Foundation
and Earth
Isaac
Azimov
The Story Behind the Foundation
ON
It was to write a historical novel of the future; to tell
the story of the fall of the Galactic Empire. My enthusiasm must have been
catching, for
The first story appeared in the May 1942 Astounding and the
second story appeared in the June 1942 issue. They were at once popular and
By the time the decade was over, I had grown tired of the
series, dropped it, and went on to other things. By then, however, various
publishing houses were beginning to put out hardcover science fiction books. One
such house was a small semiprofessional firm, Gnome Press. They published my Foundation
series in three volumes: Foundation (1951); Foundation and Empire (1952); and
Second Foundation (1953). The three books together came to be known as The
Foundation Trilogy.
The books did not do very well, for Gnome Press did not have
the capital with which to advertise and promote them. I got neither statements
nor royalties from them.
In early 1961, my then-editor at Doubleday, Timothy Seldes,
told me he had received a request from a foreign publisher to reprint the
Foundation books. Since they were not Doubleday books, he passed the request on
to me.
I shrugged my shoulders. Not interested, Tim. I don't get
royalties on those books.
Seldes was horrified, and instantly set about getting the
rights to the books from Gnome Press (which was, by that time, moribund) and in
August of that year, the books (along with I, Robot) became Doubleday property.
From that moment on, the Foundation series took off and
began to earn increasing royalties. Doubleday published the Trilogy in a single
volume and distributed them through the Science Fiction Book Club. Because of
that the Foundation series became enormously well-known.
In the 1966 World Science Fiction Convention, held in
Increasingly, fans kept asking me to continue the series. I
was polite but I kept refusing. Still, it fascinated me that people who had not
yet been born when the series was begun had managed to become caught up in it.
Doubleday, however, took the demands far more seriously than
I did. They had humored me for twenty years but as the demands kept growing in
intensity and number, they finally lost patience. In 1981, they told me that I
simply had to write another Foundation novel and, in order to sugar-coat the
demand, offered me a contract at ten times my usual advance.
Nervously, I agreed. It had been thirty-two years since I
had written a Foundation story and now I was instructed to write one 140,000
words long, twice that of any of the earlier volumes and nearly three times as
long as any previous individual story. I re-read The Foundation Trilogy and,
taking a deep breath, dived into the task.
The fourth book of the series, Foundation's Edge, was
published in October 1982, and then a very strange thing happened. It appeared
in the New York Times bestseller list at once. In fact, it stayed on that list
for twenty-five weeks, much to my utter astonishment. Nothing like that had
ever happened to me.
Doubleday at once signed me up to do additional novels and I
wrote two that were part of another series, The Robot NovelsAnd then it was
time to return to the Foundation.
So I wrote Foundation and Earth, which begins at the very
moment that Foundation's. Edge ends, and that is the book you now hold. It
might help if you glanced over Foundation's Edge just to refresh your memory,
but you don't have to. Foundation and Earth stands by itself. I hope you enjoy
it.
ISAAC ASIMOV,
New York City, 1986
Chapter I
The Search Begins
1.
WHY DID I do it? asked Golan Trevize.
It wasn't a new question. Since he had arrived at Gaia, he
had asked it of himself frequently. He would wake up from a sound sleep in the
pleasant coolness of the night and find the question sounding noiselessly in
his mind, like a tiny drumbeat: Why did I do it? Why did I do it?
Now, though, for the first time, he managed to ask it of
Dom, the ancient of Gaia.
Dom was well aware of Trevize's tension for he could sense
the fabric of the Councilman's mind. He did not respond to it. Gaia must in no
way ever touch Trevize's mind, and the best way of remaining immune to the
temptation was to painstakingly ignore what he sensed.
Do what, Trev? he asked. He found it difficult to use more
than one syllable in addressing a person, and it didn't matter. Trevize was
growing somewhat used to that.
The decision I made, said Trevize. Choosing Gaia as the
future.
You were right to do so, said Dom, seated, his aged
deep-set eyes looking earnestly up at the man of the Foundation, who was
standing.
You say I am right, said Trevize impatiently.
I/we/Gaia know you are. That's your worth to us. You have
the capacity for making the right decision on incomplete data, and you have
made the decision. You chose Gaia! You rejected the anarchy of a Galactic
Empire built on the technology of the First Foundation, as well as the anarchy
of a Galactic Empire built on the mentalics of the Second Foundation. You
decided that neither could be long stable. So you chose Gaia.
Yes, said Trevize. Exactly! I chose Gaia, a superorganism;
a whole planet with a mind and personality in common, so that one has to say
I/we/ Gaia as an invented pronoun to express the inexpressible. He paced the
floor restlessly. And it will become eventually Galaxia, a super-superorganism
embracing all the swarm of the Milky Way.
He stopped, turned almost savagely on Dom, and said, I feel
I'm right, as you feel it, but you want the coming of Galaxia, and so are
satisfied with the Id on. There's something in me, however, that doesn't want
it, and for that reason I'm not satisfied to accept the rightness so easily. I
want to know why I Made the decision, I want to weigh and judge the rightness
and be satisfied with it. Merely feeling right isn't enough. How can I know I
am right? What b the device that makes me right?
I/we/Gaia do not know how it is that you come to the right
decision. Is it important to know that as long as we have the decision?
You speak for the whole planet, do you? For the common
consciousness of every dewdrop, of every pebble, of even the liquid central
core of the planet?
I do, and so can any portion of the planet in which the
intensity of the common consciousness is great enough.
And is all this common consciousness satisfied to use me as
a black box? Since the black box works, is it unimportant to know what is
inside? That doesn't suit me. I don't enjoy being a black box. I want to know
what's inside. I want to know how and why I chose Gaia and Galaxia as the
future, so that I can rest and be at peace.
But why do you dislike or distrust your decision so?
Trevize drew a deep breath and said slowly, in a low and
forceful voice, Because I don't want to be part of a superorganism. I don't
want to be a dispensable part to be done away with whenever the superorganism
judges that doing away would be for the good of the whole.
Dom looked at Trevize thoughtfully. Do you want to change
your decision, then, Trev? You can, you know.
I long to change the decision, but I can't do that merely
because I dislike it. To do something now, I have to know whether the decision
is wrong or right. It's not enough merely to feel it's right.
If you feel you are right, you are right. Always that
slow, gentle voice that somehow made Trevize feel wilder by its very contrast
with his own inner turmoil.
Then Trevize said, in half a whisper, breaking out of the
insoluble oscillation between feeling and knowing, I must find Earth.
Because it has something to do with this passionate need of
yours to know?
Because it is another problem that troubles me unbearably
and because I fuel there is a connection between the two. Am I not a black box?
I feel there is a connection. Isn't that enough to make you accept it as a
fact?
Perhaps, said Dom, with equanimity.
Granted it is now thousands of years-twenty thousand
perhaps-since the people of the Galaxy have concerned themselves with Earth,
how is it possible that we have all forgotten our planet of origin?
Twenty thousand years is a longer time than you realize. There
are many aspects of the early Empire we know little of; many legends that are
almost surely fictitious but that we keep repeating, and even believing,
because of lack of anything to substitute. And Earth is older than the Empire.
But surely there are some records. My good friend, Pelorat,
collects myths and legends of early Earth; anything he can scrape up from any
source. It is his profession and, more important, his hobby. Those myths and
legends are all there are. There are no actual records, no documents.
Documents twenty thousand years old? Things decay, perish,
are destroyed through inefficiency or war.
But there should be records of the records; copies, copies
of the copies, and copies of the copies of the copies; useful material much
younger than twenty millennia. They have been removed. The Galactic Library at
Trantor must have had documents concerning Earth. Those documents are referred
to in known historical records, but the documents no longer exist in the
Galactic Library. The references to them may exist, but any quotations from
them do not exist.
Remember that Trantor was sacked a few centuries ago,
The Library was left untouched. It was protected by the
personnel of the Second Foundation. And it was those personnel who recently
discovered that material related to Earth no longer exists. The material was
deliberately removed in recent times. Why? Trevize ceased his pacing and
looked intently at Dom. If I find Earth, I will find out what it is hiding...
Hiding?
Hiding or being hidden. Once I find that out, I have the
feeling I will know why I have chosen Gaia and Galaxia over our individuality. Then,
I presume, I will know, not feel, that I am correct, and if lam correcthe
lifted his shoulders hopelessly then so be it.
If you feel that is so, said Dom, and if you feel you
must hunt for Earth, then, of course, we will help you do as much as we can. That
help, however, is limited. For instance, I/we/Gaia do not know where Earth may
be located among the immense wilderness of worlds that make up the Galaxy.
Even so, said Trevize, I must search. Even if the endless
powdering of stars in the Galaxy makes the quest seem hopeless, and even if I
must do it alone.
2
TREVIZE WAS surrounded by the tameness of Gaia. The
temperature, as always, was comfortable, and the air moved pleasantly,
refreshing but not chilling. Clouds drifted across the sky, interrupting the
sunlight now and then, and, no doubt, if the water vapor level per meter of
open land surface dropped sufficiently in this place or that, there would be
enough rain to restore it.
The trees grew in regular spacings, like an orchard, and did
so, no doubt, all over the world. The land and sea were stocked with plant and
animal life in proper numbers and in the proper variety to provide an
appropriate ecological balance, and all of them, no doubt, increased and
decreased in numbers in a slow sway about the recognized optimum. As did the
number of human beings, too.
Of all the objects within the purview of Trevize's vision,
the only wild card in the deck was his ship, the Far Star.
The ship had been cleaned and refurbished efficiently and
well by a number of the human components of Gaia. It had been restocked with
food and drink, its furnishings had been renewed or replaced, its mechanical
workings rechecked. Trevize himself had checked the ship's computer carefully.
Nor did the ship need refueling, for it was one of the few
gravitic ships of the Foundation, running on the energy of the general
gravitational field of the Galaxy, and that was enough to supply all the
possible fleets of humanity for all the eons of their likely existence without measurable
decrease of intensity.
Three months ago, Trevize had been a Councilman of Terminus.
He had, in other words, been a member of the Legislature of the Foundation and,
ex officio, a great one of the Galaxy. Was it only three months ago? It seemed
it was half his thirty-two-year-old lifetime since that had been his post and
his only concern had been whether the great Seldon Plan had been valid or not;
whether the smooth rise of the Foundation from planetary village to Galactic
greatness had been properly charted in advance, or not.
Yet in some ways, there was no change. He was still a
Councilman. His status and his privileges remained unchanged, except that he
didn't expect he would ever return to Terminus to claim that status and those
privileges. He would no more fit into the huge chaos of the Foundation than
into the small orderliness of Gaia. He was at home nowhere, an orphan
everywhere.
His jaw tightened and he pushed his fingers angrily through
his black hair. Before he wasted time bemoaning his fate, he must find Earth. If
he survived the search, there would then be time enough to sit down and weep. He
might have even better reason then.
With determined stolidity, then, he thought back
Three months before, he and Janov Pelorat, that able, naive
scholar, had left Terminus. Pelorat had been driven by his antiquarian
enthusiasms to discover the site of long-lost Earth, and Trevize had gone
along, using Pelorat's goal as a cover for what he thought his own real aim
was. They did not find Earth, but they did find Gaia, and Trevize had then
found himself forced to make his fateful decision.
Now it was he, Trevize, who had turned
half-circle-about-face-and was searching for Earth.
As for Pelorat, he, too, had found something he didn't
expect. He had found the black-haired, dark-eyed Bliss, the young woman who was
Gaia, even as Dom was-and as the nearest grain of sand or blade of grass was. Pelorat,
with the peculiar ardor of late middle age, had fallen in love with a woman
less than half his years, and the young woman, oddly enough, seemed content
with that.
It was odd-but Pelorat was surely happy and Trevize thought
resignedly that each person must find happiness in his or her own manner. That
was the point of individuality-the individuality that Trevize, by his choice,
was abolishing (given time) over all the Galaxy.
The pain returned. That decision he had made, and had had to
make, continued to excoriate him at every moment and was
Golan!
The voice intruded on Trevize's thoughts and he looked up in
the direction of the sun, blinking his eyes.
Ah, Janov, he said heartily-the more heartily because he
did not want Pelorat guessing at the sourness of his thoughts. He even managed
a jovial, You've managed to tear yourself away from Bliss, I see.
Pelorat shook his head. The gentle breeze stirred his silky
white hair, and his long solemn face retained its length and solemnity in full.
Actually, old chap, it was she that suggested I see you-about-about what I
want to discuss. Not that I wouldn't have wanted to see you on my own, of
course, but she seems to think more quickly than I do.
Trevize smiled. It's all right, Janov. You're here to say
good-bye.
Well, no, not exactly. In fact more nearly the reverse. Golan,
when we left Terminus, you and I, I was intent on finding Earth. I've spent
virtually my entire adult life at that task.
And I will carry on, Janov. The task is mine now.
Yes, but it's mine, also; mine, still.
But... Trevize lifted an arm in a vague all-inclusive
gesture of the world about them.
Pelorat said, in a sudden urgent gasp, I want to go with
you.
Trevize felt astonished. You can't mean that, Janov. You
have Gala now.
I'll come back to Gaia someday, but I cannot let you go
alone.
Certainly you can. I can take care of myself.
No offense, Golan, but you don't know enough. It is I who
know the myths and legends. I can direct you.
And you'll leave Bliss? Come, now.
A faint pink colored Pelorat's cheeks. I don't exactly want
to do that, old chap, but she said...
Trevize frowned. Is it that she's trying to get rid of you,
Janov. She promised me...
No, you don't understand. Please listen to me, Golan. You
do have this uncomfortable explosive way of jumping to conclusions before you
hear one out. It's your specialty, I know, and I seem to have a certain
difficulty in expressing myself concisely, but...
Well, said Trevize gently, suppose you tell me exactly
what it is that Bliss has on her mind in just any way you please, and I promise
to be very patient.
Thank you, and as long as you're going to be patient, I
think I can come out with it right away. You see, Bliss wants to come, too.
Bliss wants to come? said Trevize. No, I'm exploding
again. I won't explode. Tell me, Janov, why would Bliss want to come along? I'm
asking it quietly.
She didn't say. She said she wants to talk to you.
Then why isn't she here, eh?
Pelorat said, I think-I say I think-that she is rather of
the opinion that you are not fond of her, Golan, and she rather hesitates to
approach you. I have done my best, old man, to assure her that you have nothing
against her. I cannot believe anyone would think anything but highly of her. Still,
she wanted me to broach the subject with you, so to speak. May I tell her that
you'll be willing to see her, Golan?
Of course, I'll see her right now.
And you'll be reasonable? You see, old man, she's rather
intense about it. She said the matter was vital and she must go with you.
She didn't tell you why, did she?
No, but if she thinks she must go, so must Gaia.
Which means I mustn't refuse. Is that right, Janov?
Yes, I think you mustn't, Golan.
FOR THE FIRST time during his brief stay on Gaia, Trevize
entered Bliss's house-which now sheltered Pelorat as well.
Trevize looked about briefly. On Gaia, houses tended to be
simple. With the all-but-complete absence of violent weather of any kind, with
the temperature mild at all times in this particular latitude, with even the
tectonic plates slipping smoothly when they had to slip, there was no point in
building houses designed for elaborate protection, or for maintaining a
comfortable environment within an uncomfortable one. The whole planet was a
house, so to speak, designed to shelter its inhabitants.
Bliss's house within that planetary house was small, the
windows screened ether than glassed, the furniture sparse and gracefully
utilitarian. There were holographic images on the walls; one of them of Pelorat
looking rather astonished and self-conscious. Trevize's lips twitched but he
tried not to let his amusement show, and he fell to adjusting his waist-sash
meticulously.
Bliss watched him. She wasn't smiling in her usual fashion. Rather,
she looked serious, her fine dark eyes wide, her hair tumbling to her shoulders
in a gentle black wave. Only her full lips, touched with red, lent a bit of
color to her face.
Thank you for coming to see me, Trev.
Janov was very urgent in his request, Blissenobiarella.
Bliss smiled briefly. Well returned. If you will call me
Bliss, a decent monosyllable, I will try to say your name in full, Trevize. She
stumbled, almost unnoticeably, over the second syllable.
Trevize held up his right hand. That would be a good
arrangement. I recognize the Gaian habit of using one-syllable name-portions in
the common interchange of thoughts, so if you should happen to call me Trev now
and then I will not be offended. Still, I will be more comfortable if you try
to say Trevize as often as you can-and I shall say Bliss.
Trevize studied her, as he always did when he encountered
her. As an individual, she was a young woman in her early twenties. As part of
Gait, however, she was thousands of years old. It made no difference in her
appearance, but it made a difference in the way she spoke sometimes, and in the
atmosphere that inevitably surrounded her. Did he want it this way for everyone
who existed? No! Surely, no, and yet
Bliss said, I will get to the point. You stressed your
desire to find Earth...
I spoke to Dom, said Trevize, determined not to give in to
Gaia without a perpetual insistence on his own point of view.
Yes, but in speaking to Dom, you spoke to Gaia and to every
part of it, so that you spoke to me, for instance.
Did you hear me as I spoke?
No, for I wasn't listening, but if, thereafter, I paid
attention, I could remember what you said. Please accept that and let us go on.
You stressed your desire to find Earth and insisted on its importance. I do not
see that importance but you have the knack of being right so I/we/Gaia must
accept what you say. If the mission is crucial to your decision concerning
Gaia, It is of crucial importance to Gaia, and so Gaia must go with you, if
only to try to protect you.
When you say Gaia must go with me, you mean you must go
with me. Am I correct?
I am Gaia, said Bliss simply.
But so is everything else on and in this planet. Why, then,
you? Why not some other portion of Gaia?
Because Pel wishes to go with you, and if he goes with you,
he would not be happy with any other portion of Gaia than myself.
Pelorat, who sat rather unobtrusively on a chair in another
corner (with his back, Trevize noted, to his own image) said softly, That's
true, Golan. Bliss is my portion of Gaia.
Bliss smiled suddenly. It seems rather exciting to be
thought of in that way. It's very alien, of course.
Well, let's see. Trevize put his hands behind his head and
began to lean backward in his chair. The thin legs creaked as he did so, so
that he quickly decided the chair was not sturdy enough to endure that game and
brought it down to all four feet. Will you still be part of Gaia if you leave
her?
I need not be. I can isolate myself, for instance, if I
seem in danger of serious harm, so that harm will not necessarily spill over
into Gaia, or if there is any other overriding reason for it. That, however, is
a matter of emergency only. Generally, I will remain part of Gaia.
Even if we Jump through hyperspace?
Even then, though that will complicate matters somewhat.
Somehow I don't find that comforting.
Why not?
Trevize wrinkled his nose in the usual metaphoric response
to a bad smell. It means that anything that is said and done on my ship that
you hear and see will be heard and seen by all of Gaia.
I am Gaia so what I see, hear, and sense, Gaia will see,
hear, and sense.
Exactly. Even that wall will see, hear, and sense.
Bliss looked at the wall he pointed to and shrugged. Yes,
that wall, too. It has only an infinitesimal consciousness so that it senses
and understands only infinitesimally, but I presume there are some subatomic
shifts in response to what we are saying right now, for instance, that enable
it to fit into Gaia with more purposeful intent for the good of the whole.
But what if I wish privacy? I may not want the wall to be
aware of what I say or do.
Bliss looked exasperated and Pelorat broke in suddenly. You
know, Golan, I don't want to interfere, since I obviously don't know much about
Gaia. Still, I've been with Bliss and I've gathered somehow some of what it's
all about. If you walk through a crowd on Terminus, you see and hear a great
many things, and you may remember some of it. You might even be able to recall
all of it under the proper cerebral stimulation, but mostly you don't care. You
let it go. Even if you watch some emotional scene between strangers and even if
you're interested; still, if it's of no great concern to you-you let it go-you
forget. It must be so on Gaia, too. Even if all of Gaia knows your business
intimately, that doesn't mean that Gaia necessarily cares. Isn't that so, Bliss
dear?
I've never thought of it that way, Pel, but there is
something in what you say. Still, this privacy Trev talks about-I mean,
Trevize-is nothing we value at all. In fact, I/we/Gaia find it
incomprehensible. To want to be not part-to have your voice unheard-your deeds
unwitnessed-your thoughts unsensed... Bliss shook her head vigorously. I said
that we can block ourselves off in emergencies, but who would want to live that
way, even for an hour?
I would, said Trevize. That is why I must find Earth-to
find out the overriding reason, if any, that drove me to choose this dreadful
fate for humanity.
It is not a dreadful fate, but let us not debate the
matter. I will be with you, not as a spy, but as a friend and helper. Gaia will
be with you not as a spy, but as a friend and helper.
Trevize said, somberly, Gaia could help me best by
directing me to Earth.
Slowly, Bliss shook her head. Gaia doesn't know the
location of Earth. Dom has already told you that.
I don't quite believe that. After all, you must have
records. Why have I never been able to see those records during my stay here? Even
if Gaia honestly doesn't know where Earth might be located, I might gain some
knowledge from the records. I know the Galaxy in considerable detail,
undoubtedly much better than Gaia does. I might be able to understand and
follow hints in your records that Gaia, perhaps, doesn't quite catch.
But what records are these you talk of, Trevize?
Any records. Books, films, recordings, holographs,
artifacts, whatever it is you have. In the time I've been here I haven't seen
one item that I would consider in any way a record. Have you, Janov?
No, said Pelorat hesitantly, but I haven't really
looked.
Yet I have, in my quiet way, said Trevize, and I've seen
nothing. Nothing! I can only suppose they're being hidden from me. Why, I
wonder? Would you tell me that?
Bliss's smooth young forehead wrinkled into a puzzled frown.
Whydidn't you ask before this? I/we/Gaia hide nothing, and we tell no lies. An
Isolatean individual in isolation-might tell lies. He is limited, and is
fearful because he is limited. Gaia, however, is a planetary organism of great
mental ability and has no fear. For Gaia to tell lies, to create descriptions
that are at variance with reality, is totally unnecessary.
Trevize snorted. Then why have I carefully been kept from
seeing any records? Give me a reason that makes sense.
Of course. She held out both hands, palms up before her. We
don't have any records.
4
PELORAT recovered first, seeming the less astonished of the
two.
My dear, he said gently, that is quite impossible. You
cannot have a reasonable civilization without records of some kind.
Bliss raised her eyebrows. I understand that. I merely mean
we have no records of the type that Trev-Trevize-is talking about, or was at
all likely to come across. I/we/Gala have no writings, no printings, no films,
no computer data banks, nothing. We have no carvings on stone, for that matter.
That's all I'm saying. Naturally, since we have none of these, Trevize found
none of these.
Trevize said, What do you have, then, if you don't have any
records that I would recognize as records?
Bliss said, enunciating carefully, as though she were
speaking to a child. I/we/Gala have a memory. I remember.
What do you remember? asked Trevize.
Everything.
You remember all reference data?
Certainly.
For how long? For how many years back?
For indefinite lengths of time.
You could give me historical data, biographical,
geographical, scientific? Even local gossip?
Everything.
All in that little head. Trevize pointed sardonically at
Bliss's right temple.
No, she said. Gala's memories are not limited to the
contents of my particular skull. See herefor the moment she grew formal and
even a little stern, as she ceased being Bliss solely and took on an amalgam of
other units = there must have been a time before the beginning of history when
human beings were so primitive that, although they could remember events, they
could not speak. Speech was invented and served to express memories and to
transfer them from person to person. Writing was eventually invented in order
to record memories and transfer them across time from generation to generation.
All technological advance since then has served to make more room for the
transfer and storage of memories and to make the recall of desired items
easier. However, once individuals joined to form Gaia, all that became
obsolete. We can return to memory, the basic system of record-keeping on which
all else is built. Do you see that?
Trevize said, Are you saying that the sum total of all
brains on Gaia can remember far more data than a single brain can?
Of course.
But if Gaia has all the records spread through the
planetary memory, what good is that to you as an individual portion of Gaia?
All the good you can wish. Whatever I might want to know is
in an individual mind somewhere, maybe in many of them. If it is very
fundamental, such as the meaning of the word chair, it is in every mind. But
even if it is something esoteric that is in only one small portion of Gala's
mind, I eau , call it up if I need it, though such recall may take a bit longer
than if the a memory is more widespread. Look, Trevize, if you want to know
some. thing that isn't in your mind, you look at some appropriate book-film, or
make use of a computer's data banks. I scan Gala's total mind.
Trevize said, How do you keep all that information from
pouring into your mind and bursting your cranium?
Are you indulging in sarcasm, Trevize?
Pelorat said, Come, Golan, don't be unpleasant. ,
Trevize looked from one to the other and, with a visible
effort, allowed tightness about his face to relax. I'm sorry. I'm borne down
by a responsibility I don't want and don't know how to get rid of. That may
make me sound unpleasant when I don't intend to be. Bliss, I really wish to
know. How do you draw upon the contents of the brains of others without then
storing it in your own brain and quickly overloading its capacity?
Bliss said, I don't know, Trevize; any more than you know
the detailed workings of your single brain. I presume you know the distance
from your sun to a neighboring star, but you are not always conscious of it. You
store it somewhere and can retrieve the figure at any time if asked. If not
asked, you , may with time forget it, but you can then always retrieve it from
some data bank. If you consider Gala's brain a vast data bank, it is one I can
call on, but there is no need for me to remember consciously any particular
item I have made use of. Once I have made use of a fact or memory, I can allow
it to pass out of memory. For that matter, I can deliberately put it back, so
to speak, in the place I got it from.
How many people on Gaia, Bliss? How many human beings?
About a billion. Do you want the exact figure as of now?
Trevize smiled ruefully. I quite see you can call up the
exact figure if you wish, but I'll take the approximation.
Actually, said Bliss, the population is stable and
oscillates about a particular number that is slightly in excess of a billion. I
can tell by how much the number exceeds or falls short of the mean by extending
my consciousness and-well-feeling the boundaries. I can't explain it better
than that to some one who has never shared the experience.
it seems to me, however, that a billion human minds-a
number of them being those of children-are surely not enough to hold in memory
all the data needed by a complex society.
But human beings are not the only living things on Gaia,
Trev.
Do you mean that animals remember, too?
Nonhuman brains can't store memories with the same density
human brains can, and much of the room in all brains, human and nonhuman alike,
must be given over to personal memories which are scarcely useful except to the
particular component of the planetary consciousness that harbors them. However,
significant quantities of advanced data can be, and are, stored in animal
brains, also in plant tissue, and in the mineral structure of the planet.
In the mineral structure? The rocks and mountain range, you
mean?
And, for some kinds of data, the ocean and atmosphere. All
that is Gaia, too.
But what can nonliving systems hold?
A great deal. The intensity is low but the volume is so
great that a large majority of Gaia's total memory is in its rocks. It takes a
little longer to retrieve and replace rock memories so that it is the preferred
place for storing dead data, so to speak-items that, in the normal course of
events, would rarely be called upon.
What happens when someone dies whose brain stores data of
considerable value?
The data is not lost. It is slowly crowded out as the brain
disorganizes after death, but there is ample time to distribute the memories
into other parts of Gaia. And as new brains ,appear in babies and become more
organized with growth, they not only develop their personal memories and
thoughts but are fed appropriate knowledge from other sources. What you would
call education is entirely automatic with me/us/Gaia.
Pelorat said, Frankly, Golan, it seems to me that this
notion of a living world has a great deal to be said for it.
Trevize gave his fellow-Foundationer a brief, sidelong
glance. I'm sure of that, Janov, but I'm not impressed. The planet, however
big and however diverse, represents one brain. One! Every new brain that arises
is melted into the whole. Where's the opportunity for opposition, for
disagreement? When you think of human history, you think of the occasional
human being whose minority view may be condemned by society but who wins out in
the end and changes the world. What chance is there on Gaia for the great
rebels of history?
There is internal conflict, said Bliss. Not every aspect
of Gaia necessarily accepts the common view.
It must be limited, said Trevize. You cannot have too
much turmoil within a single organism, or it would not work properly. If
progress and development are not stopped altogether, they must certainly be
slowed. Can we take the chance of inflicting that on the entire Galaxy? On all
of humanity?
Bliss said, without open emotion, Are you now questioning
your own decision? Are you changing your mind and are you now saying that Gaia
is an undesirable future for humanity?
Trevize tightened his lips and hesitated. Then, he said,
slowly, I would like to, but-not yet. I made my decision on some basissome
unconscious basis-and until I find out what that basis was, I cannot truly
decide whether I am to maintain or change my decision. Let us therefore return
to the matter of Earth.
Where you feel you will learn the nature of the basis on
which you made your decision. Is that it, Trevize?
That is the feeling I have. Now Dom says Gaia does not know
the location of Earth. And you agree with him, I believe.
Of course I agree with him. I am no less Gaia than he is.
And do you withhold knowledge from me? Consciously, I
mean?
Of course not. Even if it were possible for Gaia to lie, it
would not lie to you. Above all, we depend upon your conclusions, and we need
them to be accurate, and that requires that they be based on reality.
In that case, said Trevize, let's make use of your
world-memory. Probe backward and tell me how far you can remember.
There was a small hesitation. Bliss looked blankly at
Trevize, as though, for a moment, she was in a trance. Then she said, Fifteen
thousand years.
Why did you hesitate?
It took time. Old memories-really old-are almost all in the
mountain roots where it takes time to dig them out.
Fifteen thousand years ago, then? Is that when Gaia was
settled?
No, to the best of our knowledge that took place some three
thousand years before that.
Why are you uncertain? Don't you-or Gaia-remember?
Bliss said, That was before Gaia had developed to the point
where memory became a global phenomenon.
Yet before you could rely on your collective memory, Gaia
must have kept records, Bliss. Records in the usual sense-recorded, written,
filmed, and so on.
I imagine so, but they could scarcely endure all this
time.
They could have been copied or, better yet, transferred
into the global memory, once that was developed.
Bliss frowned. There was another hesitation, longer this
time. I find no sign of these earlier records you speak of.
Why is that?
I don't know, Trevize. I presume that they proved of no
great importance. I imagine that by the time it was understood that the early
nonmemory records were decaying, it was decided that they had grown archaic and
wore not needed.
You don't know that. You presume and you imagine, but you
don't know that. Gaia doesn't know that.
Bliss's eyes fell. It must be so.
Must be? I am not a part of Gaia and therefore I need not
presume what Gaia presumes-which gives you an example of the importance of
isolation. I, as an Isolate, presume something else.
What do you presume?
First, there is something I am sure of. A civilization in
being is not likely to destroy its early records. Far from judging them to be
archaic and unnecessary, they are likely to treat them with exaggerated
reverence and would labor to preserve them. If Gaia's preglobal records were
destroyed, Bliss, that destruction is not likely to have been voluntary.
How would you explain it, then?
In the Library at Trantor, all references to Earth were
removed by someone or some force other than that of the Trantorian Second
Foundationers themselves. Isn't it possible, then, that on Gaia, too, all
references to Earth were removed by something other than Gaia itself?
How do you know the early records involved Earth?
According to you, Gaia was founded at least eighteen
thousand years ago. That brings us back to the period before the establishment
of the Galactic Empire, to the period when the Galaxy was being settled and the
prime source of Settlers was Earth. Pelorat will confirm that.
Pelorat, caught a little by surprise by suddenly being
called on, cleared his throat. So go the legends, my dear. I take those
legends seriously and I think, as Golan Trevize does, that the human species
was originally confined to a single planet and that planet was Earth. The
earliest Settlers came from Earth.
If, then, said Trevize, Gaia was founded in the early
days of hyperspatial travel, then it is very likely to have been colonized by
Earthmen, or possibly by natives of a not very old world that had not long
before been colonized by Earthmen. For that reason, the records of Gaia's
settlement and of the first few millennia thereafter must clearly have involved
Earth and Earthmen and those records are gone. Something seems to be seeing to
it that Earth is not mentioned anywhere in the records of the Galaxy. And if
so, there must be some reason for it.
Bliss said indignantly, This is conjecture, Trevize. You
have no evidence for this.
But it is Gaia that insists that my special talent is that
of coming to correct conclusions on the basis of insufficient evidence. If,
then, I come to a firm conclusion, don't tell me I lack evidence.
Bliss was silent.
Trevize went on, All the more reason then for finding
Earth. I intend to leave as soon as the Far Star is ready. Do you two still
want to come?
Yes, said Bliss at once, and Yes, said Pelorat.
Chapter 2
Toward Comporellon
5.
IT WAS RAINING lightly. Trevize looked up at the sky, which
was a solid grayish white.
He was wearing a rain hat that repelled the drops and sent
them flying well away from his body in all directions. Pelorat, standing out of
range of the flying drops, had no such protection.
Trevize said, I don't see the point of your letting
yourself get wet, Janov.
The wet doesn't bother me, my dear chap, said Pelorat,
looking as solemn as he always did. It's a light and warm rain. There's no
wind to speak of. And besides, to quote the old saying: In Anacreon, do as the
Anacreonians do. He indicated the few Gaians standing near the Far Star,
watching quietly. They were well scattered, as though they were trees in a
Gaian grove, and none wore rain hats.
I suppose, said Trevize, they don't mind being wet,
because all the rest of Gaia is getting wet. The trees-the grass-the soil-all
wet, and all equally part of Gaia, along with the Gaians.
I think it makes sense, said Pelorat. The sun will come
out soon enough and everything will dry quickly. The clothing won't wrinkle or
shrink, there's no chilling effect, and, since there aren't any unnecessary
pathogenic microorganisms, no one will get colds, or flu, or pneumonia. Why
worry about a bit of damp then?
Trevize had no trouble in seeing the logic of that, but he
hated to let go of his grievance. He said, Still, there is no need for it to
rain as we are leaving. After all, the rain is voluntary. Gaia wouldn't rain if
it didn't want to. It's almost as though it were showing its contempt for us.
Perhapsand Pelorat's lip twitched a bit Gaia is weeping
with sorrow at our leaving.
Trevize said, That may be, but I'm not.
Actually, Pelorat went on, I presume that the soil in
this region needs a wetting down, and that need is more important than your
desire to have the sun shine.
Trevize smiled. I suspect you really like this world, don't
you? Even aside from Bliss, I mean.
Yes, I do, said Pelorat, a trace defensively. I've always
led a quiet, orderly life, and think how I could manage here, with a whole
world laboring to keep it quiet and orderly. After all, Golan, when we build a
house-or that ship-we try to create a perfect shelter. We equip it with
everything we need; we arrange to have its temperature, air quality,
illumination, and everything else of importance, controlled by us and
manipulated in a way to make it perfectly accommodating to us. Gaia is just an
extension of the desire for comfort and security extended to an entire planet. What's
wrong with that?
What's wrong with that, said Trevize, is that my house or
my ship is engineered to suit me. I am not engineered to suit it. If I were
part of Gaia, then no matter how ideally the planet was devised to suit me, I
would be greatly disturbed over the fact that I was also being devised to suit
it.
Pelorat pursed his lips. One could argue that every society
molds its population to fit itself. Customs develop that make sense within the
society, and that chain every individual firmly to its needs.
In the societies I know, one can revolt. There are
eccentrics, even criminals.
Do you want eccentrics and criminals?
Why not? You and I are eccentrics. We're certainly not
typical of the people living on Terminus. As for criminals, that's a matter of
definition. And if criminals are the price we must pay for rebels, heretics,
and geniuses, I'm willing to pay it. I demand the price be paid.
Are criminals the only possible payment? Can't you have
genius without criminals?
You can't have geniuses and saints without having people
far outside the norm, and I don't see how you can have such things on only one
side of the norm. There is bound to be a certain symmetry. In any case, I want
a better reason for my decision to make Gaia the model for the future of
humanity than that it is a planetary version of a comfortable house.
Oh, my dear fellow. I wasn't trying to argue you into being
satisfied with your decision. I was just making an observa...
He broke off. Bliss was striding toward them, her dark hair
wet and her robe clinging to her body and emphasizing the rather generous width
of her hips. She was nodding to them as she came.
I'm sorry I delayed you, she said, panting a little. It
took longer to check with Dom than I had anticipated.
Surely, said Trevize, you know everything he knows.
Sometimes it's a matter of a difference in interpretation. We
are not identical, after all, so we discuss. Look here, she said, with a touch
of asperity, you have two hands. They are each part of you, and they seem
identical except for one being the mirror-image of the other. Yet you do not
use them entirely alike, do you? There are some things you do with your right
hand most of the time, and some with your left. Differences in interpretation,
so to speak.
She's got you, said Pelorat, with obvious satisfaction.
Trevize nodded. It's an effective analogy, if it were
relevant, and I'm not at all sure it is. In any case, does this mean we can
board the ship now? It is raining.
Yes, yes. Our people are all off it, and it's in perfect
shape. Then, with a sudden curious look at Trevize, You're keeping dry. The
raindrops are missing you.
Yes, indeed, said Trevize. I am avoiding wetness.
But doesn't it feel good to be wet now and then?
Absolutely. But at my choice, not the rain's.
Bliss shrugged. Well, as you please. All our baggage is
loaded so let's board.
The three walked toward the Far Star. The rain was growing
still lighter, but the grass was quite wet. Trevize found himself walking
gingerly, but Bliss had kicked off her slippers, which she was now carrying in
one hand, and was slogging through the grass barefoot.
It feels delightful, she said, in response to Trevize's
downward glance.
Good, he said absently. Then, with a touch of irritation,
Why are those other Gaians standing about, anyway?
Bliss said, They're recording this event, which Gaia finds
momentous. You are important to us, Trevize. Consider that if you should change
your mind as a result of this trip and decide against us, we would never grow
into Galaxia, or even remain as Gaia.
Then I represent life and death for Gaia; for the whole
world.
We believe so.
Trevize stopped suddenly, and took off his rain hat. Blue
patches were appearing in the sky. He said, But you have my vote in your favor
now. If you kill me, I'll never be able to change it.
Golan, murmured Pelorat, shocked. That is a terrible
thing to say.
Typical of an Isolate, said Bliss calmly. You must
understand, Trevize, that we are not interested in you as a person, or even in
your vote, but in the truth, in the facts of the matter. You are only important
as a conduit to the truth, and your vote as an indication of the truth. That is
what we want from you, and if we kill you to avoid a change in your vote, we
would merely be hiding the truth from ourselves.
If I tell you the truth is non-Gaia, will you all then
cheerfully agree to die?
Not entirely cheerfully, perhaps, but it's what it would
amount to in the end.
Trevize shook his head. If anything ought to convince me
that Gaia is a horror and should die, it might be that very statement you've
just made. Then he said, his eyes returning to the patiently watching (and,
presumably, listening) Gaians, Why are they spread out like that? And why do
you need so many? If one of them observes this event and stores it in his or
her memory, isn't it available to all the rest of the planet? Can't it be
stored in a million different places if you want it to be?
Bliss said, They are observing this each from a different
angle, and each is storing it in a slightly different brain. When all the
observations are studied, it will be seen that what is taking place will be far
better understood from all the observations together than from any one of them,
taken singly.
The whole is greater than the sum of the parts, in other
words.
Exactly. You have grasped the basic justification of Gaia's
existence. You, as a human individual, are composed of perhaps fifty trillion
cells, but you, as a multicellular individual, are far more important than
those fifty trillion as the sum of their individual importance. Surely you
would agree with that.
Yes, said Trevize. I agree with that.
He stepped into the ship, and turned briefly for one more
look at Gaia. The brief rain had lent a new freshness to the atmosphere. He saw
a green, lush, quiet, peaceful world; a garden of serenity set amid the
turbulence of the weary Galaxy.
And Trevize earnestly hoped he would never see it again.
6.
WHEN THE airlock closed behind them, Trevize felt as though
he had shut out not exactly a nightmare, but something so seriously abnormal
that it had prevented him from breathing freely.
He was fully aware that an element of that abnormality was
still with him in the person of Bliss. While she was there, Gaia was there-and
yet he was also convinced that her presence was essential. It was the black box
working again, and earnestly he hoped he would never begin believing in that
black box too much.
He looked about the vessel and found it beautiful. It had
been his only since Mayor Harla Branno of the Foundation had forced him into it
and sent him out among the stars-a living lightning rod designed to draw the
fire of those she considered enemies of the Foundation. That task was done but
the ship was still his, and he had no plans to return it.
It had been his for merely a matter of a few months, but it
seemed like home to him and he could only dimly remember what had once been his
home in Terminus.
Terminus! The off-center hub of the Foundation, destined, by
Seldon's Plan, to form a second and greater Empire in the course of the next
five centuries, except that he, Trevize, had now derailed it. By his own
decision he was converting the Foundation to nothing, and was making possible
instead, a new society, a new scheme of life, a frightening revolution that
would be greater than any since the development of multicellular life.
Now he was engaged in a journey designed to prove to himself
(or to disprove) that what he had done was right.
He found himself lost in thought and motionless, so that he
shook himself in self-irritation. He hastened to the pilot-room and found his
computer still there.
It glistened; everything glistened. There had been a most
careful cleaning. The contacts he closed, nearly at random, worked perfectly,
and, it surely seemed, with greater ease than ever. The ventilating system was
so noiseless that he had to put his hand over the vents to make sure he felt
air currents.
The circle of light on the computer glowed invitingly. Trevize
touched it and the light spread out to cover the desk top and the outline of a
right and left hand appeared on it. He drew a deep breath and realized that he
had stopped breathing for a while. The Gaians knew nothing about Foundation
technology and they might easily have damaged the computer without meaning any
malice. Thus far they had not-the hands were still there.
The crucial test came with the laying on of his own hands,
however, and, for a moment, he hesitated. He would know, almost at once, if
anything were wrong-but if something was, what could he do? For repairs, he
would have to go back to Terminus, and if he did, he felt quite confident that
Mayor Branno would not let him leave again. And if he did not
He could feel his heart pounding, and there was clearly no
point in deliberately lengthening the suspense.
He thrust his hands out, right, left, and placed them on the
outlines upon the desk. At once, he had the illusion of another pair of hands
holding his. His senses extended, and he could see Gaia in all directions,
green and moist, the Gaians still watching. When he willed himself to look
upward, he saw a largely cloudy sky. Again, at his will, the clouds vanished
and he looked at an unbroken blue sky with the orb of Gaia's sun filtered out.
Again he willed and the blue parted and he saw the stars.
He wiped them out, and willed and saw the Galaxy, like a
foreshortened pinwheel. He tested the computerized image, adjusting its
orientation, altering the apparent progress of time, making it spin first in
one direction, then the other. He located the sun of Sayshell, the nearest
important star to Gaia; then the sun of Terminus; then of Trantor; one after
the other. He traveled from star to star in the Galactic map that dwelt in the
bowels of the computer.
Then he withdrew his hands and let the world of reality
surround him again-and realized he had been standing all this time, half-bowing
over the computer to make the hand contact. He felt stiff and had to stretch
his back muscles before sitting down.
He stared at the computer with warm relief. It had worked
perfectly. It had been, if anything, more responsive, and what he felt for it
he could only describe as love. After all, while he held its hands (he
resolutely refused to admit to himself that he thought of it as her hands) they
were part of each other, and his will directed, controlled, experienced, and
was part of a greater self. He and it must feel, in a small way (he suddenly,
and disturbingly, thought), what Gaia did in a much larger way.
He shook his head. No! In the case of the computer and
himself, it was he Trevize-who was in entire control. The computer was a thing
of total submission.
He rose and moved out to the compact galley and dining area.
There was plenty of food of all kinds, with proper refrigeration and
easy-heating facilities. He had already noted that the book-films in his room
were in the proper order, and he was reasonably sure-no, completely sure-that
Pelorat had his personal library in safe storage. He would otherwise surely
have heard from him by now.
Pelorat! That reminded him. He stepped into Pelorat's room. Is
there room for Bliss here, Janov?
Oh yes, quite.
I can convert the common room into her bedroom.
Bliss looked up, wide-eyed. I have no desire for a separate
bedroom. I am quite content to stay here with Pel. I suppose, though, that I
may use the other rooms when needed. The gym, for instance.
Certainly. Any room but mine.
Good. That's what I would have suggested be the
arrangement, if I had had the making of it. Naturally, you will stay out of
ours.
Naturally, said Trevize, looking down and realizing that
his shoes overlapped the threshold. He took a half-step backward and said
grimly, 'These are not honeymoon quarters, Bliss.
I should say, in view of its compactness, that it is
exactly that even though Gaia extended it to half again as wide as it was.
Trevize tried not to smile. You'll have to be very
friendly.
We are, said Pelorat, clearly ill at ease at the topic of
conversation, but really, old chap, you can leave it to us to make our own
arrangements.
Actually, I can't, said Trevize slowly. I still want to
make it clear that these are not honeymoon accommodations. I have no objection
to anything you do by mutual consent, but you must realize that you will have
no privacy. I hope you understand that, Bliss.
There is a door, said Bliss, and I imagine you will not
disturb us who it is locked-short of a real emergency, that is.
Of course I won't. However, there is no soundproofing.
What you are trying to say, Trevize, said Bliss, is that
you will hear, quite clearly, any conversation we may have, and any sounds we
may make in the course of sex.
Yes, that is what I am trying to say. With that in mind, I
expect you may find you will have to limit your activities here. This may
discommode you, and I'm sorry, but that's the situation as it is.
Pelorat cleared his throat, and said gently, Actually,
Golan, this is a problem I've already had to face. You realize that any
sensation Bliss experiences, when together with me, is experienced by all of
Gaia.
I have thought of that, Janov, said Trevize, looking as
though he were repressing a wince. I didn't intend to mention it just in case
the thought had not occurred to you.
But it did, I'm afraid, said Pelorat.
Bliss said, Don't make too much of that, Trevize. At any
given moment, there may be thousands of human beings on Gaia who are engaged in
sex; millions who are eating, drinking, or engaged in other pleasure-giving
activities. This gives rise to a general aura of delight that Gaia feels, every
part of it. The lower animals, the plants, the minerals have their
progressively milder pleasures that also contribute to a generalized joy of
consciousness that Gaia feels in all its parts always, and that is unfelt in
any other world.
We have our own particular joys, said Trevize, which we
can share after a fashion, if we wish; or keep private, if we wish.
If you could feel ours, you would know how poverty-stricken
you Isolates are in that respect.
How can you know what we feel?
Without knowing how you feel, it is still reasonable to
suppose that a world of common pleasures must be more intense than those
available to a single isolated individual.
Perhaps, but even if my pleasures were poverty-stricken, I
would keep my own joys and sorrows and be satisfied with them, thin as they
are, and be me and not blood brother to the nearest rock.
Don't sneer, said Bliss. You value every mineral crystal
in your bones and teeth and would not have one of them damaged, though they
have no more consciousness than the average rock crystal of the same size.
That's true enough, said Trevize reluctantly, but we've
managed to get off the subject. I don't care if all Gaia shares your joy,
Bliss, but I don't want to share it. We're living here in close quarters and I
do not wish to be forced to participate in your activities even indirectly.
Pelorat said, This is an argument over nothing, my dear
chap. I am no more anxious than you to have your privacy violated. Nor mine,
for that matter. Bliss and I will be discreet; won't we, Bliss?
It will be as you wish, Pel.
After all, said Pelorat, we are quite likely to be
planet-bound for considerably longer periods than we will space-borne, and on
planets, the opportunities for true privacy...
I don't care what you do on planets, interrupted Trevize,
but on this ship, I am master.
Exactly, said Pelorat.
Then, with that straightened out, it is time to take off.
But wait. Pelorat reached out to tug at Trevize's sleeve. Take
off for where? You don't know where Earth is, nor do I, nor does Bliss. Nor
does your computer, for you told me long ago that it lacks any information on
Earth. What do you intend doing, then? You can't simply drift through space at
random, my dear chap.
At that, Trevize smiled with what was almost joy. For the
first time since he had fallen into the grip of Gaia, he felt master of his own
fate.
I assure you, he said, that it is not my intention to
drift, Janov. I know exactly where I am going.
7.
PELORAT walked quietly into the pilot-room after he had
waited long moments while his small tap on the door had gone unanswered. He
found Trevize looking with keen absorption at the starfield.
Pelorat said, Golan! and waited.
Trevize looked up. Janov! Sit down. Where's Bliss?
Sleeping. We're out in space, I see.
You see correctly. Trevize was not surprised at the
other's mild surprise. In the new gravitic ships, there was simply no way of
detecting takeoff. There were no inertial effects; no accelerational push; no
noise; no vibration.
Possessing the capacity to insulate itself from outside
gravitational fields to any degree up to total, the Far Star lifted from a
planetary surface as though it were floating on some cosmic sea. And while it
did so, the gravitational effect within the ship, paradoxically, remained
normal.
While the ship was within the atmosphere, of course, there
was no need to accelerate so that the whine and vibration of rapidly passing
air would be absent. As the atmosphere was left behind, however, acceleration
could take place, and at rapid rates, without affecting the passengers.
It was the
ultimate in comfort and Trevize did not see how it could be improved upon until
such time as human beings discovered a way of whisking through hyperspace
without ships, and without concern about nearby gravitational fields that might
be too intense. Right now, the Far Star would have to speed away from Gala's
sun for several days before the gravitational intensity was weak enough to
attempt the Jump.
Golan, my dear
fellow, said Pelorat. May I speak with you for a moment or two? You are not
too busy?
Not at all busy.
The computer handles everything once I instruct it properly. And sometimes it
seems to guess what my instructions will be, and satisfies them almost before I
can articulate them. Trevize brushed the top of the desk lovingly.
Pelorat said,
We've grown very friendly, Golan, in the short time we've known each other,
although I must admit that it scarcely seems a short time to me. So much has
happened. It's really peculiar when I stop to think of my moderately long life,
that half of all the events I have experienced were squeezed into the last few
months. Or so it would seem. I could almost suppose...
Trevize held up a
hand Janov, you're spinning outward from your original point, I'm sure. You
began by saying we've grown very friendly in a very short time. Yes, we have,
and we still are. For that matter, you've known Bliss an even shorter time and
have grown even friendlier.
That's
different, of course, said Pelorat, clearing his throat in some embarrassment.
Of course, said
Trevize, but what follows from our brief but enduring friendship?
If, my dear
fellow, we still are friends, as you've just said, then I must pass on to
Bliss, whom, as you've also just said, is peculiarly dear to me.
I understand.
And what of that?
I know, Golan,
that you are not fond of Bliss, but for my sake, I wish...
Trevize raised a
hand. One moment, Janov. I am not overwhelmed by Bliss, but neither is she an
object of hatred to me. Actually, I have no animosity toward her at all. She's
an attractive young woman and, even if she weren't, then, for your sake, I
would be prepared to find her so. It's Gaia I dislike.
But Bliss is
Gaia.
I know, Janov.
That's what complicates things so. As long as I think of Bliss as a person,
there's no problem. If I think of her as Gaia, there is.
But you haven't
given Gaia a chance, Golan. Look, old chap, let me admit something. When Bliss
and I are intimate, she sometimes lets me share her mind for a minute or so.
Not for more than that because she says I'm too old to adapt to it. Oh, don't
grin, Golan, you would be too old for it, too. If an Isolate, such as you or I,
were to remain part of Gaia for more, than a minute or two, there might be
brain damage and if it's as much as five or ten minutes, it would be
irreversible. If you could only experience it, Golan.
What?
Irreversible brain damage? No, thanks.
Golan, you're
deliberately misunderstanding me. I mean, just that small moment of union. You
don't know what you're missing. It's indescribable. Bliss rays there's a sense
of joy. That's like saying there's a sense of joy when you finally drink a bit
of water after you have all but died of thirst. I couldn't even begin to tell
you what it's like. You share all the pleasures that a billion people
separately experience. It isn't a steady joy; if it were you would quickly stop
feeling it. It vibrates-twinkles-has a strange pulsing rhythm that doesn't let
you go. It's more joy-no, not more-it's a better joy than you could ever
experience separately. I could weep when she shuts the door on me...
Trevize shook his
head. You are amazingly eloquent, my good friend, but you sound very much as
though you're describing pseudendorphin addiction, or that of some other drug
that admits you to joy in the short term at the price of leaving you
permanently in horror in the long term. Not for me! I am reluctant to sell my individuality
for some brief feeling of joy.
I still have my
individuality, Golan.
But for how long
will you have it if you keep it up, Janov? You'll beg for more and more of your
drug until, eventually, your brain will be damaged. Janov, you mustn't let
Bliss do this to you. Perhaps I had better speak to her about it.
No! Don't!
You're not the soul of tact, you know, and I don't want her hurt. I assure you
she takes better care of me in that respect than you can imagine. She's more
concerned with the possibility of brain damage than I am. You can be sure of
that.
Well, then, I'll
speak to you. Janov, don't do this anymore. You've lived for fifty-two years
with your own kind of pleasure and joy, and your brain is adapted to
withstanding that. Don't be snapped up by a new and unusual vice. There is a
price for it; if not immediately, then eventually.
Yes, Golan,
said Pelorat in a low voice, looking down at the tips of his shoes. Then he
said, Suppose you look at it this way. What if you were a one-celled
creature...
I know what
you're going to say, Janov. Forget it. Bliss and I have already referred to
that analogy.
Yes, but think a
moment. Suppose we imagine single-celled organisms with a human level of
consciousness and with the power of thought and imagine them faced with the
possibility of becoming a multicellular organism. Would not the single-celled
organisms mourn their loss of individuality, and bitterly resent their
forthcoming enforced regimentation into the personality of an overall organism?
And would they not be wrong? Could an individual cell even imagine the power of
the human brain?
Trevize shook his
head violently. No, Janov, it's a false analogy. Singlecelled organisms don't
have consciousness or any power of thought-or if they do it is so infinitesimal
it might as well be considered zero. For such objects to combine and lose
individuality is to lose something they have never really had. A human being,
however, is conscious and does have the power of thought. He has an actual consciousness
and an actual independent intelligence to lose, so the analogy fails.
There was silence
between the two of them for a moment; an almost oppressive silence; and finally
Pelorat, attempting to wrench the conversation in a new direction, said, Why
do you stare at the viewscreen?
Habit, said
Trevize, smiling wryly. The computer tells me that there are no Gaian ships
following me and that there are no Sayshellian fleets coming to meet me. Still
I look anxiously, comforted by my own failure to see such ships, when the
computer's sensors are hundreds of times keener and more piercing than my eyes.
What's more, the computer is capable of sensing some properties of space very
delicately, properties that my senses can't perceive under any conditions. Knowing
all that, I still stare.
Pelorat said,
Golan, if we are indeed friends...
I promise you I
will do nothing to grieve Bliss; at least, nothing I can help.
It's another
matter now. You keep your destination from me, as though you don't trust me with
it. Where are we going? Are you of the opinion you know where Earth is?
Trevize looked
up, eyebrows lifted. I'm sorry. I have been hugging the secret to my own
bosom, haven't I?
Yes, but why?
Trevize said,
Why, indeed. I wonder, my friend, if it isn't a matter of Bliss.
Bliss? Is it
that you don't want her to know. Really, old fellow, she is completely to be
trusted.
It's not that.
What's the use of not trusting her? I suspect she can tweak any secret out of
my mind if she wishes to. I think I have a more childish reason than that. I
have the feeling that you are paying attention only to her and that I no longer
really exist.
Pelorat looked
horrified. But that's not true, Golan.
I know, but I'm
trying to analyze my own feelings. You came to me just now with fears for our
friendship, and thinking about it, I feel as though I've had the same fears. I
haven't openly admitted it to myself, but I think I have felt cut out by Bliss.
Perhaps I seek to get even by petulantly keeping things from you. Childish, I
suppose.
Golan!
I said it was
childish, didn't I? But where is the person who isn't childish now and then?
However, we are friends. We've settled that and therefore I will play no
further games. We're going to Comporellon.
Comporellon?
said Pelorat, for the moment not remembering.
Surely you
recall my friend, the traitor, Munn Li Compor. We three met on Sayshell.
Pelorat's face
assumed a visible expression of enlightenment. Of course I remember.
Comporellon was the world of his ancestors.
If it was. I
don't necessarily believe anything Compor said. But Comporellon is a known
world, and Compor said that its inhabitants knew of Earth. Well, then, we'll go
there and find out. It may lead to nothing but it's the only starting point we
have.
Pelorat cleared
his throat and looked dubious. Oh, my dear fellow, are you sure?
There's nothing
about which to be either sure or not sure. We have one starting point and,
however feeble it might be, we have no choice but to follow it up.
Yes, but if
we're doing it on the basis of what Compor told us, then perhaps we ought to
consider everything he told us. I seem to remember that he told us, most
emphatically, that Earth did not exist as a living planet-that its surface was
radioactive and that it was utterly lifeless. And if that is so, then we are
going to Comporellon for nothing.
8.
THE THREE were
lunching in the dining room, virtually filling it as they did so.
This is very
good, said Pelorat, with considerable satisfaction. Is this part of our
original Terminus supply?
No, not at all,
said Trevize. That's long gone. This is part of the supplies we bought on
Sayshell, before we headed out toward Gaia. Unusual, isn't it? Some sort of
seafood, but rather crunchy. As for this stuff-I was under the impression it
was cabbage when I bought it, but it doesn't taste anything like it.
Bliss listened
but said nothing. She picked at the food on her own plate gingerly.
Pelorat said
gently, You've got to eat, dear.
I know, Pel, and
I'm eating.
Trevize said,
with a touch of impatience he couldn't quite suppress, We do have Gaian food,
Bliss.
I know, said
Bliss, but I would rather conserve that. We don't know how long we will be out
in space and eventually I must learn to eat Isolate food.
Is that so bad?
Or must Gaia eat only Gaia.
Bliss sighed.
Actually, there's a saying of ours that goes: When Gaia eats Gaia, there is
neither loss nor gain. It is no more than a transfer of consciousness up and
down the scale. Whatever I eat on Gaia is Gaia and when much of it is
metabolized and becomes me, it is still Gaia. In fact, by the fact that I eat,
some of what I eat has a chance to participate in a higher intensity of
consciousness, while, of course, other portions of it are turned into waste of
one sort or another and therefore sink in the scale of consciousness.
She took a firm
bite of her food, chewed vigorously for a moment, swallowed, and said, It
represents a vast circulation. Plants grow and are eaten by animals. Animals
eat and are eaten. Any organism that dies is incorporated into the cells of
molds, decay bacteria, and so on-still Gaia. In this vast circulation of
consciousness, even inorganic matter participates, and everything in the
circulation has its chance of periodically participating in a high intensity of
consciousness.
All this, said
Trevize, can be said of any world. Every atom in me has a long history during
which it may have been part of many living things, including human beings, and
during which it may also have spent long periods as part of the sea, or in a
lump of coal, or in a rock, or as a portion of the wind blowing upon us.
On Gaia,
however, said Bliss, all atoms are also continually part of a higher
planetary consciousness of which you know nothing.
Well, what
happens, then, said Trevize, to these vegetables from Sayshell that you are
eating? Do they become part of Gaia?
They do-rather
slowly. And the wastes I excrete as slowly cease being part of Gaia. After all,
what leaves me is altogether lacking in contact with Gaia. It lacks even the
less-direct hyperspatial contact that I can maintain, thanks to my high level
of conscious intensity. It is this hyperspatial contact that causes non-Gaian
food to become part of Gaia-slowly-once I eat it.
What about the
Gaian food in our stores? Will that slowly become nonGaian? If so, you had
better eat it while you can.
There is no need
to be concerned about that, said Bliss. Our Gaian stores have been treated in
such a way that they will remain part of Gaia over a long interval.
Pelorat said,
suddenly, But what will happen when we eat the Gaian food. For that matter,
what happened to us when we ate Gaian food on Gaia itself. Are we ourselves
slowly turning into Gaia7
Bliss shook her
head and a peculiarly disturbed expression crossed her face. No, what you ate
was lost to us. Or at least the portions that were metabolized into your
tissues were lost to us. What you excreted stayed Gaia or very slowly became
Gaia so that in the end the balance was maintained, but numerous atoms of Gaia
became non-Gaia as a result of your visit to us.
Why was that?
asked Trevize curiously.
Because you
would not have been able to endure the conversion, even a very partial one. You
were our guests, brought to our world under compulsion, in a manner of
speaking, and we had to protect you from danger, even at the cost of the loss
of tiny fragments of Gaia. It was a willing price we paid, but not a happy
one.
We regret that,
said Trevize, but are you sure that non-Gaian food, or some kinds of non-Gaian
food, might not, in their turn, harm you?
No, said Bliss.
What is edible for you would be edible to me. I merely have the additional
problem of metabolizing such food into Gaia as well as into my own tissues. It
represents a psychological barrier that rather spoils my enjoyment of the food
and causes me to eat slowly, but I will overcome that with time.
What about
infection? said Pelorat, in high-pitched alarm. I can't understand why I
didn't think of this earlier. Bliss! Any world you land on is likely to have
microorganisms against which you have no defense and you will die of some
simple infectious disease. Trevize, we must turn back.
Don't be
panicked, Pel dear, said Bliss, smiling. Microorganisms, too, are assimilated
into Gaia when they are part of my food, or when they enter my body in any
other way. If they seem to be in the process of doing harm, they will be
assimilated the more quickly, and once they are Gaia, they will do me no harm.
The meal drew to
its end and Pelorat sipped at his spiced and heated mixture of fruit juices. Dear
me, he said, licking his lips, I think it is time to change the subject
again. It does seem to me that my sole occupation on board ship is
subject-changing. Why is that?
Trevize said
solemnly, Because Bliss and I cling to whatever subjects we discuss, even to
the death. We depend upon you, Janov, to save our sanity. What subject do you
want to change to, old friend?
I've gone
through my reference material on Comporellon and the entire sector of which it
is part is rich in legends of age. They set their settlement far back in time,
in the first millennium of hyperspatial travel. Comporellon even speaks of a
legendary founder named Benbally, though they don't say when he came from. They
say that the original name of their planet was Benbally World.
And how much
truth is there in that, in your opinion, Janov?
A kernel,
perhaps, but who can guess what the kernel might be.
I never heard of
anyone named Benbally in actual history. Have you?
No, I haven't,
but you know that in the late Imperial era there was a deliberate suppression
of pre-Imperial history. The Emperors, in the turbulent last centuries of the
Empire, were anxious to reduce local patriotism since they considered it, with
ample justification, to be a disintegrating influence. In almost every sector
of the Galaxy, therefore, true history, with complete records and accurate
chronology, begins only with the days when Trantor's influence made itself felt
and the sector in question had allied Itself to the Empire or been annexed by
it.
I shouldn't
think that history would be that easy to eradicate, said Trevize.
In many ways, it
isn't, said Pelorat, but a determined and powerful government can weaken it
greatly. If it is sufficiently weakened, early history comes to depend on
scattered material and tends to degenerate into folk tales. Invariably such
folk tales will fill with exaggeration and come to show the sector to be older
and more powerful than, in all likelihood, it ever really was. And no matter
how silly a particular legend is, or how impossible it might be on the very
face of it, it becomes a matter of patriotism among the locals to believe it. I
can show you tales from every corner of the Galaxy that speak of original
colonization as having taken place from Earth itself, though that is not always
the name they give the parent planet.
What else do
they call it?
Any of a number
of names. They call it the Only, sometimes; and sometimes, the Oldest. Or they
call it the Mooned World, which, according to some authorities is a reference
to its giant satellite. Others claim it means Lost World and that Mooned is
a version of Marooned, a pre-Galactic word meaning lost or abandoned.
Trevize said
gently, Janov, stop! You'll continue forever with your authorities and counterauthorities.
These legends are everywhere, you say?
Oh yes, my dear
fellow. Quite. You have only to go through them to gain a feel for this human
habit of beginning with some seed of truth and layering about it shell after
shell of pretty falsehood-in the fashion of the oysters of Rhampora that build
pearls about a piece of grit. I came across just exactly that metaphor once
when...
Janov! Stop
again! Tell me, is there anything about Comporellon's legends that is different
from others?
Oh! Pelorat gazed
at Trevize blankly for a moment. Different? Well, they claim that Earth is
relatively nearby and that's unusual. On most worlds that speak of Earth, under
whatever name they choose, there is a tendency to be vague about its
location-placing it indefinitely far away or in some never-never land.
Trevize said,
Yes, as some on Sayshell told us that Gaia was located in hyperspace.
Bliss laughed.
Trevize cast her
a quick glance. It's true. That's what we were told.
I don't
disbelieve it. It's amusing, that's all. It is, of course, what we want them to
believe. We only ask to be left alone right now, and where can we be safer and
more secure than in hyperspace? If we're not there, we're as good as there, if
people believe that to be our location.
Yes, said
Trevize dryly, and in the same way there is something that causes people to
believe that Earth doesn't exist, or that it is far away, or that it has a
radioactive crust.
Except, said
Pelorat, that the Comporellians believe it to be relatively close to
themselves.
But nevertheless
give it a radioactive crust. One way or another every people with an
Earth-legend consider Earth to be unapproachable.
That's more or
less right, said Pelorat.
Trevize said,
Many on Sayshell believed Gaia to be nearby; some even identified its star
correctly; and yet all considered it unapproachable. There may be some
Comporellians who insist that Earth is radioactive and dead, but who can
identify its star. We will then approach it, unapproachable though they may
consider it. We did exactly that in the case of Gaia.
Bliss said, Gaia
was willing to receive you, Trevize. You were helpless in our grip but we had
no thought of harming you. What if Earth, too, is powerful, but not benevolent.
What then?
I must in any
case try to reach it, and accept the consequences. However, that is my task.
Once I locate Earth and head for it, it will not be too late for you to leave.
I will put you off on the nearest Foundation world, or take you back to Gaia,
if you insist, and then go on to Earth alone.
My dear chap,
said Pelorat, in obvious distress. Don't say such things. I wouldn't dream of
abandoning you.
Or I of
abandoning Pel, said Bliss, as she reached out a hand to touch Pelorat's
cheek.
Very well, then.
It won't be long before we're ready to take the Jump to Comporellon and
thereafter, let us hope, it will beon to Earth.
PART
TWOCOMPORELLON
Chapter 3
At the Entry
Station
9.
BLISS, entering
their chamber, said, Did Trevize tell you that we are going make the Jump and
go through hyperspace any moment now?
Pelorat, who was
bent over his viewing disk, looked up, and said, Actually, he just looked in
and told me within the half-hour.
I don't like the
thought of it, Pel. I've never liked the Jump. I get a funny inside-out
feeling.
Pelorat looked a
bit surprised. I had not thought of you as a space traveler, Bliss dear.
I'm not
particularly, and I don't mean that this is so only in my aspect as a
component. Gaia itself has no occasion for regular space travel. By
my/our/Gaia's very nature, I/we/Gaia don't explore, trade, or space junket.
Still, there is the necessity of having someone at the entry stations...
As when we were
fortunate enough to meet you.
Yes, Pel. She
smiled at him affectionately. Or even to visit Sayshell and other stellar
regions, for various reasons-usually clandestine. But, clandestine or not, that
always means the Jump and, of course, when any part of Gaia Jumps, all of Gaia
feels it.
That's too bad,
said Pel.
It could be
worse. The large mass of Gaia is not undergoing the jump, so the effect is
greatly diluted. However, I seem to feel it much more than most of Gaia. As I
keep trying to tell Trevize, though all of Gaia is Gaia, the individual
components are not identical. We have our differences, and my makeup is, for
some reason, particularly sensitive to the Jump.
Wait! said
Pelorat, suddenly remembering. Trevize explained that to me once. It's in
ordinary ships that you have the worst of the sensation. In ordinary ships, one
leaves the Galactic gravitational field on entering hyperspace, and comes back
to it on returning to ordinary space. It's the leaving and returning that
produces the sensation. But the Far Star is a gravitic ship. It is independent
of the gravitational field, and does not truly leave it or return to it. For
that reason, we won't feel a thing. I can assure you of that, dear, out of
personal experience.
But that's
delightful. I wish I had thought to discuss the matter earlier. I would have
saved myself considerable apprehension.
That's an
advantage in another way, said Pelorat, feeling an expansion of spirit in his
unusual role as explainer of matters astronautic. The ordinary ship has to
recede from large masses such as stars for quite a long distance through
ordinary space in order to make the Jump. Part of the reason is that the closer
to a star, the more intense the gravitational field, and the more pronounced
are the sensations of a Jump. Then, too, the more intense the gravitational
field the more complicated the equations that must be solved in order to
conduct the Jump safely and end at the point in ordinary space you wish to end
at.
