"Pohl, Frederick - Spending a Day at the Lottery Fair" - читать интересную книгу автора (Pohl Frederick)by Frederik Pohl Version 1.0
All writers have favorite themes and return to them
over and over-even when they don't intend to and
perhaps, as in my own case, don't realize quite how
often they've done so until it comes time to put a
collection of stories together. Their excuse (which I
do dearly hope you will find justified in the present
examples) is that a new treatment, a new setting, a
new angle of attack can refresh an argument-especially
an argument that seems worth making in the
first place. At any rate, this story came about in the
summer of 1982, when curiosity led me to Knoxville
to see how they were doing with their first-ever world's
fair. I am no great connoisseur of world's fairs; I'd
only been to three before Knoxville-the pair in New
York City a generation apart and the 1970 event in
Osaka, Japan. Knoxville was a much smaller spectacle.
Still, it had a lot of interesting exhibits and a
holiday-carnival atmosphere; I had a good time. The
locals I talked to seemed to be enjoying it a lot less,
and when I asked them why so glum, they reported
that it was losing money by the fistful and pot. What
then (I wondered) was the reason for having it? Echo
gave me an answer, and so I went back to my hotel
room and began writing this story.
They were the Baxter family, Randolph and Millicent
the parents, with their three children, Emma and
Simon and Louisa, who was the littlest; and they didn't
come to the fair in any old bus. No, they drove up in a
taxi, all the way from their home clear on the other side
of town, laughing and poking each other, and when they
got out, Randolph Baxter gave the driver a really big tip.
It wasn't that he could really afford it. It was just because
he felt it was the right thing to do. When you took your
whole family to the Lottery Fair, Baxter believed, you
might as well do it in style. Besides, the fare was only
money. Though Millicent Baxter pursed her lips when she
saw the size of the tip, she certainly was not angry; her
eyes sparkled as brightly as the children's, and together
they stared at the facade of the Lottery Fair.
Even before you got through the gates there was a
carnival smell, buttered popcorn and cotton candy and
tacos all together, and a carnival sound of merry-go-round
organs and people screaming in the rollercoaster, and bands
and bagpipes from far away. A clown stalked on tall stilts
through the fairgoers lining up at the ticket windows,
bending down to chuck children under the chin and making
believe to nibble the ears of teenage girls in bright
summer shorts. Rainbow fountains splashed perfumey
spray. People in cartoon-character costumes, Gus the
Ghost and Mickey Mouse and Pac-Man, handed out free
surprise packages to the kids; when Simon opened his it
was a propeller beanie, a fan for Emma, for little Louisa
cardboard glasses with a Groucho Marx mustache. And
crowded! You could hardly believe such crowds! Off to
one side of the parking lot the tour buses were rolling in
with their loads of foreign visitors, Chinese and Argen
tines and Swedes; they had special entrances and were
waved through by special guards who greeted them, some
of the time anyway, in their own native languages-
"Willkommen! and "Bon jour!
and "Ey there, mate!
-as long as they didn't speak anything like Urdu or
SerboCroatian, anyway. For the foreign tourists didn't have to
pay in the usual way; they bought their tickets in their
country of origin, with valuable foreign exchange, and
then everything was free for them.
Of course it wasn't like that for the regular American
fairgoers. They had to pay. You could see each family
group moving up toward the ticket windows. They would
slow down as they got closer and finally stop, huddling
together while they decided how to pay, and then one or
two of them, or all of them, would move on to the window
and reach into the admissions cuff for their tickets.
Randolph Baxter had long before made up his mind that there
would be no such wrangles on this day for his family. He
said simply, "Wait here a minute, and strode up to the
window by himself. He put his arm into the cuff, smiled
at the ticket attendant, and said grandly, "I'll take five,
please.
The ticket seller looked at him admiringly. "You know,
she offered, "there aren't that many daddies who'll take
all the little fellows in like that. Sometimes they make
even tiny babies get their own tickets. Baxter gave her
a modest I-do-what-I-can shrug, though he could not help
that his smile was a little strained until all five tickets had
clicked out of the roll. He bore them proudly back to his
family and led them through the turnstiles.
"My, what a crowd, sighed Millicent Baxter happily
as she gazed around. "Now, what shall we do first?
The response was immediate. "See the old automobiles, yelled Simon, and, "No, the animals! and, "No,
the stiffs! cried his sisters.
Randolph Baxter spoke sharply to them-not angrily
but firmly. "There will be no fighting over what we do,
he commanded. "We'll vote on what we do, the demo-cratic
way. No arguments and no exceptions. Now, he
added, "the first thing we're going to do is that you kids
will stay right here while your mother and I get tickets
for the job lottery. The parents left the children arguing
viciously among themselves and headed for the nearest
lottery booth. Randolph Baxter could not help a tingle of
excitement, and his wife's eyes were gleaming, as they
studied the prize list. The first prize was the management
of a whole apartment building-twenty-five thousand dollars
a year salary and a free three-room condo thrown in!
Millicent read his thoughts as they stood in line. "Don't
you just wish! she whispered. "But personally I'd settle
for any of the others. Look, there's even a job for an
English teacher! Randolph shook his head wordlessly.
It was just marvelous-five full-time jobs offered in this
one raftle, and that not the biggest of the day. The last
one, after the fireworks, always had the grandest of prizes.
"Aren't you glad we came? Millicent asked, and her
husband nodded.
