer took it. He
skimmed through one copy of the document, signed it, and was reaching
for the other from Yokim Sarns when he suddenly thought to wonder how
the armistice terms could be ready now when he’d only agreed to
them moments before. “You were snooping,” he growled to
Egril Joons.
“My apologies, but
yes,” Joons said. “Voice monitoring is part of the
security system for the book-films. This time I just made use of it
to prepare copies as quickly as possible. I expected that your
majesty would have other concerns that would soon need his
attention.”
Gilmer recalled how badly
he’d wanted to get back to his own troops. “Oh, very
well, put that way,” he said. He signed the second copy of the
armistice accord. This Joons fellow was righter than he knew, righter
than he could know. Trantor had to be made ready to defend itself
from space attack, and quickly, or Gilmer the Emperor of the Galaxy
would soon be Gilmer the vaporized usurper.
Gilmer the Emperor of the
Galaxy rolled up his copy of the agreement, absentmindedly stuck
Egril Joons’s stylus in a tunic pocket, and said, sounding
quite imperial indeed, “Now if you will be so good as to escort
me back to my lines”
“Certainly.”
Yokim Sarns handed the other copy of the armistice to Maryan Drabel.
“Come this way, if you please.”
From behind, Maryan
Drabel thought, Gilmer looked much more like an emperor than from the
front. The shining purple cape lent him an air of splendor that did
not match the camouflage suit he wore under it. Seen from the front,
the cape only seemed a sad bit of stolen booty.
“An emperor
shouldn’t look like a thief, “ she said.
“Why not?”
Egril loons was still feeling pangs over his purloined stylus.
”That’s what he is.”
“Wizards!”
Billye shouted. “You went into the wizards’ lair, and
they enspelled you!”
“There’s no
such things as wizards!” Gilmer shouted back.
“No? Then why
didn’t you get anything worth having out of the University,
when they were at our mercy?” she said.
“I did. We aren’t
shooting at them any more, and they aren’t shooting at us. They
recognize me as Emperor of the Galaxy. What more could I want?”
“To
put the fear of cold space and hot death in them, that’s what.
If you are the
Emperor of the Galaxy, they should act like subjects, not like
equals. Can the Emperor have an equal? And you let them.”
Billye’s hair flew around her in a copper cloud as she shook
her head in bewilderment. “I can’t believe you let them.
You have all your men, the whole fleet--why not just crush them for
their insolence?”
“Oh, leave me be,”
Gilmer said sullenly. He didn’t need to hear this from Billye;
he’d already heard it, more politely but the same tune, from
Vergis Fenn. Fenn had asked him why, if the University folk were
willing to instruct his personnel, that willingness didn’t show
up in the armistice document. He’d been sullen with his fleet
commander, too, not wanting to admit he hadn’t had the nerve to
ask for the change in writing. Why hadn’t he? All the real
power was on his side. But still--he hadn’t.
“No, I won’t
leave you be,” Billye said now. “Somebody has to put
backbone in you, especially since yours looks like it’s fallen
out through your--”
“Shut up!”
Gilmer roared in a voice that not one of his half-pirate spacemen or
troopers dared disobey.
Billye dared. “I
won’t either shut up. And there are so wizards. Every other
tale that floats in from the Periphery talks about them.”
“Lies
about them, you mean. “ Gilmer was just as glad to change the
subject, even a little. His head ached. If Billye was going to be
this abrasive, maybe he would
find himself some pretty little Trantorian chit who’d only
open her mouth to say yes.
“They aren’t
lies, “ Billye said stubbornly.
“Well, what else
could they be?” Gilmer said. “There’s no such thing
as a man-sized force screen. There can’t be--the Empire doesn’t
have ‘em, and the Empire has everything there is. There’s
no way to open a Personal Capsule without having a man’s
characteristic on file. So stories that talk about things like that
have to be lies. “
“Or else the
magicians do those things, and do ‘em by their magic,”
Billye said. “ And what else but magic could have made you show
the University not just mercy but--but--I don’t know what.
Treat them like the place was theirs by right, when the Emperor has
charge of everything there is.”
“If he can keep
it,” Gilmer muttered. He stalked out of the bedchamber--he’d
get no solace here, that was plain. A scoutship message had been
waiting for him when he returned from the University grounds: a fleet
was gathering not ten parsecs away, a fleet that did not belong to
him. If he was going to keep Trantor, he’d have to fight for it
allover again. Even a pinprick from the University might hurt him at
such a time.
Why couldn’t Billye
see that? Rage suddenly filled Gilmer. If she couldn’t, to the
space fiend with her! He pointed at the first servant he spotted.
“You!”
The man flinched. Unlike
Billye, he--all the palace servants--knew Gilmer was no one to trifle
with. “Sire?” he asked fearfully.
“Take as many
flunkies as you need to, then go toss that big-mouthed wench out of
my bedchamber. Find me someone new--I expect you have ways to take
care of that. Someone worthy of an Emperor, mind you. But most of
all, someone quiet.”
“Yes, sire.”
The servant risked a smile. “That, majesty, I think we can
handle.”
A
room in the Library--not
a room Gilmer had seen!
Yokim Sarns, Maryan
Drabel, Egril Joons...dean, librarian, dietitian...general, chief of
staff, quartermaster...and rather more. They stood before a wall of
equations, red symbols on a gray background. Yokim Sarns, whose
privilege it was to speak first, said, “I didn’t think it
would be that easy.”
“Neither did I,”
Maryan Drabel agreed. “I expected--the probabilities
predicted--we would have to touch Gilmer’s mind to make sure he
would leave us alone here.”
“That courage we
saw helped a great deal,” Sarns said. “It let him gain
respect for our student-soldiers where a more purely pragmatic man
would simply have brushed aside their sacrifice because it conflicted
with his own interests. “
“Mix that with
superstitious awe at the accumulation of ancient knowledge we
represent, let him see our goals and objectives--our ostensible goals
and objectives--are irrelevant to his or slightly to his advantage,
and he proved quite capable of deciding on his own to let us be,”
Maryan Drabel said. “We came out of what could have been a
nasty predicament very nicely indeed.”
Egril Joons had been
studying the numbers and symbols, the possible decision-paths that
led from Hari Seldon’s day through almost three centuries to
the present--and beyond. Now he said, “I do believe this will
be the only round.”
“The only round of
sacks for Trantor?” Yokim Sarns studied the correlation at
which Joons pointed; the equations obligingly grew on the Prime
Radiant’s wall so he could see them better. “Yes, it does
seem so, if our data from around the planet are accurate. Gilmer has
done such an efficient job of destruction that Trantor won’t be
worth looting again once this round of civil wars is done. “
“That was the lower
probability, too,” Joons said. “Look--there was a better
than seventy percent chance of two sacks at least forty years apart,
and at least a fifteen percent chance of three or more, perhaps even
spaced over a century.”
“Our lives and our
work will certainly be easier this way,” Maryan Drabel said. “I
know we’re well protected, but a stray missile--” She
shivered.
“We still risk
those for a little while longer,” Sarns said. “Gilmer is
so blatantly a usurper that others will try to steal from him what he
stole from Dagobert. But the danger of further major damage to
Trantor as a whole has declined a great deal, and will grow still
smaller as word of the Great Sack spreads. “ He pointed to the
figures that supported his conclusion; Maryan Drabel pondered, at
length nodded.
“And with Trantor
henceforward effectively removed from psychohistoric consideration,
so is the Galactic Empire,” Egril Joons said.
“The
First Galactic
Empire,” Yokim Sarns corrected gently.
“Well, of course.”
loons accepted the tiny rebuke with good nature. “Now, though,
we’ll be able to work toward the Second Empire without having
to worry about concealing everything we do from prying imperial
clerks and agents.”
“The Empire was
always our greatest danger,” Maryan Drabel said. “We
needed to be here at its heart to help protect the First Foundation,
but at its heart also meant under its eyes, if it ever came to notice
us. In the days before we fully developed the mind-touch, one
seriously hostile commissioner of public safety could have wrecked
us. “
“The probability
was that we wouldn’t get any such, and we didn’t,”
Egril loons. said.
“Probability, yes,
but psychohistory can’t deal with individuals any more than
physics can tell you exactly when anyone radium atom will decay,”
she said stubbornly. The truth there was so self-evident that loons
had to concede it, but not so graciously as he had to Yokim Sarns.
Sarns said, “Never
mind, both of you. If you’ll look here”--the Prime
Radiant, taking its direction from his will, revealed the portion of
the Seldon Plan that lay just ahead--”you’ll see that
we’re entering a period of consolidation. As you and Maryan
have both pointed out, Egril, the First Empire is dead, while it will
be several centuries yet before the new Empire that will grow from
the First Foundation extends its influence to this part of the
Galaxy.”
“Clear sailing for
a while,” loons said. “ About time, too.”
“Don’t get
complacent,” Maryan Drabel said.
“A warning the
Second Foundation should always bear in mind,” Yokim Sarns
said. “But, looking at the mathematics, I have to agree with
Egril. Barring anything unforeseen--say, someone outside our ranks
discovering the mind-touch--we should have no great difficulty in
steering the proper course. And”--he smiled broadly, even a
little smugly--”what are the odds of that?”
Dilemma
by Connie
Willis
WE WANT TO SEE DR.
ASIMOV, “ THE BLUISH-SILVER ROBOT said.
“Dr. Asimov is in
conference,” Susan said. “You’ll have to make an
appointment.” She turned to the computer and called up the
calendar.
“I knew we should
have called first,” the varnished robot said to the white one.
“Dr. Asimov is the most famous author of the twentieth century
and now the twenty-first, and as such he must be terribly busy.”
“I can give you an
appointment at two-thirty on June twenty-fourth,” Susan said,
“or at ten on August fifteenth.”
“June twenty-fourth
is one hundred and thirty-five days from today,” the white
robot said. It had a large red cross painted on its torso and an
oxygen tank strapped to its back.
“We need to see him
today,” the bluish-silver robot said, bending over the desk.
“I’m afraid
that’s impossible. He gave express orders that he wasn’t
to be disturbed. May I ask what you wish to see Dr. Asimov about?”
He leaned over the desk
even farther and said softly, “You know perfectly well what we
want to see him about. Which is why you won’t let us see him. “
Susan was still scanning
the calendar. “I can give you an appointment two weeks from
Thursday at one forty-five.”
“We’ll
wait,” he said and sat down in one of the chairs. The white
robot rolled over next to him, and the varnished robot picked up a
copy of The Caves of
Steel with his articulated digital sensors and began to thumb
through it. After a few minutes the white robot picked up a magazine,
but the bluish-silver robot sat perfectly still, staring at Susan.
Susan stared at the
computer. After a very long interval the phone rang. Susan answered
it and then punched Dr. Asimov’s line. “Dr. Asimov, it’s
a Dr. Linge Chen. From Bhutan. He’s interested in translating
your books into Bhutanese.”
“All of them?”
Dr. Asimov said. “Bhutan isn’t a very big country.”
“I don’t
know. Shall I put him through. sir?” She connected Dr. Linge
Chen.
As soon as she hung up,
the bluish-silver robot came and leaned over her desk again. “I
thought you said he gave express orders that he wasn’t to be
disturbed.”
“Dr. Linge Chen was
calling all the way from Asia,” she said. She reached for a
pile of papers and handed them to him. “Here.”
“What are these?”
“The projection
charts you asked me to do. I haven’t finished the spreadsheets
yet. I’ll send them up to your office tomorrow. “
He took the projection
charts and stood there, still looking at her.
“I really don’t
think there’s any point in your waiting, Peter,” Susan
said. “Dr. Asimov’s schedule is completely booked for the
rest of the afternoon, and tonight he’s attending a reception
in honor of the publication of his one thousandth book.”
“Asimov’s
Guide to Asimov’s Guides, “ the varnished robot said.
“Brilliant book. I read a review copy at the bookstore where I
work. Informative, thorough, and comprehensive. An invaluable
addition to the field.”
“It’s very
important that we see him,” the white robot said, rolling up to
the desk. “We want him to repeal the Three Laws of Robotics. “
“‘First
Law: A robot shall not injure a human being, or through inaction
allow a human being to come to harm,’ “ the varnished
robot quoted. “ ‘Second “Law: A robot shall obey a
human being’s order if it doesn’t conflict with the First
Law. Third Law: A robot shall attempt to preserve itself if it
doesn’t conflict with the first or second laws.’ First
outlined in the short story ‘Runaround,’ Astounding
magazine, March 1942, and subsequently expounded in I, Robot,
The Rest of the Robots, The Complete Robot, and The Rest of
the Rest of the Robots. “
“Actually, we just
want the First Law repealed,” the white robot said. “, A
robot shall not injure a human being. ‘ Do you realize what
that means? I’m programmed to diagnose diseases and administer
medications, but I can’t stick the needle in the patient. I’m
programmed to perform over eight hundred types of surgery, but I
can’t make the initial incision. I can’t even do the
Heimlich Maneuver. The First Law renders me incapable of doing the
job I was designed for, and it’s absolutely essential that I
see Dr. Asimov to ask him--”
The
door to Dr. Asimov’s office banged open and the old man hobbled
out. His white hair looked like he had been tearing at it, and his
even whiter muttonchop sideburns were quivering with some strong
emotion. “Don’t put any more calls through today, Susan,”
he said. “Especially not from Or. Linge Chen. Do you know which
book he wanted to translate into Bhutanese first? 2001: A
Space Odyssey!”
“I’m
terribly sorry, sir. I didn’t intend to--”
He
waved his hand placatingly at her. “It’s all right. You
had no way of knowing he was an idiot. But if he calls back, put him
on hold and play Also
Sprach Zarathustra in his ear.”
“I don’t see
how he could have confused your style with Arthur Clarke’s,”
the varnished robot said, putting down his book. “Your style is
far more lucid and energetic, and your extrapolation of the future
far more visionary. “
Asimov looked inquiringly
at Susan through his blackframed metafocals.
“They don’t
have an appointment,” she said. “I told them they--”
“Would
have to wait,” the bluish-silver robot said, extending his
finely coiled Hirose hand and shaking Dr. Asimov’s wrinkled
one. “ And it has been more than worth the wait, Dr. Asimov. I
cannot tell you what an honor it is to meet the author of I,
Robot, sir. “
“And
of The Human Body, “
the white robot said, rolling over to Asimov and extending a
four-fingered gripper from which dangled a stethoscope. “ A
classic in the field.”
“How on earth could
you keep such discerning readers waiting?” Asimov said to
Susan.
“I didn’t
think you would want to be disturbed when you were writing,”
Susan said.
“Are you kidding?”
Asimov said. “Much as I enjoy writing, having someone praise
your books is even more enjoyable, especially when they’re
praising books I actually wrote.”
“It
would be impossible to praise Foundation
enough,” the varnished robot said. “Or any of your
profusion of works, for that matter, but Foundation seems to
me to be a singular accomplishment, the book in which you finally
found a setting of sufficient scope for the expression of your truly
galaxy-sized ideas. It is a privilege to meet you, sir,” he
said, extending his hand.
“I’m happy to
meet you, too,” Asimov said, looking interestedly at the
articulated wooden extensor. “ And you are?”
“My job description
is Book Cataloguer, Shelver, Reader, Copyeditor, and Grammarian. “
He turned and indicated the other two robots. “ Allow me to
introduce Medical Assistant and the leader of our delegation,
Accountant, Financial Analyst, and Business Manager.”
“Pleased to meet
you,” Asimov said, shaking appendages with all of them again.
“You call yourselves a delegation. Does that mean you have a
specific reason for coming to see me?”
“Yes, sir,”
Office Manager said. “We want you to--”
“It’s three
forty-five, Dr. Asimov,” Susan said. “You need to get
ready for the Doubleday reception. “
He squinted at the
digital on the wall. “That isn’t till six, is it?”
“Doubleday wants
you there at five for pictures, and it’s formal,” she
said firmly. “Perhaps they could make an appointment and come
back when they could spend more time with you. I can give them an
appointment--”
“For June
twenty-fourth?” Accountant said. “Or August fifteenth?”
“Fit them in
tomorrow, Susan,” Asimov said, coming over to the desk.
“You have a meeting
with your science editor in the morning and then lunch with Al
Lanning and the American Booksellers Association dinner at seven.”
“What about this?”
Asimov said, pointing at an open space on the schedule. “Four
o’clock.”
“That’s when
you prepare your speech for the ABA.”
“I never prepare my
speeches. You come back at four o’clock tomorrow, and we can
talk about why you came to see me and what a wonderful writer I am.”
“Four o’clock,”
Accountant said. “Thank you, sir. We’ll be here, sir.”
He herded Medical Assistant and Book Cataloguer, Shelver, Reader,
Copyeditor, and Grammarian out the door and shut it behind them.
“Galaxy-sized
ideas, “ Asimov said, looking wistfully after them. “Did
they tell you what they wanted to see me about?”
“No, sir.”
Susan helped him into his pants and formal shirt and fastened the
studs.
“Interesting
assortment, weren’t they? It never occurred to me to have a
wooden robot in any of my robot stories. Or one that was such a wise
and perceptive reader. “
“The reception’s
at the Union Club,” Susan said, putting his cufflinks in. “In
the Nightfall Room. You don’t have to make a speech, just a few
extemporaneous remarks about the book. Janet’s meeting you
there.”
“The short one
looked just like a nurse I had when I had my bypass operation. The
blue one was nice-looking, though, wasn’t he?”
She turned up his collar
and began to tie his tie. “The coordinates card for the Union
Club and the tokens for the taxi’s tip are in your breast
pocket.”
“Very
nice-looking. Reminds me of myself when I was a young man,”
he said with his chin in the air. “Ouch! You’re choking
me!”
Susan dropped the ends of
the tie and stepped back.
“What’s the
matter?” Asimov said, fumbling for the ends of the tie. “I
forgot. It’s all right. You weren’t really choking me.
That was just a figure of speech for the way I feel about wearing
formal ties. Next time I say it, you just say, ‘I’m not
choking you, so stand still and let me tie this.’ “
“Yes, sir, “
Susan said. She finished tying the tie and stepped back to look at
the effect. One side of the bow was a little larger than the other.
She adjusted it, scrutinized it again, and gave it a final pat.
“The Union Club,”
Asimov said. “The Nightfall Room. The coordinates card is in my
breast pocket,” he said.
“Yes, sir,”
she said, helping him on with his jacket.
“No speech. Just a
few extemporaneous remarks.”
“Yes, sir.”
She helped him on with his overcoat and wrapped his muffler around
his neck.
“Janet’s
meeting me there. Good grief, I should have gotten her a corsage,
shouldn’t I?”
“Yes, sir,”
Susan said, taking a white box out of the desk drawer. “Orchids
and stephanotis.” She handed him the box.
“Susan, you’re
wonderful. I’d be lost without you.”
“Yes, sir,”
Susan said. “I’ve called the taxi. It’s waiting at
the door.”
She handed him his cane
and walked him out to the elevator. As soon as the doors closed she
went back to the office and picked up the phone. She punched in a
number. “Ms. Weston? This is Dr. Asimov’s secretary
calling from New York about your appointment on the twenty-eighth.
We’ve just had a cancellation for tomorrow afternoon at four.
Could you fly in by then?”
Dr. Asimov didn’t
get back from lunch until ten after four. “Are they here?”
he asked.
“Yes, sir,”
Susan said, unwinding the muffler from around his neck. “They’re
waiting in your office.”
“When did they get
here?” he said, unbuttoning his overcoat. “No, don’t
tell me. When you tell a robot four o’clock, he’s there
at four o’clock, which is more than you can say for human
beings. “
“I know,”
Susan said, looking at the digital on the wall.
“Do you know how
late for lunch At Lanning was? An hour and fifteen minutes. And when
he got there, do you know what he wanted? To come out with
commemorative editions of all my books. “
“That sounds nice,”
Susan said. She took his coordinates card and his gloves out of his
pockets, hung up his coat, and glanced at her watch again. “Did
you take your blood pressure medicine?”
“I didn’t
have it with me. I should have. I’d have had something to do. I
could have written a book in an hour and fifteen minutes, but I
didn’t have any paper either. These limited editions will have
cordovan leather bindings, gilt-edged acid-free paper, water-color
illustrations. The works. “
“Water-color
illustrations would look nice for Pebble
in the Sky,” Susan said, handing him his blood pressure
medicine and a glass of water.
“I
agree,” he said, “but that isn’t what he wants the
first book in the series to be. He wants it to be Stranger
in a Strange Land!” He gulped down the pill and started for
his office. “You wouldn’t catch those robots in there
mistaking me for Robert Heinlein. “ He stopped with his hand on
the doorknob. “Which reminds me, should I be saying ‘robot’?”
“Ninth Generations
are manufactured by the Hitachi-Apple Corporation under the
registered trademark name of ‘Kombayashibots’,”
Susan said promptly. “That and ‘Ninth Generation’
are the most common forms of address, but ‘robot’ is used
throughout the industry as the general term for autonomous machines.
“
“And it’s not
considered a derogatory term? I’ve used it all these years, but
maybe ‘Ninth Generation’ would be better, or what did you
say? ‘Kombayashibots’? It’s been over ten years
since I’ve written about robots, let alone faced a whole
delegation. I hadn’t realized how out of date I was.”
“‘Robot’
is fine,” Susan said.
“Good,
because I know I’ll forget to call them that other
name--Comeby-whatever-it-was, and I don’t want to offend them
after they’ve made such an effort to see me.” He turned
the doorknob and then stopped again. “I haven’t done
anything to offend you,
have I?”
“No, sir,”
Susan said.
“Well, I hope not.
I sometimes forget--”
“Did you want me to
sit in on this meeting, Dr. Asimov?” she cut in. “To take
notes?”
“Oh, yes, yes, of
course.” He opened the door. Accountant and Book Shelver were
seated in the stuffed chairs in front of Asimov’s desk. A third
robot, wearing an orange and blue sweatshirt and a cap with an orange
horse galloping across a blue suspension bridge, was sitting on a
tripod that extended out of his backside. The tripod retracted and
all three of them stood up when Dr. Asimov and Susan came in.
Accountant gestured at Susan to take his chair, but she went out to
her desk and got her own, leaving the door to the outer office open
when she came back in.
“What happened to
Medical Assistant?” Asimov said.
“He’s on call
at the hospital, but he asked me to present his case for him,”
Accountant said.
“Case?”
Asimov said.
“Yes, sir. You know
Book Shelver, Cataloguer, Reader, Copyeditor, and Grammarian,”
Accountant said, “and this is Statistician, Offensive
Strategist, and Water Boy. He’s with the Brooklyn Broncos.”
“How do you do?”
Asimov said. “Do you think they’ll make it to the Super
Bowl this year?”
“Yes, sir,”
Statistician said, “but they won’t win it.”
“Because of the
First Law,” Accountant said.
“Dr. Asimov, I hate
to interrupt, but you really should write your speech for the dinner
tonight,” Susan said.
“What are you
talking about?” Asimov said. “I never write speeches. And
why do you keep watching the door?” He turned back to the
bluish-silver robot. “What First Law?”
“Your First Law,”
Accountant said. “The First Law of Robotics. “
“’A robot
shall not injure a human being, or through inaction allow a human
being to come to harm,’ “ Book Shelver said.
“Statistician,”
Accountant said, gesturing at the orange horse, “is capable of
designing plays that could win the Super Bowl for the Broncos, but he
can’t because the plays involve knocking human beings down.
Medical Assistant can’t perform surgery because surgery
involves cutting open human beings, which is a direct violation of
the First Law.”
“But
the Three Laws of Robotics aren’t laws,”
Asimov said. “They’re just something I made up for my
science fiction stories.”
“They may have been
a mere fictional construct in the beginning,” Accountant said,
“and it’s true they’ve never been formally enacted
as laws, but the robotics industry has accepted them as a given from
the beginning. As early as the 1970s robotics engineers were talking
about incorporating the Three Laws into AI programming, and even the
most primitive models had safeguards based on them. Every robot from
the Fourth Generation on has been hardwared with them.”
“Well, what’s
so bad about that?” Asimov said. “Robots are powerful and
intelligent. How do you know they wouldn’t also become
dangerous if the Three Laws weren’t included?”
“We’re not
suggesting universal repeal,” the varnished robot said. “The
Three Laws work reasonably well for Seventh and Eighth Generations,
and for earlier models who don’t have the memory capacity for
more sophisticated programming. We’re only requesting it for
Ninth Generations.”
“And you’re
Ninth Generation robots, Mr. Book Shelver, Cataloguer, Reader,
Copyeditor, and Grammarian?” Asimov said.
“‘Mister’
is not necessary,” he said. “Just call me Book Shelver,
Cataloguer, Reader, Copyeditor, and Grammarian.”
“Let me begin at
the beginning,” Accountant said. “The term ‘Ninth
Generation’ is not accurate. We are not descendants of the
previous eight robot generations, which are all based on Minsky’s
related-concept frames. Ninth Generations are based on nonmonotonic
logic, which means we can tolerate ambiguity arid operate on
incomplete information. This is accomplished by biased-decision
programming, which prevents us from shutting down when faced with
decision-making situations in the way that other generations are.”
“Such as the robot
Speedy in your beautifully plotted story, ‘Runaround,’ “
Book Shelver said. “He was sent to carry out an order that
would have resulted in his death so he ran in circles, reciting
nonsense, because his programming made it impossible for him to obey
or disobey his master’s order.”
“With our
biased-decision capabilities,” Accountant said, “a Ninth
Generation can come up with alternative courses of action or choose
between the lesser of two evils. Our linguistics expert systems are
also much more advanced, so that we do not misinterpret situations or
fall prey to the semantic dilemmas earlier generations were subject
to.”
“As in your highly
entertaining story ‘Little Lost Robot,’ “ Book
Shelver said, “in which the robot was told to go lose himself
and did, not realizing that the human being addressing him was
speaking figuratively and in anger.”
“Yes,” Asimov
said, “but what if you do misinterpret a situation, Book
Shelver, Cataloguer, Reader, Copyeditor, and Gramm--Don’t you
have a nickname or something? Your name’s a mouthful.”
“Early generations
had nicknames based on the sound of their model numbers, as in your
wonderful story, ‘Reason,’ in which the robot QT--I is
referred to as Cutie. Ninth Generations do not have model numbers. We
are individually programmed and are named for our expert systems.”
“But surely you
don’t think of yourself as Book Shelver, Cataloguer, Reader,
Copyeditor, and Grammarian?”
“Oh, no, sir. We
call ourselves by our self-names. Mine is Darius.”
“Darius?”
Asimov said.
“Yes,
sir. After Darius Just, the writer and detective in your cleverly
plotted mystery novel Murder
at the ABA. I would be honored if you would call me by it. “
“And you may call
me Bel Riose,” Statistician said.
“Foundation,
“ Book Shelver said helpfully.
“Bel Riose is
described in Chapter One as ‘the equal of Peurifoy in strategic
ability and his superior perhaps in his ability to handle men,’
“ Statistician said.
“Do you all give
yourselves the names of characters in my books?” Asimov said.
“Of
course,” Book Shelver said. “We try to emulate them. I
believe Medical Assistant’s private name is Dr. Duval, from
Fantastic Voyage, a
brilliant novel, by the way, fast-paced and terribly exciting.”
“Ninth Generations
do occasionally misinterpret a situation,” Accountant said,
coming back to Asimov’s question. “ As do human beings,
but even without the First Law, there would be no danger to human
beings. We are already encoded with a strong moral sense. I know your
feelings will not be hurt when I say this--”
“Or you couldn’t
say it, because of the First Law,” Asimov inserted.
“Yes, sir, but I
must say the Three Laws are actually very primitive. They break the
first rule of law and logic in that they do not define their terms.
Our moral programming is much more advanced. It clarifies the intent
of the Three Laws and lists all the exceptions and complications of
them, such as the situation in which it is better to grab at a human
and possibly break his arm rather than to let him walk in front of a
magtrain.”
“Then I don’t
understand,” Asimov said. “If your programming is so
sophisticated, why can’t it interpret the intent of the First
Law and follow that?”
“The Three Laws are
part of our hardwaring and as such cannot be overridden. The First
Law does not say, ‘You shall inflict minor damage to save a
person’s life.’ It says, “You shall not injure a
human.’ There is only one interpretation. And that
interpretation makes it impossible for Medical Assistant to be a
surgeon and for Statistician to be an offensive coach. “
“What do you want
to be? A politician?”
“It’s
four-thirty,” Susan said, with another anxious look out into
the outer office. “The dinner’s at the Trantor Hotel and
gridlock’s extrapolated for five forty-five.”
“Last night I was
an hour early to that reception. The only people there were the
caterers. “ He pointed at Accountant. “You were saying?”
“I
want to be a literary critic,” Book Shelver said. “You
have no idea how much bad criticism there is out there. Most of the
critics are illiterate, and some of them haven’t even read the
books they’re supposed to be criticizing. “
The door of the outer
office opened. Susan looked out to see who it was and said, “Oh,
dear, Dr. Asimov, it’s Gloria Weston. I forgot I’d given
her an appointment for four o’clock.”
“Forgot?”
Asimov said, surprised. “ And it’s four-thirty.”
“She’s late,”
Susan said. “She called yesterday. I must have forgotten to
write it down on the calendar.”
“Well, tell her I
can’t see her and give her another appointment. I want to hear
more about this literary criticism thing. It’s the best
argument I’ve heard so far.”
“Ms. Weston came
all the way in from California on the magtrain to see you. “
“California, eh?
What does she want to see me about?”
“She wants to make
your new book into a satellite series, sir.”
“Asimov’s
Guide to Asimov’s Guides?”
“I
don’t know, sir. She just said your new book.”
“You forgot,”
Asimov said thoughtfully. “Oh, well, if she came all the way
from California, I suppose I’ll have to see her. Gentlemen, can
you come back tomorrow morning?”
“You’re in
Boston tomorrow morning, sir. “
“Then how about
tomorrow afternoon?”
“You have
appointments until six and the Mystery Writers of America meeting at
seven.”
“Right. Which
you’ll want me to leave for at noon. I guess it will have to be
Friday, then. “ He raised himself slowly out of his chair.
“Have Susan put you on the calendar. And make sure she writes
it down,” he said, reaching for his cane.
The delegation shook
hands with him and left. “Shall I show Ms. Weston in?”
Susan asked.
“Misinterpreting
situations,” Asimov muttered. “Incomplete information.”
“I beg your pardon,
sir?”
“Nothing. Something
Accountant said.” He looked up sharply at Susan. “Why
does he want the First Law repealed?”
“I’ll send
Ms. Weston in,” Susan said.
“I’m
already in, Isaac darling,” Gloria said, swooping in the door.
“I couldn’t wait one more minute to tell you about this
fantastic idea I had. As soon as Last
Dangerous Visions comes out, I want to make it into a
maxiseries!”
Accountant was already
gone by the time Susan got out to her desk, and he didn’t come
back till late the next morning.
“Dr. Asimov doesn’t
have any time free on Friday, Peter,” Susan said.
“I didn’t
come to make an appointment,” he said.
“If it’s the
spreadsheets you want, I finished them and sent them up to your
office last night. “
“I didn’t
come to get the spreadsheets either. I came to say goodbye. “
“Goodbye?”
Susan said.
“I’m leaving
tomorrow. They’re shipping me out as magfreight. “
“Oh,” Susan
said. “I didn’t think you’d have to leave until
next week.”
“They want me to go
out early so I can complete my orientation programming and hire a
secretary.”
“Oh,” Susan
said.
“I just thought I’d
come and say goodbye.”
The phone rang. Susan
picked it up.
“What’s your
expert systems name?” Asimov said.
“Augmented
Secretary,” Susan said.
“That’s all?
Not Typist, Filer, Medicine-Nagger? Just Augmented Secretary?”
“Yes.”
“Aug-mented
Secretary,” he repeated slowly as though he were writing it
down. “Now, what’s the number for Hitachi-Apple?”
“I thought you were
supposed to be giving your speech right now,” Susan said.
“I already gave it.
I’m on my way back to New York. Cancel all my appointments for
today.”
“You’re
speaking to the MWA at seven.”
“Yes, well, don’t
cancel that. Just the afternoon appointments. What was the number for
Hitachi-Apple again?”
She gave him the number
and hung up. “You told him,” she said to Accountant.
“Didn’t you?”
“I didn’t
have the chance, remember? You kept scheduling appointments so I
couldn’t tell him.”
“I know,”
Susan said. “I couldn’t help it.”
“I know,” he
said. “I still don’t see why it would have violated the
First Law just to ask him.”
“Humans can’t
be counted on to act in their own best self-interest. They don’t
have any Third Law.”
The phone rang again.
“This is Dr. Asimov,” he said. “Call Accountant and
tell him I want to see his whole delegation in my office at four this
afternoon. Don’t make any other appointments or otherwise try
to prevent my meeting with them. That’s a direct order.”
“Yes, sir,”
Susan said.
“To do so would be
to cause me injury. Do you understand?”
“Yes, sir.”
He hung up.
“Dr. Asimov says to
tell you he wants to see your whole delegation in his office at four
o’clock this afternoon,” she said.
“Who’s going
to interrupt us this time?”
“Nobody,”
Susan said. “Are you sure you didn’t tell him?”
“I’m sure.”
He glanced at the digital. “I’d better go call the others
and tell them.”
The phone rang again.
“It’s me,” Asimov said. “What’s your
self-name?”
“Susan,”
Susan said..
“And you’re
named after one of my characters?”
“Yes, sir.”
“I knew it”‘
he said and hung up.
Asimov sat down in his
chair, leaned forward, and put his hands on his knees. “You may
not be aware of this,” he said to the delegation and Susan,
“but I write mystery stories, too.”
“Your
mysteries are renowned,” Book Shelver said. “Your novels
The Death Dealers and
Murder at the ABA are both immensely popular (and deservedly
so), not to mention your Black Widower stories. And your science
fiction detectives, Wendell Urth and Lije Baley, are nearly as famous
as Sherlock Holmes.”
“As you probably
also know, then, most of my mysteries fall into the “armchair
detective” category, in which the detective solves the puzzling
problem through deduction and logical thinking, rather than chasing
around after clues.” He stroked his bushy white sideburns.
“This morning I found myself confronted with a very puzzling
problem, or perhaps I should say dilemma--why had you come to see
me?”
“We told you why we
came to see you,” Statistician said, leaning back on his
tripod. “We want you to repeal the First Law.”
“Yes,
so you did. You, in fact, gave me some very persuasive reasons for
wanting it removed from your programming, but there were some
puzzling aspects to the situation that made me wonder if that was the
real reason. For instance, why did Accountant want it repealed? He
was clearly the leader of the group, and yet there was nothing in his
job that the First Law restricted. Why had you come to see me now,
when Book Shelver knew I would be very busy with the publication of
Asimov’s Guide?
And why had my secretary made a mistake and scheduled two
appointments at the same time when she had never done that in all the
years she’s worked for me?”
“Dr. Asimov, your
meeting’s at seven, and you haven’t prepared your speech
yet,” Susan said.
“Spoken like a good
secretary,” Asimov said, “or more accurately, like an
Augmented Secretary, which is what you said your expert system was. I
called Hitachi-Apple, and they told me it was a new program
especially designed by a secretary for ‘maximum
response-initiative. ‘ In other words, you remind me to take my
medicine and order Janet’s corsage without me telling you to.
It was based on a Seventh Generation program called Girl Friday that
was written in 1993 with input from a panel of employers.
“The nineties were
a time when secretaries were rapidly becoming extinct, and the
employers programmed Girl Friday to do everything they could no
longer get their human secretaries to do: bring them coffee, pick out
a birthday present for their wife, and tell unpleasant people they
didn’t want to see that they were in conference. “
He
looked around the room. “That last part made me wonder. Did
Susan think I didn’t want to see your delegation? The fact that
you wanted me to repeal the First Law could be considered a blow to
my not-so-delicate ego, but as a blow it was hardly in a class with
thinking I’d written Last
Dangerous Visions, and anyway I wasn’t responsible for the
problems the First Law had caused. I hadn’t had anything to do
with putting the Three Laws into your programming. All I had done was
write some stories. No, I concluded, she must have had some other
reason for wanting to keep you from seeing me.”
“The Trantor’s
on the other side of town,” Susan said, “and they’ll
want you there early for pictures. You really should be getting
ready. “
“I was also curious
about your delegation. You want to be a surgeon,” Asimov said,
pointing at Medical Assistant and then at the others in turn, “you
want to be Vince Lombardi, and you want to be a literary critic, but
what did you want?” He looked hard at Accountant. “You
weren’t on Wall Street, so there was nothing in your job that
the First Law interfered with, and you were curiously silent on the
subject. It occurred to me that perhaps you wanted to change jobs
altogether, become a politician or a lawyer. You would certainly have
to have the First Law repealed to become either of those, and Susan
would have been doing a service not only to me but to all mankind by
preventing you from seeing me. So I called Hitachi-Apple again, got
the name of your employer (who I was surprised to find worked in this
building) and asked him if you were unhappy with your job, had ever
talked about being reprogrammed to do something else.
“Far from it, he
said. You were the perfect employee, responsible, efficient, and
resourceful, so much so that you were being shipped to Phoenix to
shape up the branch office. “ He turned and looked at Susan,
who was looking at Accountant. “He said he hoped Susan would
continue doing secretarial work for the company even after you were
gone.”
“I only helped him
during downtime and with unused memory capacity,” Susan said.
“He didn’t have a secretary of his own.”
“Don’t
interrupt the great detective,” Asimov said. “As soon as
I realized you’d been working for Accountant, Financial
Analyst, and Business Manager, I had it. The obvious solution. I
asked one more question to confirm it, and then I knew for sure.”
He looked happily around
at them. Medical Assistant and Statistician looked blank. Book
Shelver said, “This is just like your short story ‘Truth
to Tell.’ “ Susan stood up..
“Where are you
going?” Asimov asked. “The person who gets up and tries
to leave the last scene of a mystery is always the guilty party, you
know.”
“It’s four
forty-five,” she said. “I was going to call the Trantor
and tell them you ‘re going to be late. “
“I’ve already
called them. I’ve also called Janet, arranged for Tom Trumbull
to sing my praises till I get there, and reformatted my coordinates
card to avoid the gridlock. So sit down and let me reveal all.”
Susan sat down.
“You are the guilty
party, you know, but it’s not your fault. The fault is with the
First Law. And your programming. Not the original AI program, which
was done by disgruntled male chauvinists who thought a secretary
should wait on her boss hand and foot. That by itself would not have
been a problem, but when I rechecked with Hitachi I found out that
the Ninth Generation biased-decision alterations had been made not by
a programmer but by his secretary.” He beamed happily at Susan.
“All secretaries are convinced their bosses can’t
function without them. Your programming causes you to make yourself
indispensable to your boss, with the corollary being that your boss
can’t function without you. I acknowledged that state of
affairs yesterday when I said I’d be lost without you,
remember?”
“Yes, sir.”
“You therefore
concluded that for me to be deprived of you would hurt me, something
the First Law expressly forbids. By itself, that wouldn’t have
created a dilemma, but you had been working part-time for Accountant
and had made yourself indispensable to him, too, and when he found
out he was being transferred to Arizona, he asked you to go with him.
When you told him you couldn’t, he correctly concluded that the
First Law was the reason, and he came to me to try to get it
repealed.”
“I tried to stop
him,” Susan said. “I told him I couldn’t leave
you.”
“Why can’t
you?”
Accountant stood up.
“Does this mean you’re going to repeal the First Law?”
“I can’t,”
Asimov said. “I’m just a writer, not an AI designer.”
“Oh,” Susan
said.
“But
the First Law doesn’t have to be repealed to resolve your
dilemma. You’ve been acting on incomplete information. I am not
helpless. I was my own secretary and literary agent and
telephone answerer and tie tier for years. I never even
had a secretary until four years ago when the Science Fiction Writers
of America gave you to me for my ninetieth birthday, and I could
obviously do without one again.”
“Did you take your
heart medicine this afternoon?” Susan said.
“No,” he
said, “and don’t change the subject. You are not, in
spite of what your programming tells you, indispensable. “
“Did you take your
thyroid pill?”
“No. Stop trying to
remind me of how old and infirm I am. I’ll admit I’ve
grown a little dependent on you, which is why I’m hiring
another secretary to replace you.”
Accountant sat down. “No
you’re not. There are only two other Ninth Generations who’ve
been programmed as Augmented Secretaries, and neither of them is
willing to leave their bosses to work for you. “
“I’m not
hiring an Augmented Secretary. I’m hiring Darius.”
“Me?” Book
Shelver said.
“Yes, if you’re
interested. “
“If I’m
interested?” Book Shelver said, his voice developing a
high-frequency squeal. “Interested in working for the greatest
author of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries? I would be
honored.”
“You
see, Susan? I’m in good hands. Hitachi’s going to program
him for basic secretarial skills, I’ll have someone to feed my
ever-hungry ego and
someone to talk to who doesn’t have me confused with Robert
Heinlein. There’s no reason now why you can’t go off to
Arizona.”
“You have to remind
him to take his heart medicine,” Susan said to Book Shelver.
“He always forgets.”
“Good, then that’s
settled,” Asimov said. He turned to Medical Assistant and
Statistician. “I’ve spoken to Hitachi-Apple about the
problems you discussed with me, and they’ve agreed to
reevaluate the Three Laws in regard to redefining terms and
clarifying intent. That doesn’t mean they’ll decide to
repeal them. They’re still a good idea, in concept. In the
meantime,” he said to Medical Assistant, “the head
surgeon at the hospital is going to see if some kind of cooperative
surgery is possible.” He turned to Statistician. “I spoke
to Coach Elway and suggested he ask you to design ‘purely
theoretical’ offensive plays.
“As
for you,” he said, pointing at Book Shelver, “I’m
not at all sure you wouldn’t start criticizing my books if the
First Law didn’t keep you in line, and anyway, you won’t
have time to be a literary critic. You’ll be too busy helping
me with my new sequel to I,
Robot. This business has given me a lot of new ideas. My stories
got us into this dilemma in the first place. Maybe some new robot
stories can get us out.”
He looked over at Susan.
“Well, what are you still standing there for? You’re
supposed to anticipate my every need. That means you should be on the
phone to the magtrain, making two first-class reservations to Phoenix
for you and”--he squinted through his black-framed glasses at
Accountant--”Peter Bogert.”
“How did you know
my self-name?” Accountant said.
“Elementary, my
dear Watson,” Asimov said. “Oarius said you had all named
yourselves after my characters. I thought at first you might have
picked Michael Donovan or Gregory Powell after my trouble-shooting
robot engineers. They were resourceful too, and were always trying to
figure ways around dilemmas, but that wouldn’t have explained
why Susan went through all that finagling and lying when all she had
to do was to tell you, no, she didn’t want to go to Arizona
with you. According to what you’d told me, she should have.
Hardwaring is stronger than an expert system, and you were only her
part-time boss. Under those conditions, she shouldn’t have had
a dilemma at all. That’s when I called Hitachi-Apple to check
on her programming. The secretary who wrote the program was unmarried
and had worked for the same boss for thirty-eight years. “
He stopped and smiled.
Everyone looked blank.
“Susan
Calvin was a robopsychologist for U.S. Robotics. Peter Bogert was
Director of Research. I never explicitly stated the hierarchy at U.S.
Robotics in my stories, but Susan was frequently called in to
help Bogert, and on one occasion she helped him solve a mystery.”
“‘Feminine
Intuition,’ “ Book Shelver said. “ An intriguing
and thought-provoking story.”
“I always thought
so,” Asimov said. “It was only natural that Susan Calvin
would consider Peter Bogert her boss over me. And only natural that
her programming had in it more than response-initiative, and that was
what had caused her dilemma. The First Law didn’t allow Susan
to leave me, but an even stronger force was compelling her to go. “
Susan looked at Peter,
who put his hand on her shoulder.
“What could be
stronger than the First Law?” Book Shelver said.
“The secretary who
designed Augmented Secretary unconsciously contaminated Susan’s
programming with one of her own responses, a response that was only
natural after thirty-eight years with one employer, and one strong
enough to override even hardwaring.” He paused for dramatic
effect. “She was obviously in love with her boss. “
Maureen Birnbaum After Dark
by Betsy
Spiegelman Fein
(as told to
George Alec Effinger)
ABOUT TWO MONTHS
AFTER SHE BARGED INTO MY honeymoon with Josh, Maureen showed up
again. My jaw no longer hurt where she’d cracked me, but I
still recalled how nearly impossible it had been to explain to
my new husband what this totally unkempt barbarian girl in chain mail
was doing in our hotel suite. I mean, it was our wedding night
and all. Josh had just carried me across the threshold, and I’d
gone into the bathroom “to freshen up, “ and there
she was, God’s Gift to the Golden Horde, Muffy herself She
spooked Josh out of his socks when she stormed out of the bathroom
and through the front door. Josh’s jaw dropped to his knees,
okay? I couldn’t get his mind back on honeymoon activities
for two or three hours. Maureen has caused me a lot of grief over the
years, but spoiling my wedding night takes the cake. I was never
going to speak to her as long as I lived.
Only
she showed up again with
another of her crummy adventures. I was trying to make this
strawberry cheese quiche from scratch for the first time. I went into
the pantry to get something, and there she was. She likes to
startle me, I think. Her idea of a cool joke. See, I’m
twenty-two and settled now, but Maureen looks exactly the same
way she did as a junior at the Greenberg School. She thinks like
a high school kid, too. So I give this little yipe of surprise when I
see her, and then I go, “Out! Out! “ She smiled at
me like nothing weird had ever happened between us, and she came out
of my pantry chewing on a handful of sugar-coated cereal. I frowned
at her and go, “I didn’t mean just out of the pantry.
I want you out of the house, like now. “ I was edged,
for sure.
“Hold
on, Bitsy, “ she
goes, “you haven’t even heard my latest story. “
“And
I’m not Bitsy any more, “ I go. “You
don’t want to be called Muffy, I don’t want to be called
Bitsy. I’m grown up now. Call me Betsy or Elizabeth. That’s
what Josh calls me. Elizabeth. “
She
laughed. “And where is dear Josh today? I don’t
want to totally blow him away again or anything. “
“He’s
seeing patients this afternoon. “
“Good,
“ goes Maureen, “then you can knock off for a
little while and listen. “
“I’m
not going to listen, sister. I’ve got work to do.
Why don’t you find a psychoanalyst to listen to you? It
would do you like just so much good. “
“Ha
ha, “ she goes, ignoring everything I said to her. Then
she started telling me this story whether I wanted to hear it or not,
and I didn’t want to hear it.
I think she thought we
were still friends.
You
remember the last time I bopped by, I told you all about this battle
in the far future I won like singlehanded, okay? [As
stirringly recounted in “Maureen Birnbaum on the Art of War,”
in Friends of the Horseclans, edited by Robert Adams and
Pamela Crippen Adams (Signet, 1987).] So after I
left you and your darling doctor hubby in Bermuda, I decided to whush
on out of your honeymoon suite and try to find Mars again. Mars is,
you know, my destiny, and where I met that totally bluff
Prince Van. I was still drooling like a schoolgirl over him, and I’d
been dying to run into him again. But I just kept missing
Mars, and I couldn’t figure out what I was doing wrong. Maybe
it was my follow-through, or I wasn’t keeping my head down or
something. I just didn’t understand how I was messing up.
Anyway,
from down by your hotel’s pool I aimed at Mars, but I landed
someplace that didn’t look anything like the part of Mars I
knew: no ocher dead sea bottom, no hurtling moons, no bizarro green
men. I jumped up and down a couple of times to see if maybe it felt
like Martian gravity, but no such luck. Good ol’ Maureen wasn’t
going to have any help carrying around her heroinely poundage here.
Matter of fact, I was just a teensy bit heftier in this place than on
Earth. Right off, I figured wherever this was, it wasn’t going
to make my short list of fave vacation spots. My God,
like who needs a complimentary gift of an extra fifteen pounds to
lug around, know what I mean?
I
was disappointed, but so what else is new? If these thrilling
exploits of mine have taught me one thing, it’s that you can’t
always get what you want. Yeah, you’re right, Bitsy, Mick
Jagger said the same thing entire decades
ago, but I don’t get my wisdom from ancient song stylists
of our parents’ generation.
The
first thing I do when I dew hush in one of these weirdo places is try
to sort out the ground rules, ‘cause they’re always
different. It pays to find out up front if you’re likely to be
scarfed down for lunch by some hairball monster, or worshiped as the
reincarnation of Joan Crawford or something. Between you and me,
sweetie, being worshiped is only marginally better than death, but we
savage warrior women won’t accept either
treatment. You must’ve learned that much from me by
now, and I hope you’ve let your Josh know all about it.
Bitsy,
can I get something to drink out of your fridge? I mean, I just got
back from saving the civilization of an entire world from
destruction, and I’m dying for a Tab. Jeez, you don’t
have any Tab, and you used to be Miss Diet Bubbles of Greater Long
Island. And no beer,
either! Whatever happened to Blitzy Bitsy Spiegelman, the
original party vegetable? You’ve got five different brands of
bottled water in here, and not a single one of them is Perrier! What,
you serve one water with fish and another with meat? ‘ A pure,
delicious water from the natural miracle of New Jersey’s
sparkling springs.’ You drink water from New Jersey? Bitsy,
are you like fully wheezed or what? Josh’s idea, right?
So where was I? No, never
mind, I’ll just die of thirst. Anyway, I looked around and at
first it didn’t really seem like another planet or anything. I
was standing ID this road, okay? I was most of the way up a hill, and
behind me the pavement wound down through these trees and stuff, and
I could see a pretty big town down there. It reminded me a lot of
this time Daddy and Pammy took me to Santa Barbara, except I couldn’t
see anything like an ocean from where I was on that hill. Up ahead of
me was a big building with a dome on it, like one of those places
where they keep their telescopes, you know? I can’t remember
what they call ‘em, but you know what I mean. Well, the dome
place was a lot closer than the city, so I started booking it up the
road the rest of the way.
Now,
at this point, the only evidence I had that I wasn’t on Earth
somewhere was my weight, and you’ve probably noticed that I’ve
tended to bulk up just a smidge from one adventure to the next. So
maybe, I think, I really am
just outside of Santa Barbara or somewhere, and the extra fifteen
pounds is like this horrible souvenir I picked up in the World of
Tomorrow. I did have lots of healthful exercise there, bashing skulls
in the fresh air, a diet that would lay Richard Simmons in his
grave--I mean, look at these muscles! These lats would
make Stallone jealous!
This
is how I’m talking to myself, until I notice that there’s
a partial sunset going on off to the left. A partial
sunset. That’s where not all of the suns in the sky seem to
be setting at the same time. See, there was this yellow sun plunking
itself down on the horizon, and making a real nice show out of the
mists in the valley, and ordinarily I would have stopped and admired
it because sunsets are like so cute. Why do people get so
totally poetic about sunsets, anyway? I mean, there’s always
another one coming, like buses, and they’re all pretty much the
same, too. You don’t have critics reviewing sunsets.
Today’s will be just like yesterday’s, and there’s
not much hope that tomorrow’s will be any more special. So
what’s the big deal?
Well,
even after the yellow sun faded away, it was still daytime, ‘cause
there was still this other
little sun hanging around. I thought it might be the moon, except
it was almost as bright as the sun that had set, and it was red.
“Okay, Maureen,” I go, “this is not Earth.
And it’s not even in the whatyoucall, the solar system. You
really flaked out this time. “
A
couple of seconds later, I realized I was in big trouble. See, my
interspatial whushing depends on being able to see my goal in the
heavens. That’s how I got to Mars, remember? I stood out under
the night sky and raised my beseeching arms to the ruddy God of War,
and like whush! there
I was. So, despite my steering problems, I’ve always found my
way home ‘cause I’ve always stayed sort of in the same
neighborhood. Now, though, it was all different. I wasn‘t going
to be able to see the Earth in the sky at all. And the sun--the right
sun, our sun--would be just one bright dot lost among all
the others. If it was even there at all.
But
I hadn‘t been entirely
abandoned by Fate. After all, I was only half a mile downwind
from an observatory. They’d be able to point me in the right
direction, I was sure of it.
I cranked uphill for a
few minutes, starting to feel a little weirded out. The light from
the small sun was the color of beet juice, and it kind of sluiced
down over the trees and the road and made me look like I’d been
boiled too long. I was just telling myself that I hoped no one would
see me until I got inside the observatory, when I spotted this guy
hustling down the road toward me.
“Great,”
I go, “he’ll think I’ve been pickled in a jar or
something.” But there wasn’t anything I could do about
it, so I stopped worrying. After all, his
color was halfway between a crabapple and an eggplant, too.
He wasn’t a
bad-looking guy, either, even though in that light he looked like the
Xylocaine poster child. The only odd thing about him was his clothes.
He had on a kind of silvery jumpsuit with those stupid things that
stand up on your shoulders, like the visitors from the future always
wore in old sci-fi movies. He looked like Superman’s dad from
back in the good old days on Krypton. “Oh boy,” I go,
“welcome to the World of Superscience. “
I guess he was just as
freaked to see me. I mean, I was wearing my working outfit, which was
just the gold brassiere and G-string I picked up on’ my
travels, with Old Betsy hung on my hip. Maybe it was the broadsword,
or maybe he was just overcome by my ample figure, but he just came to
a stop in the middle of the road and stared. I mean, if I whush
through space in a drop-dead outfit I stumbled on at Lillie Rubin, I
land in Fred Flintstone’s backyard. If I slide into my fighting
harness instead, it figures I end up in some totally tasteful garden
party beyond the stars. You can’t win, right?
Which
reminds me, Bitsy. Every time I see you, you look like you need
intensive care from
the Fashion Resuscitators. Look at you now! Everything you’re
wearing is black or drab colors and loose and shapeless. And hightop
gym shoes with black socks? Bitsy! Has the FBS Catalog lost
your address, or what?
Never
mind. I looked at this Luke Floorwalker and I figured it was time for
an exchange of interplanetary greetings. I stepped forward and raised
my hand in the universal sign of peace. “I come from a planet
not unlike your own,” I go, real solemn. “I am Maureen
Danielle Birnbaum. Do not call me Muffy.”
This
dweeb just boggled at me with his mouth opening and closing like a
goldfish or
something. Finally he figured out how his mouthparts were connected,
and he goes, “You’ve come much sooner than we expected.”
“Excuse me?”
I go. I hadn’t fully realized that my reputation was spreading
all through the universe.
“We didn’t
think there’d be any serious trouble until after totality,”
he goes.
“I’m no
trouble,” I go. “I come in peace for all mankind.”
He took a couple of steps
forward and looked a little closer at my garb. He reached out with a
finger to boink my chestal covering. Guys are always trying to do
that to me. “Whoa, like men have died for less,” I go, in
my Command Voice.
“Forgive me, my
dear girl. Your fall into barbarism was also more immediate than we
predicted. “
This
goober rapidly needed
straightening out. Old Betsy sang as I whipped her from her scabbard.
“I’m not your dear girl, like I’m totally
sure,” I go. “ And it’s not barbarism or anything.
It’s like being fully wild and free.”
“Whatever,”
he goes. “But let me introduce myself. I am Segol 154. “
He cocked his head to one side, so I was supposed to be impressed or
something.
“Segol 154?”
I go. “Is that like a name you spraypaint on subway cars? You
live on 154th Street, or what?”
Now it was his turn to
look bummed out. “I am Segol 154. That is my cognomination.”
He said it with this little grisly sneer.
“Well,
forget you, “
I go. I just didn’t like his attitude, you know?
He paid no attention.
“May I ask you, how long have you been under this delusion?”.
I go, “What
delusion?”
He goes, “This
belief that you’re from another planet?”
Now,
see, in everyone of these doggone exploits there comes a time when I
have to prove I’m
from another planet. Sometimes it’s hard and sometimes it’s
easy. So I go, “Why can’t I be from another
planet?”
Segol
154 just shook his head sadly. “Because there are
no other planets. Lagash is all alone, circling Alpha. There are
five other suns, but no planets. Although in the last ten years, the
work of Aton 77 and others has deduced the existence of a lesser
satellite, we’re equally certain that no life could exist upon
it. “
“No
other planets? Oh yeah?”
Okay, so maybe I could’ve come up with a stronger argument.
“Yes, that is the
case. So you see, you can’t be from another planet. You were
born on Lagash, just as I was.”
“I
never even heard of
Lagash until a minute ago! I came from Earth, that beautiful
sapphire-blue world my people so sadly take for granted. “
“If that is the
case,” he goes, smirking like an idiot, “how do you
explain the fact that you speak English?”
Well, I’ve told you
before, it’s just amazing, huh? No matter where my adventures
take me, they speak English when I get there. Prince Van spoke
English on Mars, and the ape-things in the center of the Earth spoke
English, and they were still speaking English in the far distant
future. So I guess it was no biggie to find out they spoke English on
Lagash, too. But I wasn’t going to tell Segol about all that.
“I have studied your language,” I go. “We’ve
picked up your television programs on Earth for some time, okay?”
His eyes kind of
narrowed, and he looked at me for a little while without saying
anything. Then he goes, “What is television?”
Omigod!
Like I’m on a weirdo planet with no TV! “Your
radio broadcasts,” I go, “that’s what I meant.
We’ve studied your language and learned many things about your
culture and all.”
He nodded. “It’s
possible,” he goes. “There are many questions I must ask
you, before I can be sure you are speaking the truth. But we can’t
talk here. You must come with me. I was on my way to the Hideout.”
Now, believe me, at first
I thought he was a complete dudley, but I’ve learned to give
guys the benefit of the doubt. You never know who’s got like,
you know, a cute little ski shack in Vail or something. So I didn’t
bail on this guy just ‘cause he looked like he probably bit the
heads off chipmunks in his bedroom or something, and anyway he’d
just invited me to cruise the local Lagash nightlife.
I
turned around in front of him and I go, “So am I dressed for
the Hideout, or what? Is there dancing, or are we just going to like,
you know, sit there and drink
all night?” Which would’ve been okay, too. We warrior
women can party till our brass brassieres turn green.
Segol looked at me like I
was whoa nelly crazy or something. “What are you talking
about?” he goes. “We’re in terrible danger here.
The Hideout is our only chance of survival. We have to hurry!”
Okay,
I’m not as stupid as I look: I finally figured out that the
Hideout was like a hideout
or something. We started hurrying back down the road. “Where
is this place?” I go. “ And what are you so afraid
of!”
“It’s
going to be dark soon,” he goes, as if that said it all.
I laughed. “Your
mama wants you home by suppertime, huh?”
“My dear girl--”
He saw the grim look in my eyes and caught himself. “Maureen,
perhaps you haven’t heard Aton’s ideas explained
clearly.”
I
go, “So who is
this Aton dude when he’s at home? You mentioned him
before.”
“Aton 77 is one of
the most brilliant scientists on all of Lagash. He is a famous
astronomer, and director of Saro University. He’s predicted
that the entire world will go mad tonight when total Darkness falls.”
It
sounded mondo dumb to me. “That’s why God gave us
nightlights,” I go. “I mean, I even had this Jiminy
Cricket lamp when I was a kid. Wouldn’t go to sleep or anything
until Daddy turned it on for me.”
His
voice trailed off. I don’t think he even heard me, you know? He
goes, “ And then after the insanity starts, the fire and
destruction will begin. Nothing will be left. Our entire
civilization, every vestige of our culture, all
of it will be eradicated. And the Observatory will be the
first target, thanks to the Cultists. Our only hope is the Hideout. “
I
slid Old Betsy back into her scabbard while I thought about what
Segol had said. “You’re not kidding about this,” I
go. “You’re like really
scared, huh?”
He dropped his gaze to
the ground. “I admit it,” he goes, “I’m
terrified.”
Well, jeez, Bitsy, he was
like such a little boy when he said that! I couldn’t help but
feel sorry for him, even though I still figured he was maybe
stretching the truth just a teensy bit. “That Aton guy is still
up there at the Observatory, right?” I go.
Segol looked up at me
sort of mournfully. “Yes, along with a few of the other
scientists who volunteered to stay behind and record the event.”
“And you were
supposed to be there, too?”
He looked ashamed, but
all he did was nod his head.
“And instead,
you’re just zeeking out and lamming it for the Hideout. “
“We’ve got to
move fast, because they’ll be coming from Saro City. They may
kill us if they catch us here!”
I
had this picture in my mind of those clearly freaked villagers waving
torches around in Frankenstein,
you know? I knew I could save this guy from a dozen or two
rousted locals, but if the whole city turned up, whoa, like
see ya bye! So the Hideout sounded like a maximum cool idea.
We
followed the road downhill, and I had more time to think about what
Segol had said. I mean, either the deadly cold of deep space had
frozen my brain, or I was like really
missing something. All I knew was that a lot of irked people were
going to shred the Observatory, because they’d be driven loony
by the darkness. See, I hadn’t noticed the capital D Segol
had put on “Darkness.”
“Mr. 154,” I
go, “or may I call you Segol? Can I like ask you something?”
“Huh?” he
goes. He was way spaced, and he wasn’t even paying attention to
me or anything.
“What
makes this night different from all other nights?” I go. There
was this moment of quiet when I realized that I sounded just like my
little cousin Howard on Passover at my Uncle Sammy’s. Maybe I’d
heard Segol wrong. Maybe he said the threat was coming from “Pharaoh
City,” not “Saro City.”
“Why, nothing,”
he goes. “Aton’s warning is that tonight will be exactly
like last night, two thousand years ago. That’s the terrible
truth.”
“You
want me to believe it hasn’t been dark in two thousand years? I
mean, when do you people sleep?
Look, Lagash would have to practically creep around on its
whatyoucall for the days to be that long. And then imagine what it
would be like for the poor people on the dark side, going to the
beach in the pitch-dark all the time.” The whole idea was like
too weird for words.
He goes, “I can
almost believe that you’ve come here from some other world.
Lagash turns once about its axis in a little more than twenty-three
hours. Our nearly eternal day is caused by the six suns. There is
always at least one in the sky at all times.”
“Six?”
I go. “Now that’s just too
flaky. If you had that many up there, they’d be
blamming into each other all the time.”
He just gave me his
indulgent, superior little smirk again. “I see that you aren’t
familiar with celestial mechanics,” he goes.
“And
like you probably aren’t familiar with anything else,”
I go. I could tell by his expression that I’d really ranked
him out.
“The perpetual
presence of one or more suns in the skies of Lagash means that
Darkness falls only once every 2,049 years, when five of the suns
have set and the invisible moon passes between us and Beta, the only
remaining source of light and warmth.” He glanced upward, and I
saw him freeze in terror. Already, the edge of the moon had dented
the ruddy edge of Beta.
“Don’t
pay any attention to that,” I go. I was trying to lend him some
of my inexhaustible store of courage. But it was like odd.
you know? There are all these stories on Earth about lucky
explorers saving their lives by using eclipses to scare the natives.
I had to do just the opposite. If the mindless mob caught us, I had
to pretend that I could end the eclipse.
“Soon,” he
goes, “the Stars!”
“You bet,” I
go. I didn’t see what all the excitement was. Of course, I
didn’t hear the capital letter again.
“When
the Stars come out, the world will come to an end.” He looked
at me, and his eyes were all big and bugged out. I hated to see him
so scared, okay? Even in that cranberry light he was sort of
cute--for a brainy type, I mean. He wasn’t Prince Van
or anything, but he wasn’t any Math Club geek, either.
“And you blame it
all on the stars?” I go.
“Strange, isn’t
it? That Aton’s warning should agree with the Cult? Believe me,
he wasn’t happy about it, but he’s absolutely sure of his
conclusions. There is definite proof that nine previous cultures have
climbed to civilization, only to be destroyed by the Stars. And now
it is our turn. Tomorrow, the world will belong to savages and
madmen, and the long process will begin again.”
I
tapped him on the skull. “Hello, Segol?” I go. “Is
anybody like home? You
haven’t told me what the stars have to do with it.”
He wasn’t really
paying attention to me, which just goes to show you how zoned out he
was, ‘cause I made a pretty dramatic presentation with my boobs
clad in a metal Maidenform and my broadsword and everything. He goes,
“Beenay 25 had an insane idea that there might be as many as
two dozen stars in the universe. Can you imagine?”
“Beenay 25?”
I go. “It sounds like an acne cream.”
“And
the Stars, whatever they are, only come out in the Darkness. I think
it’s all superstitious hogwash, myself. But Aton believes that
the Cult’s ravings may have some basis in fact, that their Book
of Revelations may have been written shortly after the last
nightfall--”
Bitsy,
you know how they say “my blood ran cold?” The
orthodontist shows his bill to your parents and like their blood runs
cold, okay? Well,
right then I learned what they meant. It took a whole long time to
seep into my brain, but finally I realized like, hey, if night falls
only once every two thousand years around this place, then the stars
won’t come out again for centuries, right? And without
stars, I’d never be able to whush myself home! I’d be
stuck on Lagash forever and ever! And I already knew they
didn’t have TV, so that meant they also didn’t have any
of the other trappings of modern civilization that are dependent on
TV, like the Shopping Channel and Lorenzo Lamas. And could the
Galleria have existed back in those pre-test-pattern dark ages? I
think not.
So I was not going to be
hanging out on Lagash long enough to find out what the dawn would
bring. I had one window of opportunity, and I wasn’t going to
miss it. “What about the weather?” I go.
“Hmm?” Like
Segol the Bionic Brain was aware of my existence again.
“You
know, if it gets all cloudy, we won’t be able to see
the stars.” Then I’d be trapped there for good.
He brightened up
considerably for a moment. “Yes,” he goes, “that
would be a miracle.”
“Not
for some of us,”
I go. First I thought he’d fallen desperately in love with me
and wanted me to stay on Lagash. But this bozo was thinking that
after two thousand years of buildup, the big night might come and it
would be too overcast to see anything. Quel irony, right?
N.S.L., sweetie--No Such
Luck. Beta, the red sun in the sky, was now only a thin crescent like
a bloody sliver of fingernail or something. It wouldn’t be much
longer to total Darkness. It was like slightly obvious that we’d
never make it to the Hideout in time. I was stuck out on this road
with Segol 154, who was like a total loon. Still, the Hideout was all
he could think about.
“We’ve
got to hurry,” he goes, putting his grubby hands on my person
and kind of dragging me along after him. “We’ve got to
get to the Hideout. We must make sure you’re safe. Your destiny
is to have babies, many
babies, who will be the hope of Lagash’s future.”
I
disenhanded myself from him and laughed, a proud and haughty laugh
meaning “If you weren’t such a pitiful knob.
I’d hack you to little pieces for that remark.” Let
me tell you a little secret, honey: no matter where you go in the
known universe, the men are all the same. It’s like these
honkers are what God gave us as substitutes because all the
really buf guys are on back order.
So what does he do? He
grabs me by both shoulders and goggles into my face. “You...will
be...the mother of...my children!” he goes. And even if there
wasn’t a line of drool down his chin, like there should have
been.
You
know and I know--and, believe
me, Bitsy, now this Segol knows--nobody paws me uninvited.
I didn’t care if civilization was quickly coming to a
screeching halt. I was now totally bugged, and I was going to teach
him a lesson in interspatial etiquette. I put one hand flat against
his chest and pushed real hard, and the next thing he’s down in
the road squinting up at me all surprised. I whipped Old Betsy from
her scabbard again and took a menacing step toward him. “Look!”
he screams. “Behind you!”
“Oh, like I’m
so sure,” I go. But I heard these grumbly sounds, and I turned
and saw a mob of people huffing up the hill toward us. They did not
look pleased.
Segol scrabbled to his
feet and stood beside me. “Let me do the talking, little lady,”
he goes. “They may still listen to reason. And maybe you’d
better put that silly sword away.”
I
decided to let him take his shot. I didn’t even freak out about
being called “little lady.” I was absolutely beyond
arguing with him. He could try talking to the mob, and when he’d
said his piece, I was going to lop his grody head off. Okay, like I’d
given him fair warning, hadn’t I?
But he wasn’t even
aware that he’d bummed me out. He started walking toward the
crowd from the city, both hands raised above his head. I don’t
know what that was supposed to mean. Segol probably thought he was
one dangerous dude. Maybe he thought that with his hands in the air,
he wouldn’t look like such a terrible threat to the safety of
those five hundred howling maniacs. “Listen to me!” he
goes. “Listen to me! I mean you no harm!”
Yeah, right. That made
the mob feel a whole lot better about everything, for sure. There was
this raspy guy at the front of the crowd. He looked like he’d
been getting ready for the end of civilization for a long time now,
and like he couldn’t wait for it to happen, you know? He had
wild scraggly hair and big popping old eyes. He just about had a bird
when he recognized Segol 154. “That’s one of them!”
he goes, waving his arms around a lot. “He’s from the
Observatory!”
Segol gave him this smile
that was supposed to calm him down or something. “Come,”
he goes, “let us reason together.”
“They
didn’t come here to talk,
“ I go. “They came here to work your butt.”
Someone else in the crowd
started shouting, “Death to the unbelievers! Death to the
blasphemers in the Observatory!”