In a gravitic
ship, however, there is no Jump-sensation to speak of. In addition, this ship
has a computer that is a great deal more advanced than ordinary computers and
it can handle complex equations with unusual skill and speed. The result is
that instead of having to move away from a star for a couple of weeks just to
reach a safe and comfortable distance for a Jump, the Far Star need travel for
only two or three days. This is especially so since we are not subject to a
gravitational field and, therefore, to inertial effects-I admit I don't
understand that, but that's what Trevize tells me-and can accelerate much more
rapidly than an ordinary ship could.
Bliss said,
That's fine, and it's to Trev's credit that he can handle this unusual ship.
Pelorat frowned
slightly. Please, Bliss. Say 'Trevize. '
I do. I do. In
his absence, however, I relax a little.
Don't. You don't
want to encourage the habit even slightly, dear. He's so sensitive about it.
Not about that.
He's sensitive about me. He doesn't like me.
That's not so,
said Pelorat earnestly. I talked to him about that. Now, now, don't frown. I
was extraordinarily tactful, dear child. He assured me he did not dislike you.
He is suspicious of Gaia and unhappy over the fact that he has had to make it
into the future of humanity. We have to make allowances for that. He'll get over
it as he gradually comes to understand the advantages of Gaia.
I hope so, but
it's not just Gaia. Whatever he may tell you, Pel-and remember that he's very
fond of you and doesn't want to hurt your feelings-he dislikes me personally.
No, Bliss. He
couldn't possibly.
Not everyone is
forced to love me simply because you do, Pel. Let me explain. Trev-all right,
Trevize-thinks I'm a robot.
A look of
astonishment suffused Pelorat's ordinarily stolid features. He said, Surely he
can't think you're an artificial human being.
Why is that so
surprising? Gaia was settled with the help of robots. That's a known fact.
Robots might
help, as machines night, but it was people who settled Gaia; people from Earth.
That's what Trevize thinks. I know he does.
There is nothing
in Gaia's memory about Earth as I told you and Trevize. However, in our oldest
memories there are still some robots, even after three thousand years, working
at the task of completing the modification of Gaia into a habitable world. We
were at that time also forming Gaia as a planetary consciousness-that took a
long time, Pel dear, and that's another reason why our early memories are dim,
and perhaps it wasn't a matter of Earth wiping them out, as Trevize thinks...
Yes, Bliss,
said Pelorat anxiously, but what of the robots?
Well, as Gaia
formed, the robots left. We did not want a Gaia that included robots, for we
were, and are, convinced that a robotic component is, in the long run, harmful
to a human society, whether Isolate in nature or Planetary. I don't know how we
came to that conclusion but it is possible that it is based on events dating
back to a particularly early time in Galactic history, so that Gaia's memory
does not extend back to it.
If the robots
left...
Yes, but what if
some remained behind? What if I am one of them-fifteen thousand years old
perhaps. Trevize suspects that.
Pelorat shook his
head slowly. But you're not.
Are you sure you
believe that?
Of course I do.
You're not a robot.
How do you
know?
Bliss, I know.
There's nothing artificial about you. If I don't know that, no one does.
Isn't it
possible I may be so cleverly artificial that in every respect, from largest to
smallest, I am indistinguishable from the natural. If I were, how could you
tell the difference between me and a true human being?
Pelorat said, I
don't think it's possible for you to be so cleverly artificial.
What if it were
possible, despite what you think?
I just don't
believe it.
Then let's just
consider it is a hypothetical case. If I were an indistinguishable robot, how
would you feel about it?
Well, I-I
To be specific.
How would you feel about making love to a robot?
Pelorat snapped
the thumb and mid-finger of his right hand, suddenly. You know, there are
legends of women falling in love with artificial men, and vice versa. I always
thought there was an allegorical significance to that and never imagined the
tales could represent literal truth. Of course, Golan and I never even heard
the word robot till we landed on Sayshell, but, now that I think of it, those
artificial men and women must have been robots. Apparently, such robots did
exist in early historic times. That means the legends should be
reconsidered...
He fell into
silent thought, and, after Bliss had waited a moment, she suddenly clapped her
hands sharply. Pelorat jumped.
Pel dear, said
Bliss. You're using your mythography to escape the question. The question is:
How would you feel about making love to a robot?
He stared at her
uneasily. A truly undistinguishable one? One that you couldn't tell from a
human being?
Yes.
It seems to me,
then, that a robot that can in no way be distinguished from a human being is a
human being. If you were such a robot, you would be nothing but a human being
to me.
That's what I
wanted to hear you say, Pel.
Pelorat waited,
then said, Well, then, now that you've heard me say it, dear, aren't you going
to tell me that you are a natural human being and that I don't have to wrestle
with hypothetical situations?
No. I will do no
such thing. You've defined a natural human being as an object that has all the
properties of a natural human being. If you are satisfied that I have all those
properties, then that ends the discussion. We've got the operational definition
and need no other. After all, how do I know that you're not just a robot who
happens to be indistinguishable from a human being?
Because I tell
you that I am not.
Ah, but if you
were a robot that was indistinguishable from a human being, you might be
designed to tell me you were a natural human being, and you might even be
programmed to believe it yourself. The operational definition is all we have,
and all we can have.
She put her arms
about Pelorat's neck and kissed him. The kiss grew more passionate, and
prolonged itself until Pelorat managed to say, in somewhat muffled fashion,
But we promised Trevize not to embarrass him by converting this ship into a
honeymooners' haven.
Bliss said
coaxingly, Let's be carried away and not leave ourselves any time to think of
promises.
Pelorat,
troubled, said, But I can't do that, dear. I know it must irritate you, Bliss,
but I am constantly thinking and I am constitutionally averse to letting myself
be carried away by emotion. It's a lifelong habit, and probably very annoying
to others. I've never lived with a woman who didn't seem to object to it sooner
or later. My first wife-but I suppose it would be inappropriate to discuss
that...
Rather
inappropriate, yes, but not fatally so. You're not my first lover either.
Oh! said
Pelorat, rather at a loss, and then, aware of Bliss's small smile, he said, I
mean, of course not. I wouldn't expect myself to have been-Anyway, my first
wife didn't like it.
But I do. I find
your endless plunging into thought attractive.
I can't believe
that, but I do have another thought. Robot or human, that doesn't matter. We
agree on that. However, I am an Isolate and you know it. I am not part of Gaia,
and when we are intimate, you're sharing emotions outside Gaia even when you
let me participate in Gaia for a short period, and it may not be the same
intensity of emotion then that you would experience if it were Gaia loving
Gaia.
Bliss said,
Loving you, Pel, has its own delight. I look no farther than that.
But it's not
just a matter of you loving me. You aren't merely you. What if Gaia considers
it a perversion?
If it did, I
would know, for I am Gaia. And since I have delight in you, Gaia does. When we
make love, all of Gaia shares the sensation to some degree or other. When I say
I love you, that means Gaia loves you, although it is only the part that I am
that is assigned the immediate role. You seem confused.
Being an
Isolate, Bliss, I don't quite grasp it.
One can always
form an analogy with the body of an Isolate. When you whistle a tune, your
entire body, you as an organism, wishes to whistle the tune, but the immediate
task of doing so is assigned to your lips, tongue, and lungs. Your right big
toe does nothing.
It might tap to
the tune.
But that is not
necessary to the act of whistling. The tapping of the big toe is not the action
itself but is a response to the action, and, to be sure, all parts of Gaia
might well respond in some small way or other to my emotion, as I respond to
theirs.
Pelorat said, I
suppose there's no use feeling embarrassed about this.
None at all.
But it does give
me a queer sense of responsibility. When I try to make you happy, I find that I
must be trying to make every last organism on Gaia happy.
Every last
atom-but you do. You add to the sense of communal joy that I let you share
briefly. I suppose your contribution is too small to be easily measurable, but
it is there, and knowing it is there should increase your joy.
Pelorat said, I
wish I could be sure that Golan is sufficiently busy with his maneuvering
through hyperspace to remain in the pilot-room for quite a while.
You wish to
honeymoon, do you?
I do.
Than get a sheet
of paper, write 'Honeymoon Haven' on it, affix It to the outside of the door,
and if he wants to enter, that's his problem.
Pelorat did so,
and it was during the pleasurable proceedings that followed that the Far Star
made the Jump. Neither Pelorat nor Bliss detected the action, nor would they
have, had they been paying attention.
10.
IT HAD BEEN ONLY
a matter of a few months since Pelorat had met Trevize and had left Terminus
for the first time. Until then, for the more than halfcentury (Galactic
Standard) of his life, he had been utterly planet-bound.
In his own mind,
he had in those months become an old space dog. He had seen three planets from
space: Terminus itself, Sayshell, and Gaia. And on the viewscreen, he now saw a
fourth, albeit through a computer-controlled telescopic device. The fourth was
Comporellon.
And again, for
the fourth time, he was vaguely disappointed. Somehow, he continued to feel
that looking down upon a habitable world from space meant seeing an outline of
its continents against a surrounding sea; or, if it were a dry world, the
outline of its lakes against a surrounding body of land.
It was never so.
If a world was
habitable, it had an atmosphere as well as a hydrosphere. And if it had both
air and water, it had clouds; and if it had clouds, it had an obscured view.
Once again, then, Pelorat found himself looking down on white swirls with an
occasional glimpse of pale blue or rusty brown.
He wondered
gloomily if anyone could identify a world if a view of it from, say, three
hundred thousand kilometers, were cast upon a screen. How does one tell one
cloud swirl from another?
Bliss looked at
Pelorat with some concern. What is it, Pel? You seem to be unhappy.
I find that all
planets look alike from space.
Trevize said,
What of that, Janov? So does every shoreline on Terminus, when it is on the
horizon, unless you know what you're looking for-a particular mountain peak, or
a particular offshore islet of characteristic shape.
I dare say,
said Pelorat, with clear dissatisfaction, but what do you look for in a mass
of shifting clouds? And even if you try, before you can decide, you're likely
to be moving into the dark side.
Look a little
more carefully, Janov. If you follow the shape of the clouds, you see that they
tend to fall into a pattern that circles the planet and that moves about a
center. That center is more or less at one of the poles.
Which one?
asked Bliss with interest.
Since, relative
to ourselves, the planet is rotating in clockwise fashion, we are looking down,
by definition, upon the south pole. Since the center seems to be about fifteen
degrees from the terminator-the planet's line of shadow-and the planetary axis
is tilted twenty-one degrees to the perpendicular of its plane of revolution,
we're either in mid-spring or mid-summer depending on whether the pole is
moving away from the terminator or toward it. The computer can calculate its
orbit and tell me in short order if I were to ask it. The capital is on the
northern side of the equator so it is either in mid-fall or mid-winter.
Pelorat frowned.
You can tell all that? He looked at the cloud layer as though he thought it
would, or should, speak to him now, but, of course, it didn't.
Not only that,
said Trevize, but if you'll look at the polar regions, you'll see that there
are no breaks in the cloud layer as there are away from the poles. Actually,
there are breaks, but through the breaks you see ice, so it's a matter of white
on white.
Ah, said
Pelorat. I suppose you expect that at the poles.
Of habitable
planets, certainly. Lifeless planets might be airless or waterless, or might
have certain stigmata showing that the clouds are not water a clouds, or that
the ice is not water ice. This planet lacks those stigmata, so We know we are
looking at water clouds and water ice.
The next thing
we notice is the size of the area of unbroken white on the day side of the
terminator, and to the experienced eye it is at once seen V larger than
average. Furthermore, you can detect a certain orange glint, a quite faint one,
to the reflected light, and that means Comporellon's sun if rather cooler than
Terminus's sun. Although Comporellon is closer to its sun than Terminus is to
hers, it is not sufficiently closer to make up for its star's lower
temperature. Therefore, Comporellon is a cold world as habitable worlds go.
You read it like
a film, old chap, said Pelorat admiringly.
Don't be too
impressed, said Trevize, smiling affectionately. The computer has given me
the applicable statistics of the world, including its slightly low average
temperature. It is easy to deduce something you already know. In fact,
Comporellon is at the edge of an ice age and would be having one, if the
configuration of its continents were more suitable to such a condition.
Bliss bit at her
lower lip. I don't like a cold world.
We've got warm
clothing, said Trevize.
That doesn't
matter. Human beings aren't adapted to cold weather, rally. We don't have thick
coats of hair or feathers, or a subcutaneous layer of blubber. For a world to
have cold weather seems to indicate a certain indifference to the welfare of its
own parts.
Trevize said, Is
Gaia a uniformly mild world?
Most of it, yes.
There are some cold areas for cold-adapted plants and animals, and some hot
areas for heat-adapted plants and animals, but most parts are uniformly mild,
never getting uncomfortably hot or uncomfortably cold, for those between,
including human beings, of course.
Human beings, of
course. All parts of Gaia are alive and equal in that respect, but some, like
human beings, are obviously more equal than other,
Don't be
foolishly sarcastic, said Bliss, with a trace of waspishness. The level and
intensity of consciousness and awareness are important. A human being is a more
useful portion of Gaia than a rock of the same weight would be, and the
properties and functions of Gaia as a whole are necessarily weighted in the
direction of the human being-not as much so as on your Isolate worlds, however.
What's more, there are times when it is weighted in other directions, when that
is needed for Gaia as a whole. It might even, at long intervals, be weighted in
the direction of the rocky interior. That, too, demands attention or, in the
lack of that attention all parts of Gaia might suffer. We wouldn't want an
unnecessary volcanic eruption, would we?
No, said
Trevize. Not an unnecessary one.
You're not
impressed, are you?
Look, said
Trevize. We have worlds that are colder than average and worlds that are
warmer; worlds that are tropical forests to a large extent, and worlds that are
vast savannahs. no two worlds are alike, and every one of them is home to those
who are used to it. I am used to the relative mildness of Terminus-we've tamed
it to an almost Gaian moderation, actually-but I like to get away, at least
temporarily, to something different. What we have, Bliss, that Gaia doesn't
have, is variation. If Gaia expands into Galaxia, will every world in the
Galaxy be forced into mildness? The sameness would be unbearable.
Bliss said, If
that is so, and if variety seems desirable, variety will be maintained.
As a gift from
the central committee, so to speak? said Trevize dryly. And as little of it
as they can bear to part with? I'd rather leave it to nature.
But you haven't
left it to nature. Every habitable world in the Galaxy has been modified. Every
single one was found in a state of nature that was uncomfortable for humanity,
and every single one was modified until it was as mild as could be managed. If
this world here is cold, I am certain that is because its inhabitants couldn't
warm it any further without unacceptable expense. And even so, the portions
they actually inhabit we can be sure are artificially warmed into mildness. So
don't be so loftily virtuous about leaving it to nature.
Trevize said,
You speak for Gaia, I suppose.
I always speak for
Gaia. I am Gaia.
Then if Gaia is
so certain of its own superiority, why did you require my decision? Why have
you not gone ahead without me?
Bliss paused, as
though to collect her thoughts. She said, Because it is not wise to trust
one's self overmuch. We naturally see our virtues with clearer eyes than we see
our defects. We are anxious to do what is right; not necessarily what seems
right to us, but what is right, objectively, if such a thing as objective right
exists. You seem to be the nearest approach to objective right that we can
find, so we are guided by you.
So objectively
right, said Trevize sadly, that I don't even understand my own decision and I
seek its justification.
You'll find it,
said Bliss.
I hope so, said
Trevize.
Actually, old
chap, said Pelorat, it seems to me that this recent exchange was won rather
handily by Bliss. Why don't you recognize the fact that her arguments justify
your decision that Gaia is the wave of the future for humanity?
Because, said
Trevize harshly, I did not know those arguments at the time I made my
decision. I knew none of these details about Gaia. Something else influenced
me, at least unconsciously, something that doesn't depend upon Gaian detail,
but must be more fundamental. It is that which I moil find out.
Pelorat held up a
placating hand. Don't be angry, Golan.
I'm not angry.
I'm just under rather unbearable tension. I don't want to be the focus of the
Galaxy.
Bliss said, I
don't blame you for that, Trevize, and I'm truly sorry that your own makeup has
somehow forced you into the post. When will we be landing on Comporellon?
In three days,
said Trevize, and only after we stop at one of the entry stations in orbit
about it.
Pelorat said,
There shouldn't be any problem with that, should there?
Trevize shrugged.
It depends on the number of ships approaching ft world, the number of entry
stations that exist, and, most of all, on the particular rules for permitting
and refusing admittance. Such rules change from time to time.
Pelorat said
indignantly, What do you mean refusing admittance? I can they refuse
admittance to citizens of the Foundation? Isn't Comporellan part of the
Foundation dominion?
Well, yes-and
no. There's a delicate matter of legalism about the point and I'm not sure how
Comporellon interprets it. I suppose there's a chance we'll be refused
admission, but I don't think it's a large chance.
And if we are
refused, what do we do?
I'm not sure,
said Trevize. Let's wait and see what happens before we wear ourselves out
making contingency plans.
11.
THEY WERE close
enough to Comporellon now for it to appear as a substantial globe without
telescopic enlargement. When such enlargement was added, however, the entry
stations themselves could be seen. They were farther out than most of the
orbiting structures about the planet and they were well lit.
Approaching as
the Far Star was from the direction of the planet's southern pole, half its
globe was sunlit constantly. The entry stations on its night side were
naturally more clearly seen as sparks of light. They were evenly spaced in an
arc about the planet. Six of them were visible (plus six on the day side
undoubtedly) and all were circling the planet at even and identical speeds.
Pelorat, a little
awed at the sight, said, There are other lights closer to the planet. What are
they?
Trevize said, I
don't know the planet in detail so I can't tell you. Some might be orbiting
factories or laboratories or observatories, or even populated townships. Some
planets prefer to keep all orbiting objects outwardly dark, except for the
entry stations. Terminus does, for instance. Comporellon conducts itself on a
more liberal principle, obviously.
Which entry
station do we go to, Golan?
It depends on
them. I've sent in my request to land on Comporellon and we'll eventually get
our directions as to which entry station to go to, and when. Much depends on
how many incoming ships are trying to make entry at present. If there are a
dozen ships lined up at each station, we will have no choice but to be
patient.
Bliss said, I've
only been at hyperspatial distances from Gaia twice before, and those were both
when I was at or near Sayshell. I've never been at anything like this
distance.
Trevize looked at
her sharply. Does it matter? You're still Gaia, aren't you?
For a moment,
Bliss looked irritated, but then dissolved into what was almost an embarrassed
titter. I must admit you've caught me this time, Trevize. There is a double
meaning in the word Gaia. It can be used to refer to the physical planet as a
solid globular object in space. It can also be used to refer to the living
object that includes that globe. Properly speaking, we should use two different
words for these two different concepts, but Gaians always know from the context
what is being referred to. I admit that an Isolate might be puzzled at times.
Well, then,
said Trevize, admitting that you are many thousands of parsecs from Gaia as
globe, are you still part of Gaia as organism?
Referring to the
organism, I am still Gaia.
No attenuation?
Not in essence.
I'm sure I've already told you there is some added complexity in remaining Gaia
across hyperspace, but I remain Gaia.
Trevize said,
Does it occur to you that Gaia may be viewed as a Galactic kraken-the
tentacled monster of the legends-with its tentacles reaching everywhere. You
have but to put a few Gaians on each of the populated worlds and you will
virtually have Galaxia right there. In fact. you have probably done exactly
that. Where are your Gaians located? I presume that one or more are on Terminus
and one or more are on Trantor. How much farther does this go?
Bliss looked
distinctly uncomfortable. I have said I won't lie to you, Trevize, but that
doesn't mean I feel compelled to give you the whole truth. There are some
things you have no need to know, and the position and identity of individual
bits of Gaia are among them.
Do I need to
know the reason for the existence of those tentacles, Bliss, even if I don't
know where they are?
It is the
opinion of Gaia that you do not.
I presume, though,
that I may guess. You believe you serve as the guardians of the Galaxy.
We are anxious
to have a stable and secure Galaxy; a peaceful and prosperous one. The Seldon
Plan, as originally worked out by Hari Seldon at least, is designed to develop
a Second Galactic Empire, one that is more stable and more workable than the
First was. The Plan, which has been continually modified and improved by the
Second Foundation, has appeared to be working well so far.
But Gaia doesn't
want a Second Galactic Empire in the classic sense, does it? You want Galaxia-a
living Galaxy.
Since you permit
it, we hope, in time, to have Galaxia. If you had not permitted it, we would
have striven for Seldon's Second Empire and made it as secure as we could.
But what is wrong
with...
His ear caught
the soft, burring signal. Trevize said, The computer is signaling me. I
suppose it is receiving directions concerning the entry station. I'll be back.
He stepped into
the pilot-room and placed his hands on those marked out on the desk top and
found that there were directions for the specific entry station he was to
approach-its co-ordinates with reference to the line from Comporellon's center
to its north pole-the prescribed route of approach.
Trevize signaled
his acceptance, and then sat back for a moment.
The Seldon Plan!
He had not thought of it for quite a time. The Fire Galactic Empire had
crumbled and for five hundred years the Foundation had grown, first in
competition with that Empire, and then upon its ruins-all in accordance with
the Plan.
There had been
the interruption of the Mule, which, for a time, had threatened to shiver the
Plan into fragments, but the Foundation had pulled through-probably with the
help of the ever-hidden Second Foundation-possibly with the help of the
even-better-hidden Gaia.
Now the Plan was
threatened by something more serious than the Mule had ever been. It was to be
diverted from a renewal of Empire to something utterly different from anything
in history-Galaxia. And he himself had agreed to that.
But why? Was
there a flaw in the Plan? A basic flaw?
For one flashing
moment, it seemed to Trevize that this flaw did indeed exist and that he knew
what it was, that he had known what it was when he made his decision-but the
knowledge .. . if that were what it was .. . vanished as fast as it came, and
it left him with nothing.
Perhaps it was
all only an illusion; both when he had made his decision, and now. After all,
he knew nothing about the Plan beyond the basic assumptions that validated
psychohistory. Apart from that, he knew no detail, and certainly not a single
scrap of its mathematics.
He closed his
eyes and thought
There was
nothing.
Might it be the
added power he received from the computer? He placed his hands on the desk top
and felt the warmth of the computer's hands embracing them. He closed his eyes
and once more he thought
There was still
nothing.
12.
THE COMPORELLIAN
who boarded the ship wore a holographic identity card. It displayed his chubby,
lightly bearded face with remarkable fidelity, and underneath it was his name,
A. Kendray.
He was rather
short, and his body was as softly rounded as his face was. He had a fresh and
easygoing look and manner, and he stared about the ship with clear amazement.
He said, How did
you get down this fast? We weren't expecting you for two hours.
It's a new-model
ship, said Trevize, with noncommittal politeness.
Kendray was not
quite the young innocent he looked, however. He stepped into the pilot-room and
said at once, Gravitic?
Trevize saw no
point in denying anything that was apparently that obvious. He said tonelessly,
Yes.
Very
interesting. You hear of them, but you never see them somehow. Motors in the
hull?
That's so.
Kendray looked at
the computer. Computer circuits, likewise?
That's so.
Anyway, I'm told so. I've never looked.
Oh well. What I
need is the ship's documentation; engine number, place of manufacture,
identification code, the whole patty-cake. It's all in the computer, I'm sure,
and it can probably turn out the formal card I need in half a second.
It took very
little more than that. Kendray looked about again. You three all the people on
board?
Trevize said,
That's right.
Any live
animals? Plants? State of health?
No. No. And
good, said Trevize crisply.
Um! said
Kendray, making notes. Could you put your hand in here? Just routine. Right
hand, please.
Trevize looked at
the device without favor. It was being used more and more commonly, and was
growing quickly more elaborate. You could almost tell the backwardness of a
world at a glance by the backwardness of its microdetector. There were now few
worlds, however backward, that didn't have one at all. The start had come with
the final breakup of the Empire, as each fragment of the whole grew
increasingly anxious to protect itself from the diseases and alien microorganisms
of all the others.
What is that?
asked Bliss, in a low and interested voice, craning her head to see it first on
one side, then the other.
Pelorat said, A
microdetector, I believe they call it.
Trevize added,
It's nothing mysterious. It's a device that automatically checks a portion of
your body, inside and out, for any microorganism capable of transmitting
disease.
This will
classify the microorganisms, too, said Kendray, with rather more than a hint
of pride. It's been worked out right here on Comporellon. And if you don't
mind, I still want your right hand.
Trevize inserted
his right hand, and watched as a series of small red markings danced along a
set of horizontal lines. Kendray touched a contact and a facsimile in color
appeared at once. If you'll sign that, sir, he said.
Trevize did so.
How badly off am I? he asked. I'm not in any great danger, am I?
Kendray said,
I'm not a physician, so I can't say in detail, but it shows none of the marks
that would require you to be turned away or to be put in quarantine. That's all
I'm interested in.
What a lucky
break for me, said Trevize dryly, shaking his hand to rid himself of the
slight tingle he felt.
You, sir, said
Kendray.
Pelorat inserted
his hand with a certain hesitancy, then signed the facsimile.
And you, ma'am?
A few moments
later, Kendray was staring at the result, saying, I never saw anything like
this before. He looked up at Bliss with an expression of awe. You're negative.
Altogether. '
Bliss smiled
engagingly. How nice.
Yes, ma'am. I
envy you. He looked back at the first facsimile, and said, Your
identification, Mr. Trevize.
Trevize presented
it. Kendray, glancing at it, again looked up in surprise. Councilman of the
Terminus Legislature?
That's right.
High official of
the Foundation?
Trevize said
coolly, Exactly right. So let's get through with this quickly, shall we?
You're captain
of the ship?
Yes, I am.
Purpose of
visit?
Foundation
security, and that's all the answer I'm going to give you. Do you understand
that?
Yes, sir. How
long do you intend to stay?
I don't know.
Perhaps a week.
Very well, sir.
And this other gentleman?
He is Dr. Janov
Pelorat, said Trevize. You have his signature there and I vouch for him. He
is a scholar of Terminus and he is my assistant in this business of my visit.
I understand,
sir, but I must see his identification. Rules are rules, I'm afraid. I hope you
understand, sir.
Pelorat presented
his papers.
Kendray nodded.
And you, miss?
Trevize said
quietly, No need to bother the lady. I vouch for her, too.
Yes, sir. But I
need the identification.
Bliss said, I'm
afraid I don't have any papers, sir.
Kendray frowned.
I beg your pardon.
Trevize said,
The young lady didn't bring any with her. An oversight. It's perfectly all
right. I'll take full responsibility.
Kendray said, I
wish I could let you do that, but I'm not allowed. The responsibility is mine.
Under the circumstances, it's not terribly important. There should be no
difficulty getting duplicates. The young woman, I presume, is from Terminus.
No, she's not.
From somewhere
in Foundation territory, then?
As a matter of
fact, she isn't.
Kendray looked at
Bliss keenly, then at Trevize. That's a complication, Councilman. It may take
additional time to obtain a duplicate from some non-Foundation world. Since
you're not a Foundation citizen, Miss Bliss, I must have the name of your world
of birth and of the world of which you're a citizen. You will then have to wait
for duplicate papers to arrive.
Trevize said,
See here, Mr. Kendray. I see no reason why there need be any delay whatever. I
am a high official of the Foundation government and I am here on a mission of
great importance. I must not be delayed by a matter of trivial paperwork.
The choice isn't
mine, Councilman. If it were up to me, I'd let you down to Comporellon right
now, but I have a thick book of rules that guides my every action. I've got to
go by the book or I get it thrown at me. of course,
I presume there
must be some Comporellian government figure who's waiting for you. If you'll
tell me who it is, I will contact him, and if he orders me to let you through,
then that's it.
Trevize hesitated
a moment. That would not be politic, Mr. Kendray. May I speak with your
immediate superior?
You certainly
may, but you can't just see him off-hand...
I'm sure he will
come at once when he understands he's speaking to a Foundation official...
Actually, said
Kendray, just between us, that would make matters worse. We're not part of the
Foundation metropolitan territory, you know. We come under the heading of an
Associated Power, and we take it seriously. The people are anxious not to
appear to be Foundation puppets-I'm using the popular expression only, you
understand-and they bend backward to demonstrate independence. My superior
would expect to get extra points if he resists doing a special favor for a
Foundation official.
Trevize's
expression darkened. And you, too?
Kendray shook his
head. I'm below politics, sir. no one gives me extra points for anything. I'm
just lucky if they pay my salary. And though I don't get extra points, I can
get demerits, and quite easily, too. I wish that were not so.
Considering my
position, you know, I can take care of you.
No, sir. I'm
sorry if that sounds impertinent, but I don't think you can. And, sir, it's
embarrassing to say this, but please don't offer me anything valuable. They
make examples of officials who accept such things and they're pretty good at
digging them out, these days.
I wasn't
thinking of bribing you. I'm only thinking of what the Mayor of Terminus can do
to you if you interfere with my mission.
Councilman, I'll
be perfectly safe as long as I can hide behind the rulebook. If the members of
the Comporellian Presidium get some sort of Foundation discipline, that is
their concern, and not mine. But if it will help, sir, I can let you and Dr.
Pelorat through on your ship. If you'll leave Miss Bliss behind at the entry
station, we'll hold her for a time and send her down to the surface as soon as
her duplicate papers come through. If her papers should not be obtainable, for
any reason, we will send her back to her world on commercial transportation.
I'm afraid, though, that someone will have to pay her fare, in that ease.
Trevize caught
Pelorat's expression at that, and said, Mr. Kendray, may I speak to you
privately in the pilot-room?
Very well, but I
can't remain on board very much longer, or I'll be questioned.
This won't take
long, said Trevize.
In the
pilot-room, Trevize made a show of closing the door tightly, then said, in a
low voice, I've been many places, Mr. Kendray, but I've never been anyplace
where there has been such harsh emphasis on the minutiae of the rules of
immigration, particularly for Foundation people and Foundation officials
But the young
woman is not from the Foundation.
Even so.
Kendray said,
These things go in rhythms. We've had some scandals and, right now, things are
tough. If you'll come back next year, you might not have any trouble at all,
but right now, I can do nothing.
Try, Mr.
Kendray, said Trevize, his voice growing mellow. I'm going to throw myself on
your mercy and appeal to you, man to man. Pelorat and I have been on this
mission for quite a while. He and I. Just he and I. We're good friends, but
there's something lonely about it, if you get me. Some time ago, Pelorat found
this little lady. I don't have to tell you what happened, but we decided to
bring her along. It keeps us healthy to make use of her now and then.
Now the thing is
Pelorat's got a relationship back on Terminus. I'm clear, you understand, but
Pelorat is an older man and he's got to the age when they get a
little-desperate. They need their youth back, or something. He can't give her
up. At the same time, if she's even mentioned, officially, there's going to be
misery galore on Terminus for old Pelorat when he gets back.
There's no harm
being done, you understand. Miss Bliss, as she calls herself-a good name
considering her profession-is not exactly a bright kid; that's not what we want
her for. Do you have to mention her at all? Can't you just list me and Pelorat
on the ship? Only we were originally listed when we left Terminus. There need
be no official notice of the woman. After all, she's absolutely free of
disease. You noted that yourself.
Kendray made a
face. I don't really want to inconvenience you. I understand the situation
and, believe me, I sympathize. Listen, if you think holding down a shift on
this station for months at a time is any fun, think again. And it isn't
co-educational, either; not on Comporellon. He shook his head. And I have a
wife, too, so I understand. But, look, even if I let you through, as soon as
they find out that the-uh-lady is without papers, she's in prison, you and Mr.
Pelorat are in the kind of trouble that will get back to Terminus. And I myself
will surely be out of a job.
Mr. Kendray,
said Trevize, trust me in this. Once I'm on Comporellon, I'll be safe. I can
talk about my mission to some of the right people and, when that's done,
there'll be no further trouble. I'll take full responsibility for what has
happened here, if it ever comes up-which I doubt. What's more, I will recommend
your promotion, and you will get it, because I'll see to it that Terminus leans
all over anyone who hesitates. And we can give Pelorat a break.
Kendray
hesitated, then said, All right. I'll let you through-but take a word of
warning. I start from this minute figuring out a way to save my butt if the
matter comes up. I don't intend to do one thing to save yours. What's more I
know how these things work on Comporellon and you don't, and Comporellon isn't
an easy world for people who step out of line.
Thank you, Mr.
Kendray, said Trevize. There'll be no trouble. I assure you of that.
Chapter 4
On Comporellon
13.
THEY WERE
through. The entry station had shrunk to a rapidly dimming star behind them,
and in a couple of hours they would be crossing the cloud layer.
A gravitic ship
did not have to brake its path by a long route of slow spiral contraction, but
neither could it swoop downward too rapidly. Freedom from gravity did not mean
freedom from air resistance. The ship could descend in a straight line, but it
was still a matter for caution; it could not be too fast.
Where are we
going to go? asked Pelorat, looking confused. I can't tell one place in the
clouds from another, old fellow.
No more can I,
said Trevize, but we have an official holographic map of Comporellon, which
gives the shape of the land masses and an exaggerated relief for both land
heights and ocean depths-and political subdivisions, too. The map is in the
computer and that will do the work. It will match the planetary land-sea design
to the map, thus orienting the ship properly, and it will then take us to the
capital by a cycloidic pathway.
Pelorat said, If
we go to the capital, we plunge immediately into the political vortex. If the
world is anti-Foundation, as the fellow at the entry station implied, we'll be
asking for trouble.
On the other
hand, it's bound to be the intellectual center of the planet, and if we want
information, that's where we'll find it, if anywhere. As for being
anti-Foundation, I doubt that they will be able to display that too openly. The
Mayor may have no great liking for me, but neither can she afford to have a
Councilman mistreated. She would not care to allow the precedent to be
established.
Bliss had emerged
from the toilet, her hands still damp from scrubbing. She adjusted her
underclothes with no sign of concern and said, By the way, I trust the excreta
is thoroughly recycled.
No choice, said
Trevize. How long do you suppose our water supply would last without recycling
of excreta? On what do you think those choicely flavored yeast cakes that we
eat to lend spice to our frozen staples grow? I hope that doesn't spoil your
appetite, my efficient Bliss.
Why should it?
Where do you suppose food and water come from on Gaia, or on this planet, or on
Terminus?
On Gaia, said
Trevize, the excreta is, of course, as alive as you are.
Not alive.
Conscious. There is a difference. The level of consciousness is, naturally,
very low.
Trevize sniffed
in a disparaging way, but didn't try to answer. He said, I'm going into the
pilot-room to keep the computer company. Not that it needs me.
Pelorat said,
May we come in and help you keep it company? I can't quite get used to the
fact that it can get us down all by itself; that it can sense other ships, or
storms, or-whatever?
Trevize smiled
broadly. Get used to it, please. The ship is far safer under the computer's
control than it ever would be under mine. But certainly, come on. It will do
you good to watch what happens.
They were over
the sunlit side of the planet now for, as Trevize explained, the map in the
computer could be more easily matched to reality in the sunlight than in the
dark.
That's obvious,
said Pelorat.
Not at all
obvious. The computer will judge just as rapidly by the infrared light which
the surface radiates even in the dark. However, the longer waves of infrared
don't allow the computer quite the resolution that visible light would. That
is, the computer doesn't see quite as finely and sharply by infrared, and where
necessity doesn't drive, I like to make things as easy as possible for the
computer.
What if the
capital is on the dark side?
The chance is
fifty-fifty, said Trevize, but if it is, once the map is matched by daylight,
we can skim down to the capital quite unerringly even if it is in the dark. And
long before we come anywhere near the capital, we'll be intersecting microwave
beams and will be receiving messages directing us to the most convenient
spaceport. There's nothing to worry about.
Are you sure?
said Bliss. You're bringing me down without papers and without any native
world that these people here will recognizeand I'm bound and determined not to
mention Gaia to them in any case. So what do we do, if I'm asked for my papers
once we're on the surface?
Trevize said,
That's not likely to happen. Everyone will assume that was taken care of at
the entry station.
But if they
ask?
Then, when that
time comes, we'll face the problem. Meanwhile, let's not manufacture problems
out of air.
By the time we
face the problems that may arise, it might well be too late to solve them.
I'll rely on my
ingenuity to keep it from being too late.
Talking about
ingenuity, how did you get us through the entry station?
Trevize looked at
Bliss, and let his lips slowly expand into a smile that made him seem like an
impish teenager. Just brains.
Pelorat said,
What did you do, old man?
Trevize said, It
was a matter of appealing to him in the correct manner. I'd tried threats and
subtle bribes. I had appealed to his logic and his loyalty to the Foundation.
Nothing worked, so I fell back on the last resort. I said that you were
cheating on your wife, Pelorat.
My wife? Hut, my
dear fellow, I don't have a wife at the moment.
I know that, but
he didn't.
Bliss said, By
wife, I presume you mean a woman who is a particular man's regular
companion.
Trevize said, A
little more than that, Bliss. A legal companion, one with enforceable rights in
consequence of that companionship.
Pelorat said
nervously, Bliss, I do not have a wife. I have had one now and then in the
past, but I haven't had one for quite a while. If you would care to undergo the
legal ritual.
Oh, Pel, said
Bliss, making a sweeping-away movement with her right hand, what would I care
about that? I have innumerable companions that are as close to me as your arm
is close companion to your other arm. It is only Isolates who feel so alienated
that they have to use artificial conventions to enforce a feeble substitute for
true companionship.
But I am an
Isolate, Bliss dear.
You will be less
Isolate in time, Pel. Never truly Gaia, perhaps, but less Isolate, and you will
have a flood of companions.
I only want you,
Bliss, said Pel.
That's because
you know nothing about it. You'll learn.
Trevize was
concentrating on the viewscreen during that exchange with a look of strained
tolerance on his face. The cloud cover had come up close and, for a moment, all
was gray fog.
Microwave vision,
he thought, and the computer switched at once to the detection of radar echoes.
The clouds disappeared and the surface of Comporellon appeared in false color,
the boundaries between sectors of different constitution a little fuzzy and
wavering.
Is that the way
it's going to look from now on? asked Bliss, with some astonishment.
Only till we
drift below the clouds. Then it's back to sunlight. Even as he spoke, the
sunshine and normal visibility returned.
I see, said
Bliss. Then, turning toward him, But what I don't see is why it should matter
to that official at the entry station whether Pel was deceiving his wife or
not?
If that fellow,
Kendray, had held you back, the news, I said, might reach Terminus and,
therefore, Pelorat's wife. Pelorat would then be in trouble. I didn't specify
the sort of trouble he would be in, but I tried to sound all though it would be
bad. There is a kind of free-masonry among males,
Trevize was
grinning, now, and one male doesn't betray another fellow male. male. He would
even help, if requested. The reasoning, I suppose, is that it might be the
helper's turn next to be helped. I presume, he added, turning a bit graver,
that there is a similar free-masonry among women, but, not being a woman, I
have never had an opportunity to observe it closely.
Bliss's face
resembled a pretty thundercloud. Is this a joke? she demanded.
No, I'm
serious, said Trevize. I don't say that that Kendray fellow let us through
only to help Janov avoid angering his wife. The masculine free-masonry may
simply have added the last push to my other arguments.
But that is
horrible. It is its rules that hold society together and bind it into a whole.
Is it such a light thing to disregard the rules for trivial reasons?
Well, said
Trevize, in instant defensiveness, some of the rules are themselves trivial.
Few worlds are very particular about passage in and out of their space in times
of peace and commercial prosperity, such as we have now, thanks to the
Foundation. Comporellon, for some reason, is out of step-probably because of an
obscure matter of internal politics. Why should we suffer over that?
That is beside
the point. If we only obey those rules that we think are just and reasonable,
then no rule will stand, for there is no rule that some will not think is
unjust and unreasonable. And if we wish to push our own individual advantage,
as we see it, then we will always find reason to believe that soma hampering
rule is unjust and unreasonable. What starts, then, as a shrewd trick ends in
anarchy and disaster, even for the shrewd trickster, since he, too, will not
survive the collapse of society.
Trevize said,
Society will not collapse that easily. You speak as Gaia, and Gaia cannot
possibly understand the association of free individuals. Rules, established
with reason and justice, can easily outlive their usefulness as circumstances
change, yet can remain in force through inertia. It is then not only right, but
useful, to break those rules as a way of advertising the fact that they have
become useless-or even actually harmful.
Then every thief
and murderer can argue he is serving humanity.
You go to
extremes. In the superorganism of Gaia, there is automatic consensus on the
rules of society and it occurs to no one to break them. Opt might as well say
that Gaia vegetates and fossilizes. There is admittedly an element of disorder
in free association, but that is the price one must pay fog the ability to
induce novelty and change. On the whole, it's a reasonable price.
Bliss's voice
rose a notch. You are quite wrong if you think Gaia vegetates and fossilizes.
Our deeds, our ways, our views are under constant self-examination. They do not
persist out of inertia, beyond reason. Gaia learns by experience and thought;
and therefore changes when that is necessary.
Even if what you
say is so, the self-examination and learning must be slow, because nothing but
Gaia exists on Gaia. Here, in freedom, even when almost everyone agrees, there
are bound to be a few who disagree and, in some cases, those few may be right,
and if they are clever enough, enthusiastic enough, right enough, they will win
out in the end and be heroes in future ages-like Hari Seldon, who perfected
psychohistory, pitted his own thoughts against the entire Galactic Empire, and
won.
He has won only
so far, Trevize. The Second Empire he planned for will not come to pass. There
will be Galaxia instead.
Will there?
said Trevize grimly.
It was your
decision, and, however much you argue with me in favor of Isolates and of their
freedom to be foolish and criminal, there is something in the hidden recesses
of your mind that forced you to agree with me/us/Gaia when you made your
choice.
What is present
in the hidden recesses of my mind, said Trevize, more grimly still, is what I
seek. There, to begin with, he added, pointing to the viewscreen where a great
city spread out to the horizon, a cluster of low structures climbing to
occasional heights, surrounded by fields that were brown under a light frost.
Pelorat shook his
head. Too bad. I meant to watch the approach, but I got caught up in listening
to the argument.
Trevize said,
Never mind, Janov. You can watch when we leave. I'll promise to keep my mouth
shut then, if you can persuade Bliss to control her own.
And the Far Star
descended a microwave beam to a landing at the spaceport.
14.
KENDRAY looked
grave when he returned to the entry station and watched the Far Star pass
through. He was still clearly depressed at the close of his shift.
He was sitting
down to his closing meal of the day when one of his mates, a gangling fellow
with wide-set eyes, thin light hair, and eyebrows so blond they seemed absent,
sat down next to him.
What's wrong,
Ken? said the other.
Kendray's lips
twisted. He said, That was a gravitic ship that just passed through, Gatis.
The odd-looking
one with zero radioactivity?
That's why it
wasn't radioactive. no fuel. Gravitic.
Gatis nodded his
head. What we were told to watch for, right?
Right.
And you got it.
Leave it to you to be the lucky one.
Not so lucky. A
woman without identification was on it-and I didn't report her.
What? Look,
don't tell me. I don't want to know about it. Not another word. You may be a
pal, but I'm not going to make myself an accomplice after the fact.
I'm not worried
about that. Not very much. I had to send the ship down. They want that
graviticor any gravitic. You know that.
Sure, but you
could at least have reported the woman.
Didn't like to.
She's not married. She was just picked up for-for use.
How many men on
board?
Two.
And they just
picked her up for-for that. They must be from Terminus. That's right.
They don't care
what they do on Terminus.
That's right.
Disgusting. And
they get away with it.
One of them was
married, and he didn't want his wife to know. If I reported her, his wife would
find out.
Wouldn't she be
back on Terminus?
Of course, but
she'd find out anyway.
Serve the fellow
right if his wife did find out.
I agree-but I
can't be the one to be responsible for it.
They'll hammer
you for not reporting it. Not wanting to make trouble for a guy is no excuse.
Would you have
reported him?
I'd have had to,
I suppose.
No, you
wouldn't. The government wants that ship. If I had insisted on putting the
woman on report, the men on the ship would have changed their minds about
landing and would have pulled away to some other planet. The government
wouldn't have wanted-that.
But will they
believe you?
I think so. A
very cute-looking woman, too. Imagine a woman like that being willing to come
along with two men, and married men with the nerve to take advantage. You know,
it's tempting.
I don't think
you'd want the missus to know you said thator even thought that.
Kendray said
defiantly, Who's going to tell her? You?
Come on. You
know better than that. Gatis's look of indignation faded quickly, and he said,
It's not going to do those guys any good, you know, you letting them through.
I know.
The people down
surface-way will find out soon enough, and even if you get away with it, they
won't.
I know, said
Kendray, but I'm sorry for them. Whatever trouble the woman will make for them
will be as nothing to what the ship will make for them. The captain made a few
remarks.
Kendray paused,
and Gatis said eagerly, Like what?
Never mind,
said Kendray. If it comes out, it's my butt.
I'm not going to
repeat it.
Neither am I.
But I'm sorry for those two men from Terminus.
15.
To ANYONE who has
been in space and experienced its changelessness, the real excitement of space
flight comes when it is time to land on a new planet. The ground speeds
backward under you as you catch glimpses of land and water, of geometrical
areas and lines that might represent fields and roads. You become aware of the
green of growing things, the gray of concrete, the brown of bare ground, the
white of snow. Most of all, there is the excitement of populated conglomerates;
cities which, on each world, have their own characteristic geometry and
architectural variants.
In an ordinary
ship, there would have been the excitement of touching down and skimming across
a runway. For the Far Star, it was different. It floated through the air, was
slowed by skillfully balancing air resistance and gravity, and finally made to
come to rest above the spaceport. The wind was gusty and that introduced an
added complication. The Far Star, when adjusted to low response to
gravitational pull, was not only abnormally low in weight, but in mass as well.
If its mass were too close to zero, the wind would blow it away rapidly. Hence,
gravitational response had to be raised and jetthrusts had to be delicately
used not only against the planet's pull but against the wind's push, and in a
manner that matched the shift in wind intensity closely. Without an adequate
computer, it could not possibly have been done properly.
Downward and
downward, with small unavoidable shifts in this direction and that, drifted the
ship until it finally sank into the outlined area that marked its assigned
position in the port.
The sky was a
pale blue, intermingled with flat white, when the Far Star landed. The wind
remained gusty even at ground level and though it was now no longer a
navigational peril, it produced a chill that Trevize winced at. He realized at
once that their clothing supply was totally unsuited to Comporellian weather.
Pelorat, on the
other hand, looked about with appreciation and drew his breath deeply through
his nose with relish, liking the bite of the cold, at least for the moment. He
even deliberately unseamed his coat in order to feel the wind against his
chest. In a little while, he knew, he would seam up again and adjust his scarf,
but for now he wanted to feel the existence of an atmosphere. One never did
aboard ship.
Bliss drew her
coat closely about herself, and, with gloved hands, dragged her hat down to
cover her ears. Her face was crumpled in misery and seemed close to tears.
She muttered,
This world is evil. It hates and mistreats us.
Not at all,
Bliss dear, said Pelorat earnestly. I'm sure the inhabitant; like this world,
and that it-uh-likes them, if you want to put it that way. We'll be indoors
soon enough, and it will be warm there.
Almost as an
afterthought, he flipped one side of his coat outward curved it about her,
while she snuggled against his shirtfront.
Trevize did his
best to ignore the temperature. He obtained a map card from the port authority,
checking it on his pocket computer to sure that it gave the necessary
details-his aisle and lot number, the and engine number of his ship, and so on.
He checked once more to sure that the ship was tightly secured, and then took
out the maximum insurance allowed against the chance of misadventure (useless,
actually, the Far Star should be invulnerable at the likely Comporellian level
of technology, and was entirely irreplaceable at whatever price, if it were
not). !
Trevize found the
taxi-station where it ought to be. (A number of facilities at spaceports were
standardized in position, appearance, and manner of use. They had to be, in
view of the multiworld nature of the clientele.)
He signaled for a
taxi, punching out the destination merely as City.
A taxi glided up
to them on diamagnetic skis, drifting slightly under the impulse of the wind,
and trembling under the vibration of its not-quite-silent engine. It was a dark
gray in color and bore its white taxi-insignia on tell doors. The taxi-driver
was wearing a dark coat and a white, furred bat.
Pelorat, becoming
aware, said softly, The planetary decor seem to be black and white.
Trevize said, It
may be more lively in the city proper.
The driver spoke
into a small microphone, perhaps in order to avoid opening the window. Going
to the city, folks?
There was a
gentle singsong to his Galactic dialect that was rather attractive, and he was
not hard to understand-always a relief on a new world,
Trevize said,
That's right, and the rear door slid open.
Bliss entered,
followed by Pelorat, and then by Trevize. The door Wood and warm air welled
upward.
Bliss rubbed her
hands and breathed a long sigh of relief.
The taxi pulled
out slowly, and the driver said, That ship you came in is gravitic, isn't it?
Trevize said
dryly, Considering the way it came down, would you doubt it?
The driver said,
Is it from Terminus, then?
Trevize said, Do
you know any other world that could build one?
The driver seemed
to digest that as the taxi took on speed. He then said, Do you always answer a
question with a question?
Trevize couldn't
resist. Why not?
In that case,
how would you answer me if I asked if your name were Golan Trevize?
I would answer:
What makes you ask?
The taxi came to
a halt at the outskirts of the spaceport and the driver said, Curiosity! I ask
again: Are you Golan Trevize?
Trevize's voice
became stiff and hostile. What business is that of yours?
My friend, said
the driver, We're not moving till you answer the question. And if you don't
answer in a clear yes or no in about two seconds, I'm turning the heat off in
the passenger compartment and we'll keep on waiting. Are you Golan Trevize,
Councilman of Terminus? If your answer is in the negative, you will have to
show me your identification papers.
Trevize said,
Yes, I am Golan Trevize, and as a Councilman of the Foundation, I expect to be
treated with all the courtesy due my rank. Your failure to do so will have you
in hot water, fellow. Now what?
Now we can
proceed a little more lightheartedly. The taxi began to move again. I choose
my passengers carefully, and I had expected to pick up two men only. The woman
was a surprise and I might have made a mistake. As it is, if I have you, then I
can leave it to you to explain the woman when you reach your destination.
You don't know
my destination.
As it happens, I
do. You're going to the Department of Transportation.
That's not where
I want to go.
That matters not
one little bit, Councilman. If I were a taxi-driver, I'd take you where you
want to go. Since I'm not, I take you where I want you to go.
Pardon me, said
Pelorat, leaning forward, you certainly seem to be a taxi-driver. You're
driving a taxi.
Anyone might
drive a taxi. Not everyone has a license to do so. And not every car that looks
like a taxi is a taxi.
Trevize said,
Let's stop playing games. Who are you and what are you doing? Remember that
you'll have to account for this to the Foundation.
Not I, said the
driver, My superiors, perhaps. I'm an agent of the Comporellian Security
Force. I am under orders to treat you with all due respect to your rank, but
you must go where I take you. And be very careful how you react, for this
vehicle is armed, and I am under orders to defend myself against attack.
16.
THE VEHICLE,
having reached cruising speed, moved with absolute, smooth quiet, and Trevize
sat there in quietness as frozen. He was aware, without actually looking, of
Pelorat glancing at him now and then with a look of uncertainty on his face, a
What do we do now? Please tell me look.
Bliss, a quick
glance told him, sat calmly, apparently unconcerned. Of course, she was a whole
world in herself. All of Gaia, though it might be at Galactic distances, was
wrapped up in her skin. She had resources that could be called on in a true
emergency.
But, then, what
had happened?
Clearly, the
official at the entry station, following routine, had sent down his
report-omitting Bliss-and it had attracted the interest of the security people
and, of all things, the Department of Transportation. Why?
It was peacetime
and he knew of no specific tensions between Comporellon and the Foundation. He
himself was an important Foundation official
Wait, he had told
the official at the entry station-Kendray, his name had been-that he was on
important business with the Comporellian government. He had stressed that in
his attempt to get through. Kendray must have reported that as well and that
would rouse all sorts of interest.
He hadn't
anticipated that, and he certainly should have.
What, then, about
his supposed gift of rightness? Was he beginning to believe that he was the
black box that Gaia thought he was-or said it thought he was. Was he being led
into a quagmire by the growth of an overconfidence built on superstition?
How could he for
one moment be trapped in that folly? Had he never in hit life been wrong? Did
he know what the weather would be tomorrow? Did he win large amounts in games
of chance? The answers were no, no, and no.
Well, then, was
it only in the large, inchoate things that he was always right? How could he
tell?
Forget that!
After all, the mere fact that he had stated he had important state business-no,
it was Foundation security that he had said
Well, then, the
mere fact that he was there on a matter of Foundation security, coming, as he had,
secretly and unheralded, would surely attract their attention. Yes, but until
they knew what it was all about they would surely act with the utmost
circumspection. They would be ceremonious and treat him as a high dignitary.
They would not kidnap him and make use of threats.
Yet that was
exactly what they had done. Why?
What made them
feel strong enough and powerful enough to treat a Councilman of Terminus in
such a fashion?
Could it be
Earth? Was the same force that hid the world of origin so effectively, even
against the great mentalists of the Second Foundation, now working to
circumvent his search for Earth in the very first stage of that search? Was
Earth omniscient? Omipotent?
Trevize shook his
head. That way lay paranoia. Was he going to blame Earth for everything? Was
every quirk of behavior, every bend in the road, every twist of circumstance,
to be the result of the secret machinations of Earth? As soon as he began to
think in that fashion, he was defeated.
At that point, he
felt the vehicle decelerating and was brought back to reality at a stroke.
It occurred to
him that he had never, even for one moment, looked at the city through which
they had been passing. He looked about now, a touch wildly. The buildings were
low, but it was a cold planet-most of the structures were probably underground.
He saw no trace
of color and that seemed against human nature.
Occasionally, he
could see a person pass, well bundled. But, then, the people, like the
buildings themselves, were probably mostly underground.
The taxi had
stopped before a low, broad building, set in a depression, the bottom of which
Trevize could not see. Some moments passed and it continued to remain there,
the driver himself motionless as well. His tall, white hat nearly touched the
roof of the vehicle.
Trevize wondered
fleetingly how the driver managed to step in and out of the vehicle without
knocking his hat off, then said, with the controlled anger one would expect of
a haughty and mistreated official, Well, driver, what now?
The Comporellian
version of the glittering field-partition that separated the driver from the
passengers was not at all primitive. Sound waves could pass through-though
Trevize was quite certain that material objects, at reasonable energies, could
not.
The driver said,
Someone will be up to get you. Just sit back and take it easy.
Even as he said
this, three heads appeared in a slow, smooth ascent from the depression in
which the building rested. After that, there came the rest of the bodies.
Clearly, the newcomers were moving up the equivalent of an escalator, but
Trevize could not see the details of the device from where he sat.
As the three
approached, the passenger door of the taxi opened and a flood of cold air swept
inward.
Trevize stepped
out, seaming his coat to the neck. The other two followed him-Bliss with
considerable reluctance.
The three
Comporellians were shapeless, wearing garments that ballooned outward and were
probably electrically heated. Trevize felt scorn at that. There was little use
for such things on Terminus, and the one time he had borrowed a heat-coat
during winter on the nearby planet of Anacreon, he discovered it had a tendency
to grow warmer at a slow rate so that by the time he realized he was too warm
he was perspiring uncomfortably.
As the
Comporellians approached, Trevize noted with a distinct sense of indignation
that they were armed. Nor did they try to conceal the fact. Quite the contrary.
Each had a blaster in a holster attached to the outer garment
One of the
Comporellians, having stepped up to confront Trevize, said gruffly, Your
pardon, Councilman, and then pulled his coat open with rough movement. He had
inserted questing hands which moved quickly up and down Trevize's sides, back,
chest, and thighs. The coat was shaken and felt. Trevize was too overcome by
confused astonishment to realize he had been rapidly and efficiently searched
till it was over.
Pelorat, his chin
drawn down and his mouth in a twisted grimace, was undergoing a similar
indignity at the hands of a second Comporellian.
The third was
approaching Bliss, who did not wait to be touched. She, at least, knew what to
expect, somehow, for she whipped off her coat and, for a moment, stood there in
her light clothing, exposed to the whistle of the wind.
She said, freezingly
enough to match the temperature, You can see I'm not armed.
And indeed anyone
could. The Comporellian shook the coat, as though by its weight he could tell
if it contained a weapon-perhaps he couldand retreated.
Bliss put on her
coat again, huddling into it,and for a moment Trevize admired her gesture. He
knew how she felt about the cold, but she had not allowed a tremor or shiver to
escape her as she had stood there in thin blouse and slacks. (Then he wondered
if, in the emergency, she might not have drawn warmth from the rest of Gaia.)
One of the
Comporellians gestured, and the three Outworlders followed him. The other two
Comporellians fell behind. The one or two pedestrians who were on the street
did not bother to watch what was happening. Either they were too accustomed to
the sight or, more likely, had their minds occupied with getting to some indoor
destination as soon as possible.
Trevize saw now
that it was a moving ramp up which the Comporellians had ascended. They were
descending now, all six of them, and pasted through a lock arrangement almost
as complicated as that on a spaceship-to keep heat inside, no doubt, rather
than-air.
And then, at
once, they were inside a huge building.
Chapter 5
Struggle for the
Ship
17.
TREVIZE'S first
impression was that he was on the set of a hyperdrama-specifically, that of a
historical romance of Imperial days. There was a particular set, with few
variations (perhaps only one existed and was used by every hyperdrama producer,
for all he knew), that represented the great worldgirdling planet-city of
Trantor in its prime.
There were the
large spaces, the busy scurry of pedestrians, the small vehicles speeding along
the lanes reserved for them.
Trevize looked
up, almost expecting to see air-taxis climbing into dim vaulted recesses, but
that at least was absent. In fact, as his initial astonishment subsided, it was
clear that the building was far smaller than one would expect on Trantor. It
was only a building and not part of a complex that stretched unbroken for
thousands of miles in every direction.
The colors were
different, too. On the hyperdramas, Trantor was always depicted as impossibly
garish in coloring and the clothing was, if taken literally, thoroughly
impractical and unserviceable. However, all those colors and frills were meant
to serve a symbolic purpose for they indicated the decadence (a view that was
obligatory, these days) of the Empire, and of Trantor particularly.
If that were so,
however, Comporellon was the very reverse of decadent, for the color scheme
that Pelorat had remarked upon at the spaceport was here borne out.
The walls were in
shades of gray, the ceilings white, the clothing of the population in black,
gray, and white. Occasionally, there was an all-black costume; even more
occasionally, an all-gray; never an all-white that Trevize could see. The
pattern was always different, however, as though people, deprived of color,
still managed, irrepressibly, to find ways of asserting individuality.
Faces tended to
be expressionless or, if not that, then grim. Women wore their hair short; men
longer, but pulled backward into short queues. no one looked at anyone else as
he or she passed. Everyone seemed to breathe a purposefulness, as though there
was definite business on each mind and room for nothing else. Men and women
dressed alike, with only length of hair and the slight bulge of breast and
width of hip marking the difference.
The three were
guided into an elevator that went down five levels. There they emerged and were
moved on to a door on which there appeared in small and unobtrusive lettering,
white on gray, Mitza Lizalor, MinTrans.
The Comporellian
in the lead touched the lettering, which, after a moment, glowed in response.
The door opened and they walked in.
It was a large
room and rather empty, the bareness of content serving, perhaps, as a kind of
conspicuous consumption of space designed to show the power of the occupant.
Two guards stood
against the far wall, faces expressionless and eyes firmly fixed on those
entering. A large desk filled the center of the room, set perhaps just a little
back of center. Behind the desk was, presumably, Mitza Lizalor, large of body,
smooth of face, dark of eyes. Two strong and capable hands with long, square-ended
fingers rested on the desk.
The MinTrans
(Minister of Transportation, Trevize assumed) had the lapels of the outer
garment a broad and dazzling white against the dark gray of the rest of the
costume. The double bar of white extended diagonally below the lapels, across
the garment itself and crossing at the center of the chest. Trevize could see
that although the garment was cut in such a fashion as to obscure the swelling
of a woman's breasts on either side, the white X called attention to them.
The Minister was
undoubtedly a woman. Even if her breasts were ignored, her short hair showed
it, and though there was no makeup on her face, her features showed it, too.
Her voice, too,
was indisputably feminine, a rich contralto.
She said, Good
afternoon. It is not often that we are honored by a visit of men from Terminus.
And of an unreported woman as well. Her eyes passed from one to another, then
settled on Trevize, who was standing stiffly and frowningly erect. And one of
the men a member of the Council, too.
A Councilman of
the Foundation, said Trevize, trying to make his voice ring. Councilman Golan
Trevize on a mission from the Foundation.
On a mission?
The Minister's eyebrows rose.
On a mission,
repeated Trevize. Why, then, are we being treated as felons? Why have we been
taken into custody by armed guards and brought here as prisoners? The Council
of the Foundation, I hope you understand, will not be pleased to hear of this.
And in any
case, said Bliss, her voice seeming a touch shrill in comparison with that of
the older woman, are we to remain standing indefinitely?
The Minister
gazed coolly at Bliss for a long moment, then raised an arm and said, Three
chairs! Now!
A door opened and
three men, dressed in the usual somber Comporellian fashion, brought in three
chairs at a semitrot. The three people standing before the desk sat down.
There, said the
Minister, with a wintry smile, are we comfortable?
Trevize thought not.
The chairs were uncushioned, cold to the touch, flat of surface and back,
making no compromise with the shape of the body. He said, Why are we here?
The Minister
consulted papers lying on her desk. I will explain as soon as I am certain of
my facts. Your ship is the Far Star out of Terminus. Is that correct,
Councilman?
It is.
The Minister
looked up. I used your title, Councilman. Will you, as a courtesy, use mine?
Would Madam
Minister be sufficient? Or is there an honorific?
No honorific, sir,
and you need not double your words. Minister is sufficient, or Madam if you
weary of repetition.
Then my answer
to your question is: It is, Minister.
The captain of
the ship is Golan Trevize, citizen of the Foundation and member of the Council
on Terminus-a freshman Councilman, actually. And you are Trevize. Am I correct
in all this, Councilman?
You are,
Minister. And since I am a citizen of the Foundation.
I am not yet
done, Councilman. Save your objections till I am. Accompanying you is Janov
Pelorat, scholar, historian, and citizen of the Foundation. And that is you, is
it not, Dr. Pelorat?
Pelorat could not
suppress a slight start as the Minister turned her keen glance on him. He said,
Yes, it is, my He paused, and began again, Yes, it is, Minister.
The Minister
clasped her hands stiffly. There is no mention in the report that has been
forwarded to me of a woman. Is this woman a member of the ship's complement?
She is,
Minister, said Trevize.
Then I address
myself to the woman. Your name?
I am known as
Bliss, said Bliss, sitting erectly and speaking with calm clarity, though my
full name is longer, madam. Do you wish it all?
I will be
content with Bliss for the moment. Are you a citizen of the Foundation, Bliss?
I am not, madam.
Of what world
are you a citizen, Bliss?
I have no
documents attesting to citizenship with respect to any world, madam.
No papers,
Bliss? She made a small mark on the papers before her. That fact is noted.
What is it you are doing on board the ship?
I am a
passenger, madam.
Did either
Councilman Trevize or Dr. Pelorat ask to see your papers before you boarded,
Bliss?
No, madam.
Did you inform
them that you were without papers, Bliss?
No, madam.
What is your
function on board ship, Bliss? Does your name suit your function?
Bliss said
proudly, I am a passenger and have no other function.
Trevize broke in.
Why are you badgering this woman, Minister? What law has she broken?
Minister
Lizalor's eyes shifted from Bliss to Trevize. She said, You are an Outworlder,
Councilman, and do not know our laws. Nevertheless, you are subject to them if
you choose to visit our world. You do not bring your laws with you; that is a
general rule of Galactic law, I believe.
Granted,
Minister, but that doesn't tell me which of your laws she has broken.
It is a general
rule in the Galaxy, Councilman, that a visitor from a world outside the
dominions of the world she is visiting have her identification papers with her.
Many worlds are lax in this respect, valuing tourism, or indifferent to the
rule of order. We of Comporellon are not. We are a world o(' law and rigid in
its application. She is a worldless person, and as such, breaks our law.
Trevize said,
She had no choice in the matter. I was piloting the ship, and I brought it
down to Comporellon. She had to accompany us, Minister, or do you suggest she
should have asked to be jettisoned in space?
This merely
means that you, too, have broken our law, Councilman.
No, that is not
so, Minister. I am not an Outworlder. I am a citizen of the Foundation, and
Comporellon and the worlds subject to it are an Associated Power of the
Foundation. As a citizen of the Foundation, I can travel freely here.
Certainly, Councilman,
as long as you have documentation to prove that you are indeed a citizen of the
Foundation.
Which I do,
Minister.
Yet even as
citizen of the Foundation, you do not have the right to break our law by
bringing a worldless person with you.
Trevize
hesitated. Clearly, the border guard, Kendray, had not kept faith with him, so
there was no point in protecting him. He said, We were not stopped at the
immigration station and I considered that implicit permission to bring this
woman with me, Minister.
It is true you
were not stopped, Councilman. It is true the woman war not reported by the
immigration authorities and was passed through. I can suspect, however, that
the officials at the entry station decided-and quite correctly-that it was more
important to get your ship to the surface than to worry about a worldless
person. What they did was, strictly speaking, an infraction of the rules, and
the matter will have to be dealt with in the proper fashion, but I have no
doubt that the decision will be that the infraction was justified. We are a
world of rigid law, Councilman, but we are not rigid beyond the dictates of
reason.
Trevize said at
once, Then I call upon reason to bend your rigor now, Minister. If, indeed,
you received no information from the immigration station to the effect that a
worldless person was on board ship, then you had no knowledge that we were
breaking any law at the time we landed. Yet it is quite apparent that you were
prepared to take us into custody the moment we landed, and you did, in fact, do
so. Why did you do so, when you had no reason to think any law was being
broken?
The Minister
smiled. I understand your confusion, Councilman. Please let me assure you that
whatever knowledge we had gained-or had not gained-as to the worldless
condition of your passenger had nothing to do with your being taken into
custody. We are acting on behalf of the Foundation, of which, as you point out,
we are an Associated Power.
Trevize stared at
her. But that's impossible, Minister. It's even worse. It's ridiculous.
The Minister's
chuckle was like the smooth flow of honey. She said, I am interested in the
way you consider it worse to be ridiculous than impossible, Councilman. I agree
with you there. Unfortunately for you, however, it is neither. Why should it
be?
Because I am an
official of the Foundation government, on a mission for them, and it is
absolutely inconceivable that they would wish to arrest me, or that they would
even have the power to do so, since I have legislative immunity.
Ah, you omit my
title, but you are deeply moved and that is perhaps forgivable. Still, I am not
asked to arrest you directly. I do so only that I may carry out what I am asked
to do, Councilman.
Which is,
Minister? said Trevize, trying to keep his emotion under control in the face
of this formidable woman.
Which is to
commandeer your ship, Councilman, and return it to the Foundation.
What?
Again you omit
my title, Councilman. That is very slipshod of you and no way to press your own
case. The ship is not yours, I presume. Was it designed by you, or built by
you, or paid for by you?
Of course not,
Minister. It was assigned to me by the Foundation government.
Then,
presumably, the Foundation government has the right to cancel that assignment, Councilman.
It is a valuable ship, I imagine.
Trevize did not
answer.
The Minister
said, It is a gravitic ship, Councilman. There cannot be many and even the
Foundation must have but a very few. They must regret having assigned one of
those very few to you. Perhaps you can persuade them to assign you another and
less valuable ship that will nevertheless amply, suffice for your mission. But
we must have the ship in which you have arrived.
No, Minister, I
cannot give up the ship. I cannot believe the Foundation asks it of you.
The Minister
smiled. Not of me solely, Councilman. Not of Comporellon, specifically. We
have reason to believe that the request was sent out to ever; one of the many
worlds and regions under Foundation jurisdiction or association. From this, I
deduce that the Foundation does not know your itinerary and is seeking you with
a certain angry vigor. From which I further deduce that you have no mission to
deal with Comporellon on behalf of the Foundationsince in that case they would
know where you were and deal with us specifically. In short, Councilman, you
have been lying to me.