But in fact he wasn't, altogether, at least until they
safely got their tickets and were on their way back to the
children, and then he was quickly disconcerted to see that
the kids weren't where they had been left. "Oh, hell,
groaned Randolph. It was early in the day for them to get
lost.
But they weren't very far. His wife said sharply, "There
they are. And look what they're doing! They were at a
refreshment stand. And each one of them had a huge cone
of frozen custard. "L told them not to make any purchases
when we weren't with them! Millicent cried, but in fact
it was worse than that. The children were talking to a pair
of strange grownups, a lean, fair, elderly woman with a
sharp, stern face and a round, dark-skinned man with a
bald head and immense tortoise-shell glasses.
As the Baxters approached, the woman turned to them
apologetically. "Oh, hullo, she said, "you must be the
parents. I do hope you'll forgive us. Mr. Katsubishi and
I seem to have lost our tour, and your children kindly
helped us look for it.
"it's all right, Dad, Simon put in swiftly. "They're on
this foreign tour, see, and everything's free for them anyway. Dad? Why can't we get on a tour and have everything free?
"We're Americans, his father explained, smiling
tentatively at the tall English-looking woman and the tubby,
cheerful Japanese-he decided that they didn't look like
depraved child molesters. "You have to be an international
tourist to get these unlimited tickets. And I bet they
cost quite a lot of money, don't they? he appealed to the
man, who smiled and shrugged and looked at the woman.
"Mr. Katsubishi doesn't speak English very well, she
apologized. "I'm Rachel Millay. Mrs. Millay, that is,
although my dear husband left us some years ago. She
glanced about in humorous distress. "I don't suppose
you've seen a tour leader carrying a green and violet flag
with a cross of St. Andrew on it?
Since Randolph Baxter had no idea what a cross of St.
Andrew looked like, it was hard to say. In any case, there
were at least twenty tour parties in sight, each with its
own individual pennant or standard, trudging in determined
merriment toward the pavilions, the rides, or the
refreshment stands. "I'm afraid not, he began, and then
paused as his wife clutched his arm. The P.A. system
crackled, and the winners of the first drawing were announced.
Neither of the Baxters was among them. "Well, there
are six more drawings, said Millicent bravely, not adding
that there were also six more sets of raffle tickets to buy
if they wanted any hope of winning one of them. Her
husband smiled cheerfully at the children.
"What's it to be? he asked generously. "The life exhibit? The concert-
"We already voted, Dad, cried Emma, his elder
daughter. "It's the animals!
"No, the stiffs!" yelled her baby sister.
"The old autos, cried Simon. "Anyway, there won't
be any stiffs there until later, not to speak of!
Baxter smiled indulgently at the foreigners. "Children,
he explained. "Well, I do hope you find your group.
And he led the way to the first democratically selected
adventure of the day, the space exhibit.
Baxter had always had a nostalgic fondness for space,
and this was a pretty fine exhibit, harking back to the
olden, golden days when human beings could spare enough
energy and resources to send their people and probes out
toward the distant worlds. Even the kids liked it. It was
lavish with animated 3-D displays showing a human being
walking around on the surface of the Moon, and a spacecraft
slipping through the rings of Saturn, and even a
probe, though not an American one, hustling after Halley's Comet to take its picture.
But Randolph Baxter had some difficulty in concentrating on the
pleasure of the display at first because, as
they were getting their tickets, the tall, smiling black man
just ahead of him in line put his arm into the admissions
cuff, looked startled, withdrew his arm, started to speak,
and fell over on the ground, his eyes open and staring, it
seemed, right into Randolph Baxter's.
When you have a wife and three kids and no job, living
on welfare, never thinking about tomorrow because you
know there isn't going to be anything in tomorrow worth
thinking about, a day's outing for the whole family is an
event to be treasured. No matter what the price-especially
if the price isn't in money. So the Baxter family did
it all. They visited six national pavilions, even the Paraguayan.
They lunched grandly in the dining room at the
summit of the Fair's great central theme structure, the
Cenotaph. And they did the rides, all the rides, from
the Slosh-a-Slide water chutes through the immense Ferris
wheel with the wind howling through the open car and
Simon threatening to spit down on the crowds below to
the screaming, shattering rollercoaster that made little
Louisa wet her pants. Fortunately her mother had brought
clean underwear for the child. When she sent the little
girl off with her sister to change in the ladies' room, she
followed them anxiously with her eyes until they were
safely past the ticket collector and then said. "Rand, honey.
You paid for all those rides yourself.
He shrugged defensively. "I want everybody to have
a good time.
"Now, don't talk that way. We agreed. The children
and I are going to pay our own way all the rest of the
day, and the subject is closed. She proved the point by
changing it. "Look, she said, "there are those
two foreigners who lost their tour group again. She waved, and
Mrs. Millay and Mr. Katsubishi came up diffidently.
"If we're not intruding? said Mrs. Millay. "We never
did find our tour guide, you see, but actually we're getting
on quite well without. But isn't it hot! It's never like this
in Scotland.
Millicent fanned herself in agreement. "Do sit down,
Mrs. Millay. Is that where you're from, Scotland? And
you, Mr. Kat- Kats-
"Katsubishi. He smiled, with an abrupt deep bow.
Then he wrinkled his face in concentration for a moment
and managed to say: "I, too-Sukottaland.