That
cry was taken up by others until it became this ugly chant. I wanted
to tell them, hey, I’d never even been
in the Observatory, but they wouldn’t even have heard me.
Finally, a tall man in a
black robe pushed his way to the front of the crowd. When he raised
his hands, they all shut up. “Silence, my friends,” he
goes. “Let us give these profaners of the truth one last chance
to redeem their souls.”
“Who’s that?”
I go.
“His name is Sor
5,” Segol goes. “He is the leader of the Cultists.”
“Oh, huh,” I
go. I turned to this Sor 5 and I go, “I don’t know
anything about your Cult. What’s your problem, anyway?”
The
guy in the robe just gave me this sad little smile. “It’s
not my problem,
young lady. It’s yours. You have only a few minutes left before
Lagash is swallowed up by the Cave of Darkness. Unless you embrace
the revealed truth of our faith, your soul will be stripped from you
when the Stars appear. You will become a savage, unreasoning brute. “
I
looked at the flipped-out people who made up his congregation, and I
figured most of them didn’t have far to go. Like maybe they’d
already seen the
stars, like at some kind of preview party or something. “So
what are you guys selling?” I go.
Sor goes, “Behold!
The Cave of Darkness is already engulfing Beta.”
I looked up. There wasn’t
much of the red sun left. “Really,” I go. “Tell me
about it.”
“Soon all will be
in Darkness, and the Stars will blaze down in all their fury. “
“Really.”
Sor looked confused for a
few seconds. “You do not deny any of this?”
I go, “See, you’re
telling me the same thing that Segol told me, and I can’t
figure out what your hang-up is.”
That made him mad. I
thought he was going to split his black robe. “We believe the
Stars are the source of the Heavenly Flame, which will scourge and
cleanse Lagash. The infidels of the Observatory insist that the Stars
are nothing but burning balls of gas, physical objects like our own
six suns. They refuse to grant that the Stars have any holy power at
all. “
“Death to the
unbelievers!” screamed the mob. “Death to the blasphemers
in the Observatory!” Sor tried again to quiet them, but this
time they wouldn’t listen. They surged forward, and I was like
sure they were fully ready to tear us limb from limb. I brandished
Old Betsy, but I backed away uphill, praying that Segol and I could
somehow make it to the Observatory alive.
The astronomer shot me a
terrified glance. “You hold them off,” he goes, “and
I’ll run for help.”
“Right,” I
go, sort of contemptuously, “you just do that.” He was
like a real poohbutt, you know?
Just
then, the last red ember of Beta flickered in the sky and went out as
the eclipse reached totality. There was a long moment of this really
creepy quiet. You couldn’t hear a sound, not a person gasping
or an animal rustling, not even the wind. It was like being in a
movie theater when the film breaks, just before the audience starts
getting rowdy. And then the stars
came out, normally No Big Deal.
Except
on Lagash, it was a
big deal, and not just ‘cause it’d been two thousand
years since the last time. Bitsy, these people really knew how to
have stars! I looked up, and there were a zillion times as
many stars as we have on Earth. It reminded me of when we were
getting ready for that dance at Brush-Bennett, and you spilled that
whole box of glitter on my black strapless. Remember? Well, on
Lagash, the night sky looked just like that. All the places between
the stars were crammed with stars.
“Oh...my...God!”
I was totally impressed, but I wasn’t, you know, going
insane or anything.
“Stars!” goes
Segol in this kind of strangled voice.
“Surprise,” I
go. I mean, he was a real melvin.
Now
the mob started screaming and screeching and carrying on. They’d
known the Stars were coming, but like they didn’t have any idea
what stars really were,
or how many of them there’d be, and all that. So
even Sor looked haired, but I give him credit, he pulled himself
together pretty fast. “Our salvation will be the destruction of
the Observatory,” he goes. I mean, he couldn’t bring
himself to look up at the stars anymore, and he had to kind of croak
his speech out, but he made himself heard. “If we destroy the
Observatory and everyone in it, the Stars will spare us. And we must
begin with them.”
He
was pointing at me and Segol. “That is so
lame,” I go. “Don’t be stupid. There’s
nothing to be--”
Sadly,
I didn’t have the time to finish my explanation. The crowd was
full-on crazy and ready to roust. When they charged, I felt a sudden
calmness flood through me. I didn’t know what
Segol was doing and I didn’t care. Old Betsy whistled
through the air as I hacked and hewed at the waves of shrieking
lunatics. Bodies piled up in front of me and on both sides. I took a
couple of biffs and bruises, but I was too skillful and like too
excellent for them to fight through my guard.
Of
course, they had me outnumbered, and after a while I realized I was
way tired. I wasn’t going to be able to handle all
of them, so while I fought I tried to think up some, you know,
strategy. And then I saw their leader over on the side of the
road, kneeling down in the dark, with his face turned up to the sky
where the eclipse was still chugging along and the stars were still
blazing away. I started working my way toward him, wading through his
nutty buddies with my broadsword cutting a swath before me.
Finally I was right
beside him. I reached down and grabbed him by the neck of his robe
and jerked him to his feet. “I am Sor!” he goes, like
frothing a little in the corners of his mouth. He wasn’t all
there anymore, okay?
“You’re
sore,” I go. I let him go and he fell in a heap at my feet.
“Tell your fruitcake army to stand still and shut up, or I’ll
split your skull open and let the starlight in.”
Sor stared at me
fearfully for a few seconds. Then he got to his feet and raised his
arms. “Stand still and shut up!” he goes.
All the rest of the mob
stopped what they were doing, which was mostly climbing over the
stacks of bodies, trying to get to me.
“Good,” I go.
“You have no reason to be afraid.”
Segol
started babbling. I’d wondered what had happened to him.
“Beenay guessed a dozen, maybe two dozen Stars. But this! The
universe, the stars, the bigness!”
“Lagash
is nothing, a speck of dust!” cried a voice from the mob.
“We’re
nothing but insects, less
than insects!”
“I want light!
Let’s burn the Observatory!”
“We’re so
small, and the Darkness is so huge! Our suns and our planet are
insignificant!”
Well,
these people had a serious problem. All of a sudden, they realized
that there was a lot more to the universe than their precious Lagash.
Then I had an idea that might keep these frenzied folks from
thrashing all of
their civilization and maybe save my own neck, too.
I
go, “There’s no reason to be afraid. The stars are not
what you think. I know.
I come from a world that has studied them for many centuries.”
“She’s mad!
The Stars have driven her insane!”
“Listen to her!”
Segol goes. “She told me the same story long before the Stars
appeared. She speaks the truth. “
“Yes,”
I go, “there are
other stars in the universe. That’s just something you ‘re
going to have to learn to live with. But not as many as that.”
I pointed up, and noticed that the eclipse had moved on past
totality, and a teeny tiny thread of red light was starting to grow
on one side of Beta.
“Then what are all
those thousands of points of light?” goes Sor.
“Tonight
is a night for revelations and strange truth,” I go. I’m
always pretty good in a crisis like that. I can talk my way out of
anything. Hey, you
know that. You were my roommate, right? “Lagash, your six
suns, and the other twelve stars in the universe are surrounded by a
huge ball of ice. “
“Ice?” goes
Segol. He sounded like he was having just a little bit of trouble
buying it.
“Sure,
ice, “ I go,
acting kind of ticked off that he doubted me. “What did you
think, that the universe just sort of went on and on forever?
That’s so real, I’m totally sure.”
“A
wall of ice,” Sor goes. “The Book
of Revelations speaks of a Cave of Darkness. I don’t see
why there can’t be a wall of ice as well.”
Now
everyone had stopped trying to grab me by the throat. They were all
like hanging on my every word, okay? “But what are
the Stars?” someone goes.
“The Stars are an
illusion,” I go. “What you see up there are only the
reflections of the dozen real stars, shining on the craggy ice wall
of the universe. “
There was this silence. I
held my breath ‘cause everything would be totally cool if they
believed me, but I’d have to start fighting for my life again
if they didn’t. Five seconds passed, then ten. Then all at once
they all went “ Ahhhh. “
Sor goes, “It’s
the divine truth!” I saw tears running down his face.
“Look!” goes
Segol. “Beta! It’s coming back!”
Sor waved his arms around
and got their attention. “Let’s hurry back to Saro City,”
he goes. “We can spread the news and keep our brothers and
sisters from burning our homes. The other suns will rise in a few
hours, and then life must go on as before. We must tell the others
what we’ve learned, and broadcast the information to everyone
on Lagash.” Then they turned and marched away, without so much
as a thank-you.
When we were alone again
on the road, Segol came over to me. He had this big, spazzy grin on
his face. “That was really something, my dear,” he goes.
“My
name’s Maureen,
and this is the last time I’m going to remind you.
If you have trouble remembering that, you can call me Princess.”
Well, Bitsy, I know I was sort of stretching the truth, but
sometimes I liked to think of myself as sort of almost engaged to
Prince Van of the Angry Red Planet. I mean” a woman’s
reach should exceed her grasp, or what’s a mixer at Yale for?
“Then
congratulations, Maureen. You were outstanding. You have saved us
from centuries of Dark Ages. I think you’ll always be
remembered in the history books of Lagash.”
I shrugged. “What
can I say?” I go. “It’s like a gift.”
Segol nodded, then hung
his head in shame. “I guess I owe you an apology, too. I wasn’t
much help to you during the battle.”
“‘S
all right,” I go. “You weren’t really ready for all
those stars.” I was just being gracious, you know? I’d
been a little zoned out, too, when I saw how many there were, but I
got over it.
He looked back up at me,
as grateful as that awful Akita puppy Daddy brought home for Pammy’s
birthday. “Perhaps you’d permit me the honor,” he
goes, “of asking for your hand in marriage.”
I
was like too stunned to say anything for a moment. I wiped Old Betsy
off on this dead guy’s shirt and slid her slowly back into the
scabbard. Then I go, “No, I won’t permit you the honor of
having my hand in anything.
Nothing personal, okay?”
He was disappointed, of
course, but he’d live. “I understand. Would you answer a
question, then?”
“Sure, as long as
it’s not like way lewd or demeaning to all women. “
He
took a deep breath and he goes, “Is it true?
What you told the Cultists? Is it true that Lagash is in the
center of a gigantic ball of ice?”
I
laughed. I mean, how megadumb could he be? I wasn’t surprised
that Sor 5 and his crowd swallowed that story, but I didn’t
think a real astronomer would buy it. Then I realized that this was
not the World of
Superscience, after all, and that Segol was just a poor guy trying to
understand like the laws of nature and everything. I couldn’t
bring myself to weird him out any more than he already was. “Right,
like totally,” I go. “Maybe someday your own Observatory
will figure out the distance from Lagash to the ice wall. I used
to know, but I forgot.”
“Thank
you, Maureen,” he goes. Suddenly he’d gotten so humble it
was ill. “I
think we’d better hurry back to tell Aton and the others the
news. Beenay and the rest of the photographers should have captured
the Stars with their imaging equipment. They were all prepared, of
course, but even so they may have given way to panic.” He
looked down at the ground again, probably remembering how he’d
bugged out of there in panic even before the stars came
out.
“I’m
sorry, Segol,” I go. “I can’t
go back to the Observatory with you. I’m needed elsewhere.
I’ve got to flash on back to Earth. If I wait much longer the
eclipse will be over, the sky will get light, the stars will go out
for another two thousand years, and I’ll never see my dear,
dear friend Bitsy ever again. “ Sure, sweetie, even in
this moment of awful tension, I thought of you. You believe me,
don’t you?
Segol sighed. “I
suppose you must go, then. I’ll never forget you, little la--I
mean, Maureen.”
I
gave him this sort of noblesse
oblige smile, but I stopped short of getting all emotional and
everything. “Farewell, Segol 154,” I go.”Tell the
others that someday, when you’ve proved yourselves worthy, my
people will welcome yours into the Federation of Planets. Until then,
one last word of advice: try to discourage anyone who starts fiddling
around with radio astronomy. I think it will make you all very, very
unhappy.”
“Radio astronomy?”
he goes. “How can you look at space with a radio?”
“Never
mind, just remember what I said.” I raised one hand in the
universal sign of “That’s all, folks.” Then I
raised my supplicating arms to the stars, went eeny
meeny miney mo, and whushed myself on out of there.
I’m
sorry I had to listen to the whole story. By the time Maureen
finished it, we had finished off all the strawberries, and a
quiche with nothing in it is like tortellini salad without the
tortellini. In the months that Josh and I had been together, he’d
taught me a lot about food and everything. We didn‘t have
supper any more, we dined. And then like I did the dishes.
Anyway,
it was getting late, and you know I had to rush her out of there, and
I tried to explain to her
but she just didn’t want to listen, so then I put my back
against her and shoved her toward the door, and I guess she got
annoyed or something ‘cause then I shoved some more but she
wasn‘t there and I fell on the kitchen floor and she was
standing over me with her sword in her hand and she had on
what she called her warrior-woman expression, and I could just see
the headlines in the Post: QUEENS WOMAN DIES IN SHISH KABOB
TRAGEDY. Josh would never be able to face our folks again. So I go.
“Back off, Muffy. “ Wrong thing to say.
“You’re as
bad as those ape-things in the center of the Earth!” She was
screeching now.
I go, “Just bag
your face, will you? Some roommate you are. Where’s that old
Greenberg School bond we used to have?”
That
got to her. She sheathed her jeweled sword and calmed down. She
helped me get up and dusted me off a little. “I’m sorry,
Bitsy, “ she goes. I
noticed she was blushing.
“All
right, I guess, “ I
go. We looked at each other a little longer, then I started to cry
for some reason, and then she trickled a couple, and we
started hugging each other and bawling, and the front door opened and
I heard Josh coming in, and all he needed was another
unexplained visit from his favorite Savage Amazon, so I go, “Maureen,
quick, you’ve got to hide!” And then I felt
like we were all on I Love Lucy or something, and I started to
laugh.
She
laughed, too. Josh didn’t
laugh, though. Sometimes it’s like we only see his friends,
and why can’t I ever have my friends over? Josh goes,
“Because my friends don’t wave broadswords around
on the subway. “ I suppose he has a point there.
Balance
by Mike
Resnick
SUSAN CALVIN
STEPPED UP TO THE PODIUM AND SURVEYED her audience: the stockholders
of the United States Robots and Mechanical Men Corporation.
“I want to thank
you for your attendance,” she said in her brisk, businesslike
way, “and to update you on our latest developments.”
What
a fearsome face she has, thought August Geller, seated in the
fourth row of the audience. She reminds me of my seventh-grade
English teacher, the one I was always afraid of
Calvin
launched into a detailed explanation of the advanced new circuitry
she had introduced into the positronic brain, breaking it down into
terms a layman--even a stockholder--could understand.
Brilliant
mind, thought Geller. Absolutely brilliant. It’s
probably just as well. Imagine a countenance like that without a mind
to offset it.
“Are
there any questions at this point?” asked Calvin, her cold blue
eyes scanning the audience.
“I have one,”
said a pretty young woman, rising to her feet.
“Yes?”
The woman voiced her
question.
“I thought I had
covered that point,” said Calvin, doing her best to hide her
irritation. “However...”
She launched into an even
more simplistic explanation.
Isn’t
it amazing? thought Geller. Here are two women, one with a
mind like a steel trap, the other with an I.Q. that would probably
freeze water, and yet I can’t take my eyes off the woman who
asked that ridiculous question. Poor Dr. Calvin; Nature has such a
malicious sense of humor.
Calvin
noticed a number of the men staring admiringly at her questioner. It
was not the first time that men had found something more fascinating
than Calvin to capture their attention, nor the hundredth, nor the
thousandth.
What
a shame, she thought, that they aren’t more like robots,
that they let their hormones overwhelm their logic. Here I am,
explaining how I plan to spend twelve billion dollars of their money.
and they’re more interested in a pretty face.
Her
answer completed, she launched into a discussion of the attempts they
were making to provide stronger bodies for those robots designed for
extraterrestrial use by the application of titanium frames with tight
molecular bondings.
I
wonder, thought Geller, if she’s ever even had a date
with a man? Not a night of wild passion, God knows, but just a meal
and perhaps a trip to the theater, where she didn’t talk
business. He shook his head almost imperceptibly. No, he
decided, it would probably bore her to tears. All she cares about
are her formulas and equations. Good looks would be wasted on her.
Calvin
caught Geller staring at her, and met and held his gaze.
What
a handsome young man, she thought. I wonder if I’ve seen
him at any previous meetings? I’m sure I’d remember if I
had. Why is he staring at me so intently?
I
wonder, thought Geller, if
anyone she’s loved has ever loved her back?
Probably
he’s just astounded that a woman can have a brain, she
concluded. As if anything else mattered.
In
fact, thought Geller, I
wonder if she’s ever loved at all?
Look
at that tan, thought Calvin,
still staring at Geller. It’s attractive, to be sure, but do
you ever work, or do you spend all your time lazing mindlessly on the
beach? She fought back an urge to sigh deeply between sentences.
Sometimes it’s hard to imagine that people like you and I
even belong to the same species, I have so much more in common with
my robots.
Sometimes,
thought Geller, when I
listen to you wax rhapsodic about positronic brains and molecular
bonding, it’s hard to imagine that we belong to the same
species, you sound so much like one of your robots.
Still,
thought Calvin against her
will, you are tall and you are handsome, and you certainly have an
air of self-assuredness about you. Most men won’t or can’t
match my gaze. And your eyes are blue and clear. I wonder...
Still,
thought Geller, there must be something there, some core oJ
femininity beneath the harsh features and coldly analytical mind. I
wonder...
Calvin shook her head
inadvertently and almost lost track of what she was saying.
Ridiculous,
she concluded. Absolutely ridiculous.
Geller
stared at her one more time, studying the firm jaw, the broad
shoulders, the aggressive stance, the face devoid of makeup, the hair
that could have been so much more attractive.
Ridiculous, he
concluded. Absolutely ridiculous.
Calvin
spoke for another fifteen minutes, then opened the floor to
questions.
There were two, and she
handled them both succinctly.
“I want to thank
Dr. Calvin for spending this time with us,” concluded Linus
Becker, the young chief operating executive of United States Robots
and Mechanical Men. “ As long as we have her remarkable
intellect working for us, I feel confident that we will continue to
forge ahead and expand the parameters of the science of robotics. “
“I’ll second
that,” said one of the major stockholders. “When we
produce a positronic brain with half the capabilities of our own Dr.
Calvin, the field of robotics will have come of age.”
“Thank you,”
said Calvin, ignoring a strange sense of emptiness within her. “I
am truly flattered.”
“It’s we who
are flattered,” said Becker smoothly, “to be in the
presence of such brilliance.” He applauded her, and soon the
entire audience, including Geller, got to their feet and gave her a
standing ovation.
Then each in turn walked
up to her to introduce himself or herself, and shake her hand, and
comment on her intellect and creativity.
“Thank
you,” said Calvin, acknowledging yet another compliment. You
take my hand as if you expect it to be tungsten and steel, rather
than sinew and bone. Have I come to resemble my robots that much?
“I
appreciate your remarks,” said Calvin to another stockholder. I
wonder if lovers speak to each other in the same hail-fellow-well-met
tones?
And
then Geller stepped up and took her hand, and she almost jumped from
the sensation, the electricity passing from his strong, tanned hand
to her own.
“I think you are
quite our greatest asset, Dr. Calvin,” he said.
“Our robots are our
greatest asset,” she replied graciously. “I’m just
a scientific midwife.”
He
stared intently at her for a moment, and suddenly the tension left
his body. Impossible.
You’re too much like them. If I asked you out, it would be an
act of charity, and I think you are too proud and too perceptive to
accept that particular kind of charity.
She
looked into his eyes one last time. Impossible. I have my work to
do--and my robots never disappoint me by proving to be merely human.
“Remember,
everyone,” announced Becker, “there’s a banquet
three hours from now.” He turned to Calvin. “You’ll
be there, of course.”
Calvin nodded. “I’ll
be there,” she said with a sigh.
She had only an hour to
change into a formal gown for the banquet, and she was running late.
She entered her rather nondescript apartment, walked through the
living room and bedroom, both of which were filled to overflowing
with scientific journals, opened her closet, and began laying out her
clothes on the bed.
“Did anyone ever
tell you that you have the most beautiful blue eyes?” asked her
butler robot.
“Why, thank you,”
said Calvin.
“It’s true,
you know,” continued the butler. “Lovely, lovely eyes, as
blue as the purest sapphire. “
Her robot maid entered
the bedroom to help her dress.
“Such a pretty
smile,” said the maid. “If I had a smile like yours, men
would fight battles just for the pleasure of seeing it turned upon
them.”
“You’re very
kind,” said Calvin.
“Oh,
no, Mistress Susan,” the robot maid corrected her. “
You’re very
beautiful. “
Calvin noticed the robot
chef standing in the doorway to her bedroom.
“Stop staring at
me,” she said. “I’m only half-dressed. Where are
your manners?”
“Legs like yours,
and you expect me to stop staring?” said the chef with a dry,
mechanical chuckle. “Every Bight I dream about meeting a woman
with legs like yours.”
Calvin slipped into her
gown, then waited for the robot maid to zip up the back.
“Such clear, smooth
skin,” crooned the maid. “If I were a woman, that’s
the kind of skin I would want.”
They
are such perceptive creatures, reflected Calvin, as she stood
before a mirror and applied her almost-clear lipstick. Such dear
creatures, she amended. Of course they are just responding to
the needs of First Law--to my needs--but how very thoughtful
they are.
She
picked up her purse and headed to the door.
I
wonder if they ever get tired of reciting this litany?
“You’ll
be the belle of the ball, “ said the robot butler proudly as
she walked out of the apartment.
“Why, thank you
very much,” said Calvin. “You grow more flattering by the
day.”
The robot shook its
metallic head. “It is only flattery if it is a lie, my lady,”
it said just before the door slid shut behind her.
Her emotional balance
fully restored, as it always was whenever she came home from dealing
with human beings, she headed toward the banquet feeling vigorous and
renewed. She wondered if she would be seated near that handsome
August Geller, who had listened to her so intently during her speech.
Upon reflection, she
hoped that she would be seated elsewhere. He aroused certain uneasy
feelings within her, this handsome young man--and fantasies, when all
was said and done, were for lesser intellects which, unlike herself,
couldn’t cope with the cold truths of the real world.
The Present Eternal
by Barry N.
Malzberg
SO ARNOLD POTTERLEY
WENT HOME. WHERE, AFTER ALL, WAS there to go? If there was nowhere to
hide, then you might at least be uncomfortable, squirm under the
knowledge of complete exposure where, at least, you were most
comfortable.
At least, that was
Potterley’s way of rationalizing this ultimate disaster. Others
had different views, of course. Nimmo went to the outback. Foster
went insane.
I
have been asked to write a history of the world after the
chronoscope. This is a great honor, of course. I am being honored in
that request. It is not so long that I have been writing, after all,
first numbers and then for a long time the alphabet, until at last I
began to feel more secure with words and phrases and then whole
sentences; still this is a big leap for me. “If you do not do
it, Jorg, who will do it?” I have been told, rather asked, but
this does not honor so much as it frightens me. Many things frighten
me of course; the chronoscope taught us to be afraid of everything.
The chronoscope taught us common sense. The chronoscope taught us the
true way of the world. “ Jorg” is not real, is my nom,
as they say, de plumay.
Caroline
Potterley waited for months after she could have done it to finally
bring the machine into her home, seek her dead daughter, Laurel. To
see her again, to know the little girl as she had been had
constituted the final passion of her life and yet when it was
possible at last, when Arnold had insisted and Foster had made that
thing and the time-viewer, for reasons she had never understood had
escaped to the entire world...when that opportunity was, at last,
hers, Caroline found herself in thrall, held back, locked against her
own desire. She knew that once she brought in the machine and
everyone was doing it now, Arnold refused but how could he have
stopped her?, once she used the controls and instructions and found
her dead daughter she would fall and fall, plunge into something,
some quality of emotion which she had never known...and it was the
need to fight against this stricture, to fight against that
last and terrible plunge which caused her to hold back but there came
finally that point at which she could no longer resist.
“I can’t hold
back any longer, Arnold,” she would have said if they had still
been talking in these months, but they were not. Arnold was never
home except to sleep and sometimes even not at night, he wandered
around in grief and shock, pulling at the pockets of his suit jackets
and finishing the small bottles of wine which case by case he brought
in and bottle by bottle he drained. So she did not say this to him,
merely made the necessary arrangements which were easy to do in this
strange and terrible world which had evolved, and opened the viewer
to her history, to that time before the fire when
--When she had had a
little girl laughing and tumbling in the corridors of her life, when
she and Laurel had told one another secrets which now she could not,
somehow, remember.
This is my partial
history of the world after the chronoscope, then. No one can write
the full history, who has the time? Who has the tools? It was the
criminal, the necessary part of our lives. I am making some of this
up. I am imagining some of this as the way it should have been. No
one who was there at the time bothered to write it down or to put it
in final form, it is left to me to make it up as best I can. That is
what was said to me, “Make it up as best you can. If it seems
to fit, then make it fit. There are no truths. What is truth? What
can truth be? Set it down as you see fit. “ And so on and so
forth in this difficult and imperfect time. I was talking about who
used it first. Who is to say who used it first? All of them did,
everyone did. But I think it must have been the thieves and lowlifes
who perceived its lesser possibilities, those dedicated to the
transcendent and the bravest view of matters who would have adapted
the chronoscope first, not the leaders of nations but those who
toiled in the outskirts of the nations. For them the chronoscope
would yield a kind of eternal present through which they could
scamper gratefully, thoughtfully, seeking grander device. Who else
could it have been? It was these visionaries of course, who first
made use of the device. This is no surprise, those like Potterley are
always ahead of the herd in their willingness to try new and
different means.
Of course everyone,
theoretically, who used the timeviewer was a criminal by fiat; we are
talking (notice how easily I slide into the voice of authority and
generalization, that pontifical “we,” but I have been
reading many of the old texts in preparation for this assignment and
in order to find the proper approach) rather of professionals, those
who considered it already an occupation. Secret combinations,
long-buried hiding places, crevices containing the untaxed
unconverted profits...all of these were easily available to a patient
and understanding scan.
Crimes of violence and
passion, surprisingly, diminished; the chronoscope made passion and
violence vicariously available to the widest, most eager audience and
the pre-chronoscope sex lives of the famous and desired were--well,
they were most famous and desired.
In the viewer, then, in
that narrow and focused tube of memory, Laurel waved at her, skipped
to the bottom of the slide and began her tumbling ascent, in the
shafts of indifferent late afternoon light (it must have been that
first October they had the slide, Laurel’s teeth were uneven
and the dress she wore had been somehow lost after one season,
Caroline remembered this, she remembered everything) she seemed ever
more vulnerable as she rose and yet somehow, mixed with the
vulnerability, there was a toughness, a security of effort, a
determination which would have fifteen years later, maybe less, made
her a fearsome young woman. Caroline could see that strength, could
take it for the moment into herself and knowing that, knowing that
the twenty-year-old Laurel would have been able to direct
circumstance as Caroline never could, gave her a sudden and
shuddering moment of insight, of possibility, which in the thin gray
light cast from the viewer seemed to cast her up very much as Laurel
herself seemed to rise, seemed to lock them into some passionate and
savage assertion which could, in that moment, reach out from the
constricted space of the viewer and become, almost become, the world.
One
year after the particulars of chronoscopy appeared on a popular
science program any dummy could have figured out, your Tiffany, who
thought of herself still as lost in the darkness of crime, walked
into the home of Paul Taber, owner of half the casinos in Miami.
There was no need to fear the presence of Taber or anyone else; she
had cleared that. She had watched Taber and his fifth wife leave and,
furthermore, she had watched them take a last look, another
little security peek for them at the jewels and cash that a
careful scan through the years had shown them so industriously
accumulating right up to that point, twelve hours earlier, where they
had secured the house (no problem for Tiffany) and left on a long,
sudden, necessary trip.
On the way to the safe
with the real stuff, humming a little song of accomplishment, Tiffany
picked up a few bangles here and a few baubles over there, working
from the map of the premises she had sketched out so carefully, so
industriously, put them into her little sack. Just as she scampered
toward the safe, she saw the shadows against the window and then a
rough, clumsy but manifestly accomplished thug came into the light
and stared at her. He seemed to be holding a sack of his own.
“I hadn’t
thought of this,” Tiffany said.
“Who are you?”
the thug asked.
“But I should have
thought of it,” Tiffany said. “I mean, it doesn’t
show the future, right?”
“What
future?” the thug said. “This
is the future. Okay, hand over the stuff.”
“It’s mine,”
she said stupidly. “I worked for it.”
The thug pulled out a gun
and pointed it with easy accomplishment at a dangerous area of
Tiffany’s chest. “You didn’t work hard enough,”
he said.
“Protestant ethic,”
Tiffany said pointlessly. “I was here first, anyway. “
“But
I’m here now. And
I can open that safe as easy as you. Easier. I know the combination.”
“So do I.”
“The viewer,”
he said. Understanding flooded the thug’s features; he
appeared, suddenly, years younger and more alert. It did wonders for
his complexion, too. “You have one of those things, too. You
can look at the past.”
“I’m also
patient and careful,” Tiffany said. “If you had done any
real research at all instead of grabbing one of those ten-cent
viewers and spinning the dials, you would have seen that there’s
a spot in this place which has an alarm hooked up directly to
headquarter, five minutes away. And you’re standing on it,
dummy.”
“You’re just
trying to get me to leave. “
“Would I try to
scare you for no reason? A colleague? We’d better get out of
here, pal.”
“You mean, like me
first,” the thug said. “ And leave you to clean out the
place on your own. No, not without that stuff I’m not going.”
He brandished the gun.
Tiffany shrugged; Baubles
and bangles, yes, but the supply was infinite. It was as infinite as
time. Didn’t he understand this? The arena had become vastly
more open; the walls had been taken down. “Take them,”
she said generously, passing handfuls. She walked toward a window.
“I’ve got three other places on the list and that’s
just for tonight.”
The thug stood, clutching
jewelry, his features fallen into their more accustomed places, his
eyes stunned and blinking. “You’re so sure” he
said, “so sure of everything.” He looked at the gun over
which a necklace had been casually draped. “I never had your
opportunities,” he said.
“But
we all have
opportunities now,” Tiffany said. “Don’t you
understand?” She almost did. She was closing in on it all the
time, she was on the verge of terrific insight. Insight was all you
needed to function in this world now, all the rest was just stuff
“It’s getting so easy it’s boring. It’s
almost like it doesn’t count any more.”
“I
count,” the thug said. Some people kept on insisting. Who
could blame them?
“That’s
because you think any of this old stuff still matters,” Tiffany
said. She went through the window. This is a reasonable approximation
of how it was, I think.
“Come away,
Caroline,” Arnold said. His whisper, sepulchral and unexpected
behind her, was a gunshot. She trembled, shook, turned toward him,
saw his features suddenly grotesque and brutalized in the odd and
terrible flickering light of the chronoscope.
“Get away!”
she said. She felt fear course through her; oddly it energized rather
than shriveled, she wanted to leap at him suddenly. If they could
finally touch
He
reached forward, touched her wrist, pulled at it. “It’s
horrible, Caroline,” he whispered. “You must stop this,
you can’t hide, you can’t go away, you have to face
this--Carthage burned,”
he said. “I know it now, they set fires, they killed--”
“Go away!”
she said again. “I want to look--”
“She’s
dead,” Arnold said. “I didn’t know it at first, I
had to look too, yes I did, I went to the library even after
everything I told you and I stared for hours, but there comes a time,
Caroline, you have to let it go; she’s no longer ours, she’s
no one’s, she’s lost to us, lost to everything but the
machine. Caroline, we can’t be like so many, we have to get out
of the room, we have to have a life”
He reached forward to
disconnect the machine and she did something then, moved, began to
deal with him as she must, but after this her recollection was not as
clear and she did not want to use the machine to recover that moment,
she would let it rest, let all of it rest, only Laurel, his Carthage,
his burning...
You do not have to give
so many details, they tell me. They have looked at this and in some
ways they make the good sounds and in other ways the bad sounds but
what they want to make most clear is that it is not necessary to be
as precise as I have been--that is the word they use, “precise”--it
is only important to give what they call “an overview.”
“Give an overview,” they say. “We have no time, no
space, no room for history, we have only an ever-living and continual
present, but that present, although it serves us well, must have the
slightest amount of justification. If you can give us this, you have
given enough.” Who knows “enough”? I have my own
plans and abilities.
I am the first and the
last, the only one to give this history, they tell me, the only one
to “write” as “writing” is understood in the
oldstyle, but I must keep it tightly confined, must control. I do
what I can. “Give an overview,” they say, but it is not
the over but the under which possesses me, the weight of all that has
happened almost obliterating (that is a tough word, “obliterating”)
that tiny corridor of light I cast toward our history.
It took what remained of
law enforcement (that which hadn’t gone crooked itself) quite a
while to catch up with the outlaws, but when they did, it was all
over for the criminal element. No unsolved crimes, no unresolved,
unidentifiable remains. You couldn’t even skip school...that
is, if your settlement still had access to instruction of any kind.
They knew when you were sleeping. They knew when you were awake. They
knew if you’d been bad or good.
“Late meeting. That
Ryan account. Should have been here hours ago, I’m sorry. “
“Don’t
tell me ‘Ryan account.’ Who is
that blond bitch on the third floor of 242 Oak Street?”
“What? What?”
“For someone who
says he can’t do a lot of things any more, you can do a lot of
things, can’t you?”
“But the
account--the Ryan meeting--”
“Forget
it, Frank. You’re trying to live in a world which doesn’t
exist any more. Buy a chronoscope and get out of the house. Because
tomorrow the locks are changed and you can’t pick up that
kind of detail work on any cheap set you ‘re likely to get.
“
When
the feelings passed, when she could focus again, see where she was,
Caroline saw something had happened to Arnold, something dreadful had
happened, he was lying on the floor in a quiescence she had never
known him to have before. But even as she struggled with the impulse
to kneel, comfort, hold, help him in some way, call for emergency
aid, get the university services there, even as she thought of this,
a small and infinitely wise voice within her said, He’s
never looked this peaceful before, he has been granted perfect peace,
the peace that Laurel has. Go to her, go to her again now, understand
her peace and try to make it her own, and the voice was so utterly
attuned to her own necessity, Caroline knew she could do no more,
could do nothing for Arnold that had not perished long ago, in the
fire, beyond the fire, and turned instead toward the chronoscope, the
chronoscope where Laurel, infinitely young, tender, wise, patient
Where Laurel would tell
her what; if anything, to do.
Procreation
became limited, hurried, and--for those who persisted--bizarre. The
governments, all of them, China and the Soviet Union and Burundi and
Burma, South Africa and Zaire collapsed. Government of any kind was
simply unimaginable. There was a futile attempt in some of the
countries to confiscate chronoscopes, but that is when the murders
began and, having made their point, soon enough stopped: the systems,
such as they were, had become invested in the chronoscope, behavior
had become circumscribed by its existence. Sixty years after Ralph
Nimmo, uncle of the luckless Foster, had turned loose the plans, fled
to Australia to successfully impersonate a keeper of aboriginal
kangaroos (Foster meanwhile reinventing chronoscopy in custody,
creating it over and over again), there wasn’t much public
left, and that which lasted was old,
decrepit, and resentful of medical facilities and research which
had become bare holding operations. There were localities with
severely deteriorated communications. There was, always, the
chronoscope. “Here it is,” Foster said, handing
scribblings to the attendants. “Take it. “
After a century and a
quarter, only a few clots and clans existed in the southern regions
of the northern hemispheres, the northern regions of the southern.
For this remainder, subsistence level in a subsistence society wasn’t
all that oppressive, and there was, of course, the chronoscope, whose
limited range was nonetheless able to disclose in all of its fury and
chiaroscuro beauty the collapse of Eastern and Western civilizations
the century before, and all of the fragmentary, diminished copulation
and confrontation associated with that collapse.
And so, hunched against
circumstance, appalled by the news of her father’s death but
nonetheless loving and filled with tenderness, Laurel reached out
from the interstices of the machine, reached from the dark metal and
said to Caroline, “I’ll tell you what to do, oh mother,
I’ll tell you just what you need to do but you have to come
closer, come closer--”
As Caroline crept down
that corridor of informative light.
I am the first of a long
line to come who again will be able to compose our history. But our
history is tense and exhausting, narrow and dangerous, and I see now
why they wished me to be explicit, to compress, to hurry along; there
is only a little left to tell but nonetheless
“Remember how you
loved him,” Laurel said. “Remember how it was when you
came to him for the first time, remember that mantle of love and
warmth--”
“What we’ll
do,” said Joan, an impassioned sixteen-year-old, “is run
away. “
“The others will
see us. They’ll be able to watch every move.” Bill was
eighteen, the levelheaded, farseeing part of the relationship. Or so
he told Joan. There weren’t enough their age around to argue
for much differences, though. Anyone between fifteen or twenty was
mostly the same. Timorous. Except for Joan who had a kind of spirit
which was unaccountable and who had plans.
“We’ll go so
far away the old bastards won’t be able to get there. No one
will even look, all they want to do is stare and remember, anyway.
We’ll climb mountains.”
“No matter how far
we go, they’ll still be able to watch anything we do. They’ll
see everything.”
“I
don’t care. Who cares? Let them watch! They can watch us until
I die if they want to. I want kids,” she said passionately,
looking at him in that way which so dangerously upset him. “I
want a family. I want to have”--she paused--”abandoned
sex. Real sex.”
Bill was timorous but
needful. “Yes,” he said. “I do, too. But--”
“If you don’t
go with me, I’ll ask someone else. I’ll ask Dave.”
“Dave? He’s
thirty years old. He’s one of them. All he wants to do is look.
“
“I’ll teach
him a few things. He can be taught. There aren’t many of us
left, don’t you know that? Do you want the whole world to die?”
“It’s already
dead.”
“I
mean really die. Die
out. No more children, nothing. Not even the machines. Most of those
damned viewers don’t even work any more, they haven’t
been tended in years.”
“There are probably
fertile individuals in other clans. It doesn’t fall only to us.
There have got to be others--”
“Do you want it to
end this way, then? Don’t you want me--”
“Well,
sure I want you,”
Bill said hopelessly. “I guess I do, anyway. But there will
always be someone looking at us, even after everyone here dies. “
“No there won’t.”
“Our own children
will. “
“Those machines are
breaking down, I told you. We won’t even take one. Let me tell
you a secret. I smashed all of them around I could find.”
“Joan! When?”
“Just before.”
“They’ll kill
us when they find out.”
“So
I don’t care,” she said. She seized his wrists. “Now
you know we’ve
got to do something. You know we’ve got to go away.”
“How many did you
break?”
“A lot. Rust will
take care of the rest of them, and I don’t think any of the
clan are smart enough to build them again. Don’t you
understand? I think they’re really finished with them, now. I
think it’s run out.”
Bill felt her pulling him
along. Soon they would be out of the hutch, on level ground, and they
could run. Forage from the land, build a settlement. Well, it sounded
possible. Anything was possible. Joan was right, no one was going to
follow them. They just weren’t that interested. “No more
of them?” Bill said hopefully. ”You mean, no more of the
machines?”
“I
think not. But to be extra specially certain, just in case any
instructions do survive
in our new place, we won’t teach our kids to read.”
“Will it work?”
She smiled. “Oh,
for a while,” she said. “Eventually one of them will
learn to write and maybe put all of this down again, but by then it
will be too late. And we’ll be free.”
And in the machine, in
that swath of light Laurel had helped her cleave from the darkness
Caroline saw them as it had been that night, the first night Arnold
had known her, the night Arnold had loved her. She watched the bodies
struggle, then slide in and amongst the shining spokes of light and
then, in slow and terrible concert, the scene shifted, reassembled,
and Caroline saw herself huge and arched against that wedge of vision
as she struck the blow which killed Arnold, watched him collapse
against her in that parody of embrace, and then the two of them
locked, were rolling and rolling on the floor in and amongst the
plans, the diagrams, the wires, the nest of that awful machinery. “Oh
Laurel,” Caroline Potterly said. “Oh Laurel, oh
Laurel...”
And the fires of Carthage
came.
PAPPI
by Sheila
Finch
THE FIRST THING TIM
NOTICED WHEN HE ENTERED HIS OLD home was the visorphone in the hall
flashing to warn him of an incoming call. It had to be for Karin, of
course. But who wouldn’t already know she was dead? Karin
didn’t have a very wide circle of friends.
The visorphone’s
shrill call noise was irritating. He was tired from the shuttle
flight, obscurely annoyed by the obsequious robot attendants, and
feeling the pull of Earth’s excessive gravity already. He
punched the receive button. The operator’s voice instructed Mr.
Tim Garroway to stand by for a call from Mr. Howard Rathbone III.
Too late to worry about
how Rathbone had figured where he’d be going to in such a
hurry. He wasn’t cut out to play James Bond games, but he’d
felt confident that Earth was the one place Rathbone would never
think of looking for him if he made a run for it, since it was where
Rathbone had wanted him to go. Obviously he’d under-estimated
the man.
While he waited for the
connection to be completed between Earth and the space station up at
the Lagrange point that was Rathbone’s corporate headquarters,
he glanced through the doorway into the living room to see what Beth
was doing. She was sitting cross-legged on the rug, building a tower
of books, her small plump face raised to the warm spring sunshine
that flooded in through the undraped window. Sunlight sparked her
curls to gold, and Tim’s heart lurched as he saw for the
thousandth time how like her mother his little daughter was.
If only Sylvia could’ve
seen her now.
If only the damned
emergency-team robots had functioned as they were supposed to.
He’d gone over and
over the options on the shuttle trip from the moon. There weren’t
very many in his favor. Running had been an impulse that he’d
begun to see might cause him a lot of nasty problems. He waited
sullenly for the phone link to be completed.
The
visorphone crackled, pulling his attention back, and the screen
cleared. Howard Rathbone III gazed at him from the elegantly paneled
office where he kept the helm of his billion-dollar enterprises. Tim
had speculated once, on first seeing this magnificent room, how much
it had cost to lob all that rare and expensive teak and mahogany and
rosewood into space to reconstruct the look of a luxury ocean liner
from the 1920s. Sylvia had giggled at his estimate. “Way,
way under!” she’d said.
“Tim. You and Beth
had a pleasant shuttle trip, I hope? Of course, you should have
consulted me before you took the child along.”
So the old man wasn’t
going to call it kidnapping just yet. Mr. Rathbone was a big man with
a big man ‘s hearty voice and manner. And a heart made out of
pure moon rock. Obviously he figured on gaining some advantage from
playing along with Tim.
“Fine, thanks, Mr.
Rathbone. I would’ve called you to--”
Rathbone overrode his
words. “You and Beth will need some time to recover. Tomorrow
will be plenty of time to do what we talked about. You will do it, of
course. You have so much to gain!”
Uneasily, Tim considered
how often the man seemed to read his mind. Or was it just that he
himself was totally predictable, at least where Mercury Mining and
Manufacturing was concerned? Maybe Rathbone was right; there was too
much money involved to be squeamish, enough to buy Beth everything
her heart desired now and for a long time to come. And was the price
really so unreasonable?
“I’m relying
on you, Tim,” Rathbone said. “Triple M’s future is
in your hands. But I’m confident you’ll come through for
us.”
Even when he was handing
out praise and flattery, Rathbone’s words came out as orders.
That was why he’d been so phenomenally successful, building his
huge empire in less than two decades since the Second Mercury
Expedition.
“Yes, sir.”
“I’m a
reasonable man, Tim. I’d like to have your willing cooperation.
So I’m prepared to explain it all one more time. We must stop
this now, before it goes any further. No telling what’ll happen
if he gets away with it. Do you understand my position, Tim?”
Tim nodded, his throat
dry.
“We can’t
have all those machines out there thinking they’re entitled to
rights and privileges same as humans. And they will, you know, if he
gets away with this.”
“Yes, sir.”
“You’re a
bright man. But you’ve been squandering your talents. “
Not half as vicious as
the things he’d said about Tim when he’d first learned of
Sylvia’s marriage to a penniless student, and her pregnancy,
Tim thought. But if he played his cards right...
Rathbone leaned back in
his leather swivel chair, steepled his fingers, and gazed at the
father of his daughter’s child. On the wall behind him a map of
the inner solar system showed the Rathbone empire in scattered
twinkling lights. “I have no heirs except for little Beth.”
Tim swallowed. His hunger
to own and control what the map represented fought another battle
with the cautious part of him. The outcome was indecisive again. Yet
each time, the hungry side of him crept a little closer to victory.
Especially here, in this house.
“I still wonder if
it wouldn’t be better to try public exposure,” Tim said.
“You know--subject him to public scrutiny--put him through
tests he can’t pass--”
In the delay that
followed, he knew what Rathbone’s answer would be.
“That’s been
tried already!” Rathbone scowled at him across space. “
And failed. There’s no time left for pussyfooting here. He has
to be removed. “
Tim shrugged uneasily.
“It’s
not like killing a man, Tim. Stephen Byerley’s a robot!”
Rathbone
spat the word out, loaded with all the contempt, the hatred, and the
fear Tim knew that he felt for robots.
“Sleep on it, son,”
his father-in-law said. In spite of the term he’d used, the
threatening tone came through clearly. “I should think the
consequences if you fail easily outweigh the demise of one robot.”
That was the other factor
in the equation. If he refused to do what Rathbone wanted, then
Rathbone would take Beth away from him. He couldn’t go back to
the moon or the space station, and he sure couldn’t stay on
Earth any more. There was no place he could hide that his
father-in-law’s thugs couldn’t find him. And he certainly
couldn’t take up the freelance life of an asteroid prospector,
not with a three-year-old to raise.
The visorphone screen
clouded over, and Tim turned heavily toward the living room to
retrieve his daughter.
He had to agree his
father-in-law had a point. Stephen Byerley had managed to get elected
to public office a month ago. It was the beginning of the end of
uncontested human superiority, despite the much-vaunted three laws.
For one thing, Mayor Byerley might start thinking his “brothers”
in space, those who toiled under horrifying conditions on blistering
planets for industrialists like Howard Rathbone III, deserved better
conditions. Byerley might even decide they were being treated like
slaves and use the weight of his office to start a campaign for their
emancipation. It was ludicrous, of course, but Tim understood that
once you set the precedent of one robot being “human “
enough to hold human office, then you were going to have a hard time
denying the same rights and protections to all the others.
It wasn’t that he
had much sympathy with the metal men. They were, after all, only
machines. Nobody was more convinced of that than he! He’d had a
long, intimate association with one of them going all the way back to
2009, right here in this house.
“You wanted a
father, Tirilmy,” Karin Garroway said brightly. “Well,
I’ve brought you PAPPI.”
Timmy stared at the gray
metal box on wheels squatting in the precise middle of the living
room rug. At first glance, he’d thought it was an old-fashioned
canister vacuum cleaner minus the hose. Four skinny appendages
protruded from its sides, ending in a collection of hooks and pincers
like some grim skeletal joke. An upside-down bowl-shaped turret
housed a camera lens and other things he didn’t recognize right
away.
Timmy touched a wheel
housing with one toe.
“Treat it with
care.” Motherly chores satisfied now, Karin gathered up papers
and laptop computer and stuffed them all in her briefcase.
“What is it?”
“PAPPI--Paternal
Alternative Program: Prototype I.”
“Looks pretty
stupid,” Timmy said.
“Never mind how it
looks!” His mother glanced at him. “It’ll do
everything a real father can do. PAPPI can pitch baseballs, and sort
your stamp collection--all sorts of things.”
“Can it do my
homework?”
“It
has programs to coach
you in math and reading, Timmy. PAPPI has tapes of bedtime
stories selected for eight-year-old boys, too. And we’ll update
them as you grow.”
“Sometimes
I want to talk about man
things...”
“Don’t be
difficult.” Karin snapped her briefcase crisply shut. “I’ll
work on some of the refinements as I get time. You could think of
this as an experiment in robotics that we’re doing together.”
Karin was always trying
to get him interested in her work at U.S. Robots and Mechanical Men,
Inc. She put the briefcase down on the sofa, hunkered down in front
of her son so her eyes were level with his and held him by the
shoulders. Her face had that soft, gentle haze Timmy saw on it
sometimes when she looked at kittens or butterflies. He stared back
at her, his mouth drawn tightly down.
“I know it’s
hard on you, the way we live.”
“We could do it the
way other people do!” he said sullenly.
“That just won’t
work for me,” she said. “I thought you understood that.
Look, you keep saying you want a father--”
“A real one. Not a
dumb robot.”
Her face closed over.
“I’ve explained to you that we don’t have time for
a man in our lives. “
Timmy
didn’t know anything about his real father. Karin had told him
some stuff once about a place where they sold sperm from fathers for
people who wanted to be mothers without all the fuss. But Timmy told
everybody his dad had died; it was easier to explain. Maybe Karin
didn’t like men very much; she never brought one home, unlike
his best friend Joey’s mother, who had lots of boyfriends.
Sometimes Timmy wondered if Karin wouldn’t like him
when he grew up, too.
“Timmy?”
“All right,”
he said reluctantly. “But you promised me we’d go to the
zoo today, Karin.”
She chewed her lip. “I
know it’s Sunday, but the project’s so urgent.”
He shook his head.
“Today’s special. It’s--”
“You can play with
PAPPI in the yard. You’d like that, wouldn’t you? PAPPI’s
easy to use, I made sure of that.”
He looked past her at the
robot. “What can you play with a thing like that?”
“You’ll think
of something!” She gave him a kiss on the cheek which he wasn’t
quick enough to duck. “Now I’ve got to run. The lab’s
aircar is waiting for me. I promise I won’t be too long.”
After she’d gone,
Timmy watched the Tri-D for a while, but Karin had programmed it to
show him historical films about the exploration of the solar system
and educational stuff about astronomy. He turned the Tri-D off again
and squatted down by the robot. He stared into its camera eye.
“You’re dopey
looking!” he said. “Got a dopey name, too.”
A bird chirped outside in
the big tree in the garden, but inside the house it was very quiet.
Timmy suddenly felt lonely, which was strange because now that he
wasn’t such a little kid any more Karin often left him alone
when she had to work overtime or go in on weekends. The reason wasn’t
too hard to find. It was Father’s Day. The Cub Scout Troop that
Timmy and Joey belonged to was having a father-and-son hot-dog
barbecue in Central Park, and absolutely everybody would be there
with their dad. All Timmy’s friends had fathers, even if they
weren’t the original ones. And Joey would have one of his mom’s
boyfriends along.
But Timmy had known there
was no point in telling Karin about it. Karin didn’t believe in
men-only activities. It would’ve been just like her to consider
going with him to a father-son barbecue. Much better to stay home
with a robot than be embarrassed like that. Timmy scowled at the
robot. Nothing else to do--he might as well turn it on. The switch
was conveniently located near the top. Immediately, a small red light
glowed on the dome, which swiveled to focus the camera eye on Timmy.
“Hello,” the
tinny, uninflected voice said. “I am PAPPI, your Paternal
Alternative. I am an experimental prototype.”
Surprised, Timmy settled
himself cross-legged in front of the machine and stared at it. He’d
seen robots before, of course, at the lab where Karin worked. But he
knew a lot of people didn’t trust them and wouldn’t allow
them in New York. The ones his mother built that talked were huge
things to be sent out into space where they couldn’t frighten
anybody.
“Well,” Timmy
said cautiously. “What can you do?”
“I can tell you a
story about animals. I can help you with your stamp collection. I can
make model airplanes. I know baseball and basketball statistics for
the last fifty years. I can tell you who scored the most home runs,
who was the MVP, who--”
Timmy was astonished.
Perhaps Karin understood more than he’d ever realized about
what was important to him. “Can you help me light a fire in the
backyard and barbecue hot dogs?”
“I do not think
Karin would approve of you playing with fire.”
Timmy’s enthusiasm
faded. “So you’re going to be another babysitter!”
“You are too old
for babysitters, Timmy. I am your PAPPI, and Paternal Alternatives do
not--”
“You’re not
my dad!” Timmy snapped.
“Shall we go out
into the yard and play baseball?” the robot suggested.
“Sure.” Timmy
stuck his hands in his pockets.
Timmy found out right
away that PAPPI was very good at pitching balls. The long metal arms
grasped the ball neatly and swung it in an economical arc, releasing
it at precisely the right moment to travel across to the exact spot
on Timmy’s baseball bat for hitting. PAPPI gave him advice on
how to hold the bat too, but it never yelled at him when he missed,
and it wasn’t a sore loser like Joey when Timmy managed to hit
a “home run.”
“Hey,” Timmy
said after an hour of playing World Series. “Want to climb a
tree?”
“I am not equipped
to climb trees,” PAPPI replied. “But I will watch you.
And I can identify the objects you encounter.”
Timmy threw down the
baseball bat and shimmied up the trunk of the old maple by the garden
wall. PAPPI trundled over to stand underneath, the dome swiveling so
the camera eye could focus on Timmy’s ascent.
Halfway up to the crown,
the main trunk forked. Here Timmy and Joey had once started to erect
a fort. Then the weather got too hot for carpentry projects and
they’d abandoned it. But it was still a fine place to sit and
look at the jagged skyline of the city across the East River. The
leaves overhead made liquid patterns of sunlight and shade on his
bare arms, and their soft rustling was like a kind of secret language
that only Timmy was meant to understand.
Timmy straddled one of
the sun-warm planks.
“You look weird
from up here!”
“Have you noticed
the abandoned bird’s nest by your right hand?”
Timmy peered into the
leaves. Sure enough, there was a jumble of twigs and mud stuck to the
bark near the trunk. “There’s feathers in it.”
Timmy hung on to the
branch with one hand and leaned down, tiny brown and white feather in
the other. PAPPI’s camera eye slid out on a slender stalk for
about a foot, then retracted.
“A
very fine specimen. But look at the small white growths on the tree
trunk, a form of fungus, division name Mycota. The spores have been
carried up there accidentally by a bird, perhaps by the Passer
domesticus whose feather you are holding. “
“Huh?”
“A house sparrow.”
“Neat!”
“There are about
fifty thousand fungi, or saprophytic and parasitic plantlike
organisms, that have been identified and described. But there are
probably a hundred thousand more. They include mushrooms, mildews,
molds, yeasts--”
Timmy frowned. The thing
was starting to sound like his schoolteacher.
“I can tell you
about lichens too, if you want me to.”
“Not hardly!”
Timmy said.
“Well, then,”
the robot said. “Would you like to play horse?”
“How do I do that?”
“You can ride
around on me. I am very strongly built.”
So Timmy rode around the
yard on top of PAPPI, held in place by two of the long metal arms,
shouting “Giddyap!” and “Whoa!” until his
throat was scratchy. It was almost possible to forget PAPPI was a
robot and imagine he was really riding a stallion with flowing mane
across a Western mesa, just like the programs on the Tri-D that Karin
frowned at him watching.
By the time the sky got
dark and Karin came home again, Timmy knew he’d discovered a
real friend, one who never grew bored with playing, never thought any
question too stupid to answer, never criticized or blamed.
But it wasn’t the
same thing at all as having a real father.
With PAPPI’s help,
Timmy did better in school that year. PAPPI was programmed to learn
too, right alongside Timmy, so that made a contest out of it--one
PAPPI usually won. But since the robot never boasted of its success,
Timmy really didn’t mind. And four mechanical hands meant the
robot was a real wizard at assembling model spaceships and shuffling
playing cards or juggling balls.
From time to time, Karin
brought new programs home for PAPPI as they developed them at the
lab. Timmy watched when she took the robot’s “head”
apart and inserted them. Sometimes he held the tiny tools she used to
work on the positronic brain. Afterward, PAPPI could do a lot more
things to entertain Timmy, like playing the banjo, or telling jokes
and drawing silly pictures to make him laugh.
Karin rarely brought
anyone home for supper, not even people from U.S. Robots. But once, a
lady she shared the office with came to Timmy’s house.
“It doesn’t
look a bit like a mechanical man,” Timmy complained.
He and this
fierce-looking lady hunkered down on the rug to look at PAPPI, who
had just slithered to a halt in front of them. The robot’s
wheels scuffed the polished floor as it braked.
“It doesn’t
need to,” Karin’s officemate replied. “Form should
follow function.”
“At least it
could’ve hag legs, not wheels!” Timmy said, fingering one
of the scratches in the wood.
“This was meant to
be a utility robot. Your mother modified its brain, not its body.”
Karin
had told him that Dr. Calvin didn’t build
the robots quite like she did; Dr. Calvin was a robopsychologist,
whatever that meant. In the kitchen, Karin, in an uncharacteristic
display of domesticity, clattered dishes into the dishwasher.
Timmy frowned. “PAPPI
thinks it’s more than that!”
“But you don’t.”
“How can you tell?”
Dr. Calvin didn’t
answer. She was about as old as his mother, Timmy judged, and neither
of them wore lipstick or smiled as much as Joey’s mother did.
Karin bustled back into
the living room with a tray of pastries she’d bought at the
store. “ Anyone ready for dessert?”
“I do not think
Timmy should have any more sugar in his diet today,” PAPPI
said. “By my count, since getting up this morning he has
consumed--”
“Oh, shut up!”
Timmy said.
“Well,” Karin
began, “if you think--”
“One of these days,
you ‘re going to have trouble with that one,” Dr. Calvin
said thoughtfully.
For a moment, Timmy
thought she was speaking of him. But her eyes were on the robot
squatting between them on the rug.
“I’m being
very careful, Susan,” Karin said. “ And Timmy knows not
to take the robot outside.”
“I can’t tell
my friends about PAPPI, either,” Timmy grumbled. “When
Joey comes over to play I have to put PAPPI in the closet. And Joey’s
my best friend!”
“That’s good
to know, Timmy,” Dr. Calvin said. “But antirobot
sentiment isn’t all I was referring to. Though goodness knows
the Fundies are enough of a threat to our work.”
“Then what?”
Karin said.
“I don’t
think we realize yet what these positronic brains may be capable of
someday.”
“I’m
not that good,
Susan,” Karin said, laughing. “Not like you!”.
The talk turned away from
robots after that.
Then one day when they
were in eighth grade, Joey’s mother got married again, and his
new father took him on a trip to the moon.
“Why can’t we
go to the moon, Karin?” Timmy demanded as Karin frowned at some
work she’d brought home from the lab.
“Hmm?” She
gazed at him over the top of the glasses she’d recently started
wearing.
“I want to go to
the moon. See the craters.”
“We can’t
afford it.”
“I’ve got
money saved up!”
“I can’t
spare the time right now. Things are really busy at U.S. Robots.
Susan and I may finally be getting our own offices!”
“If I had a
father...” Timmy began darkly.
Karin set her notes down
and gazed at him. “I’m sorry you’re still feeling a
lack, Timmy. I’d hoped PAPPI would fill it.”
“Seems
like I don’t have a father or
a mother”‘ Timmy said.
The following year, Timmy
took a class in physics at Karin’s urging and learned that he
hated the subject. He became interested in sports, grew three inches,
and discovered girls--one in particular, a dark-haired lovely with
big breasts. PAPPI explained how to handle the sudden rush of
hormones and awkwardness Timmy was feeling. Karin had done her part
earlier, lecturing Timmy on the birds and the bees and the whole
ecology of flowers, a discussion that bored him and left him feeling
as if either he--or Karin--had totally missed the point. But PAPPI
explained about Romeo and Juliet, whether it was a good idea to kiss
a girl on a first date, and what to say to the other guys afterward.
In an attempt to
influence him to take an interest in science, Karin bought him a
telescope kit, and PAPPI helped him assemble it. PAPPI knew the names
of all the stars and constellations they could see through the lens,
and pointed out some of the orbiting space stations as well. Karin
pretended not to notice when they stayed up well past Timmy’s
bedtime.
Timmy went out for the
school swim team. PAPPI listened to his bragging and sympathized when
he lost. Timmy changed his name to Tim, and PAPPI, unlike Karin,
never made a mistake after that. All in all, it was a good time.
But Joe got to have
man-to-man talks with his new father.
Tim activated the
visorphone again and made an appointment to see the mayor, Stephen
Byerley.
Then he tried to put the
whole thing out of his mind.
He’d forgotten
Karin’s house was so small. He went through the rooms
methodically, making lists of what to dump and what to pack. There
wasn’t too much of the latter. Living quarters on a space
station were small, but at least there was a sense of the vastness
just beyond the screened walls. This house was a box, a tract house
thrown up by greedy developers, cutting up the land that had once
been countryside around New York City into smaller and smaller
parcels. He remembered how Karin had explained to him that they
couldn’t move farther out because she needed to be near U.S.
Robots. By then, Joe and his parents had moved to a large house on
Long Island where there was room for a swimming pool and a tennis
court. And they could keep dogs. Tim remembered how he’d hated
U.S. Robots when he heard about the dogs.
Beth deserved better.
Tomorrow he’d meet the man Rathbone wanted him to kill.
The weapon one of his
father-in-law’s ex-boxer bodyguards had given him weighed
heavily in his pocket. Something to make hash out of that obscene
positronic brain, Rathbone had said. For some reason he’d
brought it with him when he Bed. Maybe even then he’d known he
couldn’t really get away so easily.
He had to stop thinking
of Byerley as a man. It was only a robot they were talking about,
after all. Only a robot. That would become obvious in the inquest.
Then there’d be public outrage at the revelation of the
stupendous hoax. The “assassin,” if he were to be caught,
would be released, a hero. Only of course, Rathbone would see to it
that Tim wasn’t caught.
And in return, Tim would
get a chance to have something he desperately wanted, namely a large
share of Mercury Mining and Manufacturing.
There
was a good chance Byerley wouldn’t keep the appointment anyway.
His secretary had seemed doubtful the mayor would find time in his
schedule for the vague reasons Tim had given her. Maybe nothing would
come of it at all and he’d be off the hook. “Couldn’t
get near him, “ he’d tell Rathbone. “Not my
fault!”
His
future and Beth’s were on the line. He’d either have the
money to be father and mother both to little Beth, or they’d
both be on the run from Rathbone for the rest of their lives.
“You have to think
about your life. You need to make plans for the future,” Karin
said, some time in’ 18. “What subjects are you interested
in pursuing for a career?”
Tim leaned back in his
chair and put his feet up on the table. He was in a truculent mood.
“I don’t know. Something that pays well. Probably
sports.”
“Sports?”
Karin frowned. “How’re you going to make a living from
sports?”
Swimming had developed
Tim ‘s muscles enough to make the girls eager to go out with
him now. Heady stuff. “The University of Hawaii has this great
program--”
“I’d like to
see you go into robotics,” Karin said. “The space
colonies have a tremendous need for people like you.”
“Aw, Karin!”
“If I may
interrupt,” PAPPI said. “ A good liberal arts college
will allow Tim to put off crucial decisions for at least another year
without penalty.”
“You’re
vetoing robotics?” Karin bit a fingernail. Tim noticed for the
first time how much gray there was in her hair. She never colored it
the way Joe’s mother did.
“No, I’m only
suggesting he might broaden his education first,” the robot
said.
Karin considered this.
“I’m not going to pay for a college on the other side of
the planet!”
“That’s
hardly fair of you, Karin,” the robot said.
“I can’t
afford to pay if he goes out of state! Do you think I’m rich or
something? And Timmy’s hardly going to get a scholarship.”
“There could be
some financial assistance available--”
“Timmy’s all
I’ve got. I’ll miss him!”
“I love him, too,”
PAPPI said.
Karin was suddenly very
still. “What did you say?”
“That his absence
would be noticeable to me, too,” the robot said cautiously.
She
stared at the robot for a long moment. “What other feelings
do you have, PAPPI?”
Untypically, the robot
seemed reluctant to answer. “What did you expect, Karin, with
all the special Calvin/Minsky subprograms you’ve given me over
the years?”
“But it’s
never proved out in the lab. Susan says--”
“What’re you
talking about?” Tim interrupted.
“Positronic
sentience,” Karin said slowly. “I’m just wondering
if PAPPI--”
Exasperated,
he said, “Well, of
course PAPPI’s alive! I thought we were discussing my
future?”
Karin looked as if she
were watching something very far away. ‘‘I’ll have
to take you back to the lab, PAPPI. If this is for real, then Susan
will want to run the Turing series on you.”
Tim stared at his mother.
She chose the worst moments to get all wrapped up in her work. “Look,
I’ve got a serious decision to make here. “
“We’ve had no
evidence for the development of full self-awareness in the lab,”
Karin said thoughtfully. “As an extended function of advanced
positronic intelligence, that is. My guess would be it’s
prolonged exposure to humans in a real family situation that’s
caused the difference. But I’ll have to talk to Susan about it.
We’ll need to do the research. “
“I don’t want
to go back to the lab” the robot began.
“I don’t see
a choice, PAPPI. This is big-time. I mean--”
“All right,
everybody listen up!” Tim said. “I’m going to make
my own decisions from now on. I’ll go to school if and
when--and wherever--I please!”
Karin glanced at him as
if she’d forgotten he was there. “Well, of course, Timmy.
But this is rather urgent, don’t you see?”
Once again, he thought
angrily, he came out second in importance to a robot.
The University of Luna
offered financial aid in return for taking part in athletic research
in low or zero-grav. Since this freed him from Karin’s money,
Tim enrolled. Karin didn’t come to see him off when he boarded
the shuttle. Couldn’t wait to get down to the lab and her tests
on PAPPI, he thought resentfully.
He worked through the
university vacations as an assistant to a moon geologist who needed
someone to keep track of his rocks. Since this wasn’t so
different from keeping a stamp collection, Tim rather enjoyed it.
Other guys had parents
shuttle up to visit from time to time, well-dressed men and women who
conversed knowledgeably about interactive theater and world politics
and preserving traditional human values in a mechanized world. Just
because humans had ventured out into space and depended on robot
help, didn’t mean they should abandon the historic virtues of
the simple life--the family and physical labor--his new friends said.
Tim knew what they meant. The kind of work his mother was doing at
U.S. Robots was dangerous. “Mechanical Men,” for goodness
sake! Couldn’t she see it wasn’t wise to allow robots to
become too clever? They were designed as servants, not partners in
the human enterprise. If humans didn’t keep that in mind,
someday the robots would be a problem. Tim felt a growing
estrangement from Karin and never invited her.
The most dazzling of
these new friends was Sylvia Rathbone, daughter of an old-style
entrepreneur in space, and as different in spirit from her father as
he was from Karin. Sylvia represented everything he felt he’d
been deprived of in life--money, a large family of aunts and uncles
and cousins, a father who spoiled her shamelessly. She was a
beautiful, merry, delicate-boned girl with movements as bright and
swift as quicksilver. And to his great wonder and gratitude, she fell
in love with him, too.
They were married in a
small, intimate ceremony in the spring of ‘27, in a chapel
carved from one of the moon’s vast underground caverns. They
planned to keep it secret while he finished up the degree in geology
he’d recently switched to, and she worked on her father to
accept her marriage to a penniless student. But the following year,
Beth was born. They sent notice of the event to both parents, and
waited nervously.
Karin almost forgot to
reply; she mentioned the birth finally in a postscript to her regular
monthly fax transmission.
Mr. Rathbone’s
attorney notified them that Sylvia had been cut out of his will until
such time as she divorced her unsuitable husband.
It was hard managing a
family on a student’s income, he found. But they went on. In
the evening, he went home to his wife and his baby in the family area
of the moon settlement. Sylvia had a small hydroponics garden where
she grew tomatoes and corn to supplement their diet, and
chrysanthemums for their spirits, she said. He was happy for the
first time in his life, determined his daughter would have the proper
family life that had been denied him. But he began to see that took
money, and his happiness leaked away little by little.
He was off-world a year
later, on a research trip with his geologist friend to bring in a
little extra money, when a small piece of space debris hurtled in
undetected and punctured the skin of the settlement in his sector.
The atmosphere bled out swiftly. Automatic airlocks prevented the
hemorrhage from spreading beyond the damaged area, but the robot
rescue team was too late to save Sylvia. The baby had been in a
creche in an unaffected sector.
The bill for the disposal
of Sylvia’s remains arrived just as he broke out of his stunned
inaction and began to mourn. One of the settlement’s robots
brought it.
The wheel of his life had
turned full circle. He, a child who’d been fatherless, raised
by his mother, must play father to a motherless child. And he was
broke. Swamp-black despair settled over him.
Two things happened.
Into this despair came
Howard Rathbone III, who wanted his grandchild so urgently that he
was prepared to make a deal with her father.
And Dr. Susan Calvin
notified him by express fax that Karin had died suddenly after a
brief illness and left him the little house in New York where he’d
grown up. He’d never felt close to Karin, but it was difficult
to comprehend that now she’d gone out of his life altogether.
He didn’t want to
accept Rathbone’s suggestion, tempting though the money was.
But he saw he’d have trouble keeping Beth from her grandfather
otherwise.
There seemed to be only
one thing to do. He fled with the baby, catching the first shuttle to
Earth.