Trevize said,
with a certain difficulty, I would like to see a copy of request you have
received from the Foundation government, Minister. I entitled, I think, to
that.
Certainly, if
all this comes to legal action. We take our legal forms very seriously,
Councilman, and your rights will be fully protected, I assure you. It would be
better and easier, however, if we come to an agreement here without the
publicity and delay of legal action. We would prefer that, and, I am certain,
so would the Foundation, which cannot wish the Galaxy at large to know of a
runaway Legislator. That would put the Foundation in a ridiculous light, and,
by your estimate and mine, that would be worse than impossible.
Trevize was again
silent.
The Minister
waited a moment, then went on, as imperturbable as ever. Come, Councilman,
either way, by informal agreement or by legal action, we intend to have the
ship. The penalty for bringing in a worldless passenger will depend on which
route we take. Demand the law and she will represent an additional point
against you and you will all suffer the full punishment for the crime, and that
will not be light, I assure you. Come to an agreement, and your passenger can be
sent away by commercial flight to any destination she wishes, and, for that
matter, you tvvo can accompany her, if you wish. Or, if the Foundation is
willing, we can supply you with one of our own ships, a perfectly adequate one,
provided, of course, that the Foundation will replace it with an equivalent
ship of their own. Or, if, for any reason, you do not wish to return to
Foundation-controlled territory, we might be willing to offer you refuge here
and, perhaps, eventual Comporellian citizenship. You see, you have many
possibilities of gain if you come to a friendly arrangement, but none at all if
you insist on your legal rights.
Trevize said,
Minister, you are too eager. You promise what you cannot do. You cannot offer
me refuge in the face of a Foundation request that I be delivered to them.
The Minister
said, Councilman, I never promise what I cannot do. The Foundation's request
is only for the ship. They make no request concerning you as an individual, or
for anyone else on the ship. Their sole request is for the vessel.
Trevize glanced
quickly at Bliss, and said, May I have your permission, Minister, to consult
with Dr. Pelorat and Miss Bliss for a short while?
Certainly,
Councilman. You may have fifteen minutes.
Privately,
Minister.
You will be led
to a room and, after fifteen minutes, you will be led back, Councilman. You
will not be interfered with while you are there nor will we attempt to monitor
your conversation. You have my word on that and I keep my word. However, you
will be adequately guarded so do not be so foolish as to think of escaping.
We understand,
Minister.
And when you
come back, we will expect your free agreement to give up the ship. Otherwise,
the law will take its course, and it will be much the worse for all of you,
Councilman. Is that understood?
That is
understood, Minister, said Trevize, keeping his rage under tight control,
since its expression would do him no good at all.
18.
IT was a small
room, but it was well lighted. It contained a couch and two chairs, and one
could hear the soft sound of a ventilating fan. On the whole, it was clearly
more comfortable than the Minister's large and sterile office.
A guard had led
them there, grave and tall, his hand hovering near the butt of his blaster. He
remained outside the door as they entered and said, in a heavy voice, You have
fifteen minutes.
He had no sooner
said that than the door slid shut, with a thud.
Trevize said, I
can only hope that we can't be overheard.
Pelorat said,
She did give us her word, Golan.
You judge others
by yourself, Janov. Her so-called word will not suffice. She will break it
without hesitation if she wants to.
It doesn't
matter, said Bliss. I can shield this place.
You have a
shielding device? asked Pelorat.
Bliss smiled,
with a sudden flash of white teeth. Gaia's mind is a shielding device, Pel.
It's an enormous mind.
We are here,
said Trevize angrily, because of the limitations of that enormous mind.
What do you
mean? said Bliss.
When the triple
confrontation broke up, you withdrew me from the minds of both the Mayor and
that Second Foundationer, Gendibal. Neither was to think of me again, except
distantly and indifferently. I was to be left to myself.
We had to do
that, said Bliss. You are our most important resource.
Yes. Golan
Trevize, the ever-right. But you did not withdraw my ship from their minds, did
you? Mayor Branno did not ask for me; she had no interest in me, but she did
ask for the ship. She has not forgotten the ship.
Bliss frowned.
Trevize said,
Think about it. Gaia casually assumed that I included my ship; that we were a
unit. If Branno didn't think of me, she wouldn't think of the ship. The trouble
is that Gaia doesn't understand individuality. It thought of the ship and me as
a single organism, and it was wrong to think that.
Bliss said
softly, That is possible.
Well, then,
said Trevize flatly, it's up to you to rectify that mistake. I must have my
gravitic ship and my computer. Nothing else will do. Therefore, Bliss, make
sure that I keep the ship. You can control minds.
Yes, Trevize,
but we do not exercise that control lightly. We did it in connection with the
triple confrontation, but do you know how long that confrontation was planned?
Calculated? Weighed? It took-literally-many years. I cannot simply walk up to a
woman and adjust the mind to suit someone's convenience.
Is this a time.
Bliss went on
forcefully. If I began to follow such a course of action, where do we stop? I
might have influenced the agent's mind at the entry station and we would have
passed through at once. I might have influenced the agent's mind in the
vehicle, and he would have let us go.
Well, since you
mention it, why didn't you do these things?
Because we don't
know where it would lead. We don't know the side effects, which may well turn
out to make the situation worse. If I adjust the Minister's mind now, that will
affect her dealings with others with whom she will come in contact and, since
she is a high official in her government, it may affect interstellar relations.
Until such time as the matter is thoroughly worked out, we dare not touch her
mind.
Then why are you
with us?
Because the time
may come when your life is threatened. I must protect your life at all costs,
even at the cost of my Pel or of myself. Your life was not threatened at the
entry station. It is not threatened now. You must work this out for yourself,
and do so at least until Gaia can estimate the consequence of some sort of
action and take it.
Trevize fell into
a period of thought. Then he said, In that case, I have to try something. It
may not work.
The door moved
open, thwacking into its socket as noisily as it had closed.
The guard said,
Come out.
As they emerged,
Pelorat whispered, What are you going to do, Golan?
Trevize shook his
head and whispered, I'm not entirely sure. I will have to improvise.
19.
MINISTER Lizalor
was still at her desk when they returned to her office. Her face broke into a
grim smile as they walked in.
She said, I
trust, Councilman Trevize, that you have returned to tell me that you are
giving up this Foundation ship you have.
I have come,
Minister, said Trevize calmly, to discuss terms.
There are no
terms to discuss, Councilman. A trial, if you insist on one, can be arranged
very quickly and would be carried through even more quickly. I guarantee your
conviction even in a perfectly fair trial since your guilt in bringing in a
worldless person is obvious and indisputable. After that, we will be legally
justified in seizing the ship and you three would suffer heavy penalties. Don't
force those penalties on yourself just to delay us for a day.
Nevertheless,
there are terms to discuss, Minister, because no matter how quickly you convict
us, you cannot seize the ship without my consent. Any attempt you make to force
your way into the ship without me will destroy it, and the spaceport with it,
and every human being in the spaceport. This will surely infuriate the
Foundation, something you dare not do. Threatening us or mistreating us in
order to force me to open the ship is surely against your law, and if you break
your own law in desperation and subject us to torture or even to a period of
cruel and unusual imprisonment, the Foundation will find out about it and they
will be even more furious. However much they want the ship they cannot allow a
precedent that would permit the mistreatment of Foundation citizens. Shall we
talk terms?
This is all
nonsense, said the Minister, scowling. If necessary, we will call in the
Foundation itself. They will know how to open their own ship, or they will
force you to open it.
Trevize said,
You do not use my title, Minister, but you are emotionally moved, so that is
perhaps forgivable. You know that the very last thing you will do is call in
the Foundation, since you have no intention of delivering the ship to them.
The smile faded
from the Minister's face. What nonsense is this, Councilman?
The kind of
nonsense, Minister, that others, perhaps, ought not to hear. Let my friend and
the young woman go to some comfortable hotel room and obtain the rest they need
so badly and let your guards leave, too. They can remain just outside and you
can have them leave you a blaster. You are not a small woman and, with a
blaster, you have nothing to fear from me. I am unarmed.
The Minister
leaned toward him across the desk. I have nothing to fear from you in any
case.
Without looking
behind her, she beckoned to one of the guards, who approached at once and came
to a halt at her side with a stamp of his feet. said, Guard, take that one and
that one to Suite 5. They are to stay there and to be made comfortable and to
be well guarded. You will be held responsible for any mistreatment they may
receive, as well as for any breach of security.
She stood up, and
not all of Trevize's determination to maintain an absolute composure sufficed
to keep him from flinching a little. She was tall, at least, as Trevize's own
1.85 meters, perhaps a centimeter or so taller. She had a narrow waistline,
with the two white strips across her chest continuing into an encirclement of
her waist, making it look even narrower, There was a massive grace about her
and Trevize thought ruefully that her statement that she had nothing to fear
from him might well be correct. In a rough-and-tumble, he thought, she would
have no trouble pinning his shoulders to the mat.
She said, Come
with me, Councilman. If you are going to talk nonsense then, for your own sake,
the fewer who hear you, the better.
She led the way
in a brisk stride, and Trevize followed,' feeling shrunken in her massive
shadow, a feeling he had never before had with a woman.
They entered an
elevator and, as the door closed behind them, she said, We are alone now and
if you are under the illusion, Councilman, that You can use force with me in
order to accomplish some imagined purpose, please forget that. The singsong in
her voice grew more pronounced as she said, with clear amusement, You look
like a reasonably strong specimen, but I assure you I will have no trouble in
breaking your arm-or your back, if I must. I am armed, but I will not have to
use any weapon.
Trevize scratched
at his cheek as his eyes drifted first down, then up her body. Minister, I can
hold my own in a wrestling match with any man my weight, but I have already
decided to forfeit a bout with you. I know when I am outclassed.
Good, said the
Minister, and looked pleased.
Trevize said,
Where are we going, Minister?
Down! Quite far
down. Don't be upset, however. In the hyperdramas, this would be a preliminary
to taking you to a dungeon, I suppose, but we have no dungeons on Comporellon-only
reasonable prisons. We are going to my private apartment; not as romantic as a
dungeon in the bad old Imperial days, but more comfortable.
Trevize estimated
that they were at least fifty meters below the surface of the planet, when the
elevator door slid to one side and they stepped out.
20.
TREVIZE looked
about the apartment with clear surprise.
The Minister said
grimly, Do you disapprove of my living quarters, Councilman?
No, I have no
reason to, Minister. I am merely surprised. I find it unexpected. The
impression I had of your world from what little I saw and heard since arriving
was that it was an-an abstemious one, eschewing useless luxury.
So it is,
Councilman. Our resources are limited, and our life must be as harsh as our
climate.
But this,
Minister, and Trevize held out both hands as though to embrace the room where,
for the first time on this world, he saw color, where the couches were well
cushioned, where the light from the illuminated walls was soft, and where the
floor was force-carpeted so that steps were springy and silent. This is surely
luxury.
We eschew, as
you say, Councilman, useless luxury; ostentatious luxury; wastefully excessive
luxury. This, however, is private luxury, which has its use. I work hard and
bear much responsibility. I need a place where I can forget, for a while, the
difficulties of my post.
Trevize said,
And do all Comporellians live like this when the eyes of others are averted,
Minister?
It depends on
the degree of work and responsibility. Few can afford to, or deserve to, or,
thanks to our code of ethics, want to.
But you,
Minister, can afford to, deserve to-and want to?
The Minister
said, Rank has its privileges as well as its duties. And now sit down,
Councilman, and tell me of this madness of yours. She sat down on the couch,
which gave slowly under her solid weight, and pointed to an equally soft chair
in which Trevize would be facing her at not too great a distance.
Trevize sat down.
Madness, Minister?
The Minister
relaxed visibly, leaning her right elbow on a pillow. In private conversation,
we need not observe the rules of formal discourse too punctiliously. You may
call me Lizalor. I will call you, Trevize. Tell me what is on your mind,
Trevize, and let us inspect it.
Trevize crossed
his legs and sat back in his chair. See here, Lizalor, you gave me the choice
of either agreeing to give up the ship voluntarily, or of being subjected to a
formal trial. In both cases, you would end up with the ship. Yet you have been
going out of your way to persuade me to adopt the former alternative. You are
willing to offer me another ship to replace mine, so that my friends and I
might go anywhere we chose. We might even stay here on Comporellon and qualify
for citizenship, if we chose. In smaller things, you were willing to allow me
fifteen minutes to consult with my friends. You were even willing to bring me
here to your private apartment, while my friends are now, presumably, in
comfortable quarters. In short, you are bribing me, Lizalor, rather
desperately, to grant you the ship without the necessity of a trial.
Come, Trevize,
are you in no mood to give me credit for humane impulses?
None.
Or the thought
that voluntary surrender would be quicker and more convenient than a trial
would be?
No! I would
offer a different suggestion.
Which is?
A trial has one
thing in its strong disfavor; it is a public affair. You have several times
referred to this world's rigorous legal system, and I suspect it would be difficult
to arrange a trial without its being fully recorded. If were so, the Foundation
would know of it and you would have to hand the ship to it once the trial was
over.
Of course, said
Lizalor, without expression. It is the Foundation owns the ship.
But, said
Trevize, a private agreement with me would not have to be placed on formal
record. You could have the ship and, since the foundation would not know of the
matter-they don't even know that we are on this world-Comporellon could keep
the ship. That, I am sure, is what you intend to do.
Why should we do
that? She was still without expression. Are we not part of the Foundation
Confederation?
Not quite. Your
status is that of an Associated Power. In any map on which the member worlds of
the Federation are shown in red, Comporellon and its dependent worlds would
show up as a patch of pale pink.
Even so, as an
Associated Power, we would surely co-operate with the Foundation.
Would you? Might
not Comporellon be dreaming of total independence; even leadership? You are an
old world. Almost all worlds claim to be older than they are, but Comporellon
is an old world.
Minister Lizalor
allowed a cold smile to cross her face. The oldest, if some of our enthusiasts
are to be believed.
Might there not
have been a time when Comporellon was indeed the leading world of a relatively
small group of worlds? Might you not still dream of recovering that lost
position of power?
Do you think we
dream of so impossible a goal? I called it madness before I knew your thoughts,
and it is certainly madness now that I do.
Dreams may be
impossible, yet still be dreamed. Terminus, located at the very edge of the
Galaxy and with a five-century history that is briefer than that of any other
world, virtually rules the Galaxy. And shall Comporellon not? Eh? Trevize was
smiling.
Lizalor remained
grave. Terminus reached that position, we are given to understand, by the
working out of Hari Seldon's Plan.
That is the
psychological buttress of its superiority and it will hold only as long,
perhaps, as people believe it. It may be that the Comporellian government does
not believe it. Even so, Terminus also enjoys a technological buttress.
Terminus's hegemony over the Galaxy undoubtedly rests on its advanced
technology-of which the gravitic ship you are so anxious to have is an example.
no other world but Terminus disposes of gravitic ships. If Comporellon could
have one, and could learn its workings in detail, it would be bound to have
taken a giant technological step forward. I don't think it would be sufficient
to help you overcome Terminus's lead, but your government might think so.
Lizalor said,
You can't be serious in this. Any government that kept the ship in the face of
the Foundation's desire to have it would surely experience the Foundation's
wrath, and history shows that the Foundation can be quite uncomfortably
wrathful.
Trevize said,
The Foundation's wrath would only be exerted if the Foundation knew there was
something to be wrathful about.
In that case;
Trevize-if we assume your analysis of the situation is something other than
mad-would it not be to your benefit to give us the ship and drive a hard
bargain? We would pay well for the chance of having it quietly, according to
your line of argument.
Could you then
rely on my not reporting the matter to the Foundation?
Certainly. Since
you would have to report your own part in it.
I could report
having acted under duress.
Yes. Unless your
good sense told you that your Mayor would never believe that. Come, make a
deal.
Trevize shook his
head. I will not, Madam Lizalor. The ship is mine and it must stay mine. As I
have told you, it will blow up with extraordinary power if you attempt to force
an entry. I assure you I am telling you the truth. Don't rely on its being a
bluff.
You could open
it, and reinstruct the computer.
Undoubtedly, but
I won't do that.
Lizalor drew a
heavy sigh. You know we could make you change your mind-if not by what we
could do to you, then by what we could do to your friend, Dr. Pelorat, or to
the young woman.
Torture,
Minister? Is that your law?
No, Councilman.
But we might not have to do anything so crude. There is always the Psychic
Probe.
For the first
time since entering the Minister's apartment, Trevize felt an inner chill.
You can't do
that either. The use of the Psychic Probe for anything but medical purposes is
outlawed throughout the Galaxy.
But if we are
driven to desperation.
I am willing to
chance that, said Trevize calmly, for it would do you no good. My
determination to retain my ship is so deep that the Psychic Probe would destroy
my mind before it twisted it into giving it to you. (That was a bluff, he
thought, and the chill inside him deepened.) And even if you were so skillful
as to persuade me without destroying my mind and if I were to open the ship and
disarm it and hand it over to you, it would still do you no good. The ship's
computer is even more advanced than the ship is, and it is designed somehow-I
don't know how-to work at its full potential only with me. It is what I might
call a one-person computer.
Suppose, then,
you retained your ship, and remained its pilot. Would you consider piloting it
for us-as an honored Comporellian citizen? A large salary. Considerable luxury.
Your friends, too.
No.
What is it you
suggest? That we simply let you and your friends launch your ship and go off
into the Galaxy? I warn you that before we allow you to do this, we might
simply inform the Foundation that you are here with your ship, and leave all to
them.
And lose the
ship yourself?
If we must lose
it, perhaps we would rather lose it to the Foundation than to an impudent
Outworlder.
Then let me
suggest a compromise of my own.
A compromise?
Well, I will listen. Proceed.
Trevize said
carefully, I am on an important mission. It began with Foundation support.
That support seems to have been suspended, but the mission remains important.
Let me have Comporellian support instead and if I complete the mission
successfully, Comporellon will benefit.
Lizalor wore a
dubious expression. And you will not return the ship to the Foundation?
I have never planned
to do that. The Foundation would not be searching for the ship so desperately
if they thought there was any intention of my casually returning it to them.
That is not
quite the same thing as saying that you will give the ship to us.
Once I have completed
the mission, the ship may be of no further use to me. In that case, I would not
object to Comporellon having it.
The two looked at
each other in silence for a few moments.
Lizalor said,
You use the conditional. The ship may be. That is of no value to us.
I could make
wild promises, but of what value would that be to you? The fact that my
promises are cautious and limited should show you that they are at least
sincere.
Clever, said
Lizalor, nodding. I like that. Well, what is your mission and how might it
benefit Comporellon?
Trevize said,
No, no, it is your turn. Will you support me if I show you that the mission is
of importance to Comporellon?
Minister Lizalor
rose from the couch, a tall, overpowering presence. I am hungry, Councilman
Trevize, and I will get no further on an empty stomach. I will offer you
something to eat and drink-in moderation. After that, we will finish the
matter.
And it seemed to
Trevize that there was a rather carnivorous look of anticipation about her at
that moment, so that he tightened his lips with just a bit of unease.
21.
THE MEAL might
have been a nourishing one, but it was not one to delight the palate. The main
course consisted of boiled beef in a mustardy sauce, resting on a foundation of
a leafy vegetable Trevize did not recognize. Nor did he like it for it had a
bitter-salty taste he did not enjoy. He found out later it was a form of
seaweed.
There was,
afterward, a piece of fruit that tasted something like an apple tainted by
peach (not bad, actually) and a hot, dark beverage that was bitter enough for
Trevize to leave half behind and ask if he might have some cold water instead.
The portions were all small, but, under the circumstances, Trevize did not
mind.
The meal had been
private, with no servants in view. The Minister had herself heated and served
the food, and herself cleared away the dishes and cutlery.
I hope you found
the meal pleasant, said Lizalor, as they left the dining room.
Quite pleasant,
said Trevize, without enthusiasm.
The Minister
again took her seat on the couch. Let us return then, she said, to our
earlier discussion. You had mentioned that Comporellon might resent the
Foundation's lead in technology and its overlordship of the Galaxy. In a way
that's true, but that aspect of the situation would interest only those who are
interested in interstellar politics, and they are comparatively few. What is
much more to the point is that the average Comporellian is horrified at the
immorality of the Foundation. There is immorality in most worlds, but it seems
most marked in Terminus. I would say that any anti-Terminus animus that exists
on this world is rooted in that, rather than in more abstract matters.
Immorality?
said Trevize, puzzled. Whatever the faults of the Foundation you have to admit
it runs its part of the Galaxy with reasonable efficiency and fiscal honesty.
Civil rights are, by and large, respected and...
Councilman
Trevize, I speak of sexual morality.
In that case, I
certainly don't understand you. We are a thoroughly moral society, sexually
speaking. Women are well represented in every facet of social life. Our Mayor
is a woman and nearly half the Council consists of...
The Minister
allowed a look of exasperation to fleet across her face. Councilman, are you
mocking me? Surely you know what sexual morality meant. Is, or is not, marriage
a sacrament upon Terminus?
What do you mean
by sacrament?
Is there a
formal marriage ceremony binding a couple together?
Certainly, if
people wish it. Such a ceremony simplifies tax problems and inheritance.
But divorce can
take place.
Of course. It
would certainly be sexually immoral to keep people tied to, each other,
when...
Are there no
religious restrictions?
Religious? There
are people who make a philosophy out of ancient cults, but what has that to do
with marriage?
Councilman, here
on Comporellon, every aspect of sex is strongly controlled. It may not take
place out of marriage. Its expression is limited even within marriage. We are
sadly shocked at those worlds, at Terminus, particularly, where sex seems to be
considered a mere social pleasure of no great importance to be indulged in
when, how, and with whom one pleases without regard to the values of religion.
Trevize shrugged.
I'm sorry, but I can't undertake to reform the Galaxy, or even Terminus-and
what has this to do with the matter of my ship?
I'm talking
about public opinion in the matter of your ship and how it limits my ability to
compromise the matter. The people of Comporelbll would be horrified if they
found you had taken a young and attractive woman on board to serve the lustful
urges of you and your companion. It is out consideration for the safety of the
three of you that I have been urging you to accept peaceful surrender in place
of a public trial.
Trevize said, I
see you have used the meal to think of a new type of persuasion by threat. Am I
now to fear a lynch mob?
I merely point
out dangers. Will you be able to deny that the woman you have taken on board
ship is anything other than a sexual convenience?
Of course I can
deny it. Bliss is the companion of my friend, Dr. Pelorat. He has no other
competing companion. You may not define their state as marriage, but I believe
that in Pelorat's mind, and in the woman's, too, there is a marriage between
them.
Are you telling
me you are not involved yourself?
Certainly not,
said Trevize. What do you take me for?
I cannot tell. I
do not know your notions of morality.
Then let me
explain that my notions of morality tell me that I don't trifle with my
friend's possessions-or his companionships.
You are not even
tempted?
I can't control
the fact of temptation, but there's no chance of my giving in to it.
No chance at
all? Perhaps you are not interested in women.
Don't you
believe that. I am interested.
How long has it
been since you have had sex with a woman?
Months. Not at
all since I left Terminus.
Surely you don't
enjoy that.
I certainly
don't, said Trevize, with strong feeling, but the situation is such that I
have no choice.
Surely your
friend, Pelorat, noting your suffering, would be willing to share his woman.
I show him no
evidence of suffering, but if I did, he would not be willing to share Bliss.
Nor, I think, would the woman consent. She is not attracted to me.
Do you say that
because you have tested the matter?
I have not
tested it. I make the judgment without feeling the need to test it. In any
case, I don't particularly like her.
Astonishing! She
is what a man would consider attractive.
Physically, she
is attractive. Nevertheless, she does not appeal to me. For one thing, she is
too young, too child-like in some ways.
Do you prefer
women of maturity, then?
Trevize paused.
Was there a trap here? He said cautiously, I am old enough to value some women
of maturity. And what has this to do with my ship?
Lizalor said,
For a moment, forget your ship. I am forty-six years old, and I am not
married. I have somehow been too busy to marry.
In that case, by
the rules of your society, you must have remained continent all your life. Is
that why you asked how long it had been since I have had sex? Are you asking my
advice in the matter? If so, I say it is not food and drink. It is
uncomfortable to do without sex, but not impossible.
The Minister
smiled and there was again that carnivorous look in her eyes. Don't mistake
me, Trevize. Rank has its privileges and it is possible to be discreet. I am
not altogether an abstainer. Nevertheless, Comporellian men are unsatisfying. I
accept the fact that morality is an absolute good, but it does tend to burden
the men of this world with guilt, so that they become unadventurous,
unenterprising, slow to begin, quick to conclude, and, in general, unskilled.
Trevize said,
very cautiously, There is nothing I can do about that, either.
Are you implying
that the fault may be mine? That I am uninspiring?
Trevize raised a
hand. I don't say that at all.
In that case,
how would you react, given the opportunity? You, a man from an immoral world,
who must have had a vast variety of sexual experiences of all kinds, who is
under the pressure of several months of enforced abstinence even though in the
constant presence of a young and charming woman. How would you react in the
presence of a woman such as myself; who is the mature type you profess to
like?
Trevize said, I
would behave with the respect and decency appropriate to your rank and
importance.
Don't be a
fool! said the Minister. Her hand went to the right side of her waist. The
strip of white that encircled it came loose and unwound from her chest and
neck. The bodice of her black gown hung noticeably looser.
Trevize sat
frozen. Had this been in her mind sincewhen? Or was it a bribe to accomplish
what threats had not?
The bodice
flipped down, along with its sturdy reinforcement at the breasts. The Minister
sat there, with a look of proud disdain on her face, and bare from the waist
up. Her breasts were a smaller version of the woman herself-massive, firm, and
overpoweringly impressive.
Well? she said.
Trevize said, in
all honesty, Magnificent!
And what will
you do about it?
What does
morality dictate on Comporellon, Madam Lizalor?
What is that to
a man of Terminus? What does your morality dictate? And begin. My chest is cold
and wishes warmth.
Trevize stood up
and began to disrobe.
Chapter 6
The Nature of
Earth
22.
TREVIZE felt
almost drugged, and wondered how much time had elapsed.
Beside him lay
Mitza Lizalor, Minister of Transportation. She was on her stomach, head to one
side, mouth open, snoring distinctly. Trevize was relieved that she was asleep.
Once she woke up, he hoped she would be quite aware that she had been asleep.
Trevize longed to
sleep himself, but he felt it important that he not do so. She must not wake to
find him asleep. She must realize that while she had been ground down to
unconsciousness, he had endured. She would expect such endurance from a
Foundation-reared immoralist and, at this point, it was better she not be
disappointed.
In a way, he had
done well. He had guessed, correctly, that Lizalor, given her physical size and
strength, her political power, her contempt for the Comporellian men she had
encountered, her mingled horror and fascination with tales (what had she heard?
Trevize wondered) of the sexual feats of the decadents of Terminus, would want
to be dominated. She might even expect to be, without being able to express her
desire and expectation.
He had acted on
that belief and, to his good fortune, found he was correct. (Trevize, the
ever-right, he mocked himself.) It pleased the woman and it enabled Trevize to
steer activities in a direction that would tend to wear her out while leaving
himself relatively untouched.
It had not been
easy. She had a marvelous body (forty-six, she had said, but it would not have
shamed a twenty-five-year-old athlete) and enormous stamina-a stamina exceeded
only by the careless zest with which she had spent it.
Indeed, if she
could be tamed and taught moderation; if practice (but could he himself survive
the practice?) brought her to a better sense of her own capacities, and, even
more important, his, it might be pleasant to
The snoring
stopped suddenly and she stirred. He placed his hand on the shoulder nearest
him and stroked it lightly-and her eyes opened. Trevize was leaning on his
elbow, and did his best to look unworn and full of life.
I'm glad you
were sleeping, dear, he said. You needed your rest.
She smiled at him
sleepily and, for one queasy moment, Trevize thought she might suggest renewed
activity, but she merely heaved herself about till she was resting on her back.
She said, in a soft and satisfied voice, I had you judged correctly from the
start. You are a king of sexuality.
Trevize tried to
look modest. I must be more moderate.
Nonsense. You
were just right. I was afraid that you had been kept active and drained by that
young woman, but you assured me you had not. That it true, isn't it?
Have I acted
like someone who was half-sated to begin with?
No, you did
not, and her laughter boomed.
Are you still
thinking of Psychic Probes?
She laughed
again. Are you mad? Would I want to lose you now?
Yet it would be
better if you lost me temporarily...
What! She
frowned.
If I were to
stay here permanently, my-my dear, how long would it be before eyes would begin
to watch, and mouths would begin to whisper? It I went off on my mission,
however, I would naturally return periodically to, report, and it would then be
only natural that we should be closeted together for a while-and my mission is
important.
She thought about
that, scratching idly at her right hip. Then she said, I suppose you're right.
I hate the thought but-I suppose you're right.
And you need not
think I would not come back, said Trevize. I am not so witless as to forget
what I would have waiting for me here.
She smiled at
him, touched his cheek gently, and said, looking into his eyes, Did you find
it pleasant, love?
Much more than
pleasant, dear.
Yet you are a
Foundationer. A man in the prime of youth from Terminus itself. You must be
accustomed to all sorts of women with all soul skills...
I have
encountered nothing-nothing-in the least like you, said Trevize, with a
forcefulness that came easily to someone who was but telling the truth, after
all.
Lizalor said
complacently, Well, if you say so. Still, old habits die hard, you know, and I
don't think I could bring myself to trust a man's word without some sort of
surety. You and your friend, Pelorat, might conceivably go on this mission of
yours once I hear about it and approve, but I will keep the young woman here.
She will be well treated, never fear, but I presume your Dr. Pelorat will want
her, and he will see to it that there are frequent returns to Comporellon, even
if your enthusiasm for this mission you to stay away too long.
But, Lizalor,
that's impossible.
Indeed?
Suspicion at once seeped into her eyes. Why impossible? For what purpose would
you need the woman?
Not for sex. I
told you that, and I told you truthfully. She is Pelorat's and I have no
interest in her. Besides, I'm sure she'd break in two if she attempted what you
so triumphantly carried through.
Lizalor almost
smiled, but repressed it and said severely, What is it to you, then, if she
remains on Comporellon?
Because she is
of essential importance to our mission. That is why we must have her.
Well, then, what
is your mission? It is time you told me.
Trevize hesitated
very briefly. It would have to be the truth. He could think of no lie as
effective.
Listen to me,
he said. Comporellon may be an old world, even among the oldest, but it can't
be the oldest. Human life did not originate here. The earliest human beings
reached here from some other world, and perhaps human life didn't originate
there either, but came from still another and still older world. Eventually,
though, those probings back into time must stop, and we must reach the first
world, the world of human origins. I am seeking Earth.
The change that
suddenly came over Mitza Lizalor staggered him.
Her eyes had
widened, her breathing took on a sudden urgency, and every muscle seemed to
stiffen as she lay there in bed. Her arms shot upward rigidly, and the first
two fingers of both hands crossed.
You named it,
she whispered hoarsely.
23.
SHE DIDN'T say
anything after that; she didn't look at him. Her arms slowly came down, her
legs swung over the side of the bed, and she sat up, back to him. Trevize lay
where he was, frozen.
He could hear, in
memory, the words of Munn Li Compor, as they stood there in the empty tourist
center at Sayshell. He could hear him saying of his own ancestral planet-the
one that Trevize was on now. They're superstitious about it. Every time they
mention the word, they lift up both hands with first and second fingers crossed
to ward off misfortune.
How useless to
remember after the fact.
What should I
have said, Mitza? he muttered.
She shook her
head slightly, stood up, stalked toward and then through a door. It closed
behind her and, after a moment, there was the sound of water running.
He had no
recourse but to wait, bare, undignified, wondering whether to join her in the
shower, and then quite certain he had better not. And because, in a way, he
felt the shower denied him, he at once experienced a growing need for one.
She emerged at
last and silently began to select clothing.
He said, Do you
mind if I...
She said nothing,
and he took silence for consent. He tried to stride into the room in a strong
and masculine way but he felt uncommonly as he had in those days when his
mother, offended by some misbehavior on his part, offered him no punishment but
silence, causing him to shrivel in discomfort.
He looked about
inside the smoothly walled cubicle that was bare-completely bare. He looked
more minutely. There was nothing.
He opened the
door again, thrust his head out, and said, Listen, how are you supposed to
start the shower?
She put down the
deodorant (at least, Trevize guessed that was its function), strode to the
shower-room and, still without looking at him, pointed. Trevize followed the
finger and noted a spot on the wall that was round and faintly pink, barely
colored, as though the designer resented having to spoil the starkness of the
white, for no reason more important than to give a hint of function.
Trevize shrugged
lightly, leaned toward the wall, and touched the spot. Presumably that was what
one had to do, for in a moment a deluge of fine-sprayed water struck him from
every direction. Gasping, he touched the spot again and it stopped.
He opened the
door, knowing he looked several degrees more undignified still as he shivered
hard enough to make it difficult to articulate words. He croaked, How do you
get hot water?
Now she looked at
him and, apparently, his appearance overcame her anger (or fear, or whatever
emotion was victimizing her) for she snickered and then, without warning,
boomed her laughter at him.
What hot water?
she said. Do you think we're going to waste the energy to heat water for
washing? That's good mild water you had, water with the chill taken off. What
more do you want? You sludge-soft Terminians! Get back in there and wash!
Trevize
hesitated, but not for long, since it was clear he had no choice in the matter.
With remarkable
reluctance he touched the pink spot again and this time steeled his body for
the icy spray. Mild water? He found suds forming on his body and he rubbed
hastily here, there, everywhere, judging it to be the wash cycle and suspecting
it would not last long.
Then came the
rinse cycle. Ah, warm. Well, perhaps not warm, but not quite as cold, and
definitely feeling warm to his thoroughly chilled body. Then, even as he was
considering touching the contact spot again to stop the water, and was
wondering how Lizalor had come out dry when there was absolutely no towel or
towel-substitute in the place-the water stopped. It was followed by a blast of
air that would have certainly bowled him over if it had not come from various
directions equally.
It was hot;
almost too hot. It took far less energy, Trevize knew, to heat air than to heat
water. The hot air steamed the water off him and, in a few minutes, he was able
to step out as dry as though he had never encountered water in his life.
Lizalor seemed to
have recovered completely. Do you feel well?
Pretty well,
said Trevize. Actually, he felt astonishingly comfortable. All I had to do was
prepare myself for the temperature. You didn't tell me...
Sludge-soft,
said Lizalor, with mild contempt.
He borrowed her
deodorant, then began to dress, conscious of the fact that she had fresh
underwear and he did not. He said, What should I have called that world?
She said, We
refer to it as the Oldest.
He said, How was
I to know the name I used was forbidden? Did you tell me?
Did you ask?
How was I to
know to ask?
You know now.
I'm bound to
forget.
You had better
not.
What's the
difference? Trevize felt his temper rising. It's just a word, a sound.
Lizalor said
darkly, There are words one doesn't say. Do you say every word you know under
all circumstances?
Some words are
vulgar, some are inappropriate, some under particular circumstances would be
hurtful. Which is-that word I used?
Lizalor said,
It's a sad word, a solemn word. It represents a world that was ancestor to us
all and that now doesn't exist. It's tragic, and we feel it because it was near
to us. We prefer not to speak of it or, if we must, not to use its name.
And the crossing
of fingers at me? How does that relieve the hurt and sadness?
Lizalor's face
flushed. That was an automatic reaction, and I don't thank you for forcing it
on me. There are people who believe that the word, even the thought, brings on
misfortune-and that is how they ward it off.
Do you, too,
believe crossing fingers wards off misfortune?
No. Well, yes,
in a way. It makes me uneasy if I don't do it. She didn't look at him. Then,
as though eager to shift the subject, she said quickly, And how is that
black-haired woman of yours of the essence with respect to your mission to
reach-that world you mentioned.
Say 'the Oldest.
' Or would you rather not even say that?
I would rather
not discuss it at all, but I asked you a question.
I believe that
her people reached their present world as emigrants from the Oldest.
As we did, said
Lizalor proudly.
But her people
have traditions of some sort which she says are the key to understanding the
Oldest, but only if we reach it and can study its records.
She is lying.
Perhaps, but we
must check it out.
If you have this
woman with her problematical knowledge, and if you want to reach the Oldest
with her, why did you come to Comporellon?
To find the
location of the Oldest. I had a friend once, who, like myself, was a
Foundationer. He, however, was descended from Comporellian ancestors and he
assured me that much of the history of the Oldest was well known, on
Comporellon.
Did he indeed?
And did he tell you any of its history?
Yes, said
Trevize, reaching for the truth again. He said that the Oldest was a dead world,
entirely radioactive. He did not know why, but he thought that it might be the
result of nuclear explosions. In a war, perhaps.
No! said
Lizalor explosively.
No, there was no
war? Or no, the Oldest is not radioactive?
It is
radioactive, but there was no war.
Then how did it
become radioactive? It could not have been radioactive to begin with since
human life began on the Oldest. There would have been no life on it ever.
Lizalor seemed to
hesitate. She stood erect, and was breathing deeply, ' almost gasping. She
said, It was a punishment. It was a world that used robots. Do you know what
robots are?
Yes.
They had robots
and for that they were punished. Every world that has had robots has been
punished and no longer exists.
Who punished them,
Lizalor?
He Who Punishes.
The forces of history. I don't know. She looked away from him, uncomfortable,
then said, in a lower voice, Ask others.
I would like to,
but whom do I ask? Are there those on Comporellon who have studied primeval
history?
There are. They
are not popular with us-with the average Comporellian but the Foundation, your
Foundation, insists on intellectual freedom, as they call it. Not a bad
insistence, in my opinion, said Trevize. All is bad that is imposed from
without, said Lizalor.
Trevize shrugged.
There was no purpose in arguing the matter. He Bald, x My friend, Dr. Pelorat,
is himself a primeval historian of a sort. He would, I'm sure, like to meet his
Comporellian colleagues. Can you arrange that, Lizalor?
She nodded.
There is a historian named Vasil Deniador, who is based at the University here
in the city. He does not teach class, but he may be able to tell you what you
want to know.
Why doesn't he
teach class?
It's not that he
is forbidden; it's just that students do not elect his course.
I presume, said
Trevize, trying not to say it sardonically, that the students are encouraged
not to elect it.
Why should they
want to? He is a Skeptic. We have them, you know. There are always individuals
who pit their minds against the general modes of thought and who are arrogant
enough to feel that they alone are right and that the many are wrong.
Might it not be
that that could actually be so in some cases?
Never! snapped
Lizalor, with a firmness of belief that made it quite clear that no further
discussion in that direction would be of any use. And for all his Skepticism,
he will be forced to tell you exactly what any Comporellian would tell you.
And that is?
That if you
search for the Oldest, you will not find it.
24.
IN THE PRIVATE
quarters assigned them, Pelorat listened to Trevize thoughtfully, his long
solemn face expressionless, then said, Vasil Deniador? I do not recall having
heard of him, but it may be that back on the ship I will find papers by him in
my library.
Are you sure you
haven't heard of him? Think! said Trevize.
I don't recall,
at the moment, having heard of him, said Pelorat cautiously, but after all,
my dear chap, there must be hundreds of estimable scholars I haven't heard of;
or have, but can't remember.
Still, he can't
be first-class, or you would have heard of him.
The study of
Earth...
Practice saying
the Oldest, Janov. It would complicate matters otherwise.
The study of the
Oldest, said Pelorat, is not a well-rewarded niche in the corridors of
learning, so that first-class scholars, even in the field of primeval history,
would not tend to find their way there. Or, if we put it the other way around,
those who are already there do not make enough of a name for themselves in an
uninterested world to be considered first-class, even if they were. I am not
first-class in anyone's estimation, I am sure.
Bliss said
tenderly, In mine, Pel.
Yes, certainly
in yours, my dear, said Pelorat, smiling slightly, but you are not judging me
in my capacity as scholar.
It was almost
night now, going by the clock, and Trevize felt himself grow slightly
impatient, as he always did when Bliss and Pelorat traded endearments.
He said, I'll
try to arrange our seeing this Deniador tomorrow, but if he knows as little
about the matter as the Minister does, we're not going to be much better off
than we are now.
Pelorat said, He
may be able to lead us to someone more useful.
I doubt it. This
world's attitude toward Earth-but I had better practice speaking of it
elliptically, too. This world's attitude toward the Oldest is a foolish and
superstitious one. He turned away. But it's been a rough day and we ought to
think of an evening meal-if we can face their uninspired cookery-and then begin
thinking of getting some sleep. Have you two learned how to use the shower?
My dear fellow,
said Pelorat, we have been very kindly treated. We've received all sorts of
instructions, most of which we didn't need.
Bliss said,
Listen, Trevize. What about the ship?
What about it?
Is the
Comporellian government confiscating it?
No. I don't
think they will.
Ah. Very
pleasant. Why aren't they?
Because I
persuaded the Minister to change her mind.
Pelorat said,
Astonishing. She didn't seem a particularly persuadable individual to me.
Bliss said, I
don't know. It was clear from the texture of her mind that she was attracted to
Trevize.
Trevize looked at
Bliss with sudden exasperation. Did you do that, Bliss?,
What do you
mean, Trevize?
I mean tamper
with her...
I didn't tamper.
However, when I noted that she was attracted to you, I couldn't resist just
snapping an inhibition or two. It was a very small thing to do. Those
inhibitions might have snapped anyway, and it seemed to be important to make
certain that she was filled with good will toward you.
Good will? It
was more than that! She softened, yes, but post-coitally. Pelorat said,
Surely you don't mean, old man...
Why not? said
Trevize testily. She may be past her first youth, but she knew the art well.
She was no beginner, I assure you. Nor will I play the gentleman and lie on her
behalf. It was her idea-thanks to Bliss's fiddling with her inhibitions-and I
was not in a position to refuse, even if that thought had occurred to me, which
it didn't. Come, Janov, don't stand there looking puritanical. It's been
months since I've had an opportunity. You've... And he waved his hand vaguely
in Bliss's direction.
Believe me,
Golan, said Pelorat, embarrassed, if you are interpreting my expression as
puritanical, you mistake me. I have no objection.
Bliss said, But
she is puritanical. I meant to make her warm toward you; I did not count on a
sexual paroxysm.
Trevize said,
But that is exactly what you brought on, my little interfering Bliss. It may
be necessary for the Minister to play the puritan in public, but if so, that
seems merely to stoke the fires.
And so, provided
you scratch the itch, she will betray the Foundation...
She would have
done that in any case, said Trevize. She wanted the ship... He broke off, and
said in a whisper, Are we being overheard?
Bliss said, No!
Are you sure?
It is certain.
It is impossible to impinge upon the mind of Gaia in any unauthorized fashion
without Gaia being aware of it.
In that case,
Comporellon wants the ship for itself-a valuable addition to its fleet.
Surely, the
Foundation would not allow that.
Comporellon does
not intend to have the Foundation know.
Bliss sighed.
There are your Isolates. The Minister intends to betray the Foundation on
behalf of Comporellon and, in return for sex, will promptly betray Comporellon,
too. And as for Trevize, he will gladly sell his body's services as a way of
inducing the betrayal. What anarchy there is in this Galaxy of yours. What
chaos.
Trevize said
coldly, You are wrong, young woman...
In what I have
just said, I am not a young woman, I am Gaia. I am all of Gaia.
Then you are
wrong, Gaia I did not sell my body's services. I gave them gladly. I enjoyed it
and did no one harm. As for the consequences, they turned out well from my
standpoint and I accept that. And if Comporellon wants the ship for its own
purposes, who is to say who is right in this matter? It is a Foundation ship,
but it was given to me to search for Earth. It is mine then until I complete
the search and I feel that the Foundation has no right to go back on its
agreement. As for Comporellon, it does not enjoy Foundation domination, so it
dreams of independence. In its own eyes, it is correct to do so and to deceive
the Foundation, for that is not an act of treason to them but an act of
patriotism. Who knows?
Exactly. Who
knows? In a Galaxy of anarchy, how is it possible to sort out reasonable
actions from unreasonable ones? How decide between right and wrong, good and
evil, justice and crime, useful and useless? And how do you explain the
Minister's betrayal of her own government, when she lets you keep the ship?
Does she long for personal independence from an oppressive world? Is she a
traitor or a personal one-woman self-patriot?
To be truthful,
said Trevize, I don't know that she was willing to let me have my ship simply
because she was grateful to me for the pleasure I gave: her. I believe she made
that decision only when I told her I was searching for the Oldest. It is a
world of ill-omen to her and we and the ship that carries us, by searching for
it, have become ill-omened, too. It is my feeling that she feet/ she incurred
the ill-omen for herself and her world by attempting to take the ship, which
she may, by now, be viewing with horror. Perhaps she feels that by allowing us
and our ship to leave and go about our business, she is averting the misfortune
from Comporellon and is, in that way, performing a patriotic act.
If that were so,
which I doubt, Trevize, superstition is the spring of the action. Do you admire
that?
I neither admire
nor condemn. Superstition always directs action in the absence of knowledge.
The Foundation believes in the Seldon Plan, though no one in our realm can
understand it, interpret its details, or use it to predict. We follow blindly
out of ignorance and faith, and isn't that superstition?
Yes, it might
be.
And Gaia, too.
You believe I have given the correct decision in judging that Gaia should
absorb the Galaxy into one large organism, but you do not know why I should be
right, or how safe it would be for you to follow that . decision. You are
willing to go along only out of ignorance and faith, and are even annoyed with
me for trying to find evidence that will remove the ignorance and make mere
faith unnecessary. Isn't that superstition?
I think he has
you there, Bliss, said Pelorat.
Bliss said, Not
so. He will either find nothing at all in this search, or he will find
something that confirms his decision.
Trevize said,
And to back up that belief, you have only ignorance and faith. In other words,
superstition!
25.
VASIL DENIADOR
was a small man, little of feature, with a way of looking up by raising his
eyes without raising his head. This, combined with the brief smiles that
periodically lit his face, gave him the appearance of laughing silently at the
world.
His office was
long and narrow, filled with tapes that seemed to be in wild disorder, not
because there was any definite evidence for that, but because they were not
evenly placed in their recesses so that they gave the shelves a snaggle-toothed
appearance. The three seats he indicated for his visitors were not matched and
showed signs of having been recently, and imperfectly, dusted.
He said, Janov
Pelorat, Golan Trevize, and Bliss. I do not have your second name, madam.
Bliss, she
said, is all I am usually called, and sat down.
It is enough
after all, said Deniador, twinkling at her. You are attractive enough to be
forgiven if you had no name at all.
All were sitting
now. Deniador said, I have heard of you, Dr. Pelorat, though we have never
corresponded. You are a Foundationer, are you not? From Terminus?
Yes, Dr.
Deniador.
And you,
Councilman Trevize. I seem to have heard that recently you were expelled from
the Council and exiled. I don't think I have ever understood why.
Not expelled,
sir. I am still a member of the Council although I don't know when I will take
up my duties again. Nor exiled, quite. I was assigned a mission, concerning
which we wish to consult you.
Happy to try to
help, said Deniador. And the blissful lady? Is she from Terminus, too.
Trevize
interposed quickly. She is from elsewhere, Doctor.
Ah, a strange
world, this Elsewhere. A most unusual collection of human beings are native to
it. But since two of you are from the Foundation's capital at Terminus, and the
third is an attractive young woman, and Mitza Lizalor is not known for her
affection for either category, how is it that she recommends you to my care so
warmly?
I think, said
Trevize, to get rid of us. The sooner you help us, you see, the sooner we will
leave Comporellon.
Deniador eyed
Trevize with interest (again the twinkling smile) and said, Of course, a
vigorous young man such as yourself might attract her whatever his origin. She
plays the role of cold vestal well, but not perfectly.
I know nothing
about that, said Trevize stiffly.
And you had
better not. In public, at least. But I am a Skeptic and I am professionally
unattuned to believing in surfaces. So come, Councilman, what is your mission?
Let me find out if I can help you.
Trevize said, In
this, Dr. Pelorat is our spokesman.
I have no
objection to that, said Deniador. Dr. Pelorat?
Pelorat said, To
put it at the simplest, dear Doctor, I have all my mature life attempted to
penetrate to the basic core of knowledge concerning the world on which the
human species originated, and I was sent out along with my good friend, Golan
Trevize-although, to be sure, I did not know him at the time-to find, if we
could, the-uh-Oldest, I believe you call it.
The Oldest?
said Deniador. I take it you mean Earth.
Pelorat's jaw
dropped. Then he said, with a slight stutter, I was under the impression-that
is, I was given to understand-that one did not...
He looked at
Trevize, rather helplessly.
Trevize said,
Minister Lizalor told me that that word was not used on Comporellon.
You mean she did
this? Deniador's mouth turned downward, his nose screwed up, and he thrust his
arms vigorously forward, crossing the first two fingers on each hand.
Yes, said
Trevize. That's what I mean.
Deniador relaxed
and laughed. Nonsense, gentlemen. We do it as a matter of habit, and in the
backwoods they may be serious about it but, on the whole, it doesn't matter. I
don't know any Comporellian who wouldn't say Earth when annoyed or startled.
It's the most common vulgarism we have.
Vulgarism? said
Pelorat faintly.
Or expletive, if
you prefer.
Nevertheless,
said Trevize, the Minister seemed quite upset when I used the word.
Oh well, she's a
mountain woman.
What does that
mean, sir?
What it says.
Mitza Lizalor is from the Central Mountain Range. The children out there are
brought up in what is called the good old-fashioned way, which means that no
matter how well educated they become you can never knock those crossed fingers
out of them.
Then the word
Earth doesn't bother you at all, does it, Doctor? said Bliss.
Not at all, dear
lady. I am a Skeptic.
Trevize said, I
know what the word skeptic means in Galactic, but how. do you use the word?
Exactly as you
do, Councilman. I accept only what I am forced to accept by reasonably reliable
evidence, and keep that acceptance tentative pending the arrival of further
evidence. That doesn't make us popular.
Why not? said
Trevize.
We wouldn't be
popular anywhere. Where is the world whose people don't prefer a comfortable,
warm, and well-worn belief, however illogical, to the chilly winds of
uncertainty? Consider how you believe in the Seldon Plan without evidence.
Yes, said
Trevize, studying his finger ends. I put that forward yesterday as an example,
too.
Pelorat said,
May I return to the subject, old fellow? What is known about Earth that a
Skeptic would accept?
Deniador said,
Very little. We can assume that there is a single planet on which the human
species developed, because it is unlikely in the extreme that the same species,
so nearly identical as to be interfertile, would develop on a number of worlds,
or even on just two, independently. We can choose to cal) this world of origin
Earth. The belief is general, here, that Earth exists in this corner of the
Galaxy, for the worlds here are unusually old and it is likely that the first
worlds to be settled were close to Earth rather than far from it.
And has the
Earth any unique characteristics aside from being the planet of origin? asked
Pelorat eagerly.
Do you have something
in mind? said Deniador, with his quick smile.
I'm thinking of
its satellite, which some call the moon. That would be unusual, wouldn't it?
That's a leading
question, Dr. Pelorat. You may be putting thoughts into my mind.
I do not say
what it is that would make the moon unusual.
Its size, of
course. Am I right? Yes, I see I am. All the legends of Earth speak of its vast
array of living species and of its vast satellite-one that is some three
thousand to three thousand five hundred kilometers in diameter. The vast array
of life is easy to accept since it would naturally have come about through
biological evolution, if what we know of the process is accurate. A giant
satellite is more difficult to accept. no other inhabited world in the Galaxy
has such a satellite. Large satellites are invariably associated with the
uninhabited and uninhabitable gas-giants. As a Skeptic, then, I prefer not to
accept the existence of the moon.
Pelorat said, If
Earth is unique in its possession of millions of species, might it not also be
unique in its possession of a giant satellite? One uniqueness might imply the
other.
Deniador smiled.
I don't see how the presence of millions of species on Earth could create a
giant satellite out of nothing.
But the other
way around. Perhaps a giant satellite could help create the millions of
species.
I don't see how
that could be either.
Trevize said,
What about the story of Earth's radioactivity?
That is
universally told; universally believed.
But, said
Trevize, Earth could not have been so radioactive as to preclude life in the
billions of years when it supported life. How did it become radioactive? A
nuclear war?
That is the most
common opinion, Councilman Trevize.
From the manner
in which you say that, I gather you don't believe it.
There is no
evidence that such a war took place. Common belief, even universal belief, is
not, in itself, evidence.
What else might
have happened?
There is no
evidence that anything happened. The radioactivity might be as purely invented
a legend as the large satellite.
Pelorat said,
What is the generally accepted story of Earth's history? I have, during my
professional career, collected a large number of origin-legends, many of them
involving a world called Earth, or some name very much like that. I have none
from Comporellon, nothing beyond the vague mention of a Benbally who might have
come from nowhere for all that Comporellian legends say.
That's not
surprising. We don't usually export our legends and I'm astonished you have
found references even to Benbally. Superstition, again.
But you are not
superstitious and you would not hesitate to talk about it, would you?
That's correct,
said the small historian, casting his eyes upward at Pelorat. It would
certainly add greatly, perhaps even dangerously, to my unpopularity if I did,
but you three are leaving Comporellon soon and I take it you will never quote
me as a source.
You have our
word of honor, said Pelorat quickly.
Then here is a
summary of what is supposed to have happened, shorn of any supernaturalism or
moralizing. Earth existed as the sole world of human beings for an immeasurable
period and then, about' twenty to twenty-five thousand years ago, the human
species developed interstellar travel by way of the hyperspatial Jump and
colonized a group of planets.
The Settlers on
these planets made use of robots, which had first been devised on Earth before
the days of hyperspatial travel and-do you know what robots are, by the way?
Yes, said
Trevize. We have been asked that more than once. We know what robots are.
The Settlers,
with a thoroughly roboticized society, developed a high technology and unusual
longevity and despised their ancestral world. According to more dramatic versions
of their story, they dominated and oppressed the ancestral world.
Eventually,
then, Earth sent out a new group of Settlers, among whom robots were forbidden.
Of the new worlds, Comporellon was among the first. Our own patriots insist it
was the first, but there is no evidence of that that a Skeptic can accept. The
first group of Settlers died out, and...
Trevize said,
Why did the first set die out, Dr. Deniador?
Why? Usually
they are imagined by our romantics as having been punished for their crimes by
He Who Punishes, though no one bothers to say why He waited so long. But one
doesn't have to resort to fairy tales. It is easy to argue that a society that
depends totally on robots becomes soft and decadent, dwindling and dying out of
sheer boredom or, more subtly, by losing the will to live.
The second wave
of Settlers, without robots, lived on and took over the entire Galaxy, but
Earth grew radioactive and slowly dropped out of sight. The reason usually
given for this is that there were robots on Earth, too, since the first wave
had encouraged that.
Bliss, who had
listened to the account with some visible impatience, said, Well, Dr.
Deniador, radioactivity or not, and however many waves of settlers there might
have been, the crucial question is a simple one. Exactly where is Earth? What
are its co-ordinates?
Deniador said,
The answer to that question is: I don't know. But come, it is time for lunch.
I can have one brought in, and we can discuss Earth over it for as long as you
want.
You don't know?
said Trevize, the sound of his voice rising in pitch and intensity.
Actually, as far
as I know, no one knows.
But that is
impossible.
Councilman,
said Deniador, with a soft sigh, if you wish to call the truth impossible,
that is your privilege, but it will get you nowhere.
Chapter 7
Leaving
Comporellon
26.
LUNCHEON
consisted of a heap of soft, crusty balls that came in different shades and
that contained a variety of fillings.
Deniador picked
up a small object which unfolded into a pair of thin, ', transparent gloves,
and put them on. His guests followed suit.
Bliss said, What
is inside these objects, please?
Deniador said,
The pink ones are filled with spicy chopped fish, a great Comporellian
delicacy. These yellow ones contain a cheese filling that is very mild. The
green ones contain a vegetable mixture. Do eat them while they are a quite
warm. Later we will have hot almond pie and the usual beverages. I might
recommend the hot cider. In a cold climate, we have a tendency to heat our
foods, even desserts.
You do yourself
well, said Pelorat.
Not really,
said Deniador. I'm being hospitable to guests. For myself, I get along on very
little. I don't have much body mass to support, as you haul probably noticed.
Trevize bit into
one of the pink ones and found it very fishy indeed, with all overlay of spices
that was pleasant to the taste but which, he thought, along with the fish
itself, would remain with him for the rest of the day and, perhaps, into the
night.
When he withdrew
the object with the bite taken out of it, he found that the crust had closed in
over the contents. There was no squirt, no leakage, and, for a moment, he
wondered at the purpose of the gloves. These seemed no chance of getting his
hands moist and sticky if he didn't use them, so he decided it was a matter of
hygiene. The gloves substituted for a washing of the hands if that were
inconvenient and custom, probably, now dictated their use even if the hands
were washed. (Lizalor hadn't used gloves when he had eaten with her the day
before. Perhaps that was because she was a mountain woman.)
He said, Would
it be unmannerly to talk business over lunch?
By Comporellian
standards, Councilman, it would be, but you are my guests, and we will go by
your standards. If you wish to speak seriously, and do not think-or care-that
that might diminish your pleasure in the food, please do so, and I will join
you.
Trevize said,
Thank you. Minister Lizalor implied-no, she stated quite bluntly-that Skeptics
were unpopular on this world. Is that so?
Deniador's good
humor seemed to intensify. Certainly. How hurt we'd be if we weren't.
Comporellon, you see, is a frustrated world. Without any knowledge of the
details, there is the general mythic belief, that once, many millennia ago,
when the inhabited Galaxy was small, Comporellon was the leading world. We
never forget that, and the fact that in known history we have not been leaders
irks us, fills us-the population in general, that is-with a feeling of
injustice.
Yet what can we
do? The government was forced to be a loyal vassal of the Emperor once, and is
a loyal Associate of the Foundation now. And the more we are made aware of our
subordinate position, the stronger the belief in the great, mysterious days of
the past become.
What, then, can
Comporellon do? They could never defy the Empire in older times and they can't
openly defy the Foundation now. They take refuge, therefore, in attacking and
hating us, since we don't believe the legends and laugh at the superstitions.
Nevertheless, we
are safe from the grosser effects of persecution. We control the technology,
and we fill the faculties of the Universities. Some of us, who are particularly
outspoken, have difficulty in teaching classes openly. I have that difficulty,
for instance, though I have my students and hold meetings quietly off-campus.
Nevertheless, if we were really driven out of public life, the technology would
fail and the Universities would lose accreditation with the Galaxy generally.
Presumably, such is the folly of human beings, the prospects of intellectual
suicide might not stop them from indulging their hatred, but the Foundation
supports us. Therefore, we are constantly scolded and sneered at and denounced-and
never touched.
Trevize said, Is
it popular opposition that keeps you from telling us where Earth is? Do you
fear that, despite everything, the anti-Skeptic feeling might turn ugly if you
go too far?
Deniador shook
his head. No. Earth's location is unknown. I am not hiding anything from you
out of fear-or for any other reason.
But look, said
Trevize urgently. There are a limited number of planets in this sector of the
Galaxy that possess the physical characteristics associated with habitability,
and almost all of them must be not only inhabitable, but inhabited, and
therefore well known to you. How difficult would it be to explore the sector
for a planet that would be habitable were it not for the fact that it was
radioactive? Besides that, you would look for such a planet with a large,
satellite in attendance. Between radioactivity and a large satellite, Earth
would be absolutely unmistakable and could not be missed even with only a
casual search. It might take some time but that would be the only difficulty.
Deniador said,
The Skeptic's view is, of course, that Earth's radioactivity and its large
satellite are both simply legends. If we look for them, we look for
sparrow-milk and rabbit-feathers.
Perhaps, but
that shouldn't stop Comporellon from at least taking on the search. If they
find a radioactive world of the proper size for habitability, with a large
satellite, what an appearance of credibility it would lend to Comporellian
legendry in general.
Deniador laughed.
It may be that Comporellon doesn't search for that very reason. If we fail, or
if we find an Earth obviously different from the legends, the reverse would
take place. Comporellian legendry in general would be blasted and made into a
laughingstock. Comporellon wouldn't risk that.
Trevize paused,
then went on, very earnestly, Besides, even if we discount those two
uniquities-if there is such a word in Galactic-of radioactivity and a large
satellite, there is a third that, by definition, must exist, without any
reference to legends. Earth must have upon it either a flourishing life of
incredible diversity, or the remnants of one, or, at the very least, the fossil
record of such a one.
Deniador said,
Councilman, while Comporellon has sent out no organized search party for Earth,
we do have occasion to travel through space, and we occasionally have reports
from ships that have strayed from their intended routes for one reason or
another. Jumps are not always perfect, as perhaps you know. Nevertheless, there
have been no reports of any planets with properties resembling those of the
legendary Earth, or any planet that is bursting with life. Nor is any ship
likely to land on what seems an uninhabited planet in order that the crew might
go fossil-hunting. If, then, in thousands of years nothing of the sort has been
reported, I am perfectly willing to believe that locating Earth is impossible,
because Earth is not there to be located.
Trevize said, in
frustration, But Earth must be somewhere. Somewhere there is a planet on which
humanity and all the familiar forms of life associated with humanity evolved.
If Earth is not in this section of the Galaxy, it must be elsewhere.
Perhaps, said
Deniador cold-bloodedly, but in all this time, it hasn't turned up anywhere.
People haven't
really looked for it.
Well, apparently
you are. I wish you luck, but I would never bet on your success.
Trevize said,
Have there been attempts to determine the possible position of Earth by
indirect means, by some means other than a direct search?
Yes, said two
voices at once. Deniador, who was the owner of one of the voices, said to
Pelorat, Are you thinking of Yariffs project?
I am, said
Pelorat.
Then would you
explain it to the Councilman? I think he would more readily believe you than
me.
Pelorat said,
You see, Golan, in the last days of the Empire, there was a time when the
Search for Origins, as they called it, was a popular pastime, perhaps to get
away from the unpleasantness of the surrounding reality. The Empire was in a
process of disintegration at that time, you know.
It occurred to a
Livian historian, Humbal Yariff, that whatever the planet of origin, it would
have settled worlds near itself sooner than it would settle planets farther
away. In general, the farther a world from the point of origin the later it
would have been settled.
Suppose, then,
one recorded the date of settlement of all habitable planets in the Galaxy, and
made networks of all that were a given number of Millennia old. There could be
a network drawn through all planets ten thousand years old; another through
those twelve thousand years old, still another through those fifteen thousand
years old. Each network would, in theory, be roughly spherical and they should
be roughly concentric. The older networks would form spheres smaller in radius
than the younger ones, and if one worked out all the centers they should fall
within a comparatively small volume of space that would include the planet of
origin-Earth.
Pelorat's face
was very earnest as he kept drawing spherical surfaces with his cupped hands.
Do you see my point, Golan?
Trevize nodded.
Yes. But I take it that it didn't work.
Theoretically,
it should have, old fellow. One trouble was that times of origin were totally
inaccurate. Every world exaggerated its own age to one degree or another and
there was no easy way of determining age independently of legend.
Bliss said,
Carbon-14 decay in ancient timber.
Certainly,
dear, said Pelorat, but you would have had to get co-operation from the
worlds in question, and that was never given. no world wanted its own
exaggerated claim of age to be destroyed and the Empire was then in no position
to override local objections in a matter so unimportant. It had other things on
its mind.
All that Yariff
could do was to make use of worlds that were only two thousand years old at
most, and whose founding had been meticulously recorded under reliable
circumstances. There were few of those, and while they were distributed in
roughly spherical symmetry, the center was relatively close to Trantor, the
Imperial capital, because that was where the colonizing expeditions had
originated for those relatively few worlds.
That, of course,
was another problem. Earth was not the only point of origin of settlement for other
worlds. As time went on, the older worlds sent out settlement expeditions of
their own, and at the time of the height of Empire, Trantor was a rather
copious source of those. Yariff was, rather unfairly, laughed at and ridiculed
and his professional reputation was destroyed.
Trevize said, I
get the story, Janov. Dr. Deniador, is there then nothing at all you could give
me that represents the faintest possibility of hope? Is there any other world
where it is conceivable there may be some information concerning Earth?
Deniador sank
into doubtful thought for a while. We-e-ell, he said at last, drawing out the
word hesitantly, as a Skeptic I must tell you that I'm not sure that Earth
exists, or has ever existed. However... He fell silent again.
Finally, Bliss
said, I think you've thought of something that might be important, Doctor.
Important? I
doubt it, said Deniador faintly. Perhaps amusing, however. Earth is not the
only planet whose position is a mystery. There are the worlds of the first group
of Settlers; the Spacers, as they are called in our legends. Some call the
planets they inhabited the Spacer worlds; others call them the Forbidden
Worlds. The latter name is now the usual one.
In their pride
and prime, the legend goes, the Spacers had lifetimes stretching out for
centuries, and refused to allow our own short-lived ancestors to land on their
worlds. After we had defeated them, the situation was reversed. We scorned to
deal with them and left them to themselves, forbidding our own ships and
Traders to deal with them. Hence those planets became the Forbidden Worlds. We
were certain, so the legend states, that He Who Punishes would destroy them
without our intervention, and, apparently, He did. At least, no Spacer has
appeared in the Galaxy to our knowledge, in many millennia.
Do you think
that the Spacers would know about Earth? said Trevize.
Conceivably,
since their worlds were older than any of ours. That is, if any Spacers exist,
which is extremely unlikely.
Even if they
don't exist, their worlds do and may contain records.
If you can find
the worlds.
Trevize looked
exasperated. Do you mean to say that the key to Earth, the location of which
is unknown, may be found on Spacer worlds, the location of which is also
unknown?
Deniador
shrugged. We have had no dealings with them for twenty thousand years. no
thought of them. They, too, like Earth, have receded into the mists.
How many worlds
did the Spacers live on?
The legends
speak of fifty such worlds-,a suspiciously round number. There were probably
far fewer.
And you don't
know the location of a single one of the fifty?
Well, now, I
wonder...
What do you
wonder?
Deniador said,
Since primeval history is my hobby, as it is Dr. Pelorat's, I have
occasionally explored old documents in search of anything that might refer to
early time; something more than legends. Last year, I came upon the records of
an old ship, records that were almost indecipherable. It dated back to the very
old days when our world was not yet known as Comporellon. The name Baleyworld
was used, which, it seems to me, may be an even earlier form of the Benbally
world of our legends.
Pelorat said,
excitedly, Have you published?
No, said
Deniador. I do not wish to dive until I am sure there is water in the swimming
pool, as the old saying has it. You see, the record says that the captain of
the ship had visited a Spacer world and taken off with him a Spacer woman.
Bliss said, But
you said that the Spacers did not allow visitors.
Exactly, and
that is the reason I don't publish the material. It sounds incredible. There
are vague tales that could be interpreted as referring to the Spacers and to
their conflict with the Settlers-our own ancestors. Such tales exist not only
on Comporellon but on many worlds in many variations, but all are in absolute
accord in one respect. The two groups, Spacers and Settlers, did not mingle.
There was no social contact, let alone sexual contact, and yet apparently the
Settler captain and the Spacer woman were held together by bonds of love. This
is so incredible that I see no chance of the story being accepted as anything
but, at best, a piece of romantic historical fiction.
Trevize looked
disappointed. Is that all?
No, Councilman,
there is one more matter. I came across some figures in what was left of the
log of the ship that might-or might not-represent spatial co-ordinates. If they
were-and I repeat, since my Skeptic's honor compels me to, that they might not
be-then internal evidence made me conclude they were the spatial co-ordinates
of three of the Spacer worlds. One of them might be the Spacer world where the
captain landed and from which he withdrew his Spacer love.
Trevize said,
Might it not be that even if the tale is fiction, the coordinates are real?
It might be,
said Deniador. I will give you the figures, and you are free to use them, but
you might get nowhere. And yet I have an amusing notion. His quick smile made
its appearance.
What is that?
said Trevize.
What if one of
those sets of co-ordinates represented Earth?
27.
COMPORELLON'S
sun, distinctly orange, was larger in appearance than the sun of Terminus, but
it was low in the sky and gave out little heat. The wind, fortunately light,
touched Trevize's cheek with icy fingers.
He shivered
inside the electrified coat he had been given by Mitza Lizalor, who now stood
next to him. He said, It must warm up sometime, Mitza.