Millicent tried not to look astonished but evidently did
not succeed. Mrs. Millay explained, "He's from around
Kyle of Lochalth, you know. Since Millicent obviously
didn't know, she added, "That's the .Japanese colony in
northern Scotland, near my own home. In fact. I teach
English to Japanese schoolchildren there, since I know
the language-my parents were missionaries in Honshu,
you see. Didn't you know about the colony'?
Actually, Millicent and Randolph did know about the
colony. Or, at least, they almost did, in the way that
human beings exposed to forty channels of television and
with nothing much to do with their time have heard of,
without really knowing much about, almost every concept,
phenomenon, event, and trend in human history. In
just that way they had heard of the United Kingdom's
pact with Japan, allowing large Japanese immigration into
an enclave in the north of Scotland. The Japanese made
the area bloom both agriculturally and economically. The
United Kingdom got a useful injection of Japanese capital
and energy, and the Japanese got rid of some of their
surplus population without pain. "I wish we'd thought of
that, Millicent observed in some envy, but her husband
shook his head.
"Different countries, different ways, he said
patriotically, "and actually we're doing rather well. I mean, just
look at the Lottery Fair! That's American ingenuity for
you. Observing that Mrs. Millay was whispering a rapid-
fire translation into Mr. Katsubishi's ear, he was encouraged
to go on. "Other countries, you see, have their
own way of handling their problems. Compulsory sterilization
of all babies born in even-numbered years in India, as I'm
sure you're aware. The contraceptive drugs
they put in the water supply in Mexico-and we won't
even talk of what they're doing in, say, Bangladesh. Mrs.
Millay shuddered sympathetically as she translated, and
the Japanese beamed and bowed then spoke rapidly.
"He says one can learn much, Mrs. Millay translated,
"from what foreign countries can do. Even America.
Millicent, glancing at the expression on her husband's
face, said brightly: "Well! Let's not let this day go to
waste. What shall we do next? At once she got the same
answers from the children: "Old cars! "Animals! "No,
whined Baby Louisa, "I wanna see the stiffs!
Mr. Katsubishi whispered something in staccato Japanese to
Mrs. Miilay, who turned hesitantly to Millieent
Baxter. "One doesn't wish to intrude, she said, "but if
you are in fact going to see the Hall of Life and Death as
your daughter suggests. . . well, we don't seem to be able
to find the rest of our tour group, you see, and we would
like to go there. After all, it is the theme center for the
entire fair, as you might say-
"Why, of course, said Millicent warmly. "We'd be
real delighted to have the company of you and Mr. Kats-
Kats--
"Katsubishi, he supplied, bowing deeply and showing
all his teeth in a smile, and they all seven set off for the
Hall of Life and Death, with little Louisa delightedly leading the way.
The hall was a low, white marble structure across the
greensward from the Cenotaph, happy picnicking families
on the green, gay pavilions all around, ice cream vendors
chanting along the roadways, and a circus parade, horses
and a giraffe and even an elephant, winding along the
main avenue with a band leading them, diddley-boom,
diddley-boom, diddley-bang! bang! bang!-all noise, and
color, and excitement. But as soon as they were within
the Hall they were in another world. The Hall of Life and
Death was the only free exhibit at the fair-even the rest
rooms were not free. The crowds that moved through the
Hall were huge. But they were also reverential. As you
came in you found yourself in a great, domed entrance
pavilion, almost bare except for seventy-five raised platforms,
each spotlighted from a concealed source, each
surrounded by an air curtain of gentle drafts. At the time
the Baxters came in more than sixty of them were already
occupied with the silent, lifeless forms of those who had
passed on at the Fair that day. A sweet-faced child here,
an elderly woman there, there, side by side, a young pair
of newlyweds. Randolph Baxter looked for and found the
tall, smiling black man who had died in the line before
him. He was smiling no longer, but his face was in repose
and almost joyous, it seemed. "He's at peace now,
Millicent whispered, touching her husband's arm, and he
nodded. He didn't want to speak out loud in this solemn
hall, where the whisper of organ music was barely audible
above the gentle hiss of chilled air curtains that wafted
past every deceased. Hardly anyone in the great crowd
spoke. The visitors lingered at each of the occupied biers;
but then, as they moved toward the back of the chamber,
they didn't linger. Some didn't even look, for every tourist
at the Fair could not help thinking, as he passed an empty
platform, that before the Fair closed that night it would
be occupied.. . by someone.
But the Rotunda of Those Who Have Gone Before was
only the anteroom to the many inspiring displays the Hall
had to offer. Even the children were fascinated. Young
Simon stood entranced before the great Timepiece of Living
and Dying, watching the hands revolve swiftly to show
how many were born and how many died in each minute,
with the bottom line always showing a few more persons
alive in every minute despite everything the government
and the efforts of patriotic citizens could do-but he was
more interested, really, in the mechanism of the thing than
in the facts it displayed. Millicent Baxter and Mrs. Millay
were really thrilled by the display of opulent caskets and
cerements, and Randolph Baxter was proud to point out
to Mr. Katsubishi the working model of a crematorium,
with all of its escaping gases trapped and converted into
valuable organic feedstocks. And the girls, Emma and
Louisa, stood hand in hand for a long time, shuddering
happily as they gazed at the refrigerated display cases
that showed a hideous four-month embryo next to the
corpse of a fat, pretty two-year-old. Emma moved to put
her arm around her mother and whispered, "Mommy, I'm
so grateful you didn't abort me. And Millicent Baxter
fought back a quick and tender tear.