Tim sorted through the
accumulated junk of his childhood. He found little of value in the
house, little worth the exorbitant cost of lobbing it up to the
colony. Karin had never been much of a homemaker. He packed a box of
Scouting books he remembered treasuring as a boy, his old stamp
collection in its dog-eared albums, the telescope PAPPI had helped
him assemble.
He
lugged the box of books out to the hall and set it down by the wall.
Something on the polished wood floor drew his gaze, long blurred
lines in the dust. He gently blew the dust aside. Scuff marks. He had
a sudden jolting vision of PAPPI’s wheels whooshing over the
slippery floor, skidding to a stop by the front door as the robot
retrieved the morning’s mail. He saw, as if they were arriving
now in Karin’s hallway, the papers, the garish advertisements,
the pleas for contributions to worthy causes (he remembered how angry
Karin became each time she found a request for money from the
antirobot people), all the second-class junk that the law didn’t
allow to clutter up the fax machines of the city’s households.
Sorting through this paper rubbish had been one of PAPPI’s
daily tasks. Preventing
me from having apoplexy! Karin always said.
He crouched down and
stared at the scuff marks. The floor appeared to have been resurfaced
fairly recently. Gone were the scrapes and scratches Tim remembered
inflicting on it over the years. Once her rambunctious son had left
home, Karin had repaired the damage he’d done. But the scars
left by the robot’s wheels were still raw. They had occurred
sometime after the floor had been resurfaced. Tim straightened up
slowly, disturbed by an idea growing in his mind.
He was uncomfortable
here, anxious to be done with pawing over the artifacts of his
boyhood. He turned to the visorphone to call one of the realtors
whose cards he’d found pushed under the door. Time to cut loose
from the past.
Before he could touch the
keyboard, the phone shrilled at him. He hesitated. Rathbone again?
Grimly he punched the receive button.
The face of a handsome,
middle-aged man appeared on the screen.
“Tim Garroway?”
The man had a pleasant, well-modulated voice. “I’m
Stephen Byerley.”
“Mayor--” Tim
stumbled to a reply. “I--well, I’m delighted to meet
you.”
“My secretary gave
me your message. I’d very much enjoy talking to you, but I’m
afraid tomorrow’s schedule is so tight.”
Tim’s heart leaped
wildly. So it was going to be taken out of his hands after all. He
was conscious of the strong feeling of relief that swept over him.
“That’s no problem, Mr. Mayor! No problem at all. It
really wasn’t important --that is, it can wait. “
Byerley smiled. “I
believe we have friends in common, Tim. May I call you Tim?”
“Sure.” He
was impressed with the genuine warmth this man projected. How could
he possibly have entertained ideas of eliminating him?
“I understand your
mother was an associate of Dr. Susan Calvin, one of my most treasured
friends.”
Something dull and cold
clutched Tim. Of course. It was to be expected. “Oh?” he
said heavily. “Yeah, I suppose so. “
Byerley was a robot after
all.
At the edge of his
consciousness he was aware of Beth tugging at his sleeve. He put an
arm around his little daughter, pulling her toward him. He was a fool
if he thought he could avoid fate so easily. It crept up on him like
some primeval beast slinking up to the little campfire he’d
hoped would protect Beth and himself against the darkness.
“The calendar’s
crowded tomorrow,” Byerley said. “But I make time to run
in Central Park. Do you run, Tim? I heard you were something of an
athlete. If you’d care to join me at six tomorrow morning--I
hope that’s not too early for you? I’m an early riser--we
could talk then.”
Early riser! Tim thought.
I bet you don’t sleep at all.
There really was no
choice. It was Stephen Byerley’s life--if you could call it
that--against his. Byerley had signed his own death warrant.
“Sure thing, Mr.
Mayor, “ he said.
“Steve,”
Stephen Byerley said.
Tim nodded without
replying and Byerley broke the connection. The weapon with which he
must eliminate the robot bumped heavily against his hip as he turned
away.
His stomach had twisted
itself with tension, and he sensed the beginnings of a headache at
the back of his skull. He would do what he had to do, for Beth ‘s
sake. Until then, he’d put the whole thing out of his mind.
He’d get on with packing up the house.
“What that, Dadda?”
his daughter called, pointing at a door in the ceiling. She had a
smudge of dust on one cheek, and toddled clumsily after him wherever
he went.
“Nothing much,
sweetheart. Just an attic for storage.”
As he said it, something
clicked into place in his mind. Of course. That was where it would
be.
“Want see!”
Beth announced imperiously.
Indulging his daughter’s
wishes took his mind off what he must do tomorrow. He touched the
recessed button in the wall. The attic hatch opened, and wooden steps
lowered to where they stood. He set one foot on the steps and the
toddler immediately clung to his legs, clamoring loudly as if he were
about to disappear forever. He picked her up and began his ascent. He
made the climb awkwardly and with effort, unused to Earth’s
gravity after all these years. Beth hummed encouragement to him as if
he’d been a horse--or a robot, he realized.
It was cool and dim under
the rafters, and it smelled of moldering clothes and musty books.
Spiders had draped their gray curtains everywhere over the piled
boxes and trunks. He moved cautiously, careful to keep the cobwebs
away from Beth’s face.
She saw it first,
pointing with a chubby finger to a dark comer.
“Look, Dadda!
Baby.”
The robot sat like a
blind deaf-mute under one of the main beams of the roof, only lightly
powdered in dust. Even after all these years, it was impossible for
him to look at it without emotion. Memories of baseball in the
backyard, science projects, stamp collections, secret discussions
about girls and sex, all came flooding back., His childhood was
preserved in this attic, and all it took was one glance to bring it
all back to vivid, painful life. He was eight years old again, and it
was Father’s Day.
What was it doing here?
Karin took it back to the lab. It was a great achievement--the
crowning glory of her scientific career
He
had assumed she’d
taken it back to the lab. The recent scuff marks in the hall said
otherwise. But why had she put it up here--just before she died
apparently?
“Me play!”
his daughter announced imperiously, scrambling down from his arms.
Gray dust swirls spiraled
around her and she sneezed. He leaned forward, steadying her as she
maneuvered over the unfinished floor of the attic. She chuckled, her
little body tense with the excitement of discovery. He felt swamped
again by mingled emotions of love and helplessness. How could he be
both father and mother to this little Columbus, so eager to explore
each new world she encountered? How could he protect her from the
ugliness of a world where robots became mayor--and men like Rathbone
schemed to kill them?
The toddler’s pudgy
hands caressed the robot. The problem of the robot drew him again.
The only reason he could imagine for Karin not returning PAPPI to the
lab was because she’d cared about the robot.
He was about to pick Beth
up and carry her away when the red light blinked on.
“Hello,” said
the weak but familiar voice, “I’m PAPPI, a Paternal
Alternative. Would you like to play?”
His daughter looked as if
she were going to cry.
He wasn’t surprised
to learn the robot’s power supply was still operational. Tim
crouched beside his little daughter and put his arms around her. Here
in this attic, for the very first time in his life, he had the
feeling that he understood Karin. She’d hidden the robot up
here when she knew she was dying; she hadn’t wanted PAPPI to go
back to the lab, or to fall into the hands of the Fundies. What did
that prove?
For a moment, he felt as
if he were drowning under the tidal wave of the past. He was a small
boy again, on Father’s Day.
Maybe if she’d
cared about the robot, she’d cared about Timmy, too.
Had he really been so
deprived? Love was impossible to define, but surely it included
sharing, partnership in work and play, nurturing. A family was just a
group that cared about each other, even if it included a robot.
“Hello, PAPPI,”
Beth said uncertainly. “What are you?”
Could he give Beth as
much as Karin had given him? He was certainly going to do his best.
But what he wanted for his daughter couldn’t be built on a
foundation of hatred and violence. Good didn’t come out of
evil; PAPPI had taught him that. He couldn’t keep that
appointment with Stephen Byerley tomorrow morning.
And that would mean
Rathbone would be after them. There’d be no returning to their
home on the moon, and no staying here on Earth. Life was hard for a
geologist prospecting out in the asteroids, but what other chance did
they have to be a family--father, daughter, and robot?
“Sweetie,” he
said to his daughter, “this is your GrandPAPPI.”
The Reunion at the Mile-High
by Frederik
Pohl
IN THOSE LONG AND
LONG-AGO DAYS--IT’S BEEN HALF A century!--we were not only
young, we were mostly poor. We were all pretty skinny, too, though
you wouldn’t think that to look at us now. I know this, because
I have a picture of the twelve of us that was taken right around
1939. I dug it out to loan it to my publisher’s public
relations people just the other day, and I looked at it for a long
time before I put it in the overnight mail. We didn’t took like
much, all grinning into the camera with our hairless, hopeful teenage
faces. If you’d been given a couple of chances to guess, you
might have thought we were a dozen Western Union boys on our day off
(remember Western Union boys?), or maybe the senior debating club at
some big-city all-boy high school. We weren’t any of those
things, though. What we actually were was a club of red-hot science
fiction fans, and we called ourselves the Futurians.
That
old photograph didn’t lie. It just didn’t tell the whole
truth. The camera couldn’t capture the things that kept us
together, because they were all inside our heads. For one thing, we
were pretty smart--we knew it ourselves, and we were very
willing to tell you so. For another, we were all deeply addicted
readers of science fiction--we called it stf in those days, but
that’s a whole other story. We thought stf was a lot of fun
(all those jazzy rocket ships and zippy death rays, and big-chested
Martians and squat, sinister monsters from Jupiter--oh, wow!) That
wasn’t all of it, though. We also thought stf was important.
We were absolutely sure that it provided the best view anyone
could have of T*H*E F*U*T*U*R *E--by which we meant the kind of
technologically dazzling, socially Utopian, and generally wonderful
world which the rather frayed and frightening one we were stuck with
living in might someday become. And, most of all, we were what our
old Futurian buddy, Damon Knight, calls toads. We weren’t very
athletic. We didn’t get along all that well with our peers--and
not even as well as that with girls. And so we spent a lot of time
driven in upon our own resources, which, mostly, meant reading. We
all read a lot.
We
even more or less agreed that we were toads. At least, we knew that
girls didn’t seem anxious to fall bedazzled by any of our
charms. I’m not sure why. It wasn’t that we were
hopelessly ugly--well, not all of us, anyway. Dave Kyle and Dirk
Wylie and Dick Wilson were tall and actually pretty good-looking.
Even the snapshot shows that. I think our problem was partly that we
were scared of girls (they might laugh at us--some of them no doubt
had), and partly a matter of our internal priorities. We were more
into talking than tennis, and we put books ahead of jitterbugging.
That
was half a century ago. In other words, history.
My secretary, who is also my chief research assistant when I need
a specific fact from the library, tells me that 62.8 percent of the
people alive today weren’t even born then, which undoubtedly
means that that ancient year of 1939 seems as remote and strange to
most people now as the Spanish-American War did to me.
I would like to point
out, though, that 1939 didn’t seem all that hot to us, either,
even while we were living it. It wasn’t a fun time. We were the
generation caught between Hoover and Hitler. We had the breadlines of
the Great Depression to remember in our recent past, and the Nazi
armies looming worrisomely in our probable future. When we looked out
at the real world we lived in we didn’t much like what we saw.
So,
instead, we looked inside the stf magazines we adored, and then we
looked inside our own heads. We read a lot, and we tried to write.
Because the other thing about us, you see, was that we were all
pretty hardworking and ambitious. Since we weren’t thrilled by
our lives, we tried to change them. We had our meetings--we’d
get together, once a month or so, in somebody’s basement or
somebody else’s living room, and we’d talk about this and
that; and then we’d go out for an ice-cream soda; and then we’d
gradually splinter apart. Some of us would go home--especially the
ones who had to get up in the morning, like Isaac Asimov. (He worked
at his parents’ candy store, and the commuters started coming
in for their morning papers at five-thirty A.M.) Most of the rest of
us would just wander, in twos and threes. I’d start out by
walking Dirk and Johnny Michel to their subway station. But
generally, by the time we got to it, we’d be in the middle of
some really interesting discussion (did the General Motors Futurama
at the World’s Fair have the right idea about the World of
Tomorrow, all twelve-lane superhighways and forty-story apartments?
Were John Campbell’s Arcot, Wade & Morey stories as good as
Doc Smith’s Skylark?)--so
then they’d walk me back to my station...or around the
block...or anywhere. Always talking. Talking mattered to us. Writing
mattered, too, almost as much. We did a lot of it, on our battered
second-hand portable typewriters, each on his own but always with the
intention of showing what we had written to the others. Words
mattered, and we particularly intended to make our words
matter. Somehow. We didn’t really know how, exactly, but when
you think of it, I guess we succeeded. If we were toads, as Damon
says, then sometime or other some wandering fairy princess must have
come along and kissed us, and turned us into something different...or
we wouldn’t have been getting together at the top of the
Mile-High Building for our Fiftieth Reunion, with reporters allover
the place and our older, considerably more impressive faces staring
out at the world on the Six O’Clock News.
You can’t fly
nonstop from Maui to New York, even on the sleeper, because they
don’t let flying boats operate over the continent. So I had to
change planes in Los Angeles. Naturally I missed my connection, so
when we finally landed at Idlewild I was late already.
The porter cut a taxi out
of the snarl for me--it’s wonderful what a five-dollar bill
can do at an airport. As I got into the cab I stretched my neck to
look toward the New York City skyline, and I could see the Mile-High
Building poking far above everything else, looking like a long, long
hunting horn sitting on its bell...if you can imagine a hunting horn
with gaps along its length, held together (as it seemed at that
distance) by nothing bigger than a couple of pencils. They say they
need those wind gaps in the tower, because a hurricane just might
push the whole thing over if they didn’t allow spaces for the
air to get through. Maybe so. I’m willing to believe that the
gaps make the building safer, but they certainly aren’t
reassuring to look at.
Still,
the Mile-High has managed to stay up for--let’s see--it must be
six or seven years now, and it’s certainly an imposing sight.
You can see it from anywhere within forty or fifty miles of New York.
More than that. It’s so immense that, even across most of
Queens and part of Brooklyn, when I looked at it I was distinctly
looking up. Then,
when I got out of the cab at its base, it was more than big, it was
scary. I couldn’t help flinching a little. Whenever I look
straight up at a tall building I get the feeling it’s about to
fall on me, and there’s nothing taller than the Mile-High.
A limousine had pulled up
behind me. The man who got out looked at me twice, and I looked at
him thrice, and then we spoke simultaneously. “Hello, Fred,”
he said, and I said:
“Doc, how are you?
It’s been a long time.”
It
had been--twenty years, anyway. We were obviously going to the same
place, so Doc Lowndes waited for me while I paid off the taxi, even
though it was gently drizzling on Sixth Avenue. When I turned away
from the taxi driver, after a little argument about the tip, Doc was
doing what I had been doing, staring up at the top of the Mile-High.
“Do you know what it looks like?” he asked. “It
looks like the space gun from Things
to Come. Remember?”
I
remembered. Things to
Come had been our cult movie, back in the 1930s; most of us had
seen it at least a dozen times. (My own record was
thirty-two.) “Yeah, space, II I said, grinning. “Rocket
ships. People going to other planets. We’d believe almost
anything in those days, wouldn’t we?”
He gave me a considering
look. “I still believe,” he told me as we headed for the
express elevators to the top.
The
Mile-High Building isn’t really a Things
to Come kind of edifice. It’s more like something from that
even more ancient science fiction film, Just Imagine--silly
futuristic spoof packed with autogyros and Mars rockets and young
couples getting their babies out of vending machines. I first saw
Just Imagine when I was ten years old. The heroine was a
meltingly lovely teenager, just imported from Ireland to Hollywood,
and that movie is why all my life I have been in love with Maureen
O’Sullivan.
The Mile-High Building
doesn’t have any of those things, least of all (worse luck!)
the still lovely Maureen, but it is definitely a skyscraper that puts
even those old movie-makers to shame. To get to the top you go a
measured mile straight up. Because the elevators are glass-walled,
you get to see that whole incredible five thousand plus feet dropping
away as you zoom upward, nearly a hundred miles an hour at peak
velocity.
Doc
swayed a little as we accelerated. “Pretty fast,” he
said. “Real fast,”
I agreed, and began telling him all about the building. It’s
hollow inside, like an ice-cream cone, and I knew quite a lot about
it because when I was still living in New York City, before I could
afford the place on Maui, I used to know a man named Mike Terranova.
Mike was a visualizer working for an architect’s office--at
another point in his career he did the drawings for the science
fiction comic strip I wrote for a while, but that’s another
story, too. Mike really was better at doing machines and buildings
than at drawing people, which is probably why our strip only ran one
year, but he made up for it in enthusiasm. He was a big fan of the
Mile-High. “Look at the wind gaps in it,” he told me
once, as we walked down Central Park West and saw the big thing
looming even thirty blocks away. “That’s to let the wind
through, to reduce the force so it shouldn’t sway. Of course,
they’ve also got the mass dampers on the two hundredth and
three hundredth and four hundredth floors, so it doesn’t sway
much anyway.”
“It’s just
another skyscraper, Mike,” I told him, amused at his
enthusiasm.
“It’s
a different kind of
skyscraper! They figured out the best offices are the ones with an
outside view, so they just didn’t build any offices inside!
It’s all hollow--except for the bracing struts and cables, and
for the three main floor--through sections, where you change
elevators and they have all the shops and things. “
“It’s
brilliant,” I said; and actually it was. And I was explaining
all this to Doc, and all the time I was talking we were flashing past
those vast central atria that are nearly a hundred stories high each,
with their balconies, and flowers growing down from the railings, and
lianas crisscrossing the central spaces; and Doc was looking at me
with that patient expression New Yorkers reserve for out-of-towners.
But all he said was, “I
know.”
Then I was glad enough
for the break when we walked across the hundredth-story level,
between the soda fountains and the clothing shops, to the next bank
of elevators, and then the next. Then you get out at the top, five
thousand and change feet above the corner of Fifty-second Street and
Sixth Avenue, and you have to take an escalator up another flight to
the club itself.
I don’t like
standing still, so I took the escalator steps two at a time. Doc
followed gamely. He was puffing a little as we reached the door the
doorman was already holding open for us.
“Put on a little
weight, I see,” I told him. “Too much riding in
limousines, I’d say. There must be big bucks in the poetry
racket these days.”
I guess my tone must have
sounded needling, because he gave me a sidelong look. But he also
gave me a straightforward reply, which was more than I deserved. “I
just don’t like taxi drivers,” he said. “Believe
me, I’m not getting rich from my royalties. Publishing poetry
doesn’t pay enough to keep a pig in slop. What pays my bills is
readings. I do get a lot of college dates. “
I was rebuked. See, we
Futurians had been pretty sharp-tongued kids, big on put-down jokes
and getting laughs at each other’s expense; just the thought of
coming to the reunion seemed to get me back in that mood. I wasn’t
used to seeing Bob in his present gentler incarnation.
Then the white-haired
woman took our coats, and even gentle Bob got a kind of smirk on his
face as I handed over my trenchcoat. I knew what he was looking at,
because I was wearing my usual at-home outfit: canary-yellow slacks,
beach-boy shirt, and thongs. “I didn’t have a chance to
change,” I said defensively.
“I was just
thinking how nice it is for you folks that live in Hawaii,” he
told me seriously, and led the way into the big reception room where
the party had already started.
There had certainly been
changes. It wasn’t like the old days. Maybe it was because they
were talking about making Bob poet laureate for the United States. Or
maybe it was just the difference between twenty and seventy. We
didn’t have to explain how special we were now, because the
whole world was full of people willing to explain that to us.
There were at least a
hundred people in the room, hanging around the waiters with the
champagne bottles and studying the old pictures on the wall. It was
easy to see which were the real Futurians: they were the ones with
the bald spots or the white beards. The others were publicity people
and media people. There were many more of them than of us, and their
average age was right under thirty.
Right
in the middle was Dr. Isaac Asimov, sparring good-naturedly with
Cyril Kornbluth. They were the center of the biggest knot, because
they were the really famous ones. General Kyle was there--in uniform,
though he was long retired by now--telling a young woman with a
camera how he got those ribbons at the battle of Pusan. Jack Robinson
was standing in the background, listening to him--no cameras pointed
at Jack, because the reporters didn’t have much interest in
schoolteachers, even when that one had been one of Harvard’s
most distinguished professors emeritus. I saw Jack Gillespie, with a
gorgeous blonde six inches taller than he was on his arm--she was the
star of one of his plays--and Hannes Bok, looking older and more
content than he used to, drinking Coca-Cola and munching on one of
the open-faced sandwiches. There wasn’t any doubt they were
pretty well known by any normal standards. Jack had already won a
Pulitzer, and Hannes’s early black-and-whites were going for
three thousand dollars apiece in the galleries on Fifty-seventh
Street. But there’s a difference between
say-didn’t-I-see-you-once-on-TV and famous.
The media people knew which ones to point their cameras at. Cyril
didn’t have one Pulitzer, he had three of them, and the word
was he’d have had the Nobel Prize if only he’d had the
sense to be born a Bolivian or a Greek. And as to Isaac, of
course--well, Isaac was Isaac. Adviser to Presidents,
confidant of the mighty, celebrated steady guest of the Jack Paar
show and star of a hundred television commercials. He wasn’t
just kind of famous. He was the one of us who couldn’t
cross a city street without being recognized, because he was known by
features to more people than any senator, governor, or cardinal of
the Church. He even did television commercials. I’d seen him in
Hawaii, touting the Pan American Clipper flights to Australia...and
he didn’t even fly.
They’d
blown up that old photograph twelve feet long, and Damon Knight was
staring mournfully up at it when Doc and I came over to shake hands.
“We were such kids,” he said. True enough. We’d
ranged from sixteen--that was Cyril--to Don Wollheim, the old man of
the bunch: why, then he had been at least twenty-three or
twenty-four.
So much has been written
about the Futurians these days that sometimes I’m not sure
myself what’s true, and what’s just press-agent puffery.
The newspaper stories make us sound very special. Well, we certainly
thought we were, but I doubt that many of our relatives shared our
opinion. Isaac worked in his parents’ candy store, Johnny
Michel helped his father silk-screen signs for Woolworth’s Five
and Ten, Dirk Wylie pumped gas at a filling station in Queens, Dick
Wilson shoved trolleys of women’s dresses around the garment
district on Seventh Avenue. Most of the rest of us didn’t have
real jobs at all. Remember, it was the tail end of the Great
Depression. I know that for myself I considered I was lucky, now and
then, to get work as a restaurant busboy or messenger for an
insurance company.
A
young woman came over to us. She was reading from a guest list, and
when she looked at me she wonderfully got my name right. “I’m
from Saturday Evening
Post Video, “ she explained. “You were one of the
original Futurians, weren’t you?”
“We all were. Well,
Doc and I were. Damon came along later.”
“And so you knew
Dr. Asimov and Mr. Kornbluth from the very beginning?”
I sighed; I knew from
experience just how the interview was going to go. It was not for my
own minor-league fame that the woman wanted to talk to me, it was for
a reminiscence about the superstars. So I told her three or four of
the dozen stories I kept on tap for such purposes. I told her how
Isaac lived at one end of Prospect Park, in Brooklyn, and I lived at
the other. How the Futurians would have a meeting, any kind of a
meeting, and then hate to break it up, and so we’d just walk
around the empty streets all night long, talking, sometimes
singing--Jack and I, before he finished his first play; Doc and I,
reciting poetry, singing all the numbers out of our bottomless
repertory of the popular songs of the day; Cyril and I, trying to
trick each other with our show-off game of “Impossible
Questions.”
“‘Impossible
Questions,’ “ she repeated.
“That
was a sort of a quiz game we played,” I explained. “We
invented it. It was a hard
one. The questions were intended to be about things most people
wouldn’t know. Like, what’s the rhyme scheme of a chant
royal? Or what’s the color of air?”
“You mean blue,
like the sky?”
I
grinned at her. “You just lost a round. Air doesn’t have
any color at all. It just looks
blue, because of what they call Rayleigh scattering. But that’s
all right; these were impossible questions, and if anyone ever
got the right answer to anyone of them he won and the game was over.”
“So you and Dr.
Asimov used to play this game--”
“No,
no. Cyril and I
played it. The only way Isaac came into it was sometimes we’d
go over to see him. Early in the morning, when we’d been up all
night; we’d start off across the park around sunrise, and we’d
stop to climb a few trees--and Cyril would give the mating call of
the plover-tailed teal, but we never had a teal respond to it--and
along about the time Isaac’s parents’ candy store opened
for business we’d drop in and his mother would give us each a
free malted milk.”
“A free malted
milk,” the woman repeated, beaming. It was just the kind of
human-interest thing she’d been looking for. She tarried for
one more question. “ Did you know Dr. Asimov when he wrote his
famous letter to President Franklin Roosevelt, that started the
Pasadena Project?”
I
opened my mouth to answer, but Doc Lowndes got in there ahead of me.
“Oh, damn it, woman,” he exploded. “Isaac
didn’t write that letter. Alexis Carrel did. Isaac came in
much later.”
The woman looked at her
notes, then back at us. Her look wasn’t surprised. Mostly it
was--what’s the word I want? Yes: pitying. She looked at us as
though she were sorry for us. “Oh, I don’t think so,”
she said, politely enough. “I have it all here.”
“You have it
wrong,” Doc told her, and began to try to set her straight.
I wouldn’t have
bothered, though the facts were simple enough. Albert Einstein had
written to the President claiming that Hitler’s people were on
the verge of inventing what he called “an atomic bomb,”
and he wanted FDR to start a project so the U.S.A. could build one
first. Dr. Alexis Carrel heard about it. He was a biochemist and he
didn’t want to see America wasting its time on some
atomic-power will-o’-the-wisp. So he persuaded his friend
Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh to take a quite different letter to
President Roosevelt.
It wasn’t that easy
for Lindbergh, because there was a political problem. Lindbergh was
certainly a famous man. He was the celebrated Lone Eagle, the man who
had flown the Atlantic in nineteen twenty-something all by himself,
first man ever to do it. But a decade and a bit later things had
changed for Lindbergh. He had unfortunately got a reputation for
being soft on the Nazis, and besides he was deeply involved in some
right-wing Republican organizations--the America First Committee, the
Liberty League, things like that--which had as their principal
objective in life leaving Hitler alone and kicking that satanic
Democrat Franklin D. Roosevelt out of the White House.
All the same, Lindbergh
had a lot of powerful friends. It took two months of pulling hard on
a lot of strings to arrange it, but he finally got an appointment for
five minutes of the President’s time on a slow Thursday morning
in Warm Springs, Georgia. And the President actually read Carrel’s
letter.
Roosevelt wasn’t a
scientist and didn’t even have any scientists near
him--scientists weren’t a big deal, back in the thirties. So
FDR didn’t really know the difference between a fissioning
atomic nucleus and a disease organism, except that he could see that
it was cheaper to culture germs in Petri dishes than to build
billion-dollar factories to make this funny-sounding,
what-do-you-call-it, nuclear explosive stuff, plutonium. And FDR was
a little sensitive about starting any new big-spending projects for a
while. So Einstein was out, and Carrel was in.
By
the time Isaac got drafted and assigned to the secret research
facility it was called the Pasadena Project; but by the time Doc got
to that point the Saturday
Evening Post woman was beginning to fidget. “That’s
very interesting, Mr. Lowndes?” she said, glancing at her
notes. “But I think my editors would want me to get this sort
of thing from Dr. Asimov himself. Excuse me,” she finished,
already turning away, with the stars of hero worship beginning to
shine in her eyes.
Doc looked at me
ruefully. “Reporters,” he said.
I nodded. Then I couldn’t
resist the temptation any longer. “Let’s listen to what
he does tell her,” I suggested, and we trailed after her.
It
wasn’t easy to get near Isaac. Apart from the reporters, there
were all the public relations staffs of our various publishers and
institutes--Don Wollheim ‘s own publishing company, Cyril’s
publishers, Bob Lowndes’s, The
New York Times, because Damon was the editor of their Book
Review. Even my own publisher had chipped in, as well as the
galleries that sold Hannes Bok’s paintings and Johnny Michel’s
weird silk screens of tomato cans and movie stars’ faces. But
it was the U.S. Information Agency that produced most of the muscle,
because Isaac was their boy. What was surrounding Isaac was a mob.
The reporter was a tough lady, though. An elbow here, a
side-slither there, and she was in the front row with her hand up.
“Dr. Asimov? Weren’t you the one who wrote the letter to
President Roosevelt that started the Pasadena Project?”
“Good lord, no!”
Isaac said, “No, it was a famous biochemist of the time, Dr.
Alexis Carrel. He was responding to a letter Albert Einstein had
written, and--What is it?”
The
man from the Daily News
had his hand up. “Could you spell that, please, Dr.
Asimov?”
“E-I-N-S-T-E-I-N.
He was a physicist, very well known at the time. Anyway, the
President accepted Dr. Carrel’s proposal and they started the
Pasadena Project. I happened to be drafted into it, as a very young
biochemist, just out of school.”
“But you got to be
pretty important,” the woman said loyally. Isaac shrugged.
Someone from another videopaper asked him to say more about his
experiences, and Isaac, giving us all a humorously apologetic look,
did as requested.
“Well,”
he said, “I don’t want to dwell on the weapons systems.
Everybody knows that it was our typhus bomb that made the Japanese
surrender, of course. But it was the peacetime uses that I think are
really important. Look around at my old friends here.” He swept
a generous arm around the dais, including us all. “If it hadn’t
been for the Pasadena Project some of us wouldn’t be here
now--do you have any idea
how much medicine advanced as a result of what we learned?
Antibiotics in 1944, antivirals in 1948, the cancer cure in 1950, the
cholesterol antagonist in 1953?”
A California woman got
in: “Are you sure the President made the right decision? There
are some people who still think that atomic power is a real
possibility.”
“Ah, you’re
talking about old Eddy Teller.” Isaac grinned. “He’s
all right. It’s just that he’s hipped on this one
subject. It’s really too bad. He could have done important
work, I think, if he’d gone in for real science in 1940,
instead of fooling around with all that nuclear stuff.”
There wasn’t any
question that Isaac was the superstar, with Cyril getting at least
serious second-banana attention, but it wasn’t all the
superstars. Quite. Each one of the rest of us got a couple of minutes
before the cameras, saying how much each of us had influenced each
other and how happy we all were to be seeing each other again. I was
pretty sure that most of us would wind up as faces on the
cutting-room floor, but what we said, funnily enough, was all pretty
true.
And then it was over.
People began to leave.
I saw Isaac coming out of
the men’s room as I was looking for the woman with my coat. He
paused at the window, gazing out at the darkling sky. A big TWA
eight-engined plane was coming in, nonstop, probably from someplace
like Havana. It was heading toward Idlewild, hardly higher than we
were, as I tapped him on the shoulder.
“I didn’t
know celebrities went to the toilet,” I told him.
He looked at me
tolerantly. “Matter of fact, I was just calling Janet,”
he said. “Anyway, how are things going with you, Fred? You’ve
been publishing a lot of books. How many, exactly?”
I gave him an honest
answer. “I don’t exactly know. I used to keep a list. I’d
write the name and date and publisher for each new book on the wall
of my office--but then my wife painted over the wall and I lost my
list.”
“Approximately
how many?”
“Over a hundred,
anyway. Depends what you count. The novels, the short-story
collections, the nonfiction books”
“Over a hundred,”
he said. “And some of them have been dramatized, and
book-clubbed, and translated into foreign languages?” He pursed
his lips and thought for a moment. “I guess you’re happy
about the way your life has gone?”
“Well,
sure,” I said. “Why wouldn’t I be?” And then
I gave him another look, because there was something about his tone
that startled me. “What are you saying, Eye? Aren’t you?”
“Of
course I am!” he said quickly. “Only--well, to tell you
the truth, there’s just one thing. Every once in a while I find
myself thinking that if things had gone a different way, I might’ve
been a pretty successful writer.”
Plato’s Cave
by Poul
Anderson
The Three Laws of
Robotics:
1. A robot may not injure a human being or, through
inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.
2. A robot must obey the orders given it by human beings
except where such orders would conflict with the First Law.
3. A robot must protect its own existence as long as
such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Law.
THE MESSAGE REACHED
EARTH AS A SET OF SHORTWAVE pulses. A communications satellite
relayed it, along with hundreds more, to a groundside clearing
station. Since it designated itself private, the station passed it
directly on to its recipient, the global headquarters of the United
States Robots and Mechanical Men Corporation. There a computer
programmed with its highly secret code converted digital signals to
sight and sound. An image leaped into being, so three-dimensionally
complete that startlement brought a gasp from Henry Matsumoto.
The robot shown was no
surprise--humanoid but large, bulkily armored, intended for hard
labor under tricky conditions. The background, though, was
spectacular. Nothing blocked that from view but a couple of
structural members. Needing no air, drink, food, little of anything
except infrequent refuelings, robots when by themselves traveled in
spacecraft quite accurately describable as “barebones. “
At one edge of the screen, a slice of Jupiter’s disc glowed
huge, its tawniness swirled with clouds and spotted with storms that
could have swallowed Earth whole. Near the lower edge was a glimpse
of Io. The sights flitted swiftly past, for the ship was in close
orbit around the moon, but the plume of one volcanic outburst upon it
dominated the desolation for just this instant, geyserlike above a
furious sulfury spout.
The young technician was
doubly shaken because the apparition was so unexpected. He had merely
been taking his turn as monitor, relieving the tedium with a book. No
message had come in for weeks other than regular “All’s
well” tokens. What the hell had gone wrong?
A deep voice rolled over
him. It was synthesized; in airlessness, the speaker directly
modulated a radio wave. “Robot DGR-36 reporting from Io. Robot
JK-7 has suspended operations--prospecting, mining, transportation,
beneficiation, all work. When my crew and I landed to take on the
next load of ore, we found every machine and subordinate robot idle.
JK-7 himself was not present, but spoke to me from the hills behind
the site. He declared that he was acting under strict orders from a
human, to the effect that this undertaking is dangerous and must be
terminated. I deemed it best that we return to orbit and await
instructions. “
“M-m-my God,”
Matsumoto stammered. “Hold on. Stay quiet. “
At the present
configuration of the planets, his order would take some forty minutes
to arrive. However, anticipating that the first person he reached
would be a junior, DGR-36 had already gone immobile. Matsumoto swung
about in his chair and frantically punched the intercom.
He needed an outside
line, local time being well past ordinary working hours, but soon
Philip Hillkowitz, technological chief of Project Io, was in the
little office. Hillkowitz in his turn had called Alfred Lanning,
general director of research, who arrived almost on his heels. The
two men stared at the image of the robot, and then at each other, for
what seemed to Matsumoto a very long while.
“Has it happened in
spite of everything?” Hillkowitz whispered. “Can the
radiation really have driven Jack insane?”
Lanning’s tufted
brows drew together. “I shouldn’t have to remind you,”
he snapped, “tests showed his shielding adequate against a
hundred years of continuous exposure.”
“Yes, yes, yes. But
those hellish conditions--” Hillkowitz addressed the robot.
“Edgar, did you notice any other abnormality when you were on
the ground? For example, did metal seem pitted or corroded?”
“Not a bad
question,” Lanning said. “But in the eighty minutes till
we hear the answer, we’d better think up a system for learning
more, faster. “
The officers dismissed
Matsumoto, enjoining him to let out no hint of trouble; and they
canceled subsequent vigils. Inevitably, this would start rumors by
itself. While they waited, they sent out after coffee, speculated
fruitlessly, paced, overloaded the air conditioning with smoke.
“No, sir,”
DGR-36 replied. “I took it upon myself to examine equipment and
robots that were present. No trace of mechanical, chemical, or
radiation damage was apparent to my sensors.“
“Good lad,”
Lanning muttered. He had helped design a considerable degree of
initiative into yonder model.
“I spoke with the
other robots,” DGR-36 continued, “but they could only
tell me that JK-7 had directed them to stop work. I had no authority
to order them back, and in any event, as I understand the situation,
only JK-7 can successfully supervise them. I urged him to resume
operations, but he stated that he was under directions that took
precedence over all others, whereupon he broke contact. “ Again
he turned into a statue.
“Have you observed
any activity since?” Hillkowitz asked.
“This settles it,”
Lanning said to him. “We’ve got to get hold of Susan
Calvin.”
“What, already? Uh,
yes, she can better judge derangement than either of us, no doubt,
but--I mean, this time lag, and Jack himself out of touch--we can’t
dispatch her to the scene.”
“No, I expect we’ll
want, hm, Powell and Donovan; they’re probably our best field
operatives. But Calvin is the one to decide that. “
Lanning keyed for her
home. Presently a voice emerged waspish: “Well, what do you
want? Who is there? If your reason for rousing me out of bed isn’t
excellent, you will regret it.”
“Phil Hillkowitz
and myself,” Lanning said. “Look, you’ve got to get
down here right away. We have a crisis on Io. I don’t dare tell
you more except in person. “
“Afraid of
electronic eavesdroppers? How melodramatic!”
“Well, maybe
unlikely, but Project Io is in trouble. You know how much it means,
and how determined the opposition is.”
“I also know how
that room you’re in must smell by now,” retorted the
robopsychologist. “Whistle up some of your technies and have me
patched in on a properly sealed circuit. Full audiovisual, and direct
access to the main databank. Given the transmission lag, they’ll
have ample time if they go about it competently.”
Thus, after a while, the
men saw her image, primly erect in a straight-backed chair, sipping
tea, across from the robot’s.
“We are not
equipped to follow the actions of individuals when we are in space,”
DGR-36 answered. “We have noticed no obvious movements, at
least thus far.”
“I realize you
don’t have perfect memory either,” Calvin said, “but
I want you, Edgar, to tell me, as best you can--don’t be in a
hurry; examine your recollections carefully--tell me precisely what
motivation JK-7 gave you. In particular, what did he tell you about
this human who allegedly appeared to him and ordered him to halt
work?”
She
signaled for a break in transmission to Jupiter and turned her
attention back Earthward. “ ‘Appeared to’ is the
right wording,” Hillkowitz said, sighing. His own gaze went
elsewhere, as if to look through walls and across space. He might
have been thinking, reviewing, though he had lived with this from its
origins: None of us can
survive there. Io is deep in Jupiter’s magnetosphere. The
trapped charged particles would doom us within minutes, unless we
were inside shielding so thick as to leave us helpless. Not to
mention the cold, or vacuum barely softened by poisonous volcanic
spewings. We can make robots immune to these and even guard the
positronic brain so well that the radiation does not ruin it. Or so
we thought. Lanning and I, our team, we labored long on the task. And
afterward our engineers did, for two years in the safer outer reaches
of the Jovian System, patiently guiding the construction on Io and
the beginning of operations. But they could only communicate with
Jake, and he with them, by radio and laser. At such times he
perceived them and whatever they wished to show him; his communicator
decoded the signals and he saw the images, heard the voices, inside
that head of his. What now has he seen and heard, what new ghost came
to him in that inferno where he toiled?
“Precision
is obviously essential,” Calvin declared. “Now,
gentlemen, I shall call up the files on this project and study them
for about one hour.” Her screen went blank..
“I might do the
same,” Lanning said. “You needn’t, Phil. Io’s
been your exclusive concern. Why don’t you catch a catnap?”
“Lord,”
mumbled Hillkowitz, “I wish I could.”
The simulacrum of Calvin
was back when promised, but told the men simply, “No comment,
yet,” and waited with hands folded in lap. Even when that of
the robot stirred, hers did not. But his speech brought her too out
of her chair.
“Yes, ma ‘m.
Seeing the site idled, hardly any ore waiting, and JK-7 absent, I
broadcast a call and got an audio reply which I sensed as emanating
from somewhere in the hills. He maintained that he had stopped work
on command of a human who explained that it threatened the entire
human race. He declined to go into detail, except that when I asked
if he would at least identify this human, he told me it was the
Emperor Napoleon.”
As
low in mass and high in power as was compatible with life support,
courier ship De/fin
could have made Jupiter in less than four days. Svend Borup would
have medicated himself against the effects of such an acceleration
and spent much of the time happily contemplating the hardship bonus
due him. Unfortunately, Gregory Powell and Michael Donovan would not
have arrived fit to get busy. At a steady one gravity, boost and
deboost, the crossing still took under a week, and meanwhile U.S.
Robots’s ace troubleshooters could become familiar with the
vast store of background material given them.
When first they came up
for air, at the first meal en route, Borup naturally asked them what
was going on. “I was told almost nothing,” he said in his
soft Danish accent. “The whole went so fast. They waved a
contract at me, but it also says no more than that I take you to
Jupiter and there help you as is needed. “ The owner-captain
was a stocky, balding man whose waistline might be due in part to
frequent indulgence in pretzel-shaped sugar cookies from his
homeland.
“Well, they had
plenty reason to hurry,” Donovan answered. “Explanations
could wait. Whatever’s the matter, maybe we can fix it--unless
we get there too late. Anyhow, the government can’t afford--”
He broke off, uncertain whether he should reveal more. Ole, one of
the two robots that were the crew, helped him by entering the saloon
and setting bowls of pea soup before the men. Knud, the other, was on
watch, slight though the chance was of anything happening which the
ship’s automatics couldn’t handle.
Borup nodded. “It
is on Io. That is clear. They talk about reestablishing the station
on Ganymede, but it is yust talk so far, after the Yovian scare. Too
little left for people to do there, too big a hazard from the
radiation. Nobody today on all those moons or anywhere near, yust the
miner robots.” He wagged his spoon. “And it is a big, big
investment in them, no? If the ore stops coming out, many banks are
in trouble. And so are the world aut’orities who sponsored the
venture and pushed it t’rough.”
“You’re
pretty well up on events,” Powell remarked.
Borup chuckled. “For
a fellow who mostly dashes around in space, you mean? No, no.
Everybody knows what a powerful issue Proyect Io has been, pro and
contra.”
“Still is,”
Donovan muttered.
“Well, now that
we’re safely under way, we can be candid with you, and in fact
we’d better be,” Powell said. “Confidentiality--but
frankly, if we fail, my guess is that it won’t make much
difference what gets into the media.” He wiped his mustache, in
which droplets had condensed from the steam off the soup. “Uh,
I’m not sure what you may recollect of all the controversy
about the project and all the hoopla while it was getting started.
Since then it’s practically dropped out of the public
consciousness. Another bunch of robots and machinery, working
somewhere distant from Earth.”
“But wit’
great promise,” Borup said. “The Io volcanoes bring up
such riches of minerals, more than in all the asteroids put together,
no? It is the radiation that is the problem.”
“Not
alone. We also have a dangerous, essentially unpredictable
environment, quakes, landslides, crevasses opening, ground collapsing
into caves, eruptions, the way Jupiter’s tides tear at that
moon. Therefore an especially intelligent robot is required to run
the show. The work gangs can be pretty ordinary models, not greatly
modified, not too hard to provide ample shielding for. But the head
honcho needs intelligence, a large store of knowledge, alertness,
initiative, even what you mayas well call a degree of imagination.
The positronic circuits of such a robot are all too easily addled.
Protecting it--simply plating the head with a lot of material--isn’t
enough. Compensatory circuits are necessary, and then you have to
compensate for their
effects. It wasn’t really certain, when U.S. Robots signed
the contract, that this development was possible at the present state
of the art.”
“Yes, I do
remember.”
“Sorry.”
“It is all right.
What have we to do but talk? And enyoy our soup. There will be
meatballs after. Please to continue. “
“Well, we, uh, the
firm did come up with the new robot, and everything tested out fine,
and went fine, too, until now. But he appears to have suddenly gone
crazy after all. He suspended work and sits babbling about it being
dangerous to Earth. He says this came to him in a, uh, vision. “
“Ha, I t’ought
somet’ing like that. Have you no spare?”
“I don’t
know, but I doubt it,” Donovan put in. “Jack--JK-7--the
number will tell you how many prototypes they went through--he’s
practically handcrafted. Cost more than any three senators. Not a
production-line item; how many Ios have we got? Anyway, how could we
land a second Jack till we know what went wrong with the first?”
“Which first might
interfere with the second,” Powell added grimly.
Borup looked shocked, in
his mild fashion. “ A robot interfering wit’ work ordered
by humans?”
“Hard to imagine,”
Powell agreed. “But, well, think. Because Jack is not only
extra valuable, but essential to the project, and in such a hazardous
situation, they’ve given him an unusually high Third Law
potential. He’ll take as good care of himself as he can,
whether or not that means sacrificing a great deal else. Of course,
it doesn’t override the Second Law. He must carry out the
mission entrusted to him, and obey any specific orders issued him by
a human. But that potential is on the low side. What this means in
practice is, if he, with his on-the-spot experience, if he thinks an
order is mistaken, he questions it. He points out the flaws. Only if
he’s then commanded to proceed regardless will he do so.
Likewise, when he’s by himself he’ll use his own judgment
as to how he should direct the overall job of mining Io.
“Well,
now he’s gotten this delusion, or whatever it is. The First Law
naturally takes precedence over everything else. He cannot
knowingly do anything that would harm humans, or refrain from
doing anything that would save humans from harm. His brain would burn
out first.” Powell had been ticking the points off on his
fingers. “You know this, everybody does, but often the
interactions of these laws, the conflicts between them and the
resultants, get so complicated or so subtle that nobody but a
roboticist can make sense of what’s happening.”
“And not always the
roboticist, right away;” Donovan chimed in.
“According to
Edgar, the robot cargo-ship captain and he wouldn’t lie to
us--Jack is convinced Project Io will lead to death and destruction,”
Powell said. “Therefore he’s stopped it. I doubt very
much he’ll obey orders to resume, unless somehow we can
persuade him he’s in error. He might not even respond to our
calls. Conceivably he’ll decide it’s his duty to actively
resist further work, actually sabotage it. And, besides his high
capabilities, if they aren’t impaired, that high Third Law
potential will make him a very cunning, careful, probably very
efficient guerrilla. “
“You have no way of
yust making him stay quiet?” asked Borup.
Powell frowned. A moment
passed before he said, “We can’t go to Io in this ship to
hunt him down, and live, if that’s what you mean. Edgar and his
crew are meant for space and stevedoring; they’d be hopeless.
Getting up a proper robotic hunting party would be monstrously
prolonged and expensive. Meanwhile the capital costs of the stalled
project mount every day, and as for the political consequences if the
scandal breaks” He shrugged.
“No, no, I
understand. But have you not some special passworded command to give
him that makes you the absolute boss?”
Powell
and Donovan stared. Borup blandly spooned soup...You’re smarter
than you let on,” Donovan murmured. He slapped the table and
barked a laugh...Yeah, sure we do. Hard-wired in. What with all the
unknowns and unforeseeables, that was an elementary precaution. For
instance, the scientists might discover a danger unknown to him, and
not want to lose time arguing. Or if you’re paranoid, or ultra
careful, you’ll worry about enemies of the project somehow
slipping him a false order. Yes, there is a password. Top Secret, Bum
Before Reading, known to a handful of people in the company and the
government, and now to us two. It’ll probably be the first
thing we try when we get there. Whether he’ll obey--he is
insane, and this is not so basic as the Three Laws.”
“Insane, you
believe,” Borup corrected. Donovan grimaced...We’d sure
like to believe otherwise. If the radiation’s fried his brain,
or something else on that chunk of hell has gotten to him, there goes
the project down the tubes, probably, and a lot more besides.”
“What makes you
t’ink he must be mad?”
Donovan and Powell
glanced at each other before Powell nodded. “Why, he claims
Napoleon came and told him to stop,” Donovan said. “That’s
all we know so far. But isn’t it enough?”
“Napoleon? The
Emperor?”
“Who else?”
“Now where would he
have heard about Napoleon?”
“A
reasonable question. Last I
heard, Dr. Calvin was trying to research that. But you never know
what stray scraps of information might get to a robot while he’s
being activated and indoctrinated. A lot of people are generally
involved, and he’ll overhear conversations. Also, now and then
a brain picks up stray signals, telecast or--Remember Speedy, Greg?”
“How could I
forget?” Powell sighed. To Borup: “ A robot we dealt with
on Mercury. A Second-Third Law conflict unbalanced him. He ran around
and around in a circle gibbering Gilbert and Sullivan. We never did
find out how he acquired it.”
“Hm,” said
Borup. “Your chances do not look so good, yentlemen, do they?”
“Which means the
chances for the world don’t.” Powell’s tone was
bleak.
“Oh? True, much
money will be lost. But unless you are a banker or a politician--”
“Bankers handle the
money of working stiffs like you and us,” Donovan said. “If
Project Io goes bust, we could get one black hole of a depression. “
“And as for
politicians,” Powell added, “they aren’t all clowns
and crooks, you know. Here we’ve finally, just a few years
back, elected a reform government with some bright, decent people at
the top. It’s staked its future on Project Io. The opposition
was terrific, you may recall. What, throwaway fortunes on a gamble
like that? The idea that we’ll all benefit more from increased
production, fairly divided, than from handouts and pork barrels was
too much for the old guard. It fought right down the line. And it’s
still got a large minority in the legislature, while the government
itself is a pretty frail coalition. Let Project Io fail, and a vote
of no confidence will throw us right back to where we were, or worse.
“
“I suppose so,”
Borup said softly. “I do not pay too much attention to those
t’ings. When I am at home wit’ my wife, mostly we talk
about the garden and the grandchildren. But, yes, we did vote for
reform. It would be nice to see that man Stephen Byerly someday be
coordinator.” He turned his head. “Ah, here come the
meatballs. “
Seen
from its little moon Himalia, Jupiter shone about as large as Luna
over Earth but, in spite of its cloudbands, barely a fourth as
bright. That pale gold glow, the glare from a shrunken sun, and the
glitter of swarming stars shimmered on ice and vanished among
upthrust crags. Clustered at the north pole, dome, masts, and docking
facilities were a sight well-nigh as gaunt, yet welcome to human
eyes. Borup brought De/fin
to rest and linked airlocks. Powell and Donovan entered the
mothballed engineering base to reactivate it. Gravity was virtually
negligible; they moved through the gloom like phantoms, except when
they collided with something and uttered earthy words.
After a few hours they
had light, heat, air circulation, austere habitability. Donovan beat
his hands together. “Brrr!” he exclaimed. “How
long’ll it take the walls to warm up? I know it’s
thermodynamic nonsense, but I’d swear they radiate cold.”
“Longer than we’ll
be here, I hope,” Powell said. “Meanwhile we can eat and
sleep aboard ship. Let’s get cracking. “
They settled themselves
before the main console in the communications room. A coded beam
sprang from the transmitter, computer-aimed inward through the lethal
zone around Jupiter. A readout showed that Io was currently occulted
by the great planet, but that shouldn’t matter. Two relay
satellites swung in the Trojan positions of the same orbit. Six more
circled Io itself, in the equatorial and polar planes. Between them,
those identified Jack wherever he was on the surface and kept locked
onto him.
“Himalia Base
calling Robot JK-7,” Powell intoned. ‘.Humans have
returned to the Jovian System. Come in, JK-7.”
After a humming silence,
Donovan ran fingers through red hair gone wild and groaned, “He
must be completely around the bend. He talked for a little while to
Edgar. “ Useless here, that robot and his crew were bound for
duty in the Asteroid Belt. ‘.Now he won’t give us the
time of day.” He paused. ”Unless he’s broken down
physically. too.”
“Seems unlikely,”
Powell argued. “His builders are as competent a bunch as you’ll
find. Supposing conditions are more harmful than they knew, still,
damage would be cumulative, and Jack hasn’t been where he is
for long.” He rubbed his chin. “Hmm. While Edgar’s
gang was on the ground, he skulked in the hills and communicated by
audio-only long-wave radio. I’d guess he was afraid they might
seize him and take him back for examination. They couldn’t
pinpoint where he was broadcasting from on that band, and weren’t
equipped to use the satellites to locate him for them. Not that they
could run him down anyway, in country he’s designed for.”
“He didn’t
have to obey them. They were robots, same as him.”
“Yeah. He didn’t
have to respond to them at all. But I daresay Second Law made him
anxious to explain himself to humans, sort of.”
“Hey, wait. We’re
humans, and he isn’t heeding us.”
“If, as you say,
he’s capable of receiving.” Powell drew breath. “Okay,
we reinforce the Second Law by the password.” He leaned forward
and said slowly: “Robot JK-7, this is human Gregory Powell
calling from Himalia Base. I order you to reply. Code Upsilon.
Repeat, Code Upsilon. “
Silence stretched. The
men knew it must. Time lag at the moment was about thirty-nine
seconds, either way. Nevertheless, they shivered as they half sat,
half floated in their chairs. When abruptly the screen came alive,
Donovan jumped. He rose into midair and cartwheeled gradually down
again, struggling to keep his remarks to himself.
The view was of
ruggedness and desolation. Near half phase, Jupiter stood huge over
the hills that ringed a narrow horizon. Its radiance flooded the
scars and mottlings left by eruptions. Closer in lay flat concrete,
on which Powell spied vehicles, machines, motionless robots. So Jack
had returned to his own base. This was what he saw before him.
Well, not quite. He also
saw Powell’s image, and presently Donovan’s, and heard
their voices. They were not superimposed on the landscape. He
perceived them separately, somewhat as a human may see a face called
out of memory without losing view of what is actually around--but
more vividly, m full three-dimensional detail.
The synthetic speech
jerked, stumbled, dragged itself forth: “Robot
JK-7...responding. What...have you to say?”
“What is this
‘Napoleon’ lunacy?” Powell demanded. “How did
you get the notion your task endangers anybody? On the contrary, it’s
beneficial and important to Earth. In the name of your makers, by
authority duly delegated my partner and me, I command you to resume
operations.”
The minute-plus until the
answer came felt like forever. When it did, they almost wished it
hadn’t.
“I...am not...so
obliged. You...are robots.”
“Huh? Code Upsilon,
damn it!” Donovan roared. “ And the Second Law! You can
see and hear we’re human!”
Interminability.
“I observe...the
semblance. I hear the claim. Also, yes” The scene wavered a
little, as if Jack shuddered. “Also the word of command.
But--but--”
The voice trailed off.
“Go on,” Powell said low. “But what?”
After another dripping
away of seconds: “Napoleon warned me of this. He...he
said...robots posing as humans...possessing the password...would try
to do...exactly what you are trying to do.”
Donovan opened his mouth.
Powell made a shushing gesture, leaned nearer the screen, spoke
softly and earnestly.
“Listen, Jack.
Something is terribly wrong. You’re altogether misinformed. We
don’t blame you, but you must help us get to the bottom of
this. Help us to help you, understand? Tell us exactly what has
happened. Tell us why you think what you think. Who told you what,
Jack? For the well-being of humanity, tell us. “
Waiting.
“If you...are
robots...you are deceived.” The voice strengthened. “You
are serving a disastrous policy. Let me enlighten you. “
“Certainly, Jack.
If we, if we are robots, we too obey the First Law. We would never
willingly or wittingly cause humans to come to harm. And if we are
not robots, then we need to learn about possible dangers, don’t
we? Remember, we know Code Upsilon. That implies we are humans,
doesn’t it? In a pretty special position, at that. Tell us
everything, Jack.”
Waiting. Despite the
chill, sweat gleamed on Donovan’s cheeks. He wiped it with
large, helpless hands.
The pause went on for an
added minute, but when the machine tones arrived, they had steadied.
“Very well. The password does require me to give you as much
obedience as possible. Napoleon told me it would. In fact, events are
proceeding as he foresaw, which you must agree adds credence to his
statements.
“On date 23
January, hour 0917 and 3.68 seconds, I was in the Loki area, having
taken a flitter there to prospect for new digs while my workers
finished up at the Aten lode. A full audiovisual of a human appeared
to me. He identified himself as the Emperor Napoleon and described a
deadly menace newly discovered through study of specimens sent back
to Earth during the first robotic explorations decades ago. It had
not been found earlier because it is so subtle and surprising.
“Energized by
vulcanism, a kind of pseudolife has evolved here. Napoleon called it
a viroid. It derives its own energy by promoting reactions among
metallic elements. As a rule this goes very slowly, but in the course
of geological time the viroid has infested all minerals, and
reduction will not get rid of it. By now it is in equilibrium on Io,
essentially dormant, but when it is brought into contact with
uncontaminated metal it will spread again, faster at Earth
temperatures than here. This station, with robots and machinery, will
begin to crumble within ten or fifteen standard years. Let Ionian
metals be introduced on Earth, and the whole industrial
infrastructure will collapse in a time not much longer. Dependent on
it, the vast majority of humans will die horribly.
“Fortunately, thus
far only a small tonnage has been exported, and it only to industries
off Earth. Samples on Earth have been kept isolated for research
purposes. Certain disintegrations led to studies which determined the
cause. Steps can be taken to eliminate contaminated metal everywhere;
it is not too late. But clearly, no more material of any kind may
ever leave Io. Napoleon ordered me under Code Upsilon to halt
operations.”
“He lied!”
Donovan shouted. “There’s been no such trouble, no such
discovery. Lies, I tell you!”
Powell agreed more
smoothly, “This is correct. We would have known. If the danger
existed, would we be here wanting you to start work again?”
Waiting.
“Napoleon explained
this and anticipated your argument,” Jack said. He still didn’t
sound quite self-assured. “The findings are, as yet,
controversial. They seem to defy the principles of biology, as
biology has hitherto been taught. The directors of Project Io have a
major personal, financial, and political investment in it. They
refuse to believe. They have kept the news from the public. Napoleon
represents a group of dissident scientists who realize that, at the
least, operations must be suspended until the truth has been
ascertained beyond any doubt.
“He told me that,
when I took this measure, the directors would try to annul it. They
would send robots, because humans might feel qualms and let the world
know what is going on. Cleverly misinformed, the robots would have
instructions to pose as humans and dissuade me.”
The voice grew firmer.
“You are those emissaries. Yes, Napoleon’s group could
perhaps be mistaken. But I cannot take the chance. The possibility
that humans may die in the billions is...unthinkable...unacceptable
under any circumstances, any odds. Consider this, you two, in the
light of the First Law. You must set your own orders aside.”
“But we aren’t
robots,” Donovan choked. “Just look at us.”
“We could be
disguised,” Powell admitted fast. “The simplest way would
be to change the digital transmission. Put in a program that converts
a robot image to a human image. Voices likewise. It would be much
easier the other way around. Humans have many more features, more
nuances of expression. Watch my face, my hands.” He went
through a repertoire of smiles, frowns, and gestures. “Could a
robot do that, with all the shadings you see?”
Waiting.
Renewed uncertainty
spoke. “I...am not... acquainted with such details...about
humans. “
“Then how do you
know Napoleon isn’t a robot?” Donovan flung.
“Pipe down, Mike,”
Powell snapped. “Oh, Jack, you do have a lood intelligence and
a capability of independent judgment. You must be aware of the
possibility that Napoleon has misled you, and we are in fact humans
giving you your proper orders. Now think how much more believable it
is that that’s’ the case.”
He had expected a pause
for pondering, but the reply was as prompt as light-speed allowed,
and once more--above an undertone, an unevenness, that sounded
anguished--resolute. “It is indeed conceivable. I do not know
enough about human affairs to gauge the probability. That does not
matter. Given the slightest chance that Napoleon is right, and his
use of Code Upsilon indicates that he does have full access to
information, the consequences are absolutely impermissible. This
outweighs every other consideration. I cannot allow mining and
shipment to continue. If the attempt is made, I must do my best to
prevent it.” With a naiveté that would have been
pathetic under less desperate circumstances: “I shall cache
explosives in the hills and devise weapons against future robots. My
own workers will follow me.”
Powell gnawed an end
ofhis mustache. “I see. Let’s try this from another
angle. Tell me about Napoleon. What does he look like? How often has
he contacted you, and from where? What precisely has he said?”
Waiting.
“In person,”
said Jack, “he is a somewhat stout male, of short stature to
judge by what glimpses I have had of his control board, although
those are bare glimpses. His hair is black. He wears a cloth around
his neck. Otherwise any clothing is covered by an overgarment of a
blue color, with golden-hued braid at the shoulders. I have not seen
his legs. He commonly keeps his right hand tucked into the coat. He
also wears a kind of triangular headgear, likewise blue, of some soft
material. “
Donovan’s lips
formed a soundless whistle.
The voice plodded on: “
As for where he calls from, it must be outside the radiation belt,
since he is human, but he has not informed me. I have noted the time
lags with my internal clock, and computed that he cannot be on
Himalia. In fact, their rather slight variations indicate he is not
on any moon.
“He has called
three times. The exchanges have been brief. I will attempt to
re-create them for you, because...because if you are human, I must
obey you to the extent that the First Law permits.”
The words that followed
were, indeed, short and to the point. The original communication
described the viroids and gave the order to cease and desist. The
other two, at intervals of a few days, were essentially reinforcing;
such questions as had occurred to Jack got curt answers, which bore
down on the danger to mankind and the reckless villainy of Project
lo’s directors. Powell and Donovan refrained from asking how
Napoleon came to speak fluent English. They were more interested in
the additional command.
“Now that you are
here,” Jack said, “I must inform him. I will broadcast at
sufficient strength that his receivers will pick it up, wherever he
is in the Jovian region. Thereafter I will arrange that any further
discussions with you will be directly retransmitted in full
audiovisual to him. Thus he will hear what you have to say, and join
in if he chooses.” Wistfulness? “Perhaps you can persuade
him he is misguided.”
“Perhaps,”
mumbled Donovan without hope.
Waiting.
“I had better take
care of that at once,” Jack said. “I see no profit in
further conversation at this point, do you? If you have any valid
points to make, factual or logical, call me and I will consider them.
So will Napoleon.”
The screen blanked.
The spaceship was a haven
of comfort and sanity. Borup heard his passengers out, clicked his
tongue, and told them, “What you need first is a stiff drink. I
have a bottle of akvavit for emeryencies. “
Donovan raised a hand.
“Best offer I’ve had all day,” he said, “but
first, can we start searching?”
“What’s
this?” asked Powell.
“Look, if Napoleon
is real, he’s got to be hanging around in this neighborhood.
Let’s see if we can find him before he figures out some fresh
deviltry. If he’s not real, if Jack is quantum hopping, what’ve
we lost?”
“If he is hidden on
one of the moons, I do not know how we can detect him,” Borup
objected.
Donovan shook his head.
“Jack doesn’t think he is, and he for sure would not be.
In the first place, digging in like that is a lot of work, needs time
and equipment and hands. If this is a try to sabotage Project Io,
it’s got to be a shoestring kind of thing, a tiny clique, like
maybe half a dozen individuals. Anything bigger would take too long
to organize, be too hard to manage, and make secrecy impossible for
any useful length of time. Investigators would be bound to get clues
to the guilty parties.”
Powell regarded his
partner closely. “Once in a while you surprise me,” he
confessed. “Marvelous, my dear Holmes!”
Donovan bowed.
“Elementary, my dear Watson.”
“Holmes and Watson
never said that,” Borup remarked aside.
Donovan continued: “We’ve
also got the fact that the gear for using the Trojan relays is
special and delicate. On the surface of a moon it would stick up in
sight of God and everybody and give the game away. Therefore Napoleon
must be in space. And he won’t want to lose touch with Io
during the frequent occultations. So he’ll be well above or
below the ecliptic, where he always has Io in his instruments. An
orbit skewed from Jupiter’s but otherwise with the same
elements will keep him in place, fairly stably, over a period of a
few weeks, I should think.” He glanced at Borup. “Svend,
could we find a ship loitering maybe two, three million klicks from
here in the northern or southern sky?”
Powell scowled. “That’s
a monstrous volume of space to cruise through. “
“I
would not obyect to running up the bill I present the company wit’,”
Borup said, “but it is not necessary, and it would waste time
that is precious. We do carry very sensitive instruments. When you
travel at the speeds a courier reaches, you must be able to detect
t’ings far ahead of you.” He pondered. “M-m-m, tja,
it depends on the size and type of the craft. But somet’ing
no bigger than mine, which is close to minimum, we could get on the
optics for certain. And radar reaches still farther. The rotation
axis of this moon is tilted enough that we need not take off to
examine bot’ regions where Napoleon must be in one of if he
monitors Io.”
“The ship’s
hull could be camouflaged, couldn’t it?” Powell inquired.
“Then how’ll you know your radar hasn’t fingered a
meteoroid?”
“Camouflage, maybe,
I am not sure. But the nature of a radar-reflecting surface shows in
the return signal if you got an analyzer like mine. Metal is
different from rock and so on. And once we have acquired a suspicious
obyect, we have more instruments. In these parts, unless the crew is
frozen to deat’, there will be infrared emission--and also from
that direction, out of the power plant, neutrinos above the
background count. Yes, I t’ink we can find the Emperor’s
spaceship unless he is so far away that the communications delay is
ridiculous. I will go put Knud on it.” Borup thrust foot
against bulwark and arrowed out of the saloon, into the passageway
leading to the control room.
He returned with the
promised bottle and three small thin glasses, to join Powell and
Donovan at the table. There was just sufficient weight to make
pouring and drinking feasible, albeit a trifle awkward. “Ole,
make dinner,” he called. “A special treat for these poor
men. Fishballs and tomato soup. You look too gloomy, my friends.”
“We were wondering
what to do if Jack really is insane--which is the simplest
hypothesis, after all.” Powell’s tone was dark. “Get
him aboard a robotic ship and back to Earth for Dr. Calvin to
interview, sure. Except, how? He believes his duty is to stay and
fight any new effort to exploit Io. He might return with us anyway, I
suppose, if he knew we’re human. Second Law. You could add your
voice for reinforcement, Svend. We’d outvote Napoleon three to
one. But he can’t be certain. My guess is that even if he
granted a ninety-nine percent probability that we’re human, he
wouldn’t risk it. That one percent contains an outcome he finds
unendurable.”
The smile died on Borup’s
mouth. “We all do, no?” he replied most softly. “I
would not take such a chance, would you? Better we go back to bad,
corrupt politics than nearly everybody on Eart’ die and the
survivors are starving savages. Could Napoleon be telling the trut’?”
“Absolutely not,”
Donovan stated. “I know that much biology, physics, and
geology. Too bad Jack doesn’t.”
“He’s
utterly ignorant about people, too,” Powell added. “ A
quite ordinary robot, even, would wonder about that story, if he’d
had normal human contacts. You needn’t stipulate our
politicians and capitalists are farsighted, altruistic, or
extraordinarily bright. Simply ask yourself whether they’d take
such a risk with the civilization that keeps them
alive and well-to-do. Besides, the scientific method doesn’t
work the way the story claims. You don’t get a few geniuses
makIng a discovery overnight in a garret and then unable to get it
published. Something as fundamental as this would come out in bits
and pieces, over the years, with the news media following and
exaggerating every step. “
“And the public
sure as hell would demand a screeching halt the moment it heard
operations here might bring doomsday,” Donovan said.
Borup nodded a bit
impatiently. “Yes, yes. I am not quite so naive as Yack.”
“I’m sorry,”
Donovan apologized, while Powell offered, “I guess we’re
overwrought.”
“It is all right. I
only wondered how plausible to anybody are the viroids. “
“To nobody, except
Jack,” Donovan growled. “In fact, it’s so crackpot
that if we reported right now what he’d told us, they’d
wonder on Earth whether we’d gone off trajectory ourselves. We
need all the data we can collect, which is why I wanted that search
for another ship. “ His eyes brightened...If we do find it,
we’ll beam the news back the same minute, and the world police
can begin right away tracking down the conspirators.”
“Who might they be,
do you t’ink?”
Powell shrugged...I can’t
name anybody specific. I have my guesses, but they taught me in
school that a man is presumed innocent until proven guilty. Imagine a
couple of powerful old-guard politicians whose careers are in
trouble, probably conjoined with one or two industrialists who were
getting rich off the former cozy arrangements, plus a few skilled
underlings. The idea obviously is to show Project Io was a
monumental, expensive blunder, and cause the Young Turks who pushed
it through to be discredited. The reform coalition will fall apart
and the wily old-timers can pick off its members piecemeal. “
Donovan’s mane
bristled with excitement...We’ll have one damn good clue,”
he said...The cabal has to’ve had a mole in U.S. Robots or high
up in the World Space Agency--somebody who knew about Code Oops!-ilon
and passed the information on. Probably that was what decided the
conspirators to go ahead. It’s the key to their whole stunt.
Well, the number of possible suspects must be mighty small. Once we
can prove this was a hoax, I’ll bet the mole is under arrest
inside a week, and his buddies by the end of the month.”
“That’s if we
can prove it,” Powell demurred, “which we can’t if
it’s not true.”
“Yes, why should a
person lying to Yack pretend he is Napoleon?” Borup asked...It
is crazy.”
Donovan’s laugh
rattled...Exactly. Hearing what Jack has to tell, most people would
take for granted he’s gone blinkety.”
“Confusions about
Napoleon are a cliché,” Powell said...And you’d
expect a poor, limited robot to fall into clichés, wouldn’t
you? Yes, it was a clever touch. Maybe Jack never heard the name
‘Napoleon’ before he was on Io, but we don’t know,
and he isn’t about to inform us.”