She glanced up at
the sun briefly, and stood there in the emptiness of the spaceport, showing no
signs of discomfort-tall, large, wearing a lighter coat than Trevize had on,
and if not impervious to the cold, at least scornful of it.
She said, We
have a beautiful summer. It is not a long one but our food crops are adapted to
it. The strains are carefully chosen so that they grow quickly in the sun and
do not frostbite easily. Our domestic animals are well furred, and Comporellian
wool is the best in the Galaxy by general admission. Then, too, we have farm settlements
in orbit about Comporellon that grow tropical fruit. We actually export canned
pineapples of superior flavor. Most people who know us as a cold world don't
know that.
Trevize said, I
thank you for coming to see us off, Mitza, and for being willing to co-operate
with us on this mission of ours. For my own peace of mind, however, I must ask
whether you will find yourself in serious trouble over this.
No! She shook
her head proudly. No trouble. In the first place, I will not be questioned. I
am in control of transportation, which means I alone set the rules for this
spaceport and others, for the entry stations, for the ships that come and go.
The Prime Minister depends on me for all that and is only too delighted to
remain ignorant of its details. And even if I were questioned, I have but to
tell the truth. The government would applaud me for not turning the ship over
to the Foundation. So would the people if it were safe to let them know. And
the Foundation itself would not know of it.
Trevize said,
The government might be willing to keep the ship from the Foundation, but
would they be willing to approve your letting us take it away?
Lizalor smiled.
You are a decent human being, Trevize. You have fought tenaciously to keep
your ship and now that you have it you take the trouble to concern yourself
with my welfare. She reached toward him tentatively as though tempted to give
some sign of affection and then, with obvious difficulty, controlled the
impulse.
She said, with a
renewed brusqueness, Even if they question my decision, I have but to tell
them that you have been, and still are, searching for the Oldest, and they will
say I did well to get rid of you as quickly as I did, ship and all, And they
will perform the rites of atonement that you were ever allowed to land in the
first place, though there was no way we might have guessed what you were
doing.
Do you truly
fear misfortune to yourself and the world because of my presence?
Indeed, said
Lizalor stolidly. Then she said, more softly, You have brought misfortune to
me, already, for now that I have known you, Comporellian men will seem more
sapless still. I will be left with an unappeasable longing. He Who Punishes has
already seen to that.
Trevize
hesitated, then said, I do not wish you to change your mind on this matter,
but I do not wish you to suffer needless apprehension, either. You must know
that this matter of my bringing misfortune on you is simply superstition.
The Skeptic told
you that, I presume.
I know it
without his telling me.
Lizalor brushed
her face, for a thin rime was gathering on her prominent eyebrows and said, I
know there are some who think it superstition. That the Oldest brings
misfortune is, however, a fact. It has been demonstrated many times and all the
clever Skeptical arguments can't legislate the truth out of existence.
She thrust out
her . hand suddenly. Good-bye, Golan. Get on the ship and join your companions
before your soft Terminian body freezes in our cold, but kindly wind.
Good-bye, Mitza,
and I hope to see you when I return.
Yes, you have
promised to return and I have tried to believe that you would. I have even told
myself that I would come out and meet you at your ship in space so that
misfortune would fall only on me and not upon my world-but you will not
return.
Not so! I will!
I would not give you up that easily, having had pleasure of you. And at that
moment, Trevize was firmly convinced that he meant it.
I do not doubt
your romantic impulses, my sweet Foundationer, but those who venture outward on
a search for the Oldest will never come back-anywhere. I know that in my
heart.
Trevize tried to
keep his teeth from chattering. It was from cold and he didn't want her to think
it was from fear. He said, That, too, is superstition.
And yet, she
said, that, too, is true.
28.
IT WAS GOOD TO be
back in the pilot-room of the Far Star. It might be ;tamped for room. It might
be a bubble of imprisonment in infinite space. Nevertheless, it was familiar,
friendly, and warm.
Bliss said, I'm
glad you finally came aboard. I was wondering how long you would remain with
the Minister.
Not long, said
Trevize. It was cold.
It seemed to
me, said Bliss, that you were considering remaining with her and postponing
the search for Earth. I do not like to probe your mind even lightly, but I was
concerned for you and that temptation under which you labored seemed to leap
out at me.
Trevize said,
You're quite right. Momentarily at least, I felt the temptation. The Minister
is a remarkable woman and I've never met anyone quite like her. Did you
strengthen my resistance, Bliss?
She said, I've
told you many times I must not and will not tamper with your mind in any way,
Trevize. You beat down the temptation, I imagine, through your strong sense of
duty.
No, I rather
think not. He smiled wryly. Nothing so dramatic and noble. My resistance was
strengthened, for one thing, by the fact that is was cold, and for another, by
the sad thought that it wouldn't take many sessions with her to kill me. I
could never keep up the pace.
Pelorat said,
Well, anyway, you are safely aboard. What are we going to do next?
In the immediate
future, we are going to move outward through the planetary system at a brisk
pace until we are far enough from Comporellon's sun to make a Jump.
Do you think we
will be stopped or followed?
No, I really
think that the Minister is anxious only that we go away as rapidly as possible
and stay away, in order that the vengeance of He Who Punishes not fall upon the
planet. In fact...
She believes the
vengeance will surely fall on us. She is under the firm conviction that we will
never return. This, I hasten to add, is not an estimate of my probable level of
infidelity, which she has had no occasion to measure. She meant that Earth is
so terrible a bearer of misfortune that anyone who seeks it must die in the
process.
Bliss said, How
many have left Comporellon in search of Earth that she can make such a
statement?
I doubt that any
Comporellian has ever left on such a search. I told her that her fears were
mere superstition.
Are you sure you
believe that, or have you let her shake you?
I know her fears
are the purest superstition in the form she expresses them, but they may be
well founded just the same.
You mean,
radioactivity will kill us if we try to land on it?
I don't believe
that Earth is radioactive. What I do believe is that Earth protects itself.
Remember that all reference to Earth in the Library on Trantor has been
removed. Remember that Gaia's marvelous memory, in which all the planet takes
part down to the rock strata of the surface and the molten metal at the core,
stops short of penetrating far enough back to tell us anything of Earth.
Clearly, if
Earth is powerful enough to do that, it might also be capable of adjusting
minds in order to force belief in its radioactivity, and thus preventing any
search for it. Perhaps because Comporellon is so close that it represents a
particular danger to Earth, there is the further reinforcement of a curious
blankness. Deniador, who is a Skeptic and a scientist, is utterly convinced
that there is no use searching for Earth. He says it cannot be found. And that
is why the Minister's superstition may be well founded. If Earth is so intent
on concealing itself, might it not kill us, or distort us, rather than allow us
to find it?
Bliss frowned and
said, Gaia...
Trevize said
quickly, Don't say Gaia will protect us. Since Earth was able to remove Gaia's
earliest memories, it is clear that in any conflict between the two Earth will
win.
Bliss said
coldly, How do you know that the memories were removed? It might be that it
simply took time for Gaia to develop a planetary memory and that we can now
probe backward only to the time of the completion of that development. And if
the memory was removed, how can you be sure that it was Earth that did it?
Trevize said, I
don't know. I merely advance my speculations.
Pelorat put in,
rather timidly, If Earth is so powerful, and so intent on preserving its
privacy, so to speak, of what use is our search? You seem to think Earth won't
allow us to succeed and will kill us if that will be what it takes to keep us
from succeeding. In that case, is there any sense in not abandoning this whole
thing?
It might seem we
ought to give up, I admit, but I have this powerful conviction that Earth
exists, and I must and will find it. And Gaia tells me that when I have
powerful convictions of this sort, I am always right.
But how can we
survive the discovery, old chap?
It may be, said
Trevize, with an effort at lightness, that Earth, too, will recognize the
value of my extraordinary rightness and will leave me to myself. But-and this
is what I am finally getting at-I cannot be certain that you two will survive
and that is of concern to me. It always has been, but it is increasing now and
it seems to me that I ought to take you two back to Gaia and then proceed on my
own. It is I, not you, who first decided I must search for Earth; it is I, not
you, who see value in it; it is I, not you, who am driven. Let it be I, then,
not you, who take the risk. Let me go on alone. Janov?
Pelorat's long
face seemed to grow longer as he buried his chin in his neck. I won't deny I
feel nervous, Golan, but I'd be ashamed to abandon you. I would disown myself
if I did so.
Bliss?
Gaia will not
abandon you, Trevize, whatever you do. If Earth should prove dangerous, Gaia
will protect you as far as it can. And in any case, in my role as Bliss, I will
not abandon Pel, and if he clings to you, then I certainly cling to him.
Trevize said
grimly, Very well, then. I've given you your chance. We go on together.
Together, said
Bliss.
Pelorat smiled
slightly, and gripped Trevize's shoulder. Together. Always.
29.
BLISS SAID, Look
at that, Pel.
She had been
making use of the ship's telescope by hand, almost aimlessly, as a change from
Pelorat's library of Earth-legendry.
Pelorat
approached, placed an arm about her shoulders and looked at the viewscreen. One
of the gas giants of the Comporellian planetary system was in sight, magnified
till it seemed the large body it really was.
In color it was a
soft orange streaked with paler stripes. Viewed from the planetary plane, and
more distant from the sun than the ship itself was, it was almost a complete
circle of light.
Beautiful, said
Pelorat.
The central
streak extends beyond the planet, Pel.
Pelorat furrowed
his brow and said, You know, Bliss, I believe it does,
Do you suppose
it's an optical illusion?
Pelorat said,
I'm not sure, Bliss. I'm as much a space-novice as you am Golan!
Trevize answered
the call with a rather feeble What is it? and entered the pilot-room, looking
a bit rumpled, as though he had just been napping on his bed with his clothes
on-which was exactly what he had been doing.
He said, in a
rather peevish way, Please! Don't be handling the instruments.
It's just the
telescope, said Pelorat. Look at that.
Trevize did.
It's a gas giant, the one they call Gallia, according to the information I was
given.
How can you tell
it's that one, just looking?
For one thing,
said Trevize, at our distance from the sun, and because of the planetary sizes
and orbital positions, which I've been studying in plotting our course, that's
the only one you could magnify to that extent et this time. For another thing,
there's the ring.
Ring? said
Bliss, mystified.
All you can see
is a thin, pale marking, because we're viewing it almost edge-on. We can zoom
up out of the planetary plane and give you a better view. Would you like that?
Pelorat said, I
don't want to make you have to recalculate positions and courses, Golan.
Oh well, the
computer will do it for me with little trouble. He sat down at the computer as
he spoke and placed his hands on the markings that received them. The computer,
finely attuned to his mind, did the rest.
The Far Star,
free of fuel problems or of inertial sensations, accelerated rapidly, and once
again, Trevize felt a surge of love for a computer-and-ship that responded in
such a way to him-as though it was his thought that powered and directed it, as
though it were a powerful and obedient extension of his will.
It was no wonder
the Foundation wanted it back; no wonder Comporellon had wanted it for itself.
The only surprise was that the force of superstition had been strong enough to
cause Comporellon to be willing to give it up.
Properly armed,
it could outrun or outfight any ship in the Galaxy, or any combination of ships-provided
only that it did not encounter another ship like itself.
Of course, it was
not properly armed. Mayor Branno, in assigning him the ship, had at least been
cautious enough to leave it unarmed.
Pelorat and Bliss
watched intently as the planet, Gallia, slowly, slowly, tipped toward them. The
upper pole (whichever it was) became visible, with turbulence in a large
circular region around it, while the lower pole retired behind the bulge of the
sphere.
At the upper end,
the dark side of the planet invaded the sphere of orange light, and the
beautiful circle became increasingly lopsided.
What seemed more
exciting was that the central pale streak was no longer straight but had come
to be curved, as were the other streaks to the north and south, but more noticeably
so.
Now the central
streak extended beyond the edges of the planet very distinctly and did so in a
narrow loop on either side. There was no question of illusion; its nature was
apparent. It was a ring of matter, looping about the planet, and hidden on the
far side.
That's enough to
give you the idea, I think, said Trevize. If we were to move over the planet,
you would see the ring in its circular form, concentric about the planet,
touching it nowhere. You'll probably see that it's not one ring either but
several concentric rings.
I wouldn't have
thought it possible, said Pelorat blankly. What keeps it in space?
The same thing
that keeps a satellite in space, said Trevize. The rings consist of tiny
particles, every one of which is orbiting the planet. The rings are so close to
the planet that tidal effects prevent it from coalescing into a single body.
Pelorat shook his
head. It's horrifying when I think of it, old man. How is it possible that I
can have spent my whole life as a scholar and yet know so little about
astronomy?
And I know
nothing at all about the myths of humanity. no one can encompass all of
knowledge. The point is that these planetary rings aren't unusual. Almost every
single gas giant has them, even if it's only a thin curve of dust. As it
happens, the sun of Terminus has no true gas giant in its planetary family, so
unless a Terminian is a space traveler, or has taken University instruction in
astronomy, he's likely to know nothing about planetary rings. What is unusual is
a ring that is sufficiently broad to be bright and noticeable, like that one.
It's beautiful. It must be a couple of hundred kilometers wide, at least.
At this point,
Pelorat snapped his fingers. That's what it meant.
Bliss looked
startled. What is it, Pel?
Pelorat said, I
came across a scrap of poetry once, very ancient, and in an archaic version of
Galactic that was hard to make out but that was good evidence of great age.
Though I shouldn't complain of the archaism, old chap. My work has made me an
expert on various varieties of Old Galactic, which is quite gratifying even if
it is of no use to me whatever outside my work. What was I talking about?
Bliss said, An
old scrap of poetry, Pel dear.
Thank you,
Bliss, he said. And to Trevize, She keeps close track of what I say in order
to pull me back whenever I get off-course, which is most of the time.
It's part of
your charm, Pel, said Bliss, smiling.
Anyway, this
scrap of poetry purported to describe the planetary system of which Earth was
part. Why it should do so, I don't know, for the poem as a whole does not
survive; at least, I was never able to locate it. Only this one portion
survived, perhaps because of its astronomical content. In any case, it spoke of
the brilliant triple ring of the sixth planet both brade and large, sae the
woruld shronk in comparisoun. I can still quote it, you see. I didn't
understand what a planet's ring could be. I remember thinking of three circles
on one side of the planet, all in a row. It seemed so nonsensical, I didn't
bother to include it in my library. I'm sorry now I didn't inquire. He shook
his head. Being a mythologist in today's Galaxy is so solitary a job, one
forgets the good of inquiring.
Trevize said
consolingly, You were probably right to ignore it, Janov. It's a mistake to
take poetic chatter literally.
But that's what
was meant, said Pelorat, pointing at the screen. That's what the poem was
speaking of. Three wide rings, concentric, wider than the planet itself.
Trevize said, I
never heard of such a thing. I don't think rings can be that wide. Compared to
the planet they circle, they are always very narrow.
Pelorat said, We
never heard of a habitable planet with a giant satellite, either. Or one with a
radioactive crust. This is uniqueness . number three. If we find a radioactive
planet that might be otherwise habitable, with a giant satellite, and with
another planet in the system that has a huge ring, there would be no doubt at
all that we had encountered Earth.
Trevize smiled.
I agree, Janov. If we find all three, we will certainly have found Earth.
If! said Bliss,
with a sigh.
30.
THEY WERE beyond
the main worlds of the planetary system, plunging outward between the positions
of the two outermost planets so that there was now no significant mass within
1.5 billion kilometers. Ahead lay only the vast cometary cloud which,
gravitationally, was insignificant.
The Far Star had
accelerated to a speed of 0.1 c, one tenth the speed of light. Trevize knew
well that, in theory, the ship could be accelerated to nearly the speed of
light, but he also knew that, in practice, 0.1 c was the reasonable limit.
At that speed,
any object with appreciable mass could be avoided, but there was no way of
dodging the innumerable dust particles in space, and, to a far greater extent
even, individual atoms and molecules. At very fast speeds, even such small
objects could do damage, scouring and scraping the ship's hull. At speeds near
the speed of light, each atom smashing into the hull had the properties of a
cosmic ray particle. Under that penetrating cosmic radiation, anyone on board
ship would not long survive.
The distant stars
showed no perceptible motion in the viewscreen, and even though the ship was
moving at thirty thousand kilometers per second, there was every appearance of
its standing still.
The computer
scanned space to great distances for any oncoming object of small but
significant size that might be on a collision course, and the ship veered
gently to avoid it, in the extremely unlikely case that that would be
necessary. Between the small size of any possible oncoming object, the speed
with which it was passed, and the lack of inertial effect as the result of the
course change, there was no way of telling whether anything ever took place in the
nature of what might be termed a close call.
Trevize,
therefore, did not worry about such things, or even give it the most casual
thought. He kept his full attention on the three sets of co-ordinates he had
been given by Deniador, and, particularly, on the set which indicated the
object closest to themselves.
Is there
something wrong with the figures? asked Pelorat anxiously.
I can't tell
yet, said Trevize. Co-ordinates in themselves aren't useful, unless you know
the zero point and the conventions used in setting them up the direction in
which to mark off the distance, so to speak, what the equivalent of a prime
meridian is, and so on.
How do you find
out such things? said Pelorat blankly.
I obtained the
co-ordinates of Terminus and a few other known points, relative to Comporellon.
If I put them into the computer, it will calculate what the conventions must be
for such co-ordinates if Terminus and the other points are to be correctly
located. I'm only trying to organize things in my mind so that I can properly
program the computer for this. Once the conventions are determined, the figures
we have for the Forbidden Worlds might possibly have meaning.
Only possibly?
said Bliss.
Only possibly,
I'm afraid, said Trevize. These are old figures after all-presumably
Comporellian, but not definitely. What if they are based on other conventions?
In that case?
In that case, we
have only meaningless figures. But-we just have to find out.
His hands
flickered over the softly glowing keys of the computer, feeding it the
necessary information. He then placed his hands on the handmarks on the desk.
He waited while the computer worked out the conventions of the known
co-ordinates, paused a moment, then interpreted the co-ordinates of the nearest
Forbidden World by the same conventions, and finally located those co-ordinates
on the Galactic map in its memory.
A starfield
appeared on the screen and moved rapidly as it adjusted itself. When it reached
stasis, it expanded with stars bleeding off the edges in all directions until
they were almost all gone. At no point could the eye follow the rapid change;
it was all a speckled blur. Until finally, a space one tenth of a parsec on
each side (according to the index figures below the screen) all that
remained. There was no further change, and only half a dozen dial sparks
relieved the darkness of the screen.
Which one is the
Forbidden World? asked Pelorat softly.
None of them,
said Trevize. Four of them are red dwarfs, one a near-red dwarf, and the last
a white dwarf. None of them can possibly have a habitable world in orbit about
them.
How do you know
they're red dwarfs just by looking at them?
Trevize said,
We're not looking at real stars; we're looking at a section of the Galactic
map stored in the computer's memory. Each one is labeled. You can't see it and
ordinarily I couldn't see it either, but as long as my hands are making
contact, as they are, I am aware of a considerable amount of data on any star
on which my eyes concentrate.
Pelorat said in a
woebegone tone, Then the co-ordinates are useless.
Trevize looked up
at him, No, Janov. I'm not finished. There's still the matter of time. The
co-ordinates for the Forbidden World are those of twenty thousand years ago. In
that time, both it and Comporellon have been revolving about the Galactic
Center, and they may well be revolving at different speeds and in orbits of
different inclinations and eccentricities. With time, therefore, the two worlds
may be drifting closer together or farther apart and, in twenty thousand years,
the Forbidden World may have drifted anywhere from one-half to five parsecs off
the mark. It certainly wouldn't be included in that tenth-parsec square.
What do we do,
then?
We have the
computer move the Galaxy twenty thousand years back in time relative to
Comporellon.
Can it do that?
asked Bliss, sounding rather awe-struck.
Well, it can't
move the Galaxy itself back in time, but it can move the map in its memory
banks back in time.
Bliss said, Will
we see anything happen?
Watch, said
Trevize.
Very slowly, the
half-dozen stars crawled over the face of the screen. A new star, not hitherto
on the screen, drifted in from the left hand edge, and Pelorat pointed in
excitement. There! There!
Trevize said,
Sorry. Another red dwarf. They're very common. At least three fourths of all
the stars in the Galaxy are red dwarfs.
The screen
settled down and stopped moving.
Well? said
Bliss.
Trevize said,
That's it. That's the view of that portion of the Galaxy as it would have been
twenty thousand years ago. At the very center of the screen is a point where
the Forbidden World ought to be if it had been drifting at some average
velocity.
Ought to be, but
isn't, said Bliss sharply.
It isn't,
agreed Trevize, with remarkably little emotion.
Pelorat released
his breath in a long sigh. Oh, too bad, Golan.
Trevize said,
Wait, don't despair. I wasn't expecting to see the star there.
You weren't?
said Pelorat, astonished.
No. I told you
that this isn't the Galaxy itself, but the computer's map of the Galaxy. If a
real star is not included in the map, we don't see it. If the planet is called
Forbidden and has been called so for twenty thousand years, the chances are it
wouldn't be included in the map. And it isn't, for we don't see it.
Bliss said, We
might not see it because it doesn't exist. The Comporellian legends may be
false, or the co-ordinates may be wrong.
Very true. The
computer, however, can now make an estimate as to what the co-ordinates ought
to be at this time, now that it has located the spot where it may have been
twenty thousand years ago. Using the co-ordinates corrected for time, a
correction I could only have made through use of the star map, we can now
switch to the real starfield of the Galaxy itself.
Bliss said, But
you only assumed an average velocity for the Forbidden World. What if its
velocity was not average? You would not now have the correct co-ordinates.
True enough, but
a correction, assuming average velocity, is almost certain to be closer to its
real position, than if we had made no time correction at all.
You hope! said
Bliss doubtfully.
That's exactly
what I do, said Trevize. I hope. And now let's look at the real Galaxy.
The two onlookers
watched tensely, while Trevize (perhaps to reduce his own tensions and delay
the zero moment) spoke softly, almost as though he were lecturing.
It's more
difficult to observe the real Galaxy, he said. The map in the computer is an
artificial construction, with irrelevancies capable of being eliminated. If
there is a nebula obscuring the view, I can remove it. If the angle of view is
inconvenient for what I have in mind, I can change the angle, and so on. The
real Galaxy, however, I must take as I find it, and if I want a change I must
move physically through space, which will take far more time than it would take
to adjust a map.
And as he spoke, the
screen showed a star cloud so rich in individual stars as to seem an irregular
heap of powder.
Trevize said,
That's a large angle view of a section of the Milky Way, and I want the
foreground, of course. If I expand the foreground, the background will tend to
fade in comparison. The co-ordinate spot is close enough to Comporellon so that
I should be able to expand it to about the situation I had on the view of the
map. Just let me put in the necessary instructions, if I can hold on to my
sanity long enough. Now.
The starfield
expanded with a rush so that thousands of stars pushed off every edge, giving
the watchers so real a sensation of moving toward the screen that all three
automatically leaned backward as though in response to a forward rush.
The old view
returned, not quite as dark as it had been on the map, but with the half-dozen
stars shown as they had been in the original view. And there, close to the
center, was another star, shining far more brightly than the others.
There it is,
said Pelorat, in an awed whisper.
It may be. I'll
have the computer take its spectrum and analyze it. There was a moderately
long pause, then Trevize said, Spectral class, G-4, which makes it a trifle
dimmer and smaller than Terminus's sun, but rather brighter than Comporellon's
sun. And no G-class star should be omitted from the computer's Galactic map.
Since this one is, that is a strong indication that it may be the sun about
which the Forbidden World revolves.
Bliss said, Is
there any chance of its turning out that there is no habitable planet revolving
about this star after all? There's a chance, I suppose. In that case, we'll
try to find the other two Forbidden Worlds. Bliss persevered. And if the
other two are false alarms, too? Then we'll try something else. Like what?
I wish I knew, said Trevize grimly.
PART THREEAURORA
Chapter 8
Forbidden World
31.
GOLAN, said
Pelorat. Does it bother you if I watch?
Not at all,
Janov, said Trevize.
If I ask
questions?
Go ahead.
Pelorat said,
What are you doing?
Trevize took his
eyes off the viewscreen. I've got to measure the distance of each star that
seems to be near the Forbidden World on the screen, so that I can determine how
near they really are. Their gravitational fields must be known and for that I
need mass and distance. Without that knowledge, one can't be sure of a clean
Jump.
How do you do
that?
Well, each star
I see has its co-ordinates in the computer's memory bank! and these can be
converted into co-ordinates on the Comporellian system. That can, in turn, be
slightly corrected for the actual position of the For Star in space relative to
Co mporellon's sun, and that gives me the distance of each. Those red dwarfs
all look quite near the Forbidden World on the screen, but some might be much
closer and some much farther. We need their three-dimensional position, you
see.
Pelorat nodded,
and said, And you already have the co-ordinates of the Forbidden World...
Yes, but that's
not enough. I need the distances of the other stars to within a percent or so.
Their gravitational intensity in the neighborhood of the Forbidden World is so
small that a slight error makes no perceptible difference. The sun about which
the Forbidden World revolves-or might revolve-possesses an enormously intense
gravitational field in the neighborhood of the Forbidden World and I must know
its distance with perhaps a thousand times the accuracy of that of the other
stars. The co-ordinates alone won't do.
Then what do you
do?
I measure the
apparent separation of the Forbidden World-or, rather, its star-from three
nearby stars which are so dim it takes considerable magnification to make them
out at all. Presumably, those three are very far away. We then keep one of
those three stars centered on the screen and Jump a tenth of a parsec in a
direction at right angles to the line of vision to the Forbidden World. We can
do that safely enough even without knowing distances to comparatively far-off
stars.
The reference
star which is centered would still be centered after the Jump. The two other
dim stars, if all three are truly very distant, do not change their positions
measurably. The Forbidden World, however, is close enough to change its
apparent position in parallactic shift. From the size of the shift, we can
determine its distance. If I want to make doubly certain, I choose three other
stars and try again.
Pelorat said,
How long does all that take?
Not very long.
The computer does the heavy work. I just tell it what to do. What really takes
the time is that I have to study the results and make sure they look right and
that my instructions aren't at fault somehow. If I were one of those daredevils
with utter faith in themselves and the computer, it could all be done in a few
minutes.
Pelorat said,
It's really astonishing. Think how much the computer does for us.
I think of it
all the time.
What would you
do without it?
What would I do
without a gravitic ship? What would I do without my astronautic training? What
would I do without twenty thousand years of hyperspatial technology behind me?
The fact is that I'm myself-here-now. Suppose we were to imagine ourselves
twenty thousand additional years into the future. What technological marvels
would we have to be grateful for? Or might it be that twenty thousand years
hence humanity would not exist?
Scarcely that,
said Pelorat. Scarcely not exist. Even if we don't become part of Galaxia, we
would still have psychohistory to guide us.
Trevize turned in
his chair, releasing his handhold on the computer. Let it work out distances,
he said, and let it check the matter a number of times. There's no hurry.
He looked
quizzically at Pelorat, and said, Psychohistory! You know, Janov, twice that
subject came up on Comporellon, and twice it was described as a superstition. I
said so once, and then Deniador said it also. After all, how can you define
psychohistory but as a superstition of the Foundation? Isn't it a belief
without proof or evidence? What do you think, Janov? It's more your field than
mine.
Pelorat said,
Why do you say there's no evidence, Golan? The simulacrum of Hari Seldon has
appeared in the Time Vault many times and has discussed events as they
happened. He could not have known what those events would be, in his time, had
he not been able to predict them psychohistorically.
Trevize nodded.
That sounds impressive. He was wrong about the Mule, but even allowing for
that, it's impressive. Still, it has an uncomfortable magical feel to it. Any
conjurer can do tricks.
No conjurer
could predict centuries into the future.
No conjurer
could really do what he makes you think he does.
Come, Golan. I
can't think of any trick that would allow me to predict what will happen five
centuries from now.
Nor can you think
of a trick that will allow a conjurer to read the contents of a message hidden
in a pseudo-tesseract on an unmanned orbiting satellite. Just the same, I've
seen a conjurer do it. Has it ever occurred to you that the Time Capsule, along
with the Hari Seldon simulacrum, may be rigged by the government?
Pelorat looked as
though he were revolted by the suggestion. They wouldn't do that.
Trevize made a
scornful sound.
Pelorat said,
And they'd be caught if they tried.
I'm not at all
sure of that. The point is, though, that we don't know how psychohistory works
at all.
I don't know how
that computer works, but I know it works.
That's because
others know how it works. How would it be if no one knew how it worked? Then,
if it stopped working for any reason, we would be helpless to do anything about
it. And if psychohistory suddenly stopped working...
The Second
Foundationers know the workings of psychohistory.
How do you know
that, Janov?
So it is said.
Anything can be
said. Ah, we have the distance of the Forbidden World's star, and, I hope, very
accurately. Let's consider the figures.
He stared at them
for a long time, his lips moving occasionally, as though he were doing some
rough calculations in his head. Finally, he said, without lifting his eyes,
What's Bliss doing?
Sleeping, old
chap, said Pelorat. Then, defensively, She needs sleep, Golan. Maintaining
herself as part of Gaia across hyperspace is energy-consuming.
I suppose so,
said Trevize, and turned back to the computer. He placed his hands on the desk
and muttered, I'll let it go in several Jumps and have it recheck each time.
Then he withdrew them again and said, I'm serious, Janov. What do you know
about psychohistory?
Pelorat looked
taken aback. Nothing. Being a historian, which I am, after a fashion, is
worlds different from being a psychohistorian. Of course, I know the two
fundamental basics of psychohistory, but everyone knows that.
Even I do. The
first requirement is that the number of human beings involved must be large
enough to make statistical treatment valid. But how large is large enough?
Pelorat said,
The latest estimate of the Galactic population is something like ten
quadrillion, and that's probably an underestimate. Surely, that's large
enough.
How do you
know?
Because
psychohistory does work, Golan. no matter how you chop logic, it does work.
And the second
requirement, said Trevize, is that human beings not be aware of psychohistory,
so that the knowledge does not skew their reactions. But they are aware of
psychohistory.
Only of its bare
existence, old chap. That's not what counts. The second requirement is that
human beings not be aware of the predictions of psychohistory and that they are
not-except that the Second Foundationers are supposed to be aware of them, but
they're a special case.
And upon those
two requirements alone, the science of psychohistory has been developed. That's
hard to believe.
Not out of those
two requirements alone, said Pelorat. There are advanced mathematics and
elaborate statistical methods. The story isif you want tradition-that Hari
Seldon devised psychohistory by modeling it upon the kinetic theory of gases.
Each atom or molecule in a gas moves randomly so that we can't know the
position or velocity of any one of them. Nevertheless, using statistics, we can
work out the rules governing their overall behavior with great precision. In
the same way, Seldon intended to work out the overall behavior of human
societies even though the solutions would not apply to the behavior of
individual human beings.
Perhaps, but
human beings aren't atoms.
True, said
Pelorat. A human being has consciousness and his behavior is sufficiently
complicated to make it appear to be free will. How Seldon handled that I
haven't any idea, and I'm sure I couldn't understand it even if someone who
knew tried to explain it to me-but he did it.
Trevize said,
And the whole thing depends on dealing with people who are both numerous and
unaware. Doesn't that seem to you a quicksandish foundation on which to build
an enormous mathematical structure? If those requirements are not truly met,
then everything collapses.
But since the
Plan hasn't collapsed...
Or, if the
requirements are not exactly false or inadequate but simply weaker than they
should be, psychohistory might work adequately for centuries and then, upon
reaching some particular crisis, would collapse, as it did temporarily in the
time of the Mule. Or what if there is a third requirement?
What third
requirement? asked Pelorat, frowning slightly.
I don't know,
said Trevize. An argument may seem thoroughly logical and elegant and yet
contain unexpressed assumptions. Maybe the third requirement is an assumption
so taken for granted that no one ever thinks of mentioning it.
An assumption
that is so taken for granted is usually valid enough, or it wouldn't be so
taken for granted.
Trevize snorted.
If you knew scientific history as well as you know traditional history, Janov,
you would know how wrong that is. But I see that we are now in the neighborhood
of the sun of the Forbidden World.
And, indeed,
centered on the screen, was a bright star-one so bright that the screen
automatically filtered its light to the point where all other stars were washed
out.
32.
FACILITIES for
washing and for personal hygiene on board the Far Star were compact, and the
use of water was always held to a reasonable minimum to avoid overloading the
recycling facilities. Both Pelorat and Bliss had been sternly reminded of this
by Trevize.
Even so, Bliss
maintained an air of freshness at all times and her dark, long hair could be
counted on to be glossy, her fingernails to sparkle.
She walked into
the pilot-room and said, There you are!
Trevize looked up
and said, No need for surprise. We could scarcely have left the ship, and a
thirty-second search would be bound to uncover us inside the ship, even if you
couldn't detect our presence mentally.
Bliss said, The
expression was purely a form of greeting and not meant to be taken literally,
as you well know. Where are we? And don't say, In the pilot-room.
Bliss dear,
said Pelorat, holding out one arm, we're at the outer regions of the planetary
system of the nearest of the three Forbidden Worlds.
She walked to his
side, placing her hand lightly on his shoulder, while his arm moved about her
waist. She said, It can't be very Forbidden. Nothing has stopped us.
Trevize said, It
is only Forbidden because Comporellon and the other worlds of the second wave
of settlement have voluntarily placed the worlds of the first wave-the
Spacers-out of bounds. If we ourselves don't feel bound by that voluntary
agreement, what is to stop us?
The Spacers, if
any are left, might have voluntarily placed the worlds of the second wave out
of bounds, too. Just because we don't mind intruding upon them doesn't mean
that they don't mind it.
True, said
Trevize, If they exist. But so far we don't even know if any planet exists for
them to live on. So far, all we see are the usual gas giants. Two of them, and
not particularly large ones.
Pelorat said
hastily, But that doesn't mean the Spacer world doesn't exist. Any habitable
world would be much closer to the sun and much smaller and very hard to detect
in the solar glare from this distance. We'll have to microJump inward to detect
such a planet. He seemed rather proud to be speaking like a seasoned space
traveler.
In that case,
said Bliss, why aren't we moving inward?
Not just yet,
said Trevize. I'm having the computer check as far as it can for any sign of
an artificial structure. We'll move inward by stages-a dozen, if
necessary-checking at each stage. I don't want to be trapped this time as we
were when we first approached Gaia. Remember, Janov?
Traps like that
could catch us every day. The one at Gaia brought me Bliss. Pelorat gazed at
her fondly.
Trevize grinned.
Are you hoping for a new Bliss every day?
Pelorat looked
hurt, and Bliss said, with a trace of annoyance, My good chap-or whatever it
is that Pel insists on calling you-you might as well move in more quickly.
While I am with you, you will not be trapped.
The power of
Gaia?
To detect the
presence of other minds? Certainly.
Are you sure you
are strong enough, Bliss? I gather you must sleep quite a bit to regain
strength expended at maintaining contact with the main body of Gaia. How far
can I rely on the perhaps narrow limits of your abilities at this distance from
the source?
Bliss flushed.
The strength of the connection is ample.
Trevize said,
Don't be offended. I'm simply asking. Don't you see this as a disadvantage of
being Gaia? I am not Gaia. I am a complete and independent individual. That
means I can travel as far as I wish from my world and my people, and remain
Golan Trevize. What powers I have, and such as they are, I continue to have,
and they remain wherever I go. If I were alone in space, parsecs away from any
human being, and unable, for some reason, to communicate with anyone in any
way, or even to see the spark of a single star in the sky, I would be and
remain Golan Trevize. I might not be able to survive, and I might die, but I
would die Golan Trevize.
Bliss said,
Alone in space and far from all others, you would be unable to call on the
help of your fellows, on their different talents and knowledge. Alone, as an
isolated individual, you would be sadly diminished as compared with youself as
part of an integrated society. You know that.
Trevize said,
There would nevertheless not be the same diminution as in your case. There is
a bond between you and Gaia that is far stronger than the one between me and my
society, and that bond stretches through hyperspace and requires energy for
maintenance, so that you must gasp, mentally, with the effort, and feel
yourself to be a diminished entity far more than I must.
Bliss's young
face set hard and, for a moment, she looked young no more or, rather, she
appeared ageless-more Gaia than Bliss, as though to refute Trevize's
contention. She said, Even if everything you say is so, Golan Trevize-that is,
was, and will be, that cannot perhaps be less, but certainly cannot be
more-even if everything you say is so, do you expect there is no price to be
paid for a benefit gained? Is it not better to be a warm-blooded creature such
as yourself than a cold-blooded creature such as a fish, or whatever?
Pelorat said,
Tortoises are cold-blooded. Terminus doesn't have any, but some worlds do.
They are shelled creatures, very slow-moving but long-living.
Well, then,
isn't it better to be a human being than a tortoise; to move quickly whatever
the temperature, rather than slowly? Isn't it better to support high-energy
activities, quickly contracting muscles, quickly working nerve fibers, intense
and long-sustained thought-than to creep slowly, and sense gradually, and have
only a blurred awareness of the immediate surroundings? Isn't it?
Granted, said
Trevize. It is. What of it?
Well, don't you
know you must pay for warm-bloodedness? To maintain your temperature above that
of your surroundings, you must expend energy far more wastefully than a
tortoise must. You must be eating almost constantly so that you can pour energy
into your body as quickly as it leaks out. You would starve far more quickly
than a tortoise would, and die more quickly, too. Would you rather be a
tortoise, and live more slowly and longer? Or would you rather pay the price
and be a quick-moving, quick-sensing, thinking organism?
Is this a true
analogy, Bliss?
No, Trevize, for
the situation with Gaia is more favorable. We don't expend unusual quantities
of energy when we are compactly together. It is only when part of Gaia is at
hyperspatial distances from the rest of Gaia that energy expenditure rises. And
remember that what you have voted for is not merely a larger Gaia, not just a
larger individual world. You have decided for Galaxia, for a vast complex of
worlds. Anywhere in the Galaxy, you will be part of Galaxia and you will be
closely surrounded by parts of something that extends from each interstellar
atom to the central black hole. It would then require small amounts of energy
to remain a whole. no part would be at any great distance from all other parts.
It is all this you have decided for, Trevize. How can you doubt that you have
chosen well?
Trevize's head
was bent in thought. Finally, he looked up and said, I may have chosen well,
but I must be convinced of that. The decision I have made it the most important
in the history of humanity and it is not enough that it be a good one. I must
know it to be a good one.
What more do you
need than what I have told you?
I don't know,
but I will find it on Earth. He spoke with absolute conviction.
Pelorat said,
Golan, the star shows a disc.
It did. The
computer, busy about its own affairs and not the least concerned with any
discussion that might swirl about it, had been approaching the star in stages,
and had reached the distance Trevize had set for it.
They continued to
be well outside the planetary plane and the computer split the screen to show
each of three small inner planets.
It was the
innermost that had a surface temperature in the liquid-water range, and that
had an oxygen atmosphere as well. Trevize waited for its orbit to be computed
and the first crude estimate seemed reasonable. He kept that computation going,
for the longer the planetary movement was observed, the more accurate the
computation of its orbital elements.
Trevize said
quite calmly, We have a habitable planet in view. Very likely habitable.
Ah. Pelorat
looked as nearly delighted as his solemn expression would allow.
I'm afraid,
though, said Trevize, that there's no giant satellite. In fact, no satellite
of any kind has been detected so far. So it isn't Earth. At least, not if we go
by tradition.
Don't worry
about that, Golan. said Pelorat. I rather suspected we weren't going to
encounter Earth here when I saw that neither of the gas giants had an unusual
ring system.
Very well,
then, said Trevize. The next step is to find out the nature of the life
inhabiting it. From the fact that it has an oxygen atmosphere, we can be
absolutely certain that there is plant life upon it, but...
Animal life,
too, said Bliss abruptly. And in quantity.
What? Trevize turned
to her.
I can sense it.
Only faintly at this distance, but the planet is unquestionably not only
habitable, but inhabited.
33.
THE Far Star was
in polar orbit about the Forbidden World, at a distance great enough to keep
the orbital period at a little in excess of six days. Trevize seemed in no
hurry to come out of orbit.
Since the planet
is inhabited, he explained, and since, according to Deniador, it was once
inhabited by human beings who were technologically advanced and who represent a
first wave of Settlers-the so-called Spacers-they may be technologically
advanced still and may have no great love for us of the second wave who have
replaced them. I would like them to show themselves, so that we can learn a
little about them before risking a landing.
They may not
know we are here, said Pelorat.
We would, if the
situation were reversed. I must assume, then, that, if they exist, they are
likely to try to make contact with us. They might even want to come out and get
us.
But if they did
come out after us and were technologically advanced, we might be helpless
to...
I can't believe
that, said Trevize. Technological advancement is not necessarily all one
piece. They might conceivably be far beyond us in some ways, but it's clear
they don't indulge in interstellar travel. It is we, not they, who have settled
the Galaxy, and in all the history of the Empire, I know of nothing that would
indicate that they left their worlds and made themselves evident to us. If they
haven't been space traveling, how could they be expected to have made serious
advances in astronautics? And if they haven't, they can't possibly have
anything like a gravitic ship. We may be essentially unarmed but even if they
come lumbering after us with a battleship, they couldn't possibly catch us. No,
we wouldn't be helpless.
Their advance
may be in mentalics. It may be that the Mule was a Spacer...
Trevize shrugged
in clear irritation. The Mule can't be everything. The Gaians have described
him as an aberrant Gaian. He's also been considered a random mutant.
Pelorat said, To
be sure, there have also been speculations-not taken very seriously, of
course-that he was a mechanical artifact. A robot, in other words, though that
word wasn't used.
If there is
something that seems mentally dangerous, we will have to depend on Bliss to
neutralize that. She can... Is she asleep now, by the way?
She has been,
said Pelorat, but she was stirring when I came out here.
Stirring, was
she? Well, she'll have to be awake on short notice if anything starts
happening. You'll have to see to that, Janov.
Yes, Golan,
said Pelorat quietly.
Trevize shifted
his attention to the computer. One thing that bothers me are the entry
stations. Ordinarily, they are a sure sign of a planet inhabited by human
beings with a high technology. But these...
Is there
something wrong with them?
Several things.
In the first place, they're very archaic. They might be thousands of years old.
In the second, there's no radiation but thermals.
What are
thermals?
Thermal
radiation is given off by any object warmer than its surroundings. It's a
familiar signature that everything yields and it consists of a broad band of
radiation following a fixed pattern depending on temperature. That is what the
entry stations are radiating. If there are working human devices aboard the
stations, there is bound to be a leakage of nonthermal, nonrandom radiation.
Since only thermals are present we can assume that either the stations are
empty, and have been, perhaps, for thousands of years; or, if occupied, it is
by people with a technology so advanced in this direction that they leak no
radiation.
Perhaps, said
Pelorat, the planet has a high civilization, but the entry stations are empty
because the planet has been left so strictly alone for so long by our kind of
Settlers that they are no longer concerned about any approach.
Perhaps. Or
perhaps it is a lure of some sort.
Bliss entered,
and Trevize, noting her out of the corner of his eyes, said grumpily, Yes,
here we are.
So I see, said
Bliss, and still in an unchanged orbit. I can tell that much.
Pelorat explained
hastily. Golan is being cautious, dear. The entry stations seem unoccupied and
we're not sure of the significance of that.
There's no need
to worry about it, said-Bliss indifferently. There are no detectable signs of
intelligent life on the planet we're orbiting.
Trevize bent an
astonished glare at her. What are you talking about? You said...
I said there was
animal life on the planet, and so there is, but where in the Galaxy were you
taught that animal life necessarily implies human life?
Why didn't you
say this when you first detected animal life?
Because at that
distance, I couldn't tell. I could barely detect the unmistakable wash of
animal neural activity, but there was no way I could, at that intensity, tell
butterflies from human beings.
And now?
We're much
closer now, and you may have thought I was asleep, but I wasn't-or, at least,
only briefly. I was, to use an inappropriate word, listening as hard as I could
for any sign of mental activity complex enough to signify the presence of
intelligence.
And there isn't
any?
I would
suppose, said Bliss, with sudden caution, that if I detect nothing at this
distance, there can't possibly be more than a few thousand human beings on the
planet. If we come closer, I can judge it still more delicately.
Well, that
changes things, said Trevize, with some confusion.
I suppose, said
Bliss, who looked distinctly sleepy and, therefore, irritable. You can now
discard all this business of analyzing radiation and inferring and deducing and
who knows what else you may have been doing. My Gaian senses do the job much
more efficiently and surely. Perhaps you see what I mean when I say it is
better to be a Gaian than an Isolate.
Trevize waited
before answering, clearly laboring to hold his temper. When he spoke, it was
with a polite, and almost formal tone, I am grateful to you for the
information. Nevertheless, you must understand that, to use an analogy, the
thought of the advantage of improving my sense of smell would be insufficient
motive for me to decide to abandon my humanity and become a bloodhound.
34.
THEY COULD see
the Forbidden World now, as they moved below the cloud layer and drifted
through the atmosphere. It looked curiously moth-eaten.
The polar regions
were icy, as might be expected, but they were not large in extent. The
mountainous regions were barren, with occasional glaciers, but they were not
large in extent, either. There were small desert areas, well scattered.
Putting all that
aside, the planet was, in potential, beautiful. Its continental areas were
quite large, but sinuous, so that there were long shorelines, and rich coastal
plains of generous extent. There were lush tracts of both tropical and
temperate forests, rimmed by grasslands-and yet the moth-eaten nature of it all
was evident.
Scattered through
the forests were semibarren areas, and parts of the grasslands were thin and
sparse.
Some sort of
plant disease? said Pelorat wonderingly.
No, said Bliss
slowly. Something worse than that, and more permanent.
I've seen a
number of worlds, said Trevize, but nothing like this.
I have seen very
few worlds, said Bliss, but I think the thoughts of Gaia and this is what you
might expect of a world from which humanity has disappeared.
Why? said
Trevize.
Think about it,
said Bliss tartly. No inhabited world has a true ecological balance. Earth
must have had one originally, for if that was the world on which humanity
evolved, there must have been long ages when humanity did not exist, or any
species capable of developing an advanced technology and the ability to modify
the environment. In that case, a natural balanceeverchanging, of course-must
have existed. On all other inhabited worlds, however, human beings have
carefully terraformed their new environments and established plant and animal
life, but the ecological system they introduce is bound to be unbalanced. It
would possess only a limited number of species and only those that human beings
wanted, or couldn't help introducing...
Pelorat said,
You know what that reminds me of? Pardon me, Bliss, for interrupting, but it
so fits that I can't resist telling you right now before I forget. There's an
old creation myth I once came across; a myth in which life was formed on a
planet and consisted of only a limited assortment of species, just those useful
to or pleasant for humanity. The first human beings then did something silly-never
mind what, old fellow, because those old myths are usually symbolic and only
confusing if they are taken literally-and the planet's soil was cursed. Thorns
also and thistles shall it bring forth to thee, is the way the curse was
quoted though the passage sounds much better in the archaic Galactic in which
it was written. The point is, though, was it really a curse? Things human
beings don't like and don't want, such as thorns and thistles, may be needed to
balance the ecology.
Bliss smiled.
It's really amazing, Pel, how everything reminds you of a legend, and how
illuminating they are sometimes. Human beings, in terraforming a world, leave
out the thorns and thistles, whatever they may be, and human beings then have
to labor to keep the world going. It isn't a self-supporting organism as Gaia
is. It is rather a miscellaneous collection of Isolates and the collection
isn't miscellaneous enough to allow the ecological balance to persist
indefinitely. If humanity disappears, and if its guiding hands are removed, the
world's pattern of life inevitably begins to fall apart. The planet
unterraforms itself.
Trevize said
skeptically, If that's what's happening, it doesn't happen quickly. This world
may have been free of human beings for twenty thousand years and yet most of it
still seems to be very much a going concern.
Surely, said
Bliss, that depends on how well the ecological balance was set up in the first
place. If it is a fairly good balance to begin with, it might last for a long
time without human beings. After all, twenty thousand years, though very long
in terms of human affairs, is just overnight when compared to a planetary
lifetime.
I suppose, said
Pelorat, staring intently at the planetary vista, that if the planet is
degenerating, we can be sure that the human beings are gone.
Bliss said, I
still detect no mental activity at the human level and I am willing to suppose
that the planet is safely free of humanity. There is the steady hum and buzz of
lower levels of consciousness, however, levels high enough to represent birds
and mammals. Just the same, I'm not sure that unterraforming is enough to show
human beings are gone. A planet might deteriorate even if human beings existed
upon it, if the society were itself abnormal and did not understand the
importance of preserving the environment.
Surely, said
Pelorat, such a society would quickly be destroyed. I don't think it would be
possible for human beings to fail to understand the importance of retaining the
very factors that are keeping them alive.
Bliss said, I
don't have your pleasant faith in human reason, Pel. It seems to me to be quite
conceivable that when a planetary society consists only of Isolates, local and
even individual concerns might easily be allowed to overcome planetary
concerns.
I don't think
that's conceivable, said Trevize, anymore than Pelorat does. In fact, since
human-occupied worlds exist by the million and none of them have deteriorated
in an unterraforming fashion, your fear of Isolatism may be exaggerated,
Bliss.
The ship now
moved out of the daylit hemisphere into the night. The effect was that of a
rapidly deepening twilight, and then utter darkness outside, except for
starlight where the sky was clear.
The ship
maintained its height by accurately monitoring the atmospheric pressure and
gravitational intensity. They were at a height too great to encounter any
upthrusting mountainous massif, for the planet was at a stage when
mountain-building had not recently taken place. Still, the computer felt its way
forward with its microwave finger-tips, just in case.
Trevize regarded
the velvety darkness and said, thoughtfully, Somehow what I find most
convincing as the sign of a deserted planet is the absence of visible light on
the dark side. no technological society could possibly endure darkness. As soon
as we get into the dayside, we'll go lower.
What would be
the use of that? said Pelorat. There's nothing there.
Who said there's
nothing there?
Bliss did. And
you did.
No, Janov. I
said there's no radiation of technological origin and Bliss said there's no
sign of human mental activity, but that doesn't mean there's nothing there.
Even if there are no human beings on the planet, there would surely be relics
of some sort. I'm after information, Janov, and the remainders of a technology
may have its uses in that direction.
After twenty
thousand years? Pelorat's voice climbed in pitch. What do you think can
survive twenty thousand years? There will be no films, no paper, no print;
metal will have rusted, wood will have decayed, plastic will be in shattered
grains. Even stone will have crumbled and eroded.
It may not be
twenty thousand years, said Trevize patiently. I mentioned that time as the
longest period the planet may have been left empty of human beings because
Comporellian legend has this world flourishing at that time. But suppose the
last human beings had died or vanished or fled only a thousand years ago.
They arrived at
the other end of the nightside and the dawn came and brightened into sunlight
almost instantaneously.
The Far Star sank
downward and slowed its progress until the details of the land surface were
clearly visible. The small islands that dotted the continental shores could now
be clearly seen. Most were green with vegetation.
Trevize said,
It's my idea that we ought to study the spoiled areas particularly. It seems
to me that those places where human beings were most concentrated would be
where the ecological balance was most lacking. Those areas might be the nucleus
of the spreading blight of unterraforming. What do you think, Bliss?
It's possible.
In any case, in the absence of definite knowledge, we might as well look where
it's easiest to see. The grasslands and forest would have swallowed most signs
of human habitation so that looking there might prove a waste of time.
It strikes me,
said Pelorat, that a world might eventually establish a balance with what it
has; that new species might develop; and that the bad areas might be
recolonized on a new basis.
Possibly, Pel,
said Bliss. It depends on how badly out of balance the world was in the first
place. And for a world to heal itself and achieve a new balance through
evolution would take far more than twenty thousand years. We'd be talking
millions of years.
The Far Star was
no longer circling the world. It was drifting slowly across a
five-hundred-kilometer-wide stretch of scattered heath and furze, with
occasional clumps of trees.
What do you
think of that? said Trevize suddenly, pointing. The ship came to a drifting
halt and hovered in mid-air. There was a low, but persistent, hum as the
gravitic engines shifted into high, neutralizing the planetary gravitational
field almost entirely.
There was nothing
much to see where Trevize pointed. Tumbled mounds bearing soil and sparse grass
were all that was visible.
It doesn't look
like anything to me, said Pelorat.
There's a
straight-line arrangement to that junk. Parallel lines, and you can make out
some faint lines at right angles, too. See? See? You can't get that in any
natural formation. That's human architecture, marking out foundations and
walls, just as clearly as though they were still standing there to be looked
at.
Suppose it is,
said Pelorat. That's just a ruin. If we're going to do archeological research,
we're going to have to dig and dig. Professionals would take years to do it
properly...
Yes, but we
can't take the time to do it properly. That may be the faint outline of an
ancient city and something of it may still be standing. Let's follow those
lines and see where they take us.
It was toward one
end of the area, at a place where the trees were somewhat more thickly clumped,
that they came to standing walls-or partially standing ones.
Trevize said,
Good enough for a beginning. We're landing.
Chapter 9
Facing the Pack
35.
THE Far Star came
to rest at the bottom of a small rise, a hill in the generally fiat
countryside. Almost without thought, Trevize had taken it for granted that it
would be best for the ship not to be visible for miles in every direction.
He said, The
temperature outside is 24 C., the wind is about eleven kilometers per hour from
the west, and it is partly cloudy. The computer does not know enough about the
general air circulation to be able to predict the weather. However, since the
humidity is some forty percent, it seems scarcely about to rain. On the whole,
we seem to have chosen a comfortable latitude or season of the year, and after
Comporellon that's a pleasure.
I suppose, said
Pelorat, that as the planet continues to unterraform, the weather will become
more extreme.
I'm sure of
that, said Bliss.
Be as sure as
you like, said Trevize. We have thousands of years of leeway. Right now, it's
still a pleasant planet and will continue to be so for our lifetimes and far
beyond.
He was clasping a
broad belt about his waist as he spoke, and Bliss said sharply, What's that,
Trevize?
Just my old navy
training, said Trevize. I'm not going into an unknown world unarmed.
Are you
seriously intending to carry weapons?
Absolutely. Here
on my righthe slapped a holster that contained a massive weapon with a broad
muzzle is my blaster, and here on my lefta smaller weapon with a thin muzzle
that contained no opening is my neuronic whip.
Two varieties of
murder, said Bliss, with distaste.
Only one. The
blaster kills. The neuronic whip doesn't. It just stimulates the pain nerves,
and it hurts so that you can wish you were dead, I'm told. Fortunately, I've
never been at the wrong end of one.
Why are you
taking them?
I told you. It's
an enemy world.
Trevize, it's an
empty world.
Is it? There's
no technological society, it would seem, but what if there are
post-technological primitives. They may not possess anything worse than clubs
or rocks, but those can kill, too.
Bliss looked
exasperated, but lowered her voice in an effort to be reasonable. I detect no
human neuronic activity, Trevize. That eliminates primitives of any type,
post-technological or otherwise.
Then I won't
have to use my weapons, said Trevize. Still, what harm would there be in
carrying them? They'll just make me a little heavier, and since the
gravitational pull at the surface is about ninety-one percent that of Terminus,
I can afford the weight. Listen, the ship may be unarmed as a ship, but it has
a reasonable supply of hand-weapons. I suggest that you two also...
No, said Bliss
at once. I will not make even a gesture in the direction of killing-or of
inflicting pain, either.
It's not a
question of killing, but of avoiding being killed, if you see what I mean.
I can protect
myself in my own way.
Janov?
Pelorat
hesitated. We didn't have arms on Comporellon.
Come, Janov,
Comporellon was a known quantity, a world associated with the Foundation.
Besides we were at once taken into custody. If we had had weapons, they would
have been taken away. Do you want a blaster?
Pelorat shook his
head. I've never been in the Navy, old chap. I wouldn't know how to use one of
those things and, in an emergency, I would never think of it in time. I'd just
run and-and get killed.
You won't get
killed, Pel, said Bliss energetically. Gaia has you in my/our/its protection,
and that posturing naval hero as well.
Trevize said,
Good. I have no objection to being protected, but I am not posturing. I am
simply making assurance doubly sure, and if I never have to make a move toward
these things, I'll be completely pleased, I promise you. Still I must have
them.
He patted both
weapons affectionately and said, Now let's step out on this world which may
not have felt the weight of human beings upon its surface for thousands of
years.
36.
I HAVE a
feeling, said Pelorat, that it must be rather late in the day, but the sun is
high enough to make it near noon, perhaps.
I suspect, said
Trevize, looking about the quiet panorama, that your feeling originates out of
the sun's orange tint, which gives it a sunset feel. If we're still here at
actual sunset and the cloud formations are proper, we ought to experience a
deeper red than we're used to. I don't know whether you'll find it beautiful or
depressing. For that matter it was probably even more extreme on Comporellon,
but there we were indoors virtually all the time.
He turned slowly,
considering the surroundings in all directions. In addition to the almost
subliminal oddness of the light, there was the distinctive smell of the
world-or this section of it. It seemed a little musty, but far from actively
unpleasant.
The trees nearby
were of middling height, and looked old, with gnarled bark and trunks a little
off the vertical, though because of a prevailing wind or something off-color
about the soil he couldn't tell. Was it the trees that lent a somehow menacing
ambience to the world or was it something else-less material?
Bliss said, What
do you intend to do, Trevize? Surely we didn't come all this distance to enjoy
the view?
Trevize said,
Actually, perhaps that ought to be my part of it just now. I would suggest
that Janov explore this place. There are ruins off in that direction and he's
the one who can judge the value of any records he might find. I imagine he can
understand writings or films in archaic Galactic and I know quite well I
wouldn't. And I suppose, Bliss, you want to go with him in order to protect
him. As for me, I will stay here as a guard on the outer rim.
A guard against
what? Primitives with rocks and clubs?
Perhaps. And
then the smile that had hovered about his lips faded and he said, Oddly
enough, Bliss, I'm a little uneasy about this place. I can't say why.
Pelorat said,
Come, Bliss. I've been a home-body collector of old tales all my life, so I've
never actually put my hands on ancient documents. Just imagine if we could
find...
Trevize watched
them walk away, Pelorat's voice fading as he walked eagerly toward the ruins;
Bliss swinging along at his side.
Trevize listened
absently and then turned back to continue his study of the surroundings. What
could there be to rouse apprehension?
He had never
actually set foot upon a world without a human population, but he had viewed
many from space. Usually, they were small worlds, not large enough to hold
either water or air, but they had been useful as marking a meeting site during
naval maneuvers (there had been no war in his lifetime, or for a century before
his birth but maneuvers went on), or as an exercise in simulated emergency
repairs. Ships he had been on had been in orbit about such worlds, or had even
rested on them, but he had never had occasion to step off the ships at those
times.
Was it that he
was now actually standing on an empty world? Would he have felt the same if he
had been standing on one of the many small, airless worlds he had encountered
in his student days-and even since?
He shook his
head. It wouldn't have bothered him. He was sure of that. He would have been in
a space suit, as he had been innumerable times when he was free of his ship in
space. It was a familiar situation and contact with a mere lump of rock would
have produced no alteration in the familiarity. Surely!
Of course. He was
not wearing a space suit now.
He was standing
on a habitable world, as comfortable to the feel as Terminus would be-far more
comfortable than Comporellon had been. He experienced the wind against his
cheek, the warmth of the sun on his back, the rustle of vegetation in his ears.
Everything was familiar, except that there were no human beings on it-at least,
not any longer.
Was that it? Was
it that that made the world seem so eerie? Was it that it was not merely an
uninhabited world, but a deserted one?
He had never been
on a deserted world before; never heard of a deserted world before; never
thought a world could be deserted. All the worlds he had known of till now,
once they had been populated by human beings, remained so populated forever.
He looked up
toward the sky. Nothing else had deserted it. An occasional bird flew across
his line of vision, seeming more natural, somehow, than the slate-blue sky
between the orange-tinted fair-weather clouds. (Trevize was certain that, given
a few days on the planet, he would become accustomed to the off-color so that
sky and clouds would grow to seem normal to him.)
He heard
birdsongs from the trees, and the softer noise of insects. Bliss had mentioned
butterflies earlier and here they were-in surprising numbers and in several
colorful varieties.
There were also
occasional rustlings in the clumps of grass that surrounded the trees, but he
could not quite make out what was causing them.
Nor did the obvious
presence of life in his vicinity rouse fear in him. As Bliss had said,
terraformed worlds had, from the very first, lacked dangerous animals. The
fairy tales of childhood, and the heroic fantasies of his teenage years were
invariably set on a legendary world that must have been derived from the vague
myths of Earth. The hyperdrama holoscreen had been filled with monsters-lions,
unicorns, dragons, whales, brontosaurs, bears. There were dozens of them with
names he could not remember; some of them surely mythical, and perhaps all of
them. There were smaller animals that bit and stung, even plants that were
fearful to the touch-but only in fiction. He had once heard that primitive
honeybees were able to sting, but certainly no red bees were in any way harmful.
Slowly, he walked
to the right, skirting the border of the hill. The grass was tall and rank, but
sparse, growing in clumps. He made his way among the trees, also growing in
clumps.
Then he yawned.
Certainly, nothing exciting was happening, and he wondered if he might not
retreat to the ship and take a nap. No, unthinkable. Clearly, he had to stand
on guard.
Perhaps he ought
to do sentry duty-marching, one, two, one two, swinging about with a snap and
performing complicated maneuverings with a parade electro-rod. (It was a weapon
no warrior had used in three centuries, but it was still absolutely essential
at drill, for no reason anyone could ever advance.)
He grinned at the
thought of it, then wondered if he ought to join Pelorat and Bliss in the ruins.
Why? What good would he do?
Suppose he saw
something that Pelorat had happened to overlook? Well, time enough to make the
attempt after Pelorat returned. If there was anything that might be found
easily, by all means let Pelorat make the discovery.
Might the two be
in trouble? Foolish! What possible kind of trouble?
And if there were
trouble, they would call out.
He stopped to
listen. He heard nothing.
And then the
irresistible thought of sentry duty recurred to him and he found himself
marching, feet moving up and down with a stamp, an imaginary electro-rod coming
off one shoulder, whirling, and being held out straight before him, exactly
vertical-whirling again, end over end, and back over the other shoulder. Then,
with a smart about-face, he was looking toward the ship (rather far-off now)
once more.
And when he did
that, he froze in reality, and not in sentry make-believe.
He was not alone.
Until then, he
had not seen any living creature other than plant growl insects, and an
occasional bird. He had neither seen nor heard anything approach-but now an
animal stood between him and the ship.
Sheer surprise at
the unexpected event deprived him, for a moment, of the ability to interpret
what he saw. It was not till after a perceptible interval that he knew what he
was looking at.
It was only a
dog.
Trevize was not a
dog person. He had never owned a dog and he felt no surge of friendliness
toward one when he encountered it. He felt no such surge this time, either. He
thought, rather impatiently, that there was no world on which these creatures
had not accompanied men. They existed in countless varieties and Trevize had
long had the weary impression that each world had at least one variety
characteristic of itself. Nevertheless, all varieties were constant in this:
whether they were kept for entertainment, show, or some form of useful
work-they were bred to love and trust human beings.
It was a love and
trust Trevize had never appreciated. He had once lived with a woman who had had
a dog. That dog, whom Trevize tolerated for the sake of the woman, conceived a
deep-seated adoration for him, followed him about, leaned against him when
relaxing (all fifty pounds of him), covered him with saliva and hair at
unexpected moments, and squatted outside the door and moaned whenever he and
the woman were trying to engage in sex.
From that
experience, Trevize had emerged with the firm conviction that for some reason
known only to the canine mind and its odor-analyzing ability, he was a fixed
object of doggish devotion.
Therefore, once
the initial surprise was over, he surveyed the dog without concern. It was a
large dog, lean and rangy, and with long legs. It was staring at him with no
obvious sign of adoration. Its mouth was open in what might have been taken as
a welcoming grin, but the teeth displayed were somehow large and dangerous, and
Trevize decided that he would be more comfortable without the dog in his line
of view.
It occurred to
him, then, that the dog had never seen a human being, and that countless canine
generations preceding had never seen one. The dog might have been as astonished
and uncertain at the sudden appearance of a human being as Trevize had been at that
of the dog. Trevize, at least, had quickly recognized the dog for what it was,
but the dog did not have that advantage. It was still puzzled, and perhaps
alarmed.
Clearly, it would
not be safe to leave an animal that large, and with such teeth, in an alarmed
state. Trevize realized that it would be necessary to establish a friendship at
once.
Very slowly, he
approached the dog (no sudden motions, of course). He held out his hand, ready
to allow it to be sniffed, and made soft, soothing sounds, most of which
consisted of Nice doggysomething he found intensely embarrassing.
The dog, eyes
fixed on Trevize, backed away a step or two, as though in distrust, and then
its upper lip wrinkled into a snarl and from its mouth there issued a rasping
growl. Although Trevize had never seen a dog behave so, there was no way of
interpreting the action as representing anything but menace.
Trevize therefore
stopped advancing and froze. His eyes caught motion to one side, and his head
turned slowly. There were two other dogs advancing from that direction. They
looked just as deadly as the first.
Deadly? That
adjective occurred to him only now, and its dreadful appropriateness was
unmistakable.
His heart was
suddenly pounding. The way to the ship was blocked. He could not run aimlessly,
for those long canine legs would reach him in yards. If he stood his ground and
used his blaster, then while he killed one, the other two would be upon him.
Off in the distance, he could see other dogs approaching. Was there some way in
which they communicated? Did they hunt in packs?
Slowly, he
shifted ground leftward, in a direction in which there were no dogs-as yet.
Slowly. Slowly.
The dogs shifted
ground with him. He felt certain that all that saved him from instant attack
was the fact that the dogs had never seen or smelled anything like himself
before. They had no established behavior pattern they could follow in his case.
If he ran, of
course, that would represent something familiar to the dogs. They would know
what to do if something the size of Trevize showed fear and ran. They would
run, too. Faster.
Trevize kept
sidling toward a tree. He had the wildest desire to move upward where the dogs
could not follow. They moved with him, snarling softly, coming closer. All
three had their eyes fixed unwinkingly upon him. Two more were joining them
and, farther off, Trevize could see still other j dogs approaching. At some
point, when he was close enough, he would have to make the dash. He could not
wait too long, or run too soon. Either might be fatal.
Now!
He probably set a
personal record for acceleration and even so it was a near thing. He felt the
snap of jaws close on the heel of one foot, and for just moment he was held
fast before the teeth slid off the tough ceramoid.
He was not
skilled at climbing trees. He had not climbed one since he was ten and, as he
recalled, that had been a clumsy effort. In this case, though, the trunk was
not quite vertical, and the bark was gnarled and offered handholds. What was
more, he was driven by necessity, and it is remarkable what one can do if the
need is great enough.
Trevize found
himself sitting in a crotch, perhaps ten meters above ground. For the moment he
was totally unaware that he had scraped hand and that it was oozing blood. At
the base of the tree, five dogs now on their haunches, staring upward, tongues
lolling, all looking patiently expectant.
What now?
37.
TREVIZE was not
in a position to think about the situation in logical detail. Rather, he
experienced flashes of thought in odd and distorted sequence which, if he had
eventually sorted them out, would have come to this
Bliss had earlier
maintained that in terraforming a planet, human Map would establish an
unbalanced economy, which they would be able to keep from falling apart only by
unending effort. For instance, no Settlers had brought with them any of the
large predators. Small ones could not be helped. Insects, parasites-even small
hawks, shrews, and so on.
Those dramatic
animals of legend and vague literary accounts-tigers, grizzly bears, orcs,
crocodiles? Who would carry them from world to world even if there were sense
to it? And where would there be sense to it?
It meant that
human beings were the only large predators, and it was up to them to cull those
plants and animals that, left to themselves, would smother in their own
overplenty.
And if human
beings somehow vanished, then other predators must take their place. But what
predators? The most sizable predators tolerated by human beings were dogs and
cats, tamed and living on human bounty.
What if no human
beings remained to feed them? They must then find their own food-for their
survival and, in all truth, for the survival of those they preyed on, whose
numbers had to be kept in check lest overpopulation do a hundred times the damage
that predations would do.