"I'd never let you die looking like that, she assured
her daughter, and they clung together for a long moment.
But Randolph Baxter was becoming noticeably ill at ease.
When they finally left the Hall of Life and Death his wife
took him aside and asked in concern, "Is something the
matter, hon?
He shrugged irritably at the foreigners, who were talking together
in fast, low-toned Japanese. "Just look at
their faces, he complained. And indeed both Mr. Katsubishi and
Mrs. Millay's expressions seemed to show
more revulsion than respect.
Millicent followed her husband's eyes and sighed-
there was a little annoyance in the sigh, too. "They're not
Americans, she reminded her husband. "I guess they
just don't understand. She smiled distantly at the foreign
pair, and then looked around at her offspring. "Well,
children, who wants to come with me to the washrooms, so
we can get ready for the big fireworks?
They all did, even Randolph, but he felt a need stronger
than the urging of his bladder. He remained behind with
the foreigners. "Excuse me, he said somewhat formally,
"but may I ask what you thought of the exhibit?
She glanced at the Japanese. "Well, it was most interesting,
she said vaguely. "One doesn't wish to criticize,
of course- And she stopped there.
"No, no, please go on, Randolph encouraged.
She said, "I must say it did seem odd to, well, glory
death in that way.
Randolph Baxter smiled, and tried to make it a forgiving smile,
though he could feel that he was upset. He said,
"Perhaps you miss the point of the Hall of Life and Death-
in fact, of the whole Lottery Fair. You see, some of the
greatest minds in America have worked on this problem
of surplus population-think tanks and government agencies-why,
three universities helped design this Fair.
Every bit of it is scientifically planned. To begin with,
it's absolutely free.
Mrs. Millay left off her rapid-fire sotto vode Japanese
translation to ask, "You mean, free as far as money is
concerned?
"Yes, exactly. Of course, one takes a small chance at
every ticket window, and in that sense there is a price
for everything. A very carefully computed price, Mrs.
Millay, for every hotdog, every show, every ride. To get
into the Fair in the first place, for instance, costs one
decimill-that's one percent of a point zero zero zero one
probability of receiving a lethal injection from the ticket
cuff. Now, that's not much of a risk, is it? He smiled.
"And of course it's absolutely painless, too. As you can
see by just looking at the ones who have given their lives
inside.
Mr. Katsubishi, listening intently to Mrs. Millay's
translation in his ear, pursed his lips and nodded thought-
fully. Mrs. Millay said brightly, "Well, we all have our
own little national traits, don't we?
"Now, really, Mrs. Millay, said Randolph Baxter,
smiling with an effort, "please try to understand.
Everything is quite fair. Some things are practically free, like
the park benches and the rest rooms and so on; why, you
could use some of them as much as a million times before,
you know, your number would come up. Or you can get
a first-class meal in the Cenotaph for just about a whole
millipoint. But even that means you can do it a thousand
times, on the average.
Mr. Katsubishi listened to the end of Mrs. Millay's
translation and then struggled to get out a couple of English
words. "Not-us, he managed, pointing to himself
and Mrs. Millay.
"Certainly not, Baxter agreed. "You're foreign tourists.
So you buy your tickets in your own countries for
cash, and of course you don't have to risk your lives. It
wouldn't help the American population problem much if
you did, would it? He smiled. "And your tour money
helps pay the cost of the Fair. But the important thing to
remember is that the Lottery Fair is entirely voluntary.
No one has to come. Of course, he admitted with a self-
deprecatory grin, "I have to admit that I really like the
job lotteries. I guess I'm just a gambler at heart, and when
you've spent as much time on welfare as Mrs. Baxter and
I have, those big jobs are just hard to resist! And they're
better here than at the regular city raffles.
Mrs. Millay cleared her throat. Good manners competed with obstinacy in her expression. "Really, Mr.
Baxter, she said, "Mr. Katsubishi and I understand that-
heavens, we've had to do things in our own countries!
We certainly don't mean to criticize yours. What's hard
to understand, I suppose, is, actually, that fetus. She
searched his face with her eyes, looking for understanding.
"It just seems strange. I mean, that you'd prefer to
see a child born and then perhaps die in a lottery than to
abort him ahead of time.
Mr. Baxter did his very best to maintain a pleasant
expression, but he knew he was failing. "It's a difference
in our national philosophies, I guess, he said. "See, we
don't go in for your so-called birth control' here. No
abortion. No contraception. We accept the gift of life
when it is given. We believe that every human being, from
the moment of conception on, has a right to a life-although,
he added, "not necessarily a long one. He eyed
the abashed foreigners sternly for a moment, then relented.
"Well, he said, glancing at his watch, "I wonder
where my family can be? They'll miss the fireworks if
they don't get back. I bet Mrs. Baxter's gone and let the
children pick out souvenirs-the little dickenses have been
after us about them all day. Anyway, Mrs. Millay, Mr.
Katsubishi, it's been a real pleasure meeting the two of
you and having this chance to exchange views-
But he broke off, suddenly alarmed by the expression
on Mr. Katsubishi's face as the man looked past him.
"What's the matter? he demanded roughly.