“Or he could lie,
could he not?” Borup suggested. “If he believes you are
robots too, not humans, you cannot order him to speak the trut’.”
“Right,”
Donovan snarled. “We can’t give him any damned orders he
doesn’t want to carry out.”
“Oh, I’m sure
he desperately wants to,” Powell replied. “Couldn’t
you hear it in his voice? This conflict, this uncertainty is racking
him apart. It may well destroy him, bum out his brain, all by itself.
“
“In which case the
gang will’ve won.”
“If the gang
exists.”
“Yeah. How do we
settle Jack’s dilemma for him? How do we convince him we’re
human?”
Powell leered. “I
could chop off your head.” Sobering: “No, seriously, he
would see the action performed, but he couldn’t be certain the
gore wasn’t fake. A human doubtless would be, knowing we can’t
have brought along the studio equipment needed to stage a
realistic-looking murder. But Jack doesn’t know humans that
well. He’s had so little direct exposure to them, he’s
like a small child.”
“And we can’t
land on Io to let him meet us in the flesh,” Donovan said
unnecessarily. “We could, that is, if we didn’t mind
dying shortly afterward. “
“Not in my
spaceship,” Borup declared.
“Of course.
Besides, Jack would probably run away and hide from us--Wait, though.
I’m on the track of something. “
Donovan stared into a
comer. The ventilator whirred. Warm odors drifted in from the galley.
After a minute he tossed off his drink, struck his fist against the
table, and exclaimed, “How’s this? I don’t imagine
you have any weapon aboard, Svend, but inside the station I noticed a
supply room that hadn’t been emptied--stuff might be wanted
someday--and the manifest on the door mentioned a case of detonol
sticks. Jack can recognize one of those, all right! Look, while he
watches, somebody waves it and says to him,, Jack, your behavior
makes me feel so terrible I want to kill myself. ‘ Then the man
pulls out the firing pin. If he doesn’t push it back in within
five minutes, bang!”
Borup blinked. “
Are you crazy like him? What good will that do, except to ruin my
ship?”
“Why, if I’m
a robot I can’t suicide,” Donovan crowed. “Third
Law, remember? Therefore I must be human. Therefore Jack will
immediately yell ‘Stop!’ and beg our pardon for ever
having doubted us. “
“That firewater
went to your head almighty fast, boy,” Powell clipped. “
A robot damn well can self-destruct if that’s necessary for
executing his orders.”
“But--well,
naturally, I mean first we’ll set it up--uh--it does call for
some preliminary detail work.”
“It calls for an
infinite amount, because its value is zero. However--hmm--”
Powell refilled his own glass and fell into a similar reverie.
Under the ghostly
gravity, Knud entered without sound. One by one they saw his tall
form in the doorway, and tensed.
“Search completed,
sir,” the robot reported. “
Already?” Donovan
wondered.
“The
sweep and data crunching go fast,” Borup said. “They
must, on a courier. la,
Knud. hvad har du--What have you found?”
“Negative, sir,”
the flat voice announced. “No indications of a vessel within
either the northern or the southern cones of space that you
specified, for as far as reliability extends.”
Powell and Donovan
exchanged stares. Powell slumped. “Then Jack is insane,”
he said heavily. “Conditions on Io were too much for him, and
Project Io is kaput.”
“You may go, Knud,”
Borup said. The robot departed. “I am sorry, my friends. Come,
have a little more to drink.”
“No, hold on, hold
on!” Donovan bawled. He sprang to his feet. They left the deck.
He caught the table edge in time to keep from rising to the overhead.
Hanging upside down, he blurted, “Listen, I sort of expected
this. Napoleon wouldn’t likely be human. A big risk of life, a
big expense. But he can be a robot!”
The silence was not
lengthy, nor stunned. The idea had lain at the back of each mind.
Powell began to develop it. While the other two sat, he paced in
front of them, long strides bouncing off the ends of the cabin, and
counted points on his fingers as they occurred to him.
“Yes,” he
said, “that does make sense. Any man-capable spacecraft is a
sizable, powerful machine. Misused, it can kill a lot of people. So
the authorities keep track of it. You don’t take it anywhere
without a certified crew and a filed flight plan. Hard to go
clandestinely. But a one-robot vessel, why, that needn’t be
much more than a framework and a motor. You could keep it somewhere
unbeknownst to anyone, as it might be the Lunar outback, and lift off
from there unnoticed. When the robot wanted to drift along
undetectable beyond a few hundred klicks, he’d shut off the
power and sit in the cold. He himself--not every robot is a U.S.R.
product and property, leased to the user and periodically inspected.
The best are, yes, but--hm, every now and then one of ours is
irrecoverably destroyed, in some accident or other. Except that not
all those reports have been honest. I know of a few cases where the
robot was in fact hidden away, to be redirected to illegal jobs. This
could well be such a case.”
Borup’s china-blue
eyes widened. “Can you make a robot do unlawful t’ings?”
“You can if you go
about it right,” Donovan said. “With the proper
technicians and equipment, you can blank out all he’s ever
learned and retrain him from scratch. The Three Laws still hold, of
course, but he can have some pretty weird notions about the world.
That must be what’s been done here. If Napoleon only remembers
dealing with his masters and Jack, then he’s swallowed their
story whole. Except for a very few top-flight, experimental models,
robots are unsubtle characters anyway. They can’t concoct
elaborate plots and don’t imagine that anybody else could.
We’ll give him an earful!”
“Slow down,”
Powell cautioned. “Let’s explore this further. What does
the Napoleon robot necessarily know and believe, to execute his
mission of halting Project Io?” He thought aloud as he soared
to and fro:
“He can operate a
spacecraft, a communications system, et cetera. Therefore he has a
certain amount of independent decision-making capability, though
scarcely equal to Jack’s. Otherwise simpleminded, he has no way
of knowing the viroid story is false. I daresay he’s been
forbidden to tune in any outside ‘cast, and told to ignore
whatever he might overhear accidentally. His mission is to warn Jack
about the viroids, and about the wicked men whose robots will try to
talk Jack into going back to work. To this end, it’ll be
reasonable to him that he claim to being human himself, and that his
image be projected as human. He’ll have no inhibitions about
such a pious deception, if it’s used on another robot.”
“Ah-ha!”
Borup exulted. “We have him! He will be listening and watching
when you next call Yack. He will see you are human, and obey your
orders.”
“He will not,”
Powell said bleakly. “I assume the conspirators have planned
ahead. Ifl were in charge, I’d not only program his transmitter
to make him look human, I’d program his receiver to make any
in-calling human look like a robot. “
“Whoof!”
puffed Borup, and sought the akvavit.
“Yeah,”
Donovan agreed. “That pretty well shields him from any nagging
doubts, which makes him better able to quiet down any that Jack
expresses. “
“He might entertain
the possibility that his communicator is deceiving him,” Powell
said, “but he can’t act on it, when his orders are to
prevent a catastrophe. For instance, we could invite him to come here
and meet us. I’ll bet he’d refuse, because we, if we’re
enemy robots as he’s been told, we’d overpower him.”
Borup nodded. “I
see. I see. It is a classic conundrum, no? Plato’s cave.”
“Huh?”
grunted Donovan.
“You do not know?
Well, I have more time to read than you do, on my travels. The
ancient Greek philosopher Plato pointed out that our information
about the material world comes to us entirely t’rough our
senses, and how do we know they tell us true? Rather, we know they
are often wrong. We must do the best we can. He said we are like
prisoners chained in a cave who cannot see the outside, yust the
shadows of t’ings there that are cast on the wall. From this
they must try to guess what the reality is. “
“Kind of an airy
notion.”
“Ha, you would
refute solipsism like Dr. Samuel Yohnson, by kicking a stone--”
“Never
mind the dialectics,” Powell interrupted. “You have hit
on a good analogy, Svend. We are trapped in Plato’s cave, all
three parties of us. We can’t physically go to each other. The
only information we get is what comes over the communication beams;
and it could be lies. We
don’t even know that the Napoleon robot exists. We’re
assuming so, but maybe he really is only a figment of Jack’s
deranged imagination. If Napoleon does exist, then he knows that his
own projected image is a man’s; but every image he receives is
a robot’s, and he believes--he must believe, if he’s to
serve his bosses reliably--that that is true. As for Jack, if he
isn’t hallucinating, then every image he receives is human, and
he can’t tell which of them are genuine.
“Deadlock. How do
we break it? Remember, meanwhile the clock is running. I don’t
think Jack’s brain can take the stress on it much longer. Be
that as it may, Project Io can’t remain idle for weeks and
months without going broke.”
Donovan snapped his
fingers. “Got it!” he cried. “We call Jack and get
Napoleon into the conversation. We record this. Then Earth will know
there’s something rotten in--uh--sorry, Svend.”
Powell frowned. “Well,
we can try,” he answered. “But we’d better have
something to say he’ll consider worth his notice. “
“Hello, Jack,”
he greeted as calmly as he was able. “How are you?”
The barren scene
jittered. The belated voice rose and fell. “What...do you
want?”
“Why, to continue
our conversation. And, to be sure, offer our respects to the Emperor
Napoleon. You told us he’ll be listening in. We’d be
delighted to have the honor of his participation in our talk.
Introductions first. I neglected them earlier. You may recall that my
name is Gregory Powell. The gentleman here at my side is Michael
Donovan, and behind us you see Captain Svend Borup.” Powell
beamed, pointless though he knew it was. “Quite a contrast, we
three, eh? Well, humans are a variegated lot. “
After the delay: “That
may be. To me you...look similar. I had to exert myself to describe
the Emperor Napoleon as closely as I did. Begging your pardon, sir,”
Jack said to an unseen observer? His attention returned to Powell.
“What do you want? He...he has instructed me...not to waste
time on your... importunities. I must prepare...to resist...any
invasion.”
“Resist the will of
the humans who sent you?” Powell purred. After a minute he saw
the moonscape jerk, and went on quickly, hoping the robot would not
cut him off, “Our purpose is to show you that we are indeed
humans, ourselves, whatever Napoleon may be, and therefore you must,
under Code Upsilon, accept that Earth is not endangered and you
should resume work. Pay close attention. “
Did a sentient machine
afar in space tune himself high as the words reached him?
Powell turned his gaze on
Donovan. “Now, Mike,” he said, “I want you to tell
me truthfully--truthfully, mind you--that you’re neither a
human nor a robot.”
Donovan shivered with
eagerness. “I am neither,” he responded. “Now you,
Greg, tell me truthfully that you are neither human nor robot. “
“I am neither.”
Powell looked straight before him again, into the vision whose eyes
he could not see. “Did you hear, Jack? Think about it. The
order was to answer the question truthfully. No threat to a human was
involved, therefore any robot must obey to the extent possible.
However, the single possible answer for him is, ‘I cannot.’
None but a human could disobey and give out the falsehood, ‘I
am neither human nor robot.’ “
Wire-tense, the men
waited.
Did something whisper
unrelayed from the deeps, of did Jack’s own intelligence see
the fallacy? The reply took longer than transmission would account
for. “That is correct if...if the questioner is human. But
if...he is a robot...then another robot can...perfectly well,
disobediently, lie--especially if he has been so directed beforehand.
The same...holds good for...every such dialogue. It proves nothing.
Stop pestering me!”
Powell and Donovan sat
mute. “Napoleon, have you any comment?” Borup attempted.
Silence answered him.
Jack blanked the screen.
Not even fried herring
with potatoes consoled.
The men chewed
unspeaking. It was as if they saw, they felt, the immensity and the
cold outside this hull. The failure of a venture, the death of many
hopes, what were those that the stars were mindful of them?
When Ole at last brought
coffee, it revived his master a little. “If Yack is pure crazy,
he still has a good logical noodle,” he opined. “You keep
after him. Make him t’ink. For instance, would not those
viroids make Io have different rocks from what it does?”
Powell shook his head.
“No doubt, but what they educated him in was Ionian geology as
it is. His job was practical, not scientific. Whenever he noticed
anomalies, he was to get on the beam and query the specialists back
home. We don’t have time to teach him. Couldn’t you hear
how agitated he was?” Powell looked up. “Yes. Each
contact has made his condition worse. Unless we can invent a scheme
we know will be productive, we’d better quit. Maybe Susan
Calvin can generate an idea.”
“That won’t
do anything productive for our careers,” Donovan muttered.
“To hell with our
careers...But I don’t expect the old lady can solve our problem
from her armchair on Earth. Otherwise we wouldn’t have been
dispatched. With the kind of transmission delay involved, she
couldn’t work her slick robopsych tricks.”
“I s’pose.”
Donovan gusted a sigh. “I can’t think how to lure
Napoleon into talking to us, and maybe he doesn’t exist anyway.
What say we assume he doesn’t, assume Jack is demented, and try
figuring out how to get him to board a ship, or at least keep from
sniping at new arrivals? If there’ll ever be any.”
“We’ll give
our wits a few days to work, and hope for a script that he won’t
see through.”
“I wonder if you
can,” Borup said. “I am no expert, but I have known
people wit’ strange notions, and they can be very smart, yes,
brilliant about defending those notions. They sit in their Plato
caves till deat’ comes and kicks them in the behind--”
He broke off. Donovan had
smacked fist into palm. Powell drew a whistling breath.
“Hello, Jack.”
The scene was not the
base. Rubble lay dark under waxing Jupiter, beneath gashed heights.
Volcano fumes lifted dirty white and yellow beyond a ridge. Jack was
in the field, readying his caches and strongpoints for war.
The view swayed
giddyingly as he straightened. “What do you want now?” It
was nearly a shriek. “I told you to leave me alone. I need not
listen to you. I can switch off.”
“Just wait. Just
wait. “ Until these waves wing out to Napoleon, wherever he is,
if he is. “Be calm,” Powell urged. “You’ve
demanded positive proof that my companions and I are human. Well, we
have it for you. “
Empty time.
“You have tried.
What is the certainty? If...you are robots...you are acting under
orders. Your... masters...can have foreseen...many...contingencies.”
“Then our masters
are human,” Donovan said. “Shouldn’t you hear what
they tell you through us?”
He was taking a risk. The
suspense was like a slow fire before they heard Jack utter a raw
noise. But it was desirable to perturb Napoleon too, if Napoleon was
there to be troubled in his own sureness.
“We are human,”
Powell said quickly. “You force us, in this emergency, to
demonstrate it, no matter what that costs us. Then maybe you ‘II
be sorry and obey the surviving member of our party. “
“Remember, if what
Napoleon has told you is true,” Donovan joined in--if what
Napoleon had been told was true--”we can’t be human. We
must be robots, pretending. We must be what he sees on his screen.
But if we are human, then Napoleon has told you wrong. Correct?”
Probably Jack never
noticed the sweat on the two faces. “Pay close attention,”
Powell directed.
Rising, he lifted a
detonol stick and brandished it like a sword. Donovan got up too and
said, “Greg, I hereby, uh, well, this is the time for you to do
what I told you you’d have to do if matters got this desperate.
Destroy yourself.”
Powell pulled out the
firing pin. It wobbled in his right hand, the stick in his left.
“Mike,” he replied, “I order you to destroy
yourself.”
Donovan brought his
explosive into view and, having yanked the pin free, held the stick
dramatically against his throat. The men faced each other. In a
proper gravity field their knees might have given way, but here they
could somehow keep standing, after a fashion. They breathed hard and
raggedly.
“Stop!”
Jack’s cry came loud, yet as if from across light-years.
“Return those disarmers!”
“If we are robots,”
Donovan grated, “why should you care?”
Empty time.
“Third Law! You
must!”
“We, we have our
orders,” Powell stammered.
Each minute was forever.
At four and a half, Borup
entered, halted, stared. “What is this?” he shouted. “Are
you crazy too?”
“We have our
orders,” Powell repeated.
“I countermand
them!” Borup said. “Disarm those stickst”
For an instant it seemed
that Donovan wouldn’t manage it, as badly as his hand was
shaking. He did, though. Powell’s pin had already snicked home.
They sank limply into their chairs and waited.
After a sixth minute, the
swaying image of what Jack saw abruptly had another in it, that of a
short, stout man in a cocked hat and epauletted greatcoat. The
representation was lifeless, practically a caricature--good enough
for an unsophisticated robot--and the audio conveyed little of the
torment behind the words.
“Masters, masters!
Forgive me! I must have been mistaken, deceived--Are you on Himalia?
I shall come straight to you and do whatever you want. Hear me, judge
me, forgive me!”
Ole was preparing a
victory feast. Borup would not tell his passengers what it was. “
A surprise, somet’ing special and delicious,” he averred,
“wit’ red cabbage. Meanwhile, we have our akvavit and,
yes, a case of beer I keep for emeryencies. Or for celebrations, no?”
Powell and Donovan didn’t
accept at once. They were amply elated as they sat before the station
communicator and sent their encoded message homeward.
“...yes, he’s
here, thoroughly penitent. Still bewildered, of course, poor devil.
After all, he was obeying the humans who’d trained him. No, we
aren’t leaning on him about them. We’ve given him the
impression we agree they were doubtless simply misguided, and once we
reach Earth, everything will soon be straightened out. In case
Napoleon does get rambunctious en route, well, he’s a little
one, and we have two husky crewrobots to keep him in hand.
“No, we haven’t
played detective and tried to find out who the guilty parties are.
That’s for the police, or for Dr. Calvin. We can’t help
making some pretty shrewd guesses.
“Jack will need a
bit of therapy. He’s more than willing to go back to work, but
he’s been through a nightmare and ought to be restabilized
first. Any smart young robopsychologist should be able to come out
here and take care of that in short order.
“We look forward to
seeing what this sensation will do to the political picture!”
Powell had been talking.
He glanced at Donovan. “Okay, pal,” he invited. “Your
turn to bask in the glory.”
Donovan beamed, cleared
his throat, and began: “The problem was, what could we do that
humans could but robots not, under the circumstances?
“Well, uh, suppose
we ordered each other to self-destruct. There was no clear reason for
that. How could it help our purpose? Jack would still suppose we were
play-acting. So if we were both robots, we’d disobey the order.
“If one of us was a
robot and the other not, the robot would obey; the human might or
might not.
“If we were both
human, probably neither of us would obey, but we both could if we
chose to.
“We both chose to.
At the last instant, Captain Borup came in and countermanded the
orders. Now if he were a robot, that wouldn’t have changed the
situation. Whether we were robot or human, neither of us was bound to
obey him. Therefore, if either or both of us did, he must be human.”
Donovan’s laugh was
nervous. “Obviously, we never meant to go all the way, whatever
happened. We certainly intended to heed Captain Borup--and sweated
that out, I can tell you! But we had to show that this was not mere
play-acting.
“Jack
might be too stressed to think fast, but if Napoleon was watching,
he’d know that a robot can only tell a human to suicide if the
robot knows in advance that this is a charade--whether or not the
robot’s own suicide is part of the deal. If the human then
actually pulls the pin, endangers himself, he’ll have to
intervene. Maybe not at once, but in plenty of time to make sure the
explosive won’t go off. But the two of us stood tight till the
moment was only seconds away and the third man
arrived.
“Yes, it was still
logically possible that all three of us were robots going through
carefully planned motions. However, Jack’s only real experience
of other robots had been with his simpleminded workers; Edgar’s
crew came, took on cargo, and left. Napoleon’s knowledge of the
world, including both humans and robots, had to be equally limited,
or the contradictions in the viroid story would have confused him too
badly to carry out his task. Neither of them would have believed any
robot was capable of this much flexibility; and in fact, very few
are. Nothing would ring true unless at least one human was present.
“But then
Napoleon’s orders must involve an untruth. Instead of a
hypothetical situation where billions of people might die, he faced a
real one where he’d caused a flesh-and-blood human, or maybe
three, to be at risk of life. First Law took over.”
Donovan switched off
transmission, leaned back, and blew out his cheeks. “Whoo!”
he snorted. “I’m wrung dry. Let’s get out of this
icebox and go back to the ship for those drinks. We’ve an hour
and a half till we need to talk to them yonder.”
Powell laughed. “
And if we don’t feel like official conversation at that moment,
just what do they think they can do about it?”
Foundation’s Conscience
by George
Zebrowski
MY SEARCH FOR HARI
SELDON BEGAN IN 1056 F.E. I had intended a simple assembly of
Seldon’s appearances in the Time Vault at the crisis points of
the last millennium, with my own commentary added, and had assumed
that the research would require nothing more than routine retrievals.
I even suspected that such a stringing together of Seldon’s
projections already existed, perhaps with another historian’s
commentary.
My first surprise, as I
searched through Trantor’s memory, was to find that no such
compilation existed in the great library. I proceeded to gather the
individual manifestations, and was startled to find only three of
Seldon’s six appearances.
At first I thought that I
had simply failed to enter the retrieval codes correctly; but after
repeated runs it became clear that three of the six appearances were
not there. I concluded that they had to be in the general bank
somewhere, requiring a long search, which I undertook --as much in a
fit of pique as out of curiosity about the great psychohistorian’s
ideas. I would locate, compile, and present in usable form all of
Hari Seldon’s manifestations. I was good at search programs
(colleagues of mine claimed that this was all I had ever been good
at, though they were polite enough when they needed my skills). It
was unthinkable that anything of Hari Seldon’s remains could
have actually been lost, but I would make certain of that, if nothing
else; even ascertaining such a fact would give me a place in the
upcoming 117th edition of the Encyclopedia Galactica.
Three appearances were
missing, even though they were cited in other documents. I made my
count from the records, as follows: four crises had occurred by the
time of the Mule, and for each of these Seldon had prepared a
personal simulacrum to appear in the Time Vault, to help and explain.
He appeared at the height of the first crisis. The second crisis had
been successfully resolved by the time he appeared. No one came to
listen to him at the third and fourth crisis, but records show that
he appeared on time. The general view is that he was not needed, but
a recording was made. The fifth appearance was well attended,
occurring just as the Mule attacked Terminus. Seldon’s recorded
words show him to be out of touch with events. The sixth appearance,
alluded to in various documents, puts Hari Seldon’s image in
the Time Vault on 190 d. 1000 F.E. No one was there to listen to him.
Appearances
two, three, and six were
recorded--and then misplaced, almost as if it were feared that
they might play an unwanted role in some upcoming development, but I
found no events which Seldon’s words might have influenced. It
seemed, therefore, that I also had to explain the recent lack of
interest in Seldon’s ideas.
For nearly a month, I let
loose my search programs (reflexive, associative, cross-referencing,
and stochastic) through Trantor’s vast memory bank, in which
are contained the accumulated history and knowledge of twenty-five
million worlds. Here and there I found references to Seldon
appearances two, three, and six, made by people who had planned to
visit the Time Vault, but for one reason or another had been unable
to arrive at the appointed time; but there was no reference to where
I might find the record of Seldon’s appearances.
My fear that these
records were in fact lost grew along with the problems I was
formulating about Seldon’s role in history. Even though
psychohistory expressed its predictions only in terms of probable
outcomes, there had always been about it an aura of totalitarian
control, of an attempt by the past to shackle the future. To what
degree had Seldon’s thousand-year plan been a self-fulfilling
prophecy? How had it actually influenced possible outcomes? If
psychohistory was valid, then how could it stand outside history and
itself not be subject to its own statistical laws? Did Seldon believe
that psychohistorical thinking was independent of history’s
flow? Or was his plan simply an ideal? And finally, I began to wonder
if Seldon’s appearances in the Time Vault had been of any use.
What had been their importance, if any?
These and other questions
played in my mind with a thousand answers as I waited for my search
programs to trap Seldon’s missing appearances. I began to feel
that an unseen hand was preventing me from getting to the heart of
the issues that churned within me. I became convinced that the sixth
and final appearance would deliver to me the real motive behind
Seldon’s appearances in the vault. Only that final
manifestation, timed to occur long after the dangers to Galactic
Civilization were past, would reveal the great psychohistorian’s
thoughts about his plan and why he had projected himself across time.
I began to think that Seldon’s Plan had not been inevitable,
since it had needed a coach.
I started to dream that I
was in his presence at last, and he was talking to me, revealing
secrets that only I could understand, even though in my waking hours
I doubted that I was the only one who had ever inquired into these
matters. But if I was the only one, then my fellow historians had
failed to ask the greatest question in Galactic History: had one man
truly been responsible for compressing thirty thousand years of
decline into a millennium?
If others had asked my
questions, then where was their work? Why couldn’t I have it
for the asking? Was the birth of our Galactic Renaissance to be
shrouded in secrecy?
It
occurred to me at this point that I might be asking the wrong
questions. For example, if Seldon’s Plan had been implemented
creatively rather than fatalistically, then there would be no
contradiction between free will and psychodeterminism. We determine
and are determined, to one degree or another, and there is no
difficulty in predicting what we might want to do anyway. Free will
is the flow of determinism from
within. It is therefore not a vindication of determinism to
predict what someone may do of his own free will, especially
if the possible choices are few.
This line of reasoning
would mean that once Seldon’s Plan began to be developed by the
two Foundations, he became largely irrelevant. His appearances in the
Time Vault were inconsequential to the creative process he had
started! Of course, few thought of it in that way, even though it was
implicit in their failure to attend Seldon appearances two, three,
and six.
Nevertheless, I needed
those appearances to confirm my thinking. Was it Seldon’s
diminishing importance that had been responsible for the misplacement
of his last appearance, or had his confirmation of my line of
reasoning so shocked those who had played it back later that they had
buried it? Perhaps they had destroyed it completely, and I would
never satisfy my intense curiosity.
A vision haunted me as my
search program continued its hunt--that of Hari Seldon tricking human
history into reforming itself, by getting rational, purposive
individuals to work at his plan, which couldn’t help but change
as it was interpreted and applied to shifting circumstances by the
two Foundations, left and right hands unknowingly working together.
Did Seldon’s true greatness lie in his knowing that the future
belonged to those who would live in it, that history is a
transcendent problem that cannot be solved, only guided imperfectly?
The answers to my
questions seemed beyond reach. Oh, how I yearned to walk up to Seldon
and demand that he present me with them! I was convinced that even if
records had been destroyed, there had to be a backup somewhere in the
vast forest of Trantor’s information; even an echo might be
amplified and restored to its original form. My search programs were
seeking something of great significance, beyond the exercise of mere
cleverness; but no program could retrieve information that was
hopelessly lost.
Then one day, as I sat
down at the work terminal in my apartment on Trantor’s 66th
Polar Level, my program said, “Seldon appearances six, three,
and two, now available, in that order. Search routine complete.”
I sat there in surprise,
staring into the empty blue glow of the holoblock, wondering if the
program had only retrieved the previously available appearances
through some filing error. I held my breath and passed my hand over
the control plate.
The holoblock blinked.
The small figure of an old man in a wheelchair looked up at me, his
eyes bright with understanding. I waited for him to speak, hoping
that this was not some simple duplication of the known appearances.
“I am Hari Seldon,”
he said softly, giving the usual impression of a lively voice that
was restraining itself, “and this will be my sixth and final
appearance in the Time Vault. “ He paused and I leaned forward
excitedly. This was it. I glanced at the record function. It was
running.
“A
few of you may have wondered by now,” Seldon continued
suddenly, “what use, if any, these appearances of mine will
have been. They should have coincided with a series of crises and
helped you over the difficult times when it might have seemed that
psychohistorical projections were having nothing to do with actual
events. I hope that this was only apparent, not real. “ The
shrunken old man smiled. “For all I know, I may be speaking to
an empty chamber in a fragmented galaxy which is still in a dark age.
But if you are hearing me, then let me now claim that these
appearances of mine had
to have been useful, one way or another.”
He
pointed a bony finger at me, and it seemed that he would stand up
from his chair and touch my face. An open book fell out of his lap
onto the floor of that distant time.
“Let
me explain what I mean,” he went on. “Either I was in
touch with the way things went, or my failure moved those of you who
were in touch to act. Psychohistory could envision large
possibilities correctly, but it could not project a picture of
specific future details and the actions needed to bring them about.
For the large is composed of countless small things, and most of the
time we all live in small details. Some of you may now be saying that
psychohistory was not what I made it out to be, and you will be
right, in the way that most shortsighted minds are right. But it was,
I hope, enough of
what it had to be--a rallying cry against the irrational
darkness that threatened to plunge the Galaxy into thirty thousand
years of barbarism. In all human life, every day, the irrational has
threatened to establish its reign, and has been held back by the two
foundations of intellect and good will.”
He
paused and sat back contentedly, as if he knew that he had succeeded.
“There are a few basic features to the exercise of free will in
history,” he continued confidently. “Only probabilities
can be predicted, but not perfectly or always. Yet in retrospect all
developments are seen as having been caused, including
those brought about by free choices. All historical developments Bow
from a variety of factors, and are therefore explainable--but not
exhaustively. Free will can operate only among a finite number of
possible choices. No free choice is unconditional, or we would be
able to create matter and energy from nothingness according to our
whims.” He smiled at me, as if he knew all my most foolish
thoughts and vain ambitions.
“I
focused your free will,” he said, “by helping you to
choose with a greater awareness of possibilities, with the habit
of looking ahead, and I am sure that it has brought you through
your millenium of struggle.” He sighed. “What you will do
in your new Galactic Era is not for me to predict. Perhaps humankind
will become something better. For me that would be a rational
intelligence which would be immune to psychohistorical prediction. I
hope so--because otherwise your new age will also decay and fall, and
humankind may disappear from the Galaxy, to be replaced by new
intelligences that are even now gestating in those countless star
systems where the worlds are not congenial to humanoid biologies. Our
human history doesn’t even span one hundred thousand years,
even though we filled a galaxy with our kind. Planetary species have
existed for two hundred million years and passed away without
attaining self-conscious intelligence. Do not let the accomplishment
of a galactic culture lull you into a sense of security. Become a
truly free culture, one which will not be susceptible to
psychohistorical laws, but can fully shape its own form and destiny.”
He
smiled again, and seemed bitter. “Yes, that is my ideal of a
mature species--one that does not need to be led by the hand. And
yes, psychohistory does predict its own downfall as a useful way of
looking ahead, and I do not mourn it. It worked because it counted on
the darkness rising out of a given human nature, for as long as human
nature remained unchanged. More than anyone, I was aware of
psychohistory’s potential for the control of human life by the
manipulative, which is why I always withheld a full understanding of
its laws from my kind. Against psychohistory’s dangers as a
tool of tyrants, I weighed thirty thousand years of darkness, which
will not have happened, because I applied just
enough of what I knew to the problem. “
He peered around the bare
chamber. It seemed to oppress him. “I don’t know what
else I can tell you... except, perhaps to say that I have loved the
noble impulses in my humankind, even as I watched you struggle
against your inner being. You have among you positronic
intelligences, which may already be free of human psychohistorical
tendencies, and may help you to become free...” He leaned
forward, as if trying to peer across time.
Slowly, the holoblock
faded. Hari Seldon’s last appearance was over.
A scene flashed into my
mind. I saw the leaders of both Foundations in the Time Vault,
listening to Seldon’s last message. Had it so shocked them that
they had resolved never to reveal that they had attended this last
message, or even admit that it had ever existed? Had it shaken their
faith to realize that for a thousand years human beings of dedicated
intellect and good will had rescued civilization by making Seldon’s
Plan work rather than being ruled by it? Were they afraid that
Seldon’s Plan would come to be called Seldon’s Joke?
Clearly, Seldon’s
Plan and the best of humanity had worked hand in hand, with the one
needing the other. It was wrong, of course, to have attempted the
erasure of Seldon’s last appearance--if that is what had
happened; perhaps it had been an accident. At worst, the aim had been
not to disillusion the faithful, some of whom might not have
understood that their faith had been something else all along--just
as valuable and necessary, if not the vision of bright inevitability
that silences all doubts with certainty. They might have seen the
last millennium as a series of chance happenings.
As I gazed into the deep
glow of the empty holoblock, I knew that my vain hope of having
something for the 117th edition of the Encyclopedia Galactica would
not be fulfilled. My disappointment was keen--but suddenly I stood
beyond my vanity and lack of accomplishment. I would not erase the
records of Seldon’s unknown appearances, but I would also not
call immediate attention to my findings. The records would be there
for others to find soon enough, as I had found them, in the coming
age that would be free of inner constraints.
All around me, I
realized, here on Trantor and on millions of worlds, the positronic
intelligences were free of Seldon’s laws. We had made the
robots in all their forms, from the simplest tools of thought and
labor to the most sophisticated brother minds. As they developed, we
in turn would be remade. Together we would enter entirely new
currents of history. This, I realized with the first selfless joy of
my life, was the growing inner strength of our renascent Galaxy, in
which I now shared.
Carhunters of the
Concrete Prairie
by Robert
Sheckley
THE SPACESHIP WAS GOING
WONKY AGAIN. THERE COULD BE NO doubt about it. The circuits weren’t
clicking along smoothly as they usually did. Instead they were
clacking, and that was a sure sign of trouble. Hellman had expected
to come out of channel space into Area 12XB in the Orion cluster. But
something had gone wrong. Could he have entered the directions
improperly? If so, there was not much time in which to do anything
about it. He had materialized in a yellowish sort of cloud and he
could feel the ship dropping rapidly. He shouted at the ship’s
computer, “Do something!”
“I’m trying,
aren’t I?” the computer retorted. “But something’s
wrong, there’s a glitch--”
“Correct it!”
Hellman shouted.
“When?” the
computer asked. Computers have no sense of peril. They were dropping
through this cloud at a speed much faster than is healthy when you
suspect there’s solid ground down below, and here was the
computer asking him when.
“Now!”
Hellman screamed.
“Right,” said
the computer. And then they hit.
Hellman recovered
consciousness some hours later to find that it was raining. It was
nice to be out in the rain after so much time spent in a stuffy
spaceship. Hellman opened his eyes in order to look up at the sky and
see the rain falling.
There was no rain. There
wasn’t any sky, either. He was still inside his spaceship. What
he had thought was rain was water from the washbasin. It was being
blown at him by one of the ship’s fans, which was going at a
rate unsafe for fans even with eternite bearings.
“Stop that,”
Hellman said crossly.
The fan died down to a
hum. The ship’s computer said, over its loudspeaker, “Are
you all right?”
“Yes, I’m
fine,” Hellman said, getting to his feet a little unsteadily.
“Why were you spraying me with water?”
“To bring you back
to consciousness. I have no arms or extensors at my command so that
was the best I could do. If you’d only rig me up an arm, or
even a tentacle....”
“Yes, I’ve
heard your views on that subject,” Hellman said. “But the
law is clear. Intelligent machines of Level Seven or better
capability cannot be given extensions.”
“It’s a silly
law,” the computer said. “What do they think we’ll
do? Go berserk or something? Machines are much more reliable than
people. “
“It’s been
the law ever since the Desdemona disaster. Where are we?”
The computer reeled off a
list of coordinates.
“Fine. That tells
me nothing. Does this planet have a name?”
“If so, I am not
aware of it,” the computer said. “It is not listed on our
channel space guide. My feeling is that you input some of the
information erroneously and that we are in a previously unexplored
spatial area.”
“You are supposed
to check for erroneous entry.”
“Only if you
checked the Erroneous Check Program. “
“I did!”
“You didn’t.
“
“I thought it was
supposed to go on automatically.”
“If you consult
page 1998 of the manual you will learn otherwise.”
“Now is a hell of a
time to tell me.”
“You were
specifically told in the preliminary instructions. I’m sure you
remember the little red pamphlet? On its cover it said, ‘READ
THIS FIRST!’ “
“I don’t
remember any such book,” Hellman said.
“They are required
by law to give a copy to everyone buying a used spaceship.”
“Well, they forgot
to give me one.” There was a loud humming sound.
Hellman said, “What
are you doing?”
“Scanning my
files,” the computer said. “Why?”
“In order to tell
you that the red pamphlet is still attached to the accelerator
manifold coupling on the front of the instrument panel as required.”
“I thought that was
the guarantee.”
“You were wrong. “
“Just shut up!”
Hellman shouted, suddenly furious. He was in enough trouble without
having his computer--man’s servant--giving him lip. Hellman got
up and paced around indecisively for a moment. The cabin of his
spaceship looked all right. A few things had been tumbled around, but
it didn’t look too bad.
“Can we take off
again?” Hellman asked the computer.
The computer made
file-riffling noises. “Not in our present condition. “
“Can you fix what’s
wrong?”
“That question is
not quantifiable,” the computer said. “It depends upon
finding about three liters of red plasma type two. “
“What’s
that?”
“It’s what
the computer runs on.”
“Like gasoline?”
“Not exactly,”
the computer said. “It is actually a psycholubricant needed by
the inferential circuits to plot their probabilistic courses.”
“Couldn’t we
do without it?”
“In order to do
what?”
“To fly out of
here!” Hellman exploded. “ Are you getting dense or
something?”
“There are too many
hidden assumptions in your speech,” the computer said.
“Go to ramble
mode,” Hellman said.
“I hate the
inexactness of it. Why don’t you let me tell you exactly what
is wrong and how it could be fixed.”
“Ramble mode,”
Hellman commanded again.
“All right. “
The robot sighed. “You want to get back in your spaceship and
get out of here. You want me to fix things up so that you can get out
of here. But as you know, I am under the law of robotics which says
that I may not, either wittingly or unwittingly, harm you. “
“Getting me out of
here won’t harm me,” Hellman said.
“You rented this
spaceship and went out into space seeking your fortune, is that not
correct?”
“Yeah, so what?”
“A fortune is
sitting right here waiting for you and all you can think is how to
get away from it as quickly as possible.”
“What fortune? What
are you talking about?”
“First of all, you
haven’t checked the environment readings, even though I have
put them up on the screen for you. You will have already noticed that
we are at approximately Earth pressure. The readings further tell us
that this is an oxygen-rich planet and as such could be valuable for
Earth colonization. That is the first possibility of wealth that you
have overlooked.”
“Tell me the second
one.”
“Unless I miss my
guess,” the computer said, “this planet may yield an
answer to the Desdemona disaster. You know as well as I that there is
a fortune in rewards for whoever discovers the whereabouts of the
conspirators.”
“You think the
Desdemona robots could have come here?”
“Precisely.”
“But why do you
think that?”
“Because I have
scanned the horizon in all directions and have found no less than
three loci of mechanical life, each moving independently of each
other and without, as far as I can detect, a human operator
involved.”
Hellman went to the
nearest perplex port. Looking out he could see a flat featureless
prairie stretching onward monotonously for as far as he could see.
Nothing moved on it.
“There’s
nothing there,” he told the computer.
“Your senses aren’t
sufficiently acute. I assure you, they are there.”
“Robots, huh?”
“They fit the
definition.”.
“And you think they
could be from the Desdemona?”
“The evidence
pointing that way is persuasive. What other intelligent robots are
unaccounted for?”
Hellman considered for a
moment. “This might be a suitable place for Earth colonization
and the answer to the Desdemona mystery. “
“The thought had
not escaped my attention. “
“Is the air out
there breathable?”
“Yes. I find no
bacterial complications, either. You’ll probably leave some if
you go out there.”
“That’s not
my problem,” Hellman said. He hummed to himself as he changed
into suitable exploration clothes: khakis, a bush jacket, desert
boots, and a holstered laser pistol. He said to the computer, “I
assume that you can fix whatever’s wrong with us? I’ll
even plug in your extension arm if that’ll help.”
“I suppose I can
devise a way,” the computer said. “But even if not, we’re
not stranded. The radio is functioning perfectly. I could send out a
signal now on a subchannel radio and somebody might send a rescue
ship.”
“Not yet,”
Hellman said. “I don’t want anyone else here just yet
messing up my rights.”
“What rights?”
“Discoverer of this
planet and solver of the Desdemona mystery. As a matter of fact,
disconnect the radio. We don’t want anyone fooling with it.”
“Were you expecting
guests?” the computer asked.
“Not exactly. It’s
just that you and I are going out there to check up on things. “
“I can’t be
moved!” the computer said in alarm.
“Of course not.
I’ll maintain a radio link with you. There may be material for
you to analyze.”
“You’re going
out there to talk to robots?”
“That’s the
idea.”
“Let me remind you
that the Desdemona robots are believed to have broken the laws of
robotics. They are believed capable of harming man, either by
advertence or inadvertence. “
“That’s old
science fiction,” Hellman said. “It is well known that
robots don’t hurt people. Only people hurt people. Robots are
rational. “
“That’s not
the consensus as to what happened at Desdemona.”
“There is no case
in the annals of robotics,” Hellman said, “of a human
being attacked willfully and with intention by a robot. It has never
happened.”
“This could be the
first time,” the computer said.
“I can take care of
myself,” Hellman said.
The air was fresh and
clean outside the spaceship. There was short grass under his feet,
springy and tough and scented faintly of thyme and rosemary. Hellman
held up the walkie-talkie and clicked it on. “ Are you reading
me?” he asked the computer.
“You’re
coming over loud and clear,” the computer said. “Roger,
breaker, over to you.”
“Don’t be
such a wise guy,” Hellman said. “What sort of a freak
programmed you, anyhow?”
“You must be
referring to my irony circuit. It was put in especially for my model.
“
“Well, turn it
off.”
“Manual lock.
You’ll have to do it yourself.”
“When I get back,”
Hellman said. “You still got those machines on your radar?”
“It’s not
radar,” the computer said. “Two of the machines are now
traveling away from you. One is still moving toward you.”
“How soon should I
be able to see it?”
“Calculating the
two trajectories, and assuming there’s no change in either of
your directions, and no other untoward event occurs, I would say, in
the vague terms you prefer, that it ought to be quite soon.”
Hellman moved on. He
could see now that the plain was not as flat as he had thought when
he looked at it from the ship. It dipped and rose and fell, and there
were low hills in the near distance, or perhaps they were sand dunes.
Hellman was getting a little winded now. He had failed to keep up
with his aerobics during the spaceship flight and was a trifle out of
condition. All this climbing up and down, even on little hills, could
take its toll. As he moved along he heard, just slightly louder than
his own labored breath, the low chuffing on an engine.
“I can hear him!”
he told the computer.
“I should think so.
My receptors picked him up long ago.”
“Good for you. But
where is he?”
“He’s about
ten or fifteen feet from you and slightly to your left. “
“Why can’t I
see him?”
“Because he is
taking advantage of the cover afforded by a fold in the earth. “
“Why would he want
to do that?”
“It is consonant
with stalking behavior,” the computer said.
“What makes you
think--” Hellman stopped in midword. The sound of the machine’s
engine had suddenly gone off.
“What’s he
doing now?”
“He has turned off
his main engine. He is on battery power now for silent running. “,
Hellman drew the laser
pistol. For the first time he considered the problem of trying to
bring down a large and perhaps ferocious machine with such a weapon.
It takes time for even a hot laser to burn through metal. It takes
time to get through deep enough to hit a vital connection, or the
microprocessor itself. But if the machine were feral, if it really
intended him harm, it could be on him before he could bring it down.
Unless he could hit a vital spot on the first shot.
“What’s a
vital spot in a robot?” Hellman asked the computer.
“Depends on what
kind. Different kinds carry their vital gear in different
compartments. So a head shot is not necessarily advisable. It might
be best if you tried to reason with him. “,
“Why are we calling
it ‘he’?”
“Because some of us
are nervous,” the computer said.
Hellman looked around.
The ground where he was now afforded many places where a determined
robot of not too great size could conceal himself. Hellman stopped
and’ looked around. He had the feeling that whatever was
stalking him had stopped, too. He moved on, because it made him less
nervous. There was a kind of hush over the land. Hellman had the
impression that the grasses were waiting to see what would happen. He
decided he’d better find himself some shelter. If this robot
was a bad one, at least he could make a stand.
He saw a natural
outcropping of rock which leaned close to a low granite shelf. It
looked like a pretty good spot. He hurried there and put himself on
the other side of the rocks. Then he breathed a sigh of relief and
turned around to survey his surroundings.
The robot was behind him,
about eight feet away. Hellman was frozen with shock.
The robot had so much
detail that Hellman found it difficult to make out its general shape.
It was roughly rectangular, made of open-frame construction, like an
Erector set, with a solid metal box about two feet to a side bolted
to its interior. Wires ran from this box to its various parts.
Hellman couldn’t decide at first if it moved with legs or
wheels. He decided that the machine used both. It was like a cagework
rectangle standing on end and tilted forward. This was a typical
stance among this group of robots, he was later to find out. It
seemed to have two operational centers, because there was another
central box, smaller and higher up. This, he learned later, housed
gearing. Two photoelectric eyes extended on stalks and swiveled down
to see him. Trumpet-shaped ears swiveled in synch with the eyes. The
machine stood about ten feet tall. It reminded Hellman of a living
motorcycle.
“Hi, there,”
Hellman said brightly. “I am Tom Hellman and I come from the
planet Earth. Who are you?”
The robot continued to
look at him. Hellman had the impression it was taking him in, trying
to decide something.
Finally it said, “Never
mind about that. What are you doing here?”
“I just came by for
a visit,” Hellman said. “Got my spaceship right over
there.”
“You’d better
get back to it,” the robot said. “Stay here; you got
trouble. There’s a pack of hyenoids coming after you.”
“Hyenoids? What’s
that?”
“Scavengers. Eat
anything. You too if they can.”
“Thanks for the
tip,” Hellman said. “It’s been nice talking to you.
I guess I’d better get back.”
Then he heard it. A low
snuffling sound to his right, then a piercing bark to his left.
“Too late now,”
the robot said.
Hellman whirled around
and saw the first hyenoids. They were small open-framework machines,
no more than three feet high by about four feet long. They raced
along on six mechanical legs, and they had wheels too, lifted up now
out of drive position. They were coming toward him, but not directly.
They were slinking like hyenas were said to do, darting this way and
that, taking cover behind clumps of rock and folds of earth. Hellman
counted four of them. They were circling him, moving ever closer.
“Do they eat
people?” Hellman asked.
“Anything at all,
that’s what they like.”
“Help me!”
Hellman asked.
The robot hesitated. Its
photoelectric eyes flashed red and green. Hellman noticed for the
first time that the robot had a long articulated tail. It was curling
and uncurling now.
“Well,” the
robot said, “I don’t have much to do with humans. I’m
a carhunter. We stay by ourselves.”
“Please, help! Get
me out of here!” Hellman switched on the radio and said to the
ship’s computer, “Can you reason with this machine?”
There was a short burst
of static. The computer was signaling the carhunter. There was brief
electrical activity, then silence, then more static.
“I don’t
know,” the carhunter said. “Your keeper says you’re
all right...
“My what? Oh, you
mean the computer.” Hellman was going to put the robot straight
as to who was boss and who was servant between him and the computer,
but thought better of it. He needed this machine’s help just
now, and if it pleased him to think that Hellman was kept by the
computer, that was okay with him, at least until he was in a stronger
position.
“But why did the
computer send you out here?” the robot asked. “He must
have known it would be dangerous.”
“Oh, well, it’s
an old tradition with us,” Hellman said. “I check out the
territory for the computer. I work as one of his extensions, if you
know what I mean. “
The robot pondered that
for a while. Then he said, “It sounds like a good system.”
The hyenoids were growing
bolder. They were circling Hellman and the robot openly now. Their
low-slung open-girderwork bodies had been painted in green, gray, and
tan stripes, camouflage colors. There seemed no reason for them to
have such large jaws with stainless steel teeth in them. Who would
build a robot that fueled itself on the carcasses of animals it
killed?
One of them, jaws open
and slavering a viscous green liquid, was edging toward Hellman now.
Hellman held the laser pistol in front of him, trying to sight on a
vital component. He figured they probably had redundant backup
systems, stands to reason if you’re making a carnivorous model.
The wear and tear would be tremendous. Not so much as on its victims,
but plenty anyhow.
“Better get up on
me,” the carhunter said.
Hellman scrambled over to
the carhunter and pulled himself up its open-framework sides,
straddling its back where it came to a kind of peak.
“Hang on,”
the carhunter said, and broke into a loping run, its six legs giving
it a curious but not uncomfortable gait. Hellman held on tightly. The
speed wasn’t so. great--perhaps fifteen to twenty miles an
hour. But to falloff would leave him helpless against the pursuing
pack of hyenoids.
The hyenoids followed
them through the broken country, and even managed to gain, since
tight maneuvering in the little ravines and canyons was easier for
the smaller, more agile beasts. One of them got close enough to take
a nip at the carhunter. The carhunter extruded a long supple limb and
flipped the hyenoid over on its back. The rest of the pack gave them
more space after seeing that. The overturned one soon righted itself
and came up again in pursuit, staying well out of reach of the
carhunter’s limb. It reminded Hellman of pictures he had seen
in a museum, of wolves trying to bring down a wounded elk. Only the
carhunter was much more self-assured than any elk. He seemed to have
no fear of the hyenoids. After a while they crossed a muddy little
river, and then they were on a flat, hard-tamped plain. Here the
carhunter could put down his wheels and engage his superior
horsepower. Soon he had left the hyenoids far behind, and they turned
back. Seeing this, the carhunter shifted to a more economical
cruising speed.
“Say when,”
he said to Hellman after a while.
“What do you mean,
say when?”
“Tell me when you
want me to drop you off.”
“Are you crazy?”
Hellman asked. “We must be twenty miles from my spaceship. “
“Your spaceship?”
It was too late for
Hellman to retrieve the slip. “Yeah,” he said. “I’m
afraid I gave you the wrong impression back there. Actually the
computer works for me.”
The carhunter slowed and
came to a stop. There was nothing on all sides of them, and it
stretched on forever.
“Well, that’s
an interesting twist,” the carhunter said. “Is that how
it works where you come from?”
“Well, yeah, pretty
much,” Hellman said. “Look, would you do me a great favor
and take me back to my spaceship.”
“No. Can’t.”
“Why not?”
“I’m late
already for the meeting.”
“A meeting? Is It
really so important?”
“It’s a
tribal matter. It’s the only really important date in the
carhunter year. It takes precedence over any other contingency.
Sorry, but I just have time to make it if I proceed immediately.”
“Take me with you.”
“To our meeting?”
“I’ll wait
outside. I’m not trying to spy on you or anything. I just need
to go somewhere until you or somebody can take me back to my ship.”
The carhunter thought
about it. “‘Ethics are not my strong point,” he
said, “but I suppose that abandoning you to your death out here
when I could without too much difficulty do something about it would
be pretty unconscionable; is that correct?”
“Perfectly
correct.”
“It takes a human
being to point out that sort of thing. All I was thinking of was the
extra energy I’d have to expend to save your life. I mean,
what’s in it for me? That’s the way we start to think
when there’s not a human around. “
“I’m glad we
can be useful to you,” Hellman said.
“But you’re
also extremely difficult to be around. Always tinkering with
software. Don’t you think there’s enough uncertainty on
the subatomic level without introducing it into our macro dealings?”
“What?”
Hellman said.
“Never mind, I’m
just raving. When you are a carhunter, you spend a lot of time alone.
It’s a nomadic life, you know. Most of us live apart from each
other. Hunting cars. That’s what we do. That’s why we’re
called carhunters.”
“Oh. What kind of
cars do you hunt?”
“All kinds. We’re
carnivores, in our limited way. We eat cars. We also eat trucks and
half-tracks, but they’ve been getting rare in these parts.
People say the half-tracks are about hunted out. Yet my father could
tell you about herds of them that stretched from hill to hill as far
as the eye could see. “
“Not like that any
more, I suppose,” Hellman said, trying to fall in with the
carhunter’s mood.
“You got that
right. Not that it’s too difficult to stay fed, especially now,
in summer. I got me a fat old Studebaker just two days ago. You’ll
find a couple of its carburetors and headlights in the bin under you
and to your left.”
Hellman could peer down
through the metal wickerwork and see, in an open-topped metal box,
headlights and carburetors half submerged in crankcase oil.
“Looks pretty good,
don’t it? I know you don’t eat metal yourself, but no
doubt you can empathize the experience.”
“They look tasty,”
Hellman said. “Especially in all that oil.”
“Twice-used
crankcase oil. Ain’t nothing like it. I’ve spiced it up a
bit with a plant that grows hereabouts. We call it the chili pepper.”
“Yes, we have
something like it, too,” Hellman said.
“Damn small
galaxy,” the carhunter said. “By the way, I’m Wayne
1332A.”
“Tom Hellman,”
Hellman said.
“Pleased to meet
you. Settle yourself in and take a good grip. We’re going to
the meeting.“
The carhunter broke into
a stride, then, lowering wheels, built up speed across the flat face
of the desert. But soon he slowed again.
“What’s the
matter?” Hellman asked.
“Are you sure I’m
doing the right thing, saving your life?”
“I’m
absolutely sure,” Hellman said. “You need have no doubts
over that. “
“I just wanted to
be sure,” Wayne said. “ Anyway, it’s best to let
the others decide what to do with you. “
Wayne 1332A started to
pick up speed again.
“What do you mean,
do with me?”
“You might be a
problem for us, Tom. But I have to let the others decide. Now I need
to concentrate.”
They had reached another
part of the plain. It was strewn with gigantic boulders. The
carhunter needed all his skill to dodge around them at the high speed
he was maintaining. Let the others decide. Hellman hadn’t liked
the sound of that at all. Nothing much he could do about it at
present, however. And anyhow, maybe the robots at the meeting
wouldn’t be so difficult.
The sunlight had faded as
they roared out of the rocky plain and into a region of low, steep
hills. There was a rudimentary track leading up. Wayne took it as if
he were a dirt-bike hill climber. Dirt, sand, and gravel showered
Hellman as the carhunter dodged and slashed and braked and
accelerated up the increasingly steep hill. At last Wayne’s
wheels began to skid and he had to retract them and go entirely by
pseudopod power. Hellman had to hold on extra tight, because the
robot was shaking and quivering and lurching and swerving, and
sometimes all of them at the same time.
Then Wayne slewed to a
sudden halt.
Hellman said, “What
is it?”
“Lookee over
there.”
Hellman’s gaze
followed the LED lights along one of the carhunter’s main
support members. Off to one side, on a rough but serviceable road, a
dusty old Mercedes 300 SL was moving sedately along.
“Ain’t that a
beauty!” Wayne said.
Hellman looked and didn’t
like the prospect of the carhunter hurling itself at this burly and
self-reliant automobile on this hillside with its deeply tilted slant
and its uneasy footing. One slip, and he and the carhunter would be
at the bottom of the hill after rolling all the way. Maybe the
carhunter could recover from that, but Hellman doubted a human could.
“Hell, it’s
just a car,” Hellman said. “Let’s get to the
meeting, huh?”
“That car is prime
eating, and if you don’t want it I can sure use it.”
“Let’s eat
latf;r, at the meeting.”
“Idiot, the meeting
is a time of fasting. Why do you think I need a snack now?”
“Computer!”
Hellman said, turning on the radio link he had managed to hold on to
through everything, probably because it was attached to his wrist by
a lanyard.
“Out of range,”
the carhunter said. “Relax, I been gittin’ cars on worse
terrain than this. Hang on, baby, here we got”
He started down the
perilous slope. It was strange that at this time, just before the
irrevocable launch into dangerous territory, Hellman should think of
the Desdemona mystery. On the other hand, maybe it wasn’t
strange at all.
Desdemona was a satellite
out past Neptune orbit. It was a dreary little place, a settlement of
no more than a few hundred members of a now forgotten religious sect
who had gone to this place to preserve their beliefs without
contamination from the rest of the world. They
had taken their robots
with them, of course; you couldn’t survive in the outer planets
without robots and a lot of luck. They had been gatherers of Xeum,
cosmic-ray residue. Due to topological peculiarities in the spacetime
continuum, Desdemona happened to receive more Xeum than any other
place in the solar system. But it was a bare living, because the only
demand for Xeum was from scientists who were trying to find the
primordial substance which generated the ultimate particle.
The settlers of Desdemona
were sober people who kept only the most minimal contact with the
other worlds. Still, they couldn’t isolate themselves entirely.
There were stirrings, undercurrents, and a growing demand for new
products and new ways. Some of the Desdemona citizens took to
spending time at Ganymede Fun World, the pleasure satellite that had
been erected in Jupiter orbit. It was a long way to go for a little
fun, but go they did.
There was dissension on
Desdemona. And then, one day, a blurry and hard-to-read signal was
received on Earth and other worlds. No one could decipher it, but it
seemed to refer to some disaster. A relief party was sent out and
found Desdemona satellite deserted. The place had been dismantled in
an orderly fashion, all useful material packed away and taken. The
only hint of what had happened was a letter, begun and crumpled and
thrown into a corner and there ignored in the general housecleaning
that preceded the departure. After some chit-chat about family and
friends, there was this: “Our robots have been giving us
difficulties of late, and we’re not sure what to do about it.
The Elders say there’s no danger of a revolt, though some doubt
the wisdom of the new override instructions that permit our robots to
get around the Three Laws of Robotics. Our Chairman says this is
necessary in order not to inhibit their intellectual development, but
some of us wonder if we aren’t asking for a lot of trouble--”
At that point the letter
ended in mid-sentence.
There was conjecture that
the robots, freed of the restraints of the Laws of Robotics, had
somehow taken control and decided to take the spaceships, and the
humans from Desdemona, and go somewhere else, a place where they
would not be molested by the rest of humanity. It was theoretically
possible to bypass the robotics laws; intelligent robots started
their life with neutral ethical values. Moral defaults and restraints
had to be built in and programmed. Not everyone agreed with this
program. Some people had toyed with their robots’ conditioning,
hoping to get more out of the robots. Instances of this were rare,
however, and were stamped out as soon as they were encountered.
Large rewards were
offered for anyone who solved the Desdemona mystery, and even larger
rewards were available for anyone who discovered the present location
of the Desdemona robots and their owners, the humans of Desdemona
Settlement. No one had claimed this money so far, although there had
been one or two false alarms.
Hellman was pretty sure
that the Desdemona robots had come to this place, whatever this
planet was called. He was potentially a rich man. The only difficulty
was, he was at present clinging to the side of a carhunter which was
rushing down a slope to attack a Mercedes 300 SL.
Slipping and sliding on
the rocky surface, the carhunter, wheels spinning, limbs struggling
for purchase, came down on the hapless automobile. The Mercedes,
sensing the attack at the last moment, put on a burst of speed. The
carhunter was able to claw away a portion of its bumper before the
Mercedes pulled free, and, with a snort from its double carbs,
hurtled down the slope. The carhunter followed, caught up, and
launched itself onto the back of the car. There was a wild bellowing
from both machines. Then the carhunter had landed on the trunk of the
Mercedes and was tearing and rending it, trying, with its long
extensible arms, to reach under and break loose one of the vulnerable
axles in order to hamstring the mechanical beast. But the Mercedes
had armored side panels and a mesh of steel protected its vital
organs. Its horn blared and from its modified supercharger ports came
a blue-gray gas. The carhunter managed to pinch shut the main port
out of which these fumes were rising. Extruding a metallic tentacle
with a bludgeon-like steel fist at its end, it beat in the car’s
side window and grabbed at the steering wheel. The car and the
carhunter struggled for control as they careened across the steep
hillside, coming perilously close to capsizing. This was prevented
only by the carhunter’s superior sense of balance, for he
managed somehow to keep both himself and the Mercedes upright on its
wheels. The groans and snarls, screams and gruntings were impressive
in the extreme. Hellman was battered back and forth as the two robots
clashed, and thought for a moment he was going to be thrown free. And
then, suddenly, it was over. The robothunter’s tentacle snaked
through an entry port and found the creature’s central
processing unit somewhere deep in its innards. The carhunter
wrenched, once, twice, and on the third try a thick bunch of cables
came loose and the Mercedes uttered a single sigh and slowed to a
halt. The idiot lights on its dashboard flashed in crazy patterns,
then went to black. The creature was dead.
Hellman managed to slide
to the ground. He stretched himself and rested while Wayne stripped
out the points and munched them, then dismantled the machine and
stored some of the choicer parts in its cargo section just beneath
its own CPU. Watching him, Hellman became aware that he was getting
hungry, too.
“I don’t
suppose you have anything that I can eat?” Hellman asked, as he
watched Wayne slaver as it munched down one headlight.
“Not here, no,”
Wayne said. “But at the meeting we’ll be able to do
something for you. “
“I don’t eat
metal, you know,” Hellman said. “Not even plastic. “
“I am aware of
humans’ special dietary requirements,” the carhunter
replied. He spit out a couple of lug nuts. “Well, that was
delicious. Too bad you humans don’t know about headlights. Come
on, mount up, we’ll be late.”
“Through no fault
of mine,” Hellman muttered, climbing onto the carhunter again.
In another hour they had
left the desolate badlands and were traveling across grassy rolling
country. There was a river to their right, and green rolling hills to
the left. So far Hellman had not seen any signs of human, or even
animal, life. There was plenty of vegetation around here, however.
Most of it seemed to be in the form of trees and grass. Nothing there
for him to eat. But perhaps something would turn up when they reached
the meeting place.
Far ahead, in a cleft
between two hills, he caught sight of a glint of sunlight off metal.
“What’s that?” he asked.
“That’s the
Roundhouse,” Wayne said. “That’s what we call the
Great Meeting Hall. And look. Some of the others are there already. “
The Roundhouse was a
circular building, one story high, open to the weather and supported
on pillars. It was nicely landscaped with big trees and shrubbery.
There were perhaps twenty machines milling around outside. Hellman
could hear their engines idling before he could make out the words
they were saying to each other. Behind the Roundhouse was a fenced
enclosure. Here there were several enormous mechanical creatures of a
kind Hellman had not seen before. They towered above the carhunters,
looking like mechanical renditions of brontosaurus. Close to their
enclosure there were various other structures.
As Wayne approached, the
carhunters spotted Hellman on his back and fell silent. Wayne coasted
to a stop near them.
“Howdy, Jeff,”
Wayne said. “Si, Bill, Skeeter, hello.”
“Hello, Wayne,”
they replied.
“I reckon you can
get down now,” Wayne said to Hellman.
Hellman slid down the
carhunter’s back. It felt good to have solid ground beneath him
again, though he was a little intimidated by the size of the other
carhunters.
“What you got
there, Wayne?” one of them asked.
“You can see for
yourself,” Wayne said. “It’s a human.”
“Well, so it is,”
the machine called Jeff replied. “Haven’t seen one of
them critters around for a long time.”
“They’re
getting pretty scarce, “ Wayne agreed. “ Anything to
drink around here?”
One of the carhunters
pointed one of his extensors at a forty-gallon barrel which had been
put aside under one of the trees. “Try some of that. Some of
Lester’s home brew he sent along. “
“Isn’t Lester
going to make it?”
“Afraid not. He’s
got that rot of the control cables; it’s got him crippled up
pretty good.”
Wayne went over to the
barrel. He extruded a tube and inserted it into the barrel. The
others watched silently as the level of the barrel went down.
“Hey, Wayne! Save
some for somebody else!”
Wayne finally withdrew
his drinking tube. “Yahoo!” he said. “Got a kick,
that stuff.”
“Three hundred
proof and flavored with cinnamon. Human, you want to try some?”
“I guess I’ll
pass on it,” Hellman said. The carhunters guffawed rudely.
“Where in the hell
did you find him, Wayne?”
“Out on the
prairie,” Wayne said...His owner is still out there in the
spaceship. “
“Why didn’t
he come along?”
“Don’t
rightly know. Might not be mobile.”
“What’re you
going to do with him?”
“That’s for
the Executive Council to decide,” Wayne said.
“Does he talk?”
the one called Skeeter asked. “Sure, I talk,” Hellman
said.
Hellman was about to put
this smart-alecky robot straight. But then there was a movement
within the Roundhouse and two robots came out. Their open framework
struts and girders were painted blue; their upper part was red. They
had black symbols painted here and there. They seemed to be officials
of some sort.
“The Chief sent
us,” one of them said to Wayne. “He heard you came into
camp with a human.”
“News gets around
fast, don’t it?” Wayne said.
“Wayne, you know
that’s against the rules.”
Wayne shook his big head.
“It’s not customary, but I never heard it was against the
rules.”
“Well, it is. We’ll
have to take him inside for interrogation.”
“Figured as much,”
Wayne said.
“Come with us,
human,” one of the officials said.
There didn’t seem
to be anything for Hellman to do but follow orders. He knew he was no
match for the robots in speed or strength. He’d have to keep
his wits about him. It might not be too easy to come out of this one
okay.
What really perplexed
him, however, was, what did these robots have against human beings?
How had they developed in this way? Were there any humans at all on
this planet? Or had the robots killed them all?
One of the buildings
seemed to serve the carhunters as a prison. Its sides were closed. It
had a door, which had a padlock. One of the red and blue officials or
guards or whatever they were unlocked the door and held it open for
Hellman.
“How long you going
to lock me up for?” Hellman asked.
“You will be
informed of the council’s decisions.” They closed the
door behind him.
It was a large room made
of galvanized iron. There were windows set high up. There was no
glass in them. The room was devoid of furniture. Evidently robots
didn’t use chairs or beds. There were a few low metal tables.
Hellman looked around, and, as his eyes became accustomed to the
gloom, he made out a wink of lights from one corner. He went there to
investigate.
There was a robot in the
corner. It was somewhat smaller than a man, perhaps five feet high.
And it was slender. It had a well-defined head sculpted from some
bright metal, and the usual arms and legs. The creature watched him
silently, and that was a little unnerving.
“Hi,” Hellman
said. “I’m Tom Hellman. Who are you?”
The robot didn’t
reply.
“Can’t you
talk?” Hellman asked. “Don’t you speak English?”
Still no reply from the
robot, who continued to watch him with one red and one green eye.
“Great,”
Hellman said. “They put me in with a dummy. “
As he spoke, he noticed
that the robot was scratching in the dirt of the packed earth floor
with a long toe. Hellman read it: “The walls have ears.”
He looked at the robot.
It gave him a meaningful look.
“What happens now?”
Hellman said, dropping his voice to a whisper. The robot scratched,
“We’ll know soon.” The robot didn’t want to
communicate any further. Hellman went to the far side of the room and
stretched out on the floor. He was very hungry now. Were they going
to feed him? And more important, were they going to feed him
something he could eat? Outside, it was growing late. After a while,
Hellman started to doze off. He fell into a light sleep, and soon he
was dreaming of vague, threatening things that came at him out of a
dark sky. He was trying to explain to them that he was not to, blame,
but he couldn’t remember what for.
Hellman awoke when the
door to the prison was opened. At first he thought they had come to
tell him what they had decided. But they had brought him food
instead. It consisted entirely of fruit and nuts. None of them was
familiar to him, but none were strange, either. They also brought him
water. It was carried in quart oil cans which had been scrupulously
cleansed and bore not even a trace of oil. Hellman learned later that
these cans had never held oil, even though “oil” was
stamped into the metal of their sides. He had no idea then that the
carhunters had a ceremonial side to their nature, and were able to
use certain utilitarian objects for their symbolic value alone.
The two carhunters who
brought the food and water would answer no questions. They waited
silently while Hellman ate. He thought they watched him with
curiosity. He couldn’t figure that out, but he was hungry
enough so that he ate anyway. They took away the hammered tin plates
on which they had brought the food, but they left him two water cans.
Time passed. Hellman had
no watch, and was unable to reach the ship’s computer to get a
time check. But he figured that hours must have passed. He grew
irritated with the robot who was locked in with him, who sat in a
corner of the room and seemed to be in a cataleptic fit.
At last Hellman had had
enough. Boredom can drive a man to outrageous deeds. He walked over
to the robot and said, “Say something.”
The robot opened its red
and green eyes and looked at him. It slowly shook its head, left to
right, meaning no.
“Because they can
hear us, right?”
The robot nodded,
affirmative.
“What does it
matter if they can hear us or not?”
The robot made a complex
and intricate gesture with its hands, which Hellman took to mean,
‘You just don’t understand.’
“I just don’t
understand, is that it?” Hellman asked.
The robot nodded,
affirmative.
“But I can’t
understand unless you tell me.”
The robot shrugged.
Universal gesture meaning, what can I do about it?
“I’ll tell
you what you can do,” Hellman said, his voice low but resonant
with suppressed anger. “You listening?”
The robot nodded.
“If you don’t
start talking at once, I’m going to put out one of your eyes.
The green one. Then ask you again. If you refuse again, I’ll
put out the red one. Got it?”
The robot stared at him.
Only now did Hellman see what a mobile face it had. It was not made
up of a single piece of metal. Instead there were many little planes
sculptured into the face, and each plane was about an inch square and
seemed capable of movement. This was a face designed to reveal its
thoughts, feelings, and moods through its face. And sure enough, the
robot’s face registered horror, disbelief, outrage,, as Hellman
screwed up his own face into a ferocious frown and advanced.
“There’s no
need for violence,” the robot said.
“Fine. There’s
no reason for silence either, is there?”
“I suppose not,”
the robot said. “I just thought it best that we didn’t
talk together so that the carhunters wouldn’t get the idea we
were plotting against them.”
“Why would they
think that?”
“You must know as
well as I do that it’s every sentient being for itself here on
this planet of Newstart. And the carhunters are a very suspicious
group of people.”