So dogs would
multiply, in their variations, with the large ones attacking the large,
untended herbivores; the smaller ones preying on birds and rodents. Cats would
prey by night as dogs did by day; the former singly, the latter in packs.
And perhaps
evolution would eventually produce more varieties, to fill additional
environmental niches. Would some dogs eventually develop seagoing
characteristics to enable them to live on fish; and would some cats develop
gliding abilities to hunt the clumsier birds in the air as well as on the
ground?
In flashes, all
this came to Trevize while he struggled with more systematic thought to tell
him what he might do.
The number of
dogs kept growing. He counted twenty-three now surrounding the tree and there
were others approaching. How large was the pack? What did it matter? It was
large enough already.
He withdrew his
blaster from its holster, but the solid feel of the butt in his hand did not
give him the sense of security he would have liked. When had he last inserted
an energy unit into it and how many charges could he fire? Surely not
twenty-three.
What about
Pelorat and Bliss? If they emerged, would the dogs turn on them? Were they safe
even if they did not emerge? If the dogs sensed the presence of two human
beings inside the ruins, what could stop them from attacking them there? Surely
there would be no doors or barriers to hold them off.
Could Bliss stop
them, and even drive them away? Could she concentrate her powers through
hyperspace to the desired pitch of intensity? For how long could she maintain
them?
Should he call
for help then? Would they come running if he yelled, and would the dogs flee
under Bliss's glare? (Would it take a glare or was it simply a mental action
undetectable to onlookers without the ability?) Or, if they appeared, would
they then be torn apart under the eyes of Trevize, who would be forced to
watch, helplessly, from the relative safety of his post in the tree?
No, he would have
to use his blaster. If he could kill one dog and frighten them off for just a
while, he could scramble down the tree, yell for Pelorat and Bliss, kill a
second dog if they showed signs of returning, and all three could then hustle
into the ship.
He adjusted the
intensity of the microwave beam to the three-quartet mark. That should be ample
to kill a dog with a loud report. The report would serve to frighten the dogs
away, and he would be conserving energy.
He aimed
carefully at a dog in the middle of the pack, one who seemed (in Trevize's own
imagination, at least) to exude a greater malignancy than the rest-perhaps only
because he sat more quietly and, therefore, seemed more cold-bloodedly intent
on his prey. The dog was staring directly at the weapon now, as though it
scorned the worst Trevize could do.
It occurred to
Trevize that he had never himself fired a blaster at a human being, or seen
anyone else do it. There had been firing at water-filled dummies of leather and
plastic during training; with the water almost instantaneously heated to the
boiling point, and shredding the covering as it exploded.
But who, in the
absence of war, would fire at a human being? And what human being would
withstand a blaster and force its use? Only here, on world made pathological by
the disappearance of human beings
With that odd
ability of the brain to note something utterly beside the point, Trevize was
aware of the fact that a cloud had hidden the sun-and then he fired.
There was an odd
shimmer of the atmosphere on a straight line from the muzzle of the blaster to
the dog; a vague sparkle that might have gone unnoticed if the sun were still
shining unhindered.
The dog must have
felt the initial surge of heat, and made the smallest motion as though it were
about to leap. And then it exploded, as a portion its blood and cellular
contents vaporized.
The explosion
made a disappointingly small noise, for the dog's integument was simply not as
tough as that of the dummies they had practiced on. Flesh, skin, blood, and
bone were scattered, however, and Trevize felt his stomach heave.
The dogs started
back, some having been bombarded with uncomfortably warm fragments. That was
only a momentary hesitation, however. They crowded against each other suddenly,
in order to eat what had been provided. Trevize felt his sickness increase. He
was not frightening them; he was feeding them. At that rate, they would never
leave. In fact, the smell of fresh blood and warm meat would attract still more
dogs, and perhaps other smaller predators as well.
A voice called
out, Trevize. What
Trevize looked
outward. Bliss and Pelorat had emerged from the ruins. Bliss had stopped short,
her arms thrown out to keep Pelorat back. She stared at the dogs. The situation
was obvious and clear. She had to ask nothing.
Trevize shouted,
I tried to drive them off without involving you and Janov. Can you hold them
off?
Barely, said
Bliss, not shouting, so that Trevize had trouble hearing her even though the
dogs' snarling had quieted as though a soothing soundabsorbent blanket had been
thrown over them.
Bliss said,
There are too many of them, and I am not familiar with their pattern of
neuronic activity. We have no such savage things on Gaia.
Or on Terminus.
Or on any civilized world, shouted Trevize. I'll shoot as many of them as I
can and you try to handle the rest. A smaller number will give you less
trouble.
No, Trevize.
Shooting them will just attract others. Stay behind me, Pel. There's no way you
can protect me. Trevize, your other weapon.
The neuronic
whip?
Yes. That
produces pain. Low power. Low power!
Are you afraid
of hurting them? called out Trevize in anger. Is this a time to consider the
sacredness of life?
I'm considering
Pel's. Also mine. Do as I say. Low power, and shoot at one of the dogs. I can't
hold them much longer.
The dogs had
drifted away from the tree and had surrounded Bliss and Pelorat, who stood with
their backs to a crumbling wall. The dogs nearest the two made hesitant attempts
to come closer still, whining a bit as though trying to puzzle out what it was
that held them off when they could sense nothing that would do it. Some tried
uselessly to scramble up the wall and attack from behind.
Trevize's hand
was trembling as he adjusted the neuronic whip to low power. The neuronic whip
used much less energy than the blaster did, and a single power-cartridge could
produce hundreds of whip-like strokes but, come to think of it, he didn't
remember when he had last charged this weapon, either.
It was not so
important to aim the whip. Since conserving energy was not as critical, he
could use it in a sweep across the mass of dogs. That was the traditional
method of controlling crowds that showed signs of turning dangerous.
However, he
followed Bliss's suggestion. He aimed at one dog and fired. The dog fell over,
its legs twitching. It emitted loud, high-pitched squeals.
The other dogs
backed away from the stricken beast, ears flattening backward against their
heads. Then, squealing in their turn, they turned and left, at first slowly,
then more rapidly, and finally, at a full race. The dog who had been hit,
scrambled painfully to its legs, and limped away whimpering, much the last of
them.
The noise
vanished in the distance, and Bliss said, We had better get into the ship.
They will come back. Or others will.
Trevize thought
that never before had he manipulated the ship's entry mechanism so rapidly. And
it was possible he might never do so again.
38.
NIGHT HAD fallen
before Trevize felt something approaching the normal. The' small patch of
syntho-skin on the scrape on his hand had soothed the physical pain, but there
was a scrape on his psyche for which soothing was not so easy. It was not the
mere exposure to danger. He could react to that as well as any ordinarily brave
person might. It was the totally unlooked-for direction from which the danger
had come. It was the feeling of the ridiculous. How would it look if people
were to find out he had been treed by snarling dogs? It would scarcely be worse
if he had been put to flight by the whirring of angry canaries.
For hours, he
kept listening for a new attack on the part of the dogs, for ths, sound of
howls, for the scratch of claws against the outer hull.
Pelorat, by
comparison, seemed quite cool. There was no question in my mind, old chap,
that Bliss would handle it, but I must say you fired the weapon well.
Trevize shrugged.
He was in no mood to discuss the matter.
Pelorat was
holding his library-the one compact disc on which his lifetime of research into
myths and legends were stored-and with it he retreated into his bedroom where
he kept his small reader.
He seemed quite
pleased with himself. Trevize noticed that but didn't follow it up. Time for
that later when his mind wasn't quite as taken up with dogs.
Bliss said,
rather tentatively, when the two were alone, I presume you were taken by
surprise.
Quite, said
Trevize gloomily. Who would think that at the sight of a dog-a dog-I should
run for my life.
Twenty thousand
years without men and it would not be quite a dog. Those beasts must now be the
dominant large predators.
Trevize nodded.
I figured that out while I was sitting on the tree bramb being a dominated
prey. You were certainly right about an unbalanced ecology.
Unbalanced,
certainly, from the human standpoint-but considering how efficiently the dogs
seem to be going about their business, I wonder if Pel may be right in his
suggestion that the ecology could balance itself, with various environmental
niches being filled by evolving variations of the relatively few species that
were once brought to the world.
Oddly enough,
said Trevize, the same thought occurred to me.
Provided, of
course, the unbalance is not so great that the process of righting itself takes
too long. The planet might become completely nonviable before that.
Trevize grunted.
Bliss looked at
him thoughtfully, How is it that you thought of arming yourself?
Trevize said, It
did me little good. It was your ability...
Not entirely. I
needed your weapon. At short notice, with only hyperspatial contact with the
rest of Gaia, with so many individual minds of so unfamiliar a nature, I could
have done nothing without your neuronic whip.
My blaster was
useless. I tried that.
With a blaster,
Trevize, a dog merely disappears. The rest may be surprised, but not
frightened.
Worse than
that, said Trevize. They ate the remnants. I was bribing them to stay.
Yes, I see that
might be the effect. The neuronic whip is different. It inflicts pain, and a
dog in pain emits cries of a kind that are well understood by other dogs who,
by conditioned reflex, if nothing else, begin to feel frightened themselves.
With the dogs already disposed toward fright, I merely nudged their minds, and
off they went.
Yes, but you
realized the whip was the more deadly of the two in this case. I did not.
I am accustomed
to dealing with minds. You are not. That's why I insisted on low power and
aiming at one dog. I did not want so much pain that it killed a dog and left
him silent. I did not want the pain so dispersed as to cause mere whimpering. I
wanted strong pain concentrated at one point.
And you got it,
Bliss, said Trevize. It worked perfectly. I owe you considerable gratitude.
You begrudge
that, said Bliss thoughtfully, because it seems to you that you played a
ridiculous role. And yet, I repeat, I could have done nothing without your
weapons. What puzzles me is how you can explain your arming yourself in the
face of my assurance that there were no human beings on this world, something I
am still certain is a fact. Did you foresee the dogs?
No, said
Trevize. I certainly didn't. Not consciously, at least. And I don't habitually
go armed, either. It never even occurred to me to put on weapons at
Comporellon. But I can't allow myself to trip into the trap of feeling it was
magic, either. It couldn't have been. I suspect that once we began talking
about unbalanced ecologies earlier, I somehow had an unconscious glimpse of
animals grown dangerous in the absence of human beings.
That is clear
enough in hindsight, but I might have had a whiff of it in foresight. Nothing
more than that.
Bliss said,
Don't dismiss it that casually. I participated in the same conversation
concerning unbalanced ecologies and I didn't have that same foresight. It is
that special trick of foresight in you that Gaia values. I can see, too, that
it must be irritating to you to have a hidden foresight the nature of which you
cannot detect; to act with decision, but without clear reason.
The usual
expression on Terminus is to act on a hunch.
On Gaia we say,
to know without thought. You don't like knowing without thought, do you?
It bothers me,
yes. I don't like being driven by hunches. I assume hunch has reason behind it,
but not knowing the reason makes me feel I'm not in control of my own mind-a
kind of mild madness.
And when you
decided in favor of Gaia and Galaxia, you were acting on s hunch, and now you
seek the reason.
I have said so
at least a dozen times.
And I have
refused to accept your statement as literal truth. For that sorry. I will
oppose you in this no longer. I hope, though, that I may continue to point out
items in Gaia's favor.
Always, said
Trevize, if you, in turn, recognize that them.
Does it occur to
you, then, that this Unknown World is reverting to a kind of savagery, and
perhaps to eventual desolation and uninhabitability, because of the removal of
a single species that is capable of acting as a guiding intelligence? If the
world were Gaia, or better yet, a part of Galaxia, this could not happen. The
guiding intelligence would still exist in the form of the Galaxy V a whole, and
ecology, whenever unbalanced, and for whatever reason, would move toward
balance again.
Does that mean
that dogs would no longer eat?
Of course they
would eat, just as human beings do. They would however, with purpose, in order
to balance the ecology under deliberate direction, and not as a result of
random circumstance.
Trevize said,
The loss of individual freedom might not matter to dogs, but it must matter to
human beings. And what if all human beings were removed from existence,
everywhere, and not merely on one world or on Severa1? What if Galaxia were
left without human beings at all? Would there still be a guiding intelligence?
Would all other life forms and inanimate matter be able to put together a
common intelligence adequate for the purpose?
Bliss hesitated.
Such a situation, she said, has never been experienced. Nor does there seem
any likelihood that it will ever be experienced in the future.
Trevize said,
Hut doesn't it seem obvious to you, that the human mind is qualitatively
different from everything else, and that if it were absent, the sum total of
all other consciousness could not replace it. Would it not be true, then, that
human beings are a special case and must be treated as such? They should not be
fused even with one another, let alone with nonhuman objects.
Yet you decided
in favor of Galaxia.
For an
overriding reason I cannot make out.
Perhaps that
overriding reason was a glimpse of the effect of unbalanced ecologies? Might it
not have been your reasoning that every world in the Galaxy is on a knife-edge,
with instability on either side, and that only Galaxia could prevent such
disasters as are taking place on this world-to say nothing of the continuing
interhuman disasters of war and administrative failure.
No. Unbalanced
ecologies were not in my mind at the time of my decision.
How can you be
sure?
I may not know
what it is I'm foreseeing, but if something is suggested afterward, I would
recognize it if that were indeed what I foresaw. As it seems to me I may have
foreseen dangerous animals on this world.
Well, said
Bliss soberly, we might have been dead as a result of those dangerous animals
if it had not been for a combination of our powers, your foresight and my
mentalism. Come, then, let us be friends.
Trevize nodded.
If you wish.
There was a chill
in his voice that caused Bliss's eyebrows to rise, but at this point Pelorat
burst in, nodding his head as though prepared to shake it off its foundations.
I think, he
said, we have it.
39.
TREVIZE did not,
in general, believe in easy victories, and yet it was only human to fall into
belief against one's better judgment. He felt the muscles in his chest and
throat tighten, but managed to say, The location of Earth? Have you discovered
that, Janov?
Pelorat stared at
Trevize for a moment, and deflated. Well, no, he said, visibly abashed. Not
quite that. Actually, Golan, not that at all. I had forgotten about that. It
was something else that I discovered in the ruins. I suppose it's not really
important.
Trevize managed a
long breath and said, Never mind, Janov. Every finding is important. What was
it you came in to say?
Well, said
Pelorat, it's just that almost nothing survived, you understand. Twenty
thousand years of storm and wind don't leave much. What's more, plant life is
gradually destructive and animal life. But never mind all that. The point is
that almost nothing is not the same as nothing.
The ruins must
have included a public building, for there was some fallen stone, or concrete,
with incised lettering upon it. There was hardly anything visible, you
understand, old chap, but I took photographs with one of those cameras we have
on board ship, the kind with built-in computer enhancement I never got round to
asking permission to take one, Golan, but it was important, and I...
Trevize waved his
hand in impatient dismissal. Go on!
I could make out
some of the lettering, which was very archaic. Even with computer enhancement
and with my own fair skill at reading Archaic, it was impossible to make out
much except for one short phrase. The letters there were larger and a bit
clearer than the rest. They may have been incised more deeply because they
identified the world itself. The phrase reads, 'Planet Aurora,' so I imagine
this world we rest upon is named Aurora, or was named Aurora.
It had to be
named something, said Trevize.
Yes, but names
are very rarely chosen at random. I made a careful search of my library just
now and there are two old legends, from two widely spaced worlds, as it
happens, so that one can reasonably suppose them to be of independent origin,
if one remembers that. But never mind that. In both legends, Aurora is used as
a name for the dawn. We can suppose that Aurora may have actually meant dawn in
some pre-Galactic language.
As it happens,
some word for dawn or daybreak is often used as a name for space stations or
other structures that are the first built of their kind. If this world is
called Dawn in whatever language, it may be the first of its kind, too.
Trevize said,
Are you getting ready to suggest that this planet is Earth and that Aurora is
an alternate name for it because it represents the dawn of life and of man?
Pelorat said, I
couldn't go that far, Golan.
Trevize said,
with a trace of bitterness, There is, after all, no radioactive surface, no
giant satellite, no gas giant with huge rings.
Exactly. But
Deniador, back on Comporellon, seemed to think this was one of the worlds that
was once inhabited by the first wave of Settlers-the Spacers. If it were, then
its name, Aurora, might indicate it to have been the first of those Spacer
worlds. We might, at this very moment, be resting on the oldest human world in
the Galaxy except for Earth itself. Isn't that exciting?
Interesting, at
any rate, Janov, but isn't that a great deal to infer merely from the name,
Aurora?
There's more,
said Pelorat excitedly. As far as I could check in my records there is no
world in the Galaxy today with the name of Aurora, and I'm sure your computer
will verify that. As I said, there are all sorts of world and other objects
named Dawn in various ways, but no one uses the actual word 'Aurora. '
Why should they?
If it's a pre-Galactic word, it wouldn't be likely to be popular.
But names do
remain, even when they're meaningless. If this were the first settled world, it
would be famous; it might even, for a while, have been the dominant world of
the Galaxy. Surely, there would be other worlds calling themselves New
Aurora, or Aurora Minor, or something like that. And then others...
Trevize broke in.
Perhaps it wasn't the first settled world. Perhaps it was never of any
importance.
There's a better
reason in my opinion, my dear chap.
What would that
be, Janov?
If the first
wave of settlements was overtaken by a second wave to which all the worlds of
the Galaxy now belong-as Deniador said-then there is very likely to have been a
period of hostility between the two waves. The second wave-making up the worlds
that now exist-would not use the names given to any of the worlds of the first
wave. In that way, we can infer from the fact that the name Aurora has never
been repeated that there were two waves of Settlers, and that this is a world
of the first wave.
Trevize smiled.
I'm getting a glimpse of how you mythologists work, Janov. You build a
beautiful superstructure, but it may be standing on air. The legends tell us
that the Settlers of the first wave were accompanied by numerous robots, and
that these were supposed to be their undoing. Now if we could find a robot on
this world, I'd be willing to accept all this first-wave supposition, but we
can't expect after twenty thou...
Pelorat, whose
mouth had been working, managed to find his voice. But, Golan, haven't I told
you? No, of course, I haven't. I'm so excited I can't put things in the right
order. There was a robot.
40.
TREVIZE rubbed
his forehead, almost as though he were in pain. He said, A robot? There was a
robot?
Yes, said
Pelorat, nodding his head emphatically.
How do you
know?
Why, it was a
robot. How could I fail to know one if I see one?
Have you ever
seen a robot before?
No, but it was a
metal object that looked like a human being. Head, arms, legs, torso. Of
course, when I say metal, it was mostly rust, and when I walked toward it, I
suppose the vibration of my tread damaged it further, so that when I reached to
touch it
Why should you
touch it?
Well, I suppose
I couldn't quite believe my eyes. It was an automatic response. As soon as I
touched it, it crumbled. But...
Yes?
Before it quite
did, its eyes seemed to glow very faintly and it made a sound as though it were
trying to say something.
You mean it was
still functioning?
Just barely, Golan.
Then it collapsed.
Trevize turned to
Bliss. Do you corroborate all this, Bliss?
It was a robot,
and we saw it, said Bliss.
And was it still
functioning?
Bliss said
tonelessly, As it crumbled, I caught a faint sense of neuronic activity.
How can there
have been neuronic activity? A robot doesn't have an organic brain built of
cells.
It has the
computerized equivalent, I imagine, said Bliss, and I would detect that.
Did you detect a
robotic rather than a human mentality?
Bliss pursed her
lips and said, It was too feeble to decide anything about it except that it
was there.
Trevize looked at
Bliss, then at Pelorat, and said, in a tone of exasperation, This changes
everything.
PART FOURSOLARIA
Chapter 10
Robots
TREVIZE seemed
lost in thought during dinner, and Bliss concentrated on the food.
Pelorat, the only
one who seemed anxious to speak, pointed out that if the world they were on was
Aurora and if it was the first settled world, it ought to be fairly close to
Earth.
It might pay to
scour the immediate stellar neighborhood, he said. It would only mean sifting
through a few hundred stars at most.
Trevize muttered
that hit-and-miss was a last resort and he wanted as much information about
Earth as possible before attempting to approach it even if he found it. He said
no more and Pelorat, clearly squelched, dwindled into silence as well.
After the meal,
as Trevize continued to volunteer nothing, Pelorat said tentatively, Are we to
be staying here, Golan?
Overnight,
anyway, said Trevize. I need to do a bit more thinking.
Is it safe?
Unless there's
something worse than dogs about, said Trevize, we're quite safe here in the
ship.
Pelorat said,
How long would it take to lift off, if there is something worse than dogs
about?
Trevize said,
The computer is on launch alert. I think we can manage to take off in between
two and three minutes. And it will warn us quite effectively if anything
unexpected takes place, so I suggest we all get some sleep. Tomorrow morning,
I'll come to a decision as to the next move.
Easy to say,
thought Trevize, as he found himself staring at the darkness. He was curled up,
partly dressed, on the floor of the computer room. It was quite uncomfortable,
but he was sure that his bed would be no more conducive to sleep at this time
and here at least he could take action at once if the computer sounded an
alarm.
Then he heard
footsteps and automatically sat up, hitting his head against the edge of the
desk-not hard enough to do damage, but hard enough to make rubbing and
grimacing a necessity.
Janov? he said
in a muffled voice, eyes tearing.
No. It's Bliss.
Trevize reached
over the edge of the table with one hand to make at least semicontact with the
computer, and a soft light showed Bliss in a light pink wraparound.
Trevize said,
What is it?
I looked in your
bedroom and you weren't there. There was no mistaking your neuronic activity,
however, and I followed it. You were clearly awake so I walked in.
Yes, but what is
it you want?
She sat down
against the wall, knees up, and cradled her chin against them. She said, Don't
be concerned. I have no designs on what's left of your virginity.
I don't imagine
you do, said Trevize sardonically. Why aren't you asleep? You need it more
than we do.
Believe me, she
said in a low, heartfelt tone, that episode with the dogs was very draining.
I believe that.
But I had to
talk to you when Pel was sleeping.
About what?
Bliss said, When
he told you about the robot, you said that that changes everything. What did
you mean?
Trevize said,
Don't you see that for yourself? We have three sets of coordinates; three
Forbidden Worlds. I want to visit all three to learn as much as possible about
Earth before trying to reach it.
He edged a bit
closer so that he could speak lower still, then drew away sharply. He said,
Look, I don't want Janov coming in here looking for us. I don't know what he'd
think.
It's not likely.
He's sleeping and I've encouraged that just a bit. If he stirs, I'll know. Go
on. You want to visit all three. What's changed?
It wasn't part
of my plan to waste time on any world needlessly. If this world, Aurora, had
been without human occupation for twenty thousand years, then it is doubtful
that any information of value has survived. I don't want to spend weeks or
months scrabbling uselessly about the planetary surface, fighting off dogs and
cats and bulls or whatever else may have become wild and dangerous, just on the
hope of finding a scrap of reference material amid the dust, rust, and decay.
It may be that on one or both of the other Forbidden Worlds there may be human
beings and intact libraries. So it was my intention to leave this world at
once. We'd be out in space now, if I had done so, sleeping in perfect
security.
But?
But if there are
robots still functioning on this world, they may have important information
that we could use. They would be safer to deal with than human beings would be,
since, from what I've heard, they must follow orders and can't harm human
beings.
So you've
changed your plan and now you're going to spend time on this world searching
for robots.
I don't want to,
Bliss. It seems to me that robots can't last twenty thousand years without
maintenance. Yet since you've seen one with a spark of activity still, it's
clear I can't rely on my commonsense guesses about robots. I mustn't lead out
of ignorance. Robots may be more enduring than I imagine, or they may have a
certain capacity for self-maintenance.
Bliss said,
Listen to me, Trevize, and please keep this confidential.
Confidential?
said Trevize, raising his voice in surprise. From whom?
Sh! From Pel, of
course. Look, you don't have to change your plans. You were right the first
time. There are no functioning robots on this world. I detect nothing.
You detected
that one, and one is as good as...
I did not detect
that one. It was nonfunctioning; long nonfunctioning.
You said...
I know what I
said. Pel thought he saw motion and heard sound. Pel is a romantic. He's spent
his working life gathering data, but that is a difficult way of making one's
mark in the scholarly world. He would dearly love to make an important
discovery of his own. His finding of the word Aurora was legitimate and made
him happier than you can imagine. He wanted desperately to find more.
Trevize said,
Are you telling me he wanted to make a discovery so badly he convinced himself
he had come upon a functioning robot when he hadn't?
What he came
upon was a lump of rust containing no more consciousness than the rock against
which it rested.
But you
supported his story.
I could not
bring myself to rob him of his discovery. He means so much to me.
Trevize stared at
her for a full minute; then he said, Do you mind explaining why he means so
much to you? I want to know. I really want to know. To you he must seem an
elderly man with nothing romantic about him. He's an Isolate, and you despise
Isolates. You're young and beautiful and there must be other parts of Gaia that
have the bodies of vigorous and handsome young am. With them you can have a
physical relationship that can resonate through Gaia and bring peaks of
ecstasy. So what do you an in Janov?
Bliss looked at
Trevize solemnly. Don't you love him?
Trevize shrugged
and said, I'm fond of him. I suppose you could say, in a nonsexual way, that I
love him.
You haven't
known him very long, Trevize. Why do you love him, in that nonsexual way of
yours?
Trevize found
himself smiling without being aware of it. He's such an odd fellow. I honestly
think that never in his life has he given a single thought to himself. He was
ordered to go along with me, and he went. no objection. He wanted me to go to
Trantor, but when I said I wanted to go to Gaia, he never argued. And now he's
come along with me in this search for Earth, though he must know it's
dangerous. I feel perfectly confident that if he had to sacrifice his life for
me-or for anyone-he would, and without repining.
Would you give
your life for him, Trevize?
I might, if I
didn't have time to think. If I did have time to think, I would hesitate and I
might funk it. I'm not as good as he is. And because of that, I have this
terrible urge to protect and keep him good. I don't want the Galaxy to teach
him not to be good. Do you understand? And I have to protect him from you
particularly. I can't bear the thought of you tossing him aside when whatever
nonsense amuses you now is done with.
Yes, I thought
you'd think something like that. Don't you suppose I see in Pel what you see in
him-and even more so, since I can contact his mind directly? Do I act as though
I want to hurt him? Would I support his fantasy of having seen a functioning
robot, if it weren't that I couldn't bear to hurt him? Trevize, I am used to
what you would call goodness, for every part of Gaia is ready to be sacrificed
for the whole. We know and understand no other course of action. But we give up
nothing in so doing, for each part is the whole, though I don't expect you to
understand that. Pel is something different.
Bliss was no
longer looking at Trevize. It was as though she were talking to herself. He is
an Isolate. He is not selfless because he is a part of a greater whole. He is
selfless because he is selfless. Do you understand me? He has all to lose and
nothing to gain, and yet he is what he is. He shames me for being what I am
without fear of loss, when he is what he is without hope of gain.
She looked up at
Trevize again now, very solemnly. Do you know how much more I understand about
him than you possibly can? And do you think I would harm him in any way?
Trevize said,
Bliss, earlier today, you said, Come, let us be friends, and all I replied
was, If you wish. That was grudging of me, for I was thinking of what you
might do to Janov. It is my turn, now. Come, Bliss, let us be friends. You can
keep on pointing out the advantage of Galaxia and I may keep on refusing to
accept your arguments, but even so, and despite that, let us be friends. And
he held out his hand.
Of course,
Trevize, she said, and their hands gripped each other strongly.
42.
TREVIZE grinned
quietly to himself. It was an internal grin, for the line of his mouth didn't
budge.
When he had
worked with the computer to find the star (if any) of the first set of
co-ordinates, both Pelorat and Bliss had watched intently and had asked
questions. Now they stayed in their room and slept or, at any rate, relaxed,
and left the job entirely to Trevize.
In a way, it was
flattering, for it seemed to Trevize that by now they had simply accepted the
fact that Trevize knew what he was doing and required no supervision or
encouragement. For that matter, Trevize had gained enough experience from the
first episode to rely more thoroughly on the computer and to feel that it
needed, if not none, then at least less supervision.
Another
star-luminous and unrecorded on the Galactic map-showed up. This second star
was more luminous than the star about which Aurora circled, and that made it
all the more significant that the star was unrecorded in the computer.
Trevize marveled
at the peculiarities of ancient tradition. Whole centuries might be telescoped
or dropped out of consciousness altogether. Entire civilizations might be
banished into forgetfulness. Yet out of the midst of these centuries, snatched
from those civilizations, might be one or two factual items that would be
remembered undistorted-such as these co-ordinates.
He had remarked
on this to Pelorat some time before, and Pelorat had at once told him that it
was precisely this that made the study of myths and legends so rewarding. The
trick is, Pelorat had said, to work out or decide which particular components
of a legend represent accurate underlying truth. That isn't easy and different
mythologists are likely to pick different components, depending, usually, on
which happen to suit their particular interpretations. .
In any case, the
star was right where Deniador's co-ordinates, corrected for time, said it would
be. Trevize was prepared, at this moment, to wager a considerable sum that the
third star would be in place as well. And if it was, Trevize was prepared to
suspect that the legend was further correct in stating that there were fifty Forbidden
Worlds altogether (despite the suspiciously even number) and to wonder where
the other forty-seven might be.
A habitable
world, Forbidden World, was found circling the star-and by this time its
presence didn't cause even a ripple of surprise in Trevize's bosom. He had been
absolutely sure it would be there. He set the Far Star into a slow orbit about
it.
The cloud layer
was sparse enough to allow a reasonable view of the surface from space. The
world was a watery one, as almost all habitable worlds were. There was an
unbroken tropical ocean and two unbroken polar oceans.
In one set of
middle latitudes, there was a more or less serpentine continent encircling the
world with bays on either side producing an occasional narrow isthmus. In the
other set of middle latitudes, the land surface was broken into three large
parts and each of the three were thicker north-south than the opposite
continent was.
Trevize wished he
knew enough climatology to be able to predict, from what he saw, what the
temperatures and seasons might be like. For a moment, he toyed with the idea of
having the computer work on the problem. The trouble was that climate was not
the point at issue.
Much more
important was that, once again, the computer detected no radiation that might
be of technological origin. What his telescope told him was that the planet was
not moth-eaten and that there were no signs of desert. The land moved backward
in various shades of green, but there were no signs of urban areas on the
dayside, no lights on the nightside.
Was this another
planet filled with every kind of life but human?
He rapped at the
door of the other bedroom.
Bliss? he
called out in a loud whisper, and rapped again.
There was a
rustling, and Bliss's voice said, Yes?
Could you come
out here? I need your help...
If you wait just
a bit, I'll make myself a bit presentable.
When she finally
appeared, she looked as presentable as Trevize had ever seen her. He felt a
twinge of annoyance at having been made to wait, however, for it made little
difference to him what she looked like. But they were friends now, and he
suppressed the annoyance.
She said with a
smile and in a perfectly pleasant tone, What can I do for you, Trevize?
Trevize waved at
the viewscreen. As you can see, we're passing over the surface of what looks
like a perfectly healthy world with a quite solid vegetation cover over its
land area. no lights at night, however, and no technological radiation. Please
listen and tell me if there's any animal life. There was one point at which I
thought I could see herds of grazing animals, but I wasn't sure. It might be a
case of seeing what one desperately wants to see.
Bliss listened.
At least, a curiously intent look came across her face. She said, Oh yes, rich
in animal life.
Mammalian?
Must be.
Human?
Now she seemed to
concentrate harder. A full minute passed, and then another, and finally she
relaxed. I can't quite tell. Every once in a while it seemed to me that I
detected a whiff of intelligence sufficiently intense to be considered human.
But it was so feeble and so occasional that perhaps I, too, was only sensing
what I desperately wanted to sense. You see...
She paused in
thought, and Trevize nudged her with a Well?
She said, The
thing is I seem to detect something else. It is not something I'm familiar
with, but I don't see how it can be anything but...
Her face
tightened again as she began to listen with still greater intensity.
Well? said
Trevize again.
She relaxed. I
don't see how it can be anything but robots.
Robots!
Yes, and if I
detect them, surely I ought to be able to detect human beings, too. But I
don't.
Robots! said
Trevize again, frowning.
Yes, said
Bliss, and I should judge, in great numbers.
43.
PELORAT also said
Robots! in almost exactly Trevize's tone when he was told of them. Then he
smiled slightly. You were right, Golan, and I was wrong to doubt you.
I don't remember
your doubting me, Janov.
Oh well, old
man, I didn't think I ought to express it. I just thought, in my heart, that it
was a mistake to leave Aurora while there was a chance we might interview some
surviving robot. But then it's clear you knew there would be a richer supply of
robots here.
Not at all,
Janov. I didn't know. I merely chanced it. Bliss tells me their mental fields
seem to imply they are fully functioning, and it seems to me they can't very
well be fully functioning without human beings about for care and maintenance.
However, she can't spot anything human so we're still looking.
Pelorat studied
the viewscreen thoughtfully. It seems to be all forest, doesn't it?
Mostly forest.
But there are clear patches that may be grasslands. The thing is that I see no
cities, or any lights at night, or anything but thermal radiation at any time.
So no human
beings after all?
I wonder. Bliss
is in the galley trying to concentrate. I've set up an arbitrary prime meridian
for the planet which means that it's divided into latitude and longitude in the
computer. Bliss has a little device which she presses whenever she encounters
what seems an unusual concentration of robotic mental activity-I suppose you
can't say 'neuronic activity' in connection with robots-or any whiff of human
thought. The device is linked to the computer, which thus gets a fix on all the
latitudes and longitudes, and we'll let it make the choice among them and pick
a good place for landing.
Pelorat looked
uneasy. Is it wise to leave the matter of choice to the computer?
Why not, Janov?
It's a very competent computer. Besides, when you have no basis on which to make
a choice yourself, where's the harm in at least considering the computer's
choice?
Pelorat
brightened up. There's something to that, Golan. Some of the oldest legends
include tales of people making choices by tossing cubes to the ground.
Oh? What does
that accomplish?
Each face of the
cube has some decision on it-yes-no-perhaps-postpone-and so on. Whichever face
happens to come upward on landing would be taken as bearing the advice to be
followed. Or they would set a ball rolling about a slotted disc with different
decisions scattered among the slots. The decision written on the slot in which
the ball ends is to be taken. Some mythologists think such activities
represented games of chance rather than lotteries, but the two are much the
same thing in my opinion.
In a way, said
Trevize, we're playing a game of chance in choosing our place of landing.
Bliss emerged
from the galley in time to hear the last comment. She said, No game of chance.
I pressed several maybes and then one sure-fire yes, and it's to the yes
that we'll be going.
What made it a
yes? asked Trevize.
I caught a whiff
of human thought. Definite. Unmistakable.
44.
IT HAD been
raining, for the grass was wet. Overhead, the clouds were scudding by and
showing signs of breaking up.
The Far Star had
come to a gentle rest near a small grove of trees. (In case of wild dogs,
Trevize thought, only partly in jest.) All about was what looked like pasture
land, and coming down from the greater height at which a better and wider view
had been possible, Trevize had seen what looked like orchards and grain
fields-and this time, an unmistakable view of grazing animals.
There were no
structures, however. Nothing artificial, except that the regularity of the
trees in the orchard and the sharp boundaries that separated fields were
themselves as artificial as a microwave-receiving power station would have
been.
Could that level
of artificiality have been produced by robots, however? Without human beings?
Quietly, Trevize
was putting on his holsters. This time, he knew that both weapons were in
working order and that both were fully charged. For a moment, he caught Bliss's
eye and paused.
She said, Go
ahead. I don't think you'll have any use for them, but I thought as much once
before, didn't I?
Trevize said,
Would you like to be armed, Janov?
Pelorat
shuddered. No, thank you. Between you and your physical defense, and Bliss and
her mental defense, I feel in no danger at all. I suppose it is cowardly of me
to hide in your protective shadows, but I can't feel proper shame when I'm too
busy feeling grateful that I needn't be in a position of possibly having to use
force.
Trevize said, I
understand. Just don't go anywhere alone. If Bliss and I separate, you stay
with one of us and don't dash off somewhere under the spur of a private
curiosity.
You needn't
worry, Trevize, said Bliss. I'll see to that.
Trevize stepped
out of the ship first. The wind was brisk and just a trifle cool in the
aftermath of the rain, but Trevize found that welcome. It had probably been
uncomfortably warm and humid before the rain.
He took in his
breath with surprise. The smell of the planet was delightful. Every planet had
its own odor, he knew, an odor always strange and usually distasteful-perhaps
only because it was strange. Might not strange be pleasant as well? Or was this
the accident of catching the planet just after the rain at a particular season
of the year. Whichever it was
Come on, he
called. It's quite pleasant out here.
Pelorat emerged
and said, Pleasant is definitely the word for it. Do you suppose it always
smells like this?
It doesn't
matter. Within the hour, we'll be accustomed to the aroma, and our nasal
receptors will be sufficiently saturated, for us to smell nothing.
Pity, said
Pelorat.
The grass is
wet, said Bliss, with a shade of disapproval.
Why not? After
all, it rains on Gaia, too! said Trevize, and as he said that a shaft of
yellow sunlight reached them momentarily through a small break in the clouds.
There would soon be more of it.
Yes, said
Bliss, but we know when and we're prepared for it.
Too bad, said
Trevize; you lose the thrill of the unexpected.
Bliss said,
You're right. I'll try not to be provincial.
Pelorat looked
about and said, in a disappointed tone, There seems to be nothing about.
Only seems to
be, said Bliss. They're approaching from beyond that rise. She looked toward
Trevize. Do you think we ought to go to meet them?
Trevize shook his
head. No. We've come to meet them across many parsecs. Let them walk the rest
of the way. We'll wait for them here.
Only Bliss could
sense the approach until, from the direction of her pointing finger, a figure
appeared over the brow of the rise. Then a second, and a third.
I believe that
is all at the moment, said Bliss.
Trevize watched
curiously. Though he had never seen robots, there was not a particle of doubt
in him that that was what they were. They had the schematic and impressionistic
shape of human beings and yet were not obviously metallic in appearance. The
robotic surface was dull and gave the illusion of softness, as though it were
covered in plush.
But how did he
know the softness was an illusion? Trevize felt a sudden desire to feel those
figures who were approaching so stolidly. If it were true that this was a
Forbidden World and that spaceships never approached it-and surely that must be
so since the sun was not included in the Galactic map then the Far Star and the
people it carried must represent something the robots had never experienced.
Yet they were reacting with steady certainty, as though they were working their
way through a routine exercise.
Trevize said, in
a low voice, Here we may have information we can get nowhere else in the
Galaxy. We could ask them for the location of Earth with reference to this
world, and if they know, they will tell us. Who knows how long these things
have functioned and endured? They may answer out of personal memory. Think of
that.
On the other
hand, said Bliss, they may be recently manufactured and may know nothing.
Or, said
Pelorat, they may know, but may refuse to tell us.
Trevize said, I
suspect they can't refuse unless they've been ordered not to tell us, and why
should such orders be issued when surely no one on this planet could have
expected our coming?
At a distance of
about three meters, the robots stopped. They said nothing and made no further
movement.
Trevize, his hand
on his blaster, said to Bliss, without taking his eyes from the robot, Can you
tell whether they are hostile?
You'll have to
allow for the fact that I have no experience whatsoever with their mental
workings, Trevize, but I don't detect anything that seems hostile.
Trevize took his
right hand away from the butt of the weapon, but kept it near. He raised his
left hand, palm toward the robots, in what he hoped would be recognized as a
gesture of peace and said, speaking slowly, I greet you. We come to this world
as friends.
The central robot
of the three ducked his head in a kind of abortive bow that might also have
been taken as a gesture of peace by an optimist, and replied.
Trevize's jaw
dropped in astonishment. In a world of Galactic communication, one did not
think of failure in so fundamental a need. However, the robot did not speak in
Galactic Standard or anything approaching it. In fact, Trevize could not
understand a word.
45.
PELORAT'S
surprise was as great as that of Trevize, but there was an obvious element of
pleasure in it, too.
Isn't that
strange? he said.
Trevize turned to
him and said, with more than a touch of asperity in his voice, It's not
strange. It's gibberish.
Pelorat said,
Not gibberish at all. It's Galactic, but very archaic. I catch a few words. I
could probably understand it easily if it were written down. It's the
pronunciation that's the real puzzle.
Well, what did
it say?
I think it told
you it didn't understand what you said.
Bliss said, I
can't tell what it said, but what I sense is puzzlement, which fits. That is,
if I can trust my analysis of robotic emotion-or if there is such a thing as
robotic emotion.
Speaking very
slowly, and with difficulty, Pelorat said something, and the three robots
ducked their head in unison.
What was that?
said Trevize.
Pelorat said, I
said I couldn't speak well, but I would try. I asked for a little time. Dear
me, old chap, this is fearfully interesting.
Fearfully
disappointing, muttered Trevize.
You see, said
Pelorat, every habitable planet in the Galaxy manages to work out its own
variety of Galactic so that there are a million dialects that are sometimes
barely intercomprehensible, but they're all pulled together by the development
of Galactic Standard. Assuming this world to have been isolated for twenty
thousand years, the language would ordinarily drift so far from that of the
rest of the Galaxy as to be an entirely different language. That it isn't may
be because the world has a social system that depends upon robots which can
only understand the language as spoken in the fashion in which they were
programmed. Rather than keep reprogramming, the language remained static and we
now have what is to us merely a very archaic form of Galactic.
There's an
example, said Trevize, of how a robotized society can be held static and
made, to turn degenerate.
But, my dear
fellow, protested Pelorat, keeping a language relatively unchanged is not
necessarily a sign of degeneration. There are advantages to it. Documents
preserved for centuries and millennia retain their meaning and give greater
longevity and authority to historical records. In the rest of the Galaxy, the
language of Imperial edicts of the time of Hari Seldon already begins to sound quaint.
And do you know
this archaic Galactic?
Not to say know,
Golan. It's just that in studying ancient myths and legends I've picked up the
trick of it. The vocabulary is not entirely different, but it is inflected
differently, and there are idiomatic expressions we don't use any longer and,
as I have said, the pronunciation is totally changed. I can act as interpreter,
but not as a very good one.
Trevize heaved a
tremulous sigh. A small stroke of good fortune is better than none. Carry on,
Janov.
Pelorat turned to
the robots, waited a moment, then looked back at Trevize. What am I supposed
to say?
Let's go all the
way. Ask them where Earth is.
Pelorat said the
words one at a time, with exaggerated gestures of his hands.
The robots looked
at each other and made a few sounds. The middle one then spoke to Pelorat, who
replied while moving his hands apart as though he were stretching a length of
rubber. The robot responded by spacing his words as carefully as Pelorat had.
Pelorat said to
Trevize, I'm not sure I'm getting across what I mean by Earth. I suspect
they think I'm referring to some region on their planet and they say they don't
know of any such region.
Do they use the
name of this planet, Janov?
The closest I
can come to what I think they are using as the name is Solaria.
Have you ever
heard of it in your legends?
No-any more than
I had ever heard of Aurora.
Well, ask them
if there is any place named Earth in the sky-among the stars. Point upward.
Again an
exchange, and finally Pelorat turned and said, All I can get from them, Golan,
is that there are no places in the sky.
Bliss said, Ask
those robots how old they are; or rather, how long they have been functioning.
I don't know how
to say functioning, said Pelorat, shaking his head. In fact, I'm not sure if
I can say how old. I'm not a very good interpreter.
Do the best you
can, Pel dear, said Bliss.
And after several
exchanges, Pelorat said, They've been functioning for twenty-six years.
Twenty-six
years, muttered Trevize in disgust. They're hardly older than you are,
Bliss.
Bliss said, with
sudden pride, It so happens...
I know. You're
Gaia, which is thousands of years old. In any case, these robots cannot talk
about Earth from personal experience, and their memorybanks clearly do not
include anything not necessary to their functioning. So they know nothing about
astronomy.
Pelorat said,
There may be other robots somewhere on the planet that are primordial,
perhaps.
I doubt it,
said Trevize, but ask them, if you can find the words for it, Janov.
This time there
was quite a long conversation and Pelorat eventually broke it off with a
flushed face and a clear air of frustration.
Golan, he said,
I don't understand part of what they're trying to say, but I gather that the
older robots are used for manual labor and don't know anything. If this robot
were a human, I'd say he spoke of the older robots with contempt. These three
are house robots, they say, and are not allowed to grow old before being replaced.
They're the ones who really know things-their words, not mine.
They don't know
much, growled Trevize. At least of the things we want to know.
I now regret,
said Pelorat, that we left Aurora so hurriedly. If we had found a robot
survivor there, and we surely would have, since the very first one I
encountered still had a spark of life left in it, they would know of Earth
through personal memory.
Provided their
memories were intact, Janov, said Trevize. We can always go back there and,
if we have to, dog packs or not, we will. But if these robots are only a couple
of decades old, there must be those who manufacture them, and the manufacturers
must be human, I should think. He turned to Bliss. Are you sure you
sensed...
But she raised a
hand to stop him and there was a strained and intent look on her face. Coming
now, she said, in a low voice.
Trevize turned
his face toward the rise and there, first appearing from behind it, and then
striding toward them, was the unmistakable figure of a human being. His
complexion was pale and his hair light and long, standing out slightly from the
sides of his head. His face was grave but quite young in appearance. His bare
arms and legs were not particularly muscled.
The robots
stepped aside for him, and he advanced till he stood in their midst.
He then spoke in
a clear, pleasant voice and his words, although used archaically, were in
Galactic Standard, and easily understood.
Greetings,
wanderers from space, he said. What would you with my robots?
46.
TREVIZE did not
cover himself with glory.. He said foolishly, You speak Galactic?
The Solarian
said, with a grim smile, And why not, since I am not mute?
But these?
Trevize gestured toward the robots.
These are
robots. They speak our language, as I do. But I am Solarian and hear the
hyperspatial communications of the worlds beyond so that I have learned your
way of speaking, as have my predecessors. My predecessors have left
descriptions of the language, but I constantly hear new words and expressions
that change with the years, as though you Settlers can settle worlds, but not
words. How is it you are surprised at my understanding of your language?
I should not
have been, said Trevize. I apologize. It was just that speaking to the
robots, I had not thought to hear Galactic on this world.
He studied the
Solarian. He was wearing a thin white robe, draped loosely over his shoulder,
with large openings for his arms. It was open in front, exposing a bare chest
and loincloth below. Except for a pair of light sandals, he wore nothing else.
It occurred to
Trevize that he could not tell whether the Solarian was male or female. The
breasts were male certainly but the chest was hairless and the thin loincloth
showed no bulge of any kind.
He turned to
Bliss and said in a low voice, This might still be a robot, but very like a
human being in...
Bliss said, her
lips hardly moving, The mind is that of a human being, not a robot.
The Solarian
said, Yet you have not answered my original question. I shall excuse the
failure and put it down to your surprise. I now ask again and you must not fail
a second time. What would you with my robots?
Trevize said, We
are travelers who seek information to reach our destination. We asked your
robots for information that would help us, but they lacked the knowledge.
What is the
information you seek? Perhaps I can help you.
We seek the
location of Earth. Could you tell us that?
The Solarian's
eyebrows lifted. I would have thought that your first object of curiosity
would have been myself. I will supply that information although you have not
asked for it. I am Sarton Bander and you stand upon the Bander estate, which stretches
as far as your eye can see in every direction and far beyond. I cannot say that
you are welcome here, for in coming here, you have violated a trust. You are
the first Settlers to touch down upon Solaria in many thousands of years and,
as it turns out, you have come here merely to inquire as to the best way of
reaching another world. In the old days, Settlers, you and your ship would have
been destroyed on sight.
That would be a
barbaric way of treating people who mean no harm and offer none, said Trevize
cautiously.
I agree, but
when members of an expanding society set foot upon an inoffensive and static
one, that mere touch is filled with potential harm. While we feared that harm,
we were ready to destroy those who came at the instant of their coming. Since
we no longer have reason to fear, we are, as you see, ready to talk.
Trevize s , I
appreciate the information you have offered us so freely, and yet you failed to
answer the question I did ask. I will repeat it. Could you tell us the location
of the planet Earth?
By Earth, I take
it you mean the world on which the human species, and the various species of
plants and animalshis hand moved gracefully about as though to indicate all
the surroundings about them... originated.
Yes, I do, sir.
A queer look of
repugnance flitted over the Solarian's face. He said, Please address me simply
as Bander, if you must use a form of address. Do not address me by any word
that includes a sign of gender. I am neither male nor female. I am whole.
Trevize nodded
(he had been right). As you wish, Bander. What, then, is the location of
Earth, the world of origin of all of us?
Bander said, I
do not know. Nor do I wish to know. If I did know, or if I could find out, it
would do you no good, for Earth no longer exists as a world. Ah, he went on,
stretching out his arms. The sun feels good. I am not often on the surface,
and never when the sun does not show itself. My robots were sent to greet you
while the sun was yet hiding behind the clouds. I followed only when the clouds
cleared.
Why is it that
Earth no longer exists as a world? said Trevize insistently, steeling himself
for the tale of radioactivity once again.
Bander, however,
ignored the question or, rather, put it to one side carelessly. The story is
too long, he said. You told me that you came with no intent of harm.
That is
correct.
Why then did you
come armed?
That is merely a
precaution. I did not know what I might meet.
It doesn't
matter. Your little weapons represent no danger to me. Yet I am curious. I
have, of course, heard much of your arms, and of your curiously barbaric
history that seems to depend so entirely upon arms. Even so, I have never
actually seen a weapon. May I see yours?
Trevize took a
step backward. I'm afraid not, Bander.
Bander seemed
amused. I asked only out of politeness. I need not have asked at all.
It held out its
hand and from Trevize's right holster, there emerged his blaster, while from
his left holster, there rose up his neuronic whip. Trevize snatched at his
weapons but felt his arms held back as though by stiffly elastic bonds. Both
Pelorat and Bliss started forward and it was clear that they were held as well.
Bander said,
Don't bother trying to interfere. You cannot. The weapons flew to its hands
and it looked them over carefully. This one, it said, indicating the blaster,
seems to be a microwave beamer that produces heat, thus exploding any
fluid-containing body. The other is more subtle, and, I must confess, I do not
see at a glance what it is intended to do. However, since you mean no harm and
offer no harm, you don't need arms. I can, and I do, bleed the energy content
of the units of each weapon. That leaves them harmless unless you use one or
the other as a club, and they would be clumsy indeed if used for that purpose.
The Solarian
released the weapons and again they drifted through the air, this time back
toward Trevize. Each settled neatly into its holster.
Trevize, feeling
himself released, pulled out his blaster, but there was no need to use it. The
contact hung loosely, and the energy unit had clearly been totally drained.
That was precisely the case with the neuronic whip as well.
He looked up at
Bander, who said, smiling, You are quite helpless, Outworlder. I can as
easily, if I so desired, destroy your ship and, of course, you.
Chapter 11
Underground
47.
TREVIZE felt
frozen. Trying to breathe normally, he turned to look at Bliss. She was
standing with her arm protectively about Pelorat's waist, and, to all appearances,
was quite calm. She smiled slightly and, even more slightly, nodded her head.
Trevize turned
back to Bander. Having interpreted Bliss's actions as signifying confidence,
and hoping with dreadful earnestness that he was correct, he said grimly, How
did you do that, Bander?
Bander smiled,
obviously in high good humor. Tell me, little Outworlders, do you believe in
sorcery? In magic?
No, we do not,
little Solarian, snapped Trevize.
Bliss tugged at
Trevize's sleeve and whispered, Don't irritate him. He's dangerous.
I can see he
is, said Trevize, keeping his voice low with difficulty. You do something,
then.
Her voice barely
heard, Bliss said, Not yet. He will be less dangerous if he feels secure.
Bander paid no
attention to the brief whispering among the Outworlders. It moved away from
them uncaringly, the robots separating to let it pass.
Then it looked
back and crooked a finger languidly. Come. Follow me. All three of you. I will
tell you a story that may not interest you, but that interests me. It
continued to walk forward leisurely.
Trevize remained
in place for a while, uncertain as to the best course of action. Bliss walked
forward, however, and the pressure of her arm led Pelorat forward as well.
Eventually, Trevize moved; the alternative was to be left standing alone with
the robots.
Bliss said
lightly, If Bander will be so kind as to tell the story that may not interest
us.
Bander turned and
looked intently at Bliss as though he were truly aware of her for the first
time. You are the feminine half-human, he said, aren't you? The lesser
half?
The smaller
half, Bander. Yes.
These other two
are masculine half-humans, then?
So they are.
Have you had
your child yet, feminine?
My name, Bander,
is Bliss. I have not yet had a child. This is Trevize. This is Pel.
And which of
these two masculines is to assist you when it is your time? Or will it be both?
Or neither?
Pel will assist
me, Bander.
Bander turned his
attention to Pelorat. You have white hair, I see.
Pelorat said, I
have.
Was it always
that color?
No, Bander, it
became so with age.
And how old are
you?
I am fifty-two
years old, Bander, Pelorat said, then added hastily, That's Galactic Standard
Years.
Bander continued
to walk (toward the distant mansion, Trevize assumed), but more slowly. It
said, I don't know how long a Galactic Standard Year is, but it can't be very
different from our year. And how old will you be when you die, Pel?
I can't say. I
may live thirty more years.
Eighty-two
years, then. Short-lived, and divided in halves. Unbelievable, and yet my
distant ancestors were like you and lived on Earth. But some of them left Earth
to establish new worlds around other stars, wonderful worlds, well organized,
and many.
Trevize said
loudly, Not many. Fifty.
Bander turned a
lofty eye on Trevize. There seemed less humor in it now. Trevize. That's your
name.
Golan Trevize in
full. I say there were fifty Spacer worlds. Our worlds number in the millions.
Do you know,
then, the story that I wish to tell you? said Bander softly.
If the story is
that there were once fifty Spacer worlds, we know it.
We count not in
numbers only, little half-human, said Bander. We count the quality, too.
There were fifty, but such a fifty that not all your millions could make up one
of them. And Solaria was the fiftieth and, therefore, the best. Solaria was as
far beyond the other Spacer worlds, as they were beyond Earth.
We of Solaria
alone learned how life was to be lived. We did not herd and flock like animals,
as they did on Earth, as they did on other worlds, as they did even on the
other Spacer worlds. We lived each alone, with robots to help us, viewing each
other electronically as often as we wished, but coming within natural sight of
one another only rarely. It is many years since I have gazed at human beings as
I now gaze at you but, then, you are only half-humans and your presence,
therefore, does not limit my freedom any more than a cow would limit it, or a
robot.
Yet we were once
half-human, too. no matter how we perfected our freedom; no matter how we
developed as solitary masters over countless robots; the freedom was never
absolute. In order to produce young there had to be two individuals in
co-operation. It was possible, of course, to contribute sperm cells and egg
cells, to have the fertilization process and the consequent embryonic growth
take place artificially in automated fashion. It was possible for the infant to
live adequately under robotic care. It could all be done, but the half-humans
would not give up the pleasure that went with biological impregnation. Perverse
emotional attachments would develop in consequence and freedom vanished. Do you
see that that had to be changed?
Trevize said,
No, Bander, because we do not measure freedom by your standards.
That is because
you do not know what freedom is. You have never lived but in swarms, and you
know no way of life but to be constantly forced, in even the smallest things,
to bend your wills to those of others or, which is equally vile, to spend your
days struggling to force others to bend their wills to yours. Where is any
possible freedom there? Freedom is nothing if it is not to live as you wish!
Exactly as you wish!
Then came the
time when the Earthpeople began to swarm outward once more, when their clinging
crowds again swirled through space. The other Spacers, who did not flock as the
Earthpeople did, but who flocked nevertheless, if to a lesser degree, tried to
compete.
We Solarians did
not. We foresaw inevitable failure in swarming. We moved underground and broke
off all contact with the rest of the Galaxy. We were determined to remain
ourselves at all costs. We developed suitable robots and weapons to protect our
apparently empty surface, and they did the job admirably. Ships came and were
destroyed, and stopped coming. The planet was considered deserted, and was
forgotten, as we hoped it would be.
And meanwhile,
underground, we worked to solve our problems. We adjusted our genes gingerly,
delicately. We had failures, but some successes, and we capitalized on the
successes. It took us many centuries, but we finally became whole human beings,
incorporating both the masculine and feminine principles in one body, supplying
our own complete pleasure at will, and producing, when we wished, fertilized
eggs for development under skilled robotic care.
Hermaphrodites,
said Pelorat.
Is that what it
is called in your language? asked Bander indifferently. I have never heard
the word.
Hermaphroditism
stops evolution dead in its tracks, said Trevize. Each child is the genetic
duplicate of its hermaphroditic parent.
Come, said
Bander, you treat evolution as a hit-and-miss affair. We can design our
children if we wish. We can change and adjust the genes and, on occasion, we
do. But we are almost at my dwelling. Let us enter. It grows late in the day.
The sun already fails to give its warmth adequately and we will be more
comfortable indoors.
They passed
through a door that had no locks of any kind but that opened as they approached
and closed behind them as they passed through. There were no windows, but as
they entered a cavernous room, the walls glowed to luminous life and
brightened. The floor seemed bare, but was soft and springy to the touch. In
each of the four corners of the room, a robot stood motionless.
That wall, said
Bander, pointing to the wall opposite the door-a wall that seemed no different
in any way from the other three-is my visionscreen. The world opens before me
through that screen but it in no way limits my freedom for I cannot be
compelled to use it.
Trevize said,
Nor can you compel another to use his if you wish to see him through that
screen and he does not.
Compel? said
Bander haughtily. Let another do as it pleases, if it is but content that I do
as I please. Please note that we do not use gendered pronouns in referring to
each other.
There was one
chair in the room, facing the vision-screen, and Bander sat down in it.
Trevize looked
about, as though expecting additional chairs to spring from the floor. May we
sit, too? he said.
If you wish,
said Bander.
Bliss, smiling,
sat down on the floor. Pelorat sat down beside her. Trevize stubbornly
continued to stand.
Bliss said, Tell
me, Bander, how many human beings live on this planet?
Say Solarians,
half-human Bliss. The phrase human being is contaminated by the fact that
half-humans call themselves that. We might call ourselves whole-humans, but
that is clumsy. Solarian is the proper term.
How many
Solarians, then, live on this planet?
I am not
certain. We do not count ourselves. Perhaps twelve hundred.
Only twelve
hundred on the entire world?
Fully twelve
hundred. You count in numbers again, while we count in quality. Nor do you
understand freedom. If one other Solarian exists to dispute my absolute mastery
over any part of my land, over any robot or living thing or object, my freedom
is limited. Since other Solarians exist, the limitation on freedom must be
removed as far as possible by separating them all to the point where contact is
virtually nonexistent. Solaria will hold twelve hundred Solarians under
conditions approaching the ideal. Add more, and liberty will be palpably
limited so that the result will be unendurable.
That means each
child must be counted and must balance deaths, said Pelorat suddenly.
Certainly. That
must be true of any world with a stable population-even yours, perhaps.
And since there
are probably few deaths, there must therefore be few children.
Indeed.
Pelorat nodded
his head and was silent.
Trevize said,
What I want to know is how you made my weapons fly through the air. You
haven't explained that.
I offered you
sorcery or magic as an explanation. Do you refuse to accept that?
Of course I
refuse. What do you take me for?
Will you, then,
believe in the conservation of energy, and in the necessary increase of
entropy?
That I do. Nor
can I believe that even in twenty thousand years you have changed these laws,
or modified them a micrometer.
Nor have we,
half-person. But now consider. Outdoors, there is sunlight. There was its
oddly graceful gesture, as though marking out sunlight all about. And there is
shade. It is warmer in the sunlight than in the shade, and heat flows
spontaneously from the sunlit area into the shaded area.
You tell me what
I know, said Trevize.
But perhaps you
know it so well that you no longer think about it. And at night, Solaria's
surface is warmer than the objects beyond its atmosphere, so that heat flows
spontaneously from the planetary surface into outer space.
I know that,
too.
And day or
night, the planetary interior is warmer than the planetary surface. Heat
therefore flows spontaneously from the interior to the surface. I imagine you
know that, too.
And what of all
that, Bander?
The flow of heat
from hotter to colder, which must take place by the second law of
thermodynamics, can be used to do work.
In theory, yes,
but sunlight is dilute, the heat of the planetary surface is even more dilute,
and the rate at which heat escapes from the interior makes that the most dilute
of all. The amount of heat-flow that can be harnessed would probably not be
enough to lift a pebble.
It depends on
the device you use for the purpose, said Bander. Our own tool was developed
over a period of thousands of years and it is nothing less than a portion of
our brain.
Bander lifted the
hair on either side of its head, exposing that portion of its skull behind its
ears. It turned its head this way and that, and behind each ear was a bulge the
size and shape of the blunt end of a hen's egg.
That portion of
my brain, and its absence in you, is what makes the difference between a
Solarian and you.
48.
TREVIZE glanced
now and then at Bliss's face, which seemed entirely concentrated on Bander.
Trevize had grown quite certain he knew what was going on.
Bander, despite
its paean to freedom, found this unique opportunity irresistible. There was no
way it could speak to robots on a basis of intellectual equality, and certainly
not to animals. To speak to its fellow-Solarians would be, to it, unpleasant,
and what communication there must be would be forced, and never spontaneous.
As for Trevize,
Bliss, and Pelorat, they might be half-human to Bander, and it might regard
them as no more an infringement on its liberty than a robot or a goat would
be-but they were its intellectual equals (or near equals) and the chance to
speak to them was a unique luxury it had never experienced before.
No wonder,
Trevize thought, it was indulging itself in this way. And Bliss (Trevize was
doubly sure) was encouraging this, just pushing Bander's mind ever so gently in
order to urge it to do what it very much wanted to do in any case.
Bliss,
presumably, was working on the supposition that if Bander spoke enough, it
might tell them something useful concerning Earth. That made sense to Trevize,
so that even if he had not been truly curious about the subject under
discussion, he would nevertheless have endeavored to continue the conversation.
What do those
brain-lobes do? Trevize asked.
Bander said,
They are transducers. They are activated by the flow of heat and they convert
the heat-flow into mechanical energy.
I cannot believe
that. The flow of heat is insufficient.
Little
half-human, you do not think. If there were many Solarians crowded together,
each trying to make use of the flow of heat, then, yes, the supply would be
insufficient. I, however, have over forty thousand square kilometers that are
mine, mine alone. I can collect heat-flow from any quantity of those square
kilometers with no one to dispute me, so the quantity is sufficient. Do you
see?
Is it that
simple to collect heat-flow over a wide area? The mere act of concentration
takes a great deal of energy.
Perhaps, but I
am not aware of it. My transducer-lobes are constantly concentrating heat-flow
so that as work is needed, work is done. When I drew your weapons into the air,
a particular volume of the sunlit atmosphere lost some of its excess heat to a
volume of the shaded area, so that I was using solar energy for the purpose.
Instead of using mechanical or electronic devices to bring that about, however,
I used a neuronic device. It touched one of the transducer-lobes gently. It
does it quickly, efficiently, constantly-and effortlessly.
Unbelievable,
muttered Pelorat.
Not at all
unbelievable, said Bander. Consider the delicacy of the eye and ear., and how
they can turn small quantities of photons and air vibrations into information.
That would seem unbelievable if you had never come across it before. The
transducer-lobes are no more unbelievable, and would not be so to you, were
they not unfamiliar.
Trevize said,
What do you do with these constantly operating transducerlobes?
We run our world,
said Bander. Every robot on this vast estate obtains its energy from me; or,
rather, from natural heat-flow. Whether a robot is adjusting a contact, or
felling a tree, the energy is derived from mental transduction-my mental
transduction.
And if you are
asleep?
The process of
transduction continues waking or sleeping, little half-human, said Bander. Do
you cease breathing when you sleep? Does your heart stop beating? At night, my
robots continue working at the cost of cooling Solaria's interior a bit. The
change is immeasurably small on a global scale and there are only twelve
hundred of us, so that all the energy we use does not appreciably shorten our
sun's life or drain the world's internal heat.
Has it occurred
to you that you might use it as a weapon?
Bander stared at
Trevize as though he were something peculiarly incomprehensible. I suppose by
that, he said, you mean that Solaria might confront other worlds with energy
weapons based on transduction? Why should we? Even if we could beat their
energy weapons based on other principles-which is anything but certain-what
would we gain? The control of other worlds? What do we want with other worlds
when we have an ideal world of our own? Do we want to establish our domination
over half-humans and use them in forced labor? We have our robots that are far
better than half-humans for the purpose. We have everything. We want
nothing-except to be left to ourselves. See here-I'll tell you another story.
Go ahead, said
Trevize.
Twenty thousand
years ago when the half-creatures of Earth began to swarm into space and we
ourselves withdrew underground, the other Spacer worlds were determined to
oppose the new Earth-settlers. So they struck at Earth.
At Earth, said
Trevize, trying to hide his satisfaction over the fact that the subject had
come up at last.
Yes, at the
center. A sensible move, in a way. If you wish to kill a person, you strike not
at a finger or a heel, but at the heart. And our fellow-Spacers, not too far
removed from human beings themselves in passions, managed to set Earth's
surface radioactively aflame, so that the world became largely uninhabitable.
Ah, that's what
happened, said Pelorat, clenching a fist and moving it rapidly, as though
nailing down a thesis. I knew it could not be a natural phenomenon. How was it
done?
I don't know how
it was done, said Bander indifferently, and in any case it did the Spacers no
good. That is the point of the story. The Settlers continued to swarm and the
Spacers-died out. They had tried to compete, and vanished. We Solarians retired
and refused to compete, and so we are still here.
And so are the
Settlers, said Trevize grimly.
Yes, but not
forever. Swarmers must fight, must compete, and eventually must die. That may
take tens of thousands of years, but we can wait. And when it happens, we
Solarians, whole, solitary, liberated, will have the Galaxy to ourselves. We
can then use, or not use, any world we wish to in addition to our own.
But this matter
of Earth, said Pelorat, snapping his fingers impatiently. Is what you tell us
legend or history?
How does one
tell the difference, half-Pelorat? said Bander. All history is legend, more
or less.
But what do your
records say? May I see the records on the subject, Bander? Please understand
that this matter of myths, legends, and primeval history is my field. I am a
scholar dealing with such matters and particularly with those matters as
related to Earth.
I merely repeat
what I have heard, said Bander. There are no records on the subject. Our
records deal entirely with Solarian affairs and other worlds are mentioned in
them only insofar as they impinge upon us.
Surely, Earth
has impinged on you, said Pelorat.
That may be,
but, if so, it was long, long ago, and Earth, of all worlds, was most repulsive
to us. If we had any records of Earth, t am sure they were destroyed out of
sheer revulsion.
Trevize gritted
his teeth in chagrin. By yourselves? he asked.
Bander turned its
attention to Trevize. There is no one else to destroy them.
Pelorat would not
let go of the matter. What else have you heard concerning Earth?
Bander thought.
It said, When I was young, I heard a tale from a robot about an Earthman who
once visited Solaria; about a Solarian woman who left with him and became an
important figure in the Galaxy. That, however, was, in my opinion, an invented
tale.
Pelorat bit at
his lip. Are you sure?
How can I be
sure of anything in such matters? said Bander. Still, it passes the bounds of
belief that an Earthman would dare come to Solaria, or that Solaria would allow
the intrusion. It is even less likely that a Solarian woman-we were half-humans
then, but even so-should voluntarily leave this world. But come, let me show
you my home.
Your home? said
Bliss, looking about. Are we not in your home?
Not at all,
said Bander. This is an anteroom. It is a viewing room. In it I see my
fellow-Solarians when I must. Their images appear on that wall, or
three-dimensionally in the space before the wall. This room is a public
assembly, therefore, and not part of my home. Come with me,
It walked on
ahead, without turning to see if it were followed, but the four robots left
their corners, and Trevize knew that if he and his companions did not follow
spontaneously, the robots would gently coerce them into doing so.
The other two got
to their feet and Trevize whispered lightly to Bliss, Have you been keeping it
talking?
Bliss pressed his
hand, and nodded. Just the same, I wish I knew what its intentions were, she
added, with a note of uneasiness in her voice.
49.
THEY followed
Bander. The robots remained at a polite distance, but their presence was a constantly
felt threat.