And then he turned, and did not need an answer. The
answer was written on the strained, haggard, tear-streaked
face of his wife as she ran despairingly toward him,
carrying in her hands a plastic cap, a paperweight, and a
helium-filled balloon in the shape of a pig's head, but
without Emma and without Simon and even without little
Louisa.
by Frederik Pohl Version 1.0
All writers have favorite themes and return to them
over and over-even when they don't intend to and
perhaps, as in my own case, don't realize quite how
often they've done so until it comes time to put a
collection of stories together. Their excuse (which I
do dearly hope you will find justified in the present
examples) is that a new treatment, a new setting, a
new angle of attack can refresh an argument-especially
an argument that seems worth making in the
first place. At any rate, this story came about in the
summer of 1982, when curiosity led me to Knoxville
to see how they were doing with their first-ever world's
fair. I am no great connoisseur of world's fairs; I'd
only been to three before Knoxville-the pair in New
York City a generation apart and the 1970 event in
Osaka, Japan. Knoxville was a much smaller spectacle.
Still, it had a lot of interesting exhibits and a
holiday-carnival atmosphere; I had a good time. The
locals I talked to seemed to be enjoying it a lot less,
and when I asked them why so glum, they reported
that it was losing money by the fistful and pot. What
then (I wondered) was the reason for having it? Echo
gave me an answer, and so I went back to my hotel
room and began writing this story.
They were the Baxter family, Randolph and Millicent
the parents, with their three children, Emma and
Simon and Louisa, who was the littlest; and they didn't
come to the fair in any old bus. No, they drove up in a
taxi, all the way from their home clear on the other side
of town, laughing and poking each other, and when they
got out, Randolph Baxter gave the driver a really big tip.
It wasn't that he could really afford it. It was just because
he felt it was the right thing to do. When you took your
whole family to the Lottery Fair, Baxter believed, you
might as well do it in style. Besides, the fare was only
money. Though Millicent Baxter pursed her lips when she
saw the size of the tip, she certainly was not angry; her
eyes sparkled as brightly as the children's, and together
they stared at the facade of the Lottery Fair.
Even before you got through the gates there was a
carnival smell, buttered popcorn and cotton candy and
tacos all together, and a carnival sound of merry-go-round
organs and people screaming in the rollercoaster, and bands
and bagpipes from far away. A clown stalked on tall stilts
through the fairgoers lining up at the ticket windows,
bending down to chuck children under the chin and making
believe to nibble the ears of teenage girls in bright
summer shorts. Rainbow fountains splashed perfumey
spray. People in cartoon-character costumes, Gus the
Ghost and Mickey Mouse and Pac-Man, handed out free
surprise packages to the kids; when Simon opened his it
was a propeller beanie, a fan for Emma, for little Louisa
cardboard glasses with a Groucho Marx mustache. And
crowded! You could hardly believe such crowds! Off to
one side of the parking lot the tour buses were rolling in
with their loads of foreign visitors, Chinese and Argen
tines and Swedes; they had special entrances and were
waved through by special guards who greeted them, some
of the time anyway, in their own native languages-
"Willkommen! and "Bon jour!
and "Ey there, mate!
-as long as they didn't speak anything like Urdu or
SerboCroatian, anyway. For the foreign tourists didn't have to
pay in the usual way; they bought their tickets in their
country of origin, with valuable foreign exchange, and
then everything was free for them.
Of course it wasn't like that for the regular American
fairgoers. They had to pay. You could see each family
group moving up toward the ticket windows. They would
slow down as they got closer and finally stop, huddling
together while they decided how to pay, and then one or
two of them, or all of them, would move on to the window
and reach into the admissions cuff for their tickets.
Randolph Baxter had long before made up his mind that there
would be no such wrangles on this day for his family. He
said simply, "Wait here a minute, and strode up to the
window by himself. He put his arm into the cuff, smiled
at the ticket attendant, and said grandly, "I'll take five,
please.
The ticket seller looked at him admiringly. "You know,
she offered, "there aren't that many daddies who'll take
all the little fellows in like that. Sometimes they make
even tiny babies get their own tickets. Baxter gave her
a modest I-do-what-I-can shrug, though he could not help
that his smile was a little strained until all five tickets had
clicked out of the roll. He bore them proudly back to his
family and led them through the turnstiles.
"My, what a crowd, sighed Millicent Baxter happily
as she gazed around. "Now, what shall we do first?
The response was immediate. "See the old automobiles, yelled Simon, and, "No, the animals! and, "No,
the stiffs! cried his sisters.
Randolph Baxter spoke sharply to them-not angrily
but firmly. "There will be no fighting over what we do,
he commanded. "We'll vote on what we do, the demo-cratic
way. No arguments and no exceptions. Now, he
added, "the first thing we're going to do is that you kids
will stay right here while your mother and I get tickets
for the job lottery. The parents left the children arguing
viciously among themselves and headed for the nearest
lottery booth. Randolph Baxter could not help a tingle of
excitement, and his wife's eyes were gleaming, as they
studied the prize list. The first prize was the management
of a whole apartment building-twenty-five thousand dollars
a year salary and a free three-room condo thrown in!
Millicent read his thoughts as they stood in line. "Don't
you just wish! she whispered. "But personally I'd settle
for any of the others. Look, there's even a job for an
English teacher! Randolph shook his head wordlessly.
It was just marvelous-five full-time jobs offered in this
one raftle, and that not the biggest of the day. The last
one, after the fireworks, always had the grandest of prizes.
"Aren't you glad we came? Millicent asked, and her
husband nodded.