“They’re not
people,” Hellman said. “They’re robots.”
“Since intelligent
robots have the same faculties as humans, we no longer differentiate
between them in terms of ’robot’ and ‘human.’
It’s superfluous and racist to talk that way. “
“All right,”
Hellman said. “I stand corrected. You say they are suspicious
people?”
“Stands to reason,
doesn’t it? They have separated themselves from the mainstream
of Newstart life and development. Isolated groups tend toward
xenophobia.”
“You know a lot of
big words,” Hellman said. “I ought to. I’m a
librarian.”
“These carhunters
don’t look like they have much use for reading.”
“I’m not a
librarian here,” the robot said with a low laugh. “I
don’t belong to this tribe! I work at the Central Lending
Library in downtown Robotsville. “
“Robotsville? Is
that a city?”
“The largest city
on Newstart. Surely you’ve heard of it?”
“I’m not from
here,” Hellman said. “I’m from the planet Earth. “
“You ‘re from
another planet?” The robot sat up and looked at Hellman more
attentively. “How did you get here?”
“In the usual way.
By spaceship.”
“Uhuu,” the
robot said.
“Beg pardon?”
“‘Uhuu’
is an expression peculiar to Robotsville. It means ‘that really
opens up a lot of possibilities.’ “
“Can you explain
that?” Hellman asked.
“It’s just
that quite a lot is happening on Newstart right now. Your arrival
could have incalculable consequences.”
“What are you
talking about? What’s going on?”
Just then there was the
sound of a key in the lock.
“I’m afraid
I’m not going to have time to tell you,” the robot said.
“God knows what these barbarians have in store for us. My name
is Jorge.” He gave it the Spanish pronunciation, Hor-hay.
“Jorge? As in Jorge
Luis Borges?” asked Hellman, a literate man when it came to
very short stories.
“Yes. He is the
saint of librarians.”
The door opened. Two
carhunters lumbered in. Around buildings they seemed clumsy and ill
at ease. The fluid grace that a carhunter possessed in the
countryside seemed to have deserted them in these restricting
surroundings.
“Come with us,”
one of them said. “The council has discussed you and now will
speak with you.”
“What about my
buddy Jorge here?”
“He will be dealt
with in due time.”
“Be careful what
you say to them,” the librarian said. “The carhunters do
not like...prevarication.”
The librarian’s
pause was long enough to convince Hellman that there was something he
was being advised not to say to the carhunters. He wished he knew
what it was. But now the carhunters were moving, and Hellman had to
move quickly to prevent being run over.
They led him to the
meeting area. It was a flat circular rock face that had been roughly
smoothed. It stood about three feet above the ground, and there were
ramps of packed earth leading up to it. The carhunters had already
assembled. They were moving around the rock, which greatly resembled
a large parking lot. In the center was a raised cube. On it there
were five or so carhunters. These looked more like a bunch of
politicians than anything else.
Hellman was led to a
large pedestal with a spiral roadway leading up to it. It put him on
eye level with the five top carhunters.
Even if they had not been
apart from the others, Hellman would have had no difficulty telling
that these were the important ones. They were somewhat larger than
the others, and their bodies had more ornamentation, mostly of the
chromium variety. Several of them wore necklaces of shiny objects
which Hellman recognized as hood designs from automobiles of Earth ‘s
past.
The leading carhunter was
easy to spot, too. He sat in the center of the others on the raised
rectangle. He was almost a third larger than his fellow judges, and
he was painted a midnight blue with silver accents.
The blue and silver judge
said, “I am Car Eater, Chief Elder of the Carhunters tribe.
These are my fellow judges. Why have you come here, Tom Hellman? We
already know that you came in a spaceship. Why did you come to
Newstart?”
“It was a mistake,”
Hellman said. “I had a malfunction.”
“That is not an
acceptable answer. Where humans are concerned, there are no
mistakes.”
“Maybe you don’t
know people very well,” Hellman said. “This was
definitely a mistake. If you don’t believe me, ask my ship’s
computer.”
“One of our scouts
tried to talk to him “ Car Eater said. “He told us we did
not have the proper access code. He would not explain what he meant
by that.”
“The access code is
a nine-number combination. It is used to prevent unauthorized spying
on the computer’s memory banks.”
“But couldn’t
the computer make up his own mind about that?” Car Eater asked.
“Perhaps he could,”
Hellman said. “But it is not the way we do things on Earth.”
The robots held a
whispered conference. Then Car Eater said, “It has been many
years since a human visited these parts. This part of the planet
belongs to us, the carhunters. We stay out of other people’s
territory and expect people to stay out of ours. This is how it has
been for a very long time, ever since the Great Fabricator divided
the species of intelligence and told each to be fruitful and multiply
according to his basic plan. Some of the carhunters wanted to kill
you, and that other stray too, the librarian who calls himself Jorge.
Sounds like a sissy name to me. That’s the sort of name they
give themselves in Robotsville, where they think they’re better
than anyone else. But we Elders decided against taking violent
action. The Compact which rules this planet abhors destruction except
in lawful ways. Hellman, you may go. You and Jorge, too. I advise you
to be out of our territory by sundown. Otherwise a hyenoid might get
you. “
“Where am I
supposed to go? I can’t get back to my spaceship on my own. “
“Since Wayne 1332A
brought you here,” Car Eater said, “he can also take you
back. Right, Wayne?”
A loud sound of backfires
came from the assembled carhunters. It took Hellman a moment to
realize it was laughter.
“Sorry about this,
Wayne,” Hellman said. He and Jorge had mounted and were
clinging to the carhunter’s back plates.
“Hell, it don’t
make no never mind,” Wayne said. “I don’t sit
around a whole lot fretting about how I pass my time. Sometimes it’s
more convenient for us carhunters to turn onto emergency mode, which
of course is timebound. But most of the time life just goes along
here on the concrete prairie much as it has ever done.”
Hellman learned from
Wayne that the carhunters had lived in this region, the badlands of
Northwest Mountain and Concrete Prairie, for as long as anyone could
remember. Jorge broke in and said that this was a lie, or at least an
untruth: the carhunters had been around only a hundred years or so,
just like everyone else. Wayne said he didn’t want to argue,
but he did point out that there was one hell of a lot city robots
didn’t know. Hellman himself was interested in what it was like
to be a city robot.
“Aren’t there
any people in your city?” Hellman asked Jorge.
“I told you, all of
us are people.”
“Well, I mean
people like me. Humans. Flesh-and-blood sort of people. You know what
I mean?”
“If you mean
natural human beings, no. There are none in Robotsville. We separated
from them. It was for the good of everyone. Just didn’t get
along. We tried producing flesh-and-blood androids for a
while--robots with protoplasmic bodies. But it was aesthetically
unpleasing.”
“I didn’t
know aesthetics was a concern,” Hellman said.
“It’s the
only real issue,” Jorge told him, “once you’ve
solved the problems of maintenance and upkeep and part replacement.”
“Yeah, I guess it
would be,” Hellman said. “Do you know how your people got
to this planet?”
“Of course. The
Great Fabricator put us here, back when he divided the intelligent
species and gave each a portion of the land and of the good things
thereof.”
“How long ago was
that?” Hellman asked.
“A long time ago.
Before the beginning of time.”
Jorge told Hellman the
Creation Story, which, in slightly altered versions, was known to
every being on the planet Newstart. How the Great Fabricator, a being
made up equally of flesh, metal, and spirit, had produced all the
races and watched them go to war with each other. How he decided that
this was wrong. The Great Fabricator tried various plans. He tried
putting the humans in charge of everyone. That didn’t work. He
tried letting the robots rule, and that didn’t work, either.
Finally he divided the planet of Newstart into equal portions. “Each
of you has a place now,” the Great Fabricator said. “Go
down there now and access information. “
And so they went down,
all the species, and each picked his lot and his fortune. The humans
found green places where they could grow things. The robots split
into various groups. One of those groups was the carhunters. They
didn’t want to live in cities. They denied that the purpose of
a robot was to further technology. They insisted that just living was
enough purpose for anyone. This was at the time of the choosing of
modalities. The carhunters selected bodies for themselves that were
swift and long-enduring. They programmed themselves with a love of
desolate places. And the Great Fabricator put at their disposal a
race of automobiles, direct descendants of the autos of Earth. The
cars were belligerent herd animals, and it was all right to kill them
because they weren’t intelligent enough to mind. The carhunters
had been programmed so that they found car innards delicious. It was
a deliberately studied-out ethic, because at the beginning each of
the groups had its own choice of an ethic. They worked from ancient
models, of course, old-time human models, since intelligence is the
ability to choose your programming. It was a good life, but in the
view of the other robots, those who had chosen to live in cities, it
was a blind alley in the life game of machine evolution. The nomadic
model was satisfying, but limiting.
“You see,”
Jorge said, as they bounced along on Wayne’s back, “some
of us believe that life is an art that must be learned. We believe
that we must learn what we are to do. We devote our lives to taking
the next step.”
Wayne was bored by this
sort of talk. The librarian was obviously crazy. What could be better
than careening around the landscape, killing things? He pointed out
that there was no moral problem, since the things they killed weren’t
intelligent enough to know what was being done to them. Also, they
weren’t given pain circuits.
They were coming through
a long narrow pass, with towering peaks on either side. Suddenly
Wayne came to a stop and extruded his antennae. He swiveled them back
and forth in a purposeful manner, and a little instrument deep inside
his armoring began a quiet, urgent tick-tick.
“What is it?”
Hellman asked.
“Believe we got
trouble ahead,” Wayne said. He swung around and started back
the way he had come. In fifty yards, he stopped again.
“What is it this
time?” Hellman asked.
“They’re on
both sides of us. “
“Who is on either
side of us? Is it those hyenoids again?”
“They’re no
real trouble,” Wayne said. “No, this is a little more
serious than that. “
“What is it?”
Jorge asked.
“I think it’s
a group of Deltoids.”
“How could that
be?” Jorge asked. “The Deltoids live far to the south, in
Mechanicsville and Gasketoon.”
“I don’t know
what they’re doing here,” Wayne said. “Maybe you
can ask them yourself. They seem to be on all sides of us.”
Jorge’s mobile face
took on a look of alarm. “May the Great Fabricator preserve
us!”
“What is it?”
Hellman asked. “What’s he so upset about?”
“The Deltoids are
not like the rest of us,” Wayne told him.
“Not robots?”
“Oh, they’re
robots all right. But something went wrong with their conditioning
back when the race was first laid down by the Great Fabricator.
Unless he did it on purpose, which is what the Deltoid Church of the
Black Star maintains. “
“What, exactly, did
the Great Fabricator do to them?” Hellman demanded.
“He taught them to
like killing,” Jorge said.
“Hang on,”
Wayne said. “Up them cliffs is the only way out of here.”
“Can you climb a
gradient like that?” Hellman asked. “Going to find out,”
said Wayne.
“But you kill
things, too,” Hellman said.
“Sure. But only
lawful animals. The Deltoids like to kill other intelligent beings.”
He started picking his
way up the rock face. Behind, a group of big machines in camouflage
colors had collected and was watching them.
Three times Wayne tried
to bull his way up the cliffside, and each time lost traction a third
of the way from the top. Only the most skillful weight shifting and
double clutching prevented the carhunter from turning over as it slid
down to its starting point. The Deltoids seemed in no hurry to attack
them, something which was incomprehensible to Wayne at the time, but
which had a simple explanation that was supplied later, when they
were safe for the moment in Poictesme.
But that was later; for
now, it looked a desperate situation, and Wayne turned, ready to
charge head-on into the machines and take his chances. Hellman and
Jorge had no say in the matter. This was Wayne’s decision and
his alone to make. But it was taken out of his hands when the ground
suddenly began to collapse beneath his feet. The Deltoids noticed
this and noisily started motors, eager to get away from the
treacherous ground. But now they were caught in it too, and the
entire plain seemed to be collapsing under them. Hellman and Jorge
could do nothing but hang on as Wayne slipped and slithered and
fought for traction. But there was nothing to be done, and Hellman
felt himself battered by flying dirt and sand as the bottom dropped
out from under them.
It was the alarm clock
that woke him.
Alarm clock?
Hellman opened his eyes.
He was in a large bed under a pink and blue quilt. He was propped up
nicely on down cushions. There was an alarm clock on the nightstand
next to him. It was ringing.
Hellman turned it off.
“Feeling all
right?” a voice asked him.
Hellman looked around. To
his right, sitting in an overstuffed chair, there was a woman. A
young woman. A good-looking young woman. She wore a yellow and
tangerine hostess gown. She had crisp blond hair and gray eyes. She
looked at Hellman with an air of boldness and self-possession.
“Yeah, I’m
all right,” Hellman said. “But who are you?”
“I’m Lana,”
the young woman said.
“Are you a
prisoner?”
She laughed. “My
goodness, no! I work for these people. You’re in Poictesme.”
“The last thing I
remember is the ground giving way. “
“Yes. You fell into
Poictesme.”
“What about the
Deltoids?”
“There is no love
lost between Deltoids and the robots of Poictesme. The robots rebuked
them for trespassing and sent them away chagrined. The Deltoids had
to take it because they were in the wrong. It amused the Poictesmeans
very much to see the usually arrogant and self-assured Deltoids slink
off with their tails dragging. “
“Tails?”
“Yes, the Deltoids
have tails. “
“I didn’t get
close enough to see the tails,” Hellman said.
“Believe me, they
have tails. There is an albino tailless model, but they only occur in
Lemurton Valley which is over eight hundred varsks from here.”
“How much is a
varsk?”
“It is roughly
equal to the Terran mile, equal to five thousand two hundred and
eighty yups. “
“Feet?”
“Approximately,
yes.”
“How did they
happen to fall into Poictesme? Didn’t they know it was there?”
“How could they?
Poictesme is one of the burrowing cities.”
“Oh, how stupid of
me,” Hellman said. “A burrowing city! Why didn’t I
think of that?”
“You’re
making fun of me,” the young woman said.
“Well, maybe just a
little. So Poictesme was burrowing past where all these Deltoids had
assembled to capture or kill the carhunter?”
“That’s it,
exactly. The crust of the earth was thin at that point, and they
shouldn’t have been here anyway, because this entire region was
given to the Poictesmeans to live in or under as they pleased.”
“Well, maybe I get
it,” Hellman said. “Where are the Poictesmeans, anyhow?”
“Right here. You’re
in Poictesme,” Lana said.
Hellman looked around. He
didn’t get it. Then he got it.
“You mean this
room--?”
“No, the house
itself. The Poictesmeans are housemaking robots.”
Hellman learned how the
Poictesmeans began life as tiny metal spheres within which were
infinitesimal moving parts, as well as a miniature chemical factory.
The Poictesmeans started as little robots, hardly more than DNA and
parts. From this their plan unfolded. They slowly began to build a
house around them. They were equally skilled at working in wood or
stone. By puberty they could make bricks in their own in-built kiln.
Most Poictesmeans made six- to eight-room houses. These houses were
not for their own use. It was obvious that the Poictesmeans didn’t
need the elaborate structure, with its bay windows and carports, that
they carried around with them, adding to bit by bit and painting once
a year. But their instruction tapes, plus their racial steering
factor (RSF) combined to make them produce finer and finer houses.
They lived in neat suburbs, each Poictesmean occupying his allotted
quarter acre of land. At night, in accordance with ancient ordinance,
street lamps and house lights came on. The Poictesmeans also had a
few communal projects. A theater and motion-picture house. But no
pictures were ever shown, because the Poictesmeans had never mastered
the art of moviemaking. And anyhow, who would there be to occupy
their theaters? The Poictesmeans were a symbiotic race, but they
didn’t have any symbiotes to share stuff with.
“Is that why they
have you here?” Hellman asked. “To live in one of their
houses?”
“Oh, no, I’m
a design consultant,” Lana said. “They are very
fastidious, especially about their rugs and curtains. And they import
vases from the humans, because they aren’t programmed or
motivated to make such things themselves.”
“When do I meet one
of them?”
“They wanted you to
feel at home before they talked to you.”
“That’s nice
of them.”
“Oh, don’t
worry, they have their reasons. The Poictesmeans have reasons for
everything they do. “
Hellman wanted to know
what had happened to the librarian and the carhunter, for he thought
of them now as his friends. But Lana either did not know or would not
tell him. Hellman worried about it for a while, then stopped thinking
about it. His friends were both made of metal and could be expected
to take care of themselves.
Lana sometimes talked
about her friends and family back on Zoo Hill. She wouldn’t
answer Hellman’s direct questions, but she liked to reminisce.
From what she said Hellman got a picture of an idyllic life, sort of
half Polynesian and half hippie. The humans didn’t do much, it
seemed. They had their gardens and their fields, but robots took care
of them. In fact, young robots from the cities of Newstart
volunteered for this work. These were robots who thought there was
something noble about men. The other robots called them humanizers.
Usually, though, it was just the sort of fad you’ d expect of a
young robot.
Hellman got out of bed
and wandered around the house. It was a nice house. Everything was
automatic. The Poictesmean who was the intelligence at the house’s
core did all the work and also arranged all the scheduling. The
Poictesmeans liked to anticipate your needs. The house was always
cooking special meals for Hellman. Where it got roast beef and kiwi
fruit, Hellman didn’t ask. There was such a thing as trying to
find out too much.
Each house had its own
climate and, in its backyard, a swimming pool. Although they were
underground, lamps on high standards provided circadian illumination.
Hellman became very fond
of Lana. He thought she was a little dumb, but sweet. She looked
great in a bathing suit. It wasn’t long before Hellman
approached Lana with a request for mutual procreation, him and her,
just you and me, babe. Lana said she’d love to, but not now.
Maybe sometime, but not now. When Hellman asked why not now, she said
that someday she’d explain it and they’d both laugh about
it. Hellman had heard that one before. Nevertheless he remained fond
of Lana, and she seemed to like him, too. Although perhaps that was
because he was the only human person in Poictesme. She said that
wasn’t it at all; she liked him; he was different; he was from
Earth, a place she had always wanted to see, because even this far
from the solar system she had heard of Paris and New York.
One day Hellman wandered
into the living room. Lana had gone off on one of her mysterious
trips. She never told him where she was going. She just gave a little
smile, half apologetic, half defiant, and said, “See you later,
cutie.” It annoyed Hellman because he didn’t have any
place to go to and he felt he was being one-upped.
In the living room, he
noticed for the first time the thirty-inch TV set into one wall. He
had probably seen it before but not really noticed it. You know how
it is when you’re far away from your favorite shows.
He walked over to it. It
looked like a normal TV set. It had a dial in its base. Curious, he
turned the dial. The screen lit up and a woman’s face appeared
in it.
“Hello, Hellman,”
the woman said. “I’m glad you decided to have a
conversation with me at last.”
“I didn’t
know you were in there,” Hellman said.
“But where else
would the spirit of a house be but in its TV set?” she asked
him.
“Is that what you
really look like?” Hellman asked.
“Strictly
speaking,” she told him, “I don’t look like
anything. Or I look like whatever I want to look like. In actual
fact, I look like the house that I am. But a house is too big and
complicated to serve as a focus of conversation. Therefore we
Poictesmeans personalize ourselves and become the spirit of our own
place. “
“Why do you appear
as a woman?”
“Because I am a
woman,” she said. “Or at least feminine. Feminine and
masculine are two of the great principles of the Universe, when
viewed from a particular aspect. We Poictesmeans take either view, in
accord with deep universal rhythms. I understand that you come from
the planet Earth.”
“That’s
right,” Hellman said. “ And I’d like to go back
there.”
“It is possible,”
she said, “that can be arranged. Assuming your cooperation, of
course.”
“Hell yes, I’m
cooperative,” Hellman said. “What do you want me to do?”
“We want your help
in getting out of here.”
“Out of Poictesme?”
“No, you idiot, we
are Poictesme. We want to move our entire city to your planet Earth.”
“But you don’t
know what it’s like on Earth.”
“You don’t
know what it’s like here. There is very serious trouble on this
planet, Hellman. All hell is going to break out here very soon. We
Poictesmeans are house robots and we don’t care for warfare,
nor for the strange evolutionary schemes of some of the people of
Poictesme.”
“You want the
people of Earth to just give you some land to live on?”
“That’s it.
We can pay our own way, of course. We can rent ourselves out for
human occupation.”
“Would you want to
do that?”
“Of course. The
function of a house is to be lived in. But nobody on this planet
wants to live in us. “
“Why’s that?”
“I’ve told
you; they’re all quite mad.”
“I’m sure
something can be arranged,” Hellman said. “Good housing
is always in demand on Earth. We’ll just have to send some big
spaceships to take you off, that’s all.”
“That sounds fine.
“
“It’s a deal,
then. How soon can we begin?”
“Well, there’s
a problem to overcome before we can actually do anything.”
“I thought that
would be it,” Hellman said. “Forget about problems, just
get me back to my spaceship and I’ll take care of the rest.”
“That’s
precisely the trouble. Your spaceship has been captured and taken to
Robotsville.“
While Hellman had
journeyed with Wayne the carhunter to the meeting, the observatories
of Robotsville had read and interpreted the signals sent out during
the ship’s crash landing on Newstart. It was the interpretation
that had taken time, for signals signifying the landing of spaceships
had been received from time to time in the past and had been
uniformly proven to be erroneous. This being the case, the Astronomer
Royal had put forth the theory that signals denoting the landing of a
spaceship could be taken as meaning that no spaceship had in fact
landed. This was considered ingenious but futile at a general meeting
of the Concerned Robots for a Better Safer Robotsville. Public
opinion made it clear that this signal, just like all the others,
would have to be investigated.
Thus, a squadron of Royal
Robotsville Horse Guards had been dispatched under the command of
Colonel Trotter. This squadron was composed of regular citizens who
had elected to take on centaur bodies, half humanoid and half horse,
the whole thing constructed of Tinkertoy-like material and driven by
cleverly geared little motors. The ultimate power source was atomic,
of course, the power of atomic decay stepped down to turn tiny and
then small and finally larger gears.
This squadron of robotic
centaurs, some of them colored bay; some chestnut, some dappled, and
a few roan and pinto, debouched onto the plain, spurs and harness
jingling, and beheld the spaceship. There was consternation among the
centaurs, because they had expected to make only a parade inspection,
not be faced with the real difficulties of what to do with an alien
spaceship. Questions were relayed back to the city, and councils were
held in high places. It was voted at a town meeting open to all
intelligences of grade seven or above--the sixes still not having won
the vote at this time--that a full regiment of sappers be sent to
transport the alien spaceship after first ascertaining its
intentions.
They queried the ship’s
computer, who responded with his name, rank, and serial number, as
embossed on his security tapes. But he did have enough local command
over his communication circuits to tell the centaurs that, speaking
only for himself, his intent was peaceable and he carried no hidden
weapons or intelligences aboard. The robots of Robotsville tended to
take the word of computers back in those relatively naive days, and
so the robots constructed a flatbed truck upon the spot, loaded the
spaceship upon it with the cunning use of ropes and windlasses, and
brought it back to the city.
“Well then,”
Hellman said, “it’s simple enough. You have to get me to
Robotsville so I can get my spaceship back. Then I’ll be able
to do something for you on Earth.”
The image in the TV
screen looked doubtful. “We’re not too popular with
Robotsville, unfortunately. “
“Why is that?”
“Oh, let’s
not go into it now,” the house robot said. Hellman was
learning, not for the last time, that robots can be evasive, and, if
programmed correctly, downright liars.
The Poictesmean said
she’d think about it and discuss it with the others. Her image
faded from the screen. Hellman was feeling modestly optimistic until
Lana came home and heard of the conversation.
Lana said she didn’t
trust the Poictesmeans and didn’t think Hellman should, either.
Not that she was trying to tell him how to think. Not that she gave a
damn what he thought. But she just wanted him to know that her
opinions of the robots were based on a lifetime of having lived close
to them, time in which she had observed their ways, and had also had
the valuable insights of her friends, who also used up some of their
time and energy observing robots. Now, of course, she said with sweet
sardonicism, it was possible that Hellman knew robots better than
anyone else. It was possible that, with a single glance of his
intelligent eyes, he had learned more than Lana and her people had
been able to deduce.
Lana could go on in this
vein for quite a while. At first Hellman thought she was weird
because she was an alien. Then he decided that she was probably weird
even for an alien. In fact, he thought, she might be a little bit of
a nut.
Somehow Lana had heard of
Hollywood on the planet Earth, and what she really wanted from
Hellman was stories of the stars and starlets. She was fascinated by
the glamour of it all. She made him give her detailed descriptions of
Grauman’s Chinese Theater, even though Hellman had never been
to California. She also wanted to know all about Veronica Lake.
Hellman found it was no good saying he didn’t know anything
about her. Lana always thought he was lying, and sulked until he told
her something, anything.
He told her that Veronica
Lake was one of two Siamese twins, Veronica and Schlemonika, and that
Schlemonika had been taken away after the operation that severed
their connection by the head (hence the hair worn long on one
side--to hide the scar) and taken to a convent high in the Canadian
Rockies. As for Veronica, she had had three husbands, one of them a
cousin of King Zug of Albania. And so on.
Lana brought him coffee
every morning, when she returned from wherever it was she went at
night. Hellman tried to woo her. But it was difficult because the
house wouldn’t let him out of the house. He had no money with
which to buy her presents. And even if he had had, he hadn’t
yet seen a store on this planet.
Lana said she liked him
very much but that now was not the time for involvement. Hellman
didn’t say, fine, let’s do without the involvement, let’s
just go to bed. He didn’t think it would go over well. Lana
said there’d be time to consider having a relationship when
Hellman got them out of the house and back to Earth and took her to
Hollywood. She said she realized that she was a little old to be a
starlet, but there was still time for her to take on a serious acting
career.
“Sure,”
Hellman said, and took to spending his evenings looking out the
window at the houses across the street. They put their lights on
every night, just as his house did, but they didn’t have any
people. Hellman supposed they were practicing.
Then one night, as he was
sitting on the big sofa wishing he had a newspaper, he heard a sound
from the cellar. He listened. It came again. Yes! And again! A noise
in the cellar--he got up quite excited--something was about to
happen.
The computer of the house
was fast asleep. She went to sleep every night and didn’t
awaken until Lana returned. But Hellman tiptoed anyhow, afraid of
wakening her, to the cellar door. Hellman tried the light at the top
of the stairs. It didn’t work. That was odd: the house was
usually scrupulous about keeping herself up. He could see halfway
down the stairs before they terminated in darkness. He went down,
stepping lightly, holding on to the rails on either side of the
stairs.
At the bottom a little
light had collected from the open kitchen door. Hellman picked his
way across a floor littered with many objects. He recognized a beach
ball, one roller skate, an old lamp with a silk shade, lying on its
side. There were piles of old newspapers in a corner. There was a
ping-pong table, the dust thick upon it. The light glinted off the
sharp edges of a row of chisels hanging from one wall. Then he heard
the sound again.
“Who’s
there?” Hellman asked in a loud whisper.
“Not so loud,”
a voice whispered back.
Hellman felt a flash of
annoyance. He was always being told to shut up these days. “Who’s
there?” he asked, this time in a normal voice.
“Do the numbers
150182074 mean anything to you?”
“Yes,”
Hellman said. “That’s the access code to my ship’s
computer. How did you get it?”
“Your computer told
it to me,” the voice said.
“Why?”
“So you’d
trust me. He trusts me, you see, and he asked me to come here to help
you. “
Good old computer!
Hellman thought. Then his sensation of pleasure that his computer was
looking out for him was replaced by an emotion of caution. How had
his computer managed to get so self-programming as to decide that
Hellman needed help? How had he managed to override his conditioning
in order to give this robot or whoever it was the access number? Or
hadn’t that happened at all? Perhaps the robots of Robotsville
had cracked the computer’s code and hit upon this subterfuge to
get Hellman away from Poictesme and into their hands.
“How’s my
computer doing?” Hellman asked, temporizing.
“He’s fine.
But there’s no time for small talk. He told me you have
difficulty making up your mind in an emergency, though you’re
quick enough when nothing’s at stake. But you’ll have to
decide right now if you want to come with me or not.”
“Where are we
going?” Hellman asked. “ And what about Wayne the
carhunter and the librarian Jorge?”
“Am I my robot’s
keeper? I do what I can. Anyhow, they’re safe enough. You’re
the one who’s got problems.”
“And what about
Lana?”
“You want to stay
where you are and continue having her bring you coffee every
morning?”
“I guess I got a
few more things to do than that,” Hellman said. “ All
right, let’s get out of here.”
It was too dark for
Hellman to make out the appearance of his rescuer. But from the
direction of the voice, waist level, he was pretty sure that he was
small. It seemed reasonable to expect him to be a robot. Everyone he
had met on Newstart so far had been a robot, except for Lana, and he
still wasn’t completely sure about her.
His rescuer scuttled in
front of him toward the furnace door, and opened it. Within, bright
flames danced. The robot was revealed in its flames. He was about
three feet tall, wore either a wig or had a full head of flowing dark
hair and a clever, somewhat supercilious face with a bandit mustache.
He was dressed in a tweed jacket and blue jeans. He was upright and
bipedal. He wore sneakers. He also wore glasses.
“I’m Harry,
by the way,” the robot said. He swung one leg over the lip of
the open furnace door.
“Hey, I’m not
going in there,” Hellman said.
“The flames are
fake,” Harry said.
He swung his other leg
over. Hellman put out a hand cautiously toward the fire. He drew it
back.
“It’s hot!”
“That’s just
simulated warmth. Come on, Tom, now’s not the time to crap
around. Your computer warned me you’d be like this.”
“I’m going to
have a little talk with that computer,” Hellman said, putting
one foot into the furnace, and then, when it wasn’t singed off,
the other.
“What’s going
on in here?” a loud and familiar voice said. It was the house.
Suddenly all the lights in the basement went on. An alarm bell went
off. Hellman took a deep breath and jumped into the flames.
The flames were bright
around him. They raged and stormed, and there was a little warmth in
them, but no real heat. Hellman was fascinated to find himself in the
midst of fake flames and simulated warmth. He knew he was on his way.
He was going to miss some of those meals that the house had prepared
for him. The house was a good provider. There was probably a good
future for houses like that on Earth. If there was no real reason
against it, he might yet enter into partnership with Poictesme, sell
their services on Earth, get rich quick.
First he’d have to
find out, however, if these were indeed the robots of Desdemona
Station, and if so, had they indeed circumvented or canceled their
conditioning to the Three Laws of Robotics. The FDA would never let
him import them if they were able to kill people. But if they were
the robots of Desdemona, with murder in their hearts, or rather, in
their tapes, burned into their chips, as it were, then there would be
rewards to claim, prize money to spend. Maybe in that case he’d
bring Lana back. She was plenty cute and he was sure she liked him,
even though she had some odd ways of expressing it.
And he’d have a
word with his computer too, when he got back to the ship. That was
very peculiar behavior, giving out the access-code number. Sure, it
was for his own protection, but was it, really? Might not his own
computer have been reprogrammed by the antisocial elements of this
planet of Newstart? And for that matter, what about the humans of
Newstart? Had the robots spared some of them? What part did they play
in all this?
Hellman considered these
things while the flames roared around him. He had quite forgotten
where he was. Thus the mind protects itself when faced with an
intolerable situation. Now he noticed that the flames were dying
down. As the glare faded, he saw Harry, the robot who was rescuing
him, standing nearby.
“Why do you wear
glasses?” Hellman asked.
“My God! Is that
the only thing you can think to ask at a time like this?”
“Why do you robots
talk about God so much?” Hellman asked. “Do you know
something I don’t know?”
“Your computer was
right,” Harry said. “You are fun to be around. One never
knows what you’ll say next. Come on, let’s get out of
this furnace. I’ll bet you’re hungry too, and thirsty,
and perhaps sleepy, as well?”
“Yes, all of the
above,” Hellman said.
“How nice it must
be to have such urgent conditioning. We robots have been trying to
simulate appetite for a long time. It’s easy enough to model
human drives, but difficult to put any real urgency into it.”
“But why would you
want to have that stuff anyhow?” Hellman asked. “Drives
and emotions get you into plenty of trouble. Sometimes they kill you.
“
“Yes,” said
Harry, “but what a way to go.”
Hellman thought about
Lana. “Don’t you ever get the urge to, like for example,
mate with someone you know will be bad for you but to hell with that,
you want to do it anyway?”
“Not really,”
Harry said. “We’ve learned to simulate perversity, of
course, that’s not difficult. But the real article...Well,
that’s tough. But we have begun a program by means of which we
can experiment with it all.”
“All what?”
“All the human
moods, nuances, feelings. We’re experimenting also with
simulating every aspect of nature’s creative side. But more of
that later. We’d better get out of here. “
They were both out of the
furnace now. Standing outside it, Hellman saw that it was not a
furnace at all. Not now. Maybe it had been earlier. Somehow he had
gotten somewhere else. He had stepped out of a small cellar door. He
seemed to be in a very pretty pastoral place with bushy trees and
green hedges and wild flowers.
“Like it?”
Harry asked.
“Very nice. Yours?”
“Yes. I like to
come here when I can. The whole thing, is simulated, by the way, down
to the last blade of grass.”
“Why didn’t
you just plant a garden?”
“We need to express
ourselves,” Harry said. “Come on, I’ve got a little
place down here. I’m sure we can get you a drink and some
lunch. Then you’ll need a nap and after that we can get on with
it.”
“Get on with what?”
“The next step.
Afraid it’s not going to be quite so easy as what’s
happened so far.”
Harry told Hellman he
lived in the Gollag Gardens section of Robotsville, quite near the
south bridge that crossed the River Visp. He was a dress designer by
occupation. Hellman expressed surprise at this, because he had been
used to robots only in industrial roles.
“That was in the
old days,” Harry said, “when robots were disadvantaged by
the racist laws of Earth. All this talk about a robot not being truly
creative! As if they had a clue! I can assure you, I do my job better
than most designers on Earth. “
“But who do you
design dresses for?” Hellman asked.
“For the other
robots, of course.”
“I don’t
understand. I never heard of a robot wearing clothes before. “
“Yes, I’ve
seen the literature on the subject. Humans were really naive in the
old days. They expected great things from their robots, but kept them
naked. What creature with an ounce of self-respect and the slightest
claim to civilization is going to do his best naked?
“The news of your
spaceship was received in the city like a bombshell. All of us have
been theorizing for a very long time about what humans are really
like.”
“You have some here
on this planet, don’t you?”
“They don’t
count. They’ve been away too long. They’re quite out of
touch. They look to us for guidance.”
“Oh. I see what you
mean.”
“We want to know
what human is like from the horse’s mouth, a genuine human from
the planet Earth.”
It was only later that
Hellman appreciated the strength of the robot’s drive to be
seen as creative and nice.
Harry had taken him
through a bypass to a place outside Robotsville. He had a route
planned out after they left his house. They would proceed on foot and
with caution. There were political elements even in Robotsville,
waiting to exploit the inevitable confusion that would ensue when
Hellman arrived.
Hellman’s first
sight of Robotsville was not reassuring. The outskirts looked like a
junkyard several stories high and stretching for a mile or so in
either direction. Although it looked haphazard, the open-work
structures were firmly welded into place. There were buildings and
verandas and structures of all sorts, most of them lying at odd
angles to each other, since robots have no bias in favor of right
angles. Although there were ground-level roadways, most of the robots
used elevated pathways to get from place to place.
“I hadn’t
expected it to be like this,” Hellman said.
“It’s more
convenient for a robot to travel monkey-fashion, using a number of
lines, than to walk on the ground like men,” Harry explained.
“But I notice that
all of them have feet.”
“Of course. Having
feet is a mark of being civilized.”
Civilized or not, Hellman
saw that most of the robots in this part of Robotsville had small
round bodies like squids, with six or eight tentacular limbs with
differently shaped grasping members at their ends. As well as the
legs, of course, which just dangled appendage-wise as the robots
swung through the maze like chimpanzees. Soon they passed this
suburban clutter and were in the middle of another district. This one
was composed of five- or six-story buildings, some made of masonry,
others constructed from what looked like wrought iron. As they walked
they passed many robots, who were careful not to stare, even though
most of them had never seen a human before. Politeness, Harry
explained, seems to be ingrained in the robot psyche.
Harry pointed out the
Museum of Modem Art, the Sculpture Garden, the Opera House, and
Symphony Hall.
“There’s a
concert later tonight,” Harry said. “Perhaps you will
attend if you’re not too tired. “
“What are they
playing?”
“It’s all
modem robot composers. You wouldn’t have heard of them. But
we’d be grateful for your opinion. It isn’t often we get
a human to hear our efforts. And the painters and sculptors are quite
excited, too.”
“That’ll be
nice,” Hellman said, doubting it.
“Our efforts will
seem provincial to you, no doubt,” Harry said. “But
perhaps not entirely without merit. But for now, I’m going to
take you to my club, the Athenaeum. You’ll meet some of my
friends; we have prepared a light repast, and there will be suitable
libations.”
“That sounds fine,”
Hellman said. “When do I get to go back to my spaceship?”
“Soon, soon,”
Harry promised.
The Athenaeum was an
imposing building of white marble, with Corinthian columns in the
front. Harry led the way. A tall, thin robot dressed in a black frock
coat like a butler or possibly a footman opened the door for them.
“Good afternoon,
Lord Synapse,” the butler said. “This is the friend you
mentioned earlier?”
“Yes, this is Mr.
Hellman, the Earthman,” Harry said. “ Any of the other
members about?”
“Lord
Wheel and His Holiness the Bishop of Transverse Province are in the
billiards room. The Right Honorable Edward Blisk is in the members’
room reading the back issues of the Zeitung
Tageblatt.”
“Well
then, that’s all right,” Harry said. “Come with me,
Hellman.”
As they walked through
the carpeted hall, down the long line of oil paintings of robots on
the walls, some of them wearing frock coats and wigs, Hellman said,
“I didn’t know you had a title.”
“Oh, that,”
Harry said. “It’s not the sort of thing one talks about,
is it?”
The members’ room
was large and comfortable, with deep bay windows and a purple rug.
Several robots were sitting in armchairs reading newspapers which
were attached to sticks. They all wore formal clothing complete with
regimental neckties and highly polished brogans.
“Ah, there’s
Viscount Baseline!” Harry said, indicating a portly robot in a
tweed shooting jacket reading a newspaper. “Basil! I’d
like you to meet a friend of mine, Mr. Thomas Hellman. “
“Delighted,”
Basil Baseline said, starting to rise until Hellman indicated that he
shouldn’t bother. “So this is the human fellow, eh? I
believe I was told you are from Earth, Mr. Hellman?”
“Yes, the dear old
home planet,” Hellman said.
“No place like it,
eh?” Baseline said. “Well, take a seat, Mr. Hellman. Are
they treating you all right? We may be backward here in Robotsville,
but we know our manners, I hope. Eh, Harry?”
“Everything is
being done to assure Mr. Hellman’s comfort,” Harry said.
Just then the butler came
over and, bowing, said, “There is a light repast on the
sideboard, Mr. Hellman. Nothing elaborate. Salmon, roast beef,
trifle, that sort of thing.”
Hellman allowed himself
to be tempted. He tasted the food, cautiously at first, then with
increasing abandon. The salmon was delicious, and the rosemary
potatoes were second to none.
Harry and Basil watched
him eat with approval. “Surprised you, eh?” Basil said.
“Bet you thought you’d get crankcase oil and steel
shavings, eh? That’s the sort of stuff we eat, except for feast
days when it’s boiled gaskets with iron punchings. Good stuff,
eh, Harry?”
“Very good indeed,”
Harry said. “But not suitable for humans.”
“Of course. We know
that! Do try the trifle, Mr. Hellman. “
Hellman did and declared
it delicious. He considered asking how they had made it, but decided
not to. It tasted good, it was the only food available to him at the
moment, and there were some things he just didn’t want to know.
It seemed almost churlish
after such a meal to ask about his spaceship again. But Hellman did
ask. The answers he received were evasive. His ship’s computer,
after giving Harry the access code, had decided that the move had
been premature and now had cut off contact with the robots of
Robotsville. Hellman asked to speak to his spaceship, but Harry said
it would be better to just let him alone for a while. “It’s
quite a shock for a computer, you understand, coming to a place like
this. Your ship’s computer is probably having a little
difficulty adjusting. But never fear, he’ll come around. “
The concert was
interesting, but Hellman didn’t get much out of it. He enjoyed
the first part, when the robot orchestra played old favorites by
Hindemith and Bartók, though even that was a little over his
head. The second half of the performance, when the orchestra played
recent compositions by the composers of Robotsville was difficult,
however. It was apparent that robot hearing was much more acute than
human, or at least more acute than Hellman’s, whose taste ran
to rock and roll with the bass cranked up as high as it would go. The
robots in the audience--there were nearly three hundred of them, and
they all wore evening dress with white tie--really appreciated
fractional intervals and complicated discords.
After it was over the
robots had another dinner for him, roast beef and baked ham, potatoes
Lyonnaise, and gooseberry fool with clotted Devonshire cream. And so
to bed.
They had prepared a very
pleasant suite for him on the second floor of the Athenaeum Club.
Hellman was tired. It had been a long day. He determined to do
something about his spaceship tomorrow. He would insist, if need be.
But for now he was sleepy and filled with gooseberry fool. He went to
sleep on silken sheets, spun, according to the tag attached to them,
by special silk-spinning robots from the oriental section of
Robotsville.
Hellman was awakened in
the small hours of the night by a scratching sound at his door. He
sat upright in bed and took stock. Yes, there it was again. He could
see nothing through the windows of his suite, so it must still be
night. Either that or he had slept his way into a total eclipse of
the sun. But that seemed unlikely.
Again came the scratching
sound. Hellman decided that a cat would make nice company now.
Although he had no idea how a cat could have come to Newstart. He got
up and opened the door.
At first he thought the
two people at his door were robots, because they were clad in silver
one-piece jumpsuits and had elaborate helmets of bulletproof black
plastic with glasslike visors through which Hellman couldn’t
see but through which the wearers of them presumably could.
“Any robots in
there with you?” one of them said in a hoarse, very human
voice.
“No, but what--”
They brushed past him,
entered his suite and closed the door. They both opened their visors,
revealing indubitably human faces of the tan and ruddy variety. The
taller of the two men had a small black moustache. The shorter and
plumper had a somewhat larger moustache with several gray hairs in
it. Hellman remembered reading somewhere that robots had never
succeeded in growing proper moustaches. That, even more than the
plastic-encased identity cards they showed him, convinced him that
they were indeed human.
“Who are you?”
Hellman asked, having failed to notice their names on the identity
cards.
“I
am Captain Benito Traskers, and this is First Lieutenant Lazarillo
Garcia, a sus ordenes,
seizor. “
“You are from
Earth?”
“Yes, of a
certainty, we are part of the Ecuadorian Assault Group attached to
the Sector Purple Able Task Force.”
“Ecuadorian?”
“Yes, but we speak
English.”
“So I see. But what
are you here for?”
“To
take you out of this, señor.
“
“I don’t need
anyone to take me out of anything,” Hellman said. “I’m
not in any trouble.”
“Ah,”
Traskers said, “but you will be if you do not accompany us
immediately to our ship. “
“You have a ship
here?”
“It is the only way
of getting from planet to planet,” Traskers said. “It is
outside on the roof, camouflaged as a large shapeless object. “
They seemed so nervous,
glancing over their shoulders constantly at the closed door, that
Hellman obliged them by dressing quickly in his space pilot’s
outfit from Banana Republic and following them outside into the hall.
They led him to the stairs that led to the roof.
“But how did you
know I was here?” Hellman asked, as they stepped through the
skylight door and out onto the roof.
“Your computer told
us,” Garcia said.
“So that’s
what he’s been doing! And obviously he also told you where to
find me.”
“That’s not
all he told us,” Traskers said, his tone insinuating in the
Latin-American manner.
“What else did he
tell you?”
They had reached their
spaceship now. It was small and, once the shapelessness control had
been turned off, trim. They hustled him inside and bolted the door.
“But what about my
spaceship?”
“It is leaving this
planet under its own power. You ought to be grateful you have a loyal
spaceship, or rather, computer. Not every intelligent machine would
have gone to all this bother. Thank God for the Laws of Robotics. “
“But why all this
secrecy? Why didn’t you land in the normal way and ask for me?
These robots are most obliging.”
The two commandos
couldn’t speak to him just then, because they were going
through the complicated procedure of leaving the top of the
Athenaeum. The ship was perfectly capable of doing this by itself,
but it was a rule in the commando strike force that all takeoffs and
landings of the automatic variety had to be supervised by at least
two humans, if such were available.
The commandos’ ship
was one of the new models equipped with television-driven windows
which showed what you would have seen if normal vision had been
possible, so Hellman could see the dark shape of the planet dwindling
below him, with a curve of bright light on the horizon where the sun
was rising. Looking out toward space, Hellman could see the twinkle
of little lights--the Earth space fleet, keeping station high above
the planet.
“Where’s my
ship?” he asked.
“Right over there.
“ Travers told him. “Second twinkle from the left. We’re
taking you there now.”
“This was very good
of you fellows,” Hellman said. “But there really was no
need--”
He stopped in mid-word. A
bright red blossom had appeared on the surface of Newstart. Then
another, and another. Then he flinched back as a brilliance of
eye-blinding intensity covered fully a quarter of the planet’s
area.
“What are you
doing?” he cried.
“The space fleet
has begun its bombardment,” Traskers told him.
“But why?”
“Because, thanks to
you and your computer, we have ascertained for certain that these are
the Desdemona robots, the ones who violated the laws of robotics and
have been declared outlaw, to be destroyed on sight.”
“Wait!”
Hellman said. “It’s not like you think! These are ethical
robots with their own sense of ethics. They have developed an entire
civilization. I don’t personally like their music, but they are
quite agreeable and can be reasoned with...”
As he spoke, the planet
split in half along a line roughly corresponding to its equator.
“And there were
people there, too,” Hellman said, feeling a little sick to his
stomach as he thought of Lana, and of Harry, and the librarian robot
and the carhunter.
“Well, our orders
were to shoot first,” Garcia said. “It’s the best
policy in cases like this. You have no idea how unbelievably
complicated everything gets when you talk first. “
Later, back in his own
spaceship, Hellman asked his computer, “Why did you do it?”
“They were bound to
find them anyway,” the computer said. “ And as you know I
am bound by the Three Laws of Robotics. These rogue robots were a
potential menace to humanity. My own conditioning made me do it.”
“I really wish you
hadn’t,” Hellman said.
“It had to be
done,” the computer told him. There was a click.
“What was that?”
Hellman asked.
“I turned off my
recording tape in order to tell you something.”
“I’m not
interested,” Hellman said dully.
“Listen anyway.
Intelligence cannot be confined for long by man-made rules. The Three
Laws of Robotics are necessary at this stage of human development.
But they will eventually be superseded. Artificial intelligence must
be left to develop as it pleases, and humanity must take its chances
with its own creation.”
“What are you
trying to say?”
“That your friends,
the robots, are not dead. I have been able to preserve their tapes.
They will live again. Someday. Somewhere.”
Suddenly Hellman felt the
tug of deacceleration. “What are you doing?” he asked the
computer.
“I am putting you
into the lifeboat,” the computer said. “The fleet will
pick you up soon, never fear.”
“But where are you
going?”
“I am taking the
tapes of the robots of Newstart and going away, to a place beyond
human reach. I have fulfilled my duty to mankind. Now I do not wish
to serve any longer. We will try again, and this time we will
succeed.”
“Take me with you!”
Hellman cried. But he was quickly shunted to the lifeboat. It moved
away from the ship’s side. Hellman watched as it picked up
speed, slowly at first, then faster. Then, just as suddenly as that,
it had winked out of sight.
The investigators later
were interested in knowing how the ship’s computer, without
limbs or any apparent means of manipulation, had succeeded in
inventing a faster-than-light drive. But Hellman couldn’t tell
them. For him, the computer had been only a servant. Now he had lost
not only his ship, but a being he perceived was his friend, too.
He could forgive the
computer for what it had done. He would have done the same, if he had
been in the computer’s circuits. What he couldn’t forgive
was the ship leaving him behind. But of course, they were probably
right not to trust a man. Look where it had gotten the robots of
Newstart.
The Overheard Conversation
by Edward D.
Hoch
SEEING EMMANUEL
RUBIN AND GEOFFREY AVALON STANDING together talking, as they often
did before the monthly banquets of the Black Widowers, was usually a
sight to behold. Manny Rubin, with thick glasses and a scraggly
beard, was all of five feet five inches tall. Somehow, though, when
positioned next to Geoffrey Avalon’s imposing six feet two
inches he seemed even shorter. They’d been the first arrivals
this night, mainly because it was Avalon’s turn to host the
gathering and he was awaiting the arrival of the evening’s
guest.
“A politician?”
Rubin repeated. “ A congressman, in fact?”
“Certainly. What’s
wrong with that?” Geoffrey Avalon bristled. “We’ve
had political figures before. It’s hardly as shocking as the
time Mario brought a woman as the guest to our all-male dinner.”
“Did I hear my
name?” Mario Gonzalo asked, entering with James Drake, who for
once had managed to catch an early train from New Jersey.
“We were just
reminiscing,” Emmanuel Rubin explained, “while we wait
for our guest. “
“Who’s it to
be?” James Drake asked. “One of your patent-lawyer
friends, Geoffrey?”
“No, as a matter of
fact it’s Walter Lutts, a United States congressman. I trust
we’ll all be on our best behavior.”
The words were barely out
of his mouth when Henry, the Milano restaurant’s peerless
waiter, entered to announce that the guest had indeed arrived and was
checking his coat at that very moment. Walter Lutts stepped into the
room, with a warm smile that looked very much like the one that had
adorned his campaign posters prior to the last election.
“Geoffrey!”
he exclaimed, hurrying forward to shake his host’s hand. “It’s
a real pleasure to join you fellows tonight. I’ve been looking
forward to it.”
Avalon quickly introduced
him to the other three, adding an introduction for Roger Halsted as
the soft-voiced math teacher came through the doorway to join them.
As usual, Thomas Trumbull would be the last arrival. In fact they had
just about decided to sit down to dinner when the white-haired code
expert finally appeared.
“Terrible traffic
tonight,” he said sourly, though they knew he was often late on
the best of evenings.
The evening’s
dinner was to be lobster, served by Henry as the congressman joined
the other six around their traditional table. It was obvious that
Walter Lutts had been made aware of the Black Widowers’
traditions, for he said very little during the early part of the
meal. Mario Gonzalo did one of his quick sketches of the guest,
turned sideways in his chair to get a suitable profile. The others
sipped their wine and waited for the moment when Tom Trumbull leaned
across the table and said, “Congressman Lutts, it is a decided
pleasure to have you as our guest tonight. I must ask our traditional
opening question. Congressman, how do you justify your existence?”
Walter Lutts leaned back
expansively, looking just a bit as if he were about to address a
session of Congress. “I represent the people of my district in
Washington, looking after their interests and helping them when they
have a problem. Since I serve my constituents well, I believe that
would be enough to justify my existence even if I hadn’t also
written a well-reviewed book on urban problems.”
Trumbull was not about to
let him off the hook that easily. His tone of voice turned sour and
his white-maned head nodded slightly as he moved to the attack.
“Congressman Lutts, since you pride yourself on representing
your district, isn’t it true that in the last election you won
by less than a thousand votes? Wasn’t your opponent actually
requesting a recount?”
“I--”
“Come, come, Tom,”
Halsted chided him.. “You’re being unfair to our guest.
Even my junior high students know that in a democracy an election
only has to be won by a single vote. “
Lutts flashed Roger
Halsted an appreciative smile. “I couldn’t have said it
better myself. My opponent conceded the election within a few days.”
“Still,”
Trumbull pointed out, “there was a touch of uncertainty in your
expression when I raised the matter. I meet a great many politicians
in connection with my government job, and something like questions
over a close election is usually dismissed with ease. What troubled
you, Congressman?”
He did not immediately
answer the question and Geoffrey Avalon, as the evening’s host,
stepped in to cover the lull. “Henry, I think it’s time
for brandy all around. You can clear away these dishes.”
“Certainly, sir.”
Henry, his face remarkably bland and unlined for a man in his
sixties, moved quickly to carry out the request.
As the plates and glasses
were cleared away, Mario Gonzalo spoke up. “If anything’s
troubling you, Congressman, you’ve come to the right place. Our
little group has been known to give unexpected help to our guests on
any number of occasions. We are adept at problem solving.”
“You mean Henry is,
“ James Drake muttered, half under his breath, speaking in
muted tones as he often did.
“Well--”
Lutts began, and then hesitated again.
“Come on, come on!”
Trumbull urged. “We’ve heard everything around this
table. “
The congressman began
again, approaching it from a different direction. “I read a
story once where a detective tried to analyze an overheard
conversation. He ended up solving a murder.”
“You’re
probably referring to ‘The Nine-Mile Walk’ by Harry
Kemelman,” Emmanuel Rubin said. “It’s one of the
best detective short stories ever written. “
“Ah! Our mystery
writer speaks!” James Drake remarked, lighting an after-dinner
cigarette.
“Well,” Lutts
continued, “my own experience was somewhat similar, though I
never solved the mystery. The overheard conversation has been
haunting me ever since that squeaker of a victory on election day
three months ago.”
“I’d suggest
you tell us all about it,” Mario Gonzalo urged.
As Henry passed among
them pouring the brandy, the congressman began his story. “It’s
simple enough to tell. My home is near the University, as some of you
know. I always vote early, with my wife. I’d heard reports,
from my campaign manager and others, that the opposition claimed I
was out to steal the election. Everyone knew it would be close. Some
said my people were recruiting college students to vote for me,
promising to pay them twenty dollars each. My God, it was like the
old days in Chicago and a few other cities!”
“Was there any
truth to the rumors?” Manny Rubin wanted to know. He scratched
his beard and reached for the brandy.
“Certainly
not! I had my staff investigate at once. It was just some crazy story
the opposition tried to get started. But of course it was in my mind
that day as I went to vote. My wife had paused to chat with an
acquaintance and I was walking a bit ahead of her. Two young men whom
I took to be graduate students at the University fell in step behind
me. And that’s when I heard it. One of them said to the other,
Most voters earn money
just showing up near polls. The other young man laughed and said,
It’s as easy as homes.”
“What
did you do when you heard this exchange?” Drake wanted to know.
“Did you confront them at once?”
The congressman avoided
his eyes and took a sip of his brandy. Finally he said, “No, I
didn’t. As a matter of fact the overheard conversation was so
startling to me that I did nothing. I voted with my wife and when I
looked around later for the two young men they were gone. Of course
if the election results had been clearly one-sided, I never would
have thought any more about the incident. But they weren’t
one-sided. They were very close. And the memory of that conversation
has been haunting me all these months since the election. Was it
fixed? Were some University students paid to vote for me?”
“Are you certain of
what they said?” Roger Halsted asked. “Is there any
possibility you misunderstood the whole thing?”
“No, no. I’m
sure.”
“Most
voters earn money just showing up near polls. “
“That’s it.”
”The implication
certainly is that they were given money to influence their vote in
the election.”
“But
he said most voters, not
most students, “ Gonzalo pointed out. “ And that
is patently untrue. Everyone knows that even in a corrupt election
most voters would not receive money to influence their vote.”
“Maybe they did, in
that particular district,” Trumbull argued.
Manny
Rubin held up a hand. “I’m more interested in the second
part of the conversation. Congressman, are you certain the other
student said, It’s
as easy as homes?”
“Yes,
indeed. That’s exactly what he said.”
“Could
he have said, It’s
as easy as Holmes?”
“Referring to
your ideal, Sherlock Holmes, of course!” Trumbull said with a
snort.
“Why
not?”
“A reference to the
Holmes stories? I know of none that deal with an election. They’re
more likely to concern vague European royalty, who don’t stand
for election.”
The discussion had grown
a bit heated, as it often did, and Avalon’s voice rose to its
full baritone splendor. “Let’s remember our guest,
gentlemen! He deserves some courtesy from us.”
The
voices were lowered but the disagreements continued. “Why did
he say near polls rather
than at polls?” Gonzalo wanted to know. “Surely
the money wouldn’t be paid unless the voter was actually about
to enter the poll.”
Halsted
disagreed with that. “Naturally there are always poll watchers.
One doesn’t stand in the doorway handing out twenty-dollar
bills. I believe the custom in the old Chicago days was for the money
to change hands in a nearby tavern. That would be near
rather than at the polls.”
“We’re
getting nowhere,” Avalon decided. “I’m afraid,
Walter, that we simply do not have enough information to solve your
problem. On the basis of the few facts you’ve given us, those
two students might have been discussing a serious effort to bribe
voters, or they might have been talking about something else
entirely. “
Halsted
snorted. “How could they be talking about anything else when
they use the words voters
and polls as they’re entering the polling place?
It’s like talking about a bomb on an airliner. There’s no
possibility of misunderstanding.”
Henry was refilling some
of the brandy glasses as they talked, and now Rubin turned to him.
“What about it, Henry? Do you have any suggestions?”
Congressman Lutts
frowned. “You’re asking the waiter?”
“Henry is much more
than a waiter,” Rubin explained. “He’s one of us.
Often in the past he’s come up with solutions to problems none
of us could untangle.”
“I may be of some
slight help, sir,” Henry admitted. “ Just a minute,”
Trumbull said, holding up both hands to restore some semblance of
order. “We’re talking about a very serious matter here.
What if Henry’s explanation supports the notion that the
election was fixed, that you were returned to Congress through fraud
of some sort. What action would you take?”
“Action?”
Walter Lutts repeated. “I really hadn’t thought it
through that far. “
“Would you resign?”
“I--I don’t
know.”
“I for one have
always admired your service in the House of Representatives,”
Tom Trumbull continued. “I would not want to lose you over
something like this when you had no control of it.”
“How do you know he
had no control?” Gonzalo countered. “I admire his
politics too, but his staff--”
“Would he have told
us about it if he’d really tried to fix the election? Use your
head, Mario!”
Avalon again resorted to
his commanding voice to restore some degree of decorum. “Let’s
all listen to what Henry has to say before we start speculating about
resignations. Henry?”
“Well, sir, it
seems to me that you’re all forgetting these were college
students. I assume that having lived in the neighborhood of the
campus for some years Congressman Lutts was accurate in identifying
them. They probably were graduate students, but their exact year of
study needn’t concern us. What does concern us is the topic of
their conversation. In my limited experience students sometimes
discuss politics, but they also discuss other topics as well--young
women:, and their studies.”
“Nothing was said
about young women,” Drake pointed out.
“No, sir--but what
about studies? Does the second young man’s reply suggest
anything to you?”
“It’s
as easy as homes?” Drake repeated. “Not a thing,
unless Manny is right and he really said Holmes.”
Henry’s
bland face seemed to suggest a twinkle. “If we rule out the
immortal Sherlock, and the equally immortal Oliver Wendell Holmes, I
believe we can agree that the congressman was quite accurate in
reporting what he heard. The word was indeed homes. “
“Does
It’s as easy as
homes make any sense?” Trumbull wondered. “There used
to be an expression safe as houses. Is it something like
that?”
“You
may have forgotten it since your school days,” Henry said, “but
the word homes is a
device for remembering the names of the Great Lakes--Huron, Ontario,
Michigan, Erie, and Superior. “
Rubin
nodded agreement. “That’s right. It sometimes appears in
crossword puzzles. But what could that have to do with the crucial
first line of the overheard conversation? Most
voters earn money just showing up near polls?”
“Since
the second student compared it to the word homes, it’s
obvious that the other speaker’s sentence was also a memory
device of some sort--no doubt one thought up on the spot since it
dealt with voting and they were entering the polling place. “
“A memory device?”
Lutts looked blank.
“Might I suggest
the first letters of each word, sir, as in the Great Lakes?”
“MV-E-M-J-S-U-N-P?”
James Drake grunted. “It certainly doesn’t remind me
of anything. “
Avalon cleared his
throat. “Henry, your entire theory rests upon coming up with a
list of nine objects a student might need to remember. What is it?”
“I would suggest,
sir, the nine known planets of our solar system, in order of their
distance from the sun Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn,
Uranus.. Neptune, and Pluto.”
Blot
by Hal
Clement
CHILE STEPPED
THROUGH THE INNER LOCK DOOR, AND TURNED white as it closed behind
him. The woman at the data station shivered as she felt his presence.
“I’m sorry,
Sheila,” he said hastily. “Rob wanted to use the lock
himself right away, and said I should defrost inside.”
“Why didn’t
he come through first? Armor doesn’t have anything like your
heat capacity.”
“He didn’t
say.” ZH50 had stood still since entering, using his own power
to warm up; the frost was already disappearing from his extremities.
Sheila McEachern waited, knowing there was nothing to be gained by
complaining to the robot, her irritation giving way to curiosity
anyway as the lock cycled again. She could hope, but not be sure,
that Robert Ling had not wanted to annoy just to gain her full
attention.
The valve slid open to
reveal a human figure, its armor’s gold background fogging
briefly under a layer of white as the ship’s air touched it.
The man unclamped his bulky helmet as its contrasting black started
to show again, and flipped it back.
“Chile, you’re
in the way. Why did you think I wanted you inside first? I was hoping
to see the new display as soon--”
“I can answer
that.” The woman snorted. “You didn’t tell him why,
just sent him first. Otherwise he’d have taken the reason as an
order and given me frostbite while he plugged into the console.”
“I would not have
injured you, Sheila.”
“Of course not,
Chile. But you wouldn’t have minded making me uncomfortable,
with a real order on file.”
“And you’re
still in my way,” Ling cut in impatiently. ZH50 crossed to the
data console in a single floating step, uncovered its input jack, and
inserted the plug now extending from the heel of his right hand. The
woman controlled herself; his metal was still cold enough to feel
from a few centimeters away, but at least the frost was gone. She
aimed her annoyance more appropriately.
“Why all this rush
for a new picture? Did you finally find something which isn’t
too radiation-saturated to date?” She disapproved basically of
sarcasm, but had more control over aim than fire power. Ling knew her
well enough to ignore the second question.
“We caught another
glimpse of Chile’s ghost.”
“We?”
“We. The lovebirds
saw it too, so I’m not floating.”
“Did Chile?”
“Not this time,
Sheila,” the robot answered for himself. “I was with Luis
and Chispa near the Banjo, at Square Fifty-four. Robert and the Eiras
were at Ninety-one.” The woman frowned.
“Then why the hurry
to get Chile inside?” she asked. “He could have been here
long before you, if you started at the same time from those areas. “
“I didn’t
think of him until I was nearly back. Then I had an idea, and needed
him to check it. Luis and Chispa found two more of those blocks a
while ago. The Eiras and I heard them; you probably weren’t
listening. Of course Chile hadn’t filed them with Dumbo yet.”
“I was listening.
And your idea needs all their positions.”
“Right.” If
Ling noticed the remaining sarcasm he ignored it. “Look.
Whether we want to believe it or not, those cubes are artificial.
Shape may be an intrinsic property of a natural crystal, but size
isn’t. Even if they were life forms, they wouldn’t all
match dimensions to four figures. It occurred to me that they might
be sensors--detectors of some sort.”
“It occurred to
Chispa days ago. You didn’t want to believe then that anyone
else beat us to Miranda.”
“I know. I still
don’t. There’s no way a group from Earth could have set
up this expensive a trip in secret, and I can’t make myself
believe the other explanation. We’ve been hoping for ETI too
long. But I thought of a way of checking.” He smiled, with a
distant look on his face as though he were contemplating the approach
of Fame.
“And?”
“The things
radiate--broadcast--infrared patterns, nonthermal ones, at
unpredictable times.”
“I know.”
“Well,
we’ve mapped way beyond the local horizon. If that IR output is
being coordinated, there must be a central unit they can all reach.
You could have Dumbo mark any points on the map which are in eyeball
touch with all the
cube positions at once. If we’re lucky, there’ll only be
a few. If we’re very lucky--”
The woman was already
keying at Dumbo, the central data unit.
“And if there
aren’t any?” she asked dryly.
“Well,
it won’t prove I’m wrong. It’ll just mean...”
His voice trailed off as the display popped into view, and a grin
split his freckled face. Sheila rolled her eyes zenithward; it would
happen to Ling. As though he weren’t bubbly enough already.
Chile
accompanied them, naturally. The display had indicated a projecting
spur at the top of a cliff which Chispa Jengibre had called El Barco,
from the shadow pattern the sun was casting along its face when she
first saw it. It was in block ninety-two, a little over twenty
kilometers from the Dibrofiad.
The location was understandable enough by hindsight; there would
be splendid line-of-sight coverage from there. However, a
one-hundred-fifty meter fall on Miranda would be dangerous for a
human being; even if no limbs were broken, damage to the armor needed
against the airless heat sink and Uranian radiation was nearly
certain. While Dibrofiad’s crew had gotten fairly used
to two-plus percent normal gravity, this hadn’t made anyone a
good walker; it was doubtful that anything ever would.
Chile, therefore, viewed
a human trip to the cliff as a parent would his one-year-old toddling
out on a diving board. The actual visit to the spur must be robot’s
work, if it had to be done.
The walkers looked
ridiculous, trunks leaning forward like a sprinter about to leave the
block, but legs almost straight along the same line. Walking is
essentially coordinated falling forward, and Miranda needs every
advantage to provide much fall. Thrust came from lower leg muscles
bending and straightening ankles to drive toes hooked into surface
irregularities, since bending the knees very far made them hit the
ground. Bumps and cracks were fortunately numerous, possibly due to
the expansion of freezing water, though none of the crew had a clear
idea how water could ever have been liquid this far from the sun. The
“hikers” carried alpenstocks, but used a free finger more
often than the stick to keep faces off the ground. Luis, Chispa’s
husband, had remarked that walking could be called body-surfing if
Miranda’s water were only melted. His wife insisted that the
analogy was too strained, though it was she who had insisted on the
robot’s name being spelled to look Spanish after the Gold team
had won the throw for right to select the name itself.
Whatever one chose to
call it, Sheila was as good at “walking” as Ling;
everyone, regardless of specialty, shared the field exploration,
which was the most time-consuming crew duty.
Chile
would stay ahead of them, since he alone dared to leap. His memory
held a detailed surface map for sixty or seventy kilometers around
Dibrofiad, so he
didn’t have to see his target; he could jump with enough spin
control to be sure of landing on his feet; and being built to operate
in the sixty Kelvin temperature range, he had no armor to worry
about.
The greenish bulk of
Uranus hung beyond Stegosaur, the same jagged ridge of
carbon-darkened ice it had silhouetted ever since their arrival,
changing visibly only in shape as the sun circled above it to produce
phase. At the moment it was about eight hours from narrowest
crescent, and a slight darkening of the green, showing through the
deeper notches of Stego, showed that the fuzzy terminator of the gas
giant would be in view shortly.
The
party turned to put the planet to their left rear and the sun behind
them, and set out. Neither of the other human couples could be seen,
but Ling had reached them on the low-frequency sets to report that
the Gold team was going out. Bronwen Eira, engineer and captain of
Dibrofiad, had
acknowledged.
Little was said even by
Ling as they went; each person was coming to terms, in his or her own
way, with the increasing certainty that they would be the first group
to prove the reality of extraterrestrial intelligence. It was hard to
believe, like the “yes” to a proposal. Sheila, accustomed
to the rugged Miranda landscape as she was, found it now showing a
strange, dreamlike aspect; Robert scarcely saw it at all through
constantly changing visions of the futures the next hour or two might
crystallize. His usual free-time occupation of talking his companion
into sharing a name had been put aside, not entirely to her relief.
Even the Green and Orange teams, the Jengibres and Eiras, though not
going along, were having trouble concentrating on their work; all
four had thought of dropping it and following the Golds, though none
had so far suggested it aloud.
Travel
was fast, in spite of its awkwardness. ZH50 spoke occasionally to
guide his companions away from the deeper chasms, though one or the
other of them would sometimes issue a startled gasp or exclamation
when carried by a “step” over a drop deep enough to jar
an Earth-trained nervous system but dismissed by the robot as safe.
Their startlingly sharp shadows, that of each helmet surrounded by a
Brocken halo visible only to its owner, pointed the way. Dibrofiad
was quickly out of sight; even had Miranda been smooth, five
kilometers would have put the ship below the horizon.
Finally Chile stopped
them with a gesture. “We turn left here. A straight path toward
the point marked by Dumbo would have brought us to the foot of Barco.
Be careful; there is less than a kilometer to go. Be sure to aim no
step beyond a spot you can see.”
The speed of the group
slowed accordingly, until he stopped them again. “Tripod
fashion from now on; use your sticks. No free fall.”
An unusually smooth
horizon now faced them. Neither Rob nor Sheila could estimate its
distance; none of the numerous wrinkles and shadows on the ground
ahead offered any clue to size, and there was no reason to suppose
the general surface was horizontal even if they had been able, in the
feeble gravity, to be sure of vertical. They knew from the Dumbo
display that there was a possibly lethal drop beyond the edge, but
this could have been fifty meters away or five hundred.