They were moving
through a corridor, and Trevize mumbled low-spiritedly, There's nothing
helpful about Earth on this planet. I'm sure of it. Just another variation on
the radioactivity theme. He shrugged. We'll have to go on to the third set of
co-ordinates.
A door opened
before them, revealing a small room. Bander said, Come, half-humans, I want to
show you how we live.
Trevize
whispered, It gets infantile pleasure out of display. I'd love to knock it
down.
Don't try to
compete in childishness, said Bliss.
Bander ushered
all three into the room. One of the robots followed as well. Bander gestured
the other robots away and entered itself. The door closed behind it.
It's an
elevator, said Pelorat, with a pleased air of discovery.
So it is, said
Bander. Once we went underground, we never truly emerged. Nor would we want
to, though I find it pleasant to feel the sunlight on occasion. I dislike
clouds or night in the open, however. That gives one the sensation of being
underground without truly being underground, if you know what I mean. That is
cognitive dissonance, after a fashion, and I find it very unpleasant.
Earth built
underground, said Pelorat. The Caves of Steel, they called their cities. And
Trantor built underground, too, even more extensively, in the old Imperial
days. And Comporellon builds underground right now. It is a common tendency,
when you come to think of it.
Half-humans
swarming underground and we living underground in isolated splendor are two
widely different things, said Bander.
Trevize said, On
Terminus, dwelling places are on the surface.
And exposed to
the weather, said Bander. Very primitive.
The elevator,
after the initial feeling of lower gravity that had given away its nature to
Pelorat, gave no sensation of motion whatsoever. Trevize was wondering how far
down it would penetrate, when there was a brief feeling of higher gravity and
the door opened.
Before them was a
large and elaborately furnished room. It was dimly lit, though the source of
the light was not apparent. It almost seemed as though the air itself were
faintly luminous.
Bander pointed
its finger and where it pointed the light grew a bit more intense. It pointed
it elsewhere and the same thing happened. It placed its left hand on a stubby
rod to one side of the doorway and, with its right hand, made an expansive
circular gesture so that the whole room lit up as though it were in sunlight,
but with no sensation of heat.
Trevize grimaced
and said, half-aloud, The man's a charlatan.
Bander said
sharply. Not the man, but the Solarian. I'm not sure what the word
charlatan means, but if I catch the tone of voice, it is opprobrious.
Trevize said, It
means one who is not genuine, who arranges effects to make what is done seem
more impressive than it really is.
Bander said, I
admit that I love the dramatic, but what I have shown you is not an effect. It
is real.
It tapped the rod
on which its left hand was resting. This heat-conducting rod extends several
kilometers downward, and there are similar rods in many convenient places
throughout my estate. I know there are similar rods on other estates. These
rods increase the rate at which heat leaves Solaria's lower regions for the
surface and eases its conversion into work. I do not need the gestures of the
hand to produce the light, but it does lend an air of drama or, perhaps, as you
point out, a slight touch of the not-genuine, I enjoy that sort of thing.
Bliss said, Do
you have much opportunity to experience the pleasure of such little dramatic
touches?
No, said
Bander, shaking its head. My robots are not impressed with such things. Nor
would my fellow-Solarians be. This unusual chance of meeting half-humans and
displaying for them is most-amusing.
Pelorat said,
The light in this room shone dimly when We entered. Does it shine dimly at all
times?
Yes, a small
drain of power-like keeping' the robots working. My entire estate is always
running, and those parts of it not engaged in active labor are idling.
And you supply
the power constantly for all this vast estate?
The sun and the
planet's core supply the power. I am merely the conduit. Nor is all the estate
productive. I keep most of it as wilderness and well stocked with a variety of
animal life; first, because that protects my boundaries, and second, because I
find esthetic value in it. In fact, my fields and factories are small. They
need only supply my own needs, plus some specialties to exchange for those of
others. I have robots, for instance, that can manufacture and install the
heat-conducting rods at need. Many Solarians depend upon me for that.
And your home?
asked Trevize. How large is that?
It must have been
the right question to ask, for Bander beamed. Very large. One of the largest
on the planet, I believe. It goes on for kilometers in every direction. I have
as many robots caring for my home underground, as I have in all the thousands of
square kilometers of surface.
You don't live
in all of it, surely, said Pelorat.
It might
conceivably be that there are chambers I have never entered, but what of that?
said Bander. The robots keep every room clean, well ventilated, and in order. But
come, step out here.
They emerged
through a door that was not the one through which they had entered and found
themselves in another corridor. Before them was a little topless ground-car
that ran on tracks.
Bander motioned
them into it, and one by one they clambered aboard. There was not quite room
for all four, plus the robot, but Pelorat and Bliss squeezed together tightly
to allow room for Trevize. Bander sat in the front with an air of easy comfort,
the robot at its side, and the car moved along with no sign of overt
manipulation of controls other than Bander's smooth hand motions now and then.
This is a
car-shaped robot, actually, said Bander, with an air of negligent
indifference.
They progressed
at a stately pace, very smoothly past doors that opened as they approached, and
closed as they receded. The decorations in each were of widely different kinds
as though robots had been ordered to devise combinations at random.
Ahead of them the
corridor was gloomy, and behind them as well. At whatever point they actually
found themselves, however, they were in the equivalent of cool sunlight. The
rooms, too, would light as the doors opened. And each time, Bander moved its
hand slowly and gracefully.
There seemed no
end to the journey. Now and then they found themselves curving in a way that
made it plain that the underground mansion spread out in two dimensions. (No,
three, thought Trevize, at one point, as they moved steadily down a shallow
declivity.)
Wherever they
went, there were robots, by the dozensscores-hundreds engaged in unhurried
work whose nature Trevize could not easily divine. They passed the open door of
one large room in which rows of robots were bent quietly over desks.
Pelorat asked,
What are they doing, Bander?
Bookkeeping,
said Bander. Keeping statistical records, financial accounts, and all sorts of
things that, I am very glad to say, I don't have to bother with. This isn't
just an idle estate. About a quarter of its growing area is given over to
orchards. An additional tenth are grain fields, but it's the orchards that are
really my pride. We grow the best fruit in the world and grow them in the
largest number of varieties, too. A Bander peach is the peach on Solaria.
Hardly anyone else even bothers to grow peaches. We have twenty-seven varieties
of apples and-and so on. The robots could give you full information.
What do you do
with all the fruit? asked Trevize. You can't eat it all yourself.
I wouldn't dream
of it. I'm only moderately fond of fruit. It's traded to the other estates.
Traded for
what?
Mineral material
mostly. I have no mines worth mentioning on my estates. Then, too, I trade for
whatever is required to maintain a healthy ecological balance. I have a very
large variety of plant and animal life on the estate.
The robots take
care of all that, I suppose, said Trevize.
They do. And
very well, too.
All for one
Solarian.
All for the
estate and its ecological standards. I happen to be the only Solarian who
visits the various parts of the estate-when I choose-but that is part of my
absolute freedom.
Pelorat said, I
suppose the others-the other Solarians-also maintain a local ecological balance
and have marshlands, perhaps, or mountainous areas or seafront estates.
Bander said, I
suppose so. Such things occupy us in the conferences that world affairs
sometimes make necessary.
How often do you
have to get together? asked Trevize. (They were going through a rather narrow
passageway, quite long, and with no rooms on either side. Trevize guessed that
it might have been built through an area that did not easily allow anything
wider to be constructed, so that it served as a connecting link between two
wings that could each spread out more widely.
Too often. It's
a rare month when I don't have to pass some time in conference with one of the
committees I am a member of. Still, although I may not have mountains or
marshlands on my estate, my orchards, my fishponds, and my botanical gardens
are the best in the world.
Pelorat said,
But, my dear fellow-I mean, Bander-I would assume you have never left your
estate and visited those of others...
Certainly nor,
said Bander, with an air of outrage.
I said I assumed
that, said Pelorat mildly. But in that case, how can you be certain that
yours are best, never having investigated, or even seen the others?
Because, said
Bander, I can tell from the demand for my products in interestate trade.
Trevize said,
What about manufacturing?
Bander said,
There are estates where they manufacture tools and machinery. As I said, on my
estate we make the heat-conducting rods, but those are rather simple.
And robots?
Robots are
manufactured here and there. Throughout history, Solaria has led all the Galaxy
in the cleverness and subtlety of robot design.
Today also, I
imagine, said Trevize, carefully having the intonation make the remark a
statement and not a question.
Bander said,
Today? With whom is there to compete today? Only Solaria makes robots
nowadays. Your worlds do not, if I interpret what I hear on the hyperwave
correctly.
But the other
Spacer worlds?
I told you. They
no longer exist.
At all?
I don't think
there is a Spacer alive anywhere but on Solaria.
Then is there no
one who knows the location of Earth?
Why would anyone
want to know the location of Earth?
Pelorat broke in,
I want to know. It's my field of study.
Then, said
Bander, you will have to study something else. I know nothing about the
location of Earth, nor have I heard of anyone who ever did, nor do I care a
sliver of robot-metal about the matter.
The car came to a
halt, and, for a moment, Trevize thought that Bander was offended. The halt was
a smooth one, however, and Bander, getting out of the car, looked its usual
amused self as it motioned the others to get out also.
The lighting in
the room they entered was subdued, even after Bander had brightened it with a
gesture. It opened into a side corridor, on both sides of which were smaller
rooms. In each one of the smaller rooms was one or two ornate vases, sometimes
flanked by objects that might have been film projectors.
What is all
this, Bander? asked Trevize.
Bander said, The
ancestral death chambers, Trevize.
50.
PELORAT looked
about with interest. I suppose you have the ashes of your ancestors interred
here?
If you mean by
'interred,"' said Bander, buried in the ground, you are not quite right.
We may be underground, but this is my mansion, and the ashes are in it, as we
are right now. In our own language we say that the ashes are inhoused. It
hesitated, then said, House is an archaic word for mansion.
Trevize looked
about him perfunctorily. And these are all your ancestors? How many?
Nearly a hundred,
said Bander, making no effort to hide the pride in its voice. Ninety-four, to
be exact. Of course, the earliest are not true Solarians not in the present
sense of the word. They were half-people, masculine and feminine. Such
half-ancestors were placed in adjoining urns by their immediate descendants. I
don't go into those rooms, of course. It's rather shamiferous. At least,
that's the Solarian word for it; but I don't know your Galactic equivalent. You
may not have one.
And the films?
asked Bliss. I take it those are film projectors?
Diaries, said
Bander, the history of their lives. Scenes of themselves in their favorite
parts of the estate. It means they do not die in every sense. Part of them
remains, and it is part of my freedom that I can join them whenever I choose; I
can watch this bit of film or that, as I please.
But not into
theshamiferous ones.
Bander's eyes
slithered away. No, it admitted, but then we all have that as part of the
ancestry. It is a common wretchedness.
Common? Then
other Solarians also have these death chambers? asked Trevize.
Oh yes, we all
do, but mine is the best, the most elaborate, the most perfectly preserved.
Trevize said, Do
you have your own death chamber already prepared?
Certainly. It is
completely constructed and appointed. That was done as my first duty when I
inherited the estate. And when I am laid to ash-to be poetic-my successor will
go about the construction of its own as its first duty.
And do you have
a successor?
I will have when
the time comes. There is as yet ample scope for life. When I must leave, there
will be an adult successor, ripe enough to enjoy the estate, and well lobed for
power-transduction.
It will be your
offspring, I imagine.
Oh yes.
But what if,
said Trevize, something untoward takes place? I presume accidents and
misfortunes take place even on Solaria. What happens if a Solarian is laid to
ash prematurely and it has no successor to take its place, or at least not one
who is ripe enough to enjoy the estate?
That rarely
happens. In my line of ancestors, that happened only once. When it does,
however, one need only remember that there are other successors waiting for
other estates. Some of those are old enough to inherit, and yet have parents
who are young enough to produce a second descendant and to live on till that
second descendant is ripe enough for the succession. One of these old/young
successors, as they are called, would be assigned to the succession of my
estate.
Who does the
assigning?
We have a ruling
board that has this as one of its few functions-the assignment of a successor
in case of premature aching. It is all done by holovision, of course.
Pelorat said,
Hut see here, if Solarians never see each other, how would anyone know that
some Solarian somewhere has unexpectedly-or expectedly, for that matter-been
laid to ash.
Bander said,
When one of us is laid to ash, all power at the estate ceases. If no successor
takes over at once, the abnormal situation is eventually noticed and corrective
measures are taken. I assure you that our social system works smoothly.
Trevize said,
Would it be possible to view some of these films you have here?
Bander froze.
Then it said, It is only your ignorance that excuses you. What you have said
is crude and obscene.
I apologize for
that, said Trevize. I do not wish to intrude on you, but we've already
explained that we are very interested in obtaining information on Earth. It
occurs to me that the earliest films you have would date back to a time before
Earth was radioactive. Earth might therefore be mentioned. There might be
details given about it. We certainly do not wish to intrude on your privacy,
but would there be any way in which you yourself could explore those films, or
have a robot do so, perhaps, and then allow any relevant information to be
passed on to us? Of course, if you can respect our motives and understand that
we will try our best to respect your feelings in return, you might allow us to
do the viewing ourselves.
Bander said
frigidly, I imagine you have no way of knowing that you are becoming more and
more offensive. However, we can end all this at once, for I can tell you that
there are no films accompanying my early half-human ancestors.
None? Trevize's
disappointment was heart-felt.
They existed
once. But even you can imagine what might have been on them. Two half-humans
showing interest in each other or, even, Hander cleared its throat, and said,
with an effort, interacting. Naturally, all halfhuman films were destroyed many
generations ago.
What about the
records of other Solarians?
All destroyed.
Can you be
sure?
It would be mad
not to destroy them.
It might be that
some Solarians were mad, or sentimental, or forgetful. We presume you will not
object to directing us to neighboring estates.
Bander looked at
Trevize in surprise. Do you suppose others will be as tolerant of you as I
have been?
Why not,
Bander?
You'll find they
won't be.
It's a chance
we'll have to take.
No, Trevize. No,
any of you. Listen to me.
There were robots
in the background, and Bander was frowning.
What is it,
Bander? said Trevize, suddenly uneasy.
Bander said, I
have enjoyed speaking to all of you, and observing you in all your-strangeness.
It was a unique experience, which I have been delighted with, but I cannot
record it in my diary, nor memorialize it in film.
Why not?
My speaking to
you; my listening to you; my bringing you into my mansion; my bringing you here
into the ancestral death chambers; are shameful acts.
We are not
Solarians. We matter to you as little as these robots do, do we not?
I excuse the
matter to myself in that way. It may not serve as an excuse to others.
What do you
care? You have absolute liberty to do as you choose, don't you?
Even as we are,
freedom is not truly absolute. If I were the only Solarian on the planet, I
could do even shameful things in absolute freedom. But there are other
Solarians on the planet, and, because of that, ideal freedom, though
approached, is not actually reached. There are twelve hundred Solarians on the
planet who would despise me if they knew what I had done.
There is no
reason they need know about it.
That is true. I
have been aware of that since you've arrived. I've been aware of it all this
time that I've been amusing myself with you. The others must not find out.
Pelorat said, If
that means you fear complications as a result of our visits to other estates in
search of information about Earth, why, naturally, we will mention nothing of
having visited you first. That is clearly understood.
Bander shook its
head. I have taken enough chances. I will not speak of this, of course. My
robots will not speak of this, and will even be instructed not to remember it.
Your ship will be taken underground and explores for what information it can
give us
Wait, said
Trevize, how long do you suppose we can wait here while you inspect our ship?
That is impossible.
Not at all
impossible, for you will have nothing to say about it. I am sorry. I would like
to speak to you longer and to discuss many other things with you, but you see
the matter grows more dangerous.
No, it does
not, said Trevize emphatically.
Yes, it does,
little half-human. I'm afraid the time has come when I must do what my
ancestors would have done at once. I must kill you, all three.
Chapter 12
To the Surface
51.
TREVIZE turned
his head at once to look at Bliss. Her face was expressionless, but taut, and
her eyes were fixed on Bander with an intensity that made her seem oblivious
:to all else.
Pelorat's eyes
were wide, disbelieving.
Trevize, not
knowing what Bliss would-or could-do, struggled to fight down an overwhelming
sense of loss (not so much at the thought of dying, as of dying without knowing
where Earth was, without knowing why he had chosen Gaia as humanity's future).
He had to play for time.
He said, striving
to keep his voice steady, and his words clear, You have shown yourself a
courteous and gentle Solarian, Bander. You have not grown angry at our
intrusion into your world. You have been kind enough to show us over your
estate and mansion, and you have answered our questions. It would suit your
character better to allow us to leave now. no one need ever know we were on
this world and we would have no cause to return. We arrived in all innocence,
seeking merely information.
What you say is
so, said Bander lightly, and, so far, I have given you life. Your lives were
forfeit the instant you entered our atmosphere. What I might have done-and
should have done-on making close contact with you, would be to have killed you
at once. I should then have ordered the appropriate robot to dissect your
bodies for what information on Outworlders that might yield me.
I have not done
that. I have pampered my own curiosity and given in to my own easygoing nature,
but it is enough. I can do it no longer. I have, in fact, already compromised
the safety of Solaria, for if, through some weakness, I were to let myself be
persuaded to let you go, others of your kind would surely follow, however much
you might promise that they would not.
There is,
however, at least this. Your death will be painless. I will merely heat your
brains mildly and drive them into inactivation. You will experience no pain.
Life will merely cease. Eventually, when dissection and study are over, I will
convert you to ashes in an intense flash of heat and all will be over.
Trevize said, If
we must die, then I cannot argue against a quick painless death, but why must
we die at all, having given no offense?
Your arrival was
an offense.
Not on any
rational ground, since we could not know it was an offense.
Society defines
what constitutes an offense. To you, it may seem irrational and arbitrary, but
to us it is not, and this is our world on which we have the full right to say
that in this and that, you have done wrong and deserve to die.
Bander smiled as
though it were merely making pleasant conversation and went on, Nor have you
any right to complain on the ground of your own superior virtue. You have a
blaster which uses a beam of microwaves to induce intense killing heat. It does
what I intend to do, but does it, I am sure, much more crudely and painfully.
You would have no hesitation in using it on me right now, had I not drained its
energy, and if I were to be so foolish as to allow you the freedom of movement
that would enable you to remove the weapon from its holster.
Trevize said
despairingly, afraid even to glance again at Bliss, lest Bander's attention be
diverted to her, I ask you, as an act of mercy, not to do this.
Bandar said,
turning suddenly grim, I must first be merciful to myself and to my world, and
to do that, you must die.
He raised his
hand and instantly darkness descended upon Trevize.
52.
For a moment,
Trevize felt the darkness choking him and thought wildly, Is this death?
And as though his
thoughts had given rise to an echo, he heard a whispered, Is this death? It
was Pelorat's voice.
Trevize tried to
whisper, and found he could. Why ask? he said, with a sense of vast relief.
The mere fact that you can ask shows it is not death.
Mere are old
legends that there is life after death.
Nonsense,
muttered Trevize. Bliss? Are you here, Bliss?
There was no
answer to that.
Again Pelorat
echoed, Bliss? Bliss? What happened, Golan?
Trevize said,
Bender must be dead. He would, in that case, be unable to supply the power for
his estate. The lights would go out.
But how could?
You mean Bliss did it?
I suppose so. I
hope she did not come to harm in the process. He was on his hands and knees
crawling about in the total darkness of the underground (if one did not count
the occasional subvisible flashing of a radioactive atom breaking down in the
walls).
Then his hand
came on something warm and soft. He felt along it and recognized a leg, which
he seized. It was clearly too small to be Bander's. Bliss?
The leg kicked
out, forcing Trevize to let go.
He said, Bliss?
Say something!
I am alive,
came Bliss's voice, curiously distorted.
Trevize said,
But are you well?
No. And, with that,
light returned to their surroundings-weakly. The walls gleamed faintly,
brightening and dimming erratically.
Bander lay
crumpled in a shadowy heap. At its side, holding its head, was Bliss.
She looked up at
Trevize and Pelorat. The Solarian is dead, she said, and her cheeks glistened
with tears in the weak light.
Trevize was
dumbfounded. Why are you crying?
Should I not cry
at having killed a living thing of thought and intelligence? That was not my
intention.
Trevize leaned
down to help her to her feet, but she pushed him away.
Pelorat knelt in
his turn, saying softly, Please, Bliss, even you can't bring it back to life.
Tell us what happened.
She allowed
herself to be pulled upward and said dully, Gaia can do what Bander could do.
Gaia can make use of the unevenly distributed energy of the Universe and
translate it into chosen work by mental power alone.
I knew that,
said Trevize, attempting to be soothing without quite knowing how to go about
it. I remember well our meeting in space when you-or Gaia, rather-held our
spaceship captive. I thought of that when Bander held me captive after it had
taken my weapons. It held you captive, too, but I was confident you could have
broken free if you had wished.
No. I would have
failed if I had tried. When your ship was in my/our/ Gaia's grip, she said
sadly, I and Gaia were truly one. Now there is a hyperspatial separation that
limits my/our/Gaia's efficiency. Besides, Gaia does what it does by the sheer
power of massed brains. Even so, all those brains together lack the
transducer-lobes this one Solarian has. We cannot make use of energy as
delicately, as efficiently, as tirelessly as he could. You see that I cannot
make the lights gleam more brightly, and I don't know how long I can make them gleam
at all before tiring. Bander could supply the power for an entire vast estate,
even when it was sleeping.
But you stopped
it, said Trevize.
Because it
didn't suspect my powers, said Bliss, and because I did nothing that would
give it evidence of them. It was therefore without suspicion of me and gave me
none of its attention. It concentrated entirely on you, Trevize, because it was
you who bore the weapons-again, how well it has served that you armed
yourself-and I had to wait my chance to stop Hander with one quick and
unexpected blow. When it was on the point of killing us, when its whole mind
was concentrated on that, and on you, I was able to strike.
And it worked
beautifully.
How can you say
something so cruel, Trevize? It was only my intention to stop it. I merely
wished to block its use of its transducer. In the moment of surprise when it
tried to blast us and found it could not, but found, instead, that the very
illumination about us was fading into darkness, I would tighten my grip and send
it into a prolonged normal sleep and release the transducer. The power would
then remain on, and we could get out of this mansion, into our ship, and leave
the planet. I hoped to so arrange things that, when Bander finally woke, it
would have forgotten all that had happened from the instant of its sighting us.
Gaia has no desire to kill in order to accomplish what can be brought about
without killing.
What went wrong,
Bliss? said Pelorat softly.
I had never
encountered any such thing as those transducer-lobes and I lacked any time to
work with them and learn about them. I merely struck out forcefully with my
blocking maneuver and, apparently, it didn't work correctly. It was not the
entry of energy into the lobes that was blocked, but the exit of that energy.
Energy is always pouring into those lobes at a reckless rate but, ordinarily,
the brain safeguards itself by pouring out that energy just as quickly. Once I
blocked the exit, however, energy piled up within the lobes at once and, in a
tiny fraction of a second, the temperature had risen to the point where the
brain protein inactivated explosively and it was dead. The lights went out and
I removed my block immediately, but, of course, it was too late.
I don't see that
you could have done anything other than that which you did, dear, said
Pelorat.
Of what comfort
is that, considering that I have killed.
Bander was on
the point of killing us, said Trevize.
That was cause
for stopping it, not for killing it.
Trevize
hesitated. He did not wish to show the impatience he felt for he was unwilling
to offend or further upset Bliss, who was, after all, their only defense
against a supremely hostile world.
He said, Bliss,
it is time to look beyond Bander's death. Because it is dead, all power on the
estate is blanked out. This will be noticed, sooner or later, probably sooner,
by other Solarians. They will be forced to investigate. I don't think you will
be able to hold off the perhaps combined attack of several. And, as you have
admitted yourself, you won't be able to supply for very long the limited power
you are managing to supply now. It is important, therefore, that we get back to
the surface, and to our ship, without delay.
But, Golan,
said Pelorat, how do we do that? We came for many kilometers along a winding
path. I imagine it's quite a maze down here and, for myself, I haven't the
faintest idea of where to go to reach the surface. I've always had a poor sense
of direction.
Trevize, looking
about, realized that Pelorat was correct. He said, I imagine there are many
openings to the surface, and we needn't find the one we entered.
But we don't
know where any of the openings are. How do we find them?
Trevize turned
again to Bliss. Can you detect anything. mentally, that will help us find our
way out?
Bliss said, The
robots on this estate are all inactive. I can detect a thin whisper of
subintelligent life straight up, but all that tells us is that the surface is
straight up, which we know.
Well, then,
said Trevize, we'll just have to look for some opening.
Hit-and-miss,
said Pelorat, appalled. We'll never succeed.
We might,
Janov, said Trevize. If we search, there will be a chance, however small. The
alternative is simply to stay here, and if we do that then we will never
succeed. Come, a small chance is better than none.
Wait, said
Bliss. I do sense something.
What? said
Trevize.
A mind.
Intelligence?
Yes, but
limited, I think. What reaches me most clearly, though, is something else.
What? said
Trevize, again fighting impatience.
Fright!
Intolerable fright! said Bliss, in a whisper.
53.
TREVIZE looked
about ruefully. He knew where they had entered but he had no illusion on the
score of being able to retrace the path by which they had come. He had, after
all, paid little attention to the turnings and windings. Who would have thought
they'd be in the position of having to retrace the route alone and without
help, and with only a flickering, dim light to be guided by?
He said, Do you
think you can activate the car, Bliss?
Bliss said, I'm
sure I could, Trevize, but that doesn't mean I can run it.
Pelorat said, I
think that Bander ran it mentally. I didn't see it touch anything when it was
moving.
Bliss said
gently, Yes, it did it mentally, Pel, but how, mentally? You might as well say
that it did it by using the controls. Certainly, but if I don't know the
details of using the controls, that doesn't help, does it?
You might try,
said Trevize.
If I try, I'll
have to put my whole mind to it, and if I do that, then I doubt that I'll be
able to keep the lights on. The car will do us no good in the dark even if I
learn how to control it.
Then we must
wander about on foot, I suppose?
I'm afraid so.
Trevize peered at
the thick and gloomy darkness that lay beyond the dim light in their immediate
neighborhood. He saw nothing, heard nothing.
He said, Bliss,
do you still sense this frightened mind?
Yes, I do.
Can you tell
where it is? Can you guide us to it?
The mental sense
is a straight line. It is not refracted sensibly by ordinary matter, so I can
tell it is coming from that direction.
She pointed to a
spot on the dusky wall, and said, But we can't walk through the wall to it.
The best we can do is follow the corridors and try to find our way in whatever
direction will keep the sensation growing stronger. In short, we will have to
play the game of hot-and-cold.
Then let's start
right now.
Pelorat hung
back. Wait, Golan; are we sure we want to find this thing, whatever it is? If
it is frightened, it may be that we will have reason to be frightened, too.
Trevize shook his
head impatiently. We have no choice, Janov. It's a mind, frightened or not,
and it may be willing to-or may be made to-direct us to the surface.
And do we just
leave Bander lying here? said Pelorat uneasily.
Trevize took his
elbow. Come, Janov. We have no choice in that, either. Eventually some
Solarian will reactivate the place, and a robot will find Bander and take care
of it-I hope not before we are safely away.
He allowed Bliss
to lead the way. The light was always strongest in her immediate neighborhood
and she paused at each doorway, at each fork in the corridor, trying to sense
the direction from which the fright came. Sometimes she would walk through a
door, or move around a curve, then come back and try an alternate path, while
Trevize watched helplessly.
Each time Bliss
came to a decision and moved firmly in a particular direction, the light came
on ahead of her. Trevize noticed that it seemed a bit brighter now-either
because his eyes were adapting to the dimness, or because Bliss was learning
how to handle the transduction more efficiently. At one point, when she passed
one of the metal rods that were inserted into the ground, she put her hand on
it and the lights brightened noticeably. She nodded her head as though she were
pleased with herself.
Nothing looked in
the least familiar; it seemed certain they were wandering through portions of
the rambling underground mansion they had not passed through on the way in.
'Trevize kept
looking for corridors that led upward sharply, and he varied that by studying
the ceilings for any sign of a trapdoor. Nothing of the sort appeared, and the
frightened mind remained their only chance of getting out.
They walked
through silence, except for the sound of their own steps; through darkness,
except for the light in their immediate vicinity; through death, except for
their own lives. Occasionally, they made out the shadowy bulk of a robot,
sitting or standing in the dusk, with no motion. Once they saw a robot lying on
its side, with legs and arms in queer frozen positions. It had been caught
off-balance, Trevize thought, at the moment when power had been turned off, and
it had fallen. Bander, either alive or dead, could not affect the force of
gravity. Perhaps all over the vast Bander estate, robots were standing and
lying inactive and it would be that that would quickly be noted at the borders.
Or perhaps not,
he thought suddenly. Solarians would know when one of their number would be
dying of old age and physical decay. The world would be alerted and ready.
Bander, however, had died suddenly, without possible foreknowledge, in the
prime of its existence. Who would know? Who would expect? Who would be watching
for inactivation?
But no (and
Trevize thrust back optimism and consolation as dangerous lures into
overconfidence). The Solarians would note the cessation of all activity on the
Bander estate and take action at once. They all had too great an interest in
the succession to estates to leave death to itself.
Pelorat murmured
unhappily, Ventilation has stopped. A place like this, underground, must be
ventilated, and Bander supplied the power. Now it has stopped.
It doesn't matter,
Janov, said Trevize. We've got enough air down in this empty underground
place to last us for years.
It's close just
the same. It's psychologically bad.
Please, Janov,
don't get claustrophobic. Bliss, are we any closer?
Much, Trevize,
she replied. The sensation is stronger and I am clearer as to its location.
She was stepping
forward more surely, hesitating less at points of choice of direction.
There! There!
she said. I can sense it intensely.
Trevize said
dryly, Even I can hear it now.
All three stopped
and, automatically, held their breaths. They could hear a soft moaning,
interspersed with gasping sobs.
They walked into
a large room and, as the lights went on, they saw that, unlike all those they
had hitherto seen, it was rich and colorful in furnishings.
In the center of
the room was a robot, stooping slightly, its arms stretched out in what seemed
an almost affectionate gesture and, of course, it was absolutely motionless.
Behind the robot
was a flutter of garments. A round frightened eye edged to one side of it, and
there was still the sound of a brokenhearted sobbing.
Trevize darted
around the robot and, from the other side, a small figure shot out, shrieking.
It stumbled, fell to the ground, and lay there, covering its eyes, kicking its
legs in all directions, as though to ward off some threat from whatever angle
it might approach, and shrieking, shrieking-Bliss said, quite unnecessarily,
It's a child!
54.
TREVIZE drew
back, puzzled. What was a child doing here? Bander had been so proud of its
absolute solitude, so insistent upon it.
Pelorat, less apt
to fall back on iron reasoning in the face of an obscure event, seized upon the
solution at once, and said, I suppose this is the successor.
Bander's child,
said Bliss, agreeing, but too young, I think, to be a successor. The Solarians
will have to find one elsewhere.
She was gazing at
the child, not in a fixed glare, but in a soft, mesmerizing way, and slowly the
noise the child was making lessened. It opened its eyes and looked at Bliss in
return. Its outcry was reduced to an occasional soft whimper.
Bliss made sounds
of her own, now, soothing ones, broken words that made little sense in
themselves but were meant only to reinforce the calming effect of her thoughts.
It was as though she were mentally fingering the child's unfamiliar mind and
seeking to even out its disheveled emotions.
Slowly, never
taking its eyes off Bliss, the child got to its feet, stood there swaying a
moment, then made a dash for the silent, frozen robot. It threw its arms about
the sturdy robotic leg as though avid for the security of its touch.
Trevize said, I
suppose that the robot is its-nursemaid-or caretaker. I suppose a Solarian
can't care for another Solarian, not even a parent for a child.
Pelorat said,
And I suppose the child is hermaphroditic.
It would have to
be, said Trevize.
Bliss, still
entirely preoccupied with the child, was approaching it slowly, hands held half
upward, palms toward herself, as though emphasizing that there was no intention
of seizing the small creature. The child was now silent, watching the approach,
and holding on the more tightly to the robot.
Bliss said,
There, child-warm, child-soft, warm, comfortable, safe, childsafe-safe.
She stopped and,
without looking round, said in a low voice, Pel, speak to it in its language.
Tell it we're robots come to take care of it because the power failed.
Robots! said
Pelorat, shocked.
We must be
presented as robots. It's not afraid of robots. And it's never seen a human
being, maybe can't even conceive of them.
Pelorat said, I
don't know if I can think of the right expression. I don't know the archaic
word for robot.
Say robot,
then, Pel. If that doesn't work, say iron thing. Say whatever you can.
Slowly, word by
word, Pelorat spoke archaically. The child looked at him, frowning intensely,
as though trying to understand.
Trevize said,
You might as well ask it how to get out, while you're at it.
Bliss said, No.
Not yet. Confidence first, then information.
The child,
looking now at Pelorat, slowly released its hold on the robot and spoke in a
high-pitched musical voice.
Pelorat said
anxiously, It's speaking too quickly for me.
Bliss said, Ask
it to repeat more slowly. I'm doing my best to calm it and remove its fears.
Pelorat,
listening again to the child, said, I think it's asking what made Jemby stop.
Jemby must be the robot.
Check and make
sure, Pel.
Pelorat spoke,
then listened, and said, Yes, Jemby is the robot. The child calls itself
Fallom.
Good! Bliss
smiled at the child, a luminous, happy smile, pointed to it, and said, Fallom.
Good Fallom. Brave Fallom. She placed a hand on her chest and said, Bliss.
The child smiled.
It looked very attractive when it smiled. Bliss, it said, hissing the s a
bit imperfectly.
Trevize said,
Bliss, if you can activate the robot, Jemby, it might be able to tell us what
we want to know. Pelorat can speak to it as easily as to the child.
No, said Bliss.
That would be wrong. The robot's first duty is to protect the child. If it is
activated and instantly becomes aware of us, aware of strange human beings, it
may as instantly attack us. no strange human beings belong here. If I am then
forced to inactivate it, it can give us no information, and the child, faced
with a second inactivation of the only parent it knows-Well, I just won't do
it.
But we were
told, said Pelorat mildly, that robots can't harm human beings.
So we were,
said Bliss, but we were not told what kind of robots these Solarians have
designed. And even if this robot were designed to do no harm, it would have to
make a choice between its child, or the nearest thing to a child it can have,
and three objects whom it might not even recognize as human beings, merely as
illegal intruders. Naturally, it would choose the child and attack us.
She turned to the
child again. Fallow, she said, Bliss. She pointed, Pel-Trev.
Pel. Trev, said
the child obediently.
She came closer
to the child, her hands reaching toward it slowly. It watched her, then took a
step backward.
Calm, Fallom,
said Bliss. Good, Fallom. Touch, Fallom. Nice, Fallom.
It took a step
toward her, and Bliss sighed. Good, Fallom.
She touched
Fallom's bare arm, for it wore, as its parent had, only a long robe, open in
front, and with a loincloth beneath. The touch was gentle. She removed her arm,
waited, and made contact again, stroking softly.
The child's eyes
half-closed under the strong, calming effect of Bliss's mind.
Bliss's hands
moved up slowly, softly, scarcely touching, to the child's shoulders, its neck,
its ears, then under its long brown hair to a point just above and behind its
ears.
Her hands dropped
away then, and she said, The transducer-lobes are still small. The cranial
bone hasn't developed yet. There's just a tough layer of skin there, which will
eventually expand outward and be fenced in with bone after the lobes have fully
grown. Which means it can't, at the present time, control the estate or even
activate its own personal robot. Ask it how old it is, Pel.
Pelorat said,
after an exchange, It's fourteen years old, if I understand it rightly.
Trevize said, It
looks more like eleven.
Bliss said, The
length of the years used on this world may not correspond closely to Standard
Galactic Years. Besides, Spacers are supposed to have extended lifetimes and,
if the Solarians are like the other Spacers in this, they may also have
extended developmental periods. We can't go by years, after all.
Trevize said,
with an impatient click of his tongue, Enough anthropology. We must get to the
surface and since we are dealing with a child, we may be wasting our time
uselessly. It may not know the route to the surface. It may not ever have been
on the surface.
Bliss said,
Pel!
Pelorat knew what
she meant and there followed the longest conversation he had yet had with
Fallom.
Finally, he said,
The child knows what the sun is. It says it's seen it. I think it's seen
trees. It didn't act as though it were sure what the word meant or at least
what the word I used meant...
Yes, Janov,
said Trevize, but do get to the point.
I told Fallow
that if it could get us out to the surface, that might make it possible for us
to activate the robot. Actually, I said we would activate the robot. Do you
suppose we might?
Trevize said,
We'll worry about that later. Did it say it would guide us?
Yes. I thought
the child would be more anxious to do it, you see, if I made that promise. I
suppose we're running the risk of disappointing it...
Come, said
Trevize, let's get started. All this will be academic if we are caught
underground.
Pelorat said
something to the child, who began to walk, then stopped and looked back at
Bliss.
Bliss held out
her hand and the two then walked hand in hand.
I'm the new
robot, she said, smiling slightly.
It seems
reasonably happy over that, said Trevize.
Fallom skipped
along and, briefly, Trevize wondered if it were happy simply because Bliss had
labored to make it so, or if, added to that, there was the excitement of
visiting the surface and of having three new robots, or whether it was
excitement at the thought of having its Jemby foster-parent back. Not that it
mattered-as long as the child led them.
There seemed no
hesitation in the child's progress. It turned without pause whenever there was
a choice of paths. Did it really know where it was going, or was it all simply
a matter of a child's indifference? Was it simply playing a game with no clear
end in sight?
But Trevize was
aware, from the slight burden on his progress, that he was moving uphill, and
the child, bouncing self-importantly forward, was pointing ahead and
chattering.
Trevize looked at
Pelorat, who cleared his throat and said, I think what it's saying is
'doorway. '
I hope your
thought is correct, said Trevize.
The child broke
away from Bliss, and was running now. It pointed to a portion of the flooring
that seemed darker than the sections immediately neighboring it. The child
stepped on it, jumping up and down a few times, and then turned with a clear
expression of dismay, and spoke with shrill volubility.
Bliss said, with
a grimace, I'll have to supply the power. This is wearing me out.
Her face reddened
a bit and the lights dimmed, but a door opened just ahead of Fallom, who
laughed in soprano delight.
The child ran out
the door and the two men followed. Bliss came last, and looked back as the
lights just inside darkened and the door closed. She then paused to catch her
breath, looking rather worn out.
Well, said
Pelorat, we're out. Where's the ship?
All of them stood
bathed in the still luminous twilight.
Trevize muttered,
It seems to me that it was in that direction.
It seems so to
me, too, said Bliss. Let's walk, and she held out her hand to Fallom.
There was no
sound except those produced by the wind and by the motions and calls of living
animals. At one point they passed a robot standing motionless near the base of
a tree, holding some object of uncertain purpose.
Pelorat took a
step toward it out of apparent curiosity, but Trevize said, Not our business,
Janov. Move on.
They passed
another robot, at a greater distance, who had tumbled.
Trevize said,
There are robots littered over many kilometers in all directions, I suppose.
And then, triumphantly, Ah, there's the ship.
They hastened
their steps now, then stopped suddenly. Fallow raised its voice in an excited
squeak.
On the ground
near the ship was what appeared to be an air-vessel of primitive design, with a
rotor that looked energy-wasteful, and fragile besides. Standing next to the
air-vessel, and between the little party of Outworlders and their ship, stood four
human figures.
Too late, said
Trevize. We wasted too much time. Now what?
Pelorat said
wonderingly, Four Solarians7 It can't be. Surely they wouldn't come into
physical contact like that. Do you suppose those are holoimages?
They are
thoroughly material, said Bliss. I'm sure of that. They're not Solarians
either. There's no mistaking the minds. They're robots.
55.
WELL, THEN,
said Trevize wearily, onward! He resumed his walk toward the ship at a calm
pace and the others followed.
Pelorat said,
rather breathlessly, What do you intend to do?
If they're
robots, they've got to obey orders.
The robots were
awaiting them, and Trevize watched them narrowly as they came closer.
Yes, they must be
robots. Their faces, which looked as though they were made of skin underlain
with flesh, were curiously expressionless. They were dressed in uniforms that
exposed no square centimeter of skin outside the face. Even the hands were
covered by thin, opaque gloves.
Trevize gestured
casually, in a fashion that was unquestionably a brusque request that they step
aside.
The robots did
not move.
In a low voice,
Trevize said to Pelorat, put it into words, Janov. Be firm.
Pelorat cleared
his throat and, putting an unaccustomed baritone into his voice, spoke slowly,
gesturing them aside much as Trevize had done. At that, one of the robots, who
was perhaps a shade taller than the rest, said something in a cold and incisive
voice.
Pelorat turned to
Trevize. I think he said we were Outworlders.
Tell him we are
human beings and must be obeyed.
The robot spoke
then, in peculiar but understandable Galactic. I understand you, Outworlder. I
speak Galactic. We are Guardian Robots.
Then you have
heard me say that we are human beings and that you must therefore obey us.
We are
programmed to obey Rulers only, Outworlder. You are not Rulers and not
Solarian. Ruler Bander has not responded to the normal moment of Contact and we
have come to investigate at close quarters. It is our duty to do so. We find a
spaceship not of Solarian manufacture, several Outworlders present, and all
Bander robots inactivated. Where is Ruler Bander?
Trevize shook his
head and said slowly and distinctly, We know nothing of what you say. Our
ship's computer is not working well. We found ourselves near this strange
planet against our intentions. We landed to find our location. We found all
robots inactivated. We know nothing of what might have happened.
That is not a
credible account. If all robots on the estate are inactivated and all power is
off, Ruler Bander must be dead. It is not logical to suppose that by
coincidence it died just as you landed. There must be some sort of causal
connection.
Trevize said,
with no set purpose but to confuse the issue and to indicate his own foreigner's
lack of understanding and, therefore, his innocence, But the power is not off.
You and the others are active.
The robot said,
We are Guardian Robots. We do not belong to any Ruler. We belong to all the
world. We are not Ruler-controlled but are nuclearpowered. I ask again, where
is Ruler Bander?
Trevize looked
about him. Pelorat appeared anxious; Bliss was tight-lipped but calm. Fallom
was trembling, but Bliss's hand touched the child's shoulder and it stiffened
somewhat and lost facial expression. (Was Bliss sedating it?)
The robot said,
Once again, and for the last time, where is Ruler Bander?
I do not know,
said Trevize grimly.
The robot nodded
and two of his companions left quickly. The robot said, My fellow Guardians
will search the mansion. Meanwhile, you will be held for questioning. Hand me
those objects you wear at your side.
Trevize took a
step backward. They are harmless.
Do not move
again. I do not question their nature, whether harmful or harmless. I ask for
them.
No.
The robot took a
quick step forward, and his arm flashed out too quickly for Trevize to realize
what was happening. The robot's hand was on his shoulder; the grip tightened
and pushed downward. Trevize went to his knees.
The robot said,
Those objects. It held out its other hand.
No, gasped
Trevize.
Bliss lunged
forward, pulled the blaster out of its holster before Trevize, clamped in the
robot's grip, could do anything to prevent her, and held it out toward the
robot. Here, Guardian, she said, and if you'll give me a moment-here's the
other. Now release my companion.
The robot,
holding both weapons, stepped back, and Trevize rose slowly to his feet,
rubbing his left shoulder vigorously, face wincing with pain.
(Fallow whimpered
softly, and Pelorat picked it up in distraction, and held it tightly.)
Bliss said to
Trevize, in a furious whisper, Why are you fighting him? He can kill you with
two fingers.
Trevize groaned
and said, between gritted teeth, Why don't you handle him.
I'm trying to.
It takes time. His mind is tight, intensely programmed, and leaves no handle. I
must study it. You play for time.
Don't study his
mind. Just destroy it, said Trevize, almost soundlessly.
Bliss looked
quickly toward the robot. It was studying the weapons intently, while the one
other robot that still remained with it watched the Outworlders. Neither seemed
interested in the whispering that was going on between Trevize and Bliss.
Bliss said, No.
no destruction. We killed one dog and hurt another on the first world. You know
what happened on this world. (Another quick glance at the Guardian Robots.)
Gaia does not needlessly butcher life or intelligence. I need time to work it
out peacefully.
She stepped back
and stared at the robot fixedly.
The robot said,
These are weapons.
No, said
Trevize.
Yes, said Bliss,
but they are no longer useful. They are drained of energy.
is that indeed
so? Why should you carry weapons that are drained of energy? Perhaps they are
not drained. The robot held one of the weapons in its fist and placed its
thumb accurately. Is this the way it is activated?
Yes, said
Bliss; if you tighten the pressure, it would be activated, if it contained
energy-but it does not.
Is that
certain? The robot pointed the weapon at Trevize. Do you still say that if I
activate it now, it will not work?
It will not
work, said Bliss.
Trevize was
frozen in place and unable to articulate. He had tested the blaster after
Hander had drained it and it was totally dead, but the robot was holding the
neuronic whip. Trevize had not tested that.
If the whip
contained even a small residue of energy, there would be enough for a
stimulation of the pain nerves, and what Trevize would feel would make the grip
of the robot's hand seem to have been a pat of affection.
When he had been
at the Naval Academy, Trevize had been forced to take a mild neuronic whipblow,
as all cadets had had to. That was just to know what it was like. Trevize felt
no need to know anything more.
The robot
activated the weapon and, for a moment, Trevize stiffened painfully-and then slowly
relaxed. The whip, too, was thoroughly drained.
The robot stared
at Trevize and then tossed both weapons to one side. How do these come to be
drained of energy? it demanded. If they are of no use, why do you carry
them?
Trevize said, I
am accustomed to the weight and carry them even when drained.
The robot said,
That does not make sense. You are all under custody. You will be held for
further questioning, and, if the Rulers so decide, you will then be
inactivated. How does one open this ship? We must search it.
It will do you
no good, said Trevize. You won't understand it.
If not I, the
Rulers will understand.
They will not
understand, either.
Then you will
explain so that they will understand.
I will not.
Then you will be
inactivated.
My inactivation
will give you no explanation, and I think I will be inactivated even if I
explain.
Bliss muttered,
Keep it up. I'm beginning to unravel the workings of its brain.
The robot ignored
Bliss. (Did she see to that? thought Trevize, and hoped savagely that she had.)
Keeping its
attention firmly on Trevize, the robot said, If you make difficulties, then we
will partially inactivate you. We will damage you and you will then tell us
what we want to know.
Suddenly, Pelorat
called out in a half-strangled cry. Wait, you cannot do this. Guardian, you
cannot do this.
I am under
detailed instructions, said the robot quietly. I can do this. Of course, I
shall do as little damage as is consistent with obtaining information.
But you cannot.
Not at all. I am an Outworlder, and so are these two companions of mine. But
this child, and Pelorat looked at Fallom, whom he was still carrying, is a
Solarian. It will tell you what to do and you must obey it.
Fallom looked at
Pelorat with eyes that were open, but seemed empty.
Bliss shook her
head, sharply, but Pelorat looked at her without any sign of understanding.
The robot's eyes
rested briefly on Fallom. It said, The child is of no importance. It does not
have transducer-lobes.
It does not yet
have fully developed transducer-lobes, said Pelorat, panting, but it will
have them in time. It is a Solarian child.
It is a child,
but without fully developed transducer-lobes it is not a Solarian. I am not
compelled to follow its orders or to keep it from harm.
But it is the
offspring of Ruler Bander.
Is it? How do
you come to know that?
Pelorat
stuttered, as he sometimes did when overearnest. Wh what other child would be
on this estate?
How do you know
there aren't a dozen?
Have you seen
any others?
It is I who will
ask the questions.
At this moment,
the robot's attention shifted as the second robot touched its arm. The two
robots who had been sent to the mansion were returning at a rapid run that,
nevertheless, had a certain irregularity to it.
There was silence
till they arrived and then one of them spoke in the Solarian language-at which
all four of the robots seemed to lose their elasticity. For a moment, they
appeared to wither, almost to deflate.
Pelorat said,
They've found Bander, before Trevize could wave him silent.
The robot turned
slowly and said, in a voice that slurred the syllables, Ruler Bander is dead.
By the remark you have just made, you show us you were aware of the fact. How
did that come to be?
How can I know?
said Trevize defiantly.
You knew it was
dead. You knew it was there to be found. How could you know that, unless you
had been there-unless it was you that had ended the life? The robot's
enunciation was already improving. It had endured and was absorbing the shock.
Then Trevize
said, How could we have killed Bander? With its transducer-lobes it could have
destroyed us in a moment.
How do you know
what, or what not, transducer-lobes could do?
You mentioned
the transducer-lobes just now.
I did no more
than mention them. I did not describe their properties or abilities.
The knowledge
came to us in a dream.
That is not a
credible answer.
Trevize said, To
suppose that we have caused the death of Bander is not credible, either.
Pelorat added,
And in any case, if Ruler Bander is dead, then Ruler Fallom now controls this
estate. Here the Ruler is, and it is it whom you must obey.
I have already
explained, said the robot, that an offspring with undeveloped
transducer-lobes is not a Solarian. It cannot be a Successor, therefore,
Another Successor, of the appropriate age, will be flown in as soon as we
report this sad news.
What of Ruler Fallom?
There is no
Ruler Fallom. There is only a child and we have an excess of children. It will
be destroyed.
Bliss said
forcefully, You dare not. It is a child!
It is not I,
said the robot, who will necessarily do the act and it is certainly not I who
will make the decision. That is for the consensus of the Rulers. In times of
child-excess, however, I know well what the decision will in.
No. I say no.
It will be
painless. But another ship is coming. It is important that we go into what was
the Bander mansion and set up a holovision Council that will supply a Successor
and decide on what to do with you. Give me the child.
Bliss snatched
the semicomatose figure of Fallom from Pelorat. Holding it tightly and trying
to balance its weight on her shoulder, she said, Do not touch this child.
Once again, the
robot's arm shot out swiftly and it stepped forward, reaching for Fallom. Bliss
moved quickly to one side, beginning her motion well before the robot had begun
its own. The robot continued to move forward, however, as though Bliss were
still standing before it. Curving stiffly downward, with the forward tips of
its feet as the pivot, it went down on its face. The other three stood
motionless, eyes unfocused.
Bliss was
sobbing, partly with rage. I almost had the proper method of control, and it
wouldn't give me the time. I had no choice but to strike and now all four are
inactivated. Let's get on the ship before the other ship lands. I am too ill to
face additional robots, now.
PART FIVE
MELPOMENIA
Chapter 13
Away from Solaria
56.
THE LEAVING was a
blur. Trevize had gathered up his futile weapons, had opened the airlock, and
they had tumbled in. Trevize didn't notice until they were off the surface that
Fallom had been brought in as well.
They probably
would not have made it in time if the Solarian use of airflight had not been so
comparatively unsophisticated. It took the approaching Solarian vessel an
unconscionable time to descend and land. On the other hand, it took virtually
no time for the computer of the Far Star to take the gravitic ship vertically
upward.
And although the
cut-off of the gravitational interaction and, therefore, of inertia wiped out
the otherwise unbearable effects of acceleration that would have accompanied so
speedy a takeoff, it did not wipe out the effects of air resistance. The outer
hull temperature rose at a distinctly more rapid rate than navy regulations (or
ship specifications, for that matter) would have considered suitable.
As they rose,
they could see the second Solarian ship land and several more approaching.
Trevize wondered how many robots Bliss could have handled, and decided they
would have been overwhelmed if they had remained on the surface fifteen minutes
longer.
Once out in space
(or space enough, with only tenuous wisps of the planetary exosphere around
them), Trevize made for the nightside of the planet. It was a hop away, since
they had left the surface as sunset was approaching. In the dark, the Far Star
would have a chance to cool more rapidly, and there the ship could continue to
recede from the surface in a slow spiral.
Pelorat came out
of the room he shared with Bliss. He said, The child is sleeping normally now.
We've showed it how to use the toilet and it had no trouble understanding.
That's not
surprising. It must have had similar facilities in the mansion.
I didn't see any
there and I was looking, said Pelorat feelingly. We didn't get back on the
ship a moment too soon for me.
Or any of us.
But why did we bring that child on board?
Pelorat shrugged
apologetically. Bliss wouldn't let go. It was like saving a life in return for
the one she took. She can't bear...
I know, said
Trevize.
Pelorat said,
It's a very oddly shaped child.
Being
hermaphroditic, it would have to be, said Trevize.
It has
testicles, you know.
It could
scarcely do without them.
And what I can
only describe as a very small vagina.
Trevize made a
face. Disgusting.
Not really,
Golan, said Pelorat, protesting. It's adapted to its needs. It only delivers
a fertilized egg-cell, or a very tiny embryo, which is then developed under
laboratory conditions, tended, I dare say, by robots.
And what happens
if their robot-system breaks down? If that happens, they would no longer be
able to produce viable young.
Any world would
be in serious trouble if its social structure broke down completely.
Not that I would
weep uncontrollably over the Solarians.
Well, said
Pelorat, I admit it doesn't seem a very attractive world-to us, I mean. But
that's only the people and the social structure, which are not our type at all,
dear chap. But subtract the people and the robots, and you have a world which
otherwise...
Might fall apart
as Aurora is beginning to do, said Trevize. How's Bliss, Janov?
Worn out, I'm
afraid. She's sleeping now. She had a very bad time, Golan.
I didn't exactly
enjoy myself either.
Trevize closed
his eyes, and decided he could use some sleep himself and would indulge in that
relief as soon as he was reasonably certain the Solarians had no space
capability-and so far the computer had reported nothing of artifactitious
nature in space.
He thought
bitterly of the two Spacer planets they had visited-hostile wild dogs on
one-hostile hermaphroditic loners on the other-and in neither place the tiniest
hint as to the location of Earth. All they had to show for the double visit was
Fallom.
He opened his
eyes. Pelorat was still sitting in place at the other side of the computer,
watching him solemnly.
Trevize said,
with sudden conviction, We should have left that Solarian child behind.
Pelorat said,
The poor thing. They would have killed it.
Even so, said
Trevize, it belonged there. It's part of that society. Being put to death
because of being superfluous is the sort of thing it's born to.
Oh, my dear
fellow, that's a hardhearted way to look at it.
It's a rational
way. We don't know how to care for it, and it may suffer more lingeringly with
us and die anyway. What does it eat?
Whatever we do,
I suppose, old man. Actually, the problem is what do we eat? How much do we
have in the way of supplies?
Plenty. Plenty.
Even allowing for our new passenger.
Pelorat didn't
look overwhelmed with happiness at this remark. He said, It's become a pretty
monotonous diet. We should have taken some items on board on Comporellon-not
that their cooking was excellent.
We couldn't. We
left, if you remember, rather hurriedly, as we left Aurora, and as we left, in
particular, Solaria. But what's a little monotony? It spoils one's pleasure,
but it keeps one alive.
Would it be
possible to pick up fresh supplies if we need to?
Anytime, Janov.
With a gravitic ship and hyperspatial engines, the Galaxy is a small place. In
days, we can be anywhere. It's just that half the worlds in the Galaxy are
alerted to watch for our ship and I would rather stay out of the way for a
time.
: suppose that's
so. Bander didn't seem interested in the ship.
It probably
wasn't even consciously aware of it. I suspect that the Solarians long ago gave
up space flight. Their prime desire is to be left completely alone and they can
scarcely enjoy the security of isolation if they are forever moving about in
space and advertising their presence.
What are we
going to do next, Golan?
Trevize said, We
have a third world to visit.
Pelorat shook his
head. Judging from the first two, I don't expect much from that.
Nor do I at the
moment, but just as soon as I get a little sleep, I'm going to get the computer
to plot our course to that third world.
57.
TREVIZE slept
considerably longer than he had expected to, but that scarcely mattered. There
was neither day nor night, in any natural sense, on board ship, and the
circadian rhythm never worked absolutely perfectly. The hours were what they
were made to be, and it wasn't uncommon for Trevize and Pelorat (and
particularly Bliss) to be somewhat out-of-sync as far as the natural rhythms of
eating and sleeping were concerned.
Trevize even
speculated, in the course of his scrapedown (the importance of conserving water
made it advisable to scrape off the suds rather than rinse them off), about
sleeping another hour or two, when he turned and found himself staring at
Fallom, who was as undressed as he was.
He could not help
jumping back, which, in the restricted area of the Personal, was bound to bring
part of his body against something hard. He grunted
Fallom was
staring curiously at him and was pointing at Trevize's penis. What it said was
incomprehensible but the whole bearing of the child seemed to bespeak a sense
of disbelief. For his own peace of mind, Trevize had no choice but to put his
hands over his penis.
Then Fallom said,
in its high-pitched voice, Greetings.
Trevize started
slightly at the child's unexpected use of Galactic, but the word had the sound
of having been memorized.
Fallom continued,
a painstaking word at a time, Blisssay-you-wash me.
Yes? said
Trevize. He put his hands on Fallom's shoulders. You-stay here.
He pointed
downward at the floor and Fallom, of course, looked instantly at the place to
which the finger pointed. It showed no comprehension of the phrase at all.
Don't move,
said Trevize, holding the child tightly by both arms, pressing them toward the
body as though to symbolize immobility. He hastily dried himself and put on his
shorts, and over them his trousers.
He stepped out
and roared, Bliss!
It was difficult
for anyone to be more than four meters from any one else on the ship and Bliss
came to the door of her room at once. She said, smiling, Are you calling me,
Trevize; or was that the soft breeze sighing through the waving grass?
Let's not be
funny, Bliss. What is that? He jerked his thumb over his shoulder.
Bliss looked past
him and said, Well, it looks like the young Solarian we brought on board
yesterday.
You brought on
board. Why do you want me to wash it?
I should think
you'd want to. It's a very bright creature. It's picking up Galactic words
quickly. It never forgets once I explain something. Of course, I'm helping it
do so.
Naturally.
Yes. I keep it
calm. I kept it in a daze during most of the disturbing events on the planet. I
saw to it that it slept on board ship and I'm trying to divert its mind just a
little bit from its lost robot, Jemby, that, apparently, it loved very much.
So that it ends
up liking it here, I suppose.
I hope so. It's
adaptable because it's young, and I encourage that by as much as I dare
influence its mind. I'm going to teach it to speak Galactic.
Then you wash
it. Understood?
Bliss shrugged.
I will, if you insist, but I would want it to feel friendly with each of us. It
would be useful to have each of us perform functions. Surely you can co-operate
in that.
Not to this
extent. And when you finish washing it, get rid of it. I want to talk to you.
Bliss said, with
a sudden edge of hostility, How do you mean, get rid of it?
I don't mean
dump it through the airlock. I mean, put it in your room. Sit it down in a
corner. I want to talk at you.
I'll be at your
service, she said coldly.
He stared after
her, nursing his wrath for the moment, then moved into the pilot-room, and
activated the viewscreen.
Solaria was a
dark circle with a curving crescent of light at the left. Trevize placed his
hands on the desk to make contact with the computer and found his anger cooling
at once. One had to be calm to link mind and computer effectively and,
eventually, conditioned reflex linked handhold and serenity.
There were no
artifactitious objects about the ship in any direction, out as far as the
planet itself. The Solarians (or their robots, most likely) could not, or would
not, follow.
Good enough. He
might as well get out of the night-shadow, then. If he continued to recede, it
would, in any case, vanish as Solaria's disc grew smaller than that of the more
distant, but much larger, sun that it circled.
He set the
computer to move the ship out of the planetary plane as well, since that would
make it possible to accelerate with greater safety. They would then more
quickly reach a region where space curvature would be low enough to make the
Jump secure.
And, as often on
such occasions, he fell to studying the stars. They were almost hypnotic in
their quiet changelessness. All their turbulence and instability were wiped out
by the distance that left them only dots of light.
One of those dots
might well be the sun about which Earth revolved-the original sun, under whose
radiation life began, and under whose beneficence humanity evolved.
Surely, if the
Spacer worlds circled stars that were bright and prominent members of the
stellar family, and that were nevertheless unlisted in the computer's Galactic
map, the same might be true of the sun.
Or was it only
the suns of the Spacer worlds that were omitted because of some primeval treaty
agreement that left them to themselves? Would Earth's sun be included in the
Galactic map, but not marked off from the myriads of stars that were sun-like,
yet had no habitable planet in orbit about itself?
There were after
all, some thirty billion sun-like stars in the Galaxy, and only about one in a
thousand had habitable planets in orbits about them. There might be a thousand
such habitable planets within a few hundred parsecs of his present position.
Should he sift through the sun-like stars one by one, searching for them?
Or was the
original sun not even in this region of the Galaxy? How many other regions were
convinced the sun was one of their neighbors, that they were primeval
Settlers-?
He needed
information, and so far he had none.
He doubted
strongly whether even the closest examination of the millennial ruins on Aurora
would give information concerning Earth's location. He doubted even more
strongly that the Solarians could be made to yield information.
Then, too, if all
information about Earth had vanished out of the great Library at Trantor; if no
information about Earth remained in the great Collective Memory of Gaia; there
seemed little chance that any information that might have existed on the lost
worlds of the Spacers would have been overlooked.
And if he found
Earth's sun and, then, Earth itself, by the sheerest good fortune-would
something force him to be unaware of the fact? Was Earth's defense absolute?
Was its determination to remain in hiding unbreakable?
What was he
looking for anyway?
Was it Earth? .
Or was it the flaw in Seldon's Plan that he thought (for no clear reason) he
might find on Earth?
Seldon's Plan had
been working for five centuries now, and would bring the human species (so it
was said) to safe harbor-at last in the womb of a Second Galactic Empire,
greater than the First, a nobler and a freer one-and yet he, Trevize, had voted
against it, and for Galaxia.
Galaxia would be
one large organism, while the Second Galactic Empire would, however great in
size and variety, be a mere union of individual organisms of microscopic size
in comparison with itself. The Second Galactic Empire would be another example
of the kind of union of individuals that humanity had set up ever since it
became humanity. The Second Galactic Empire might be the largest and best of
the species, but it would still be but one more member of that species.
For Galaxia, a
member of an entirely different species of organization, to be better than the
Second Galactic Empire, there must be a flaw in the Plan, something the great
Hari Seldon had himself overlooked.
But if it were
something Seldon had overlooked, how could Trevize correct the matter? He was
not a mathematician; knew nothing, absolutely nothing, about the details of the
Plan; would understand nothing, furthermore, even if it were explained to him.
All he knew were
the assumptions-that a great number of human beings be involved and that they
not be aware of the conclusions reached. The first assumption was
self-evidently true, considering the vast population of the Galaxy, and the
second had to be true since only the Second Foundationers knew the details of
the Plan, and they kept it to themselves securely enough.
That left an
added unacknowledged assumption, a taken-for-granted assumption, one so taken
for granted it was never mentioned nor thought of-and yet one that might be
false. An assumption that, if it were false, would alter the grand conclusion
of the Plan and make Galaxia preferable to Empire.
But if the
assumption was so obvious and so taken for granted that it was never even
expressed, how could it be false? And if no one ever mentioned it, or thought
of it, how could Trevize know it was there, or have any idea of its nature even
if he guessed its existence?
Was he truly
Trevize, the man with the flawless intuition-as Gaia insisted? Did he know the
right thing to do even when he didn't know why he. was doing it?
Now he was visiting
every Spacer world he knew about. Was that the right thing to do? Did the
Spacer worlds hold the answer? Or at least the beginning of the answer?
What was there on
Aurora but ruins and wild dogs? (And, presumably, other feral creatures. Raging
bulls? Overgrown rats? Stalking green-eyed cats?) Solaria was alive, but what
was there on it but robots and energy-transducing human beings? What had either
world to do with Seldon's Plan unless they contained the secret of the location
of the Earth?
And if they did,
what had Earth to do with Seldon's Plan? Was this all madness? Had he listened
too long and too seriously to the fantasy of his own infallibility?
An overwhelming
weight of shame came over him and seemed to press upon him to the point where
he could barely breathe. He looked at the stars remote, uncaring-and thought: I
must be the Great Fool of the Galaxy.
58.
BLISS'S voice
broke in on him. Well, Trevize, why do you want to seeis anything wrong? Her
voice had twisted into sudden concern.
Trevize looked up
and, for a moment, found it momentarily difficult to brush away his mood. He
stared at her, then said, No, no. Nothing's wrong. I-I was merely lost in
thought. Every once in a while, after all, I find myself thinking. .
He was uneasily
aware that Bliss could read his emotions. He had only her word that she was
voluntarily abstaining from any oversight of his mind.
She seemed to
accept his statement, however. She said, Pelorat is with Fallom, teaching it
Galactic phrases. The child seems to eat what we do without undue objection.
But what do you want to see me about?
Well, not
here,, said Trevize. The computer doesn't need me at the moment. If you want
to come into my room, the bed's made and you can sit on it while I sit on the
chair. Or vice versa, if you prefer.
It doesn't
matter. They walked the short distance to Trevize's room. She eyed him
narrowly. You don't seem furious anymore.
Checking my
mind?
Not at all.
Checking your face.
I'm not furious.
I may lose my temper momentarily, now and then, but that's not the same as
furious. If you don't mind, though, there are questions I must ask you.
Bliss sat down on
Trevize's bed, holding herself erect, and with a solemn expression on her
wide-cheeked face and in her dark brown eyes. Her shoulder-length black hair
was neatly arranged and her slim hands were clasped loosely in her lap. There
was a faint trace of perfume about her.
Trevize smiled.
You've dolled yourself up. I suspect you think I won't yell quite so hard at a
young and pretty girl.
You can yell and
scream all you wish if it will make you feel better. I just don't want you
yelling and screaming at Fallom.
I don't intend
to. In fact, I don't intend to yell and scream at you. Haven't we decided to be
friends?
Gaia has never
had anything but feelings of friendship toward you, Trevize.
I'm not talking
about Gaia. I know you're part of Gaia and that you are Gaia. Still there's
part of you that's an individual, at least after a fashion. I'm talking to the
individual. I'm talking to someone named Bliss without regard or with as little
regard as possible-to Gaia. Haven't we decided to be friends, Bliss?
Yes, Trevize.
Then how is it
you delayed dealing with the robots on Solaria after we had left the mansion
and reached the ship? I was humiliated and physically hurt, yet you did
nothing. Even though every moment might bring additional robots to the scene
and the number might overwhelm us, you did nothing.
Bliss looked at
him seriously, and spoke as though she were intent on explaining her actions
rather than defending them. I was not doing nothing, Trevize. I was studying
the Guardian Robots' minds, and trying to learn how to handle them.
I know that's
what you were doing. At least you said you were at the time. I just don't see
the sense of it. Why handle the minds when you were perfectly capable of
destroying them-as you finally did?
Do you think it
so easy to destroy an intelligent being?
Trevize's lips
twisted into an expression of distaste. Come, Bliss. An intelligent being? It
was just a robot.
Just a robot? A
little passion entered her voice. That's the argument always. Just. Just! Why
should the Solarian, Bander, have hesitated to kill us? We were just human
beings without transducers. Why should there be any hesitation about leaving
Fallom to its fate? It was just a Solarian, and an immature specimen at that.
If you start dismissing anyone or anything you want to do away with as just a
this or just a that, you can destroy anything you wish. There are always
categories you can find for them.
Trevize said,
Don't carry a perfectly legitimate remark to extremes just to make it seem
ridiculous. The robot was just a robot. You can't deny that. It was not human.
It was not intelligent in our sense. It was a machine mimicking an appearance
of intelligence.
Bliss said, How
easily you can talk when you know nothing about it. I am Gaia. Yes, I am Bliss,
too, but I am Gaia. I am a world that finds every atom of itself precious and
meaningful, and every organization of atoms even more precious and meaningful.
I/we/Gaia would not lightly break down an organization, though we would gladly
build it into something still more complex, provided always that that would not
harm the whole.
The highest form
of organization we know produces intelligence, and to be willing to destroy
intelligence requires the sorest need. Whether it is machine intelligence or
biochemical intelligence scarcely matters. In fact, the Guardian Robot
represented a kind of intelligence I/we/Gaia had never encountered. To study it
was wonderful. To destroy it, unthinkable-except in a moment of crowning
emergency.
Trevize said
dryly, There were three greater intelligences at stake: your own, that of
Pelorat, the human being you love, and, if you don't mind my mentioning it,
mine.