But in fact he wasn't, altogether, at least until they
safely got their tickets and were on their way back to the
children, and then he was quickly disconcerted to see that
the kids weren't where they had been left. "Oh, hell,
groaned Randolph. It was early in the day for them to get
lost.
But they weren't very far. His wife said sharply, "There
they are. And look what they're doing! They were at a
refreshment stand. And each one of them had a huge cone
of frozen custard. "L told them not to make any purchases
when we weren't with them! Millicent cried, but in fact
it was worse than that. The children were talking to a pair
of strange grownups, a lean, fair, elderly woman with a
sharp, stern face and a round, dark-skinned man with a
bald head and immense tortoise-shell glasses.
As the Baxters approached, the woman turned to them
apologetically. "Oh, hullo, she said, "you must be the
parents. I do hope you'll forgive us. Mr. Katsubishi and
I seem to have lost our tour, and your children kindly
helped us look for it.
"it's all right, Dad, Simon put in swiftly. "They're on
this foreign tour, see, and everything's free for them anyway. Dad? Why can't we get on a tour and have everything free?
"We're Americans, his father explained, smiling
tentatively at the tall English-looking woman and the tubby,
cheerful Japanese-he decided that they didn't look like
depraved child molesters. "You have to be an international
tourist to get these unlimited tickets. And I bet they
cost quite a lot of money, don't they? he appealed to the
man, who smiled and shrugged and looked at the woman.
"Mr. Katsubishi doesn't speak English very well, she
apologized. "I'm Rachel Millay. Mrs. Millay, that is,
although my dear husband left us some years ago. She
glanced about in humorous distress. "I don't suppose
you've seen a tour leader carrying a green and violet flag
with a cross of St. Andrew on it?
Since Randolph Baxter had no idea what a cross of St.
Andrew looked like, it was hard to say. In any case, there
were at least twenty tour parties in sight, each with its
own individual pennant or standard, trudging in determined
merriment toward the pavilions, the rides, or the
refreshment stands. "I'm afraid not, he began, and then
paused as his wife clutched his arm. The P.A. system
crackled, and the winners of the first drawing were announced.
Neither of the Baxters was among them. "Well, there
are six more drawings, said Millicent bravely, not adding
that there were also six more sets of raffle tickets to buy
if they wanted any hope of winning one of them. Her
husband smiled cheerfully at the children.
"What's it to be? he asked generously. "The life exhibit? The concert-
"We already voted, Dad, cried Emma, his elder
daughter. "It's the animals!
"No, the stiffs!" yelled her baby sister.
"The old autos, cried Simon. "Anyway, there won't
be any stiffs there until later, not to speak of!
Baxter smiled indulgently at the foreigners. "Children,
he explained. "Well, I do hope you find your group.
And he led the way to the first democratically selected
adventure of the day, the space exhibit.
Baxter had always had a nostalgic fondness for space,
and this was a pretty fine exhibit, harking back to the
olden, golden days when human beings could spare enough
energy and resources to send their people and probes out
toward the distant worlds. Even the kids liked it. It was
lavish with animated 3-D displays showing a human being
walking around on the surface of the Moon, and a spacecraft
slipping through the rings of Saturn, and even a
probe, though not an American one, hustling after Halley's Comet to take its picture.
But Randolph Baxter had some difficulty in concentrating on the
pleasure of the display at first because, as
they were getting their tickets, the tall, smiling black man
just ahead of him in line put his arm into the admissions
cuff, looked startled, withdrew his arm, started to speak,
and fell over on the ground, his eyes open and staring, it
seemed, right into Randolph Baxter's.
When you have a wife and three kids and no job, living
on welfare, never thinking about tomorrow because you
know there isn't going to be anything in tomorrow worth
thinking about, a day's outing for the whole family is an
event to be treasured. No matter what the price-especially
if the price isn't in money. So the Baxter family did
it all. They visited six national pavilions, even the Paraguayan.
They lunched grandly in the dining room at the
summit of the Fair's great central theme structure, the
Cenotaph. And they did the rides, all the rides, from
the Slosh-a-Slide water chutes through the immense Ferris
wheel with the wind howling through the open car and
Simon threatening to spit down on the crowds below to
the screaming, shattering rollercoaster that made little
Louisa wet her pants. Fortunately her mother had brought
clean underwear for the child. When she sent the little
girl off with her sister to change in the ladies' room, she
followed them anxiously with her eyes until they were
safely past the ticket collector and then said. "Rand, honey.
You paid for all those rides yourself.
He shrugged defensively. "I want everybody to have
a good time.
"Now, don't talk that way. We agreed. The children
and I are going to pay our own way all the rest of the
day, and the subject is closed. She proved the point by
changing it. "Look, she said, "there are those
two foreigners who lost their tour group again. She waved, and
Mrs. Millay and Mr. Katsubishi came up diffidently.
"If we're not intruding? said Mrs. Millay. "We never
did find our tour guide, you see, but actually we're getting
on quite well without. But isn't it hot! It's never like this
in Scotland.
Millicent fanned herself in agreement. "Do sit down,
Mrs. Millay. Is that where you're from, Scotland? And
you, Mr. Kat- Kats-
"Katsubishi. He smiled, with an abrupt deep bow.
Then he wrinkled his face in concentration for a moment
and managed to say: "I, too-Sukottaland.