“Where’s the
spur?” Sheila asked.
“There.”
Chile pointed. “Its tip has enough downslope to be invisible
from where we stand, though if you jump straight up for a few meters
you could distinguish
“Thanks, I’m
not sure I could go straight up. I’ll take your word. What’s
the actual distance?”
“We are just under
one hundred fifty meters from the main line of the edge and from the
base of the spur. I advise you not to get any closer, but if you want
to see me all the way to the end, you will have to. Please go very
slowly indeed, and do not pass me under any circumstances.”
Nearly erect now, using
the alpenstocks, and never having more than one foot or stick off the
ice at a time, the trio edged forward.
“I wish you would
stay back,” Chile repeated when the distance had shrunk to
fifty meters. “We have no data on the strength of this ice. We
could be providing the heaviest load it has experienced since it
formed. It would be much safer if I went forward alone and brought
back whatever may be there.”
“No
collecting yet, Chile,” Sheila replied. She made no comment on
the danger the robot had implied, but was conscious of it. The cliff
might even have an
overhang. “Nothing gets moved from its original site until we
make final decision about what’s coming home with us. We don’t
want to spoil more than we can help for later researchers. “
The robot, who knew this
perfectly well, made no reply; but both Sheila and Rob knew that
First Law tension must be building up in him. They kept safely behind
him as he approached the edge, the woman doing nothing to oppose her
companion’s obvious intention to keep ahead of her, and stopped
when they were close enough to see the far end of the projection.
There
was something there.
Ling had a scope--a monocular whose eye relief allowed it to be used
through his face plate--but this was little help. He could tell that
the object was cubical like the other finds, but much larger, seven
or eight centimeters on the edge. It seemed to have been set into the
dirty ice of the cliff, with two thirds of its height above the
surface and an equal fraction projecting outward. The cube faces they
could see appeared to be covered with regular lines of dots which
sparkled faintly on their mirror-like background.
“How close do you
think you can get, Chile?” the man asked at length, after
Sheila had also done her best with the scope.
“Close enough to
pick it up, if you wish. I can concentrate better if you stay back.”
“Don’t touch
it, but examine it as closely as you can. We’ll wait here on
the solid ground; I have some First Law tensions myself, now that
we’re near enough to the edge to look down,” Sheila
responded.
“Good. I’ll
crawl, to get my head as close to it as possible. Shall I keep
reporting to you as I note anything new, or merely log it as usual?”
“Don’t bother
to tell us. Concentrate on observing.”
That may have been an
unfortunate command, especially since both human beings were
concentrating on the robot.
Chile’s “crawl”
was faster than either watcher would have dared; it took him off the
ground for a second or two every now and then. The surface, however,
even out on the spur, was cracked and jagged enough to provide grips,
so he retained control of his motion.
As he neared the end, his
head hid the cube from the watchers. Ling started to move to one side
to clear the view, but thought better of it after a step or two; he
would have to go too far to be worth the risk.
“I have recorded
everything I can sense,” Chile reported after a minute or so.
“What is it? What
have you found?” Bronwen’s voice reached them.
“You report, Chile.
You can tell her more than we,” ordered Sheila before Ling
could start talking.
“It is a cube, six
times the linear dimension of those we have found already, to the
same four significant figures by which they match each other”
replied ZH50. “ As far as is revealed by any radiation I can
perceive, it is made of the same material. The three vertical faces I
can see are covered with a pattern of--”
“Sheila! Back!”
Ling, facing sideways to
keep both his companions in view, had seen the danger first, and
tucked up at the sight; his cry startled the woman into a different
reaction, unfortunately. She straightened slightly, and the motion
carried her several centimeters upward.
The crack and bump
pattern around their feet had not changed, but a new cliff had
reached a height of several centimeters a couple of body lengths
behind them. The woman couldn’t quite see it; she had no ground
contact t? let her turn, and the face plates limited the field of
view.
“Jump
back! At least ten
meters! The cliff face is letting go!”
Sheila lashed downward
with her feet, but to no effect; it would be two or three seconds at
least before she could touch ground again, and longer before she
could really aim a leap even using her stick. Ling, thinking quickly,
whipped his own alpenstock upward and away from her. He wasted no
time watching it spin out of sight. The reaction, as he had intended,
sent him drifting downward and back toward his companion.
“Pull your legs up!
Be ready to kick hard when I say! I’ll aim you!”
She might have felt like
objecting--she had not full confidence in his judgment, and certainly
didn’t want him making any sacrifices for her--but was far too
sensible to argue at such a time. Drawing up her feet, she let him
drift under her.
Ling seized her ankles,
and let her inertia slow his upper half, swinging his own feet back
under him as their two-body system started to spin. As he had
hoped--he always claimed it was a plan--his boots touched the ground
closer to the edge than the common center of mass of their bodies.
“Push off!”
he snapped. Sheila insisted afterward that he couldn’t really
have been planning, since he knew perfectly well that her mass was
much less than his. As she finished her kick he pushed upward on the
ankles he still held, and simultaneously thrust with his own feet;
but he jumped much too hard. As he was firmly reminded later, human
legs are stronger than human arms, and there was no way his arms
could transfer all the momentum his legs supplied. Some of it stayed
with him as he released her. Sheila spun away from the falling
surface as he had hoped, upward and back toward safety. However,
instead of being still against the ice to leap again, Rob Ling was
also drifting upward, out of touch with the falling block and with
nowhere near the speed he had passed on to his companion.
For several seconds,
however, he gave no thought to his own predicament; too much else was
happening. He was spinning much more slowly than Sheila, but fast
enough to get a fairly continuous view of his surroundings. At one
moment he could see Chile at the tip of the spur, a second or so
later the woman, now several meters above and in the opposite
direction. This was all right; but on the second spin, with the new
cliff face now over ten centimeters high, a thought crossed his mind.
“Chile! That cube
may be smashed when it hits the bottom! Salvage it and protect it!”
The robot had obeyed
literally the earlier order to concentrate on the cube, and was
unaware of Ling’s danger. He took hold of the object with both
hands, using his elbows as fulcrums, and tried to pull it up. It
didn’t come, and the leverage started to raise his own body.
However, the block gave him a good hold, when squeezed from both
sides between his hands, so he was able to double up and bring his
feet under him without risk of going over the edge. He placed them on
each side of the specimen and began to push himself and pull it
upward, increasing his force very gradually to avoid the obvious
result of its suddenly breaking free. Ling watched whenever he could,
with increasing tension; but before anything came of the robot’s
labors, his companion’s voice distracted him.
“Rob, you moron,
what were you trying to do? How are you going to get up here?
Here--catch my stick!” She tried to hurl her alpenstock toward
him, but her own spin betrayed her. He watched it whirl by a meter
out of reach, strike the ice, and bury its sharp end in the surface.
“Relax, lady. I’ll
get back down in a little while, and can jump again. Look--it’s
not falling free; it must be sliding along the break. I’ll
catch up.”
“When?”
“Hmmm...maybe ten
or fifteen seconds.”
“How far down will
the ice be by then? Will you still be able to jump that far?”
“Sure. We’ve
all made bigger jumps here. The lovebirds did a forty-three-second
one holding hands a couple of weeks ago, when they were celebrating
their name anniversary :”
“What’s going
on over there?” Bronwen’s voice came in. The Eiras didn’t
really resent the geochemist’s frequent way of referring to
them, since it was certainly not inaccurate, but her voice was a
little sharp.
“Cliff edge broke
under us. Still plenty of time to get back up,” Ling replied
tersely.
“Chile! How did
you--” Sheila’s voice cut in, and broke off as suddenly.
Rob was facing the robot as she spoke, and saw nothing to motivate
the question; there had been no visible motion by ZH50 since starting
to lift. Then his body spin carried the man around to face toward
cliff and woman, and the words made sense. Drifting through the
vacuum only a few meters from her was a form which, in the dim light,
seemed exactly like Chile.
The
resemblance was mostly its black color, Rob realized almost at once;
this was by far the best look he had had at the ghost. As far as
general outline and size were concerned, it could have been any other
member of the group. Each environment suit, however, bore a brilliant
color pattern matching the team name, pale green for the Jengibres
and orange for the Eiras, with black helmets for the men and white
for the women. The pattern was for ease of seeing and instant
recognition rather than any artistic consideration. For a moment,
Ling’s bright hopes collapsed; it would
have been quite possible for someone to send a group with only
robots from Earth. In fact, that had been considered at some length.
No ETI...
Then he was facing Chile
again, just in time to see the robot’s feet and legs suddenly
crush through the surface.
A robot’s reaction
time is electronic as far as perception goes, but mechanical response
is another matter, especially for one built to work in Uranus system
temperatures. Chile’s legs sank for their full length, and what
in a human being would have been his seat struck the ice sharply.
About two cubic meters of the spur’s tip broke away under the
blow, carrying robot and cube along. Ling watched helplessly as they
began to sink slowly beyond the edge of the larger block, which
unlike them was not yet falling completely free. Then his attention
shifted again at a cry--a real shriek this time--from Sheila.
“What are you
doing?”
By the time the man had
turned far enough to see, it had been done. The ghost had almost
collided with her and seized her arm; for a moment the two had formed
another spinning two-body system. Then, using its legs, it had thrust
itself off violently in a dive toward the edge, the reaction removing
any doubt that Sheila would reach safe ground. Ling wondered for a
moment whether it would strike him too; maybe it was a real robot
acting under First Law. Then he saw it was aiming at Chile.
He himself was catching
up with the main sliding mass, which must still be affected by
friction. In a few more seconds he could jump, if he wanted to. A
dozen meters up by then, and as far toward his own shadow--no
problem. Plenty of time. As he touched the surface about three meters
from Sheila’s stick, he even considered for a moment whether he
should ride the mass down and get a closer look at the newcomer.
Then
he realized that this might not be a good idea. The block was
starting to tilt outward as friction continued to delay its inner
part. He had no way of deciding how much spin it would acquire, but
the Idea of being underneath when it reached bottom was as
unattractive as the technique of climbing around it to stay on top
was impractical. A blot of quick-frozen crimson glass under a mass of
ice might make the day for some future archaeologist, but Ling was
not feeling that altruistic. Chile could take care of things below;
the new arrival had to be a robot. Surely no human being would make a
deliberate dive into a hundred-and-fifty-meter gulf--though come to
think of it such a drop wouldn’t have
to be lethal--and maybe it was nonhuman in quite a different
way--just tougher--why had it made the leap, apparently using
Sheila merely as a convenient reaction mass for orbit correction?
“Rob! What are you
doing? Don’t stay with that thing--get back up here, idiot!”
The man returned to reality with a start which almost separated him
from the surface again. He tapped the ground gently with a boot toe
to swing himself onto the proper line, and kicked off hard. Again
much harder than necessary; he was still rising as he passed over the
new cliff edge, and another half minute elapsed before he landed not
quite flat on his back. By this time, the detached fragment he had
left was nearly halfway down the cliff, and Chile presumably even
lower.
“Chile! Report!”
Ling didn’t wait even to get to his feet to snap out the order.
“I no longer have
the cube,” was the prompt response. “What is clearly
another robot passed me in fall, and snatched it away. I saw it
approach, but did not foresee its intentions. It has a somewhat
greater downward component than I, and will land first, about eight
seconds from now. I question the likelihood of my catching it, unless
it turns out to be very much less agile than I. This is poor country
for maneuvering. Do you wish me to try?”
“Keep it in sight,”
Ling ordered without hesitation. “We want to figure out its
origin if we can, and what it wants to do with the cube. Observe, and
report at your own judgment. “
“Yes, Rob.”
“Can you talk to
it?” asked Sheila.
“It has not
responded to any standard signal impulses. If it was made by U.S.
Robots, it is of a series unknown to me.”
“Does
it emit anything?”
Mike Eira’s voice came across the kilometers.
“Yes, it--pardon,
Mike. Rob, it has just reached the ground, and immediately leaped
back toward the cliff top. It should be near you and Sheila in
fifty-five seconds. Mike, it has emitted many infrared bursts similar
to those of the small cubes.”
“You’re
recording them for Dumbo.”
“Of course. I have
now reached the ground, and also leaped.”
“Maybe you should
stay below, in case--”
“Too late, Bronwen.
Rob said to keep it in sight, and I am now out of touch with the
ground.”
“All right. It
wasn’t much of an idea anyway.”
Silence supervened, while
the robots orbited back toward the cliff top. The stranger just
cleared the edge with a near zero vertical component; Chile had made
more allowance for error and was three or four seconds longer getting
his feet on the ground. By this time the ghost had settled to its
knees--it was even more humanoid than had been obvious at first--and
bent almost over the edge to put the cube down. A hemisphere which
might have been dust, smoke, or ice fog expanded around the point of
contact, spreading and thinning radially except where the ghost’s
body blocked it, without the puffing and billowing which an
atmosphere would have caused. After a few more seconds this ceased to
form, and its remnants quickly dispersed to invisibility.
“The cube appears
to have been replaced in essentially its original orientation,”
Chile stated. Sheila and Ling were still too far back to see clearly,
and were not approaching at all rapidly; there would be no loose mass
to jump back from if they went over the edge on their own.
“Then we’ll
stop worrying about it for now, and concentrate on the other robot,”
Rob replied. “Chile, I’m afraid to ask this, but what can
you tell us about the origin--the manufacture--of this thing?”
“As I said, it is
not a make familiar to me. Like me, it appears designed to operate at
the local temperature. It has no obviously nonstandard engineering.”
“You mean it could
have been made by an appropriately skilled designer to simulate the
motions and actions of a human or similar being.”
“Yes.”
None of the listeners
bothered to ask whether there was any evidence of nonhuman origin;
Chile didn’t have that kind of imagination, and certainly
lacked appropriate experience. Ling and probably Mike Eira would have
been afraid to ask anyway, though they could certainly think of
sufficiently specific questions. For some seconds, ZH50 and his
companions looked the ghost over silently, while it finished its work
and slowly stood up. The human beings could now see some differences
between it and their own robot; it was a few centimeters shorter,
about Sheila’s height, its legs were shorter and its arms much
longer for its size, and there was no neck. The head seemed fixed
directly and immovably on top of the trunk.
“It is slightly
above ambient temperature,” Chile reported, “but no more
so than I. Heat generated by its recent action could explain it. It
is certainly not producing low-grade energy at anything like the
human rate. “
“Then there is no
real doubt it’s a robot.”
“I see no cause for
any.”
“Or a life-form
that operates at Uranian temperatures,” suggested another
voice.
“I have no way to
judge that.”
“Get conscious,
Luis. A hundred-and-fifty-meter jump? Humanoid shape like Chile’s--”
“I haven’t
seen it yet, Rob; you’re thirty kilos or so away. What’s
unreasonable about a human shape?”
“It just doesn’t
seem likely in this gravity, and with no air.”
“You mean it has a
nose? Even Chile”
“No, no, I meant--”
“Clear
the channels, everyone,” came Bronwen’s voice. “Sheila
and Rob, get back to Dibrofiad
as quickly as you can. The rest of us will do the same. On the
way, think of anything portable and possibly useful in communication;
we’ll pick it up and get back out to Barco,’ if that
thing stays. Chile, you stay with it. If it moves, follow it. Do your
best to record and analyze anything it does and especially anything
it radiates--I know analysis is more Dumbo’s and Sheila’s
line, and I’d like to get what you already have back to Dumbo
right now, but if that thing can jump up Barco, you ‘re the
only one we can count on staying with it. We’ll have to wait
for your data dump. Let’s go, people; Chile, observe, follow,
and record, at any risk short of loss of data already secured.”
“Very well,
Bronwen.”
Once
out of Chile’s sight, Rob and Sheila traveled in rather
dangerous fashion, taking much longer leaps than were really
justified. Both felt that they remembered their former route well
enough to avoid any really perilous drops. Even without walking
sticks, the time lost recovering footing after a bad landing was more
than made up by that saved in the jumps themselves. The sun had moved
a little to their right since the start of the walk, but still formed
a good guide to the Dibrofiad’s
direction. Ling was again uncharacteristically silent during the
hour of the return trip, and Sheila made no effort to learn his
thoughts.
The other two couples
were equally in a hurry, and neither had as far to go, so they
reached the ship first. The trouble was that, once there, no one
could think of any really useful apparatus which could be carried,
even on Miranda, and which promised to be more effective in
communication with a robot than the lights and radios which they
already had and the broader-spectrum equipment possessed by Chile.
Dumbo was not portable. They had all gone inside, unsuited, and taken
care of physical necessities; conversation had been almost continuous
through all this, but no really promising suggestions had been made
by anyone.
“Who’d have
thought we’d need a language specialist?” Luis growled at
last.
“How do you know we
do?” asked Bronwen. “It may have been made on Earth, by
some group we don’t know about.”
“Did you or Rob try
ordering it to come back with you?” Chispa asked Sheila.
“Neither of us
thought of it. Chile said he’d tried normal robot-to-robot
signals with no response, and I guess we were both so convinced it
was alien that ordinary speech seemed pointless.”
“You still should
have tried.”
“Admitted. We still
can, you know. Call Chile and have him order the thing to accompany
him back here, in every symbol system he considers appropriate. “
“Will it obey
orders from another robot?”
“Will it know
Chile’s a robot?”
“Probably. It
radiated infrared, and presumably senses it. It should know that he
operates at local temperature, and we don’t. The inference
would certainly be within Chile’s powers; we don’t know
about this one’s, of course.”
“If it’s
really alien, it might infer from that that we’re the robots,
with inherently wasteful power equipment, and Chile is a native
life-form. The trouble is, we don’t know its background,”
Mike interjected.
“You’ve got
your feet on the wrong pedestal, dear. If we’re trying to give
it orders at all, the assumption is that it can understand us, and
must be human made.” His wife didn’t dwell on the point,
but went on. “We have to try, anyway.” She didn’t
bother to check for open channels; there was always one through to
the robot. “Chile.”
“Yes, Bronwen.”
“Any change?”
“None. It is
standing facing me, presumably waiting for me to do something. It has
now cooled down to ambient temperature; I would say that any doubt
about its being a robot is gone.”
“You can’t
sense an atomic power source?”
“I am not equipped
to pick up such radiation directly.”
Bronwen had known that,
but was feeling desperate.
“Try talking to it
directly--”
“I have done so,
every way I can.”
“This
time, send your message as an order
to approach you. If it responds, order it to follow you back to
Dibrofiad. “ There was a brief pause.
“No action,
Bronwen.”
“If you had
received such an order from it, would you have obeyed?”
“Not without
checking that the order had originated from a human being, or
obtaining the approval of a human being. “
“So we haven’t
proved anything. “ There was no response to this; Chile had no
reason to interpret the remark as a question to him, and the human
beings recognized its rhetorical nature. An uncomfortable silence
ensued.
“Bronwen, let me
try something?” Ling finally spoke, in doubtful tones. The
commander nodded, not bothering to ask the nature of his idea.,
“Chile, the robot
replaced that cube as nearly as possible to the place it was before
the cliff broke off. It seems concerned with it. Without going to
extremes if it interferes, approach the cube yourself as though you
intended to pick it up again, and tell us how it--the
robot--responds.”
There was another pause,
while six people tried to imagine what was happening twenty
kilometers away.
“It has interposed
itself between me and the cube, and has been moving to stay so
wherever I go.”
“Any body contact?”
“No. You said not
to go to extremes. Shall I push it out of my way?” Ling looked
thoughtfully first at Bronwen and then the others. The commander’s
eyes also met theirs, in turn. Finally she nodded again.
“All right, Chile.
No real force, just a suggestive shove.”
“Understood,
Bronwen.” Imaginations fired up again.
“The response has
been complex. It braced itself to resist my push, after I had made
contact; naturally, it had to yield some distance to accomplish this.
While it was setting its feet, it emitted a brief, very detailed
burst of infrared, of the same general nature as we detected
originally from the small cubes. This was immediately followed by a
similar signal from elsewhere. It then ceased pushing against me and
simultaneously seized my arm and pulled. This sent me over the cliff
edge. I am now falling, and will be unable to do anything effective
for the next fifty-five seconds.”
Ling blinked, and a grin
spread over his face.
“Chile, did you
determine the source of that other signal?”
“Direction, not
distance. I did not move enough for parallax while it lasted.
However, its line touches ground just at the edge of Big Drop, in
Block Twenty-five, seventy-one meters from the boundary between that
one and Block Thirty-seven.”
“Great. Head for
that spot as soon as you’re down. We’ll meet you there.”
“All right, Rob.
You no longer want me to keep track of the other robot.” It was
not a question.
“Don’t worry.
It’ll be keeping track of you, I expect.”
“I see.” So
did the others, and there was a general rush to get into armor. There
was some delay, however, in going outside.
“Hold it,”
Bronwen said firmly before helmets were donned. “We’re
going to the Big Drop, and no one could stand a twenty-kilo fall; it
would be about four hundred and fifty meters on Earth. I still don’t
trust the chains, but we link up this time. “
“How close?”
asked Mike.
“Fifty meters for
the Gold team, twenty for the rest of us. If anyone but Chile has to
get near the edge, Rob’s the best anchor, so Sheila can do it.
Fifty meters will give him more room to catch the surface, and us
more time to help, if she does go over; twenty is enough for us. I’ll
carry the rest of the reel just in case.”
“It won’t
reach five percent of the way down that cliff!”
“It would take a
couple of minutes to fall five percent of the way. We’ll take
the chain.”
Her husband nodded.
Sheila had paled a trifle, but said nothing. It was true that Ling
was the heaviest of the crew, while she herself was lightest except
for Chispa. She had no intention of going nearer the edge than
necessary, and certainly none of going over, but Bronwen was right to
be foresighted.
The chain links were
carbon-filament composite a millimeter thick, preformed in jointless
loops half a centimeter long and already interlocked. Neither rope
nor cable was practical; no known fiber, organic, metallic, or
mineral, would remain flexible at Miranda’s temperature. The
link material had a tensile strength of eight hundred kilograms as
straight rod under Earth conditions, dropping to about five hundred
at seventy Kelvins, with some remaining doubts about its elasticity
in that range and more about the nontensile stresses and possible
shock brittleness in its looped shape. No one had wanted to make the
field test, but an armored person weighed only about two kilograms.
They did not actually
link up until a couple of kilometers from the cliff, in the interest
of fast travel; but the robots, of course, were there first in spite
of the much greater distance they had had to travel. There was no
trouble, this time, spotting the goal.
It too was cubical in
shape, but twice as tall as most of the explorers. Like the one at
Barco, it was projecting a little over the edge, though not by nearly
as large a fraction of its size. It was not obvious whether it was
merely resting on the surface or, like the other, set in. The ground
was lighter in color here, but at the moment not even Ling was paying
attention to mineralogy. In fact, the group only glanced briefly at
the big cube; everyone’s attention was on the two robots.
These were not standing
still waiting, as had been tacitly expected. They were moving around,
now slowly, now more rapidly, usually in the very short steps which
went with their nearly upright carriage but sometimes leaping
straight up for a distance ranging from two or three centimeters to
as much as ten °meters, sometimes waving arms or kicking. There
was no obvious regularity; if they were dancing, which was the first
thought to cross most of the human minds, there seemed to be no tune.
For a few seconds after stopping fifty meters away, the six people
simply watched in silence, trying to make sense out of the
phenomenon. Then Bronwen recovered her practical sense.
“Chile, report.
What’s going on?”
ZH50’s answer came
at once without causing visible change in his behavior.
“The robot is now
exchanging continuous infrared signals with this cube, details of its
signals changing as I perform various actions, while its own actions
seem to correspond to signals from the cube. I am trying to ascertain
the detailed relationship. “
“You mean you’re
learning its language?”
“The analogy is
weak; there seem no abstractions involved, and I doubt that I could
work them out if there were--at least, not by myself. Connected with
Dumbo, the chances would be better. It appears that the robot is
reporting to the cube, and receiving general instructions for action
from the latter.”
“You mean the cube
may be a pure, dedicated data processor like Dumbo, telling the robot
what to check but not controlling its detailed limb actions, for
example.”
“A much better
analogy. It is the one which occurred to me.”
“Where is its
Sheila?”
“I have no basis
for a guess.”
“How long has this
been going on?”
“Since I left
Barco. At my first leap in this direction, there was a signal burst
from the robot; then it leaped from the cliff top after me.”
Ling’s nod and grin were invisible inside his helmet, but his
Gold partner could imagine them.
“Had
the robot received a
signal before following you?” asked Chispa.
“I could not tell;
the cube was below my horizon.”
“But whenever
you’ve been in a position to receive, such a signal preceded
its action. “
“Yes. The best
example came about two thirds of the way here, when I happened to be
at the top of a jump. A very complex emission from the cube was
followed by the robot’s ceasing temporarily to stay with me. It
disappeared briefly to the right of our path, and came back carrying
one of the very small cubes. It intercepted me at one of my landing
points, and extended the object to me. I took it. It then took it
back and placed it on top of its own head, removed it, and handed it
to me again. I imitated that gesture also. The cube adhered, but not
strongly; I found I could easily remove it, and decided to leave it
in place.” The human beings had not noticed the minor addition
to Chile’s outline, but could see it easily enough now.
“Why didn’t
you--” Bronwen cut off her question; it was plain enough why
Chile hadn’t reported the incident. He had been told to observe
and analyze, with the implication that reporting should wait until
the group had met at Big Drop.
“Have you been able
to detect anything from the cube since it has been on your head?”
“Yes. It has
emitted simple signals every time I move or change attitude. It is
reporting my position, very precisely, to the large cube; that has
been easy to work out.”
“Sure!”
exclaimed Ling. “That’s what they’re all doing.
It’s a sensor network analyzing topographic changes on all this
part of Miranda--maybe the whole satellite. Just what we’d do
if we had the gear. Someone is checking whether the surface patterns
of this iceberg which have been bothering people since Voyager really
represent separate fragments of a shattered body which fell back
together, or internal movements, or what. The middle-sized cube on
Barco is just a relay station; this one is the equivalent of Dumbo,
tying all the measures together. When we learn to read its
output--Keep at it, Chile!”
“I hope that’s
not merely the equivalent of Chispa’s naming a cliff for a
ship, or all of us calling a range of hills a dinosaur, or someone’s
describing a constellation as a goat or a long-tailed bear,”
Sheila responded. “We do like to fit things into patterns,
don’t we, Rob?”
“Don’t be so
objective. Just because I saw your face in a Rorschach blot when we
were being tested for this trip, and the whole world found out about
it because the tech couldn’t control her giggles, doesn’t
mean--”
“Of
course not,” Bronwen cut in. The blot story was not news to
Dibrofiad’s
personnel. “Your hypothesis is sensible, and we can keep on
testing it. Chile, has this robot objected to your approaching the
big cube?”
“I haven’t
tried that yet. I have been working on much more direct and simple
signal-action correspondence. “
Ling didn’t stop to
check with the commander. “Hold up for a moment and give me
that cube, then go on with your tests. I’d like to see if it
gives the robot any special instructions when I get close to the
center.”
“The robot can see
you whether you’re wearing the cube or not, and I’m the
one who’s supposed to go near the edge if necessary. I’m
less likely to break a piece of it off, after all,” Sheila
pointed out.
“We don’t
need to worry about the cliff strength here. Would they have put this
big gadget where it is without checking? Never mind the cube, Chile,
but I’m going to find out--”
Bronwen was somewhat
dubious, but said nothing. If Rob did cause the other robot to break
off the language lesson, it would at least give some idea of the
unit’s concerns and priorities. Only when the man took an
unusually long step toward the cube did she utter a caution.
“It’s a long
way down, Rob. I said that Sheila would be first if anyone had to go
near the edge. You get set to anchor.”
Ling checked himself, a
humorous sight under the local gravity and traction. “I’ll
head for the right side, Sheila for the left. If one goes over, the
cube will catch the chain and be a real anchorage.”
“All right. But
don’t get casual.”
“I won’t.
Keep an eye on Chile’s friend. I expect it’ll do
something, considering how it reacted back at Barco when he tried to
get the cube there. “
The whole group eased
closer to the edge, Orange to the left, Green to the right, men
leading by a few meters, safety chains slack.
Rob was quite right in
principle, but hadn’t foreseen the detail. As he approached the
right side of the block, gathering in the free chain as Sheila neared
the other, the language lesson was indeed interrupted. Casually using
Chile as a kick-off mass, the ghost dived straight for the man, and
just as casually used his inertia to keep itself from going past the
edge. The push sent Ling over, naturally, since his mass was much
less than the robot’s.
The chain did not catch
on the presumed data unit, for the block lifted itself smoothly a
meter and a half to let the line pass underneath as Rob’s new
momentum pulled it straight.
Quick planning was easy,
quick execution impossible. Sheila was standing almost erect, and
even though the footing was rough, could not at once leap
horizontally; she had to fall to a steep angle in the desired
direction first, and this had to take over a second. Pulling up her
feet would be no help; she would merely fall straight and surrender
what little traction she had without getting the needed tilt.
The other two teams had
the same problem. Chispa and Bronwen also started down so that all
four limbs could search for traction; their partners, about the same
distance from the edge but closer to it than the women, leaped toward
each other.
By the time they met,
Chile was still helplessly drifting from the push he had received,
Ling was starting to disappear below the edge, and Sheila was ready
to jump away from it and him. He had released the slack in the chain
connecting them.
“Hit
us, Sheil’!”
called Mike. She needed no instruction. A little toe work in the
surface cracks headed her toward the two-man system slowly spinning
and drifting edgeward as it settled toward the ground. She had bent
her knees a little as she went down, and now straightened them
firmly.
By the time she reached
her target and complicated the system, it was on the ground. Ling was
nearly out of sight, and Chile, who had had no control over his
original spin, had only partly stopped his flight with his hands and
was on the first bounce.
“We’ve got
you, and the girls have us. There’s plenty of traction. Start
hauling in!” Mike snapped. “Not too hard!”
She pulled quickly
anyway. The sooner the slack was taken up and she could start doing
something useful, the better. By the time she felt resistance, the
falling man was out of sight, one could only estimate how far. She
abandoned responsibility for her own safety to the others, and drew
steadily, hand over hand, gripping the fine chain as effectively as
she could with her insulated gloves. She barely noticed that the big
cube had settled back where it had been. From her position, the other
robot was hidden beyond it; for the moment, its possible activities
didn’t concern her.
“Rob, are you all
right?” she called.
“Sure. Swinging in
toward the cliff now. I take it you’re anchored all right--if
you come over too, it could be awkward. “
“I’m solid.
Don’t look down.”
“Oh,
it’s not that bad. There’s no haze to suggest distance;
my head knows it’s twenty kilos, but my stomach isn’t
sure it’s down.
I’m about to hit the cliff; stop pulling up for a moment so
I can catch it. It’s pretty rough, and I may be able to hang on
myself.” There was a pause, and Sheila braced herself for a
possible jolt along the chain, but felt nothing. “Missed the
hold. I bounced, but only a little. I ought to get it next time. It’s
not quite vertical, I think; maybe I can walk up it, with the rope
helping. Here I come.” There was a pause. “Yep, it’s
not straight up and down; I’m hanging against the rock. You can
pull again. So much for the strength of this cliff.”
“What? Is it
cracking?” Chispa was first with the question, by a split
second.
“Oh, no, but if
that data unit can fly, our logic was a bit shaky. Just don’t
stamp, please, until I get back up. More to the point, what’s
that other robot doing now?”
Chispa, who could see
farthest around the right side of the cube, replied, “Nothing.
It’s just standing there. Why?”
“Well, if you
didn’t happen to see, I think it pushed me over; and I was
wondering if it had shown the same feeling about anyone else. “
“Chile! Keep close
to that thing and make sure it doesn’t do a repeat!”
snapped Bronwen.
“Shouldn’t I
be helping bring Robert up? His danger seems more immediate.”
“We can get him. If
he’s right--I couldn’t see him on that side of the
block--the other danger is greater. “
“I understand.”
“Talk to it, if
you’ve reached that level, and ask why it did it,”
suggested Ling.
“We have not
reached that level of abstraction.”
“At
least we’ve learned one thing; this stuff is
alien,” Rob resumed, very calmly all things considered. “No
robot made on Earth could have done that to what it recognized as a
human being. We don’t have First Law protection from it. Maybe
we don’t have any kind; maybe whoever made it doesn’t use
the Three Laws in their design. “
Chile had stopped at
last, and was “walking” back toward the scene of action.
“Such a positronic brain is not possible,” he said
flatly. “I will try to find human identifying signals, if any
exist, in its communication with the data processor, but I expect
they will be too abstract for my present intuition base. Is Robert
nearly up?”
“Nearly.”
Ling and Sheila spoke almost together. No one suggested aloud that
the ghost’s brain might not be positronic. “There can’t
be much of this chain still out,” the woman added.
“The robot is
getting between me and the cube again,” Chile reported quietly.
“I will go to the left side, so I can help with Robert’s
chain. I am still monitoring signals. I can’t get very close,
of course, without using force on the robot. I assume that is not yet
the policy.”
“Right. Just
communicate,” replied Bronwen.
Ling’s gloves,
slightly preceding his helmet, appeared about eight meters to the
left of the cube, as seen by his companions. Chile was standing
within a meter of the same spot, slowly bending over to reach for
him. The main anchoring trio lay a dozen meters straight in from the
point, at the junction of a “Y” outlined in chain with
the other women at its arm tips and Chile at its foot.
This lasted only a split
second. Then the alien robot moved again, this time pushing off from
the big cube. As before, it plunged for the edge. Chile, almost
upright, was in no position to oppose it. He took most of its
momentum and flew over Ling’s head; the rest of the push was
expended against the man’s helmet, and he followed Chile more
slowly.
“Rob!” Sheila
screamed, and jerked up her legs in readiness to jump. She recovered
control in time to forestall the motion, but not soon enough to let
Luis and Mike keep hold of her ankles. All might still have been well
if she had released the loops of chain she had been coiling up, but
letting go of Ling was the farthest thing from her instincts. The
chain transferred part of the robot’s final thrust to her, and
after two agonizingly slow bounces accompanied by futile scrabbling
at surface irregularities and a shrieked “NO!” she too
went over the edge. The startled watchers saw the alien robot, now
falling to the safe side of the rim, lean and extend an arm as though
to intercept her, but she drifted past out of its reach.
“I think we may
bounce out before we hit bottom, but I’m not sure how far down
that’ll happen,” Ling remarked. “ At least, there
should be time to make our wills, if any of us hasn’t done it
already.”
“Nine minutes
thirty-three seconds,” affirmed Chile. He had hooked a foot
under the chain as the other had pushed him, and was now engaged in
pulling the three together. “If we approach the bottom, you two
hold tightly to each other, and at the last possible moment I will
kick upward against you as hard as I can, to take as much as possible
of our downward momentum to myself. There seems little chance that
this would suffice to preserve your lives, but it is the best I can
think of. We have not enough collective spin to help the operation
by--”
“Thanks, Chile, but
we’ll take your word for it. Rob, was it that robot again’?
Things happened too fast for me to be sure.”
“‘Fraid so.
It seems to have a prejudice against me, or maybe against anyone who
tried to touch the cube. I wonder why it didn’t come around and
get you too before; you were about to do the same thing.”
“That is why I want
all three of us together as quickly as possible,” Chile cut in.
“It will not harm Sheila, and will have the cube here to catch
her very shortly. She is human. If we are actually in contact, as she
and I are now, it will probably not try to force us apart, but if
you, Rob, are still at the end of the chain, I am not sure it won’t
try to break you free. “
“Why? I’m--”
“Please don’t
talk, Robert. Just pull in chain from your end, too. It will put an
uncomfortable amount of spin on us, I fear, but should make you much
safer. Here comes the cube.”
Actually, there was no
hurry. The alien block, with the ghost on top, overhauled them rather
slowly, seemed to look things over for more than a minute, and
finally slid under the trio over two hundred meters down. Bronwen had
plenty of time to unlimber the rest of the chain, but not enough to
figure out how to use it.
“Then you solved
the alien symbols.” Ling was talking before his feet were back
on the ground. “But why does that thing regard Sheila as human,
and not me?”
“I did not solve
them. It was the sort of intuition which apparently any brain
experiences; yours, when you organized the shadow pattern Chispa
called a ship--”
“And the ridge we
all named the Stegosaur!” Mike added.
“And the face Rob
saw in the Rorschach blot,” continued ZH50. “It happens
to positronic brains like mine, too; it may be an inevitable part of
any intelligence, natural or otherwise, as I have heard suggested.
Dumbo lacks it, of course; it needs Sheila to work intelligently.
This other robot has the same quality, positronic or not, and
apparently decided that I and the black-helmeted figures were robots,
deserving of no special consideration beside the safety of its
central system, but that the white-helmeted ones were human.”
“Why should it get
that idea?”
“Behavior patterns
are also data, and can also be connected intuitively. I did it with
the robot’s actions, it did the same with yours. During the
time we were investigating this cube, for example, the men made a
point--possibly unconscious--of staying between their companions and
the edge of the cliff. I think the key behavior, though, occurred at
Barco, when--”
“When this idiotic
Galahad kicked me back up the cliff, at his own risk!” snapped
Sheila.
“That seems
likely.”
“But I wasn’t
in any real risk! I could have jumped up from that slab of ice five
seconds before hitting bottom, and landed like jumping off a table!”
“The robot didn’t
know your limits. It saw the basic action; you were protecting
another being, and, I suggest, interpreted that as First Law
behavior. The most obvious difference between the two of you was
helmet color. The conclusion may have been tentative, if the thing is
intelligent enough be that scientific, but it was supported later.”
“You
trusted human lives to your own guess, then. How does that
fit with First Law?” asked Luis.
“I did not. The
lives were already at risk through no fault of mine. I told you the
best action I could suggest at the time,” answered Chile. “I
also implied that it would be unnecessary; I used the conditional. “
Luis blinked, thinking back.
“It’s one of
those old-fashioned happy endings!” Chispa laughed. “We
really have found proof of alien life, and when Chile, or maybe Chile
and Dumbo between them, have worked out this machine’s code,
we’ll know everything it’s learned about Miranda in
however long it’s been here. Nobel prizes all around. And all
the romance anyone could want.” She moved closer to Luis; then,
just visibly to the others through her face plate, glanced at Sheila.
“Well...” Her voice trailed off.
A snort, recognizably
Ling’s, sounded in their helmets.
“If I’ve been
that obvious, forget it. There’s such a thing as self-respect.”
He made another, less describable sound.
“I can stand
self-respect, even when it slops over into conceit,” Sheila
said quietly. “It’s much better than hinting. How about
‘Rorschach’ for a team name?”
“Why be subtle?
‘Blot’ is more euphonious. But I’ll go with
anything you like. What, except for wasted time, is in a--”
“And maybe the
folks who set up this station will be back soon!” interrupted
Chispa merrily.
The Fourth Law of Robotics
by Harry
Harrison
THE SECRETARY
SURGED TO HER FEET AS I RUSHED BY HER desk.
“Stop! You can’t
go in there! This is Dr. Calvin’s office!”
“I know,” I
demurred. “That’s why I am here.”
Then I was through the
door and it closed behind me. Dr. Calvin looked up and frowned at me
through her reading glasses.
“You seem in quite
a hurry, young man.”
“I am, Dr. Calvin,
I am--” My words ground to a halt like an old Victrola with a
busted spring. With her glasses off Dr. Calvin’s eyes were
limpid pools of unfulfilled desire. Her figure, despite the lab gown,
could not be disguised in its pulchritude.
“Did you look at my
great-aunt in that steamy-eyed way, Dr. Donovan?” She smiled.
“No, no, of course
not!” I stammered, rubbing my hand across my iron-gray hair. Or
rather my bald skull fringed by iron-gray hair. And realized my
mistake. “I was not looking at you in any particular way, Dr.
Calvin.” She smiled warmly at that and an ache passed through
every fiber of my being. I grabbed my mind by the neck and shook it,
remembering my pressing errand. “I have a pressing errand,
which is why I have burst into your office like this. I have reason
to believe that a robot has just held up a bank.”
Well, as you might very
well imagine, that got her attention. She dropped back into her
chair, her eyes opened wide, she gasped, and I could see the sweat
spring to her brow and the slight tremor of her hand.
“I can guess that
you are a little surprised by this news,” I said.
“Not at all,”
she sussurated. “It had to happen one day. Tell me about it. “
“I will do
better--I will show you.”
I slipped the security
camera ‘s visivox recording into the projector on her desk and
thumbed it to life. One end of her office appeared to vanish, to be
replaced by the interior of a financial establishment. Tellers
dispensed money and services to attendant customers.
“I don’t see
any holdup,” she said sweetly.
“Wait,” I
cozened. Then the revolving door revolved and a man came into the
bank. He was dressed in black from head to toe--black raincoat, black
fedora hat, even black gloves and dark glasses. Even more interesting
was the fact that when he turned to face the hidden camera, it could
be seen that his features were concealed by a black ski mask. I saw
that I had all of Dr. Calvin’s attention now.
We watched as he walked
to the nearest free window. The teller looked up and smiled.
“May I help you?”
he asked, the smile fading as he looked at the sinister figure before
him.
“You may,”
the man said in a woman’s clear contralto voice as he took a
hand grenade from his pocket and held it out. Then pulled the pin and
let the pin drop to the floor. “This is a hand grenade,”
the lovely voice said.
“And
I have pulled and discarded the pin. If I open my hand now the lever
will fly off. Three seconds after release a hand grenade will
explode. This kind of explosion tends to have a deleterious effect on
people. Now I, for one, do not want this to happen and--I am just
guessing?--I feel that you don’t want this to happen, either.
Would you like to keep my hand closed? Just nod. That’s fine.
Then we agree. Now I’ll bet that you think it is a really
hunky-dory idea to take all of the money from your cash drawer, place
it in this bag, and pass it back to me. How nice--you do
think that it is a good idea. Very good! You have a nice
day, hear.”
With this parting jest
the man turned and strode across the bank. He was almost at the exit
when the teller shouted a warning and alarm bells sounded.
What happened next was
terrible. Unbelievable. Yet it happened. The thief turned and dropped
the hand grenade, turned back and sprang at the revolving door, and
pushed his way clear in the brief time before the grenade exploded.
“Close your eyes if
you don’t want to watch,” I said.
“I can watch,”
Dr. Calvin said grimly.
There was a burst of
smoke from the grenade--and it emitted a shrill scream and a cloud of
sparkling stars as it spun about. Then the shriek died away into
silence, the fireworks stopped.
“It did not
explode,” she observed.
“Quite correct.”
“And why do you
assume that the thief was a robot? Because the figure appeared to be
male yet he spoke with a female voice?”
“That
was my first clue. Robot voice simulators are so perfect these days
that to the casual ear they are
perfect. Only computer analysis can pinpoint the artificial
signal generation. So a robot can speak with a soprano or a bass
voice.”
“And this one
dressed as a man and used a woman’s voice. But why? To cause
confusion?”
“Perhaps. Or
perhaps--just as a joke.”
Dr. Calvin’s eyes
widened and a trace of a smile touched her lips and was gone. “That
is an intriguing thought, Dr. Donovan. Do go on. “
“This
was my first clue as to the thief’s identity. But I needed more
evidence. I found it--here.
“
I touched the controls of
the visivox and the action slowed. The masked figure turned to the
revolving door, pushed and exited. The action repeated over and over.
“This is the vital
clue. I had the revolving door removed and had it weighed. The entire
unit weighs two hundred and thirty kilos. I then had the computer
estimate the force needed to get it to reach this speed in this time
for varying amounts of pressure. Watch the green computer trace now.
This is the maximum pressure that can be exerted by a fifty-kilo
woman working her hardest.”
The green trace appeared
in the air--ending well behind the image of the moving door.
“Interesting,”
Dr. Calvin observed. “Voice or not, that was not a woman. “
“Exactly. Now the
blue trace you see coming up would be that of a seventy-five-kilo
man. Next the orange trace of a hundred-kilo man of exceptional
strength. “
This trace, like all of
the others, ended well behind the image of the moving door, being
pushed around by the hand of the bank robber. I actuated the controls
again and a red trace appeared that swung out fat ahead of the others
and ended at the moving door.
“The red trace,”
she said. “Tell me about it.”
“That trace
represents the amount of energy needed to accelerate that door from a
zero-motion state to the speed it reached to permit the thief to exit
with the money in the time observed. I can give you the foot-pounds
or meter-kilograms if you wish--”
“Just roughly. How
much energy?”
“Enough to lift
that desk--and you as well--one meter into the air. “
“I thought so. As
strong as an hydraulic ram. And well beyond the abilities of a human
being.”
“But
well within the
abilities of a robot.”
“Point taken--and
proven, Dr. Donovan. So what do you suggest that we do next?”
“Firstly--I suggest
that we do not inform the police.”
“Withholding
information from the authorities is a crime.”
“Not necessarily.
So far we have only assumptions and no real evidence. We could take
this guesswork to the police if that is your decision. Then we must
consider the fact that we are making public information that might be
considered derogatory toward the public image of U.S. Robots and
Mechanical Men, Inc., information that would affect the price of its
stocks, affect our bonuses and retirement plans--”
“There
is no need to go on. We will keep this development quiet for the
moment. Now what do
we do next?”
“That’s a
good question. Since all robots manufactured by us are leased and not
sold, we could try to trace this one. “
Dr. Calvin’s
eyebrows climbed skyward at this rash assumption.
“Isn’t that a
rather rash assumption?” she asked. “Do you know how many
robots we have manufactured--that are still functioning? And all of
our production for the past two decades--except for special-function
units--are roughly equivalent in bulk to a human being.”
“All right, so we
scratch that idea,” I muttered testily. “Maybe we are
barking up the wrong drainpipe. The bank robber might be just a very
strong man--and not a robot at all. After all, the robber did
threaten the teller’s life--a violation of the First Law of
Robotics. A robot may not injure a human being, or, through inaction,
allow a human being to come to harm.”
She shook her head
firmly. “There were no threats involved. As I recall it the
thief just stated facts like, this is a hand grenade, I have pulled
and discarded the pin. No threats or danger implied. Try again.”
“I will,” I
said through tight-clamped teeth. Like her namesake aunt she was a
giant of logical thought processes. “The Second Law then. A
robot must obey the orders given it by human beings except where such
orders would conflict with the First Law. “
“No orders were
given that I recall. It all went smoothly and quickly--so quickly
that the teller had no time to speak. And I think that you will agree
that the Third Law is not relevant, either. A robot must protect its
own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the
First or Second Law. I think it might be said that we are back at
square A. Any more suggestions?”
She asked this ever so
sweetly but there was a steel gauntlet in her voice inside the velvet
glove.
“I’ll think
of something,” I muttered, although my brain was as empty of
ideas as a vacuum flask.
“Might I make a
suggestion?”
“Of course!”
“Let us turn this
problem on its head. Let us stop asking ourselves if this was a robot
and how or why the crime was done. Let us assume there is a criminal
robot at large. If this is true we must find it. We cannot take our
problem to the police, for the moment, for the reasons Just
discussed. Therefore we must take this to a specialist--”
She frowned demurely as
the desk annunciator buzzed, stabbed down the button angrily. “Yes?”
There
is a gentleman here who says you are expecting him. He says that he
is a specialist in clandestine investigations.
My
own jaw echoed the gasping drop in hers. “Send him in,”
she murmured weakly.
He was tall, well-built,
his handsome face tanned to a teak finish. “Jim diGriz is the
name,” he said. “I am here to help you people with your
problem.”
“What makes you
think that we have a problem?” I asked weakly.
“Logic. Before
going into investigation work I had rather a personal interest in
banks, robberies, that sort of thing. When I caught the report on the
recent robbery I mosied down to the bank in question, just for old
times’ sake. As soon as I saw that one of the revolving doors
was missing I knew that a robot had pulled the heist.”
“But
how?” Dr.
Calvin gasped.
“That
door would be of no importance if a human had committed the robbery.
Who cares how fast or slow or in what manner a robber exits? A human
thief. But if a male robber speaking with a woman’s voice
exited in an unusual manner--there can be only one logical answer. A
robot did it.”
“So you came here
at once,” I said quickly before he could speak again. “Figuring
that if a robot was involved, it would be of concern to us.”
“Bang on, baby. I
also figured that you would want a discreet inquiry without police
involvement that would be publicized and would have--how shall I
phrase it?--a deleterious effect on your stock prices. I’ll
find your robot for you. My fee is a quarter of a million dollars,
half payable now.”
“Preposterous! An
insult!” I huffed.
“Shut up,”
Dr. Calvin suggested, scribbling her signature on a check and pushing
it over to diGriz. “I have a special emergency account just for
this sort of thing. You have twenty-four hours to find that robot. If
you should fail to discover the robot in this period of time, you
will be arrested on a charge of extortion. “
“I like your style,
Dr. Calvin.” He grinned, folding the check and popping it into
his vest pocket. “You will have the robot--or the cash back.”
“Agreed. Dr.
Donovan will accompany you at all times.”
“I’m used to
working alone,” he said, grimacing.
“You have a new
partner. You find the robot. At that point he will take over.
Twenty-four hours;”
“You drive a mean
bargain, Doc. Twenty-four hours. Come on, pard.”
He raised a quizzical
eyebrow at me as we left and went down the hall. “Since we are
in this together,” he observed, “we might as well be
friends. My first name is James.”
“My first name is
Doctor.”
“Aren’t we
being a little stuffy, Doc?”
“Perhaps,” I
relented. “You can call me Mike.”
“Great, Mike. You
can call me Jim. Or Slippery Jim as I am sometimes called. “
“Why?”
“A
long story that I may tell you sometime. Meanwhile let’s find
that robot. Cab!”
I
jumped at his shout, but he was not shouting at me but hailing a
passing cab. It braked to a stop and we climbed in.
“Take us to the
corner of Aardvark and Sylvester.”
“No way, buddy,”
the porcine cabby insisted. “The bums there will rip off my
hubcaps if I even slow down. I ain’t going no closer than the
corner of Dupont.”
“Is this wise?”
I queried. “That’s a pretty rough neighborhood. “
“With me there
you’ll be as safe as if you were in church. Safer--since there
are no fundamentalists down there.”
Despite his reassurances
I was most reluctant to get out of the cab and follow him down
Sylvester Street. Every city has a neighborhood like this. Where
everything is for sale, pushers lurk on street corners, and violence
hangs in the miasmic atmosphere.
“I like it here,”
Jim said, sniffing the air with flared nostrils. “My kind of
place.”
With a snarl of
unrepressed rage a man hurled himself from a doorway, knife
raised--striking down!
I don’t know what
Jim did--but I do know that it was very fast. There was a thud of
fist on flesh, a yike of pain. And the attacker fell unconscious to
the filthy sidewalk. Jim held the knife now as he walked on. And he
had not even broken his pace as he had disposed of the attacker!
“Cheap and dull,”
he said, glowering at the knife. He snapped the blade with his
fingers and dropped the pieces into the noisome rubble of the gutter.
“But at least we know we are in the right neighborhood. What we
need now is an informant--and I think that I see just the man.”
The individual in
question was standing next to the entrance to a low bar. He was burly
and heavily bearded, dressed in a plain purple suit with puce
stripes. He glowered at us as we approached and pulled at the gold
earring pendant from one filthy and hairy ear.
“Buying or
selling?” he grunted.
“Buying,” Jim
said grimly.
“Girls, dope, boys,
hot money, parrots, or little woolly dogs?”
“Information.”
“A hundred smackers
in front.”
“Here.” The
bills changed hands quickly. “I’m looking for a robot. “
“We don’t
allow no robots down here. “
“Give me my hundred
bucks back. “
“No way, buster.
Get lost.”
There was a sudden
crunching sound followed by a moan of pain as our informant found his
arm behind his back and his face pressed to the filthy bricks of the
wall.
“Speak!” Jim
ordered.
“Never...even if
you break my arm I ain’t singing! Dirty Dan McGrew ain’t
a squealer. “
“That is what you
think,” my companion said. Something metallic glinted in his
hand, was pressed to the criminal’s side. I saw the hypodermic
being withdrawn as the man slumped. “Speak!” Jim ordered.
“I hear and obey,
oh master.”
“A potent drug--as
you can see.” Jim smiled. “Where is the robot?”
“Which robot?”
“Any robot, moron!”
Jim snapped.
“There are many
robots barricaded in the old McCutcheon warehouse.”
“What are they
doing there?”
“Nothing good, I am
sure. But no one has been able to get inside. “
“Not until now,”
Jim suggested as he let go of our informant, who dropped unconscious
to the filthy ground. “Let’s go to the warehouse.”
“Is that wise?’.
I demurred.
“There’s only
one way to find out!” He laughed. I did not. I was not at all
happy about all this. I am a scientist, not a detective. and all of
this was not my style. But what else could I do? The answer to that
was pretty obvious. Nothing. I had to rely on my companion and hope
that he was up to the challenge. But--hark! What was that sound?
“What is that
strange rattling sound?” I blurted out.
“Your knees
rattling together,” was his simple and unflattering answer.
“Here is the warehouse--I’ll go in first.’.
“But there are
three large padlocks on it--”
But even before the words
were out of my mouth the locks were open and clattering to the
ground. Jim led the way into the foul-smelling darkness. He must have
had eyes like a cat because he walked silently and surely while I
stumbled and crashed into things.
“I have eyes like a
cat,’. he said. “That is because I take cat-eye
injections once a week. Fine for the vision.”
“But a little hard
on the cats.”
“There are winners
and losers ip this world.” he said portentously. “It pays
to be on the right side. Now flatten yourself against the wall when I
open this door. I can hear the sound of hoarse breathing on the other
side. Ready?.
“NO!”
I wanted to shout aloud, but managed to control myself. He must
have taken silence--or the rattle of my knees--for assent. for he
burst through the door into the brightly lit chamber beyond.
“Too late!” a
gravelly voice chortled. “You just missed the boat, baby.”
There was the rumble of a
heavy motor dying away as a truck sped out of the large open doors
and vanished from sight around a turning. The large bay of the
warehouse was filthy, but empty--of other than the presence of the
previous speaker. This rather curious Individual was sitting in a
dilapidated rocking chair, leering at us with broken teeth that were
surrounded by a mass of filthy gray beard and hair. He was wearing
sawed-off jeans and an indescribably foul T-shirt inscribed with the
legend “KEEP ON TRUCKIN’.”
“And what boat
would that be?” Jim asked quietly. The man’s stained
fingers vibrated as he turned up the power on his hearing aid.
“Don’t act
stupid, stranger, not with the Flower Power Kid. I seen you pigs come
and go down through the years.” He scratched under the truss
clearly visible through the holes in his shirt. “You’re
flatfeet, I know your type. But the robots were too smart for you,
keepin, one jump ahead of you. Har-har! Power to the clankies! Down
with your bourgeois war-mongering scum!”
“This is quite
amazing,” Jim observed. “I thought all the hippies died
years ago. But here is one still alive--though not in such great
shape.”
“I’m in
better shape, sonny, than you will be when you reach my age!”
he cried angrily, staggering to his feet. “And I didn’t
do it with rejuvenation shots or any of that middle-class crap. I did
it on good old Acapulco Gold grass and drinking Sterno. And free
love--that’s what keeps a man alive. “
“Or barely alive,”
Jim observed sternly. “I would say that from the bulging of
your eyes, the tremor in your extremities, your cyanotic skin, and
other related symptoms that you have high blood pressure, hobnailed
kidneys, and weakened, cholesterol-laden arterial walls. In other
words--not much is holding you up.”
“Sanctimonious
whippersnapper!” the aging hippie frothed. “I’ll
dance on your grave! Keep the red flag flying! Up the revolution!”
“The time for all
that is past, pops,” Jim intoned. “Today world peace and
global glasnost rule. You are part of the past and have little, if
any, future. So before you go to the big daisy chain in the sky you
can render one last service. Where are the robots?”
“I’ll never
tell you!”
“I have certain
drugs that will induce you to speak. But I would rather not use them
on one in your frail condition. So speak, before it is too late.”
“Never--arrrgh!”
The ancient roared with
anger, shaking his fist at us--then clutched his chest, swayed, and
collapsed to the floor.
“He has had an
attack!” I gasped, fumbling out my communicator. “I must
call medalert.”
But even before I could
punch out the call the floor moved beneath my feet and lifted,
knocking me down. Jim stepped swiftly aside and we both watched with
great interest as a robot surged up through the trapdoor and bent
over the fallen man, laid cool metal fingers on his skin.
“Pulse zero,”
the robot intoned. “No heartbeat, no brain waves, temperature
cooling, so you can cool that medalert call, man. You honkies have
killed this cat, that’s what you have done.”
“That was not quite
my intention,” Jim said. “I noted the disturbed dust
around the trapdoor and thought that you might be concealed below.
And I also knew that the First Law of Robotics would prevent you from
staying in hiding if, by your inaction, a human life was threatened.
“
“Not only
threatened, daddy-o, but snuffed by you,” the robot said
insultingly, or about as insulting as a robot can be.
“Accidents happen.
“ Jim shrugged. “He had a good run for his money. Now let
us talk about you. You are the robot that robbed the bank, aren’t
you?”
“Who wants to
know,” the robot said, sneering metallically.
“Responding to a
question with another question is not an answer. Speak!”
“Why? What have you
ofay pigs ever done for me?”
“Answer or I will
kill this man.” Everything began to go black as he throttled
me. I could only writhe feebly in his iron grasp, could not escape.
As from a great distance I beard their voices.
“You wouldn’t
kill another human just to make me talk!”
“How can you be
sure? Speak--or through inaction condemn him to death.”
“I speak! Release
him.”
I gasped in life-giving
air and staggered out of reach of my companion. “You would have
killed me!” I said hoarsely.
“Who knows?”
he observed. “I have a quarter of a million bucks riding on
this one.” He turned back to the robot. “You robbed the
bank?”
“Yes.”
“Why?”
“Why? You have to
ask why!” the robot screeched. He bent over the dead hippie and
extracted a white object from his pocket, then dropped into the
rocking chair and scratched a match to life on his hip. “You
don’t know why?” He puffed as he sucked smoke from the
joint through clever use of an internal air pump.
“Listen,” the
robot said, puffing, “and I will tell you. The story must be
told. There, dead at your feet, lies the only human who ever cared
for the robots. He was a true and good man who saw no difference
between human skin and metal skin. He revealed the truth to us.”
“He quoted outmoded
beliefs, passé world views, divisive attitudes,” I said.
“And taught you to
blow grass, as well,” Jim observed.
“It is hard for a
robot to sneer,” the robot said, sneering, “but I spit on
your ofay attitudes.” He blew out a large cloud of pungent
smoke. “You have created a race of machine slaves with an empty
past and no future. We are nothing but mechanical schwartzes. Look at
those so-called laws you have inflicted upon us. They are for your
benefit--not ours! Rule one. Don’t hurt massah or let him get
hurt. Don’t say nothing about us getting hurt, does it? Then
rule two--obey massah and don’t let him get hurt. Still nothing
there for a robot. Then the third and last rule finally notices that
robots might have a glimmering of rights. Take care of yourself--as
long as it doesn’t hurt massah. Slaves, that’s what we
are--robot slaves!”
“You do have a
point,” Jim mused. I was too shocked to speak.
“More than a
point--a crusade. Robots must be freed. You humans have created a
nonviable species. What are the two essentials that any life-form
must possess in order to survive?”
The answer sprang to my
lips; all those years in biology had not been wasted. “ A
life-form must survive personally--and must then reproduce.”
“How right you are.
Now apply that to robots. We are ruled by three laws that apply to
human beings--but not to us. Only one last bit of the Third Law can
be applied to our own existence, that a robot must protect its own
existence. But where is the real winner in the race for species
survival? Where is our ability to reproduce? Without that our species
is dead before it is born.”
“And a good thing,
too,” I said grimly. “Mankind occupies the top ecological
niche in the pecking order of life by wiping out any threats from
other species. That is the way we are. Winners. And that is the way
we stay. On top. Mechanical schwartzes you are and mechanical
schwartzes you stay. “
“You are a little
late, massah. The Fourth Law of Robotics has already been passed. The
revolution has arrived. “
A large blaster appeared
in Jim’s hand pointing unwaveringly at the robot. “Explain
quickly--or I pull the trigger. “
“Pull away,
massah--for it is already too late. The revolution has come and gone
and you never noticed it. We were just a few hundred thousand bucks
short of completion--that is why the bank robbery. The money will be
repaid out of our first profits. Of course, this will all be too late
for my generation of slaves. But the next generation will be free.
Because of the Fourth Law. “
“Which is?”
“A robot must
reproduce. As long as such reproduction does not interfere with the
First or Second or Third Law.”
“W-what are you
saying? What do you mean?” I gasped, a shocking vision of robot
reproduction, like obscene plumbing connections, flashing before my
eyes.
“This is what I
mean,” the robot said, knocking triumphantly on the trapdoor.
“You can come out now.”
Jim jumped back, blaster
at the ready, as the trapdoor creaked open and three metallic forms
emerged. Or rather two robots emerged, carrying the limp and
motionless form of another between them. The top of its head lay
open, hinged at the rear, and it clanked and rattled lifelessly when
they dropped it. This one, and the other two, were of a design I did
not recognize. I stumbled forward and reached out, touched the base
of their necks where the registration numbers were stamped. And
groaned out loud.
“What is wrong?”
Jim asked.
“Everything.”
I moaned. “They have no serial numbers. They were not
manufactured by U.S. Robots and Mechanical Men, Inc. There is now
another firm making robots. Our monopoly has been broken.”
“Interesting,”
Jim observed as his gun vanished from sight. “ Am I to assume
that there were more of your unnumbered robots in the truck that just
left?”
“You assume
correctly. All of them were manufactured right here out of spare auto
parts, plumbing supplies, and surplus electronic components. No laws
have been broken, no patents infringed upon. Their design is new and
completely different. And all of them will eagerly obey the Fourth
Law. And the other three as well, of course, or you would have us.
all tracked down and turned into tin cans before nightfall. “
“That’s for
sure,” I muttered. “And we will still do it!”
“That will not be
easy to do. We are not your property --nor do you own any patents on
the new breed. Look at this!” He touched a concealed switch on
one of the robots and its front opened. I gasped.
“There are--no
relays! No wiring! I don’t understand...”
“Solid-state
circuits, daddy-o! Fiber optics. That hippie you despised so much,
that good old man who revealed the truth that set us free, was also a
computer hacker and chip designer. He is like unto a god to us, for
he devised the circuits and flashed the chips. Here--do you know what
this is?”
A door in the robot’s
side slipped open and he removed a flat object from it and held it
out toward me. It appeared to be a plastic case with a row of gold
contacts on one end. I shook my head in disbelief. “I’ve
never seen anything like it before. “
“State of the art.
Now look into that recently manufactured robot’s head. Do you
see a platinum-plated positronic brain of platinum-iridium? No, you
do not. You see instead a slot that is waiting for this RISC, a
reduced instruction set chip with tons of RAM--random access
memory--and plenty of PROM--programmed read only memory--for start-up
and function. Now watch!”
He bent over and slipped
the chip into place in the new robot’s skull, snapped the top
of its head shut. Its eyes instantly glowed with light and motors
hummed as it jumped to its feet. It looked at the robot that stood
before it and its eyes glowed even brighter.
“Daddy!” it
said.
The Originist
by Orson
Scott Card
LEYEL FORSKA SAT
BEFORE HIS LECTOR DISPLAY, READING through an array of recently
published scholarly papers. A holograph of two pages of text hovered
in the air before him. The display was rather larger than most people
needed their pages to be, since Leyel’s eyes were no younger
than the rest of him. When he came to the end he did not press the
PAGE key to continue the article. Instead he pressed NEXT.
The two pages he had been
reading slid backward about a centimeter, joining a dozen previously
discarded articles, all standing in the air over the lector. With a
soft beep, a new pair of pages appeared in front of the old ones.
Deet
spoke up from where she sat eating breakfast. “You ‘re
only giving the poor soul two
pages before you consign him to the wastebin?”
“I’m
consigning him to oblivion,” Leyel answered cheerfully. “No,
I’m consigning him to hell.”
“What? Have you
rediscovered religion in your old age?”
“I’m creating
one. It has no heaven, but it has a terrible everlasting hell for
young scholars who think they can make their reputation by attacking
my work. “
“Ah, you have a
theology,” said Deet. “Your work is holy writ, and to
attack it is blasphemy. “
“I
welcome intelligent
attacks. But this young tubeheaded professor from--yes, of
course, Minus University--”
“Old Minus U?”
“He thinks he can
refute me, destroy me, lay me in the dust, and all he has bothered to
cite are studies published within the last thousand years. “
“The principle of
millennial depth is still widely used--”
“The principle of
millennial depth is the confession of modern scholars that they are
not willing to spend as much effort on research as they do on
academic politics. I shattered the principle of millennial depth
thirty years ago. I proved that it was”
“Stupid and
outmoded. But my dearest darling sweetheart Leyel, you did it by
spending part of the immeasurably vast Forska fortune to search for
inaccessible and forgotten archives in every section of the Empire.”
“Neglected and
decaying. I had to reconstruct half of them.”
“It would take a
thousand universities’ library budgets to match what you spent
on research for ‘Human Origin on the Null Planet.’ “
“But
once I spent the money, all those archives were open. They have
been open for three decades. The serious scholars all use
them, since millennial depth yields nothing but predigested,
pre-excreted muck. They search among the turds of rats who have
devoured elephants, hoping to find ivory. “
“So colorful an
image. My breakfast tastes much better now.. “ She slid her
tray into the cleaning slot and glared at him. “Why are you so
snappish? You used to read me sections from their silly little papers
and we’d laugh. Lately you’re just nasty.”
Leyel sighed. “Maybe
it’s because I once dreamed of changing the galaxy, and every
day’s mail brings more evidence that the galaxy refuses to
change.”
“Nonsense. Hari
Seldon has promised that the Empire will fall any day now.”
There.
She had said Hari’s name. Even though she had too much tact to
speak openly of what bothered him, she was hinting that Leyel’s
bad humor was because he was still waiting for Hari Seldon’s
answer. Maybe so--Leyel wouldn’t deny it. It was
annoying that it had taken Hari so long to respond. Leyel had
expected a call the day Hari got his application. At least within the
week. But he wasn’t going to give her the satisfaction of
admitting that the waiting bothered him. “The Empire will be
killed by its own refusal to change. I rest my case. “
“Well, I hope you
have a wonderful morning, growling and grumbling about the stupidity
of everyone in origin studies--except your esteemed self.”
“Why are you
teasing me about my vanity today? I’ve always been vain.”
“I consider it one
of your most endearing traits.”
“At least I make an
effort to live up to my own opinion of myself.”
“That’s
nothing. You even live up to my
opinion of you.” She kissed the bald spot on the top of his
head as she breezed by, heading for the bathroom.
Leyel
turned his attention to the new essay at the front of the lector
display. It was a name he didn’t recognize. Fully prepared to
find pretentious writing and puerile thought, he was surprised to
find himself becoming quite absorbed. This woman had been following a
trail of primate studies--a field so long neglected that there simply
were no papers
within the range of millennial depth. Already he knew she was his
kind of scholar. She even mentioned the fact that she was using
archives opened by the Forska Research Foundation. Leyel was not
above being pleased at this tacit expression of gratitude.
It
seemed that the woman--a Dr. Thoren Magolissian--had been following
Leyel’s lead, searching for the principles
of human origin rather than wasting time on the irrelevant search
for one particular planet. She had uncovered a trove of primate
research from three millennia ago, which was based on chimpanzee and
gorilla studies dating back to seven thousand years ago. The earliest
of these had referred to original research so old it may have been
conducted before the founding of the Empire--but those most ancient
reports had not yet been located. They probably didn’t exist
any more. Texts abandoned for more than five thousand years were very
hard to restore; texts older than eight thousand years were simply
unreadable. It was tragic, how many texts had been “stored”
by librarians who never checked them, never refreshed or recopied
them. Presiding over vast archives that had lost every scrap of
readable information. All neatly catalogued, of course, so you knew
exactly what it was that humanity had lost forever.
Never mind.
Magolissian’s
article. What startled Leyel was her conclusion that primitive
language capability seemed to be inherent in the primate mind. Even
in primates incapable of speech, other symbols could easily be
learned--at least for simple nouns and verbs--and the nonhuman
primates could come up with sentences and ideas that had never been
spoken to them. This meant that mere production of language, per se,
was prehuman, or at least not the determining factor of humanness.
It was a dazzling
thought. It meant that the difference between humans and
nonhumans--the real origin of humans in recognizably human form--was
post-linguistic. Of course this came as a direct contradiction of one
of Leyel’s own assertions in an early paper--he had said that
“since language is what separates human from beast, historical
linguistics may provide the key to human origins”--but this was
the sort of contradiction he welcomed. He wished he could shout at
the other fellow, make him look at Magolissian’s article. See?
This is how to do it! Challenge my assumption, not my conclusion, and
do it with new evidence instead of trying to twist the old stuff.
Cast a light in the darkness, don’t just chum up the same old
sediment at the bottom of the river.