Four! You still
keep forgetting to include Fallom. They were not yet at stake. So I judged. See
here! Suppose you were faced with a painting, a great artistic masterpiece, the
existence of which meant death to you. All you had to do was to bring a wide
brush of paint slam-bang, and at random, across the face of that painting and
it would be destroyed forever, and you would be safe. But suppose, instead,
that if you studied the painting carefully, and added just a touch of paint
here, a speck there, scraped off a minute portion in a third place, and so on,
you would alter the painting enough to avoid death, and yet leave it a
masterpiece. Naturally, the revision couldn't be done except with the most
painstaking care. It would take time, but surely, if that time existed, you
would try to save the painting as well as your life.
Trevize said,
Perhaps. But in the end you destroyed the painting past redemption. The wide
paintbrush came down and wiped out-all the wonderful little touches of color
and subtleties of form and shape. And you did that instantly when a little
hermaphrodite was at risk, where our danger and your own had not moved you.
We Outworlders
were still not at immediate risk, while Fallom, it seemed to me, suddenly was.
I had to choose between the Guardian Robots and Fallom, and, with no time to
lose, I had to choose Fallom.
Is that what it
was, Bliss? A quick calculation weighing one mind against another, a quick
judging of the greater complexity and the greater worth?
Yes.
Trevize said,
Suppose I tell you, it was just a child that was standing before you, a child
threatened with death. An instinctive maternalism gripped you then, and you
saved it where earlier you were all calculation when only three adult lives
were at stake.
Bliss reddened
slightly. There might have been something like that in it; but it was not
after the fashion of the mocking way in which you say it. It had rational
thought behind it, too.
I wonder. If
there had been rational thought behind it, you might have considered that the
child was meeting the common fate inevitable in its own society. Who knows how
many thousands of children had been cut down to maintain the low number these
Solarians think suitable to their world?
There's more to
it than that, Trevize. The child would be killed because it was too young to be
a Successor, and that was because it had a parent who had died prematurely, and
that was because I had killed that parent.
At a time when
it was kill or be killed.
Not important. I
killed the parent. I could not stand by and allow the child to be killed for my
deed. Besides, it offers for study a brain of a kind that has never been
studied by Gaia.
A child's
brain.
It will not
remain a child's brain. It will further develop the two transducer-lobes on
either side of the brain. Those lobes give a Solarian abilities that all of
Gaia cannot match. Simply to keep a few lights lit, just to activate a device
to open a door, wore me out. Bander could have kept all the power going over an
estate as great in complexity and greater in size than that city we saw on
Comporellon-and do it even while sleeping.
Trevize said,
Then you see the child as an important bit of fundamental brain research.
In a way, yes.
That's not the
way I feel. To me, it seems we have taken danger aboard. Great danger.
Danger in what
way? It will adapt perfectly-with my help. It is highly intelligent, and
already shows signs of feeling affection for us. It will eat what we eat, go
where we go, and I/we/Gala will gain invaluable knowledge concerning its
brain.
What if it
produces young? It doesn't need a mate. It is its own mate.
It won't be of
child-bearing age for many years. The Spacers lived for centuries and the
Solarians had no desire to increase their numbers. Delayed reproduction is
probably bred into the population. Fallom will have no children for a long
time.
How do you know
this?
I don't know it.
I'm merely being logical.
And I tell you
Fallom will prove dangerous.
You don't know
that. And you're not being logical, either.
I feel it Bliss,
without reason. At the moment. And it is you, not I, who insists my intuition
is infallible.
And Bliss frowned
and looked uneasy.
59.
PELORAT paused at
the door to the pilot-room and looked inside in a rather ill-at-ease manner. It
was as though he were trying to decide whether Trevize was hard at work or not.
Trevize had his
hands on the table, as he always did when he made himself part of the computer,
and his eyes were on the viewscreen. Pelorat judged, therefore, he was at work,
and he waited patiently, trying not to move or, in any way, disturb the other.
Eventually,
Trevize looked up at Pelorat. It was not a matter of total awareness. Trevize's
eyes always seemed a bit glazed and unfocused when he was in
computer-communion, as though he were looking, thinking, living in some other
way than a person usually did.
But he nodded
slowly at Pelorat, as though the sight, penetrating with difficulty, did, at
last, sluggishly impress itself on the optic lobes. Then, after a while, he
lifted his hands and smiled and was himself again.
Pelorat said
apologetically, I'm afraid I'm getting in your way, Golan. Not seriously,
Janov. I was just testing to see if we were ready for the Jump. We are, just
about, but I think I'll give it a few more hours, just for luck.
Does luck-or
random factors-have anything to do with it?
An expression
only, said Trevize, smiling, but random factors do have something to do with
it, in theory. What's on your mind?
May I sit down?
Surely, but
let's go into my room. How's Bliss?
Very well. He
cleared his throat. She's sleeping again. She must have her sleep, you
understand.
I understand
perfectly. It's the hyperspatial separation.
Exactly, old
chap.
And Fallom?
Trevize reclined on the bed, leaving Pelorat the chair.
Those books out
of my library that you had your computer print up for me? The folk tales? It's
reading them. Of course, it understands very little Galactic, but it seems to
enjoy sounding out the words. He's-I keep wanting to use the masculine pronoun
for it. Why do you suppose that is, old fellow?
Trevize shrugged.
Perhaps because you're masculine yourself.
Perhaps. It's
fearfully intelligent, you know.
I'm sure.
Pelorat
hesitated. I gather you're not very fond of Fallom.
Nothing against
it personally, Janov. I've never had children and I've never been particularly
fond of them generally. You've had children, I seem to remember.
One son. It was
a pleasure, I recall, having my son when he was a little boy. Maybe that's why
I want to use the masculine pronoun for Fallom. It takes me back a quarter of a
century or so.
I've no
objection to your liking it, Janov.
You'd like him,
too, if you gave yourself a chance.
I'm sure I
would, Janov, and maybe someday I will give myself a chance to do so.
Pelorat hesitated
again. I also know that you must get tired of arguing with Bliss.
Actually, I
don't think we'll be arguing much, Janov. She and I are actually getting along
quite well. We even had a reasonable discussion just the other day-no shouting,
no recrimination-about her delay in inactivating the Guardian Robots. She keeps
saving our lives, after all, so I can't very well offer her less than
friendship, can I?
Yes, I see that,
but I don't mean arguing, in the sense of quarreling. I mean this constant
wrangle about Galaxia as opposed to individuality.
Oh, that! I
suppose that will continue-politely.
Would you mind,
Golan, if I took up the argument on her behalf?
Perfectly all
right. Do you accept the idea of Galaxia on your own, or is it that you simply
feel happier when you agree with Bliss?
Honestly, on my
own. I think that Galaxia is what should be forthcoming. You yourself chose
that course of action and I am constantly becoming more convinced that that is
correct.
Because I chose
it? That's no argument. Whatever Gaia says, I may be wrong, you know. So don't
let Bliss persuade you into Galaxia on that basis.
I don't think
you are wrong. Solaria showed me that, not Bliss.
How?
Well, to begin
with, we are Isolates, you and L
Her term, Janov.
I prefer to think of us as individuals.
A matter of
semantics, old chap. Call it what you will, we are enclosed in our private
skins surrounding our private thoughts, and we think first and foremost of
ourselves. Self-defense is our first law of nature, even if that means harming
everyone else in existence.
People have been
known to give their lives for others.
A rare
phenomenon. Many more people have been known to sacrifice the dearest needs of
others to some foolish whim of their own.
And what has
that to do with Solaria?
Why, on Solaria,
we see what Isolates-or individuals, if you prefer-can become. The Solarians
can hardly bear to divide a whole world among themselves. They consider living
a life of complete isolation to be perfect liberty.
They have no
yearning for even their own offspring, but kill them if there are too many.
They surround themselves with robot slaves to which they supply the power, so
that if they die, their whole huge estate symbolically dies as well. Is this
admirable, Golan? Can you compare it in decency, kindness, and mutual concern
with Gaia? Bliss has not discussed this with me at all. It is my own feeling.
Trevize said,
And it is like you to have that feeling, Janov. I share it. I think Solarian
society is horrible, but it wasn't always like that. They are descended from
Earthmen, and, more immediately, from Spacers who lived a much more normal
life. The Solarians chose a path, for one reason or another, which led to an
extreme, but you can't judge by extremes. In all the Galaxy, with its millions
of inhabited worlds, is there one you know that now, or in the past, has had a
society like that of Solaria, or even remotely like that of Solaria? And would
even Solaria have such a society if it were not riddled with robots? Is it
conceivable that a society of individuals could evolve to such a pitch of
Solarian horror without robots?
Pelorat's face
twitched a little. You punch holes in everything, Golan or at least I mean you
don't ever seem to be at a loss in defending the type of Galaxy you voted
against.
I won't knock
down everything. There is a rationale for Galaxia and when I find it, I'll know
it, and I'll give in. Or perhaps, more accurately, if I find it.
Do you think you
might not?
Trevize shrugged.
How can I say? Do you know why I'm waiting a few hours to make the Jump, and
why I'm in danger of talking myself into waiting a few days?
You said it
would be safer if we waited.
Yes, that's what
I said, but we'd be safe enough now. What I really fear is that those Spacer
worlds for which we have the co-ordinates will fail us altogether. We have only
three, and we've already used up two, narrowly escaping death each time. In doing
so, we have still not gained any hint as to Earth's location, or even, in
actual fact, Earth's existence. Now I face the third and last chance, and what
if it, too, fails us?
Pelorat sighed.
You know there are old folk tales-one, in fact, exists among those I gave
Fallom to practice upon-in which someone is allowed three wishes, but only
three. Three seems to be a significant number in these things, perhaps because
it is the first odd number so that it is the smallest decisive number. You
know, two out of three wins. The point is that in these stories, the wishes are
of no use. no one ever wishes correctly, which, I have always supposed, is
ancient wisdom to the effect that the satisfaction of your wants must be
earned, and not...
He fell suddenly
silent and abashed. I'm sorry, old man, but I'm wasting your time. I do tend
to rattle on when I get started on my hobby.
I find you
always interesting, Janov. I am willing to see the analogy. We have been given
three wishes, and we have had two and they have done us no good. Now only one
is left. Somehow, I am sure of failure again and so I wish to postpone it. That
is why I am putting off the Jump as long as possible.
What will you do
if you do fail again? Go back to Gaia? To Terminus?
Oh no, said
Trevize in a whisper, shaking his head. The search must continue-if I only
knew how.
Chapter 14
Dead Planet
60.
TREVIZE felt
depressed. What few victories he had had since the search began had never been
definitive; they had merely been the temporary staving off of defeat
Now he had
delayed the Jump to the third of the Spacer worlds till he had spread his
unease to the others. When he finally decided that he simply must tell the
computer to move the ship through hyperspace, Pelorat was standing solemnly in the
doorway to the pilot-room, and Bliss was just behind him and to one side. Even
Fallom was standing there, gazing at Trevize owlishly, while one hand gripped
Bliss's hand tightly.
Trevize had
looked up from the computer and had said, rather churlishly, Quite the family
group! but that was only his own discomfort speaking.
He instructed the
computer to Jump in such a way as to reenter space at a further distance from
the star in question than was absolutely necessary. He told himself that that
was because he was learning caution as a result of events on the first two
Spacer worlds, but he didn't believe that. Well underneath, he knew, he was
hoping that he would arrive. in space at a great enough distance from the star
to be uncertain as to whether it did or did not have a habitable planet. That
would give him a few more days of in-space travel before he could find out, and
(perhaps) have to stare bitter defeat in the face.
So now, with the
family group watching, he drew a deep breath, held it, then expelled it in a
between-the-lips whistle as he gave the computer its final instruction.
The star-pattern
shifted in a silent discontinuity and the viewscreen became barer, for he had
been taken into a region in which the stars were somewhat sparser. And there,
nearly in the center, was a brightly gleaming star.
Trevize grinned
broadly, for this was a victory of sorts. After all, the third set of
co-ordinates might have been wrong and there might have been no appropriate
G-type star in sight. He glanced toward the other three, and said, That's it.
Star number three.
Are you sure?
asked Bliss softly.
Watch! said
Trevize. I will switch to the equi-centered view in the computer's Galactic
map, and if that bright star disappears, it's not recorded on the map, and it's
the one we want.
The computer
responded to his command, and the star blinked out without any prior dimming.
It was as though it had never been, but the rest of the starfield remained as
it was, in sublime indifference.
We've got it,
said Trevize.
And yet he sent
the Far Star forward at little more than half the speed he might easily have
maintained. There was still the question of the presence or absence of a
habitable planet, and he was in no hurry to find out. Even after three days of
approach, there was still nothing to be said about that, either way.
Or, perhaps, not
quite nothing. Circling the star was a large gas giant. It was very far from
its star and it gleamed a very pale yellow on its daylight side, which they
could see, from their position, as a thick crescent.
Trevize did not
like its looks, but he tried not to show it and spoke as matter-of-factly as a
guidebook. There's a big gas giant out there, he said. It's rather
spectacular. It has a thin pair of rings and two sizable satellites that can be
made out at the moment.
Bliss said, Most
systems include gas giants, don't they?
Yes, but this is
a rather large one. Judging from the distance of its satellites, and their
periods of revolution, that gas giant is almost two thousand times as massive
as a habitable planet would be.
What's the
difference? said Bliss. Gas giants are gas giants and it doesn't matter what
size they are, does it? They're always present at great distances from the star
they circle, and none of them are habitable, thanks to their size and distance.
We just have to look closer to the star for a habitable planet.
Trevize
hesitated, then decided to place the facts on the table. The thing is, he
said, that gas giants tend to sweep a volume of planetary space clean. What
material they don't absorb into their own structures will coalesce into fairly
large bodies that come to make up their satellite system. They prevent other
coalescences at even a considerable distance from themselves, so that the
larger the gas giant, the more likely it is to be the only sizable planet of a
particular star. There'll just be the gas giant and asteroids.
You mean there
is no habitable planet here?
The larger the
gas giant, the smaller the chance of a habitable planet and that gas giant is
so massive it is virtually a dwarf star.
Pelorat said,
May we see it?
All three now
stared at the screen (Fallom was in Bliss's room with the j books).
The view was
magnified till the crescent filled the screen. Crossing that crescent a
distance above center was a thin dark line, the shadow of the ring system which
could itself be seen a small distance beyond the planetary surface as a
gleaming curve that stretched into the dark side a short distance before it
entered the shadow itself.
Trevize said,
The planet's axis of rotation is inclined about thirty-five degrees to its
plane of revolution, and its ring is in the planetary equatorial plane, of
course, so that the star's light comes in from below, at this point in its
orbit, and casts the ring's shadow well above the equator.
Pelorat watched
raptly. Those are thin rings.
Rather above
average size, actually, said Trevize.
According to
legend, the rings that circle a gas giant in Earth's planetary system are much
wider, brighter, and more elaborate than this one. The rings actually dwarf the
gas giant by comparison.
I'm not
surprised, said Trevize. When a story is handed on from person to person for
thousands of years, do you suppose it shrinks in the telling?
Bliss said, It's
beautiful. If you watch the crescent, it seems to writhe and wriggle before
your eyes.
Atmospheric
storms, said Trevize. You can generally see that more clearly if you choose
an appropriate wavelength of light. Here, let me try. He placed his hands on
the desk and ordered the computer to work its way through the spectrum and stop
at the appropriate wavelength.
The mildly lit
crescent went into a wilderness of color that shifted so rapidly it almost
dazed the eyes that tried to follow. Finally, it settled into a red-orange,
and, within the crescent, clear spirals
drifted, coiling and uncoiling as they moved.
Unbelievable,
muttered Pelorat.
Delightful,
said Bliss.
Quite believable,
thought Trevize bitterly, and anything but delightful. Neither Pelorat nor
Bliss, lost in the beauty, bothered to think that the planet they admired
lowered the chances of solving the mystery Trevize was trying to unravel. But,
then, why should they? Both were satisfied that Trevize's decision had been
correct, and they accompanied him in his' search for certainty without an
emotional bond to it. It was useless to blame them for that.
He said, The
dark side seems dark, but if our eyes were sensitive to the range just a little
beyond the usual long-wave limit, we would see it as a dull, deep, angry red.
The planet is pouring infrared radiation out into space in great quantities
because it is massive enough to be almost red-hot. It's more than a gas giant;
it's a sub-star.
He waited a
little longer and then said, And now let's put that object out of our mind and
look for the habitable planet that may exist.
Perhaps it
does, said Pelorat, smiling. Don't give up, old fellow.
I haven't given
up, said Trevize, without true conviction. The formation of planets is too
complicated a matter for rules to be hard and fast. We speak only of
probabilities. With that monster out in space, the probabilities decrease, but
not to zero.
Bliss said, Why
don't you think of it this way? Since the first two sets of co-ordinates each
gave you a habitable planet of the Spacers, then this third set, which has
already given you an appropriate star, should give you a habitable planet as
well. Why speak of probabilities?
I certainly hope
you're right, said Trevize, who did not feel at all consoled. Now we will
shoot out of the planetary plane and in toward the star.
The computer took
care of that almost as soon as he had spoken his intention. He sat back in his
pilot's chair and decided, once again, that the one evil of piloting a gravitic
ship with a computer so advanced was that one could never-never-pilot any other
type of ship again.
Could he ever
again bear to do the calculations himself? Could he bear to have to take
acceleration into account, and limit it to a reasonable level? In all
likelihood, he would forget and pour on the energy till he and everyone on
board were smashed against one interior wall or another.
Well, then, he
would continue to pilot this one ship-or another exactly like it, if he could
even bear to make so much of a change-always.
And because he
wanted to keep his mind off the question of the habitable planet, yes or no, he
mused on the fact that he had directed the ship to move above the plane, rather
than below. Barring any definite reason to go below a plane, pilots almost
always chose to go above. Why?
For that matter,
why be so intent on considering one direction above and the other below? In the
symmetry of space that was pure convention.
Just the same, he
was always aware of the direction in which any planet under observation rotated
about its axis and revolved about its star. When both were counterclockwise,
then the direction of one's raised arm was north, and the direction of one's feet
was south. And throughout the Galaxy, north was pictured as above and south as
below.
It was pure
convention, dating back into the primeval mists, and it was followed slavishly.
If one looked at a familiar map with south above, one didn't recognize it. It
had to be turned about to make sense. And all things being equal, one turned
north-and above.
Trevize thought
of a battle fought by Bel Riose, the Imperial general of three centuries
before, who had veered his squadron below the planetary plane at a crucial
moment, and caught a squadron of vessels, waiting and unprepared. There were
complaints that it had been an unfair maneuver-by the losers, of course.
A convention, so
powerful and so primordially old, must have started on Earth-and that brought
Trevize's mind, with a jerk, back to the question of the habitable planet.
Pelorat and Bliss
continued to watch the gas giant as it slowly turned on the viewscreen in a
slow, slow back-somersault. The sunlit portion spread and, as Trevize kept its
spectrum fixed in the orange-red wavelengths, the storm-writhing of its surface
became ever madder and more hypnotic.
Then Fallom came
wandering in and Bliss decided it must take a nap and that so must she.
Trevize said to
Pelorat, who remained, I have to let go of the gas giant, Janov. I want to
have the computer concentrate on the search for a gravitational blip of the
right size.
Of course, old
fellow, said Pelorat.
But it was more
complicated than that. It was not just a blip of the right size that the
computer had to search for, it was one of the right size and at the right
distance. It would still be several days before he could be sure.
61.
TREVIZE walked
into his room, grave, solemn-indeed somber-and started perceptibly.
Bliss was waiting
for him and immediately next to her was Fallow, with its loincloth and robe
bearing the unmistakable fresh odor of steaming and vacupressing. The youngster
looked better in that than in one of Bliss's foreshortened nightgowns.
Bliss said, I
didn't want to disturb you at the computer, but now listen. Go on, Fallow.
Fallow said, in
its high-pitched musical voice, I greet you, Protector Trevize. It is with
great pleasure that I am ap-ad-accompanying you on this ship through space. I
am happy, too, for the kindness of my friends, Bliss and Pel.
Fallow finished
and smiled prettily, and once again Trevize thought to himself: Do I think of
it as a boy or as a girl or as both or as neither?
He nodded his
head. Very well memorized. Almost perfectly pronounced.
Not at all
memorized, said Bliss warmly. Fallow composed this itself and asked if it
would be possible to recite it to you. I didn't even know what Fallow would say
till I heard it said.
Trevize forced a
smile, In that case, very good indeed. He noticed Bliss avoided pronouns when
she could.
Bliss turned to
Fallow and said, I told you Trevize would like it. Now go to Pel and you can
have some more reading if you wish.
Fallow ran off,
and Bliss said, It's really astonishing how quickly Fallow is picking up
Galactic. The Solarians must have a special aptitude for languages. Think how
Bander spoke Galactic merely from hearing it on hyperspatial communications.
Those brains may be remarkable in ways other than energy transduction.
Trevize grunted.
Bliss said,
Don't tell me you still don't like Fallom.
I neither like
nor dislike. The creature simply makes me uneasy. For one thing, it's a grisly
feeling to be dealing with a hermaphrodite.
Bliss said,
Come, Trevize, that's ridiculous. Fallom is a perfectly acceptable living
creature. To a society of hermaphrodites, think how disgusting you and I must
seem-males and females generally. Each is half of a whole and, in order to
reproduce, there must be a temporary and clumsy union.
Do you object to
that, Bliss?
Don't pretend to
misunderstand. I am trying to view us from the hermaphroditic standpoint. To
them, it must seem repellent in the extreme; to us, it seems natural. So Fallom
seems repellent to you, but that's just a shortsighted parochial reaction.
Frankly, said
Trevize, it's annoying not to know the pronoun to use in connection with the
creature. It impedes thought and conversation to hesitate forever at the
pronoun.
But that's the
fault of our language, said Bliss, and not of Fallom. no human language has
been devised with hermaphroditism in mind. And I'm glad you brought it up,
because I've been thinking about it myself. Saying it, as Bander itself
insisted on doing, is no solution. That is a pronoun intended for objects to
which sex is irrelevant, and there is no pronoun at all for objects that are
sexually active in both senses. Why not just pick one of the pronouns
arbitrarily, then? I think of Fallom as a girl. She has the high voice of one,
for one thing, and she has the capacity of producing young, which is the vital
definition of femininity. Pelorat has agreed; why don't you do so, too? Let it
be she and her.
Trevize shrugged.
Very well. It will sound peculiar to point out that she has testicles, but
very well.
Bliss sighed. You
do have this annoying habit of trying to turn everything into a joke, but I
know you are under tension and I'll make allowance for that. Just use the
feminine pronoun for Fallom, please.
I will. Trevize
hesitated, then, unable to resist, said, Fallom seems more your
surrogate-child every time I see you together. Is it that you want a child and
don't think Janov can give you one?
Bliss's eyes
opened wide. He's not there for children! Do you think I use him as a handy
device to help me have a child? It is not time for me to have a child, in any
case. And when it is time, it will have to be a Gaian child, something for
which Pel doesn't qualify.
You mean Janov
will have to be discarded?
Not at all. A
temporary diversion, only. It might even be brought about by artificial
insemination.
I presume you
can only have a child when Gaia's decision is that one is' necessary; when
there is a gap produced by the death of an already-existing, Gaian human
fragment.
That is an
unfeeling way of putting it, but it is true enough. Gaia must be well
proportioned in all its parts and relationships.
As in the case
of the Solarians.
Bliss's lips
pressed together and her face grew a little white. Not at all. '' The
Solarians produce more than they need and destroy the excess. We produce just
what we need and there is never a necessity of destroying-as you replace the
dying outer layers of your skin by just enough new growth for renewal and by
not one cell more.
I see what you
mean, said Trevize. I hope, by the way, that you are considering Janov's
feelings.
In connection
with a possible child for me? That has never come up for discussion; nor will
it.
No, I don't mean
that. It strikes me you are becoming more and more interested in Fallom. Janov
may feel neglected.
He's not
neglected, and he is as interested in Fallom as I am. She is another point of
mutual involvement that draws us even closer together. Can it be that you are
the one who feels neglected?
I? He was
genuinely surprised.
Yes, you. I don't
understand Isolates any more than you understand Gaia, but I have a feeling
that you enjoy being the central point of attention on this ship, and you may
feel cut out by Fallom.
That's foolish.
No more foolish
than your suggestion that I am' neglecting Pel.
Then let's
declare a truce and stop. I'll try to view Fallom as a girl, and I shall not
worry excessively about you being inconsiderate of Janov's feelings.
Bliss smiled.
Thank you. All is well, then.
Trevize turned
away, and Bliss then said, Wait!
Trevize turned
back and said, just a bit wearily, Yes?
It's quite clear
to me, Trevize, that you're sad and depressed. I am not going to probe your
mind, but you might be willing to tell me what's wrong. Yesterday, you said
there was an appropriate planet in this system and you seemed quite pleased.
It's still there, I hope. The finding hasn't turned out to be mistaken, has
it?
There's an
appropriate planet in the system, and it's still there, said Trevize.
Is it the right
size?
Trevize nodded.
Since it's appropriate, it's of the right size. And it's at the right distance
from the star as well.
Well, then,
what's wrong?
We're close
enough now to analyze the atmosphere. It turns out that it has none to speak
of.
No atmosphere?
None to speak
of. It's a nonhabitable planet, and there is no other circling the sun that has
even the remotest capacity for habitability. We have come up with zero on this
third attempt.
62.
PELORAT, looking
grave, was clearly unwilling to intrude on Trevize's unhappy silence. He
watched from the door of the pilot-room, apparently hoping that Trevize would
initiate a conversation.
Trevize did not.
If ever a silence seemed stubborn, his did.
And finally,
Pelorat could stand it no longer, and said, in a rather timid way, What are we
doing?
Trevize looked
up, stared at Pelorat for a moment, turned away, and then said, We're zeroing
in on the planet.
But since
there's no atmosphere...
The computer
says there's no atmosphere. Till now, it's always told me what I've wanted to
hear and I've accepted it. Now it has told me something I don't want to hear,
and I'm going to check it. If the computer is ever going to be wrong, this is
the time I want it to be wrong.
Do you think
it's wrong?
No; I don't.
Can you think of
any reason that might make it wrong?
No, I can't.
Then why are you
bothering, Golan?
And Trevize
finally wheeled in his seat to face Pelorat, his face twisted in near-despair,
and said, Don't you see, Janov, that I can't think of anything else to do? We
drew blanks on the first two worlds as far as Earth's location is concerned,
and now this world is a blank. What do I do now? Wander from world to world,
and peer about and say, Pardon me. Where's Earth? Earth has covered its tracks
too well. Nowhere has it left any hint. I'm beginning to think that it will see
to it that we're incapable of picking up a hint even if one exists.
Pelorat nodded,
and said, I've been thinking along those lines myself. Do you mind if we
discuss it? I know you're unhappy, old chap, and don't want to talk, so if you
want me to leave you alone, I will.
Go ahead,
discuss it, said Trevize, with something that was remarkably like a groan.
What have I got better to do than listen?
Pelorat said,
That doesn't sound as though you really want me to talk, but perhaps it will
do us good. Please stop me at any time if you decide you can stand it no
longer. It seems to me, Golan, that Earth need not take only passive and
negative measures to hide itself. It need not merely wipe out references to
itself. Might it not plant false evidence and work actively for obscurity in
that fashion?
How do you
mean?
Well, we've
heard of Earth's radioactivity in several places, and that sort of thing would
be designed to make anyone break off any attempt to locate it. If it were truly
radioactive, it would be totally unapproachable. In all likelihood, we would
not even be able to set foot on it. Even robot explorers, if we had any, might
not survive the radiation. So why look? And if it is not radioactive, it
remains inviolate, except for accidental approach, and even then it might have
other means of masking itself.
Trevize managed a
smile. Oddly enough, Janov, that thought has occurred to me. It has even
occurred to me that that improbable giant satellite has been invented and
planted in the world's legends. As for the gas giant with the monstrous ring
system, that is equally improbable and may be equally planted. It is all
designed, perhaps, to have us look for something that doesn't exist, so that we
go right through the correct planetary system, staring at Earth and dismissing
it because, in actual fact, it lacks a large satellite or a triple-ringed
cousin or a radioactive crust. We don't recognize it, therefore, and don't
dream we are looking at it. I imagine worse, too.
Pelorat looked
downcast. How can there be worse?
Easily-when your
mind gets sick in the middle of the night and begins searching the vast realm
of fantasy for anything that can deepen despair. What if Earth's ability to
hide is ultimate? What if our minds can be clouded? What if we can move right
past Earth, with its giant satellite and with its distant ringed gas giant, and
never see any of it? What if we have already done so?
But if you
believe that, why are we-?
I don't say I
believe that. I'm talking about mad fancies. We'll keep on looking.
Pelorat
hesitated, then said, For how long, Trevize? At some point, surely, we'll have
to give up.
Never, said
Trevize fiercely. If I have to spend the rest of my life going from planet to
planet and peering about and saying, Please, sir, where's Earth? then that's
what I'll do. At any time, I can take you and Bliss and even Fallom, if you
wish, back to Gaia and then take of on my own.
Oh no. You know
I won't leave you, Golan, and neither will Bliss. We'll go planet-hopping with
you, if we must. But why?
'. Because I must
find Earth, and because I will. I don't know how, but I will. Now, look, I'm
trying to reach a position where I can study the sunlit aide of the planet
Without its suit being too close, so just let me be for a while.
Pelorat fell
silent, but did not leave. He continued to watch while Trevize studied the
planetary image, more than half in daylight, on the screen. To Pelorat, it
seemed featureless, but he knew that Trevize, bound to the computer, saw it
under enhanced circumstances.
Trevize
whispered, There's a haze.
Then there must
be an atmosphere, blurted out Pelorat.
Not necessarily
much of one. Not enough to support life, but enough to support a thin wind that
will raise dust. It's a well-known characteristic of planets with thin
atmospheres. There may even be small polar ice caps. A little water-ice
condensed at the poles, you know. This world is too warm for solid carbon
dioxide. I'll have to switch to radar-mapping. And if I do that I can work more
easily on the nightside.
Really?
Yes. I should
have tried it first, but with a virtually airless and, therefore, cloudless
planet, the attempt. with visible light seems so natural.
Trevize was
silent for a long time, while the viewscreen grew fuzzy with radar-reflections
that produced almost the abstraction of a planet, something that an artist of
the Cleonian period might have produced. Then he said, Well... emphatically,
holding the sound for a while, and was silent again.
Pelorat said, at
last, What's the well about?
Trevize looked at
him briefly. No craters that I can see.
No craters? Is
that good?
Totally unexpected,
said Trevize. His face broke into a grin, And very good. In fact, possibly
magnificent.
63.
FALLOM remained
with her nose pressed against the ship's porthole, where a small segment of the
Universe was visible in the precise form in which the eye saw it, without
computer enlargement or enhancement.
Bliss, who had
been trying to explain it all, sighed and said in a low voice to Pelorat, I
don't know how much she understands, Pel dear. To her, her father's mansion and
a small section of the estate it stood upon was all the Universe. I don't think
she was ever out at night, or ever saw the stars.
Do you really
think so?
I really do. I
didn't dare show her any part of it until she had enough vocabulary to
understand me just a little-and how fortunate it was that you could speak with
her in her own language.
The trouble is
I'm not very good at it, said Pelorat apologetically. And the Universe is
rather hard to grasp if you come at it suddenly. She said to me that if those
little lights are giant worlds, each one just like Solaria-they're much larger
than Solaria, of course-that they couldn't hang in nothing. They ought to fall,
she says.
And she's right,
judging by what she knows. She asks sensible questions, and little by little,
she'll understand. At least she's curious and she's not frightened.
The thing is,
Bliss, I'm curious, too. Look how Golan changed as soon as he found out there
were no craters on the world we're heading for. I haven't the slightest idea
what difference that makes. Do you?
Not a bit. Still
he knows much more planetology than we do. We can only assume he knows what
he's doing.
I wish I knew.
Well, ask him.
Pelorat grimaced.
I'm always afraid I'll annoy him. I'm sure he thinks I ought to know these
things without being told.
Bliss said,
That's silly, Pel. He has no hesitation in asking you about any aspect of the
Galaxy's legends and myths which he thinks might be useful. You're always
willing to answer and explain, so why shouldn't he be? You go ask him. If it
annoys him, then he'll have a chance to practice sociability, and that will be
good for him.
Will you come
with me?
No, of course
not. I want to stay with Fallom and continue to try to get the concept of the
Universe into her head. You can always explain it to me afterward-once he
explains it to you.
64.
PELORAT entered
the pilot-room diffidently. He was delighted to note that Trevize was whistling
to himself and was clearly in a good mood.
Golan, he said,
as brightly as he could.
Trevize looked
up. Janov! You're always tiptoeing in as though you think it's against the law
to disturb me. Close the door and sit down. Sit down! Look at that thing.
He pointed to the
planet on the viewscreen, and said, I haven't found more than two or three
craters, each quite small.
Does that make a
difference, Golan? Really?
A difference?
Certainly. How can you ask?
Pelorat gestured
helplessly. It's all a mystery to me. I was a history major at college. I took
sociology and psychology in addition to history, also languages and literature,
mostly ancient, and specialized in mythology in graduate school. I never came
near planetology, or any of the physical sciences.
That's no crime,
Janov. I'd rather you know what you know. Your facility in ancient languages
and in mythology has been of enormous use to us. You know that. And when it
comes to a matter of planetology, I'll take care of that.
He went on, You
see, Janov, planets form through the smashing together of smaller objects. The
last few objects to collide leave crater marks. Potentially, that is. If the
planet is large enough to be a gas giant, it is essentially liquid under a
gaseous atmosphere and the final collisions are just splashes and leave no
marks.
Smaller planets
which are solid, whether icy or rocky, do show crater marks, and these remain
indefinitely unless an agency for removal exists. There are three types of
removals.
First, a world
may have an icy surface overlying a liquid ocean. In that case, any colliding
object breaks through the ice and splashes water. Behind it the ice refreezes
and heals the puncture, so to speak. Such a planet, or satellite, would have to
be cold, and would not be what we would consider a habitable world.
Second, if a
planet is intensely active, volcanically, then a perpetual lava flow or ash
fallout is forever filling in and obscuring any craters that form. However,
such a planet or satellite is not likely to be habitable either.
q That brings us
to habitable worlds as a third case. Such worlds may have polar ice caps, but
most of the ocean must be freely liquid. They may have active volcanoes, but
these must be sparsely distributed. Such worlds can neither heal craters, nor
fill them in. There are, however, erosion effects. Wind and flowing water will
erode craters, and if there is life, the actions of living things are strongly
erosive as well. See?
Pelorat
considered that, then said, But, Golan, I don't understand you at all. This
planet we're approaching...
We'll be landing
tomorrow, said Trevize cheerfully.
This planet
we're approaching doesn't have an ocean.
Only some thin
polar ice caps.
Or much of an
atmosphere.
Only a hundredth
the density of the atmosphere on Terminus.
Or life.
Nothing I can
detect.
Then what could
have eroded away the craters?
An ocean, an
atmosphere, and life, said Trevize. Look, if this planet had been airless and
waterless from the start, any craters that had been formed would still exist
and the whole surface would be cratered. The absence of craters proves it can't
have been airless and waterless from the start, and may even have had a sizable
atmosphere and ocean in the near past. Besides, there are huge basins, visible
on this world, that must have held seas, and oceans once, to say nothing of the
marks of rivers that are now dry. So you see there was erosion and that erosion
has ceased so short a time ago, that new cratering has not yet had time to
accumulate.
Pelorat looked
doubtful. I may not be a planetologist, but it seems to me that if a planet is
large enough to hang on to a dense atmosphere for perhaps billions of years, it
isn't going to suddenly lose it, is it?
I shouldn't
think so, said Trevize. But this world undoubtedly held life before its
atmosphere vanished, probably human life. My guess is that it was a terraformed
world as almost all the human-inhabited worlds of the Galaxy are. The trouble
is that we don't really know what its condition was before human life arrived,
or what was done to it in order to make it comfortable for human beings, or
under what conditions, actually, life vanished. There may have been a
catastrophe that sucked off the atmosphere and that brought about the end of
human life. Or there may have been some strange imbalance on this planet that
human beings controlled as long as they were here and that went into a vicious
cycle of atmospheric reduction once they were gone. Maybe we'll find the answer
when we land, or maybe we won't. It doesn't matter.
But surely
neither does it matter if there was life here once, if there isn't now. What's
the difference if a planet has always been uninhabitable, or is only
uninhabitable now?
If it is only
uninhabitable now, there will be ruins of the one-time inhabitants.
There were ruins
on Aurora...
Exactly, but on
Aurora there had been twenty thousand years of rain and snow, freezing and
thawing, wind and temperature change. And there was also life-don't forget
life: There may not have been human beings there, but there was plenty of life.
Ruins can be eroded just as craters can. Faster. And in twenty thousand years,
not enough was left to do us any good. Here on this planet, however, there has
been a passage of time, perhaps twenty thousand years, perhaps less, without
wind, or storm, or life. There has been temperature change, I admit, but that's
all. The ruins will be in good shape.
Unless,
murmured Pelorat doubtfully, there are no ruins. Is it possible that there was
never any life on the planet, or never . any human life at any rate, and that
the loss of the atmosphere was due to some event that human beings had nothing
to do with?
No, no, said
Trevize. You can't turn pessimist on me, because it won't work. Even from
here, I've spotted the remains of what I'm sure was a city. So we land
tomorrow.
65.
BLISS said, in a
worried tone, Fallow is convinced we're going to take her back to Jemby, her'
robot.
Umm, said
Trevize, studying the surface of the world as it slid back under the drifting
ship. Then he looked up as though he had heard the remark only after a delay.
Well, it was the only parent she knew, wasn't it?
Yes, of course,
but she thinks we've come back to Solaria.
Does it look
like Solaria?
How would she
know?
Tell her it's
not Solaria. Look, I'll give you one or two reference bookfilms with graphic
illustrations. Show her close-ups of a number of different inhabited worlds and
explain that there are millions of them. You'll have time for it. I don't know
how long Janov and I will have to wander around, once we pick a likely target
and land.
You and Janov?
Yes. Fallom
can't come with us, even if I wanted her to, which I would only want if I were
a madman. This world requires space suits, Bliss. There's no breathable air.
And we don't have a space suit that would fit Fallom. So she and you stay on
the ship.
Why IT'
Trevize's lips
stretched into a humorless smile. I admit, he said, I would feel safer if
you were along, but we can't leave Fallom on this ship alone. She can do damage
even if she doesn't mean to. I must have Janov with me because he might be able
to make out whatever archaic writing they have here. That means you will have
to stay with Fallom. I should think you would want to.
Bliss looked
uncertain.
Trevize said,
Look. You wanted Fallom along, when I didn't. I'm convinced she'll be nothing
but trouble. So-her presence introduces constraints, and you'll have to adjust
yourself to that. She's here, so you'll have to be here, too. That's the way it
is.
Bliss sighed. I
suppose so.
Good. Where's
Janov?
He's with
Fallom.
Very well. Go
and take over. I want to talk to him.
Trevize was still
studying the planetary surface when Pelorat walked in, clearing his throat to
announce his presence. He said, Is anything wrong, Golan?
Not exactly
wrong, Janov. I'm just uncertain. This is a peculiar world and I don't know
what happened to it. The seas must have been extensive, judging from the basins
left behind, but they were shallow. As nearly as I can tell from the traces
left behind, this was a world of desalinization and canals-or perhaps the seas
weren't very salty. If they weren't very salty, that would account for the
absence of extensive salt flats in the basins. Or else, when the ocean was
lost, the salt content was lost with it-which certainly makes it look like a
human deed.
Pelorat said
hesitantly, Excuse my ignorance about such things, Golan, but does any of this
matter as far as what we are looking for is concerned?
I suppose not,
but I can't help being curious. If I knew just how this planet was terraformed
into human habitability and what it was like before terraforming, then perhaps
I would understand what has happened to it after it was abandoned-or just
before, perhaps. And if we did know what happened to it, we might be forewarned
against unpleasant surprises.
What kind of
surprises? It's a dead world, isn't it?
Dead enough.
Very little water; thin, unbreathable atmosphere; and Bliss detects no signs of
mental activity.
That should
settle it, I should think.
Absence of
mental activity doesn't necessarily imply lack of life.
It must surely
imply lack of dangerous life.
I don't know.
But that's not what I want to consult you about. There are two cities that
might do for our first inspection. They seem to be in excellent shape; all the
cities do. Whatever destroyed the air and oceans did not seem to touch the
cities. Anyway, those two cities are particularly large. The larger, however,
seems to be short on empty space. There are spaceports far in the outskirts but
nothing in the city itself. The one not so large does have empty space, so it
will be easier to come down in its midst, though not in formal spaceports-but
then, who would care about that?
Pelorat grimaced.
Do you want me to make the decision, Golan?
No, I'll make
the decision. I just want your thoughts.
For what they're
worth, a large sprawling city is likely to be a commercial or manufacturing
center. A smaller city with open space is likely to be an administrative
center. It's the administrative center we'd want. Does it have monumental buildings?
What do you mean
by a monumental building?
Pelorat smiled
his tight little stretching of the lips. I scarcely know. Fashions change from
world to world and from time to time. I suspect, though, that they always look
large, useless, and expensive. Like the place where we were on Comporellon.
Trevize smiled in
his turn. It's hard to tell looking straight down, and when I get a sideways
glance as we approach or leave, it's too confusing. Why do you prefer the
administrative center?
That's where
we're likely to find the planetary museum, library, archives, university, and
so on.
Good. That's
where we'll go, then; the smaller city. And maybe we'll find something. We've
had two misses, but maybe we'll find something this time.
Perhaps it will
be three times lucky.
Trevize raised
his eyebrows. Where did you get that phrase?
It's an old
one, said Pelorat. I found it in an ancient legend. It means success on the
third try, I should think. '
That sounds
right, said Trevize. Very well, then-three times lucky, Janov.
Chapter 15
Moss
66.
TREVIZE looked
grotesque in his space suit. The only part of him that remained outside were
his holsters-not the ones that he strapped around his hips ordinarily, but more
substantial ones that were part of his suit. Carefully, he inserted the blaster
in the right-hand holster, the neuronic whip in the left. Again, they had been
recharged and this time, he thought grimly, nothing would take them away from
him.
Bliss smiled.
Are you going to carry weapons even on a world without air or... Never mind! I
won't question your decisions.
Trevize paid,
Good! and turned to help Pelorat adjust his helmet, before donning his Own.
Pelorat, who had
never worn a space suit before, said, rather plaintively, Will I really be
able to breathe in this thing, Golan?
I promise you,
said Trevize.
Bliss watched as
the final joints were sealed, her arm about Fallom's shoulder. The young
Solarian stared at the two space-suited figures in obvious alarm. She was
trembling, and Bliss's arm squeezed her gently and reassuringly.
The airlock door
opened, and the two stepped inside, their bloated arms waving a farewell. It
closed. The mainlock door opened and they stepped clumsily onto the soil of a
dead world.
It was dawn. The
sky was clear, of course, and purplish in color, but the sun had not yet risen.
Along the lighter horizon where the sun would come, there was a slight haze.
Pelorat said,
It's cold.
Do you feel
cold? said Trevize, with surprise. The suits were well insulated and if there
was a problem, now and then, it was with the getting rid of body heat.
Pebrat said, Not
at all, but look His radioed voice sounded Trevize's ear, and his finger
pointed.
In the purplish
light of dawn, the crumbling stone front of the building they were approaching
was sheathed in hoar frost.
Trevize said,
With a thin atmosphere, it would get colder at night than you would expect,
and warmer in the day. Right now it's the coldest part of the day and it should
take several hours before it gets too hot for us to remain in the sun.
As though the
word had been a cabalistic incantation, the rim of the sun appeared above the
horizon.
Don't look at
it, said Trevize conversationally. Your face-plate is reflective and
ultraviolet-opaque, but it would still be dangerous.
He turned his
back to the rising sun and let his long shadow fall on the building. The
sunlight was causing the frost to disappear, even as he watched. For a few
moments, the wall looked dark with dampness and then that disappeared, too.
Trevize said,
The buildings don't look as good down here as they looked from the sky.
They're cracked and crumbling. That's the result of the temperature change, I
suppose, and of having the water traces freeze and melt each night and day for
maybe as much as twenty thousand years.
Pelorat said,
There are letters engraved in the stone above the entrance, but crumbling has
made them difficult to read.
Can you make it
out, Janov?
A financial
institution of some sort. At least I make out a word which may be 'bank. '
What's that?
A building in
which assets were stored, withdrawn, traded, invested, loaned-if it's what I
think it is.
A whole building
devoted to it? no computers?
Without
computers taking over altogether.
Trevize shrugged.
He did not find the details of ancient history inspiring.
They moved about,
with increasing haste, spending less time at sac build ing. The silence, the
deadness, was completely depressing. The slow millennial-long collapse into
which they had intruded made the place seem like the skeleton of a city, with everything
gone but the bones.
They were well up
in the temperate zone, but Trevize imagined he could feel the heat of the sun
on his back.
Pelorat, about a
hundred meters to his right, said sharply, Look at that.
Trevize's ears
rang. He said, Don't shout, Janov. I can hear your whispers clearly no matter
how far away you are. What is it?
Pelorat, his
voice moderating at once, said, This building is the Hall of the Worlds. At
least, that's what I think the inscription reads.
Trevize joined
him. Before them was a three-story structure, the line of its roof irregular
and loaded with large fragments of rock, as though some sculptured object that
had once stood there had fallen to pieces.
Are you sure?
said Trevize.
If we go in,
we'll find out.
They climbed five
low, broad steps, and crossed a space-wasting plaza. In the thin sir, their
metal-shod footsteps made a whispering vibration rather than a sound.
I see what you
mean by large, useless, and expensive, muttered Trevize.
They entered a
wide and high hall, with sunlight shining through tall windows and illuminating
the interior too harshly where it struck and yet leaving things obscure in the
shadow. The thin atmosphere scattered little light.
In the center was
a larger than life-size human figure in what seemed to be a synthetic stone.
One arm had fallen off. The other arm was cracked at the shoulder and Trevize
felt that if he tapped it sharply that arm, too, would break off. He stepped
back as though getting too near might tempt him into such unbearable vandalism.
I wonder who
that is? said Trevize. No markings anywhere. I suppose those who set it up
felt that his fame was so obvious he needed no identification, but now... He
felt himself in danger of growing philosophical and turned his attention away.
Pelorat was
looking up, and Trevize's glance followed the angle of Pelorat's head. There
were markingscarvingson the wall which Trevize could not read.
Amazing, said
Pelorat. Twenty thousand years old, perhaps, and, in here, protected somewhat
from sun and damp, they're still legible.
Not to me, said
Trevize.
It's in old
script and ornate even for that. Let's see now-seven-one-two... His voice died
away in a mumble, and then he spoke up again. There are fifty names listed and
there are supposed to have been fifty Spacer worlds and this is The Hall of
the Worlds. I assume those are the names of the fifty Spacer worlds, probably
in the order of establishment. Aurora is first and Solaria is last. If you'll notice,
there are seven columns, with seven names in the first six columns and then
eight names in the last. It is as though they had planned a seven-by-seven grid
and then added Solaria after the fact. My guess, old chap, is that that list
dates back to before Solaria was terraformed and populated.
And which one is
this planet we're standing on? Can you tell?
Pelorat said,
You'll notice that the fifth one down in the third column, the nineteenth in
order, is inscribed in letters a little larger than the others. The listers
seem to have been self-centered enough to give themselves some pride of place.
Besides...
What does the
name read?
As near as I can
make out, it says Melpomenia. It's a name I'm totally unfamiliar with.
Could it
represent Earth?
Pelorat shook his
head vigorously, but that went unseen inside his helmet. He said, There are
dozens of words used for Earth in the old legends. Gaia is one of them, as you
know. So is Terra, and Erda, and so on. They're all short. I don't know of any
long name used for it, or anything even resembling a short version of
Melpomenia.
Then we're
standing on Melpomenia, and it's not Earth.
Yes. And
besides-as I started to say earlier-an even better indication than the larger
lettering is that the co-ordinates of Melpomenia are given as 0,0,0, and you
would expect co-ordinates to be referred to one's own planet.
Co-ordinates?
Trevize sounded dumbfounded. That list gives the coordinates, too?
They give three
figures for each and I presume those are co-ordinates. What else can they be?
Trevize did not
answer. He opened a small compartment in the portion of the space suit that
covered his right thigh and took out a compact device with wire connecting it
to the compartment. He put it up to his eyes and carefully focused it on the
inscription on the wall, his sheathed fingers making a difficult job out of
something that would ordinarily have been a moment's work.
Camera? asked
Pelorat unnecessarily.
It will feed the
image directly into the ship's computer, said Trevize.
He took several
photographs from different angles; then said, Wait! I've got to get higher.
Help me, Janov.
Pelorat clasped
his hands together, stirrup-fashion, but Trevize shook his head. That won't
support my weight. Get on your hands and knees.
Pelorat did so,
laboriously, and, as laboriously, Trevize, having tucked the camera into its
compartment again, stepped on Pelorat's shoulders and from them on to the
pedestal of the statue. He tried to rock the statue carefully to judge its firmness,
then placed his foot on one bent knee and used it as a base for pushing himself
upward and catching the armless shoulder. Wedging his toes against some
unevenness at the chest, he lifted himself and, finally, after several grunts,
managed to sit on the shoulder. To those long-dead who had revered the statue
and what it represented, what Trevize did would have seemed blasphemy, and
Trevize was sufficiently influenced by that thought to try to sit lightly.
You'll fall and
hurt yourself, Pelorat called out anxiously.
I'm not going to
fall and hurt myself, but you might deafen me. Trevize unslung his camera and
focused once more. Several more photographs were taken and then he replaced the
camera yet again and carefully lowered himself till his feet touched the
pedestal. He jumped to the ground and the vibration of his contact was
apparently the final push, for the still intact arm crumbled, and produced a
small heap of rubble at the foot of the statue. It made virtually no noise as
it fell.
Trevize froze,
his first impulse being that of finding a place to hide before the watchman
came and caught him. Amazing, he thought afterward, how quickly one relives the
days of one's childhood in a situation like that-when you've accidentally
broken something that looks important. It lasted only a moment, but it cut
deeply.
Pelorat's voice
was hollow, as befitted one who had witnessed and even abetted an act of
vandalism, but he managed to find words of comfort. It'sit's all right,
Golan. It was about to come down by itself, anyway.
He walked over to
the pieces on the pedestal and floor as though he were going to demonstrate the
point, reached out for one of the larger fragments, and then said, Golan, come
here.
Trevize
approached and Pelorat, pointing at a piece of stone that had clearly been the
portion of the arm that had been joined to the shoulder, said, What is this?
Trevize stared.
There was a patch of fuzz, bright green in color. Trevize rubbed it gently with
his suited finger. It scraped off without trouble.
It looks a lot
like moss, he said.
The
life-without-mind that you mentioned?
I'm not
completely sure how far without mind. Bliss, I imagine, would insist that this
had consciousness, too-but she would claim this stone also had it.
Pelorat said, Do
you suppose that moss stuff is what's crumbling the rock?
Trevize said, I
wouldn't be surprised if it helped. The world has plenty of sunlight and it has
some water. Half what atmosphere it has is water vapor. The rest is nitrogen
and inert gases. Just a trace of carbon dioxide, which would lead one to
suppose there's no plant life-but it could be that the carbon dioxide is low
because it is virtually all incorporated into the rocky crust. Now if this rock
has some carbonate in it, perhaps this moss breaks it down by secreting acid,
and then makes use of the carbon dioxide generated. This may be the dominant
remaining form of life on this planet.
Fascinating,
said Pelorat.
Undoubtedly,
said Trevize, but only in a limited way. The co-ordinates of the Spacer worlds
are rather more interesting but what we really want are the co-ordinates of
Earth. If they're not here, they may be elsewhere in the building-or in another
building. Come, Janov.
But you know...began
Pelorat.
No, no, said
Trevize impatiently. We'll talk later. We've got to see what else, if
anything, this building can give us. It's getting warmer. He looked . the
small temperature reading on the back of his left glove. Come, Janov.
They tramped
through the rooms, walking as gently as possible, not because they were making
sounds in the ordinary sense, or because there was anyone to hear them, but
because they were a little shy of doing further damage through vibration.
They kicked up
some dust, which moved a short way upward and settled quickly through the thin
air, and they left footmarks behind them.
Occasionally, in
some dim corner, one or the other would silently point out more samples of moss
that were growing. There seemed a little comfort in the presence of life,
however low in the scale, something that lifted the deadly, suffocating feel of
walking through a dead world, especially one in which artifacts all about
showed that once, long ago, it had been an elaborately living one.
And then, Pelorat
said, I think this must be a library.
Trevize looked
about curiously. There were shelves and, as he looked more narrowly, what the
corner of his eye had dismissed as mere ornamentation, seemed as though they
might well be book-films. Gingerly, he reached for one. They were thick and
clumsy and then he realized they were only cases. He fumbled with his thick
fingers to open one, and inside he saw several discs. They were thick, too, and
seemed brittle, though he did not test that.
He said,
Unbelievably primitive.
Thousands of
years old, said Pelorat apologetically, as though defending the old
Melpomenians against the accusation of retarded technology.
Trevize pointed
to the spine of the film where there were dim curlicues of the ornate lettering
that the ancients had used. Is that the title? What does it say?
Pelorat studied
it. I'm not really sure, old man. I think one of the words refers to
microscopic life. It's a word for microorganism, perhaps. I suspect these are
technical microbiological terms which I wouldn't understand even in Standard
Galactic.
Probably, said
Trevize morosely. And, equally probably, it wouldn't do us any good even if we
could read it. We're not interested in germs. Do me a favor, Janov. Glance
through some of these books and see if there's anything there with an
interesting title. While you're doing that, I'll look over these book-viewers.
Is that what
they are? said Pelorat, wondering. They were squat, cubical structures, topped
by a slanted screen and a curved extension at the top that might serve as an
elbow rest or a place on which to put an electro-notepad-if they had had such
on Melpomenia.
Trevize said, if
this is a library, they must have book-viewers of one kind or another, and this
seems as though it might suit.
He brushed the
dust off the screen very gingerly and was relieved that the screen, whatever it
might be made of, did not crumble at his touch. He manipulated the controls
lightly, one after another. Nothing happened. He tried another book-viewer,
then another, with the same negative results.
He wasn't
surprised. Even if the device were to remain in working order for twenty
millennia in a thin atmosphere and was resistant to water vapor, there was
still the question of the power source. Stored energy had a way of leaking, no
matter what was done to stop it. That was another aspect of the all embracing,
irresistible second law of thermodynamics.
Pelorat was
behind him. Golan?
Yes.
I have a
book-film here...
What kind?
I think it's a
history of space flight.
Perfect but it
won't do us any good if I can't make this viewer work.
His hands
clenched in frustration.
We could take
the film back to the ship.
I wouldn't know
how to adapt it to our viewer. It wouldn't fit and our scanning system is sure
to be incompatible.
But is all that
really necessary, Golan? If we...
It is really
necessary, Janov. Now don't interrupt me. I'm trying to decide what to do. I
can try adding power to the viewer. Perhaps that is all it needs.
Where would you
get the power?
Well... Trevize
drew his weapons, looked at them briefly, then settled his blaster back into
its holster. He cracked open his neuronic whip, and studied the energy-supply
level. It was at maximum.
Trevize threw
himself prone upon the floor and reached behind the viewer (he kept assuming
that was what it was) and tried to push it forward. It moved a small way and he
studied what he found in the process.
One of those
cables had to carry the power supply and surely it was the one that came out of
the wall. There was no obvious plug or joining. (How does one deal with an
alien and ancient culture where the simplest taken-for granted matters are made
unrecognizable?)
He pulled gently
at the cable, then harder. He turned it one way, then the other. He pressed the
wall in the vicinity of the cable, and the cable in the vicinity of the wall.
He turned his attention, as best he could, to the halfhidden back of the viewer
and nothing he could do there worked, either.
He pressed one
hand against the floor to raise himself and, as he stood up, the cable came
with him. What he had done that had loosened it, he hadn't the slightest idea.
It didn't look
broken or torn away. The end seemed quite smooth and it had left a smooth spot
in the wall where it had been attached.
Pelorat said
softly, Golan, may I...
Trevize waved a
peremptory arm at the other. Not now, Janov. Pleasel He was suddenly aware of
the green material caking the creases on his left glove. He must have picked up
some of the moss behind the viewer and crushed it. His glove had a faint dampness
to it, but it dried as he watched, and the greenish stain grew brown.
He turned his
attention toward the cable, staring at the detached end carefully. Surely there
were two small holes there. Wires could enter.
He sat on the
floor again and opened the power unit of his neuronic whip. Carefully, he
depolarized one of the wires and clicked it loose. He then, slowly and
delicately, inserted it into the hole, pushing it in until it stopped. When he
tried gently to withdraw it again, it remained put, as though it had been
seized. He suppressed his first impulse to yank it out again by force. He
depolarized the other wire and pushed it into the other opening. It was
conceivable that that would close the circuit and supply the viewer with power.
Janov, he said,
you've played about with book-films of all kinds. See if you can work out a
way of inserting that book into the viewer.
Is it really
nece...
Please, Janov,
you keep trying to ask unnecessary questions. We only have so much time. I
don't want to have to wait far into the night for the building to cool off to
the point where we can return.
It must go in
this way, said Janov, but...
Good, said
Trevize. If it's a history of space flight, then it will have to begin with
Earth, since it was on Earth that space flight was invented. Let's see if this
thing works now.
Pelorat, a little
fussily, placed the book-film into the obvious receptacle and then began
studying the markings on the various controls for any hint as to direction.
Trevize spoke in
a low voice, while waiting, partly to ease his own tension. I suppose there
must be robots on this world, too-here and there-in reasonable order to all
appearances-glistening in the near-vacuum. The trouble is their power supply
would long since have been drained, too, and, even if repowered, what about
their brains? Levers and gears might withstand the millennia, but what about
whatever microswitches or subatomic gizmos they had in their brains? They would
have to have deteriorated, and even if they had not, what would they know about
Earth. What would they
Pelorat said,
The viewer is working, old chap. See here.
In the dim light,
the book-viewer screen began to flicker. It was only faint, but Trevize turned
up the power slightly on his neuronic whip and it grew brighter. The thin air
about them kept the area outside the shafts of sunlight comparatively dim, so
that the room was faded and shadowy, and the screen seemed the brighter by
contrast.
It continued to
flicket, with occasional shadows drifting across the screen.
It needs to be
focused, said Trevize.
I know, said
Pelorat, but this seems the best I can do. The film itself must have
deteriorated.
The shadows came
and went rapidly now, and periodically there seemed something like a faint
caricature of print. Then, for a moment, there was sharpness and it faded
again.
Get that back
and hold it, Janov, said Trevize.
Pelorat was
already trying. He passed it going backward, then again forward, and then got
it and held it.
Eagerly, Trevize
tried to read it, then said, in frustration, Can you make it out, Janov?
Not entirely,
said Pelorat, squinting at the screen. It's about Aurora. I can tell that
much. I think it's dealing with the first hyperspatial expedition-the prime
outpouring, it says.
He went forward,
and it blurred and shadowed again. He said finally, All the pieces I can get
seem to deal with the Spacer worlds, Golan. There's nothing I can find about
Earth.
Trevize said
bitterly, No, there wouldn't be. It's all been wiped out on this world as it
has on Trantor. Turn the thing off.
But it doesn't
matter... began Pelorat, turning it off:
Because we can
try other libraries? It will be wiped out there, too. Everywhere. Do you
know... He had looked at Pelorat as he spoke, and now he stared at him with a
mixture of horror and revulsion. What's wrong with your face-plate? he asked.
67.
PELORAT
automatically lifted his gloved hand to his face-plate and then took it away
and looked at it.
What is it? he
said, puzzled. Then, he looked at Trevize and went on, rather squeakily,
There's something peculiar about your face-plate, Golan.
Trevize looked
about automatically for a mirror. There was none and he would need a light if
there were. He muttered, Come into the sunlight, will you?
He half-led,
half-pulled Pelorat into the shaft of sunlight from the nearest window. He
could feel its warmth upon his back despite the insulating effect of the space
suit.
He said, Look
toward the sun, Janov, and close your eyes.
It was at once
clear what was wrong with the face-plate. There was moss growing luxuriantly
where the glass of the face-plate met the metallized fabric of the suit itself.
The face-plate was rimmed with green fuzziness and Trevize knew his own was,
too.
He brushed a
finger of his glove across the moss on Pelorat's face-plate. Some of it came
off, the crushed green staining the glove. Even as he watched it glisten in the
sunlight, however, it seemed to grow stiffer and drier. He tried again, and
this time, the moss crackled off. It was turning brown. He brushed the edges of
Pelorat's face-plate again, rubbing hard.
Do mine, Janov,
he said. Then, later, Do I look clean? Good, so do you. Let's go. I don't
think there's more to do here.
The sun was
uncomfortably hot in the deserted airless city. The stone buildings gleamed
brightly, almost achingly. Trevize squinted as he looked at them and, as far as
possible, walked on the shady side of the thoroughfares. He stopped at a crack
in one of the building fronts, one wide enough to stick his little finger into,
gloved as it was. He did just that, looked at it, muttered, Moss, and
deliberately walked to the end of the shadow and held that finger out in the
sunlight for a while.
He said, Carbon
dioxide is the bottleneck. Anywhere they can get carbon dioxide-decaying
rock-anywhere-it will grow. We're a good source of carbon dioxide, you know,
probably richer than anything else on this nearly dead planet, and I suppose
traces of the gas leak out at the boundary of the face-plate.
So the moss
grows there.
Yes.
It seemed a long
walk back to the ship, much longer and, of course, hotter than the one they had
taken at dawn. The ship was still in the shade when they got there, however;
that much Trevize had calculated correctly, at least.
Pelorat said,
Look!
Trevize saw. The
boundaries of the mainlock were outlined in green moss.
More leakage?
said Pelorat.
Of course.
Insignificant amounts, I'm sure, but this moss seems to be a better indicator
of trace amounts of carbon dioxide than anything I ever heard of. Its spores
must be everywhere and wherever a few molecules of carbon dioxide are to be
found, they sprout. He adjusted his radio for ship's wavelength and said,
Bliss, can you hear me?
Bliss's voice
sounded in both sets of oars. Yes. Are you ready to come in? Any luck?
We're just
outside, said Trevize, but don't open the lock. We'll open it from out here.
Repeat, don't open the lock.
Why not?
Bliss, just do
as I ask, will you? We can have a long discussion afterward.
Trevize brought
out his blaster and carefully lowered, its intensity to minimum, then gazed at
it uncertainly. He had never used it at minimum. He looked about him. There was
nothing suitably fragile to test it on.
In sheer
desperation, he turned it on the rocky hillside in whose shadow the Fur Star
lay. The target didn't turn red-hot. Automatically, he felt the spot he had
hit. Did 'it feel warm? He couldn't tell with any degree of certainty through
the insulated fabric of his suit.
He hesitated
again, then thought that the hull of the ship would be as resistant, within an
order of magnitude at any rate, as the hillside. He turned the blaster on the
rim of the lock and flicked the contact briefly, holding his breath.
Several
centimeters of the moss-like growth browned at once. He waved his hand in the
vicinity of the browning and even the mild breeze set up in the thin air in
this way sufficed to set the light skeletal remnants that made up the brown
material to scattering.
Does it work?
said Pelorat anxiously.
Yes, it does,
said Trevize. I turned the blaster into a mild heat ray.
He sprayed the
heat all around the edge of the lock and the green vanished at the touch. All
of it. He struck the mainlock to create a vibration that would knock off what
remained and a brown dust fell to the ground-a dust so fine that it even
lingered in the thin atmosphere, buoyed up by wisps of gas.
I think we can
open it now, said Trevize, and, using his wrist controls, he tapped out the
emission of the radio-wave combination that activated the opening mechanism
from inside. The lock gaped and had not opened more than halfway when Trevize
said, Don't dawdle, Janov, get inside. Don't wait for the steps. Climb in.
Trevize followed,
sprayed the rim of the lock with his toned-down blaster. He sprayed the steps,
too, once they had lowered. He then signaled the close of the lock and kept on
spraying till they were totally enclosed.
Trevize said,
We're in the lock, Bliss. We'll stay here a few minutes. Continue to do
nothing!
Bliss's voice
said, Give me a hint. Are you all right? How is Pel?
Pel said, I'm
here, Bliss, and perfectly well. There's nothing to worry about.
If you say so,
Pel, but there'll have to be explanations later. I hope you know that.
It's a promise,
said Trevize, and activated the lock light.
The two
space-suited figures faced each other.
Trevize said,
We're pumping out all the planetary air we can, so let's just wait till that's
done.
What about the
ship air? Are we going to let that in?
Not for a while.
I'm as anxious to get out of the space suit as you are, Janov. I just want to
make sure that we get rid of any spores that have entered with us-or upon us.
By the not
entirely satisfactory illumination of the lock light, Trevize turned his
blaster on the inner meeting of lock and hull, spraying the heat methodically
along the floor, up and around, and back to the floor.
Now you, Janov.
Pelorat stirred
uneasily, and Trevize said, You may feel warm. It shouldn't be any worse than
that. If it grows uncomfortable, just say so.
He played the
invisible beam over the face-plate, the edges particularly, then, little by
little, over the rest of the space suit.
He muttered,
Lift your arms, Janov. Then, Rest your arms on my shoulder, and lift one
foot. I've got to do the soles-now the other. Are you getting too warm?
Pelorat said,
I'm not exactly bathed in cool breezes, Golan.
Well, then, give
me a taste of my own medicine. Go over me.
I've never held
a blaster.
You must hold
it. Grip it so, and, with your thumb, push that little knob and squeeze the
holster tightly. Right. Now play it over my face-plate. Move it steadily,
Janov, don't let it linger in one place too long. Over the rest of the helmet,
then down the cheek and neck.
He kept up the
directions, and when he had been heated everywhere and was in an uncomfortable
perspiration as a result, he took back the blaster and studied the energy
level.
More than half
gone, he said, and sprayed the interior of the lock methodically, back and
forth over the wall, till the blaster was emptied of its charge, having itself
heated markedly through its rapid and sustained discharge. He then restored it
to its holster.
Only then did he
signal for entry into the ship. He welcomed the hiss and feel of air coming
into the lock as the inner door opened. Its coolness and its convective powers
would carry off the warmth of the space suit far more quickly than radiation
alone would do. It might have been imagination, but he felt the cooling effect
at once. Imagination or not, he welcomed that, too.
Off with your
suit, Janov, and leave it out here in the lock, said Trevize.
If you don't
mind, said Pelorat, a shower is what I would like to have before anything
else.
Not before
anything else. In fact, before that, and before you can empty your bladder,
even, I suspect you will have to talk to Bliss.
Bliss was waiting
for them, of course, and with a look of concern on her face. Behind her,
peeping out, was Fallom, with her hands clutching firmly at Bliss's left arm.
What happened?
Bliss asked severely. What's been going on?
Guarding against
infection, said Trevize dryly, so I'll be turning on the ultraviolet radiation.
Break out the dark glasses. Please don't delay.
With ultraviolet
added to the wall illumination, Trevize took off his moist garments one by one
and shook them out, turning them in one direction and another.
Just a
precaution, he said. You do it, too, Janov. And, Bliss, I'll have to peel
altogether. If that will make you uncomfortable, step into the next room.
Bliss said, It
will neither make me uncomfortable, nor embarrass me. I have a good notion of
what you look like, and it will surely present me with nothing new. What
infection?
Just a little
something that, given its own way, said Trevize, with a deliberate air of
indifference, could do great damage to humanity, I think.
68.
IT was all done.
The ultraviolet light had done its part. Officially, according to the complex
films of information and instructions that had come with the Far Star when
Trevize had first gone aboard back on Terminus, the light was there precisely
for purposes of disinfection. Trevize suspected, however, that the temptation
was always there, and sometimes yielded to, to use it for developing a
fashionable tan for those who were from worlds where tans were fashionable. The
light was, however, disinfecting, however used.