Millicent tried not to look astonished but evidently did
not succeed. Mrs. Millay explained, "He's from around
Kyle of Lochalth, you know. Since Millicent obviously
didn't know, she added, "That's the .Japanese colony in
northern Scotland, near my own home. In fact. I teach
English to Japanese schoolchildren there, since I know
the language-my parents were missionaries in Honshu,
you see. Didn't you know about the colony'?
Actually, Millicent and Randolph did know about the
colony. Or, at least, they almost did, in the way that
human beings exposed to forty channels of television and
with nothing much to do with their time have heard of,
without really knowing much about, almost every concept,
phenomenon, event, and trend in human history. In
just that way they had heard of the United Kingdom's
pact with Japan, allowing large Japanese immigration into
an enclave in the north of Scotland. The Japanese made
the area bloom both agriculturally and economically. The
United Kingdom got a useful injection of Japanese capital
and energy, and the Japanese got rid of some of their
surplus population without pain. "I wish we'd thought of
that, Millicent observed in some envy, but her husband
shook his head.
"Different countries, different ways, he said
patriotically, "and actually we're doing rather well. I mean, just
look at the Lottery Fair! That's American ingenuity for
you. Observing that Mrs. Millay was whispering a rapid-
fire translation into Mr. Katsubishi's ear, he was encouraged
to go on. "Other countries, you see, have their
own way of handling their problems. Compulsory sterilization
of all babies born in even-numbered years in India, as I'm
sure you're aware. The contraceptive drugs
they put in the water supply in Mexico-and we won't
even talk of what they're doing in, say, Bangladesh. Mrs.
Millay shuddered sympathetically as she translated, and
the Japanese beamed and bowed then spoke rapidly.
"He says one can learn much, Mrs. Millay translated,
"from what foreign countries can do. Even America.
Millicent, glancing at the expression on her husband's
face, said brightly: "Well! Let's not let this day go to
waste. What shall we do next? At once she got the same
answers from the children: "Old cars! "Animals! "No,
whined Baby Louisa, "I wanna see the stiffs!
Mr. Katsubishi whispered something in staccato Japanese to
Mrs. Miilay, who turned hesitantly to Millieent
Baxter. "One doesn't wish to intrude, she said, "but if
you are in fact going to see the Hall of Life and Death as
your daughter suggests. . . well, we don't seem to be able
to find the rest of our tour group, you see, and we would
like to go there. After all, it is the theme center for the
entire fair, as you might say-
"Why, of course, said Millicent warmly. "We'd be
real delighted to have the company of you and Mr. Kats-
Kats--
"Katsubishi, he supplied, bowing deeply and showing
all his teeth in a smile, and they all seven set off for the
Hall of Life and Death, with little Louisa delightedly leading the way.
The hall was a low, white marble structure across the
greensward from the Cenotaph, happy picnicking families
on the green, gay pavilions all around, ice cream vendors
chanting along the roadways, and a circus parade, horses
and a giraffe and even an elephant, winding along the
main avenue with a band leading them, diddley-boom,
diddley-boom, diddley-bang! bang! bang!-all noise, and
color, and excitement. But as soon as they were within
the Hall they were in another world. The Hall of Life and
Death was the only free exhibit at the fair-even the rest
rooms were not free. The crowds that moved through the
Hall were huge. But they were also reverential. As you
came in you found yourself in a great, domed entrance
pavilion, almost bare except for seventy-five raised platforms,
each spotlighted from a concealed source, each
surrounded by an air curtain of gentle drafts. At the time
the Baxters came in more than sixty of them were already
occupied with the silent, lifeless forms of those who had
passed on at the Fair that day. A sweet-faced child here,
an elderly woman there, there, side by side, a young pair
of newlyweds. Randolph Baxter looked for and found the
tall, smiling black man who had died in the line before
him. He was smiling no longer, but his face was in repose
and almost joyous, it seemed. "He's at peace now,
Millicent whispered, touching her husband's arm, and he
nodded. He didn't want to speak out loud in this solemn
hall, where the whisper of organ music was barely audible
above the gentle hiss of chilled air curtains that wafted
past every deceased. Hardly anyone in the great crowd
spoke. The visitors lingered at each of the occupied biers;
but then, as they moved toward the back of the chamber,
they didn't linger. Some didn't even look, for every tourist
at the Fair could not help thinking, as he passed an empty
platform, that before the Fair closed that night it would
be occupied.. . by someone.
But the Rotunda of Those Who Have Gone Before was
only the anteroom to the many inspiring displays the Hall
had to offer. Even the children were fascinated. Young
Simon stood entranced before the great Timepiece of Living
and Dying, watching the hands revolve swiftly to show
how many were born and how many died in each minute,
with the bottom line always showing a few more persons
alive in every minute despite everything the government
and the efforts of patriotic citizens could do-but he was
more interested, really, in the mechanism of the thing than
in the facts it displayed. Millicent Baxter and Mrs. Millay
were really thrilled by the display of opulent caskets and
cerements, and Randolph Baxter was proud to point out
to Mr. Katsubishi the working model of a crematorium,
with all of its escaping gases trapped and converted into
valuable organic feedstocks. And the girls, Emma and
Louisa, stood hand in hand for a long time, shuddering
happily as they gazed at the refrigerated display cases
that showed a hideous four-month embryo next to the
corpse of a fat, pretty two-year-old. Emma moved to put
her arm around her mother and whispered, "Mommy, I'm
so grateful you didn't abort me. And Millicent Baxter
fought back a quick and tender tear.