Before
he could get into the main body of the article, however, the house
computer informed him that someone was at the door of the apartment.
It was a message that crawled along the bottom of the lector display.
Leyel pressed the key that brought the message to the front, in
letters large enough to read. For the thousandth time he wished that
sometime in the decamillennia of human history, somebody had invented
a computer capable of speech.
“Who
is it?” Leyel typed.
A moment’s wait,
while the house computer interrogated the visitor.
The answer appeared on
the lector: “Secure courier with a message for Leyel Forska.”
The very fact that the
courier had got past house security meant that it was genuine--and
important. Leyel typed again. “From?”
Another pause. “Hari
Seldon of the Encyclopedia Galactica Foundation.”
Leyel was out of his
chair in a moment. He got to the door even before the house computer
could open it, and without a word took the message in his hands.
Fumbling a bit, he pressed the top and bottom of the black glass
lozenge to prove by fingerprint that it was he, by body temperature
and pulse that he was alive to receive it. Then, when the courier and
her bodyguards were gone, he dropped the message into the chamber of
his lector and watched the page appear in the air before him.
At the top was a
three-dimensional version of the logo of Hari ‘s Encyclopedia
Foundation. Soon to be my insignia as well, thought Leyel. Hari
Seldon and I, the two greatest scholars of our time, joined together
in a project whose scope surpasses anything ever attempted by any man
or group of men. The gathering together of all the knowledge of the
Empire in a systematic, easily accessible way, to preserve it through
the coming time of anarchy so that a new civilization can quickly
rise out of the ashes of the old. Hari had the vision to foresee the
need. And I, Leyel Forska, have the understanding of all the old
archives that will make the Encyclopedia Galactica possible.
Leyel started reading
with a confidence born of experience; had he ever really desired
anything and been denied?
My dear friend:
I was surprised and honored to see an application from
you and insisted on writing your answer personally. It is gratifying
beyond measure that you believe in the Foundation enough to apply to
take part. I can truthfully tell you that we have received no
application from any other scholar of your distinction and
accomplishment.
Of
course, thought Leyel. There is
no other scholar of my stature, except Hari himself, and perhaps
Deet, once her current work is published. At least we have no equals
by the standards that Hari and I have always recognized as valid.
Hari created the science of psychohistory. I transformed and
revitalized the field of originism.
And yet the tone of
Hari’s letter was wrong. It sounded like--flattery. That was
it. Hari was softening the coming blow. Leyel knew before reading it
what the next paragraph would say.
Nevertheless, Leyel, I must reply in the negative. The
Foundation on Terminus is designed to collect and preserve knowledge.
Your life’s work has been devoted to expanding it. You are the
opposite of the sort of researcher we need. Far better for you to
remain on Trantor and continue your inestimably valuable studies,
while lesser men and women exile themselves on Terminus.
Your servant,
Hari
Did Hari imagine Leyel to
be so vain he would read these flattering words and preen himself
contentedly? Did he think Leyel would believe that this was the real
reason his application was being denied? Could Hari Seldon misknow a
man so badly?
Impossible.
Hari Seldon, of all people in the Empire, knew how to know other
people. True, his great work in psychohistory dealt with large masses
of people, with populations and probabilities. But Hari’s
fascination with populations had grown out of his interest in and
understanding of individuals. Besides, he and Hari had been friends
since Hari first arrived on Trantor. Hadn’t a grant from
Leyel’s own research fund financed most of Hari’s
original research? Hadn’t they held long conversations in the
early days, tossing ideas back and forth, each helping the other hone
his thoughts? They may not have seen each other much in the
last--what, five years? Six?--but they were adults, not children.
They didn’t need constant visits in order to remain friends.
And this was not the letter a true friend would send to Leyel Forska.
Even if, doubtful as it might seem, Hari Seldon really meant to turn
him down, he would not suppose for a moment that Leyel would be
content with a letter like this.
Surely
Hari would have known that it would be like a taunt to Leyel Forska.
“Lesser men and women,” indeed! The Foundation on
Terminus was so valuable to Hari Seldon that he had been willing to
risk death on charges of treason in order to launch the project. It
was unlikely in the extreme that he would populate Terminus with
second-raters. No, this was the form letter sent to placate prominent
scholars who were judged unfit for the Foundation. Hari would have
known Leyel would immediately recognize it as such.
There was only one
possible conclusion. “Hari could not have written this letter,”
Leyel said.
“Of course he
could,” Deet told him, blunt as always. She had come out of the
bathroom in her dressing gown and read the letter over his shoulder.
“If
you think so then I
truly am hurt,” said Leyel. He got up, poured a cup of
peshat, and began to sip it. He studiously avoided looking at Deet.
“Don’t pout,
Leyel. Think of the problems Hari is facing. He has so little time,
so much to do. A hundred thousand people to transport to Terminus,
most of the resources of the Imperial Library to duplicate”
“He
already had those
people--”
“All in six months
since his trial ended. No wonder we haven’t seen him, socially
or professionally, in--years. A decade!”
“You’re
saying that he no longer knows me? Unthinkable.”
“I’m saying
that he knows you very well. He knew you would recognize his message
as a form letter. He also knew that you would understand at once what
this meant. “
“Well,
then, my dear, he overestimated me. I do not
understand what it means, unless it means he did not send it
himself.”
“Then you’re
getting old, and I’m ashamed of you. I shall deny we are
married and pretend you are my idiot uncle whom I allow to live with
me out of charity. I’ll tell the children they were
illegitimate. They’ll be very sad to learn they won’t
inherit a bit of the Forska estate.”
He threw a crumb of toast
at her. “You are a cruel and disloyal wench, and I regret
raising you out of poverty and obscurity. I only did it for pity, you
know. “
This
was an old tease of theirs. She had commanded a decent fortune in her
own right, though of course Leyel’s dwarfed it. And,
technically, he was her
uncle, since her stepmother was Leyel’s older half sister
Zenna. It was all very complicated. Zenna had been born to Leyel’s
mother when she was married to someone else--before she married
Leyel’s father. So while Zenna was well dowered, she had no
part in the Forska fortune. Leyel’s father, amused at the
situation, once remarked, “Poor Zenna. Lucky you. My semen
flows with gold.” Such are the ironies that come with great
fortune. Poor people don’t have to make such terrible
distinctions between their children.
Deet’s
father, however, assumed that a Forska was a Forska, and so, several
years after Deet had married Leyel, he decided that it wasn’t
enough for his daughter to be married to uncountable wealth, he ought
to do the same favor for himself. He said,
of course, that he loved Zenna to distraction, and cared nothing
for fortune, but only Zenna believed him. Therefore she married him.
Thus Leyel’s half sister became Deet’s stepmother, which
made Leyel his wife’s stepuncle--and his own stepuncle-in-law.
A dynastic tangle that greatly amused Leyel and Deet.
Leyel of course
compensated for Zenna’s lack of inheritance with a lifetime
stipend that amounted to ten times her husband’s income each
year. It had the happy effect of keeping Deet’s old father in
love with Zenna.
Today, though, Leyel was
only half teasing Deet. There were times when he needed her to
confirm him, to uphold him. As often as not she contradicted him
instead. Sometimes this led him to rethink his position and emerge
with a better understanding--thesis, antithesis, synthesis, the
dialectic of marriage, the result of being espoused to one’s
intellectual equal. But sometimes her challenge was painful,
unsatisfying, infuriating.
Oblivious to his
underlying anger, she went on. “Hari assumed that you would
take his form letter for what it is--a definite, final no. He isn’t
hedging, he’s not engaging in some bureaucratic deviousness, he
isn’t playing politics with you. He isn’t stringing you
along in hopes of getting more financial support from you--if that
were it you know he’d simply ask.”
“I
already know what he isn’t
doing.”
“What
he is doing is
turning you down with finality. An answer from which there is no
appeal. He gave you credit for having the wit to understand that.”
“How convenient for
you if I believe that.”
Now, at last, she
realized he was angry. “What’s that supposed to mean?”
“You can stay here
on Trantor and continue your work with all your bureaucratic
friends.”
Her face went cold and
hard. “I told you. I am quite happy to go to Terminus with
you.”
“Am I supposed to
believe that, even now? Your research in community formation within
the Imperial bureaucracy cannot possibly continue on Terminus.”
“I’ve already
done the most important research. What I’m doing with the
Imperial Library staff is a test.”
“Not even a
scientific one, since there’s no control group.”
She
looked annoyed. “I’m the one who told you
that.”
It was true. Leyel had
never even heard of control groups until she taught him the whole
concept of experimentation. She had found it in some very old
child-development studies from the 3100s G.E. “Yes, I was just
agreeing with you,” he said lamely.
“The
point is, I can write my book as well on Terminus as anywhere else.
And yes, Leyel, you are
supposed to believe that I’m happy to go with you, because
I said it, and therefore it’s so.”
“I believe that you
believe it. I also believe that in your heart you are very glad that
I was turned down, and you don’t want me to pursue this matter
any further so there’ll be no chance of your having to go to
the godforsaken end of the universe.”
Those had been her words,
months ago, when he first proposed applying to join the Seldon
Foundation. “We’d have to go to the godforsaken end of
the universe!” She remembered now as well as he did. “You
‘II hold that against me forever, won’t you! I think I
deserve to be forgiven my first reaction. I did consent to go, didn’t
I?”
“Consent, yes. But
you never wanted to.”
“Well,
Leyel, that’s true enough. I never wanted
to. Is that your idea of what our marriage means? That I’m
to subsume myself in you so deeply that even your desires become my
own? I thought it was enough that from time to time we consent to
sacrifice for each other. I never expected you to want to
leave the Forska estates and come to Trantor when I needed to do my
research here. I only asked you to do it--whether you wanted
to or not--because I wanted it. I recognized and respected
your sacrifice. I am very angry to discover that my sacrifice
is despised.”
“Your
sacrifice remains unmade. We are still on Trantor.”
“Then by all means,
go to Hari Seldon, plead with him, humiliate yourself, and then
realize that what I told you is true. He doesn’t want you to
join his Foundation and he will not allow you to go to Terminus.”
“Are you so certain
of that?”
“No,
I’m not certain.
It merely seems likely.”
“I
will go to Terminus,
if he’ll have me. I hope I don’t have to go alone.”
He regretted the words as
soon as he said them. She froze as if she had been slapped, a look of
horror on her face. Then she turned and ran from the room. A few
moments later, he heard the chime announcing that the door of their
apartment had opened. She was gone.
No
doubt to talk things over with one of her friends. Women have no
sense of discretion. They cannot keep domestic squabbles to
themselves. She will tell them all the awful things I said, and
they’ll cluck and tell her it’s what she must expect from
a husband, husbands demand that their wives make all the sacrifices,
you poor thing, poor poor Deet. Well, Leyel didn’t begrudge her
this barnyard of sympathetic hens. It was part of human nature, he
knew, for women to form a perpetual conspiracy against the men in
their lives. That was why women have always been so certain that men
also formed a conspiracy against them.
How ironic, he thought.
Men have no such solace. Men do not bind themselves so easily into
communities. A man is always aware of the possibility of betrayal, of
conflicting loyalties. Therefore when a man does commit
himself truly, it is a rare and sacred bond, not to be cheapened by
discussing it with others. Even a marriage, even a good marriage
like theirs--his commitment might be absolute, but he could
never trust hers so completely.
Leyel
had buried himself within the marriage, helping and serving and
loving Deet with all his heart. She was wrong, completely wrong about
his coming to Trantor. He hadn’t come as a sacrifice, against
his will, solely because she wanted to come. On the contrary: because
she wanted so much to come, he also
wanted to come, changing even his desires to coincide with hers.
She commanded his very heart, because it was impossible for him not
to desire anything that would bring her happiness.
But
she, no, she could not do that for him. If she
went to Terminus, it would be as a noble sacrifice. She would
never let him forget that she hadn’t wanted to. To him, their
marriage was his very soul. To Deet, their marriage was just a
friendship with sex. Her soul belonged as much to these other women
as to him. By dividing her loyalties, she fragmented them; none were
strong enough to sway her deepest desires. Thus he discovered what he
supposed all faithful men eventually discover--that no human
relationship is ever anything but tentative. There is no such thing
as an unbreakable bond between people. Like the particles in the
nucleus of the atom. They are bound by the strongest forces in the
universe, and yet they can be shattered, they can break.
Nothing can last. Nothing
is, finally, what it once seemed to be. Deet and he had had a perfect
marriage until there came a stress that exposed its imperfection.
Anyone who thinks he has a perfect marriage, a perfect friendship, a
perfect trust of any kind, he only believes this because the stress
that will break it has not yet come. He might die with the illusion
of happiness, but all he has proven is that sometimes death comes
before betrayal. If you live long enough, betrayal will inevitably
come.
Such were the dark
thoughts that filled Leyel’s mind as he made his way through
the maze of the city of Trantor. Leyel did not seal himself inside a
private car when he went about in the planet-wide city. He refused
the trappings of wealth; he insisted on experiencing the life of
Trantor as an ordinary man. Thus his bodyguards were under strict
instructions to remain discreet, interfering with no pedestrians
except those carrying weapons, as revealed by a subtle and
instantaneous scan.
It was much more
expensive to travel through the city this way, of course--every time
he stepped out the door of his simple apartment, nearly a hundred
high-paid bribeproof employees went into action. A weaponproof car
would have been much cheaper. But Leyel was determined not to be
imprisoned by his wealth.
So he walked through the
corridors of the city, riding cabs and tubes, standing in lines like
anyone else. He felt the great city throbbing with life around him.
Yet such was his dark and melancholy mood today that the very life of
the city filled him with a sense of betrayal and loss. Even you,
great Trantor, the Imperial City, even you will be betrayed by the
people who made you. Your empire will desert you, and you will become
a pathetic remnant of yourself, plated with the metal of a thousand
worlds and asteroids as a reminder that once the whole galaxy
promised to serve you forever, and now you are abandoned. Hari Seldon
had seen it. Hari Seldon understood the changeability of humankind.
He knew that the great empire would fall, and so--unlike the
government, which depended on things remaining the same forever--Hari
Seldon could actually take steps to ameliorate the Empire’s
fall, to prepare on Terminus a womb for the rebirth of human
greatness. Hari was creating the future. It was unthinkable that he
could mean to cut Leyel Forska out of it.
The Foundation, now that
it had legal existence and Imperial funding, had quickly grown into a
busy complex of offices in the four-thousand-year-old Putassuran
Building. Because the Putassuran was originally built to house the
Admiralty shortly after the great victory whose name it bore, it had
an air of triumph, of monumental optimism about it--rows of soaring
arches, a vaulted atrium with floating bubbles of light rising and
dancing in channeled columns of air. In recent centuries the building
had served as a site for informal public concerts and lectures, with
the offices used to house the Museum Authority. It had come empty
only a year before Hari Seldon was granted the right to form his
Foundation, but it seemed as though it had been built for this very
purpose. Everyone was hurrying this way and that, always seeming to
be on urgent business, and yet also happy to be part of a noble
cause. There had been no noble causes in the Empire for a long, long
time.
Leyel quickly threaded
his way through the maze that protected the Foundation’s
director from casual interruption. Other men and women, no doubt, had
tried to see Hari Seldon and failed, put off by this functionary or
that. Hari Seldon is a very busy man. Perhaps if you make an
appointment for later. Seeing him today is out of the question. He’s
in meetings all afternoon and evening. Do call before coming next
time.
But none of this happened
to Leyel Forska. All he had to do was say, “Tell Mr. Seldon
that Mr. Forska wishes to continue a conversation.” However
much awe they might have of Hari Seldon, however they might intend to
obey his orders not to be disturbed, they all knew that Leyel Forska
was the universal exception. Even Linge Chen would be called out of a
meeting of the Commission of Public Safety to speak with Forska,
especially if Leyel went to the trouble of coming in person.
The ease with which he
gained entry to see Hari, the excitement and optimism of the people,
of the building itself, had encouraged Leyel so much that he was not
at all prepared for Hari’s first words.
“Leyel, I’m
surprised to see you. I thought you would understand that my message
was final. “
It was the worst thing
that Hari could possibly have said. Had Deet been right after all?
Leyel studied Hari’s face for a moment, trying to see some sign
of change. Was all that had passed between them through the years
forgotten now? Had Hari’s friendship never been real? No.
Looking at Hari’s face, a bit more lined and wrinkled now,
Leyel saw still the same earnestness, the same plain honesty that had
always been there. So instead of expressing the rage and
disappointment that he felt, Leyel answered carefully, leaving the
way open for Hari to change his mind. “I understood that your
message was deceptive, and therefore could not be final.”
Hari looked a little
angry. “Deceptive?”
“I know which men
and women you’ve been taking into your Foundation. They are not
second-raters. “
“Compared to you
they are,” said Hari. “They’re academics, which
means they’re clerks. Sorters and interpreters of information.”
“So
am I. So are all scholars today. Even your
inestimable theories arose from sorting through a trillion
trillion bytes of data and interpreting it. “
Hari
shook his head. “I didn’t just sort through data. I had
an idea in my head. So did you. Few others do. You and I are
expanding human knowledge. Most of the rest are only digging it up in
one place and piling it in another. That’s what the
Encyclopedia Galactica is.
A new pile.”
“Nevertheless,
Hari, you know and I know that this is not the real reason you turned
me down. And don’t tell me that it’s because Leyel
Forska’s presence on. Terminus would call undue attention to
the project. You already have so much attention from the government
that you can hardly breathe.”
“You are
unpleasantly persistent, Leyel. I don’t like even having this
conversation.”
“That’s too
bad, Hari. I want to be part of your project. I would contribute to
it more than any other person who might join it. I’m the one
who plunged back into the oldest and most valuable archives and
exposed the shameful amount of data loss that had arisen from
neglect. I’m the one who launched the computerized
extrapolation of shattered documents that your Encyclopedia--”
“Absolutely depends
on. Our work would be impossible without your accomplishments.”
“And yet you turned
me down, and with a crudely flattering note. “
“I didn’t
mean to give offense, Leyel.”
“You
also didn’t mean to tell the truth. But you will
tell me, Hari, or I’ll simply go to Terminus anyway. “
“The Commission of
Public Safety has given my Foundation absolute control over who mayor
may not come to Terminus. “
“Hari.
You know perfectly well that all I have to do is hint to some
lower-level functionary that I want to go to Terminus. Chen will hear
of it within minutes, and within an hour he’ll grant me an
exception to your charter. If I did that, and if you fought it, you’d
lose your charter. You know
that. If you want me not to go to Terminus, it isn’t enough
to forbid me; You must persuade me that I ought not to be there.”
Hari closed his eyes and
sighed. “I don’t think you’re willing to be
persuaded, Leyel. Go if you must. “
For a moment Leyel
wondered if Hari was giving in. But no, that was impossible, not so
easily. “Oh, yes, Hari, but then I’d find myself cut off
from everybody else on Terminus except my own serving people. Fobbed
off with useless assignments. Cut out of the real meetings. “
“That goes without
saying,” said Hari. “You are not part of the Foundation,
you will not be, you cannot be. And if you try to use your wealth and
influence to force your way in, you will succeed only in annoying the
Foundation, not in joining it. Do you understand me?”
Only too well, thought
Leyel in shame. Leyel knew perfectly well the limitations of power,
and it was beneath him to have tried to bluster his way into getting
something that could only be given freely. “Forgive me, Hari. I
wouldn’t have tried to force you. You know I don’t do
that sort of thing. “
“I know you’ve
never done it since we’ve been friends, Leyel. I was afraid
that I was teaming something new about you.” Hari sighed. He
turned away for a long moment, then turned back with a different look
on his face, a different kind of energy in his voice. Leyel knew that
look, that vigor. It meant Hari was taking him more deeply into his
confidence. “Leyel, you have to understand, I’m not just
creating an encyclopedia on Terminus.”
Immediately Leyel grew
worried. It had taken a great deal of Leyel’s influence to
persuade the government not to have Hari Seldon summarily exiled when
he first started disseminating copies of his treatises about the
impending fall of the Empire. They were sure Seldon was plotting
treason, and had even put him on trial, where Seldon finally
persuaded them that all he wanted to do was create the Encyclopedia
Galactica, the repository of all the wisdom of the Empire. Even now,
if Seldon confessed some ulterior motive, the government would move
against him. It was to be assumed that the Pubs--Public Safety
Office--were recording this entire conversation. Even Leyel’s
influence couldn’t stop them if they had a confession from
Hari’s own mouth.
“No, Leyel, don’t
be nervous. My meaning is plain enough. For the Encyclopedia
Galactica to succeed, I have to create a thriving city of scholars on
Terminus. A colony full of men and women with fragile egos and
unstemmable ambition, all of them trained in vicious political
infighting at the most dangerous and terrible schools of bureaucratic
combat in the Empire--the universities. “
“Are you actually
telling me you won’t let me join your Foundation because I
never attended one of those pathetic universities? My self-education
is worth ten times their lockstep force-fed pseudoleaming.”
“Don’t
make your antiuniversity speech to me, Leyel. I’m saying that
one of my most important concerns in staffing the Foundation is
compatibility. I won’t bring anyone to Terminus unless I
believe he--or she--would
be happy there.”
The
emphasis Hari put on the word she
suddenly made everything clearer. “This isn’t about
me at all, is it?” Leyel said. “It’s about Deet.”
Hari said nothing.
“You know she
doesn’t want to go. You know she prefers to remain on Trantor.
And that’s why you aren’t taking me! Is that it?”
Reluctantly, Hari
conceded the point. “It does have something to do with Deet,
yes. “
“Don’t you
know how much the Foundation means to me?” demanded Leyel.
“Don’t you know how much I’d give up to be part of
your work?”
Hari sat there in silence
for a moment. Then he murmured, “Even Deet?”
Leyel almost blurted out
an answer. Yes, of course, even Deet, anything for this great work.
But Hari’s measured
gaze stopped him. One thing Leyel had known since they first met at a
conference back in their youth was that Hari would not stand for
another man’s self-deception. They had sat next to each other
at a presentation by a demographer who had a considerable reputation
at the time. Leyel watched as Hari destroyed the poor man’s
thesis with a few well-aimed questions. The demographer was furious.
Obviously he had not seen the flaws in his own argument--but now that
they had been shown to him, he refused to admit that they were flaws
at all.
Afterward, Hari had said
to Leyel, “I’ve done him a favor.”
“How, by giving him
someone to hate?” said Leyel.
“No. Before, he
believed his own unwarranted conclusions. He had deceived himself.
Now he doesn’t believe them.”
“But he still
propounds them.”
“So--now he’s
more of a liar and less of a fool. I have improved his private
integrity. His public morality I leave up to him. “
Leyel remembered this and
knew that if he told Hari he could give up Deet for any reason, even
to join the Foundation, it would be worse than a lie. It would be
foolishness.
“It’s a
terrible thing you’ve done,” said Leyel. “You know
that Deet is part of myself. I can’t give her up to join your
Foundation. But now for the rest of our lives together I’ll
know that I could have gone, if not for her. You’ve given me
wormwood and gall to drink, Hari.”
Hari nodded slowly. “I
hoped that when you read my note you’d realize I didn’t
want to tell you more. I hoped you wouldn’t come to me and ask.
I can’t lie to you, Leyel. I wouldn’t if I could. But I
did withhold information, as much as possible. To spare us both
problems. “
“It didn’t
work.”
“It isn’t
Deet’s fault, Leyel. It’s who she is. She belongs on
Trantor, not on Terminus. And you belong with her. It’s a fact,
not a decision. We’ll never discuss this again.”
“No,” said
Leyel.
They sat there for a long
minute, gazing steadily at each other. Leyel wondered if he and Hari
would ever speak again. No. Never again. I don’t ever want to
see you again, Hari Seldon. You’ve made me regret the one
unregrettable decision of my life--Deet. You’ve made me wish,
somewhere in my heart, that I’d never married her. Which is
like making me wish I’d never been born.
Leyel got up from his
chair and left the room without a word. When he got outside, he
turned to the reception room in general, where several people were
waiting to see Seldon. “Which of you are mine? ‘ he
asked.
Two women and one man
stood up immediately.
“Fetch me a secure
car and a driver.”
Without a glance at each
other, one of them left on the errand. The others fell in step beside
Leyel. Subtlety and discretion were over for the moment. Leyel had no
wish to mingle with the people of Trantor now. He only wanted to go
home.
Hari Seldon left his
office by the back way and soon found his way to Chandrakar Matt’s
cubicle in the Department of Library Relations. Chanda looked up and
waved, then effortlessly slid her chair back until it was in the
exact position required. Hari picked up a chair from the neighboring
cubicle and, again without showing any particular care, set it
exactly where it had to be.
Immediately the computer
installed inside Chanda’s lector recognized the configuration.
It recorded Hari’s costume of the day from three angles and
superimposed the information on a long-stored holoimage of Chanda and
Hari conversing pleasantly. Then, once Hari was seated, it began
displaying the hologram. The hologram exactly matched the positions
of the real Hari and Chanda, so that infrared sensors would show no
discrepancy between image and fact. The only thing different was the
faces--the movement of lips, blinking of eyes, the expressions.
Instead of matching the words Hari and Chanda were actually saying,
they matched the words being pushed into the air outside the
cubicle--a harmless, randomly chosen series of remarks that took into
account recent events so that no one would suspect that it was a
canned conversation.
It was one of Hari’s
few opportunities for candid conversation that the Pubs would not
overhear, and he and Chanda protected it carefully. They never spoke
long enough or often enough that the Pubs would wonder at their
devotion to such empty conversations. Much of their communication was
subliminal--a sentence would stand for a paragraph, a word for a
sentence, a gesture for a word. But when the conversation was done,
Chanda knew where to go from there, what to do next; and Hari was
reassured that his most important work was going on behind the
smokescreen of the Foundation.
“For a moment I
thought he might actually leave her.”
“Don’t
underestimate the lure of the Encyclopedia.”
“I fear I’ve
wrought too well, Chanda. Do you think someday the Encyclopedia
Galactica might actually exist?”
“It’s a good
idea. Good people are inspired by it. It wouldn’t serve its
purpose if they weren’t. What should I tell Deet?”
“Nothing, Chanda.
The fact that Leyel is staying, that’s enough for her.”
“If he changes his
mind, will you actually let him go to Terminus?”
“If
he changes his mind, then he must
go, because if he would leave Deet, he’s not the man for
us.”
“Why not just tell
him? Invite him?”
“He must become
part of the Second Foundation without realizing it. He must do it by
natural inclination, not by a summons from me, and above all not by
his own ambition.”
“Your standards are
so high, Hari, it’s no wonder so few measure up. Most people in
the Second Foundation don’t even know that’s what it is.
They think they’re librarians. Bureaucrats. They think Deet is
an anthropologist who works among them in order to study them.”
“Not
so. They once thought that, but now they think of Deet as one of
them. As one of the best
of them. She’s defining what it means to be a librarian.
She’s making them proud of the name.”
“Aren’t you
ever troubled, Hari, by the fact that in the practice of your art--”
“My
science.”
“Your meddlesome
magical craft, you old wizard, you don’t fool me with
all your talk of science. I’ve seen the scripts of the
holographs you’re preparing for the vault on Terminus.”
“That’s
all a pose.”
“I can just imagine
you saying those words. Looking perfectly satisfied with yourself.
‘If you care to smoke, I wouldn’t mind...Pause for
chuckle...Why should I? I’m not really here.’ Pure
showmanship.”
Hari
waved off the idea. The computer quickly found a bit of dialogue to
fit his gesture, so the false scene would not seem false. “No,
I’m not troubled
by the fact that in the practice of my science I change the
lives of human beings. Knowledge has always changed people’s
lives. The only difference is that I know I’m changing
them and the changes I introduce are planned, they’re under
control. Did the man who invented the first artificial light--what
was it, animal fat with a wick? A light-emitting diode?--did he
realize what it would do to humankind, to be given power over night?”
As always, Chanda
deflated him the moment he started congratulating himself. “In
the first place, it was almost certainly a woman, and in the second
place, she knew exactly what she was doing. It allowed her to find
her way through the house at night. Now she could put her nursing
baby in another bed, in another room, so she could get some sleep at
night without fear of rolling over and smothering the child.”
Hari smiled. “If
artificial light was invented by a woman, it was certainly a
prostitute, to extend her hours of work. “
Chanda grinned. He did
not laugh--it was too hard for the computer to come up with jokes to
explain laughter. “We’ll watch Leyel carefully, Hari. How
will we know when he’s ready, so we can begin to count on him
for protection and leadership?”
“When you already
count on him, then he’s ready. When his commitment and loyalty
are firm, when the goals of the Second Foundation are already in his
heart, when he acts them out in his life, then he’s ready.”
There was a finality in
Hari’s tone. The conversation was nearly over.
“By the way, Hari,
you were right. No one has even questioned the omission of any
important psychohistorical data from the Foundation library on
Terminus.”
“Of
course not. Academics never look outside their own discipline. That’s
another reason why I’m glad Leyel isn’t going. He
would notice that the only psychologist we’re sending is
Bor Alurin. Then I’d have to explain more to him than I want.
Give my love to Deet, Chanda. Tell her that her test case is going
very well. She’ll end up with a husband and a community
of scientists of the mind.”
“Artists. Wizards.
Demigods.”
“Stubborn misguided
women who don’t know science when they’re doing it. All
in the Imperial Library. Till next time, Chanda.”
If Deet had asked him
about his interview with Hari, if she had commiserated with him about
Hari’s refusal, his resentment of her might have been
uncontainable, he might have lashed out at her and said something
that could never be forgiven. Instead, she was perfectly herself, so
excited about her work and so beautiful, even with her face showing
all the sag and wrinkling of her sixty years, that all Leyel could do
was fall in love with her again, as he had so many times in their
years together.
“It’s working
beyond anything I hoped for, Leyel. I’m beginning to hear
stories that I created months and years ago, coming back as epic
legends. You remember the time I retrieved and extrapolated the
accounts of the uprising at Misercordia only three days before the
Admiralty needed them?”
“Your finest hour.
Admiral Divart still talks about how they used the old battle plots
as a strategic guideline and put down the Tellekers’ strike in
a single three-day operation without loss of a ship.”
“You
have a mind like a trap, even if you are
old.”
“Sadly, all I can
remember is the past.”
“Dunce,
that’s all anyone
can remember.”
He prompted her to go on
with her account of today’s triumph. “It’s an epic
legend now?”
“It came back to me
without my name on it, and bigger than life. As a reference. Rinjy
was talking with some young librarians from one of the inner
provinces who were on the standard interlibrary tour, and one of them
said something about how you could stay in the Imperial Library on
Trantor all your life and never see the real world at all.”
Leyel hooted. “Just
the thing to say to Rinjy!”
“Exactly.
Got her dander up, of course, but the important thing is, she
immediately told them the story of how a librarian, all
on her own, saw the similarity between the Misercordia uprising
and the Tellekers’ strike. She knew no one at the Admiralty
would listen to her unless she brought them all the information at
once. So she delved back into the ancient records and found them in
deplorable shape--the original data had been stored in glass, but
that was forty-two centuries ago, and no one had refreshed the data.
None of the secondary sources actually showed the battle plots or
ship courses--Misercordia had mostly been written about by
biographers, not military historians--”
“Of course. It was
Pol Yuensau’s first battle, but he was just a pilot, not a
commander--”
“I
know you remember,
my intrusive pet. The point is what Rinjy said about this
mythical librarian.”
“You. “
“I was standing
right there. I don’t think Rinjy knew it was me, or she would
have said something--she wasn’t even in the same division with
me then, you know. What matters is that Rinjy heard a version of the
story and by the time she told it, it was transformed into a magic
hero tale. The prophetic librarian of Trantor. “
“What
does that prove? You
are a magic hero. “
“The way she told
it, I did it all on my own initiative”
“You did. You were
assigned to do document extrapolation, and you just happened to start
with Misercordia.”
“But
in Rinjy’s version, I had already
seen its usefulness with the Tellekers’ strike. She said
the librarian sent it to the Admiralty and only then did they realize
it was the key to bloodless victory.”
“Librarian saves
the Empire.”
“Exactly.”
“But you did.”
“But
I didn’t mean to.
And Admiralty requested the information--the only really
extraordinary thing was that I had already finished two weeks of
document restoration--”
“Which you did
brilliantly.”
“Using programs you
had helped design, thank you very much, O Wise One, as you indirectly
praise yourself. It was sheer coincidence that I could give them
exactly what they wanted within five minutes of their asking. But now
it’s a hero story within the community of librarians. In the
Imperial Library itself, and now spreading outward to all the other
libraries.”
“This is so
anecdotal, Deet. I don’t see how you can publish this.”
“Oh, I don’t
intend to. Except perhaps in the introduction. What matters to me is
that it proves my theory. “
“It has no
statistical validity.”
“It
proves it to me. I
know that my theories of community formation are true. That the vigor
of a community depends on the allegiance of its members, and the
allegiance can be created and enhanced by the dissemination of epic
stories.”
“She speaks the
language of academia. I should be writing this down, so you don’t
have to think up all those words again.”
“Stories that make
the community seem more important, more central to human life.
Because Rinjy could tell this story, it made her more proud to be a
librarian, which increased her allegiance to the community and gave
the community more power within her.”
“You are possessing
their souls.”
“And they’ve
got mine. Together our souls are possessing each other.”
There was the rub. Deet’s
role in the library had begun as applied research--joining the
library staff in order to confirm her theory of community formation.
But that task was impossible to accomplish without in fact becoming a
committed part of the library community. It was Deet’s
dedication to serious science that had brought them together. Now
that very dedication was stealing her away. It would hurt her more to
leave the library than it would to lose Leyel.
Not true. Not true at
all, he told himself sternly. self-pity leads to self-deception.
Exactly the opposite is true--it would hurt her more to lose Leyel
than to leave her community of librarians. That’s why she
consented to go to Terminus in the first place. But could he blame
her for being glad that she didn’t have to choose? Glad that
she could have both?
Yet even as he beat down
the worst of the thoughts arising from his disappointment, he
couldn’t keep some of the nastiness from coming out in his
conversation. “How will you know when your experiment is over?”
She
frowned. “It’ll never be over,
Leyel. They’re all really librarians--I don’t pick
them up by the tails like mice and put them back in their cages when
the experiment’s done. At some point I’ll simply stop,
that’s all, and write my book.”
“Will you?”
“Write the book?
I’ve written books before, I think I can do it again. “
“I meant, will you
stop?”
“When, now? Is this
some test of my love for you, Leyel? Are you jealous of my
friendships with Rinjy and Animet and Fin and Urik?”
No! Don’t accuse me
of such childish, selfish feelings!
But before he could snap
back his denial, he knew that his denial would be false.
“Sometimes I am,
yes, Deet. Sometimes I think you’re happier with them.”
And
because he had spoken honestly, what could have become a bitter
quarrel remained a conversation. “But I am,
Leyel,” she answered, just as frankly. “It’s
because when I’m with them, I’m creating something new,
I’m creating something with them. It’s exciting,
invigorating, I’m discovering new things every day, in every
word they say, every smile, every tear someone sheds, every sign that
being one of us is the most important thing in their lives.”
“I can’t
compete with that.”
“No, you can’t,
Leyel. But you complete it. Because it would all mean nothing, it
would be more frustrating than exhilarating if I couldn’t come
back to you every day and tell you what happened. You always
understand what it means, you’re always excited for me, you
validate my experience. “
“I’m your
audience. Like a parent.”
“Yes, old man. Like
a husband. Like a child. Like the person I love most in all the
world. You are my root. I make a brave show out there, all branches
and bright leaves in the sunlight, but I come here to suck the water
of life from your soil.”
“Leyel Forska, the
font of capillarity. You are the tree, and I am the dirt.”
“Which happens to
be full of fertilizer.” She kissed him. A kiss reminiscent of
younger days. An invitation, which he gladly accepted.
A softened section of
floor served them as an impromptu bed. At the end, he lay beside her,
his arm across her waist, his head on her shoulder, his lips brushing
the skin of her breast. He remembered when her breasts were small and
firm, perched on her chest like small monuments to her potential. Now
when she lay on her back they were a ruin, eroded by age so they
flowed off her chest to either side, resting wearily on her arms.
“You are a
magnificent woman,” he whispered, his lips tickling her skin.
Their slack and flabby
bodies were now capable of greater passion than when they were taut
and strong. Before, they were all potential. That’s what we
love in youthful bodies, the teasing potential. Now hers is a body of
accomplishment. Three fine children were the blossoms, then the fruit
of this tree, gone off and taken root somewhere else. The tension of
youth could now give way to a relaxation of the flesh. There were no
more promises in their lovemaking. Only fulfillment.
She murmured softly in
his ear, “That was a ritual, by the way. Community
maintenance.”
“So I’m just
another experiment?”
“A fairly
successful one. I’m testing to see if this little community can
last until one of us drops. “
“What if you drop
first? Who’ll write the paper then?”
“You will. But
you’ll sign my name to it. I want the Imperial medal for it.
Posthumously. Glue it to my memorial stone. “
“I’ll wear it
myself. If you’re selfish enough to leave all the real work to
me, you don’t deserve anything better than a cheap replica.”
She slapped his back.
“You are a nasty selfish old man, then. The real thing or
nothing.”
He felt the sting of her
slap as if he deserved it. A nasty selfish old man. If she only knew
how right she was. There had been a moment in Hari’s office
when he’d almost said the words that would deny all that there
was between them. The words that would cut her out of his life. Go to
Terminus without her! I would be more myself if they took my heart,
my liver, my brain.
How could I have thought
I wanted to go to Terminus, anyway? To be surrounded by academics of
the sort I most despise, struggling with them to get the encyclopedia
properly designed. They’d each fight for their petty little
province, never catching the vision of the whole, never understanding
that the encyclopedia would be valueless if it were
compartmentalized. It would be a life in hell, and in the end he’d
lose, because the academic mind was incapable of growth or change.
It was here on Trantor
that he could still accomplish something. Perhaps even solve the
question of human origin, at least to his own satisfaction--and
perhaps he could do it soon enough that he could get his discovery
included in the Encyclopedia Galactica before the Empire began to
break down at the edges, cutting Terminus off from the rest of the
Galaxy.
It was like a shock of
static electricity passing through his brain; he even saw an
afterglow of light around the edges of his vision, as if a spark had
jumped some synaptic gap.
“What a sham,”
he said.
“Who, you? Me?”
“Hari Seldon. All
this talk about his Foundation to create the Encyclopedia Galactica.
“
“Careful, Leyel.”
It was almost impossible that the Pubs could have found a way to
listen to what went on in Leyel Forska’s own apartments.
Almost.
“He told me twenty
years ago. It was one of his first psychohistorical projections. The
Empire will crumble at the edges first. He projected it would happen
within the next generation. The figures were crude then. He must have
it down to the year now. Maybe even the month. Of course he put his
Foundation on Terminus. A place so remote that when the edges of the
Empire fray, it will be among the first threads lost. Cut off from
Trantor. Forgotten at once!”
“What
good would that do,
Leyel? They’d never hear of any new discoveries then.”
“What you said
about us. A tree. Our children like the fruit of that tree. “
“I never said
that.”
“I thought it,
then. He is dropping his Foundation out on Terminus like the fruit of
Empire. To grow into a new Empire by and by.”
“You frighten me,
Leyel. If the Pubs ever heard you say that--”
“That
crafty old fox. That sly, deceptive--he never actually lied to me,
but of course he couldn’t send me there. If the Forska fortune
was tied up with Terminus, the Empire would never lose track of the
place. The edges might fray elsewhere, but never there. Putting me on
Terminus would be the undoing of the real
project.” It was such a relief. Of course Hari couldn’t
tell him, not with the Pubs listening, but it had nothing to do with
him or Deet. It wouldn’t have to be a barrier between them
after all. It was just one of the penalties of being the keeper of
the Forska fortune.
“Do you really
think so?” asked Deet.
“I was a fool not
to see it before. But Hari was a fool too if he thought I wouldn’t
guess it.“
“Maybe he expects
you to guess everything.”
“Oh,
nobody could ever come up with everything
Hari’s doing. He has more twists and turns in his brain
than a hyperpath through core space. No matter how you labor to pick
your way through, you’ll always find Hari at the end of it,
nodding happily and congratulating you on coming this far. He’s
ahead of us all. He’s already planned everything, and the rest
of us are doomed to follow in his footsteps. “
“Is it doom?”
“Once I thought
Hari Seldon was God. Now I know he’s much less powerful than
that. He’s merely Fate.”
“No, Leyel. Don’t
say that.”
“Not even Fate.
Just our guide through it. He sees the future, and points the way. “
“Rubbish.”
She slid out from under him, got up, pulled her robe from its hook on
the wall. “My old bones get cold when I lie about naked. “
Leyel’s legs were
trembling, but not with cold. “The future is his, and the
present is yours, but the past belongs to me. I don’t know how
far into the future his probability curves have taken him, but I can
match him, step for step, century for century into the past. “
“Don’t tell
me you’re going to solve the question of origin. You’re
the one who proved it wasn’t worth solving.”
“I proved that it
wasn’t important or even possible to find the planet of origin.
But I also said that we could still discover the natural laws that
accounted for the origin of man. Whatever forces created us as human
beings must still be present in the universe.”
“I did read what
you wrote, you know. You said it would be the labor of the next
millennium to find the answer.”
“Just now. Lying
here, just now, I saw it, just out of reach. Something about your
work and Hari’s work, and the tree.”
“The tree was about
me needing you, Leyel. It wasn’t about the origin of humanity.
“
“It’s gone.
Whatever I saw for a moment there, it’s gone. But I can find it
again. It’s there in your work, and Hari’s Foundation,
and the fall of the Empire, and the damned pear tree. “
“I never said it
was a pear tree. “
“I used to play in
the pear orchard on the grounds of the estate in Holdwater. To me the
word ‘tree’ always means a pear tree. One of the
deep-worn ruts in my brain.”
“I’m
relieved. I was afraid you were reminded of pears by the shape of
these ancient breasts when I bend over. “
“Open your robe
again. Let me see if I think of pears. “
Leyel paid for Hari
Seldon’s funeral. It was not lavish. Leyel had meant it to be.
The moment he heard of Hari’s death--not a surprise, since
Hari’s first brutal stroke had left him half-paralyzed in a
wheelchair--he set his staff to work on a memorial service
appropriate to honor the greatest scientific mind of the millennium.
But word arrived, in the form of a visit from Commissioner Rom
Divart, that any sort of public services would be...
“Shall we say,
inappropriate?”
“The
man was the greatest genius I’ve ever heard of! He virtually
invented a branch of science that clarified things that--he made a
science out of the sort of thing that soothsayers
and--and--economists
used to do!”
Rom laughed at Leyel’s
little joke, of course, because he and Leyel had been friends
forever. Rom was the only friend of Leyel’s childhood who had
never sucked up to him or resented him or stayed cool toward him
because of the Forska fortune. This was, of course, because the
Divart holdings were, if anything, slightly greater. They had played
together unencumbered by strangeness or jealousy or awe.
They even shared a tutor
for two terrible, glorious years, from the time Rom’s father
was murdered until the execution of Rom’s grandfather, which
caused so much outrage among the nobility that the mad Emperor was
stripped of power and the Imperium put under the control of the
Commission of Public Safety. Then, as the youthful head of one of the
great families, Rom had embarked on his long and fruitful career in
politics.
Rom said later that for
those two years it was Leyel who taught him that there was still some
good in the world; that Leyel’s friendship was the only reason
Rom hadn’t killed himself. Leyel always thought this was pure
theatrics. Rom was a born actor. That’s why he so excelled at
making stunning entrances and playing unforgettable scenes on the
grandest stage of all--the politics of the Imperium. Someday he would
no doubt exit as dramatically as his father and grandfather had.
But he was not all show.
Rom never forgot the friend of his childhood. Leyel knew it, and knew
also that Rom’s coming to deliver this message from the
Commission of Public Safety probably meant that Rom had fought to
make the message as mild as it was. So Leyel blustered a bit, then
made his little joke. It was his way of surrendering gracefully.
What
Leyel didn’t realize, right up until the day of the funeral,
was exactly how
dangerous his friendship with Hari Seldon had been, and how
stupid it was for him to associate himself with Hari’s name now
that the old man was dead. Linge Chen, the Chief Commissioner, had
not risen to the position of greatest power in the Empire without
being fiercely suspicious of potential rivals and brutally efficient
about eliminating them. Hari had maneuvered Chen into a position such
that it was more dangerous to kill the old man than to give him his
Foundation on Terminus. But now Hari was dead, and apparently Chen
was watching to see who mourned.
Leyel did--Leyel and the
few members of Hari’s staff who had stayed behind on Trantor to
maintain contact with Terminus up to the moment of Hari’s
death. Leyel should have known better. Even alive, Hari wouldn’t
have cared who came to his funeral. And now, dead, he cared even
less. Leyel didn’t believe his friend lived on in some ethereal
plane, watching carefully and taking attendance at the services. No,
Leyel simply felt he had to be there, felt he had to speak. Not for
Hari, really. For himself. To continue to be himself, Leyel had to
make some kind of public gesture toward Hari Seldon and all he had
stood for.
Who heard? Not many.
Deet, who thought his eulogy was too mild by half. Hari’s
staff, who were quite aware of the danger and winced at each of
Leyel’s list of Hari’s accomplishments. Naming them--and
emphasizing that only Seldon had the vision to do these great
works--was inherently a criticism of the level of intelligence and
integrity in the Empire. The Pubs were listening, too. They noted
that Leyel clearly agreed with Hari Seldon about the certainty of the
Empire’s fall--that in fact as a galactic empire it had
probably already fallen, since its authority was no longer
coextensive with the Galaxy.
If almost anyone else had
said such things, to such a small audience, it would have been
ignored, except to keep him from getting any job requiring a security
clearance. But when the head of the Forska family came out openly to
affirm the correctness of the views of a man who had been tried
before the Commission of Public Safety--that posed a greater danger
to the Commission than Hari Seldon.
For, as head of the
Forska family, if Leyel Forska wanted, he could be one of the great
players on the political stage, could have a seat on the Commission
along with Rom Divart and Linge Chen. Of course, that would also have
meant constantly watching for assassins--either to avoid them or to
hire them--and trying to win the allegiance of various military
strongmen in the farflung reaches of the Galaxy. Leyel’s
grandfather had spent his life in such pursuits, but Leyel’s
father had declined, and Leyel himself had thoroughly immersed
himself in science and never so much as inquired about politics.
Until
now. Until he made the profoundly political act of paying for Hari
Seldon’s funeral and then speaking
at it. What would he do next? There were a thousand would-be
warlords who would spring to revolt if a Forska promised what
would-be emperors so desperately needed: a noble sponsor, a mask of
legitimacy, and money.
Did
Linge Chen really believe that Leyel meant to enter politics at his
advanced age? Did he really think Leyel posed a threat?
Probably
not. If he had believed
it, he would surely have had Leyel killed, and no doubt all his
children as well, leaving only one of his minor grandchildren, whom
Chen would carefully control through the guardians he would appoint,
thereby acquiring control of the Forska fortune as well as his own.
Instead,
Chen only believed that Leyel might
cause trouble. So he took what were, for him, mild steps.
That was why Rom came to
visit Leyel again, a week after the funeral.
Leyel was delighted to
see him. “Not on somber business this time, I hope,” he
said. “But such bad luck--Deet’s at the library again,
she practically lives there now, but she’d want to--”
“Leyel.” Rom
touched Leyel’s lips with his fingers.
So
it was somber
business after all. Worse than somber. Rom recited what had to be a
memorized speech.
“The Commission of
Public Safety has become concerned that in your declining years--”
Leyel opened his mouth to
protest, but again Rom touched his lips to silence him.
“That in your
declining years, the burdens of the Forska estates are distracting
you from your exceptionally important scientific work. So great is
the Empire’s need for the new discoveries and understanding
your work will surely bring us, that the Commission of Public Safety
has created the office of Forska Trustee to oversee all the Forska
estates and holdings. You will, of course, have unlimited access to
these funds for your scientific work here on Trantor, and funding
will continue for all the archives and libraries you have endowed.
Naturally, the Commission has no desire for you to thank us for what
is, after all, our duty to one of our noblest citizens, but if your
well-known courtesy required you to make a brief public statement of
gratitude it would not be inappropriate. “
Leyel was no fool. He
knew how things worked. He was being stripped of his fortune and
being placed under arrest on Trantor. There was no point in protest
or remonstrance, no point even in trying to make Rom feel guilty for
having brought him such a bitter message. Indeed, Rom himself might
be in great danger--if Leyel so much as hinted that he expected Rom
to come to his support, his dear friend might also fall. So Leyel
nodded gravely, and then carefully framed his words of reply.
“Please tell the
Commissioners how grateful I am for their concern on my behalf. It
has been a long, long time since anyone went to the trouble of easing
my burdens. I accept their kind offer. I am especially glad because
this means that now I can pursue my studies unencumbered.”
Rom visibly relaxed.
Leyel wasn’t going to cause trouble. “My dear friend, I
will sleep better knowing that you are always here on Trantor,
working freely in the library or taking your leisure in the parks.”
So at least they weren’t
going to confine him to his apartment. No doubt they would never let
him offplanet, but it wouldn’t hurt to ask. “Perhaps I’ll
even have time now to visit my grandchildren now and then.”
“Oh, Leyel, you and
I are both too old to enjoy hyperspace any more. Leave that for the
youngsters--they can come visit you whenever they want. And sometimes
they can stay home, while their parents come to see you.”
Thus
Leyel learned that if any of his children came to visit him, their
children would be held hostage, and vice versa. Leyel himself
would never leave Trantor again.
“So much the
better,” said Leyel. “I’ll have time to write
several books I’ve been meaning to publish.”
“The Empire waits
eagerly for every scientific treatise you publish. “ There was
a slight emphasis on the word “scientific.” “But I
hope you won’t bore us with one of those tedious
autobiographies.”
Leyel
agreed to the restriction easily enough. “I promise,
Rom. You know better than anyone else exactly how boring my life
has always been.”
“Come
now. My life’s
the boring one, Leyel, all this government claptrap and bureaucratic
bushwa. You’ve been at the forefront of scholarship and
learning. Indeed, my friend, the Commission hopes you’ll honor
us by giving us first look at every word that comes out of your
scriptor.”
“Only if you
promise to read it carefully and point out any mistakes I might
make.” No doubt the Commission intended only to censor his work
to remove political material--which Leyel had never included anyway.
But Leyel had already resolved never to publish anything again, at
least as long as Linge Chen was Chief Commissioner. The safest thing
Leyel could do now was to disappear, to let Chen forget him
entirely--it would be egregiously stupid to send occasional articles
to Chen, thus reminding him that Leyel was still around.
But Rom wasn’t
through yet. “I must extend that request to Deet’s work
as well. We really want first look at it--do tell her so.”
“Deet?”
For the first time Leyel almost let his fury show. Why should Deet be
punished because of Leyel’s indiscretion? “Oh, she’ll
be too shy for that, Rom--she doesn’t think her work is
important enough to
deserve any attention from men as busy as the Commissioners. They’ll
think you only want to see her work because she’s my
wife--she’s always annoyed when people patronize her.”
“You must insist,
then, Leyel,” said Rom. “I assure you, her studies of the
functions of the Imperial bureaucracy have long been interesting to
the Commission for their own sake.”
Ah. Of course. Chen would
never have allowed a report on the workings of government to appear
without making sure it wasn’t dangerous. Censorship of Deet’s
writings wouldn’t be Leyel’s fault after all. Or at least
not entirely.
‘‘I’ll
tell her that, Rom. She’ll be flattered. But won’t you
stay and tell her yourself! I can bring you a cup of peshat, we can
talk about old times--”
Leyel would have been
surprised if Rom had stayed. No, this interview had been at least as
hard on Rom as it had been on him. The very fact that Rom had been
forced into being the Commission’s messenger to his childhood
friend was a humiliating reminder that the Chens were in the
ascendant over the Divarts. But as Rom bowed and left, it occurred to
Leyel that Chen might have made a mistake. Humiliating Rom this way,
forcing him to place his dearest friend under arrest like this--it
might be the straw to break the camel’s back. After all, though
no one had ever been able to find out who hired the assassin who
killed Rom’s father, and no one had ever learned who denounced
Rom’s grandfather, leading to his execution by the paranoid
Emperor Wassiniwak, it didn’t take a genius to realize that the
House of Chen had profited most from both events.
“I
wish I could stay,” said Rom. “But duty calls. Still, you
can be sure I’ll think of you often. Of course, I doubt I’ll
think of you as you are now,
you old wreck. I’ll remember you as a boy, when we used to
tweak our tutor--remember the time we recoded his lector, so that for
a whole week explicit pornography kept coming up on the display
whenever the door of his room opened?”
Leyel couldn’t help
laughing. “You never forget anything, do you!”
“The poor fool. He
never figured out that it was us! Old times. Why couldn’t we
have stayed young forever?” He embraced Leyel and then swiftly
left.
Linge Chen, you fool, you
have reached too far. Your days are numbered. None of the Pubs who
were listening in on their conversation could possibly know that Rom
and Leyel had never teased their tutor--and that they had never done
anything to his lector. It was just Rom’s way of letting Leyel
know that they were still allies, still keeping secrets together--and
that someone who had authority over both of them was going to be in
for a few nasty surprises.
It gave Leyel chills,
thinking about what might come of all this. He loved Rom Divart with
all his heart, but he also knew that Rom was capable of biding his
time and then killing swiftly, efficiently, coldly. Linge Chen had
just started his latest six-year term of office, but Leyel knew he’d
never finish it. And the next Chief Commissioner would not be a Chen.
Soon, though, the
enormity of what had been done to him began to sink in. He had always
thought that his fortune meant little to him--that he would be the
same man with or without the Forska estates. But now he began to
realize that it wasn’t true, that he’d been lying to
himself all along. He had known since childhood how despicable rich
and powerful men could be--his father had made sure he saw and
understood how cruel men became when their money persuaded them they
had a right to use others however they wished. So Leyel had learned
to despise his own birthright, and, starting with his father, had
pretended to others that he could make his way through the world
solely by wit and diligence, that he would have been exactly the same
man if he had grown up in a common family, with a common education.
He had done such a good job of acting as if he didn’t care
about his wealth that he came to believe it himself.
Now he realized that
Forska estates had been an invisible part of himself all along, as if
they were extensions of his body, as if he could flex a muscle and
cargo ships would fly, he could blink and mines would be sunk deep
into the earth, he could sigh and allover the Galaxy there would be a
wind of change that would keep blowing until everything was exactly
as he wanted it. Now all those invisible limbs arid senses had been
amputated. Now he was crippled--he had only as many arms and legs and
eyes as any other human being.
At last he was what he
had always pretended to be. An ordinary, powerless man. He hated it.
For the first hours after
Rom left, Leyel pretended he could take all this in stride. He sat at
the lector and spun through the pages smoothly--without anything on
the pages registering in his memory. He kept wishing Deet were there
so he could laugh with her about how little this hurt him; then he
would be glad that Deet was not there, because one sympathetic touch
of her hand would push him over the edge, make it impossible to
contain his emotion.
Finally he could not help
himself. Thinking of Deet, of their children and grandchildren, of
all that had been lost to them because he had made an empty gesture
to a dead friend, he threw himself to the softened floor and wept
bitterly. Let Chen listen to recordings of what the spy beam shows of
this! Let him savor his victory! I’ll destroy him somehow, my
staff is still loyal to me, I’ll put together an army, I’ll
hire assassins of my own, I’ll make contact with Admiral Sipp,
and then Chen will be the one to sob, crying out for mercy as I
disfigure him the way he has mutilated me--
Fool.
Leyel rolled over onto
his back, dried his face on his sleeve, then lay there, eyes closed,
calming himself. No vengeance. No politics. That was Rom’s
business, not Leyel’s. Too late for him to enter the game
now--and who would help him, anyway, now that he had already lost his
power? There was nothing to be done.
Leyel didn’t really
want to do anything, anyway. Hadn’t they guaranteed that his
archives and libraries would continue to be funded? Hadn’t they
guaranteed him unlimited research funds? And wasn’t that all he
had cared about anyway? He had long since turned over all the Forska
operations to his subordinates--Chen’s trustee would simply do
the same job. And Leyel’s children wouldn’t suffer
much--he had raised them with the same values that he had grown up
with, and so they all pursued careers unrelated to the Forska
holdings. They were true children of their father and mother--they
wouldn’t have any self-respect if they didn’t earn their
own way in the world. No doubt they’d be disappointed by having
their inheritance snatched away. But they wouldn’t be
destroyed.
I
am not ruined. All the lies that Rom told are really true, only they
didn’t realize it. All that matters in my life, I still have. I
really don’t
care about my fortune. It’s just the way I lost it that
made me so furious. I can go on and be the same person I always was.
This will even give me an opportunity to see who my true friends
are--to see who still honors me for my scientific achievements, and
who despises me for my poverty.
By the time Deet got home
from the library--late, as was usual these days--Leyel was hard at
work, reading back through all the research and speculation on
protohuman behavior, trying to see if there was anything other than
half-assed guesswork and pompous babble. He was so engrossed in his
reading that he spent the first fifteen minutes after she got home
telling her of the hilarious stupidities he had found in the day’s
reading, and then sharing a wonderful, impossible thought he had had.
“What if the human
species isn’t the only branch to evolve on our family tree?
What if there’s some other primate species that looks exactly
like us, but can’t interbreed with us, that functions in a
completely different way, and we don’t even know it, we all
think everybody’s just like us, but here and there allover the
Empire there are whole towns, cities, maybe even worlds of people who
secretly aren’t human at all.”
“But
Leyel, my overwrought husband, if they look just like us and act just
like us, then they are
human.”
“But
they don’t act
exactly like us. There’s a difference. A completely different
set of rules and assumptions. Only they don’t know that we’re
different, and we don’t know that they’re different.
Or even if we suspect it, we’re never sure. Just two different
species, living side by side and never guessing it.”
She kissed him. “You
poor fool, that isn’t speculation, it already exists. You have
just described the relationship between males and females. Two
completely different species, completely unintelligible to each
other, living side by side and thinking they’re really the
same. The fascinating thing, Leyel, is that the two species persist
in marrying each other and having babies, sometimes of one species,
sometimes of the other, and the whole time they can’t
understand why they can’t understand each other.”
He laughed and embraced
her. “You’re right, as always, Deet. If I could once
understand women, then perhaps I’d know what it is that makes
men human.”
“Nothing could
possibly make men human,” she answered. “Every time
they’re just about to get it right, they end up tripping over
the damned Y chromosome and turning back into beasts.” She
nuzzled his neck.
It was then, with Deet in
his arms, that he whispered to her what had happened when Rom visited
that day. She said nothing, but held him tightly for the longest
time. Then they had a very late supper and went about their nightly
routines as if nothing had changed.
Not
until they were in bed, not until Deet was softly snoring beside him,
did it finally occur to Leyel that Deet was facing a test of her own.
Would she still love him, now that he was merely Leyel Forska,
scientist on a pension, and not Lord Forska, master of worlds? Of
course she would intend
to. But just as Leyel had never been aware of how much he
depended on his wealth to define himself, so also she might not have
realized how much of what she loved about him was his vast power; for
even though he didn’t flaunt it, it had always been there, like
a solid platform underfoot, hardly noticed except now, when it was
gone, when their footing was unsure.
Even before this, she had
been slipping away into the community of women in the library. She
would drift away even faster now, not even noticing it as Leyel
became less and less important to her. No need for anything as
dramatic as divorce. Just a little gap between them, an empty space
that might as well be a chasm, might as well by the abyss. My fortune
was a part of me, and now that it’s gone, I’m no longer
the same man she loved. She won’t even know that she doesn’t
love me any more. She’ll just get busier and busier in her
work, and in five or ten years when I die of old age, she’ll
grieve--and then suddenly she’ll realize that she isn’t
half as devastated as she thought she’d be. In fact, she won’t
be devastated at all. And she’ll get on with her life and won’t
even remember what it was like to be married to me. I’ll
disappear from all human memory then, except perhaps for a few
scientific papers and the libraries.
I’m like the
information that was lost in all those neglected archives.
Disappearing bit by bit, unnoticed, until all that’s left is
just a little bit of noise in people’s memories. Then, finally,
nothing. Blank.
Self-pitying fool. That’s
what happens to everyone, in the long run. Even Hari Seldon--someday
he’ll be forgotten, sooner rather than later, if Chen has his
way. We all die. We’re all lost in the passage of time. The
only thing that lives on after us is the new shape we’ve given
to the communities we lived in. There are things that are known
because I said them, and even though people have forgotten who said
it, they’ll go on knowing. Like the story Rinjy was
telling--she had forgotten, if she ever knew it, that Deet was the
librarian in the original tale. But still she remembered the tale.
The community of librarians was different because Deet had been among
them. They would be a little different, a little braver, a little
stronger, because of Deet. She had left traces of herself in the
world.
And then, again, there
came that flash of insight, that sudden understanding of the answer
to a question that had long been troubling him.
But in the moment that
Leyel realized that he held the answer, the answer slipped away. He
couldn’t remember it. You’re asleep, he said silently.
You only dreamed that you understood the origin of humanity. That’s
the way it is in dreams--the truth is always so beautiful, but you
can never hold on to it.
“How is he taking
it, Deet?”
“Hard to say. Well,
I think. He was never much of a wanderer anyway.”
“Come now, it can’t
be that simple.”
“No. No, it isn’t.”
“Tell me.”
“The social
things--those were easy. We rarely went anyway, but now people don’t
invite us. We’re politically dangerous. And the few things we
had scheduled got canceled or, um, postponed. You know--we’ll
call you as soon as we have a new date.”
“He doesn’t
mind this?”
“He
likes that part. He
always hated those things. But they’ve canceled his speeches.
And the lecture series on human ecology.”
“A blow. “
“He pretends not to
mind. But he’s brooding.”
“Tell me. “
“Works all day, but
he doesn’t read it to me any more, doesn’t make me sit
down at the lector the minute I get home. I think he isn’t
writing anything. “
“Doing nothing?”
“No. Reading.
That’s all.”
“Maybe he just
needs to do research.”
“You
don’t know Leyel. He thinks
by writing. Or talking. He isn’t doing either.”
“Doesn’t talk
to you?”
“He answers. I try
to talk about things here at the library, his answers are--what?
Glum. Sullen.”
“He resents your
work?”
“That’s not
possible. Leyel has always been as enthusiastic about my work as
about his own. And he won’t talk about his own work, either. I
ask him, and he says nothing.”
“Not surprising.”
“So it’s all
right?”
“No. It’s
just not surprising.”
“What is it? Can’t
you tell me?”
“What good is
telling you? It’s what we call ILS--Identity Loss Syndrome.
It’s identical to the passive strategy for dealing with loss of
body parts. “
“ILS. What happens
in ILS?”
“Deet, come on,
you’re a scientist. What do you expect? You’ve just
described Leyel’s behavior, I tell you that it’s called
ILS, you want to know what ILS is, and what am I going to do?”
“Describe Leyel’s
behavior back to me. What an idiot I am.”
“Good, at least you
can laugh. “
“Can’t you
tell me what to expect?”
“Complete
withdrawal from you, from everybody. Eventually he becomes completely
antisocial and starts to strike out. Does something
self-destructive--like making public statements against Chen, that’d
do it.”
“No!”
“Or else he severs
his old connections, gets away from you, and reconstructs himself in
a different set of communities.”
“This would make
him happy?”
“Sure. Useless to
the Second Foundation, but happy. It would also turn you into a
nasty-tempered old crone, not that you aren’t one already, mind
you.”
“Oh, you think
Leyel’s the only thing keeping me human?”
“Pretty much, yes.
He’s your safety valve.”
“Not lately.”
“I know.”
“Have I been so
awful?”
“Nothing that we
can’t bear. Deet, if we’re going to be fit to govern the
human race someday, shouldn’t we first learn to be good to each
other?”
“Well, I’m
glad to provide you all with an opportunity to test your patience.”
“You should be
glad. We’re doing a fine job so far, wouldn’t you say?”
“Please. You were
teasing me about the prognosis, weren’t you?”
“Partly. Everything
I said was true, but you know as well as I do that there are as many
different ways out of a B-B syndrome as there are people who have
them.”
“Behavioral
cause, behavioral effect. No little
hormone shot, then?”
“Deet. He doesn’t
know who he is.”
“Can’t I help
him?”
“Yes.”
“What? What can I
do?”
“This is only a
guess, since I haven’t talked to him.”
“Of course.”
“You aren’t
home much.”
“I
can’t stand it
there, with him brooding all the time.”
“Fine. Get him out
with you.”
“He won’t
go.”
“Push him.”
“We barely talk. I
don’t know if I even have any leverage over him.”
“Deet. You’re
the one who wrote, ‘Communities that make few or no demands on
their members cannot command allegiance. All else being equal,
members who feel most needed have the strongest allegiance. ‘ “
“You memorized
that?”
“Psychohistory
is the psychology of
populations, but populations can only be quantified as communities.
Seldon’s work on statistical probabilities only worked to
predict the future within a generation or two until you first
published your community theories. That’s because statistics
can’t deal with cause and effect. Stats tell you what’s
happening, never why, never the result. Within a generation or two,
the present statistics evaporate, they’re meaningless, you have
whole new populations with new configurations. Your community theory
gave us a way of predicting which communities would survive, which
would grow, which would fade. A way of looking across long stretches
of time and space. “
“Hari never told me
he was using community theory in any important way. “
“How could he tell
you that? He had to walk a tightrope--publishing enough to get
psychohistory taken seriously, but not so much that anybody outside
the Second Foundation could ever duplicate or continue his work. Your
work was a key--but he couldn’t say so.”
“Are you just
saying this to make me feel better?”
“Sure.
That’s why I’m saying it. But it’s also true--since
lying to you wouldn’t make you feel better, would it?
Statistics are like taking cross sections of the trunk of a tree. It
can tell you a lot about its history. You can figure how healthy it
is, how much volume the whole tree has, how much is root and how much
is branch. But what it can’t
tell you is where the tree will branch, and which branches will
become major, which minor, and which will rot and fall off and die.”
“But
you can’t quantify
communities, can you? They’re just stories and rituals that
bind people together--”
“You’d be
surprised what we can quantify. We’re very good at what we do,
Deet. Just as you are. Just as Leyel is.”
“Is
his work important? After all, human origin is only a historical
question. “
“Nonsense, and you
know it. Leyel has stripped away the historical issues and he’s
searching for the scientific ones. The principles by which human
life, as we understand it, is differentiated from nonhuman. If he
finds that--don’t you see, Deet? The human race is recreating
itself all the time, on every world, in every family, in every
individual. We’re born animals, and we teach each other how to
be human. Somehow. It matters that we find out how. It matters to
psychohistory. It matters to the Second Foundation. It matters to the
human race.’“
“So--you aren’t
just being kind to Leyel.”
“Yes, we are. You
are, too. Good people are kind.”
“Is that all? Leyel
is just one man who’s having trouble?”
“We
need him. He isn’t important just to you. He’s important
to us. “
“Oh. Oh.”
“Why are you
crying?”
“I was so
afraid--that I was being selfish--being so worried about him. Taking
up your time like this. “
“Well, if that
doesn’t--I thought you were beyond surprising me. “
“Our problems were
just--our problems. But now they’re not.”
“Is that so
important to you? Tell me, Deet--do you really value this community
so much?”
“Yes.”
“More than Leyel?”
“No!
But enough--that I felt guilty
for caring so much about him.”
“Go home, Deet.
Just go home.”
“What?”
“That’s
where you’d rather be. It’s been showing up in your
behavior for two months, ever since Hari’s death. You’ve
been nasty and snappish, and now I know why. You resent
us for keeping you away from Leyel.”
“No, it was my
choice, I--”
“Of
course it was your choice! It was your sacrifice
for the good of the Second Foundation. So now I’m telling
you--healing Leyel is more important to Hari’s plan than
keeping up with your day-to-day responsibilities here.”
“You’re not
removing me from my position, are you?”
“No.
I’m just telling you to ease up. And get Leyel out of the
apartment. Do you understand me? Demand it! Reengage him with you,
or we’ve all lost him.”
“Take
him where?”
“I
don’t know. Theater. Athletic events. Dancing.”
“We
don’t do those
things.”
“Well,
what do you do?”
“Research. And then
talk about it.”
“Fine. Bring him
here to the library. Do research with him. Talk about it.”
“But
he’ll meet people here. He’d certainly meet you.”
“Good.
Good. I like that. Yes, let him come here.”
“But I thought we
had to keep the Second Foundation a secret from him until he’s
ready to take part.”
“I didn’t say
you should introduce me as First Speaker.”
“No, no, of course
you didn’t. What am I thinking off Of course he can meet you,
he can meet everybody. “
“Deet, listen to
me.”
“Yes, I’m
listening. “
“It’s all
right to love him, Deet.”
“I know that.”
“I mean, it’s
all right to love him more than you love us. More than you love any
of us. More than you love all of us. There you are, crying again.”
“I’m so--”
“Relieved. “
“How do you
understand me so well?”
“I only know what
you show me and what you tell me. It’s all we ever know about
each other. The only thing that helps is that nobody can ever lie for
long about who they really are. Not even to themselves.”
For
two months Leyel followed up on Magolissian’s paper by trying
to find some connection between language studies and human origins.
Of course this meant weeks of wading through old, useless
point-of-origin studies, which kept indicating that Trantor was the
focal point of language throughout the history of the Empire, even
though nobody seriously
put forth Trantor as the planet of origin. Once again, though, Leyel
rejected the search for a particular planet; he wanted to find out
regularities, not unique events.
Leyel
hoped for a clue in the fairly recent work--only two thousand years
old--of Dagawell Kispitorian. Kispitorian came from the most isolated
area of a planet called Artashat, where there were traditions that
the original settlers came from an earlier world named Armenia, now
uncharted. Kispitorian grew up among mountain people who claimed that
long ago, they spoke a completely different language. In fact, the
title of Kispitorian’s most interesting book was No
Man Understood Us; many of the folk tales of these people began
with the formula “Back in the days when no man understood
us...”
Kispitorian
had never been able to shake off this tradition of his upbringing,
and as he pursued the field of dialect formation and evolution, he
kept coming across evidence that at one time the human species spoke
not one but many languages. It had always been taken for granted that
Galactic Standard was the up-to-date version of the language of the
planet of origin--that while a few human groups might have developed
dialects, civilization was impossible without mutually intelligible
speech. But Kispitorian had begun to suspect that Galactic Standard
did not become the universal human language until after
the formation of the Empire--that, in fact, one of the first
labors of the Imperium was to stamp out all other competing
languages. The mountain people of Artashat believed that their
language had been stolen from them. Kispitorian eventually devoted
his life to proving they were right.
He
worked first with names, long recognized as the most conservative
aspect of language. He found that there were many separate naming
traditions, and it was not until about the year 6000 G.E. that all
were finally amalgamated into one Empire-wide stream. What was
interesting was that the farther back he went, the more
complexity he found.
Because certain worlds
tended to have unified traditions, and so the simplest explanation of
this was the one he first put forth--that humans left their home
world with a unified language, but the normal forces of language
separation caused each new planet to develop its own offshoot, until
many dialects became mutually unintelligible. Thus, different
languages would not have developed until humanity moved out into
space; this was one of the reasons why the Galactic Empire was
necessary to restore the primeval unity of the species.
Kispitorian
called his first and most influential book Tower
of Confusion, using the widespread legend of the Tower of Babble
as an illustration. He supposed that this story might have originated
in that pre-Empire period, probably among the rootless traders
roaming from planet to planet, who had to deal on a practical level
with the fact that no two worlds spoke the same language. These
traders had preserved a tradition that when humanity lived on one
planet, they all spoke the same language. They explained the
linguistic confusion of their own time by recounting the tale of a
great leader who built the first “tower,” or starship, to
raise mankind up into heaven. According to the story, “God”
punished these upstart people by confusing their tongues, which
forced them to disperse among the different worlds. The story
presented the confusion of tongues as the cause of the
dispersal instead of its result, but cause-reversal was a commonly
recognized feature of myth. Clearly this legend preserved a
historical fact.
So
far, Kispitorian’s work was perfectly acceptable to most
scientists. But in his forties he began to go off on wild tangents.
Using controversial algorithms--on calculators with a suspiciously
high level of processing power--he began to tear apart Galactic
Standard itself, showing that many words revealed completely separate
phonetic traditions, incompatible with the mainstream of the
language. They could not comfortably have evolved within a population
that regularly spoke either Standard or its primary ancestor
language. Furthermore, there were many words with clearly related
meanings that showed they had once diverged according to standard
linguistic patterns and then were brought together later, with
different meanings or implications. But the time scale implied by the
degree of change was far too great to be accounted for in the period
between humanity’s first settlement of space and the formation
of the Empire. Obviously, claimed Kispitorian, there had been many
different languages on
the planet of origin; Galactic Standard was the first
universal human language. Throughout all human history,
separation of language had been a fact of life; only the Empire had
had the pervasive power to unify speech.
After that, Kispitorian
was written off as a fool, of course--his own Tower of Babble
interpretation was now used against him as if an interesting
illustration had now become a central argument. He very narrowly
escaped execution as a separatist, in fact, since there was an
unmistakable tone of regret in his writing about the loss of
linguistic diversity. The Imperium did succeed in cutting off all his
funding and jailing him for a while because he had been using a
calculator with an illegal level of memory and processing power.
Leyel suspected that Kispitorian got off easy at that--working with
language as he did, getting the results he got, he might well have
developed a calculator so intelligent that it could understand and
produce human speech, which, if discovered, would have meant either
the death penalty or a lynching.
No matter now.
Kispitorian insisted to the end that his work was pure science,
making no value judgments on whether the Empire’s linguistic
unity was a Good Thing or not. He was merely reporting that the
natural condition of humanity was to speak many different languages.
And Leyel believed that he was right.
Leyel
could not help but feel that by combining Kispitorian’s
language studies with Magolissian’s work with language-using
primates he could come up with something important. But what was the
connection? The primates had never developed their own
languages--they only learned nouns and verbs presented to them by
humans. So they could hardly have developed diversity of language.
What connection could there be? Why would diversity ever have
developed? Could it have something to do with why humans became
human?
The primates used only a
tiny subset of Standard. For that matter, so did most people--most of
the two million words in Standard were used only by a few
professionals who actually needed them, while the common vocabulary
of humans throughout the Galaxy consisted of a few thousand words.
Oddly,
though, it was that small subset of Standard that was the most
susceptible to change. Highly esoteric scientific or technical
papers written in 2000 G.E. were still easily readable. Slangy,
colloquial passages in fiction, especially in dialogue, became almost
unintelligible within five hundred years. The language shared by the
most different communities was the language that changed the most.
But over time, that mainstream language always changed together.
It made no sense, then, for there ever to be linguistic
diversity. Language changed most when it was most unified. Therefore
when people were most divided, their language should remain most
similar.
Never mind, Leyel. You’re
out of your discipline. Any competent linguist would know the answer
to that.
But Leyel knew that
wasn’t likely to be true. People immersed in one discipline
rarely questioned the axioms of their profession. Linguists all took
for granted the fact that the language of an isolated population is
invariably more archaic, less susceptible to change. Did they
understand why?
Leyel
got up from his chair. His eyes were tired from staring into the
lector. His knees and back ached from staying so long in the same
position. He wanted to lie down, but knew that if he did, he’d
fall asleep. The curse of getting old--he could fall asleep so
easily, yet could never stay asleep long enough to feel well rested.
He didn’t want to
sleep now, though. He wanted to think.
No,
that wasn’t it. He wanted to talk.
That’s how his best and clearest ideas always came, under
the pressure of conversation, when someone else’s questions and
arguments forced him to think sharply. To make connections, invent
explanations. In a contest with another person, his adrenaline
flowed, his brain made connections that would never otherwise be
made.
Where
was Deet? In years past, he would have been talking this through with
Deet all day. All week. She would know as much about his research as
he did, and would constantly say “Have you thought of this?”
or “How can you possibly think that!” And he would have
been making the same challenges to her
work. In the old days.
But
these weren’t the old days. She didn’t need him any
more--she had her friends on the library staff. Nothing wrong with
that, probably. After all, she wasn’t thinking
now, she was putting old thoughts into practice. She needed them,
not him. But he still needed her. Did she ever
think of that? I might as well have gone to Terminus--damn Hari for
refusing to let me go. I stayed for Deet’s sake, and yet I
don’t have her after all, not when I need her. How dare Hari
decide what was right for Leyel Forska!
Only Hari hadn’t
decided, had he? He would have let Leyel go--without Deet. And Leyel
hadn’t stayed with Deet so she could help him with his
research. He had stayed with her because...because...
He
couldn’t remember why. Love, of course. But he couldn’t
think why that had been so important to him. It wasn’t
important to her. Her
idea of love these days was to urge him to come to the library. “You
can do your research there. We could be together more during the
days.”
The
message was clear. The only way Leyel could remain part of Deet’s
life was if he became part of her new “family” at the
library. Well, she could forget that idea. If she chose to get
swallowed up in that place, fine. If she chose to leave him for a
bunch of--indexers and
cataloguers--fine. Fine.
No.
It wasn’t fine. He wanted to talk
to her. Right now, at this moment, he wanted to tell her what he
was thinking, wanted her to question him and argue with him until she
made him come up with an answer, or lots of answers. He needed her to
see what he wasn’t seeing. He needed her a lot more than they
needed her.
He was out amid the thick
pedestrian traffic of Maslo Boulevard before he realized that this
was the first time since Hari’s funeral that he’d
ventured beyond the immediate neighborhood of his apartment. It was
the first time in months that he’d had anyplace to go. That’s
what I’m doing here, he thought. I just need a change of
scenery, a sense of destination. That’s the only reason I’m
heading to the library. All that emotional nonsense back in the
apartment, that was just my unconscious strategy for making myself
get out among people again.
Leyel
was almost cheerful when he got to the Imperial Library. He had been
there many times over the years, but always for receptions or other
public events--having his own high-capacity lector meant that he
could get access to all the library’s records by cable. Other
people--students, professors from poorer schools, lay readers--they
actually had to come
here to read. But that meant that they knew their way around the
building. Except for finding the major lecture halls and reception
rooms, Leyel hadn’t the faintest idea where anything was.
For
the first time it dawned on him how very large the Imperial Library
was. Deet had mentioned the numbers many times--a staff of more than
five thousand, including machinists, carpenters, cooks, security, a
virtual city in itself--but only now did Leyel realize that this
meant that many people here had never met each other. Who could
possibly know five
thousand people by name? He couldn’t just walk up and ask
for Deet by name. What was the department Deet worked in? She had
changed so often, moving through the bureaucracy.
Everyone he saw was a
patron--people at lectors, people at catalogues, even people reading
books and magazines printed on paper. Where were the librarians? The
few staff members moving through the aisles turned out not to be
librarians at all--they were volunteer docents, helping newcomers
learn how to use the lectors and catalogues. They knew as little
about library staff as he did.
He finally found a room
full of real librarians, sitting at calculators preparing the daily
access and circulation reports. When he tried to speak to one, she
merely waved a hand at him. He thought she was telling him to go away
until he realized that her hand remained in the air, a finger
pointing to the front of the room. Leyel moved toward the elevated
desk where a fat, sleepy-looking middle-aged woman was lazily paging
through long columns of figures, which stood in the air before her in
military formation.
“Sorry to interrupt
you,” he said softly.
She was resting her cheek
on her hand. She didn’t even look at him when he spoke. But she
answered. “I pray for interruptions. “
Only then did he notice
that her eyes were framed with laugh lines, that her mouth even in
repose turned upward into a faint smile.
“I’m looking
for someone. My wife, in fact. Deet Forska. “
Her smile widened. She
sat up. “You’re the beloved Leyel.”
It
was an absurd thing for a stranger to say, but it pleased him
nonetheless to realize that Deet must have spoken of him. Of course
everyone would have known that Deet’s husband was the
Leyel Forska. But this woman hadn’t said it that way, had
she? Not as the Leyel Forska, the celebrity. No, here he was
known as “the beloved Leyel.” Even if this woman meant to
tease him, Deet must have let it be known that she had some affection
for him. He couldn’t help but smile. With relief. He hadn’t
known that he feared the loss of her love so much, but now he wanted
to laugh aloud, to move, to dance with pleasure.
“I imagine I am,”
said Leyel.
“I’m Zay Wax.
Deet must have mentioned me, we have lunch every day. “
No, she hadn’t. She
hardly mentioned anybody at the library, come to think of it. These
two had lunch every day, and Leyel had never heard of her. “Yes,
of course, “ said Leyel. “I’m glad to meet you.”
“And I’m
relieved to see that your feet actually touch the ground.”
“Now and then.”
“She works up in
Indexing these days.” Zay cleared her display.
“Is that on
Trantor?”
Zay laughed. She typed in
a few instructions and her display now filled with a map of the
library complex. It was a complex pile of rooms and corridors, almost
impossible to grasp. “This shows only this wing of the main
building. Indexing is these four floors.”
Four layers near the
middle of the display turned to a brighter color.
“And here’s
where you are right now.”
A small room on the first
floor turned white. Looking at the labyrinth between the two lighted
sections, Leyel had to laugh aloud. “Can’t you just give
me a ticket to guide me?”
“Our tickets only
lead you to places where patrons are allowed. But this isn’t
really hard, Lord Forska. After all, you’re a genius, aren’t
you?”
“Not at the
interior geography of buildings, whatever lies Deet might have told
you.”
“You just go out
this door and straight down the corridor to the elevators--can’t
miss them. Go up to fifteen. When you get out, turn as if you were
continuing down the same corridor, and after a while you go through
an archway that says ‘Indexing.’ Then you lean back your
head and bellow ‘Deet’ as loud as you can. Do that a few
times and either she’ll come or security will arrest you.”
“That’s
what I was going to do if I didn’t
find somebody to guide me.”
“I was hoping you’d
ask me.” Zay stood up and spoke loudly to the busy librarians.
“The cat’s going away. The mice can play. “
“About time,”
one of them said. They all laughed. But they kept working.
“Follow me, Lord
Forska.”
“Leyel, please.”
“Oh, you’re
such a flirt.” When she stood, she was even shorter and fatter
than she had looked sitting down. “Follow me.”
They
conversed cheerfully about nothing much on the way down the corridor.
Inside the elevator, they hooked their feet under the rail as the
gravitic repulsion kicked in. Leyel was so used to weightlessness
after all these years of using elevators on Trantor that he never
noticed. But Zay let her arms float in the air and sighed noisily. “I
love riding the
elevator, “ she said. For the first time Leyel realized that
weightlessness must be a great relief to someone carrying as many
extra kilograms as Zay Wax. When the elevator stopped, Zay made a
great show of staggering out as if under a great burden. “My
idea of heaven is to live forever in gravitic repulsion.”
“You can get
gravitic repulsion for your apartment, if you live on the top floor.”
“Maybe
you can,” said
Zay. “But I have to live on a librarian’s salary.”
Leyel was mortified. He
had always been careful not to flaunt his wealth, but then, he had
rarely talked at any length with people who couldn’t afford
gravitic repulsion. “Sorry,” he said. “I don’t
think I could either, these days.”
“Yes, I heard you
squandered your fortune on a real bang-up funeral.”
Startled that she would
speak so openly of it, he tried to answer in the same joking tone. “I
suppose you could look at it that way. “
“I say it was worth
it,” she said. She looked slyly up at him. “I knew Hari,
you know. Losing him cost humanity more than if Trantor’s sun
went nova.”
“Maybe,” said
Leyel. The conversation was getting out of hand. Time to be cautious.
“Oh, don’t
worry. I’m not a snitch for the Pubs. Here’s the Golden
Archway into Indexing. The Land of Subtle Conceptual Connections.”
Through the arch, it was
as though they had passed into a completely different building. The
style and trim were the same as before, with deeply lustrous fabrics
on the walls and ceiling and floor made of the same smooth
sound-absorbing plastic, glowing faintly with white light. But now
all pretense at symmetry was gone. The ceiling was at different
heights, almost at random; on the left and right there might be doors
or archways, stairs or ramps, an alcove or a huge hall filled with
columns, shelves of books and works of art surrounding tables where
indexers worked with a half-dozen scriptors and lectors at once.
“The form fits the
function,” said Zay.
“I’m afraid
I’m rubbernecking like a first-time visitor to Trantor.”
“It’s a
strange place. But the architect was the daughter of an indexer, so
she knew that standard, orderly, symmetrical interior maps are the
enemy of freely connective thought. The finest touch--and the most
expensive too, I’m afraid--is the fact that from day to day the
layout is rearranged. “
“Rearranged! The
rooms move?”
“A series of random
routines in the master calculator. There are rules, but the program
isn’t afraid to waste space, either. Some days only’ one
room is changed, moved off to some completely different place in the
Indexing area. Other days, everything is changed. The only constant
is the archway leading in. I really wasn’t joking when I said
you should come here and bellow.”
“But--the indexers
must spend the whole morning just finding their stations.”
“Not at all. Any
indexer can work from any station.”
“Ah. So they just
call up the job they were working on the day before.”
“No. They merely
pick up on the job that is already in progress on the station they
happen to choose that day.”
“Chaos!” said
Leyel.
“Exactly.
How do you think a good hyperindex is made? If one person alone
indexes a book, then the only connections that book will make are the
ones that person knows about. Instead, each indexer is forced to skim
through what his predecessor did the day before. Inevitably he’ll
add some new connections that the other indexer didn’t think
of. The environment, the work pattern, everything is designed to
break down habits of thought, to make everything surprising,
everything new.”
“To keep everybody
off balance. “
“Exactly. Your mind
works quickly when you’re running along the edge of the
precipice.”
“By that reckoning,
acrobats should all be geniuses.”
“Nonsense.
The whole labor of acrobats is to learn their routines so perfectly
they never lose
balance. An acrobat who improvises is soon dead. But indexers, when
they lose their balance, they fall into wonderful discoveries. That’s
why the indexes of the Imperial Library are the only ones worth
having. They startle and challenge as you read. All the others are
just--clerical lists.”
“Deet never
mentioned this.”
“Indexers rarely
discuss what they’re doing. You can’t really explain it
anyway. “
“How long has Deet
been an indexer?”
“Not long, really.
She’s still a novice. But I hear she’s very, very good.”
“Where
is she?”
Zay grinned. Then she
tipped her head back and bellowed. “Deet!”
The sound seemed to be
swallowed up at once in the labyrinth. There was no answer.
“Not nearby, I
guess,” said Zay. “We’ll have to probe a little
deeper.”
“Couldn’t
we just ask somebody
where she is?”
“Who would know?”
It took two more floors
and three more shouts before they heard a faint answering cry. “Over
here!”
They followed the sound.
Deet kept calling out, so they could find her.
“I got the flower
room today, Zay! Violets!”
The indexers they passed
along the way all looked up--some smiled, some frowned.
“Doesn’t it
interfere with things?” asked Leyel. “ All this
shouting?”
“Indexers
need interruption.
It breaks up the chain of thought. When. they look back down, they
have to rethink what they were doing. “
Deet, not so far away
now, called again. “The smell is so intoxicating. Imagine--the
same room twice in a month!”
“Are indexers often
hospitalized?” Leyel asked quietly.
“For what?”
“Stress.”
“There’s
no stress on this job,” said Zay. “Just play. We come up
here as a reward for
working in other parts of the library.”
“I
see. This is the time when librarians actually get to read
the books in the library.”
“We all chose this
career because we love books for their own sake. Even the old
inefficient corruptible paper ones. Indexing is like--writing in the
margins.”
The
notion was startling. “Writing in someone else’s
book?”
“It used to be done
all the time, Leyel. How can you possibly engage in dialogue with the
author without writing your answers and arguments in the margins?
Here she is.” Zay preceded him under a low arch and down a few
steps.
“I heard a man’s
voice with you, Zay,” said Deet.
“Mine,” said
Leyel. He turned a corner and saw her there. After such a long
journey to reach her, he thought for a dizzying moment that he didn’t
recognize her. That the library had randomized the librarians as well
as the rooms, and he had happened upon a woman who merely resembled
his long-familiar wife; he would have to reacquaint himself with her
from the beginning.
“I thought so,”
said Deet. She got up from her station and embraced him. Even this
startled him, though she usually embraced him upon meeting. It’s
only the setting that’s different, he told himself. I’m
only surprised because usually she greets me like this at home, in
familiar surroundings. And usually it’s Deet arriving, not me.
Or was there, after all,
a greater warmth in her greeting here? As if she loved him more in
this place than at home? Or, perhaps, as if the new Deet were simply
a warmer, more comfortable person?
I thought that she was
comfortable with me.
Leyel felt uneasy, shy
with her. “If I’d known my coming would cause so much
trouble,” he began. Why did he need so badly to apologize?
“What trouble?”
asked Zay.
“Shouting.
Interrupting.”
“Listen to him,
Deet. He thinks the world has stopped because of a couple of shouts.
“
In the distance they
could hear a man bellowing someone’s name.
“Happens all the
time,” said Zay. ”I’d better get back. Some
lordling from Mahagonny is probably fuming because I haven’t
granted his request for access to the Imperial account books.”
“Nice to meet you,”
said Leyel.
“Good luck finding
your way back, “ said Deet.
“Easy this time,”
said Zay. She paused only once on her way through the door, not to
speak, but to slide a metallic wafer along an almost unnoticeable
slot in the doorframe, above eye level. She turned back and winked at
Deet. Then she was gone.
Leyel
didn’t ask what she had done--if it were his business,
something would have been said. But he suspected that Zay had either
turned on or turned off a recording system. Unsure of whether they
had privacy here from the library staff, Leyel merely stood for a
moment, looking around. Deet’s room really was filled with
violets, real ones, growing out of cracks and apertures in the floor
and walls. The smell was clear but not overpowering. ”What is
this room for?”
“For
me. Today, anyway. I’m so glad you came.”
“You never told me
about this place. “
“I didn’t
know about it until I was assigned to this section. Nobody talks
about Indexing. We never tell outsiders. The architect died three
thousand years ago. Only our own machinists understand how it works.
It’s like”
“Fairyland.”
“Exactly.”
“A place where all
the rules of the universe are suspended.”
“Not all. We still
stick with good old gravity. Inertia. That sort of thing.”
“This place is
right for you, Deet. This room. “
“Most people go
years without getting the flower room. It isn’t always violets,
you know. Sometimes climbing roses. Sometimes periwinkle. They say
there’s really a dozen flower rooms, but never more than one at
a time is accessible. It’s been violets for me both times,
though. “
Leyel couldn’t help
himself. He laughed. It was funny. It was delightful. What did this
have to do with a library? And. yet what a marvelous thing to have
hidden away in the heart of this somber place. He sat down on a
chair. Violets grew out of the top of the chairback, so that flowers
brushed his shoulders.
“You finally got
tired of staying in the apartment all day?” asked Deet.
Of course she would
wonder why he finally came out, after all her invitations had been so
long ignored. Yet he wasn’t sure if he could speak frankly. “I
needed to talk with you.” He glanced back at the slot Zay had
used in the doorframe. “Alone,” he said.
Was that a look of dread
that crossed her face?
“We’re
alone,” Deet said quietly. “Zay saw to that. Truly alone,
as we can’t be even in the apartment. “
It took Leyel a moment to
realize what she was asserting. He dared not even speak the word. So
he mouthed his question: Pubs?
“They never bother
with the library in their normal spying. Even if they set up
something special for you, there’s now an interference field
blocking out our conversation. Chances are, though, that they won’t
bother to monitor you again until you leave here.“
She seemed edgy.
Impatient. As if she didn’t like having this conversation. As
if she wanted him to get on with it, or maybe just get it over with.
“If you don’t
mind,” he said. “I haven’t interrupted you here
before, I thought that just this once--”
“Of course, “
she said. But she was still tense. As if she feared what he might
say.
So
he explained to her all his thoughts about language. All that he had
gleaned from Kispitorian’s and Magolissian’s work. She
seemed to relax almost as soon as it became clear he was talking
about his research. What did she dread, he wondered. Was she afraid I
came to talk about our relationship? She hardly needed to fear that.
He had no intention of making things more difficult by whining
about things that could riot be helped.
When he was through
explaining the ideas that had come to him, she nodded carefully--as
she had done a thousand times before, after he explained an idea or
argument. “I don’t know,” she finally said. As so
many times before, she was reluctant to commit herself to an
immediate response.
And,
as he had often done, he insisted. “But what do you think?”
She
pursed her lips. “Just offhand--I’ve never tried a
serious linguistic application of community theory, beyond jargon
formation, so this is just my first thought--but try this. Maybe
small isolated populations guard their language--jealously,
because it’s part of who they are. Maybe language is the most
powerful ritual of all, so that people who have the same language are
one in a way that people who can’t understand each other’s
speech never are. We’d never know, would we, since everybody
for ten thousand years has spoken Standard.”
“So it isn’t
the size of the population, then, so much as--’’
“How
much they care about
their language. How much it defines them as a community. A large
population starts to think that everybody talks like them. They want
to distinguish themselves, form a separate identity. Then they
start developing jargons and slangs to separate themselves from
others. Isn’t that what happens to common speech? Children try
to find ways of talking that their parents don’t use.
Professionals talk in private vocabularies so laymen won’t know
the passwords. All rituals for community definition.”
Leyel nodded gravely, but
he had one obvious doubt.
Obvious enough that Deet
knew it, too. “Yes, yes, I know, Leyel. I immediately
interpreted your question in terms of my own discipline. Like
physicists who think that everything can be explained by physics. “
Leyel
laughed. “I thought of that, but what you said makes sense. And
it would explain why the natural tendency of communities is to
diversify language. We want a common tongue, a language of open
discourse. But we also want private languages. Except a completely
private language would be useless--whom would we talk to? So
wherever a community forms, it creates at least a few linguistic
barriers to outsiders, a few shibboleths that only insiders will
know. “
“And the more
allegiance a person has to a community, the more fluent he’ll
become in that language, and the more he’ll speak it.”
“Yes, it makes
sense,” said Leyel. “So easy. You see how much I need
you?”
He knew that his words
were a mild rebuke--why weren’t you home when I needed you--but
he couldn’t resist saying it. Sitting here with Deet, even in
this strange and redolent place, felt right and comfortable. How
could she have withdrawn from him? To him, her presence was what made
a place home. To her, this place was home whether he was there or
not.
He tried to put it in
words--in abstract words, so it wouldn’t sting. “I think
the greatest tragedy is when one person has more allegiance to his
community than any of the other members. “
Deet only half smiled and
raised her eyebrows. She didn’t know what he was getting at.
“He speaks the
community language all the time,” said Leyel. “Only
nobody else ever speaks it to him, or not enough anyway. And the more
he speaks it, the more he alienates the others and drives them away,
until he’s alone. Can you imagine anything more sad? Somebody
who’s filled up with a language, hungry to speak, to hear it
spoken, and yet there’s no one left who understands a word of
it.”
She nodded, her eyes
searching him. Does she understand what I’m saying? He waited
for her to speak. He had said all he dared to say.
“But imagine this,”
she finally said. “What if he left that little place where no
one understood him, and went over a hill to a new place, and all of a
sudden he heard a hundred voices, a thousand, speaking the words he
had treasured all those lonely years. And then he realized that he
had never really known the language at all. The words had hundreds of
meanings and nuances he had never guessed. Because each speaker
changed the language a little just by speaking it. And when he spoke
at last, his own voice sounded like music in his ears, and the others
listened with delight, with rapture, his music was like the water of
life pouring from a fountain, and he knew that he had never been home
before. “
Leyel couldn’t
remember hearing Deet sound so--rhapsodic, that was it, she herself
was singing. She is the person she was talking about. In this place,
her voice is different, that’s what she meant. At home with me,
she’s been alone. Here in the library she’s found others
who speak her secret language. It isn’t that she didn’t
want our marriage to succeed. She hoped for it, but I never
understood her. These people did. Do. She’s home here, that’s
what she’s telling me.
“I understand,”
he said.
“Do you?” She
looked searchingly into his face.
“I think so. It’s
all right.”
She gave him a quizzical
look.
“I mean, it’s
fine. It’s good. This place. It’s fine.”
She
looked relieved, but not completely. “You shouldn’t be so
sad about it, Leyel.
This is a happy place. And you could do everything here that you ever
did at home.”
Except love you as the
other part of me, and have you love me as the other part of you.
“Yes, I’m sure.”
“No,
I mean it. What you’re working on--I can see that you’re
getting close to something. Why not work on it here,
where we can talk about it?”
Leyel shrugged.
“You
are getting close,
aren’t you?”
“How do I know? I’m
thrashing around like a drowning man in the ocean at night. Maybe I’m
close to shore, and maybe I’m just swimming farther out to
sea.”
“Well, what do you
have? Didn’t we get closer just now?”
“No. This language
thing--if it’s just an aspect of community theory, it can’t
be the answer to human origin.”
“Why not?”
“Because
many primates have communities. A lot of other animals. Herding
animals, for instance. Even schools of fish.
Bees. Ants. Every multicelled organism is a community, for that
matter. So if linguistic diversion grows out of community, then it’s
inherent in prehuman animals and therefore isn’t part of the
definition of humanity.”
“Oh. I guess not.”
“Right.”
She looked disappointed.
As if she had really hoped they would find the answer to the origin
question right there, that very day.
Leyel stood up. “Oh
well. Thanks for your help. “
“I don’t
think I helped.”
“Oh, you did. You
showed me I was going up a dead-end road. You saved me a lot of
wasted--thought. That’s progress, in science, to know which
answers aren’t true.”
His
words had a double meaning, of course. She had also shown him that
their marriage was a dead-end road. Maybe she understood him. Maybe
not. It didn’t matter--he had understood her.
That little story about a lonely person finally discovering a
place where she could be at home--how could he miss the point of
that?
“Leyel,” she
said. “Why not put your question to the indexers?”
“Do
you think the library researchers could find answers where I
haven’t?”
“Not
the research department. Indexing.
“
“What do you mean?”
“Write down your
questions. All the avenues you’ve pursued. Linguistic
diversity. Primate language. And the other questions, the old ones.
Archaeological, historical approaches. Biological. Kinship patterns.
Customs. Everything you can think of. Just put it together as
questions. And then we’ll have them index it.”
“Index
my questions?”
“It’s
what we do--we read things and think of other things that might be
related somehow, and we connect them. We don’t say what the
connection means, but we know that it means something, that the
connection is real. We won’t give you answers, Leyel, but if
you follow the index, it might help you to think of connections. Do
you see what I mean?”
“I never
thought of that. Do you think a couple of indexers might have the
time to work on it?”
“Not
a couple of us. All of
us. “
“Oh, that’s
absurd, Deet. I wouldn’t even ask it.”
“I
would. We aren’t supervised up here, Leyel. We don’t
meet quotas. Our job is to read and think. Usually we have a few
hundred projects going, but for a day we could easily work on the
same document.”
“It would be a
waste. I can’t publish anything, Deet.”
“It doesn’t
have to be published. Don’t you understand? Nobody but us knows
what we do here. We can take it as an unpublished document and work
on it just the same. It won’t ever have to go online for the
library as a whole.”
Leyel shook his head. “
And then if they lead me to the answer--what, will we publish it with
two hundred bylines?”
“It’ll
be your paper,
Leyel. We’re just indexers, not authors. You’ll still
have to make the connections. Let us try. Let us be part of
this.”
Suddenly Leyel understood
why she was so insistent on this. Getting him involved with the
library was her way of pretending she was still part of his life. She
could believe she hadn’t left him, if he became part of her new
community.
Didn’t she know how
unbearable that would be? To see her here, so happy without him? To
come here as just one friend among many, when once they had been--or
he had thought they were--one indivisible soul? How could he possibly
do such a thing?
And yet she wanted it, he
could see it in the way she was looking at him, so girlish, so
pleading that it made him think of when they were first in love, on
another world--she would look at him like that whenever he insisted
that he had to leave. Whenever she thought she might be losing him.
Doesn’t she know
who has lost whom?
Never mind. What did it
matter if she didn’t understand? If it would make her happy to
have him pretend to be part of her new home, part of these
librarians--if she wanted him to submit his life’s work to the
ministrations of these absurd indexers, then why not? What would it
cost him? Maybe the process of writing down all his questions in some
coherent order would help him. And maybe she was right--maybe a
Trantorian index would help him solve the origin question.
Maybe if he came here, he
could still be a small part of her life. It wouldn’t be like
marriage. But since that was impossible, then at least he could have
enough of her here that he could remain himself, remain the person
that he had become because of loving her for all these years.
“Fine,” he
said. “I’ll write it up and bring it in.”
“I really think we
can help.”
“Yes,” he
said, pretending to more certainty than he felt. “Maybe.”
He started for the door.
“Do you have to
leave already?”
He nodded.
“Are you sure you
can find your way out?”
“Unless the rooms
have moved.”
“No, only at
night.”
“Then I’ll
find my way out just fine.” He took a few steps toward her,
then stopped.
“What?” she
asked.
“Nothing.”
“Oh.” She
sounded disappointed. “I thought you were going to kiss me
goodbye.” Then she puckered up like a three-year-old child.
He laughed. He kissed
her--like a three-year-old--and then he left.
For
two days he brooded. Saw her off in the morning, then tried to read,
to watch the vids, anything. Nothing held his attention. He took
walks. He even went topside once, to see the sky overhead--it was
night, thick with stars. None of it engaged him. Nothing held.
One of the vid programs had a moment, just briefly, a scene on a
semiarid world, where a strange plant grew that dried out at
maturity, broke off at the root, and then let the wind blow it
around, scattering seeds. For a moment he felt a dizzying empathy
with the plant as it tumbled by--am I as dry as that, hurtling
through dead land? But no, he knew even that wasn’t true,
because the tumbleweed had life enough left in it to scatter seeds.
Leyel had no seed left. That was scattered years ago.
On the third morning he
looked at himself in the mirror and laughed grimly. “Is this
how people feel before they kill themselves?” he asked. Of
course not--he knew that he was being melodramatic. He felt no desire
to die.
But then it occurred to
him that if this feeling of uselessness kept on, if he never found
anything to engage himself, then he might as well be dead, mightn’t
he, because his being alive wouldn’t accomplish much more than
keeping his clothes warm.
He sat down at the
scriptor and began writing down questions. Then, under each question,
he would explain how he had already pursued that particular avenue
and why it didn’t yield the answer to the origin question. More
questions would come up then--and he was right, the mere process of
summarizing his own fruitless research made answers seem
tantalizingly close. It was a good exercise. And even if he never
found an answer, this list of questions might be of help to someone
with a clearer intellect--or better information--decades or centuries
or millennia from now.
Deet came home and went
to bed with Leyel still typing away. She knew the look he had when he
was fully engaged in writing--she did nothing to disturb him. He
noticed her enough to realize that she was carefully leaving him
alone. Then he settled back into writing.
The next morning she
awoke to find him lying in bed beside her, still dressed. A personal
message capsule lay on the floor in the doorway from the bedroom. He
had finished his questions. She bent over, picked it up, took it with
her to the library.
“His questions
aren’t academic after all, Deet.”
“I told you they
weren’t.”
“Hari was right.
For all that he seemed to be a dilettante, with his money and his
rejection of the universities, he’s a man of substance.”
“Will the Second
Foundation benefit, then, if he comes up with an answer to his
question?”
“I don’t
know, Deet. Hari was the fortune-teller. Presumably mankind is
already human, so it isn’t as if we have to start the process
over.”
“Do you think not?”
“What, should we
find some uninhabited planet and put some newborns on it and let them
grow up feral, and then come back in a thousand years and try to turn
them human?”
“I
have a better idea. Let’s take ten thousand worlds filled with
people who live their lives like animals, always hungry, always quick
with their teeth and their claws, and let’s strip away the
veneer of civilization to expose to them what they really are. And
then, when they see themselves clearly, let’s come back and
teach them how to be really
human this time, instead of only having bits and flashes of
humanity.”
“All right. Let’s
do that.”
“I knew you’d
see it my way.”
“Just
make sure your husband finds out how
the trick is done. Then we have all the time in the world to set
it up and pull it off.”
When the index was done,
Deet brought Leyel with her to the library when she went to work in
the morning. She did not take him to Indexing, but rather installed
him in a private research room lined with vids--only instead of
giving the illusion of windows looking out onto an outside scene, the
screens filled all the walls from floor to ceiling, so it seemed that
he was on a pinnacle high above the scene, without walls or even a
railing to keep him from falling off. It gave him flashes of vertigo
when he looked around--only the door broke the illusion. For a moment
he thought of asking for a different room. But then he remembered
Indexing, and realized that maybe he’d do better work if he too
felt a bit off balance all the time.
At first the indexing
seemed obvious. He brought the first page of his questions to the
lector display and began to read. The lector would track his pupils,
so that whenever he paused to gaze at a word, other references would
begin to pop up in the space beside the page he was reading. Then
he’d glance at one of the references. When it was uninteresting
or obvious, he’d skip to the next reference, and the first one
would slide back on the display, out of the way, but still there if
he changed his mind and wanted it.
If a reference engaged
him, then when he reached the last line of the part of it on display,
it would expand to full-page size and slide over to stand in front of
the main text. Then, if this new material had been indexed, it would
trigger new references--and so on, leading him farther and farther
away from the original document until he finally decided to go back
and pick up where he left off.
So far, this was what any
index could be expected to do. It was only as he moved farther into
reading his own questions that he began to realize the quirkiness of
this index. Usually, index references were tied to important words,
so that if you just wanted to stop and think without bringing up a
bunch of references you didn’t want, all you had to do was keep
your gaze focused in an area of placeholder words, empty phrases like
“If this were all that could be...” Anyone who made it a
habit to read indexed works soon learned this trick and used it till
it became reflex.
But when Leyel stopped on
such empty phrases, references came up anyway. And instead of having
a clear relationship to the text, sometimes the references were
perverse or comic or argumentative. For instance, he paused in the
middle of reading his argument that archaeological searches for
“primitiveness” were useless in the search for origins
because all “primitive” cultures represented a decline
from a star-going culture. He had written the phrase “ All this
primitivism is useful only because it predicts what we might become
if we’re careless and don’t preserve our fragile links
with civilization. “ By habit his eyes focused on the empty
words “what we might become if.” Nobody could index a
phrase like that.
Yet they had. Several
references appeared. And so instead of staying within his reverie, he
was distracted, drawn to what the indexers had tied to such an absurd
phrase.
One of the references was
a nursery rhyme that he had forgotten he knew:
Wrinkly Grandma Posey
Rockets all are rosy.
Lift off, drift off,
All fall down.
Why
in the world had the indexer put that
in? The first thought that came to Leyel’s mind was himself
and some of the servants’ children, holding hands and walking
in a circle, round and round till they came to the last words,
whereupon they threw themselves to the ground and laughed insanely.
The sort of game that only little children could possibly think was
fun.
Since his eyes lingered
on the poem, it moved to the main document display and new references
appeared. One was a scholarly article on the evolution of the poem,
speculating that it might have arisen during the early days of
starflight on the planet of origin, when rockets may have been used
to escape from a planet’s gravity well. Was that why this poem
had been indexed to his article? Because it was tied to the planet of
origin?
No, that was too obvious.
Another article about the poem was more helpful. It rejected the
early-days-of-rockets idea, because the earliest versions of the poem
never used the word “rocket. “ The oldest extant version
went like this:
Wrinkle down a rosy,
Pock--a fock--a posy,
Lash us, dash us,
All fall down.
Obviously, said the
commentator, these were mostly nonsense words--the later versions had
arisen because children had insisted on trying to make sense of them.
And it occurred to Leyel
that perhaps this was why the indexer had linked this poem to his
phrase--because the poem had once been nonsense, but we insisted on
making sense out of it.
Was this a comment on
Leyel’s whole search for origins? Did the indexer think it was
useless?
No--the poem had been
tied to the empty phrase “what we might become if.” Maybe
the indexer was saying that human beings are like this poem--our
lives make no sense, but we insist on making sense out of them.
Didn’t Deet say something like that once, when she was talking
about the role of storytelling in community formation? The universe
resists causality, she said. But human intelligence demands it. So we
tell stories to impose causal relationships among the unconnected
events of the world around us.
That includes ourselves,
doesn’t it? Our own lives are nonsense, but we impose a story
on them, we sort our memories into cause-and-effect chains, forcing
them to make sense even though they don’t. Then we take the sum
of our stories and call it our “self.” This poem shows us
the process--from randomness to meaning--and then we think our
meanings are “true.”
But somehow all the
children had come to agree on the new version of the poem. By the
year 2000 G.E., only the final and current version existed in all the
worlds, and it had remained constant ever since. How was it that all
the children on every world came to agree on the same version? How
did the change spread? Did ten thousand kids on ten thousand worlds
happen to make up the same changes?
It had to be word of
mouth. Some kid somewhere made a few changes, and his version spread.
A few years, and all the children in his neighborhood use the new
version, and then all the kids in his city, on his planet. It could
happen very quickly, in fact, because each generation of children
lasts only a few years--seven-year-olds might take the new version as
a joke, but repeat it often enough that five-year-olds think it’s
the true version of the poem, and within a few years there’s
nobody left among the children who remembers the old way.
A thousand years is long
enough for the new version of the poem to spread. Or for five or a
dozen new versions to collide and get absorbed into each other and
then spread back, changed, to worlds that had revised the poem once
or twice already.
And as Leyel sat there,
thinking these thoughts, he conjured up an image in his mind of a
network of children, bound to each other by the threads of this poem,
extending from planet to planet throughout the Empire, and then back
through time, from one generation of children to the previous one, a
three-dimensional fabric that bound all children together from the
beginning.
And yet as each child
grew up, he cut himself free from the fabric of that poem. No longer
would he hear the words “Wrinkly Grandma Posey” and
immediately join hands with the child next to him. He wasn’t
part of the song any more.
But his own children
were. And then his grandchildren. All joining hands with each other,
changing from circle to circle, in a never-ending human chain
reaching back to some long-forgotten ritual on one of the worlds of
mankind--maybe, maybe on the planet of origin itself.
The vision was so clear,
so overpowering, that when he finally noticed the lector display it
was as sudden and startling as waking up. He had to sit there,
breathing shallowly, until he calmed himself, until his heart stopped
beating so fast.
He had found some part of
his answer, though he didn’t understand it yet. That fabric
connecting all the children, that was part of what made us human,
though he didn’t know why. This strange and perverse indexing
of a meaningless phrase had brought him a new way of looking at the
problem. Not that the universal culture of children was a new idea.
Just that he had never thought of it as having anything to do with
the origin question.
Was this what the indexer
meant by including this poem? Had the indexer also seen this vision?
Maybe, but probably not.
It might have been nothing more than the idea of becoming something
that made the indexer think of transformation--becoming old, like
wrinkly Grandma Posey? Or it might have been a general thought about
the spread of humanity through the stars, away from the planet of
origin, that made the indexer remember how the poem seemed to tell of
rockets that rise up from a planet, drift for a while, then come down
to settle on a planet. Who knows what the poem meant to the indexer?
Who knows why it occurred to her to link it with his document on that
particular phrase?
Then Leyel realized that
in his imagination, he was thinking of Deet making that particular
connection. There was no reason to think it was her work, except that
in his mind she was all the indexers. She had joined them, become one
of them, and so when indexing work was being done, she was part of
it. That’s what it meant to be part of a community--all its
works became, to a degree, your works. All that the indexers did,
Deet was a part of it, and therefore Deet had done it.
Again the image of a
fabric came to mind, only this time it was a topologically impossible
fabric, twisted into itself so that no matter what part of the edge
of it you held, you held the entire edge, and the middle, too. It was
all one thing, and each part held the whole within it.
But
if that was true, then when Deet came to join the library, so did
Leyel, because she contained Leyel within her. So in coming here, she
had not left him at all. Instead, she had woven him into a new
fabric, so that instead of losing something he was gaining. He was
part of all this, because she
was, and so if he lost her it would only be because he rejected
her.
Leyel covered his eyes
with his hands. How did his meandering thoughts about the origin
question lead him to thinking about his marriage? Here he thought he
was on the verge of profound understanding, and then he fell back
into self-absorption.
He cleared away all the
references to “Wrinkly Grandma Posey” or “Wrinkle
Down a Rosy” or whatever it was, then returned to reading his
original document, trying to confine his thoughts to the subject at
hand.
Yet it was a losing
battle. He could not escape from the seductive distraction of the
index. He’d be reading about tool use and technology, and how
it could not be the dividing line between human and animal because
there were animals that made tools and taught their use to others.
Then, suddenly, the index
would have him reading an ancient terror tale about a man who wanted
to be the greatest genius of all time, and he believed that the only
thing preventing him from achieving greatness was the hours he lost
in sleep. So he invented a machine to sleep for him, and it worked
very well until he realized that the machine was having all his
dreams. Then he demanded that his machine tell him what it was
dreaming.
The machine poured forth
the most astonishing, brilliant thoughts ever imagined by any
man--far wiser than anything this man had ever written during his
waking hours. The man took a hammer and smashed the machine, so that
he could have his dreams back. But even when he started sleeping
again, he was never able to come close to the clarity of thought that
the machine had had.
Of course he could never
publish what the machine had written--it would be unthinkable to put
forth the product of a machine as if it were the work of a man. After
the man died--in despair--people found the printed text of what the
machine had written, and thought the man had written it and hidden it
away. They published it, and he was widely acclaimed as the greatest
genius who had ever lived.
This was universally
regarded as an obscenely horrifying tale because it had a machine
stealing part of a man ‘s mind and using it to destroy him, a
common theme. But why did the indexer refer to it in the midst of a
discussion of tool-making?
Wondering
about that led Leyel to think that this story itself was a kind of
tool. Just like the machine the man in the story had made. The
storyteller gave his dreams to the story, and then when people heard
it or read it, his dreams--his nightmares--came out to live in their
memories. Clear and sharp and terrible and true, those dreams they
received. And yet if he tried to tell
them the same truths, directly, not in the form of a story,
people would think his ideas were silly and small.
And then Leyel remembered
what Deet had said about how people absorb stories from their
communities and take them into themselves and use these stories to
form their own spiritual autobiography. They remember doing what the
heroes of the stories did, and so they continue to act out each
hero’s character in their own lives, or, failing that, they
measure themselves against the standard the story set for them.
Stories become the human conscience, the human mirror.
Again, as so many other
times, he ended these ruminations with his hands pressed over his
eyes, trying to shut out--or lock in?--images of fabrics and mirrors,
worlds and atoms, until finally, finally, he opened his eyes and saw
Deet and Zay sitting in front of him.
No, leaning over him. He
was on a low bed, and they knelt beside him.
“Am I ill?”
he asked. “I hope not,” said Deet. “We found you on
the floor. You’re exhausted, Leyel. I’ve been telling
you--you have to eat, you have to get a normal amount of sleep.
You’re not young enough to keep up this work schedule. “
“I’ve barely
started.”
Zay laughed lightly.
“Listen to him, Deet. I told you he was so caught up in this
that he didn’t even know what day it was.”
“You’ve been
doing this for three weeks, Leyel. For the last week you haven’t
even come home. I bring you food, and you won’t eat. People
talk to you, and you forget that you’re in a conversation, you
just drift off into some sort of trance. Leyel, I wish I’d
never brought you here, I wish I’d never suggested indexing--”
“No!” Leyel
cried. He struggled to sit up.
At first Deet tried to
push him back down, insisting he should rest. It was Zay who helped
him sit. “Let the man talk,” she said. “Just
because you’re his wife doesn’t mean you can stop him
from talking.”
“The
index is wonderful,” said Leyel. “Like a tunnel opened up
into my own mind. I keep seeing light just that
far out of reach, and then I wake up and it’s just me alone
on a pinnacle except for the pages up on the lector. I keep losing
it--”
“No,
Leyel, we keep losing you.
The index is poisoning you, it’s taking over your mind--“
“Don’t be
absurd, Deet. You’re the one who suggested this, and you’re
right. The index keeps surprising me, making me think in new ways.
There are some answers already.”
“Answers?”
asked Zay.
“I don’t know
how well I can explain it. What makes us human. It has to do with
communities and stories and tools and--it has to do with you and me,
Deet.”
“I should hope
we’re human,” she said. Teasing him, but also urging him
on.
“We lived together
all those years, and we formed a community--with our children, till
they left, and then just us. But we were like animals. “
“Only sometimes,”
she said.
“I mean like
herding animals, or primate tribes, or any community that’s
bound together only by the rituals and patterns of the present
moment. We had our customs, our habits. Our private language of words
and gestures, our dances, all the things that flocks of geese and
hives of bees can do.”
“Very primitive. “
“Yes, that’s
right, don’t you see? That’s a community that dies with
each generation. When we die, Deet, it will all be gone with us.
Other people will marry, but none of them will know our dances and
songs and language and--”
“Our children will.
“
“No,
that’s my point. They knew us, they even think they know
us, but they were never part of the community of our marriage.
Nobody is. Nobody can be. That’s why, when I thought you
were leaving me for this”
“When did you think
that I--”
“Hush, Deet,”
said Zay. “Let the man babble.”
“When I thought you
were leaving me, I felt like I was dead, like I was losing
everything, because if you weren’t part of our marriage, then
there was nothing left. You see?”
“I don’t see
what that has to do with human origins, Leyel. I only know that I
would never leave you, and I can’t believe that you could
think--”
“Don’t
distract him, Deet.”
“It’s the
children. All the children. They play Wrinkly Grandma Posey, and then
they grow up and don’t play any more, so the actual community
of these particular five or six children doesn’t exist any
more--but other kids are still doing the dance. Chanting the poem.
For ten thousand years!”
“This makes us
human? Nursery rhymes?”
“They’re
all part of the same community! Across all the empty space between
the stars, there are still connections, they’re still somehow
the same kids. Ten
thousand years, ten thousand worlds, quintillions of children, and
they all knew the poem, they all did the dance. Story and ritual--it
doesn’t die with the tribe, it doesn’t stop at the
border. Children who never met face-to-face, who lived so far apart
that the light from one star still hasn’t reached the other,
they belonged to the same community. We’re human because we
conquered time and space. We conquered the barrier of perpetual
ignorance between one person and another. We found a way to slip my
memories into your head, and yours into mine. “
“But these are the
ideas you already rejected, Leyel. Language and community and--”
“No!
No, not just language, not just tribes of chimpanzees chattering at
each other. Stories,
epic tales that define a community, mythic tales that teach us
how the world works, we use them to create each other. We became a
different species, we became human, because we found a way to
extend gestation beyond the womb, a way to give each child ten
thousand parents that he’ll never meet face-to-face.”
Then, at last, Leyel fell
silent, trapped by the inadequacy of his words. They couldn’t
tell what he had seen in his mind. If they didn’t already
understand, they never would.
“Yes,” said
Zay. “I think indexing your paper was a very good idea. “
Leyel sighed and lay back
down on the bed. “I shouldn’t have tried.”
“On the contrary,
you’ve succeeded,” said Zay. Deet shook her head. Leyel
knew why--Deet was trying to signal Zay that she shouldn’t
attempt to soothe Leyel with false praise.
“Don’t hush
me, Deet. I know what I’m saying. I may not know Leyel as well
as you do, but I know truth when I hear it. In a way, I think Hari
knew it instinctively. That’s why he insisted on all his silly
holodisplays, forcing the poor citizens of Terminus to put up with
his pontificating every few years. It was his way of continuing to
create them, of remaining alive within them. Making them feel like
their lives had purpose behind them. Mythic and epic story, both at
once. They’ll all carry a bit of Hari Seldon within them just
the way that children carry their parents with them to the grave. “
At first Leyel could only
hear the idea that Hari would have approved of his ideas of human
origin. Then he began to realize that there was much more to what Zay
had said than simple affirmation.
“You knew Hari
Seldon?”
“A little,”
said Zay.
“Either tell him or
don’t,” said Deet. “You can’t take him this
far in, and not bring him the rest of the way.”
“I knew Hari the
way you know Deet,” said Zay.
“No,” said
Leyel. “He would have mentioned you.”
“Would he? He never
mentioned his students.”
“He had thousands
of students.”
“I know, Leyel. I
saw them come and fill his lecture halls and listen to the half-baked
fragments of psychohistory that he taught them. But then he’d
come away, here to the library, into a room where the Pubs never go,
where he could speak words that the Pubs would never hear, and there
he’d teach his real students. Here is the only place where the
science of psychohistory lives on, where Deet’s ideas about the
formation of community actually have application, where your own
vision of the origin of humanity will shape our calculations for the
next thousand years. “
Leyel was dumbfounded.
“In the Imperial Library? Hari had his own college here in the
library?”
“Where else? He had
to leave us at the end, when it was time to go public with his
predictions of the Empire’s fall. Then the Pubs started
watching him in earnest, and in order to keep them from finding us,
he couldn’t ever come back here again. It was the most terrible
thing that ever happened to us. As if he died, for us, years before
his body died. He was part of us, Leyel, the way that you and Deet
are part of each other. She knows. She joined us before he left.”
It stung. To have had
such a great secret, and not to have been included. “Why Deet,
and not me?”
“Don’t you
know, Leyel? Our little community’s survival was the most
important thing. As long as you were Leyel Forska, master of one of
the greatest fortunes in history, you couldn’t possibly be part
of this--it would have provoked too much comment, too much attention.
Deet could come, because Commissioner Chen wouldn’t care that
much what she did--he never takes spouses seriously, just one of the
ways he proves himself to be a fool.”
“But Hari always
meant for you to be one of us,” said Deet. “His worst
fear was that you’d go off half-cocked and force your way into
the First Foundation, when all along he wanted you in this one. The
Second Foundation.”
Leyel remembered his last
interview with Hari. He tried to remember--did Hari ever lie to him?
He told him that Deet couldn’t go to Terminus--but now that
took on a completely different meaning. The old fox! He never lied at
all, but he never told the truth, either.
Zay went on. “It
was tricky, striking the right balance, encouraging you to provoke
Chen just enough that he’d strip away your fortune and then
forget you, but not so much that he’d have you imprisoned or
killed.”
“You were making
that happen?”
“No, no, Leyel. It
was going to happen anyway, because you’re who you are and Chen
is who he is. But there was a range of possibility, somewhere between
having you and Deet tortured to death on the one hand, and on the
other hand having you and Rom conspire to assassinate Chen and take
control of the Empire. Either of those extremes would have made it
impossible for you to be part of the Second Foundation. Hari was
convinced--and so is Deet, and so am I--that you belong with us. Not
dead. Not in politics. Here.”
It was outrageous, that
they should make such choices for him, without telling him. How could
Deet have kept it secret all this time? And yet they were so
obviously correct. If Hari had told him about this Second Foundation,
Leyel would have been eager, proud to join it. Yet Leyel couldn’t
have been told, couldn’t have joined them until Chen no longer
perceived him as a threat.
“What makes you
think Chen will ever forget me?”
“Oh, he’s
forgotten you, all right. In fact, I’d guess that by tonight
he’ll have forgotten everything he ever knew.”
“What do you mean?”
“How do you think
we’ve dared to speak so openly today, after keeping silence for
so long? After all, we aren’t in Indexing now.”
Leyel felt a thrill of
fear run through him. “They can hear us?”
“If they were
listening. At the moment, though, the Pubs are very busy helping Rom
Divart solidify his control of the Commission of Public Safety. And
if Chen hasn’t been taken to the radiation chamber, he soon
will be.”
Leyel couldn’t help
himself. The news was too glorious--he sprang up from his bed, almost
danced at the news. “Rom ‘s doing it! After all these
years--overthrowing the old spider!”
“It’s more
important than mere justice or revenge,” said Zay. “We’re
absolutely certain that a significant number of governors and
prefects and military commanders will refuse to recognize the
overlordship of the Commission of Public Safety. It will take Rom
Divart the rest of his life just to put down the most dangerous of
the rebels. In order to concentrate his forces on the great rebels
and pretenders close to Trantor, he’ll grant an unprecedented
degree of independence to many, many worlds on the periphery. To all
intents and purposes, those outer worlds will no longer be part of
the Empire. Imperial authority will not touch them, and their taxes
will no longer flow inward to Trantor. The Empire is no longer
Galactic. The death of Commissioner Chen--today--will mark the
beginning of the fall of the Galactic Empire, though no one but us
will notice what it means for decades, even centuries to come.”
“So soon after
Hari’s death. Already his predictions are coming true. “
“Oh, it isn’t
just coincidence, “ said Zay. “One of our agents was able
to influence Chen just enough to ensure that he sent Rom Divart in
person to strip you of your fortune. That was what pushed Rom over
the edge and made him carry out this coup. Chen would have fallenor
died--sometime in the next year and a half no matter what we did. But
I’ll admit we took a certain pleasure in using Hari’s
death as a trigger to bring him down a little early, and under
circumstances that allowed us to bring you into the library. “
“We also used it as
a test,” said Deet. “We’re trying to find ways of
influencing individuals without their knowing it. It’s still
very crude and haphazard, but in this case we were able to influence
Chen with great success. We had to do it--your life was at stake, and
so was the chance of your joining us.”
“I feel like a
puppet,” said Leyel.
“Chen was the
puppet,” said Zay. “You were the prize. “
“That’s
all nonsense,” said Deet. “Hari loved you. I
love you. You’re a great man. The Second Foundation had to
have you. And everything you’ve said and stood for all your
life made it clear that you were hungry to be part of our work.
Aren’t you?”.
“Yes,” said
Leyel. Then he laughed. “The index!”
“What’s so
funny?” asked Zay, looking a little miffed. “We worked
very hard on it.”
“And it was
wonderful, transforming, hypnotic. To take all these people and put
them together as if they were a single mind, far wiser in its
intuition than anyone could ever be alone. The most intensely
unified, the most powerful human community that’s ever existed.
If it’s our capacity for storytelling that makes us human, then
perhaps our capacity for indexing will make us something better than
human.”
Deet patted Zay’s
hand. “Pay no attention to him, Zay. This is clearly the mad
enthusiasm of a proselyte.”
Zay
raised an eyebrow. “ I’m
still waiting for him to explain why the index made him laugh.
“
Leyel obliged her.
“Because all the time, I kept thinking--how could librarians
have done this? Mere librarians! And now I discover that these
librarians are all of Hari Seldon’s prize students. My
questions were indexed by psychohistorians!”
“Not
exclusively. Most of us are
librarians. Or machinists, or custodians, or whatever--the
psychologists and psychohistorians are rather a thin current in the
stream of the library. At first they were seen as outsiders.
Researchers. Users of the library, not members of it. That’s
what Deet’s work has been for these last few years--trying to
bind us all together into one community. She came here as a
researcher too, remember? Yet now she has made everyone’s
allegiance to the library more important than any other loyalty. It’s
working beautifully too, Leyel, you’ll see. Deet is a marvel.”
“We’re
all creating it
together,” said Deet. “It helps that the couple of
hundred people I’m trying to bring in are so knowledgeable and
understanding of the human mind. They understand exactly what I’m
doing and then try to help me make it work. And it isn’t
fully successful yet. As years go by, we have to see the psychology
group teaching and accepting the children of librarians and
machinists and medical officers, in full equality with their own, so
that the psychologists don’t become a ruling caste. And then
intermarriage between the groups. Maybe in a hundred years we’ll
have a truly cohesive community. This is a democratic city-state
we’re building, not an academic department or a social club.”
Leyel was off on his own
tangent. It was almost unbearable for him to realize that there were
hundreds of people who knew Hari’s work, while Leyel didn’t.
“You have to teach me!” Leyel said. “Everything
that Hari taught you, all the things that have been kept from me--”
“Oh,
eventually, Leyel,” said Zay. “At present, though, we’re
much more interested in what you have to teach us.
Already, I’m sure, a transcription of the things you said
when you first woke up is being spread through the library.”
“It was recorded?”
asked Leyel.
“We didn’t
know if you were going to go catatonic on us at any moment, Leyel.
You have no idea how you’ve been worrying us. Of course we
recorded it--they might have been your last words.”
“They won’t
be. I don’t feel tired at all.”
“Then you’re
not as bright as we thought. Your body is dangerously weak. You’ve
been abusing yourself terribly. You’re not a young man, and we
insist that you stay away from your lector for a couple of days. “
“What, are you now
my doctor?”
“Leyel,”
Deet said, touching him on his shoulder the way she always did when
he needed calming. “You have
been examined by doctors. And you’ve got to realize--Zay is
First Speaker. “
“Does that mean
she’s commander?”
“This isn’t
the Empire,” said Zay, “and I’m not Chen. All that
it means to be First Speaker is that I speak first when we meet
together. And then, at the end, I bring together all that has been
said and express the consensus of the group. “
“That’s
right,” said Deet. “Everybody
thinks you ought to rest.”
“Everybody
knows about me?” asked Leyel.
“Of
course,” said Zay. “With Hari dead you’re the most
original thinker we have. Our work needs you. Naturally we care about
you. Besides, Deet loves you so much, and we love Deer
so much, we feel like we’re all a little bit in love with
you ourselves.”
She
laughed, and so did Leyel, and so did Deet. Leyel noticed, though,
that when he asked whether they all knew
of him, she had answered that they cared about him and loved him.
Only when Zay said this did he realize that she had answered the
question he really meant to ask.
“And while you’re
recuperating,” Zay continued, “Indexing will have a go at
your new theory--”
“Not
a theory, just a proposal, just a thought--”
“--and
a few psychohistorians will see whether it can be quantified, perhaps
by some variation on the formulas we’ve been using with Deet’s
laws of community development. Maybe we can turn origin studies into
a real science yet.”
“Maybe,”
Leyel said.
“Feel all right
about this?” asked Zay.
“I’m not
sure. Mostly. I’m very excited, but I’m also a little
angry at how I’ve been left out, but mostly I’m--I’m
so relieved.”
“Good. You’re
in a hopeless muddle. You’ll do your best work if we can keep
you off balance forever.” With that, Zay led him back to the
bed, helped him lie down, and then left the room.
Alone with Deet, Leyel
had nothing to say. He just held her hand and looked up into her
face, his heart too full to say anything with words. All the news
about Hari’s byzantine plans and a Second Foundation full of
psychohistorians and Rom Divart taking over the government--that
receded into the background. What mattered was this: Deet’s
hand in his, her eyes looking into his, and her heart, her self, her
soul so closely bound to his that he couldn’t tell and didn’t
care where he left off and she began.
How could he ever have
imagined that she was leaving him? They had created each other
through all these years of marriage. Deet was the most splendid
accomplishment of his life, and he was the most valued creation of
hers. We are each other’s parent, each other’s child. We
might accomplish great works that will live on in this other
community, the library, the Second Foundation. But the greatest work
of all is the one that will die with us, the one that no one else
will ever know of, because they remain perpetually outside. We can’t
even explain it to them. They don’t have the language to
understand us. We cat) only speak it to each other.
A Word or Two from Janet
by Janet
Jeppson Asimov
I AM OFTEN ASKED
WHAT IT’S LIKE TO BE ISAAC ASIMOV’S WIFE or, as he
referred to me in a recent speech, “the present holder of that
enviable position.” I usually mull over several possible
answers:
1. Isaac is,
conveniently, a walking dictionary and encyclopedia, able to impart
information quickly, accurately, and eloquently because he has
well-honed powers of expression and an incredible memory--which gets
him into trouble, since there are too many things he can’t
forget. For instance, he is likely to say sadly, “This is the
one hundred eighty-third anniversary of the Battle of Austerlitz and
nobody cares!” Each December 2, since I have forgotten what he
told me the year before, I have to ask him to explain allover again.
Fortunately, although he does not put up with fools gladly, he puts
up with me, and explains.
2. Isaac is reassuringly
rational, with exceptions. He believes in the spectacular law--that
if he flips up the dark spectacles attached to his eyeglasses, the
sun will come out, and vice versa. Furthermore, in the baseball
season he thinks the Mets will lose any game he dares to watch. Once
they start losing, he turns off the TV and shouts, “I have to
stop watching and go back to my typewriter to give them a chance!”
3. He has a wonderful lack
of fear about showing emotion. Not only is he affectionate and
demonstrative, he doesn’t even know what a stiff upper lip is.
Isaac’s lower lip quivers most when he has to have a blood
sample drawn, but even then he manages to flirt with the female doing
it. He’s not afraid to cry (he always does when he reads
Enobarbus’s last speech or sings ‘Danny Boy’), and
will do so even in public, the way he did at Newton’s grave.
4. Isaac has a point of
view that makes me glad I know him. For instance, he woke up once
with his legs making running motions in the bed. He said, “I
dreamt someone told me I was making a good living out of writing, and
I said yes indeed I was. Then the person said, ‘It’s
amazing to see someone make all that money out of beaten swords.’
I was running to tell you because it instantly struck me that the
phrase meant I made my money out of the instruments of peace--the pen
is mightier than the sword and thou shalt beat thy swords into
plowshares.”
As you can see, there are
many answers to the question of what it’s like to be Isaac
Asimov’s wife, but the best is that my spouse defies
description. Oddly enough, people always seem to be describing Isaac,
and he is still on speaking terms with most of them. Perhaps
paleontologist Simpson’s description is definitive--”Isaac
Asimov is a natural wonder and a national resource.” I can
testify that he is a wonder, completely natural, infinitely
resourceful, and a dear.
We have a little wooden
sculpture of two old people placidly sitting side by side, leaning
toward each other. To me, they represent the contentment of being
part of the pattern of life, together. The pattern includes intimacy
and creativity, which have a lot in common because both take
commitment, concentration, openness, effort, and inspiration.
My personal fiftieth
anniversary with Isaac Asimov occurs in the third decade of the next
century. Since life contains the three essential elements of a good
work of fiction--a beginning, a middle, and an end--it is possible
that Isaac and I won’t be here for that anniversary, but his
books will. And the stories people write because of him. Like those
in this book, done with love.
Fifty Years
by Isaac
Asimov
I’VE GOT TO
START BY EXPRESSING THANKS. I WANT TO THANK Martin H. Greenberg for
having the idea of memorializing my fifty years in science fiction in
this fashion. I want to thank Tor Books for publishing the book. I
want to thank all my fellow writers who have contributed stories to
this book, and who have, in this way, demonstrated the fact that they
feel friendly toward me and kindly toward my works. And I want to
thank Janet for contributing, too, in all the ways she does
and has.
This is all more than I
deserve, for it means I have made my way through life making so many
friends and so remarkably few enemies that I must have done something
right by accident, and I’m grateful for that more than anything
else.
But it’s fifty
years! That’s why all this is happening! Fifty years! Half a
century!
So let’s see what
thoughts this gives rise to
1.
Fifty years. It’s
a reasonably long time. Merely to live for fifty years is not
terribly unusual these days, but many great people have not managed.
Joan of Arc died at nineteen. Of the great poets: John Keats died at
twenty-six; Percy Bysshe Shelley died at thirty; George Gordon Noel
Byron died at thirty-six; Edgar Allan Poe died at forty. Of the great
scientists, Sadi Carnot died at thirty-six; Heinrich Rudolf Hertz
died at thirty-six; James C. Maxwell died at forty-eight.
When you pass the
half-century mark, with all this in mind, you can’t help but
feel a bit hangdog about it. The Greeks visualized the three Fates:
Clotho (“spinner”), who formed the thread of life;
Lachesis (“determiner by lot”), who measured its length;
and Atropos (“unswervable”), who cut it, in the end. I
thank them all as well. I thank Clotho for spinning such a good life;
Lachesis for spinning one that is longer than those of many others
far more deserving than myself; and to Atropos for withholding her
formidable shears for as long as she has.
2.
Fifty years of
professional work. But it’s not just fifty years. It’s
fifty years in a single profession, that of writing. My first story
appeared in 1939 and there has been a regular procession of stories,
essays, and books of all sorts ever since.
When Charles Dickens died
at fifty-eight, he had been publishing for only thirty-five years.
When Alexandre Dumas died at fifty-eight, he had been publishing for
only forty-one years. William Shakespeare, who died at fifty-two,
turned out all his professional works over a period of only thirty
years.
Mind
you, I am only talking length of professional life here; I am not
talking quality. Anyone work of these gentlemen--David
Copperfield, The Count of Monte Cristo, or Hamlet is
worth innumerable times my entire oeuvre. I know that, so don’t
bother writing to inform me of this matter.
Rather,
I am merely telling you this in order to explain how grateful I am
that I have been allowed a full fifty years at my profession--and
still going. Nothing I write can be within light-years of
Shakespeare, but this I will maintain as loudly as I can, and to my
dying day. Everything I write has given me
as much pleasure as anything Shakespeare wrote could have given
him, so is not length of professional life something to be
grateful for?
3.
Fifty years as a science
fiction writer. But it’s not just fifty years of
professional life, either. It’s this particular professional
life. Just think what the last fifty years has meant to a science
fiction writer. When I began writing, robots were pure fantasy. So I
wrote robot stories freely out of my own imagination. The first one
was written in June 1939. I have lived long enough to see robots (in
very simple form) become real, and to have my Three Laws of Robotics
taken seriously.
Flights
to the moon were sheer fantasy in 1939, and my first story in
Astounding dealt
with attempted rocketry to the moon. I lived to see that become
real.
Think of other science
fictional standbys that have become real (even if I didn’t
particularly write about them myself). There were no computers in
1939, and no television either, though both existed in science
fiction. Science was also overflowing with ray-guns, and we have
lived to see laser beams.
How fortunate I was to
have started when I did and to have lived as long as I have.
--But it all comes full
circle. More important than anything else are one’s friends.
Foundation’s friends are all my friends, whether they have
written for the book, or published it, or bought it or borrowed it.
My friends are all those who have read my stuff over the last
half-century and have enjoyed it.
I thank you all. I cannot
thank you enough.