"I'd never let you die looking like that, she assured
her daughter, and they clung together for a long moment.
But Randolph Baxter was becoming noticeably ill at ease.
When they finally left the Hall of Life and Death his wife
took him aside and asked in concern, "Is something the
matter, hon?
He shrugged irritably at the foreigners, who were talking together
in fast, low-toned Japanese. "Just look at
their faces, he complained. And indeed both Mr. Katsubishi and
Mrs. Millay's expressions seemed to show
more revulsion than respect.
Millicent followed her husband's eyes and sighed-
there was a little annoyance in the sigh, too. "They're not
Americans, she reminded her husband. "I guess they
just don't understand. She smiled distantly at the foreign
pair, and then looked around at her offspring. "Well,
children, who wants to come with me to the washrooms, so
we can get ready for the big fireworks?
They all did, even Randolph, but he felt a need stronger
than the urging of his bladder. He remained behind with
the foreigners. "Excuse me, he said somewhat formally,
"but may I ask what you thought of the exhibit?
She glanced at the Japanese. "Well, it was most interesting,
she said vaguely. "One doesn't wish to criticize,
of course- And she stopped there.
"No, no, please go on, Randolph encouraged.
She said, "I must say it did seem odd to, well, glory
death in that way.
Randolph Baxter smiled, and tried to make it a forgiving smile,
though he could feel that he was upset. He said,
"Perhaps you miss the point of the Hall of Life and Death-
in fact, of the whole Lottery Fair. You see, some of the
greatest minds in America have worked on this problem
of surplus population-think tanks and government agencies-why,
three universities helped design this Fair.
Every bit of it is scientifically planned. To begin with,
it's absolutely free.
Mrs. Millay left off her rapid-fire sotto vode Japanese
translation to ask, "You mean, free as far as money is
concerned?
"Yes, exactly. Of course, one takes a small chance at
every ticket window, and in that sense there is a price
for everything. A very carefully computed price, Mrs.
Millay, for every hotdog, every show, every ride. To get
into the Fair in the first place, for instance, costs one
decimill-that's one percent of a point zero zero zero one
probability of receiving a lethal injection from the ticket
cuff. Now, that's not much of a risk, is it? He smiled.
"And of course it's absolutely painless, too. As you can
see by just looking at the ones who have given their lives
inside.
Mr. Katsubishi, listening intently to Mrs. Millay's
translation in his ear, pursed his lips and nodded thought-
fully. Mrs. Millay said brightly, "Well, we all have our
own little national traits, don't we?
"Now, really, Mrs. Millay, said Randolph Baxter,
smiling with an effort, "please try to understand.
Everything is quite fair. Some things are practically free, like
the park benches and the rest rooms and so on; why, you
could use some of them as much as a million times before,
you know, your number would come up. Or you can get
a first-class meal in the Cenotaph for just about a whole
millipoint. But even that means you can do it a thousand
times, on the average.
Mr. Katsubishi listened to the end of Mrs. Millay's
translation and then struggled to get out a couple of English
words. "Not-us, he managed, pointing to himself
and Mrs. Millay.
"Certainly not, Baxter agreed. "You're foreign tourists.
So you buy your tickets in your own countries for
cash, and of course you don't have to risk your lives. It
wouldn't help the American population problem much if
you did, would it? He smiled. "And your tour money
helps pay the cost of the Fair. But the important thing to
remember is that the Lottery Fair is entirely voluntary.
No one has to come. Of course, he admitted with a self-
deprecatory grin, "I have to admit that I really like the
job lotteries. I guess I'm just a gambler at heart, and when
you've spent as much time on welfare as Mrs. Baxter and
I have, those big jobs are just hard to resist! And they're
better here than at the regular city raffles.
Mrs. Millay cleared her throat. Good manners competed with obstinacy in her expression. "Really, Mr.
Baxter, she said, "Mr. Katsubishi and I understand that-
heavens, we've had to do things in our own countries!
We certainly don't mean to criticize yours. What's hard
to understand, I suppose, is, actually, that fetus. She
searched his face with her eyes, looking for understanding.
"It just seems strange. I mean, that you'd prefer to
see a child born and then perhaps die in a lottery than to
abort him ahead of time.
Mr. Baxter did his very best to maintain a pleasant
expression, but he knew he was failing. "It's a difference
in our national philosophies, I guess, he said. "See, we
don't go in for your so-called birth control' here. No
abortion. No contraception. We accept the gift of life
when it is given. We believe that every human being, from
the moment of conception on, has a right to a life-although,
he added, "not necessarily a long one. He eyed
the abashed foreigners sternly for a moment, then relented.
"Well, he said, glancing at his watch, "I wonder
where my family can be? They'll miss the fireworks if
they don't get back. I bet Mrs. Baxter's gone and let the
children pick out souvenirs-the little dickenses have been
after us about them all day. Anyway, Mrs. Millay, Mr.
Katsubishi, it's been a real pleasure meeting the two of
you and having this chance to exchange views-
But he broke off, suddenly alarmed by the expression
on Mr. Katsubishi's face as the man looked past him.
"What's the matter? he demanded roughly.
And then he turned, and did not need an answer. The
answer was written on the strained, haggard, tear-streaked
face of his wife as she ran despairingly toward him,
carrying in her hands a plastic cap, a paperweight, and a
helium-filled balloon in the shape of a pig's head, but
without Emma and without Simon and even without little
Louisa.
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