They took the
ship up into space and Trevize maneuvered it as close to Melpomenia's sun as he
might without making them all unpleasantly uncomfortable, turning and twisting
the vessel so as to make sure that its entire surface was drenched in
ultraviolet.
Finally, they
rescued the two space suits that had been left in the lock and examined them
until even Trevize was satisfied.
All that, said
Bliss, at last, for moss. Isn't that what you said it was, Trevize? Moss?
I call it moss,
said Trevize, because that's what it reminded me of. I'm not a botanist,
however. All I can say is that it's intensely green and can probably make do on
very little light-energy.
Why very
little?
The moss is
sensitive to ultraviolet and can't grow, or even survive, in direct
illumination. Its spores are everywhere and it grows in hidden corners, in
cracks in statuary, on the bottom surface of structures, feeding on the energy
of scattered photons of light wherever there is a source of carbon dioxide.
Bliss said, I
take it you think they're dangerous.
They might well
be. If some of the spores were clinging to us when we entered, or swirled in
with us, they would find illumination in plenty without the harmful
ultraviolet. They would find ample water and an unending supply of carbon
dioxide.
Only 0.03
percent of our atmosphere, said Bliss.
A great deal to
them-and 4 percent in our exhaled breath. What if spores grew in our nostrils,
and on our skin? What if they decomposed and destroyed our food? What if they
produced toxins that killed us? Even if we labored to kill them but left some
spores alive, they would be enough, when carried to another world by us, to
infest it, and from there be carried to other worlds. Who knows what damage
they might do?
Bliss shook her
head. Life is not necessarily dangerous because it is different. You are so
ready to kill.
That's Gaia
speaking, said Trevize.
Of course it is,
but I hope I make sense, nevertheless. The moss is adapted to the conditions of
this world. Just as it makes use of light in small quantities but is killed by
large; it makes use of occasional tiny whiffs of carbon dioxide and may be
killed by large amounts. It may not be capable of surviving on any world but
Melpomenia.
Would you want
me to take a chance on that? demanded Trevize.
Bliss shrugged.
Very well. Don't be defensive. I see your point. Being an Isolate, you
probably had no choice but to do what you did.
Trevize would
have answered, but Fallom's clear high-pitched voice broke in, in her own
language.
Trevize said to
Pelorat, What's she saying?
Pelorat began,
What Fallom is saying...
Fallom, however,
as though remembering a moment too late that her own language was not easily
understood, began again. Was there Jemby there where you were?
The words were
pronounced meticulously, and Bliss beamed. Doesn't she speak Galactic well?
And in almost no time.
Trevize said, in
a low voice, I'll mess it up if I try, but you explain to her, Bliss, that we
found no robots on the planet.
I'll explain
it, said Pelorat. Come, Fallom. He placed a gentle arm about the youngster's
shoulders. Come to our room and I'll get you another book to read.
A book? About
Jemby?
Not exactly...
And the door closed behind them.
You know, said
Trevize, looking after them impatiently, we waste our time playing nursemaid
to that child.
Waste? In what
way does it interfere with your search for Earth, Trevize? In no way. Playing
nursemaid establishes communication, however, allays fear, supplies love. Are
these achievements nothing?
That's Gaia
speaking again.
Yes, said
Bliss. Let us be practical, then. We have visited three of the old Spacer
worlds and we have gained nothing.
Trevize nodded.
True enough.
In fact, we have
found each one dangerous, haven't we? On Aurora, there were feral dogs; on
Solaria, strange and dangerous human beings; on Melpomenia, a threatening moss.
Apparently, then, when a world is left to itself, whether it contains human
beings or not, it becomes dangerous to the Interstellar community.
You can't
consider, that a general rule.
Throe out of
throe certainly seems impressive.
And how does it
impress you, Bliss?
I'll tell you.
Please listen to me with an open mind. If you have millions of interacting
worlds in the Galaxy, as is, of course, the affil case, and if. each is made up
entirely of Isolates, as they are, then on each world, human beings are
dominant and can force their will on nonhuman life-forms, on the inanimate
geological background, and even on each other. The Galaxy is, then, a very
primitive and fumbling and misfunctioning Galaxia. The beginnings of a unit. Do
you see what I mean?
I see what you're
trying to say-but that doesn't mean I'm going to agree with you when you're
done saying it.
Just listen to
me. Agree or not, as you please, but listen. The only way the Galaxy will work
. is as a proto-Galaxia, and the less proto and the more Galaxia, the better.
The Galactic Empire was an attempt at a strong proto-Galaxia, and when it fell
apart, times grew rapidly worse and there was the constant drive to strengthen
the proto-Galaxia concept. The Foundation Confederation is such an attempt. So
was the Mule's Empire. So is the Empire the Second Foundation is planning. But
even if there were no such Empires or Confederations; even if the entire Galaxy
were in turmoil, it would be a connected turmoil, with each world interacting,
even if only hostilely, with every other. That would, in itself, be a kind of
union and it would not yet be the worst case.
What would be
the worst, then?
You know the
answer to that, Trevize. You've seen it. If a human-inhabited world breaks up
completely, is truly Isolate, and if it loses all interaction with other human
worlds, it develops-malignantly.
A cancer, then?
Yes. Isn't
Solaria just that? Its hand is against all worlds. And on it, the hand of each
individual is against those of all others. You've seen it. And if human beings
disappear altogether, the last trace of discipline goes. The each-against-each
becomes unreasoning, as with the dogs, or is merely an elemental force as with
the moss. You see, I suppose, that the closer we are to Galaxia, the better the
society. Why, then, stop at anything short of Galaxia?
For a while,
Trevize stared silently at Bliss. I'm thinking about it. But why this
assumption that dosage is a one-way thing; that if a little is good, a lot is
better, and all there is is best of all? Didn't you yourself point out that
it's possible the moss is adapted to very little carbon dioxide so that a
plentiful supply might kill it? A human being two meters tall is better off
than one who is one meter tall; but is also better off than one who is three
meters tall. A mouse isn't better off, if it is expanded to the size of an
elephant. He wouldn't live. Nor would an elephant be better off reduced to the
size of a mouse.
There's natural
size, a natural complexity, some optimum quality for everything, whether star
or atom, and it's certainly true of living things and living societies. I don't
say the old Galactic Empire was ideal, and I csfa certainly see saws in the
Foundation Confederation, but rm not prey say that because total Isolation is
bad, total Unification is good. The eats: may both be equally horrible, and an
old-fashioned Galactic Empire, however imperfect, may be the best we can do.
Bliss shook her
head. I wonder if you believe yourself, Trevize. Are you going to argue that a
virus and a human being are equally unsatisfactory, and wish to settle for
something in-between-like a slime mold?
No. But I might
argue that a virus and a superhuman being are equally unsatisfactory, and wish
to settle for something in-between-like an ordinary person. There is, however,
no point in arguing. I will have my solution when I find Earth. On Melpomenia,
we found the co-ordinates of forty-seven other Spacer worlds.
And you'll visit
them all?
Every one, if I
have to.
Risking the
dangers on each.
Yes, if that's
what it takes to find Earth.
Pelorat had
emerged from the room within which he had left Fallow, and seemed about to say
something when he was caught up in the rapid-fire exchange between Bliss and
Trevize. He stared from one to the other as they spoke in turn.
How long would
it take? asked Bliss.
However long it
takes, said Trevize, and we ought find what we need on y the next one we
visit.
Or on none of
them.
That we cannot
know till we search.
And now, at last,
Pelorat managed to insert a word. But why look, Golan? We have the answer.
Trevize waved an
impatient hand in the direction of Pelorat, checked the motion, turned his
head, and said blankly, What?'''
I said we have
the answer. I tried to tell you this on Melpomenia at least five times, but you
were so wrapped up in what you were doing...
What answer do
we have? What are you talking about?
About Earth. I
think we know where Earth is.
PART SIXALPHA
Chapter 16
The Center of the
Worlds
69.
TREVIZE stared at
Pelorat for a long moment, and with an expression of clear displeasure. Then he
said, Is there something you saw that I did not, and that you did not tell me
about?
No, answered
Pelorat mildly. You saw it and, as I just said, I tried to explain, but you
were in no mood to listen to me.
Well, try
again.
Bliss said,
Don't bully him, Trevize.
I'm not bullying
him. I'm asking for information. And don't you baby him.
Please, said
Pelorat, listen to me, will you, and not to each other. Do you remember,
Golan, that we discussed early attempts to discover the origin of the human
species? Yariff's project? You know, trying to plot the times of settlement of
various planets on the assumption that planets would be settled outward from the
world of origin in all directions alike. Then, as we moved from newer to older
planets, we would approach the world of origin from all directions.
Trevize nodded
impatiently. What I remember is that it didn't work because the dates of
settlement were not reliable.
That's right,
old fellow. But the worlds that Yariff was working with were part of the second
expansion of the human race. By then, hyperspatial travel was far advanced, and
settlement must have grown quite ragged. Leapfrogging very long distances was
very simple and settlement didn't necessarily proceed outward in radial
symmetry. That surely added to the problem of unreliable dates of settlement.
But just think
for a moment, Golan, of the Spacer worlds. They were in the first wave of settlement.
Hyperspatial travel was less advanced then, and there was probably little or no
leapfrogging. Whereas millions of worlds were settled, perhaps chaotically,
during the second expansion, only fifty were settled, probably in an orderly
manner, in the first. Whereas the millions of worlds of the second expansion
were settled over a period of twenty thousand years; the fifty of the first
expansion were settled over a period of a few centuries-almost instantaneously,
in comparison. Those fifty, taken together, should exist in roughly spherical
symmetry about the world of origin.
We have the
co-ordinates of the fifty worlds. You photographed them, remember, from the
statue. Whatever or whoever it is that is destroying information that concerns
Earth, either overlooked those co-ordinates, or didn't stop to think that they
would give us the information we need. All you have to do, Golan, is to adjust
the co-ordinates to allow for the last twenty thousand years of stellar
motions, then find the center of the sphere. You'll end up fairly close to
Earth's sun, or at least to where it was twenty thousand years ago.
Trevize's mouth
had fallen slightly open during the recital and it took a few moments for him
to close it after Pelorat was done. He said, Now why didn't I think of that?
I tried to tell
you while we were still on Melpomenia.
I'm sure you
did. I apologize, Janov, for refusing to listen. The fact is it didn't occur to
me that... He paused in embarrassment.
Pelorat chuckled
quietly, That I could have anything of importance to say. I suppose that
ordinarily I wouldn't, but this was something in my own field, you see. I am
sure that, as a general rule, you'd be perfectly justified in not listening to
me.
Never, said
Trevize. That's not so, Janov. I feel like a fool, and I well deserve the
feeling. My apologies again-and I must now get to the computer.
He and Pelorat
walked into the pilot-room, and Pelorat, as always, watched with a combination
of marveling and incredulity as Trevize's hands settled down upon the desk, and
he became what was almost a single man computer organism.
I'll have to
make certain assumptions, Janov, said Trevize, rather blankfaced from
computer-absorption. I have to assume that the first number is a distance in
parsecs, and that the other two numbers are angles in radians, the first being
up and down, so to speak, and the other, right and left. I have to assume that
the use of plus and minus in the case of the angles is Galactic Standard and
that the zero-zero-zero mark is Melpomenia's sun.
That sounds fair
enough, said Pelorat.
Does it? There
are six possible ways of arranging the numbers, four possible ways of arranging
the signs, distances may be in light-years rather than parsecs, the angles in
degrees, rather than radians. That's ninety-six diferent variations right
there. Add to that, the point that if the distances are lightyears, I'm
uncertain as to the length of the year used. Add also the fact that I don't
know the actual conventions used to measure the angles-from the Melpomenian
equator in one case, I suppose, but what's their prime merid
Pelorat frowned.
Now you make it sound hopeless.
Not hopeless.
Aurora and Solaria are included in the list, and I know where they are in
space. I'll use the co-ordinates, and see if I can locate them. If I end up in
the wrong place, I will adjust the co-ordinates until they give me the right
place, and that will tell me what mistaken assumptions I am making as far as
the standards governing the co-ordinates are concerned. Once my assumptions are
corrected, I can look for the center of the sphere.
With all the
possibilities for change, won't it make it difficult to decide what to do?
What? said
Trevize. He was increasingly absorbed. Then, when Pelorat repeated the question,
he said, Oh well, chances are that the co-ordinates follow the Galactic
Standard and adjusting for an unknown prime meridian isn't difficult. These
systems for locating points in space were worked out long ago, and most
astronomers are pretty confident they even antedate interstellar travel. Human
beings are very conservative in some ways and virtually never change numerical
conventions once they grow used to them. They even come to mistake them for
laws of nature, I think. Which is just as well, for if every world had its own
conventions of measurement that changed every century, I honestly think
scientific endeavor would stall and come to a permanent stop.
He was obviously
working while he was talking, for his words came haltingly. And now he muttered,
But quiet now. .
After that, his
face grew furrowed and concentrated until, after several minutes, he leaned
back and drew a long breath. He said quietly, The conventions hold. I've
located Aurora. There's no question about it. See?
Pelorat stared at
the field of stars, and at the bright one near the center and said, Are you
sure?
Trevize said, My
own opinion doesn't matter. The computer is sure. We've visited Aurora, after
all. We have its characteristics-its diameter, mass, luminosity, temperature,
spectral details, to say nothing of the pattern of neighboring stars. The
computer says it's Aurora.
Then I suppose
we must take its word for it.
Believe me, we
must. Let me adjust the viewscreen and the computer can get to work. It has the
fifty sets of co-ordinates and it will use them one at a time.
Trevize was
working on the screen as he spoke. The computer worked in the four dimensions
of space-time routinely, but, for human inspection, the viewscreen was rarely
needed in more than two dimensions. Now the screen seemed to unfold into a dark
volume as deep as it, was tall and broad. Trevize dimmed the room lights almost
totally to make the view of star-shine easier to observe.
It will begin
now, he whispered.
A moment later, a
star appeared-then another-then another. The view on the screen shifted with
every addition so that all might be included. It was as though space was moving
backward from the eye so that a more and more panoramic view could be taken..
Combine that with shifts up or down, right or left
Eventually, fifty
dots of light appeared, hovering in three-dimensional space.
Trevize said, I
would have appreciated a beautiful spherical arrangement, but this looks like
the skeleton of a snowball that had been patted into shape in a big hurry, out
of snow that was too hard and gritty.
Does that ruin
everything?
It introduces
some difficulties, but that can't be helped, I suppose. The stars themselves
aren't uniformly distributed, and certainly habitable planets aren't, so there
are bound to be unevennesses in the establishment of new worlds. The computer
will adjust each of those dots to its present position, allowing for its likely
motion in the last twenty thousand years-even in that time it won't mean much
of an adjustment-and then fit them all into a bestsphere. It will find a
spherical surface, in other words, from which the distance of all the dots is a
minimum. Then we find the center of the sphere, and Earth should be fairly
close to that center. Or so we hope. It won't take long.
70.
IT DIDN'T.
Trevize, who was used to accepting miracles from the computer, found himself
astonished at how little time it took.
Trevize had
instructed the computer to sound a soft, reverberating note upon deciding upon
the co-ordinates of the best-center. There was no reason for that, except for
the satisfaction of hearing it and knowing that perhaps the search had been
ended.
The sound came in
a matter of minutes, and was like the gentle stroking of a mellow gong. It
swelled till they could feel the vibration physically, and then slowly faded.
Bliss appeared at
the door almost at once. What's that? she asked, her eyes big. An
emergency?
Trevize said,
Not at all.
Pelorat added
eagerly, We may have located Earth, Bliss. That sound was the computer's way
of saying so.
She walked into
the room. I might have been warned.
Trevize said,
I'm sorry, Bliss. I didn't mean it to be quite that loud.
Fallom had
followed Bliss into the room and said, Why was there that sound, Bliss?
I see she's
curious, too, said Trevize. He sat back, feeling drained. The next step was to
try the finding on the real Galaxy, to focus on the coordinates of the center
of the Spacer worlds and see if a G-type star was actually present. Once again,
he was reluctant to take the obvious step, unable to make himself put the
possible solution to the actual test.
Yes, said
Bliss. Why shouldn't she? She's as human as we are.
Her parent
wouldn't have thought so, said Trevize abstractedly. I worry about the kid.
She's bad news.
In what way has
she proven so? demanded Bliss.
Trevize spread
his arms. Just a feeling.
Bliss gave him a
disdainful look, and turned to Fallom. We are trying to locate Earth, Fallom.
,
What's Earth?
Another world,
but a special one. It's the world our ancestors came from. Do you know what the
word ancestors means from your reading, Fallom?
Does it mean ?
But the last word was not in Galactic.
Pelorat said,
That's an archaic word for ancestors, Bliss. Our word forebears is closer
to it.
Very well, said
Bliss, with a sudden brilliant smile. Earth is the world where our forebears
came from, Fallom. Yours and mine and Pel's and Trevize's.
Yours, Bliss-and
mine also. Fallom sounded puzzled. Both of them?
There's just one
set of forebears, said Bliss. We had the same forebears, all of us.
Trevize said, It
sounds to me as though the child knows very well that she's different from us.
Bliss said to
Trevize in a low voice, Don't say that. She must be made to see she isn't. Not
in essentials.
Hermaphrodism is
essential, I should think.
I'm talking
about the mind.
Transducer-lobes
are essential, too.
Now, Trevize,
don't be difficult. She's intelligent and human regardless of details.
She turned to
Fallom, her voice rising to its normal level. Think quietly about this,
Fallom, and see what it means to you. Your forebears and mine were the same.
All the people on all the worlds-many, many worlds-all had the same forebears,
and those forebears lived originally on the world named Earth. That means we're
all relatives, doesn't it? Now go back to our room and think of that.
Fallom, after
bestowing a thoughtful look on Trevize, turned and ran off, hastened on by
Bliss's affectionate slap on her backside.
Bliss turned to
Trevize, and said, Please, Trevize, promise me you won't make any comments in
her hearing that will lead her to think she's different from us.
Trevize said, I
promise. I have no wish to impede or subvert the educational procedure, but,
you know, she is different from us.
In ways. As I'm
different from you, and as Pel is.
Don't be naive,
Bliss. The differences in Fallom's case are much greater.
A little
greater. The similarities are vastly more important. She, and her people, will
be part of Galaxia some day, and a very useful part, I'm sure.
All right. We
won't argue. He turned to the computer with clear reluctance. And meanwhile,
I'm afraid I have to check the supposed position of Earth in real space.
Afraid?
Well, Trevize
lifted his shoulders in what he hoped was a half-humorous way, what if there's
no suitable star near the place?
Then there
isn't, said Bliss.
I'm wondering if
there's any point in checking it out now. We won't be able to make a Jump for
several days.
And you'll be
spending them agonizing over the possibilities. Find out now. Waiting won't
change matters.
Trevize sat there
with his lips compressed for a moment, then said, You're right. Very well,
then-here goes.
He turned to the
computer, placed his hands on the handmarks on the desk, and the viewscreen
went dark.
Bliss said, I'll
leave you, then. I'll make you nervous if I stay. She left, with a wave of her
hand.
The thing is,
he muttered, that we're going to be checking the computer's Galactic map first
and even if Earth's sun is in the calculated position, the map should not
include it. But we'll then...
His voice trailed
off in astonishment as the viewscreen flashed with a background of stars. These
were fairly numerous and dim, with an occasional brighter one sparkling here
and there, well scattered over the face of the screen. But quite close to the
center was a star that was brighter than all the rest.
We've got it,
said Pelorat jubilantly. We've got it, old chap. Look how bright it is.
Any star at
centered co-ordinates would look bright, said Trevize, clearly trying to fight
off any initial jubilation that might prove unfounded. The view, after all, is
presented from a distance of a parsec from the centered co-ordinates. Still,
that centered star certainly isn't a red dwarf, or a red giant, or a hot
blue-white. Wait for information; the computer is checking its data banks.
There was silence
for a few seconds and then Trevize said, Spectral class G-2. Another pause,
then, Diameter, 1.4 million kilometers-mass, 1.02 times that of Terminus's
sun-surface temperature, 6,000 absolute-rotation slow, just under thirty
days-no unusual activity or irregularity.
Pelorat said,
Isn't all that typical of the kind of star about which habitable planets are
to be found?
Typical, said
Trevize, nodding in the dimness. And, therefore, what we'd expect Earth's sun
to be like. If that is where life developed, the sun of Earth would have set
the original standard.
So there is a
reasonable chance that there would be a habitable planet circling it.
We don't have to
speculate about that, said Trevize, who sounded puzzled indeed over the
matter. The Galactic map lists it as possessing a planet with human life-but
with a question mark.
Pelorat's
enthusiasm grew. That's exactly what we would expect, Golan. The life-bearing
planet is there, but the attempt to hide the fact obscures data concerning it
and leaves the makers of the map the computer uses uncertain.
No, that's what
bothers me, said Trevize. That's not what we should expect. We should expect
far more than that. Considering the efficiency with which data concerning Earth
has been wiped out, the makers of the map should not have known that life exists
in the system, let alone human life. They should not even have known Earth's
sun exists. The Spacer worlds aren't on the map. Why should Earth's sun be?
Well, it's
there, just the same. What's the use of arguing the fact? What other
information about the star is given?
A name.
Ah! What is it?
Alpha.
There was a short
pause, then Pelorat said eagerly, That's it, old man. That's the final bit of
evidence. Consider the meaning.
Does it have a
meaning? said Trevize. It's just a name to me, and an odd one. It doesn't
sound Galactic.
It isn't
Galactic. It's in a prehistoric language of Earth, the same one that gave us
Gaia as the name of Bliss's planet.
What does Alpha
mean, then?
Alpha is the
first letter of the alphabet of that ancient language. That is one of the most
firmly attested scraps of knowledge we have about it. In ancient times, alpha
was sometimes used to mean the first of anything. To call a sun Alpha,
implies that it's the first sun. And wouldn't the first sun be the one around
which a planet revolved that was the first planet to bear human ,life-Earth?
Are you sure of
that?
Absolutely,
said Pelorat.
Is there
anything in early legends. you're the mythologist, after all-that gives Earth's
sun some very unusual attribute?
No, how can
there be? It has to be standard by definition, and the characteristics the
computer has given us ate as standard as possible, I imagine. Aren't they?
Earth's sun is a
single star, I suppose?
Pelorat said,
Well, of course! As far as I know, all inhabited worlds orbit single stars.
So I would have
thought myself, said Trevize. The trouble is that that star in the center of
the viewscreen is not a single star, it is a binary. The brighter of the two
stars making up the binary is indeed standard and it is that one for which the
computer supplied us with data. Circling that star with a period of roughly
eighty years, however, is another star with a mass four fifths that of the
brighter one. We can't see the two as separate stars with the unaided eye, but
if I were to enlarge the view, I'm sure we would.
Are you certain
of that, Golan? said Pelorat, taken aback.
It's what the
computer is telling me. And if we are looking at a binary star, then it's not
Earth's sun. It can't be.
71.
TREVIZE broke
contact with the computer, and the lights brightened.
That was the
signal, apparently, for Bliss to return, with Fallow tagging after her. Well,
then, what are the results? she asked.
Trevize said
tonelessly, Somewhat disappointing. Where I expected to find Earth's sun, I
found a binary star, instead. Earth's sun is a single star, so the one centered
is not it.
Pelorat said,
Now what, Golan?
Trevize shrugged.
I didn't really expect to see Earth's sun centered. Even the Spacers wouldn't settle
worlds in such a way as to set up an exact sphere. Aurora, the oldest of the
Spacer worlds, might have sent out settlers of its own and that may have
distorted the sphere, too. Then, too, Earth's sun may not have moved at
precisely the average velocity of the Spacer worlds.
Pelorat said, So
the Earth can be anywhere. Is that what you're saying?
No. Not quite
anywhere. All these possible sources of error can't amount to much. Earth's
sun must be in the vicinity of the co-ordinates. The star we've spotted almost
exactly at the co-ordinates must be a neighbor of Earth's sun. It's startling
that there should be a neighbor that so closely resembles Earth's sun-except
for being a binary-but that must be the case.
But we would see
Earth's sun on the map, then, wouldn't we? I mean, near Alpha?
No, for I'm
certain Earth's sun isn't on the map at all. It was that which shook my
confidence when we first spied Alpha. Regardless of how much it might resemble
Earth's sun, the mere fact that it was on the map made me suspect it was not
the real thing.
Well, then,
said Bliss. Why not concentrate on the same co-ordinates in real space? Then,
if there is any bright star close to the center, a star that does not exist in
the computer's map, and if it is very much like Alpha in its properties, but is
single, might it not be Earth's sun?
Trevize sighed.
If all that were so, I'd be willing to wager half my fortune, such as it is,
that circling that star you speak of would be the planet Earth. Again, I
hesitate to try.
Because you
might fail?
Trevize nodded.
However, he said, just give me a moment or two to catch my breath, and I'll
force myself to do so.
And while the
three adults looked at each other, Fallow approached the computer-desk and
stared curiously at the handmarks upon it. She reached out her own hand
tentatively toward the markings, and Trevize blocked the motion with a swift
outthrusting of his own arm and a sharp, Mustn't touch, Fallow.
The young
Solarian seemed startled, and retreated to the comfort of Bliss's encircling
arm.
Pelorat said, We
must face it, Golan. What if you find nothing in real space?
Then we will be
forced to go back to the earlier plan, said Trevize, and visit each of the
forty-seven Spacer worlds in turn.
And if that
yields nothing, Golan?
Trevize shook his
head in annoyance, as though to prevent that thought from taking too deep a
root. Staring down at his knees, he said abruptly, Then I will think of
something else.
But what if
there is no world of forebears at all?
Trevize looked up
sharply at the treble voice. Who said that? he asked.
It was a useless
question. The moment of disbelief faded, and he knew very well who the
questioner was.
I did, said
Fallow.
Trevize looked at
her with a slight frown. Did you understand the conversation?
Fallow said, You
are looking for the world of forebears, but you haven't found it yet. Maybe
there isn't no such world.
Any such world,
said Bliss softly.
No, Fallow, said
Trevize seriously. There has been a very big effort to hide it. To try so hard
to hide something means there is something there to hide. Do you understand
what I am saying?
Yes, said
Fallow. You do not let me touch the hands on the deck. Because you do not let
me do that means it would be interesting to touch them.
Ah, but not for
you, Fallom. Bliss, you are creating a monster that will destroy us all. Don't
ever let her in here unless I'm at the desk. And even then, think twice, will
you?
The small byplay,
however, seemed to have shaken him out of his irresolution. He said,
Obviously, I had better get to work. If I just sit here, uncertain as to what
to do, that little fright will take over the ship.
The lights
dimmed, and Bliss said in a low voice, You promised, Trevize. Do not call her
a monster or a fright in her hearing.
Then keep an eye
on her, and teach her some manners. Tell her children should be never heard and
seldom seen.
Bliss frowned.
Your attitude toward children is simply appalling, Trevize.
Maybe, but this
is not the time to discuss the matter.
Then he said, in
tones in which satisfaction and relief were equally represented, There's Alpha
again in real space. And to its left, and slightly upward, is almost as bright
a star and one that isn't in the computer's Galactic map. That is Earth's sun.
I'll wager all my fortune on it.
72.
WELL, Now, said
Bliss, we won't take any part of your fortune if you lose, so why not settle
the matter in a forthright manner? Let's visit the star as soon as you can make
the Jump.
Trevize shook his
head. No. This time it's not a matter of irresolution or fear. It's a matter
of being careful. Three times we've visited an unknown world and three times
we've come up against something unexpectedly dangerous. And three times,
moreover, we've had to leave that world in a hurry. This time the matter is
ultimately crucial and I will not play my cards in ignorance again; or at least
in any more ignorance than I can help. So far, all we have are vague stories
about radioactivity, and that is not enough. By an odd chance that no one could
have anticipated, there is a planet with human life about a parsec from
Earth...
Do we really
know that Alpha has a planet with human life on it? put in Pelorat. You said
the computer placed a question mark after that.
Even so, said
Trevize, it's worth trying. Why not take a look at it? If it does indeed have
human beings on it, let us find out what they know about Earth. For them, after
all, Earth is not a distant thing of legend; it is a neighbor world, bright and
prominent in their sky.
Bliss said
thoughtfully, It's not a bad idea. It occurs to me that if Alpha is inhabited
and if the inhabitants are not your thoroughly typical Isolates, they may be
friendly, and we might be able to get some decent food for a change.
And meet some
pleasant people, said Trevize. Don't forget that. Will it be all right with
you, Janov?
Pelorat said,
You make the decision, old chap. Wherever you go, I will go, too.
Fallom said
suddenly, Will we find Jemby?
Bliss said
hastily, before Trevize could answer, We will look for it, Fallom.
And then Trevize
said, It's settled then. On to Alpha.
73.
Two BIG stars,
said Fallom, pointing to the viewscreen.
That's right,
said Trevize. Two of them. Bliss, do keep an eye on her. I don't want her
fiddling with anything.
She's fascinated
by machinery, said Bliss.
Yes, I know she
is, said Trevize, but I'm not fascinated by her fascination. Though to tell you
the truth, I'm as fascinated as she is at seeing two stars that bright in the
viewscreen at the same time.
The two stars
were bright enough to seem to be on the point of showing a disc-each of them.
The screen had automatically increased filtration density in order to remove
the hard radiation and dim the light of the bright stars so as to avoid retinal
damage. As a result, few other stars were bright enough to be noticeable, and
the two that were reigned in haughty near-isolation.
The thing is,
said Trevize, I've never been this close to a binary system before.
You haven't?
said Pelorat, open astonishment in his voice. How is that possible?
Trevize laughed.
I've been around, Janov, but I'm not the Galactic rover you think I am.
Pelorat said, I
was never in space at all till I met you, Golan, but I always thought that
anyone who did manage to get into space
Would go
everywhere. I know. That's natural enough. The trouble with planet-bound people
is that no matter how much their mind may tell them otherwise, their
imaginations just can't take in the true size of the Galaxy. We could travel
all our lives and leave most of the Galaxy unpenetrated and untouched. Besides,
no one ever goes to binaries.
Why not? said
Bliss, frowning. We on Gaia know little astronomy compared to the traveling
Isolates of the Galaxy, but I'm under the impression that binaries aren't
rare.
They're not,
said Trevize. There are substantially more binaries than there are single
stars. However, the formation of two stars in close association upsets the
ordinary processes of planetary formation. Binaries have less planetary
material than single stars do. Such planets as do form about them often have
relatively unstable orbits and are very rarely of a type that is reasonably
habitable.
Early explorers,
I imagine, studied many binaries at close range but, after a while, for
settlement purposes, they sought out only singles. And, of course, once you
have a densely settled Galaxy, virtually all travel involves trade and communications
and is carried on between inhabited worlds circling single stars. In periods of
military activity, I suppose bases were sometimes set up on small,
otherwise-uninhabited worlds circling one of the stars of a binary that
happened to be strategically placed, but as hyperspatial travel came to be
perfected, such bases were no longer necessary.
Pelorat said
humbly, . It's amazing how much I don't know.
Trevize merely
grinned. Don't let that impress you, Janov. When I was in the Navy, we listened
to an incredible number of lectures on outmoded military tactics that no one
ever planned, or intended to use, and were just talked about out of inertia. I
was just rattling off a bit of one of them. Consider all you know about
mythology, folklore, and archaic languages that I don't know, and that only you
and a very few others do know.
Bliss said, Yes,
but those two stars make up a binary system and one of them has an inhabited
planet circling it.
We hope it does,
Bliss, said Trevize. Everything has its exceptions. And with an official
question mark in this case, which makes it more puzzling. No, Fallom, those
knobs are not toys. Bliss, either keep her in handcuffs, or take her out.
She won't hurt
anything, said Bliss defensively, but pulled the Solarian youngster to herself
just the same. If you're so interested in that habitable planet, why aren't we
there already?
For one thing,
said Trevize, I'm just human enough to want to see this sight of a binary
system at close quarters. Then, too, I'm just human enough to be cautious. As
I've already explained, nothing has happened since we left Gaia that would
encourage me to be anything but cautious.
Pelorat said,
Which one of those stars is Alpha, Golan?
We won't get
lost, Janov. The computer knows exactly which one is Alpha, and, for that
matter, so do we. It's the hotter and yellower of the two because it's the
larger. Now the one on the right has a distinct orange tinge to its light,
rather like Aurora's sun, if you recall. Do you notice?
Yes, now that
you call it to my attention.
Very well.
That's the smaller one. What's the second letter of that ancient language you
speak of?
Pelorat thought a
moment, and said, Beta.
Then let's call
the orange one Beta and the yellow-white one Alpha, and it's Alpha we're
heading for right now.
Chapter 17
New Earth
74.
FOUR PLANETS,
muttered Trevize. All are small, plus a trailing off of asteroids. no gas
giants.
Pelorat said, Do
you find that disappointing?
Not really. It's
expected. Binaries that circle each other at small distances can have no
planets circling one of the stars. Planets can circle the center of gravity of
both, but it's very unlikely that they would be habitable-too far away.
On the other hand
if the binaries are reasonably separate, there can be planets in stable orbits
about each, if they are close enough to one or the other of the stars. These
two stars, according to the computer's data bank, have an average separation of
3.5 billion kilometers and even at periastron, when they are closest together,
are about 1.7 billion kilometers apart. A planet in an orbit of less than 200
million kilometers from either star would be stably situated, but there can be
no planet with a larger orbit. That means no gas giants since they would have
to be farther away from a star, but what's the difference? Gas giants aren't
habitable, anyway.
But one of those
four planets might be habitable.
Actually the
second planet is the only real possibility. For one thing, it's the only one of
them large enough to have an atmosphere.
They approached
the second planet rapidly and over a period of two days its image expanded; at
first with a majestic and measured swelling. And then, when there was no sign
of any ship emerging to intercept them, with increasing and almost frightening
speed.,
The Far Star was
moving swiftly along a temporary orbit a thousand kilometers above the cloud
cover, when Trevize said grimly, I see why the computer's memory banks put a
question mark after the notation that it was inhabited. There's no clear sign
of radiation; either light in the night-hemisphere, or radio anywhere.
Me cloud cover
seems pretty thick, said Pelorat.
That should not
blank out radio radiation.
They watched the
planet wheeling below them, a symphony in swirling white clouds, through
occasional gaps of which a bluish wash indicated ocean.
Trevize said,
The cloud level is fairly heavy for an inhabited world. It might be a rather
gloomy one. What bothers me most, he added, as they plunged once more into the
night-shadow, is that no space stations have hailed us.
The way they did
back at Comporellon, you mean? said Pelorat.
The way they
would in any inhabited world. We would have to stop for the usual checkup on
papers, freight, length of stay, and so on.
Bliss said,
Perhaps we missed the hail for some reason.
Our computer
would have received it at any wavelength they might have cared to use. And
we've been sending out our own signals, but have roused no one and nothing as a
result. Dipping under the cloud layer without communicating with station
officials violates space courtesy, but I don't see that we have a choice.
The Far Star
slowed, and strengthened its antigravity accordingly, so as to maintain its height.
It came out into the sunlight again, and slowed further. Trevize, in
co-ordination with the computer, found a sizable break in the clouds. The ship
sank and passed through it. Beneath them heaved the ocean in what must have
been a fresh breeze. It lay, wrinkled, several kilometers below, them, faintly
striped in lines of froth.
They flew out of
the sunlit patch and under the cloud cover. The expanse of water immediately
beneath them turned a slate-gray, and the temperature dropped noticeably.
Fallom, staring
at the viewscreen, spoke in her own consonant-rich language for a few moments,
then shifted to Galactic. Her voice trembled. What is that which I see
beneath?
That is an
ocean, said Bliss soothingly. It is a very large mass of water.
Why does it not
dry up?
Bliss looked at
Trevize, who said, There's too much water for it to dry UP. 9t
Fallom said in a
half-choked manner, I don't want all that water. Let us go away. And then she
shrieked, thinly, as the Far Star moved through a patch of storm clouds so that
the viewscreen turned milky and was streaked with the mark of raindrops.
The lights in the
pilot-room dimmed and the ship's motion became slightly jerky.
Trevize looked up
in surprise and cried out. Bliss, your Fallow is old enough to transduce.
She's using electric power to try to manipulate the controls. Stop her!
Bliss put her
arms about Fallom, and hugged her tightly, It's all right, Fallom, it's all
right. There's nothing to be afraid of. It's just another world, that's all.
There are many like this.
Fallom relaxed
somewhat but continued to tremble.
Bliss said to
Trevize, The child has never seen an ocean, and perhaps, for all I know, never
experienced fog or rain. Can't you be sympathetic?
Not if she
tampers with the ship. She's a danger to all of us, then. Take her into your
room and calm her down.
Bliss nodded
curtly.
Pelorat said,
I'll come with you, Bliss.
No, no, Pel,
she responded. You stay here. I'll soothe Fallom and you soothe Trevize. And
she left.
I don't need
soothing, growled Trevize to Pelorat. I'm sorry if I flew off the handle, but
we can't have a child playing with the controls, can we?
Of course we
can't, said Pelorat, but Bliss was caught by surprise. She can control
Fallom, who is really remarkably well behaved for a child taken from her home
and her-her robot, and thrown, willy-nilly, into a life she doesn't
understand.
I know. It
wasn't I who wanted to take her along, remember. It was Bliss's idea.
Yes, but the
child would have been killed, if we hadn't taken her.
Well, I'll
apologize to Bliss later on. To the child, too.
But he was still
frowning, and Pelorat said gently, Golan, old chap, is there anything else
bothering you?
The ocean, said
Trevize. They had long emerged from the rain storm, but the clouds persisted.
What's wrong
with it? asked Pelorat.
There's too much
of it, that's all.
Pelorat looked
blank, and Trevize said, with a snap, No land. We haven't seen any land. The
atmosphere is perfectly normal, oxygen and nitrogen in decent proportions, so
the planet has to be engineered, and there has to be plant life to maintain the
oxygen level. In the natural state, such atmospheres do not occur-except,
presumably, on Earth, where it developed, who knows how. But, then, on
engineered planets there are always reasonable amounts of dry land, up to one
third of the whole, and never less than a fifth. So how can this planet be
engineered, and lack land?
Pelorat said,
Perhaps, since this planet is part of a binary system, it is completely
atypical. Maybe it wasn't engineered, but evolved an atmosphere in ways that
never prevail on planets about single stars. Perhaps life developed
independently here, as it once did on Earth, but only sea life.
Even if we were
to admit that, said Trevize, it would do us no Good.
There's no way
life in the sea can develop a technology. Technology is always based on fire,
and fire is impossible in the sea. A life-bearing planet without technology is
not what we're looking for.
I realize that,
but I'm only considering ideas. After all, as far as we know, technology only
developed onceon Earth. Everywhere else, the Settlers brought it with them.
You can't say technology is always anything, if you only have one case to
study.
Travel through
the sea requires streamlining. Sea life cannot have irregular outlines and
appendages such as hands.
Squids have
tentacles.
Trevize said, I
admit we are allowed to speculate, but if you're thinking of intelligent squid-like
creatures evolving independently somewhere in the Galaxy, and developing a
technology not based on fire, you're supposing something not at all likely, in
my opinion.
In your opinion,
said Pelorat gently.
Suddenly, Trevize
laughed. Very well, Janov. I see you're logic-chopping in order to get even
with me for speaking harshly to Bliss, and you're doing a good job. I promise
you that if we find no land, we will examine the sea as best we can to see if
we can find your civilized squids.
As he spoke, the
ship plunged into the night-shadow again, and the viewscreen turned black.
Pelorat winced.
I keep wondering, he said. Is this safe?
Is what safe,
Janov?
Racing through
the dark like this. We might dip, and dive into the ocean, and be destroyed
instantly.
Quite
impossible, Janov. Really! The computer keeps us traveling along a
gravitational line of force. In other words, it remains always at a constant
intensity of the planetary gravitational force which means it keeps us at a
nearly constant height above sea level.
But how high?
Nearly five
kilometers.
That doesn't
really console me, Golan. Might we not reach land and smash into a mountain we
don't see?
We don't see,
but ship's radar will see it, and the computer will guide the ship around or
over the mountain.
What if there's
level land, then? We'll miss it in the dark.
No, Janov, we
won't. Radar reflected from water is not at all like radar reflected from land.
Water is essentially flat; land is rough. For that reason, reflection from land
is substantially more chaotic than reflection from water. The computer will
know the difference and it will let me know if there's land in view. Even if it
were day and the planet were sun-lit, the computer might well detect land
before I would.
They fell silent
and, in a couple of hours, they were back in daylight, with an empty ocean
again rolling beneath them monotonously, but occasionally invisible when they
passed through one of the numerous storms. In one storm, the wind drove the Far
Star out of its path. The computer gave way, Trevize explained, in order to
prevent an unnecessary waste of energy and to minimize the chance of physical
damage. Then, when the turbulence had passed, the computer eased the ship back
into its path.
Probably the
edge of a hurricane, said Trevize.
Pelorat said,
See here, old chap, we're just traveling west to east-or east to west. All
we're examining is the equator.
Trevize said,
That would be foolish, wouldn't it? We're following a great-circle route
northwest-southeast. That takes us through the tropics and both temperate zones
and each time we repeat the circle, the path moves westward, as the planet
rotates on its axis beneath us. We're methodically crisscrossing the world. By
now, since we haven't hit land, the chances of a sizable continent are less
than one in ten, according to the computer, and of a sizable island less than
one in four, with the chances going down each circle we make.
You know what I
would have done, said Pelorat slowly, as the night hemisphere engulfed them
again. I'd have stayed well away from the planet and swept the entire
hemisphere facing me with radar. The clouds wouldn't have mattered, would
they?
Trevize said,
And then zoom to the other side and do the same there. Or just let the planet
turn once. That's hindsight, Janov. Who would expect to approach a habitable
planet without stopping at a station and being given a path-or being excluded?
And if one went under the cloud layer without stopping at a station, who would
expect not to find land almost at once? Habitable planets are-land!
Surely not all
land, said Pelorat.
I'm not talking
about that, said Trevize, in sudden excitement. I'm saying we've found land!
Quiet!
Then, with a
restraint that did not succeed in hiding his excitement, Trevize placed his
hands on the desk and became part of the computer. He said, It's an island
about two hundred and fifty kilometers long and sixty-five kilometers wide,
more or less. Perhaps fifteen thousand square kilometers in area or thereabout.
Not large, but respectable. More than a dot on the map. Wait...
The lights in the
pilot-room dimmed and went out.
What are we
doing? said Pelorat, automatically whispering as though darkness were
something fragile that must not be shattered.
Waiting for our
eyes to undergo dark-adaptation. The ship is hovering over the island. Just
watch. Do you see anything?
No. Little
specks of light, maybe. I'm not sure.
I see them, too.
Now I'll throw in the telescopic lam.
And there was
light! Clearly visible. Irregular patches of it.
It's inhabited,
said Trevize. It may be the only inhabited portion of the pest...
What do we do?
We wait for
daytime. That gives us a few hours in which we can rest.
Might they not
attack us?
With what? I
detect almost no radiation except visible light and infrared. It's inhabited
and the inhabitants are clearly intelligent. They have a technology, but
obviously a preelectronic one, so I don't think there's anything to worry about
up here. If I should be wrong, the computer will warn me in plenty of time.
And once
daylight comes?
We'll land, of
course.
75.
THEY CAME down
when the first rays of the morning sun shone through a break in the clouds to
reveal part of the island-freshly green, with its interior marked by a line of
low, rolling hills stretching into the purplish distance.
As they dropped
closer, they could see isolated copses of trees and occasional orchards, but
for the most part there were well-kept farms. Immediately below them, on the
southeastern shore of the island was a silvery beach backed by a broken line of
boulders, and beyond it was a stretch of lawn. They caught a glimpse of an
occasional house, but these did not cluster into anything like a town.
Eventually, they
made out a dim network of roads, sparsely lined by dwelling places, and then,
in the cool morning sir, they spied an sir-car in the far distance. They could
only tell it was an au-car, and not a bird, by the manner of its maneuvering.
It was the first indubitable sign of intelligent life in action they had yet
seen on the planet.
It could be an
automated vehicle, if they could manage that without electronics, said
Trevize.
Bliss said, It
might well be. It seems to me that if there were a human being at the controls,
it would be heading for us. We must be quite a sight-a vehicle sinking downward
without the use of braking jets of rocket fire.
A strange sight
on any planet, said Trevize thoughtfully. There can't be many worlds that
have ever witnessed the descent of a gravitic space-vessel. The beach would
make a fine landing place, but if the winds blow I don't want the ship
inundated. I'll make for the stretch of grass on the other side of the
boulders.
At least, said
Pelorat, a gravitic ship won't scorch private property in descending.
Down they came
gently on the four broad pads that had moved slowly outward during the last
stage. These pressed down into the soil under weight of the ship.
Pelorat . said,
I'm afraid we'll . leave marks, though.
At least, said
Bliss, and there was that in her voice that was not en approving, the climate
is evidently equable. I would even say, warm.
A human being was
on the grass, watching the ship descend and showing no evidence of fear or
surprise. The look on her face showed only rapt interest.
She wore very
little, which accounted for Bliss's estimate of the c Her sandals seemed to be
of canvas, and about her hips was a wraparound skirt with a flowered pattern.
There were no leg-coverings and there was nothing above her waist.
Her hair was
black, long, and very glossy, descending almost to her waist; Her skin color
was a pale brown and her eyes were narrow.
Trevize scanned
the surroundings and there was no other human being in sight. He shrugged and
said, Well, it's early morning and the inhabitants may be mostly indoors, or
even asleep. Still, I wouldn't say it was a well-populated area.
He turned to the
others and said, I'll go out and talk to the woman, if she,' speaks anything
comprehensible. The rest of you...
I should think,
said Bliss firmly, that we might as well all step out. That woman looks
completely harmless and, in any case, I want to stretch my legs and breathe
planetary air, and perhaps arrange for planetary food. I want Fallow to get the
feel of a world again, too, and I think Pel would like to examine the woman at
closer range.
Who? I? said
Pelorat, turning faintly pink. Not at all, Bliss, but I am the linguist of our
little party.
Trevize shrugged.
Come one, come all. Still, though she may look harmless, I intend to take my
weapons with me.
I doubt, said
Bliss, that you will be much tempted to use them on that young woman.
Trevize grinned.
She is attractive, isn't she?
Trevize left the
ship first, then Bliss, with one hand swung backward to enclose Fallom's, who
carefully made her way down the ramp after Bliss. Pelorat was last.
The black-haired young
woman continued to watch with interest. She did not back away an inch.
Trevize muttered,
Well, let's try.
He held his arms
away from his weapons and said, I greet you.
The young woman
considered that for a moment, and said, I greet thee and I greet thy
companions.
Pelorat said
joyfully, How wonderful! She speaks Classical Galactic and with a correct
accent. '
I understand
her, too, said Trevize, oscillating one hand to indicate his understanding
wasn't perfect. I hope she understands me.
He said, smiling,
and assuming a friendly expression, We come from across space. We come from
another world.
That is well,
said the young woman, in her clear soprano. Comes thy ship from the Empire?
It comes from a
far star, and the ship is named Far Star.
The young woman
looked up at the lettering on the ship. Is that what that sayeth? If that be
so, and if the first letter is an F, then, behold, it is imprinted backward.
Trevize was about
to object, but Pelorat, in an ecstasy of joy, said, She's right. The letter F
did reverse itself about two thousand years ago. What a marvelous chance to
study Classical Galactic in detail and as a living language.
Trevize studied
the young woman carefully. She was not much more than 1.5 meters in height, and
her breasts, though shapely, were small. Yet she did not seem unripe. The
nipples were large and the areolae dark, though that might be the result of her
brownish skin color.
He said, My name
is Golan Trevize; my friend is Janov Pelorat; the woman is Bliss; and the child
is Fallom.
Is it the
custom, then, on the far star from which you come, that the men be given a
double name? I am Hiroko, daughter of Hiroko.
And your
father? interposed Pelorat suddenly.
To which Hiroko
replied with an indifferent shrug of her shoulder, His name, so sayeth my
mother, is Smool, but it is of no importance. I know him not.
And where are
the others? asked Trevize. You seem to be the only one to be here to greet
us.
Hiroko said,
Many men are aboard the fishboats; many women are in the fields. I take
holiday these last two days and so am fortunate enough to see this great thing.
Yet people are curious and the ship will have been seen as it descended, even
from a distance. Others will be here soon.
Are there many
others on this island?
There are more
than a score and five thousand, said Hiroko with obvious pride.
And are there
other islands in the ocean?
Other islands,
good sir? She seemed puzzled.
Trevize took that
as answer enough. This was the one spot on the entire planet that was inhabited
by human beings.
He said, What do
you call your world?
It is Alpha,
good sir. We are taught that the whole name is Alpha Centauri, if that has more
meaning to thee, but we call it Alpha only and, see, it is a fair-visaged
world.
A what world?
said Trevize, turning blankly to Pelorat.
A beautiful
world, she means, said Pelorat.
That it is,
said Trevize, at least here, and at this moment. He looked up at the mild
blue morning sky, with its occasional drift of clouds. You have a nice sunny
day, Hiroko, but I imagine there aren't many of those on Alpha.
Hiroko stiffened.
As many as we wish, sir. The clouds may come when we need rain, but on most
days it seemeth good to us that the sky is fair above. Surely a goodly sky and
a quiet wind are much to be desired on those days when the fishboats are at
sea.
Do your people
control the weather, then, Hiroko?
Did we not, Sir
Golan Trevize, we would be soggy with rain.
But how do you
do that?
Not being a
trained engineer, sir, I cannot tell thee.
And what might
be the name of this island on which you and your people live? said Trevize,
finding himself trapped in the ornate sound of Classical Galactic (and
wondering desperately if he had the conjugations right).
Hiroko said, We
call our heavenly island in the midst of the vast sea of waters New Earth.
At which Trevize
and Pelorat stared at each other with surprise and delight.
THERE was no time
to follow up on the statement. Others were arriving. Dozens. They must consist
of those, Trevize thought, who were not on the ships or in the fields, and who
were not from too far away. They came on foot for the most part, though two
ground-cars were in evidence-rather old and clumsy.
Clearly, this was
a low-technology society, and yet they controlled the weather.
It was well known
that technology was not necessarily all of a piece; that lack of advance in
some directions did not necessarily exclude considerable advance in others-but
surely this example of uneven development was unusual.
Of those who were
now watching the ship, at least half were elderly men and women; there were
also three or four children. Of the rest, more were women than men. None showed
any fear or uncertainty whatever.
Trevize said in a
low voice to Bliss, Are you manipulating them? They seem-serene.
I'm not in the
least manipulating them, said Bliss. I never touch minds unless I must. It's
Fallom I'm concerned with.
Few as the
newcomers were to anyone who had experienced the crowds of curiosity-seekers on
any normal world in the Galaxy, they were a mob to Fallom, to whom the three
adults on the Far Star had been something to grow accustomed to. Fallom was
breathing rapidly and shallowly, and her eyes were half-closed. Almost, she
seemed in shock.
Bliss was
stroking her, softly and rhythmically, and making soothing sounds. Trevize was
certain that she was delicately accompanying it all by an infinitely gentle
rearrangement of mental fibrils.
Fallom took in a
sudden deep breath, almost a gasp, and shook herself, in what was perhaps an
involuntary shudder. She raised her head and looked at those present with
something approaching normality and then buried her head in the space between
Bliss's arm and body.
Bliss let her
remain so, while her arm, encircling Fallom's shoulder, tightened periodically
as though to indicate her own protective presence over and over.
Pelorat seemed
rather awestruck, as his eyes went from one Alphan to another. He said, Golan,
they differ so among themselves.
Trevize had noticed
that, too. There were various shades of skin and hair color, including one
brilliant redhead with blue eyes and freckled skin. At least three apparent
adults were as short as Hiroko, and one or two were taller than Trevize. A
number of both sexes had eyes resembling those of Hiroko, and Trevize
remembered that on the teeming commercial planets of the Fili sector, such eyes
were characteristic of the population, but he had never visited that sector.
All the Alphans
wore nothing above the waist and among the women the breasts all seemed to be
small. That was the most nearly uniform of all the bodily characteristics that
he could see.
Bliss said
suddenly, Miss Hiroko, my youngster is not accustomed to travel through space
and she is absorbing more novelty than she can easily manage. Would it be
possible for her to sit down and, perhaps, have something to eat and drink?
Hiroko looked
puzzled, and Pelorat repeated what Bliss had said in the more ornate Galactic
of the mid-Imperial period.
Hiroko's hand
then flew to her mouth and she sank to her knees gracefully. I crave your
pardon, respected madam, she said. I have not thought of this child's needs,
nor of thine. The strangeness of this event has too occupied me. Wouldst
thou-would you all-as visitors and guests, enter the refectory for morning
meal? May we join you and serve as hosts?
Bliss said, That
is kind of you. She spoke slowly and pronounced the words carefully, hoping to
make them easier to understand. It would be better, though, if you alone
served as hostess, for the sake of the comfort of the child who is unaccustomed
to being with many people at once.
Hiroko rose to
her feet. It shall be as thou hast said.
She led them, in
leisurely manner, across the grass. Other Alphans edged closer. They seemed
particularly interested in the clothing of the newcomers. Trevize removed his
light jacket, and handed it to a man who had sidled toward him and had laid a
questing finger upon it.
Here, he said,
look it over, but return it. Then he said to Hiroko. See that I get it back,
Miss Hiroko.
Of a surety, it
will be backhanded, respected sir. She nodded her head gravely.
Trevize smiled
and walked on. He was more comfortable without the jacket in the light, mild
breeze.
He had detected
no visible weapons on the persons of any of those about him, and he found it
interesting that no one seemed to show any fear or discomfort over Trevize's.
They did not even show curiosity concerning them. It might well be that they
were not aware of the objects as weapons at all. From what Trevize had so far
seen, Alpha might well be a world utterly without violence.
A woman, having
moved rapidly forward, so as to be a little ahead of Bliss, turned to examine
her blouse minutely, then said, Hast thou breasts, respected madam?
And, as though
unable to wait for an answer, she placed her hand lightly on Bliss's chest.
Bliss smiled and
said, As thou hast discovered, I have. They are perhaps not as shapely as
thine, but I hide them not for that reason. On my world, it is not fitting that
they be uncovered.
She whispered in
an aside to Pelorat, How do you like the way I'm getting the hang of Classical
Galactic?
You did that
very well, Bliss, said Pelorat.
The dining room
was a large one with long tables to which were attached long benches on either
side. Clearly, the Alphans ate community-fashion.
Trevize felt a
pang of conscience. Bliss's request for privacy had reserved this space for
five people and forced the Alphans generally to remain in exile outside. A
number, however, placed themselves at a respectful distance from the windows
(which were no more than gaps in the wall, unfilled even by screens),
presumably so that they might watch the strangers eat.
Involuntarily, he
wondered what would happen if it were to rain. Surely, the rain would come only
when it was needed, light and mild, continuing without significant wind till
enough had fallen. Moreover, it would always come at known times so that the Alphans
would be ready for it, Trevize imagined.
The window he was
facing looked out to sea, and far out at the horizon it seemed to Trevize that
he could make out a bank of clouds similar to those that so nearly filled the
skies everywhere but over this little spot of Eden.
There were
advantages to weather control.
Eventually, they
were served by a young woman on tiptoeing feet. They were not asked for their
choice, but were merely served. There was a small glass of milk, a larger of
grape juice, a still larger of water. Each diner received two large poached
eggs, with slivers of white cheese on the side. Each also had a large platter
of broiled fish and small roasted potatoes, resting on cool, green lettuce
leaves.
Bliss looked with
dismay at the quantity of food before her and was clearly at a loss where to
begin. Fallom had no such trouble. She drank the grape juice thirstily and with
clear evidence of approval, then chewed away at the fish and potatoes. She was
about to use her fingers for the purpose, but Bliss held up a large spoon with
tined ends that could serve as a fork as well, and Fallom accepted it.
Pelorat smiled
his satisfaction and cut into the eggs at once.
Trevize, saying,
Now to be reminded what real eggs taste like, followed suit.
Hiroko, forgetting
to eat her own breakfast in her delight at the manner in which the others ate
(for even Bliss finally began, with obvious relish), said, at last, Is it
well?
It is well,
said Trevize, his voice somewhat muffled. This island has no shortage of food,
apparently. Or do you serve us more than you should, out of politeness?
Hiroko listened
with intent eyes, and seemed to grasp the meaning, for she said, No, no,
respected sir. Our land is bountiful, our sea even more so. Our ducks give
eggs, our goats both cheese and milk. And there are our grains. Above all, our
sea is filled with countless varieties of fish in numberless quantity. The
whole Empire could eat at our tables and consume not the fish of our sea.
Trevize smiled
discreetly. Clearly, the young Alphan had not the smallest idea of the true
size of the Galaxy.
He said, You
call this island New Earth, Hiroko. Where, then, might Old Earth be?
She looked at him
in bewilderment. Old Earth, say you? I crave pardon, respected sir. I take not
thy meaning.
Trevize said,
Before there was a New Earth, your people must have lived elsewhere. Where was
this elsewhere from which they came?
I know naught of
that, respected sir, she said, with troubled gravity. This land has been mine
all my life, and my mother's and grandmother's before me; and, I doubt not,
their grandmother's and great-grandmother's before them. Of any other land, I
know naught.
But, said
Trevize, descending to gentle argumentation, you speak of this land as New
Earth. Why do you call it that?
Because,
respected sir, she replied, equally gentle, that is what it is called by all
since the mind of woman goeth not to the contrary.
But it is New
Earth, and therefore, a later Earth. There must be an Old Earth, a former one, for
which it was named. Each morning there is a new day, and that implies that
earlier there had existed an old day. Don't you see that this must be so?
Nay, respected
sir. I know only what this land is called. I know of naught else, nor do I
follow this reasoning of thine which sounds very much like what we call here
chop-logic. I mean no offense.
And Trevize shook
his head and felt defeated.
77.
TREVIZE leaned
toward Pelorat, and whispered, Wherever we go, whatever we do, we get no
information.
We know where
Earth is, so what does it matter? said Pelorat, doing little more than move
his lips.
I want to know
something about it.
She's very
young. Scarcely a repository of information.
Trevize thought
about that, then nodded. Right, Janov.
He turned to
Hiroko and said, Miss Hiroko, you haven't asked us why we are here in your
land?
Hiroko's eyes
fell, and she said, That would be but scant courtesy until you have all eaten
and rested, respected sir.
But we have
eaten, or almost so, and we have recently rested, so I shall tell you why we
are here. My friend, Dr. Pelorat, is a scholar on our world, a learned man. He
is a mythologist. Do you know what that means?
Nay, respected
sir, I do not.
He studies old
tales as they are told on different worlds. Old tales are known as myths or
legends and they interest Dr. Pelorat. Are there learned ones on New Earth who
know the old tales of this world?
Hiroko's forehead
creased slightly into a frown of thought. She said, This is not a matter in
which I am myself skilled. We have an old man in these parts who loves to talk
of ancient days. Where he may have learned these things, I know not, and
methinks he may have spun his notions out of air, or heard them from others who
did so spin. This is perhaps the material which thy learned companion would
hear, yet I would not mislead thee. It is in my mind, she looked to right and
left as though unwilling to be overheard, that the old man is but a prater,
though many listen willingly to him.
Trevize nodded.
Such prating is what we wish. Would it be possible for you to take my friend
to this old man...
Monolee he calls
himself.
to Monolee,
then. And do you think Monolee would be willing to speak to my friend?
He? Willing to
speak? said Hiroko scornfully. Thou must ask, rather, if he be ever ready to
cease from speaking. He is but a man, and will therefore speak, if allowed,
till a fortnight hence, with no pause. I mean no offense, respected sir.
No offense
taken. Would you lead my friend to Monolee now?
That may anyone
do at any time. The ancient is ever home and ever ready to greet an ear.
Trevize said,
And perhaps an older woman would be willing to come and sit with Madam Bliss.
She has the child to care for and cannot move about too much. It would please
her to have company, for women, as you know, are fond of...
Prating? said
Hiroko, clearly amused. Why, so men say, although I have observed that men are
always the greater babblers. Let the men return from their fishing, and one
will vie with another in telling greater flights of fancy concerning their
catches. None will mark them nor believe, but this will not stop them, either.
But enough of my prating, too. I will have a friend of my mother's, one whom I
can see through the window, stay with Madam Bliss and the child, and before
that she will guide your friend, the respected doctor, to the aged Monolee. If
your friend will hear as avidly as Monolee will prate, thou wilt scarcely part
them in this life. Wilt thou pardon my absence a moment?
When she had
left, Trevize turned to Pelorat and said, Listen, get what you can out of the
old man, and Bliss, you find out what you can from whoever stays with you. What
you want is anything about Earth.
And you? said
Bliss. What will you do?
I will remain
with Hiroko, and try to find a third source.
Bliss smiled. Ah
yes. Pel will be with this old man; I with an old woman. You will force
yourself to remain with this fetchingly unclad young woman. It seems a
reasonable division of labor.
As it happens,
Bliss, it is reasonable.
But you don't
find it depressing that the reasonable division of labor should work out so, I
suppose.
No, I don't. Why
should I?
Why should you,
indeed?
Hiroko was back,
and sat down again. It is all arranged. The respected Dr. Pelorat will be
taken to Monolee; and the respected Madam Bliss, together with her child, will
have company. May I be granted, then, respected Sir Trevize, the boon of
further conversation with thee, mayhap of this Old Earth of which thou...
Pratest? asked
Trevize.
Nay, said
Hiroko, laughing. But thou dost well to mock me. I showed thee but discourtesy
ere now in answering thy question on this matter. I would fain make amends.
Trevize turned to
Pelorat. Fain?
Be eager, said
Pelorat softly.
Trevize said,
Miss Hiroko, I felt no discourtesy, but if it will make you feel better, I
will gladly speak with you.
Kindly spoken. I
thank thee, said Hiroko, rising.
Trevize rose,
too. Bliss, he said, make sure Janov remains safe.
Leave that to
me. As for you, you have your... She nodded toward his holsters.
I don't think
I'll need them, said Trevize uncomfortably.
He followed
Hiroko out of the dining room. The sun was higher in the sky now and the
temperature was still warmer. There was an otherworldly smell as always.
Trevize remembered it had been faint on Comporellon, a little musty on Aurora,
and rather delightful on Solaria. (On Melpomenia, they were in space suits
where one is only aware of the smell of one's own body.) In every case, it
disappeared in a matter of hours as the osmic centers of the nose grew
saturated.
Here, on Alpha,
the odor was a pleasant grassy fragrance under the warming effect of the sun,
and Trevize felt a bit annoyed, knowing that this, too, would soon disappear.
They were
approaching a small structure that seemed to be built of a pale pink plaster.
This, said
Hiroko, is my home. It used to belong to my mother's younger sister.
She walked in and
motioned Trevize to follow. The door was open or, Trevize noticed as he passed
through, it would be more accurate to say there was no door.
Trevize said,
What do you do when it rains?
We are ready. It
will rain two days hence, for three hours ere dawn, when it is coolest, and
when it will moisten the soil most powerfully. Then I have but to draw this
curtain, both heavy and water-repellent, across the door.
She did so as she
spoke. It seemed made of a strong canvas-like material.
I will leave it
in place now, she went on. All will then know I am within but not available,
for I sleep or am occupied in matters of importance.
It doesn't seem
much of a guardian of privacy.
Why should it
not be? See, the entrance is covered.
But anyone could
shove it aside.
With disregard
of the wishes of the occupant? Hiroko looked shocked. Are such things done on
thy world? It would be barbarous.
Trevize grinned.
I only asked.
She led him into
the second of two rooms, and, at her invitation, he seated himself in a padded
chair. There was something claustrophobic about the blockish smallness and
emptiness of the rooms, but the house seemed designed for little more than
seclusion and rest. The window openings were small and near the ceiling, but
there were dull mirror strips in a careful pattern along the walls, which
reflected light diffusely. There were slits in the Ioor from which a gentle,
cool breeze uplifted. Trevize saw no signs of artifinal lighting and wondered
if Alphans had to wake at sunrise and go to bed at sunset.
He was about to
ask, but Hiroko spoke first, saying, Is Madam Bliss thy woman companion?
Trevize said
cautiously, Do you mean by that, is she my sexual partner?
Hiroko colored.
I pray thee, have regard for the decencies of polite conversation, but I do
mean private pleasantry.
No, she is the
woman companion of my learned friend.
But thou art the
younger, and the more goodly.
Well, thank you
for your opinion, but it is not Bliss's opinion. She likes Dr. Pelorat much
more than she does me.
That much
surprises me. Will he not share?
I have not asked
him whether he would, but I'm sure he wouldn't. Nor would I want him to.
Hiroko nodded her
head wisely. I know. It is her fundament.
Her fundament?
Thou knowest.
This. And she slapped her own dainty rear end.
Oh, that! I
understand you. Yes, Bliss is generously proportioned in her pelvic anatomy.
He made a curving gesture with his hands and winked. (And Hiroko laughed.)
Trevize said,
Nevertheless, a great many men enjoy that kind of generosity of figure.
I cannot believe
so. Surely it would be a sort of gluttony to wish excess of that which is
pleasant in moderation. Wouldst thou think more of me if my breasts were
massive and dangling, with nipples pointing to toes? I have, in good sooth,
seen such, yet have I not seen men flock to them. The poor women so afflicted
must needs cover their monstrosities-as Madam Bliss does.
Such oversize
wouldn't attract me, either, though I am sure that Bliss doesn't cover her
breasts for any imperfection they may have.
Thou dost not,
then, disapprove of my visage or form?
I would be a
madman to do so. You are beautiful.
And what dost
thou for pleasantries on this ship of thine, as thou flittest from one world to
the next-Madam Bliss being denied thee?
Nothing, Hiroko.
There's nothing to do. I think of pleasantries on occasion and that has its
discomforts, but we who travel through space know well that there are times
when we must do without. We make up for it at other times.
If it be a
discomfort, how may that be removed?
I experience
considerably more discomfort since you've brought up the subject. I don't think
it would be polite to suggest how I might be comforted.
Would it be
discourtesy, were I to suggest a way?
It would depend
entirely on the nature of the suggestion.
I would suggest
that we be pleasant with each other.
Did you bring me
here, Hiroko, that it might come to this?
Hiroko said, with
a pleased smile, Yes. It would be both my hostess-duty of courtesy, and it
would be my wish, too.
If that's the
case, I will admit it is my wish, too. In fact, I would like very much to
oblige you in this. I would be-uh fain to do thee pleasure.
Chapter 18
The Music
Festival
78.
LUNCH was in the
same dining room in which they had had breakfast. It was full of Alphans, and
with them were Trevize and Pelorat, made thoroughly welcome. Bliss and Fallom
ate separately, and more or less privately, in a small annex.
There were
several varieties of fish, together with soup in which there were strips of
what might well have been boiled kid. Loaves of bread were there for the
slicing, butter and jam for the spreading. A salad, large and diffuse, came
afterward, and there was a notable absence of any dessert, although fruit
juices were passed about in apparently inexhaustible pitchers. Both
Foundationers were forced to be abstemious after their heavy breakfast, but
everyone else seemed to eat freely.
How do they keep
from getting fat? wondered Pelorat in a low voice.
Trevize shrugged.
Lots of physical labor, perhaps.
It was clearly a
society in which decorum at meals was not greatly valued. There was a
miscellaneous hubbub of shouting, laughing, and thumping on the table with
thick, obviously unbreakable, cups. Women were as loud and raucous as men,
albeit in higher pitch.
Pelorat winced,
but Trevize, who now (temporarily, at least) felt no trace of the discomfort he
had spoken of to Hiroko, felt both relaxed and good-natured.
He said,
Actually, it has its pleasant side. These are people who appear to enjoy life
and who have few, if any, cares. Weather is what they make it and food is
unimaginably plentiful. This is a golden age for them that simply continues and
continues.
He had to shout
to make himself heard, and Pelorat shouted back, But it's so noisy.
They're used to
it.
I don't see how
they can understand each other in this riot.
Certainly, it was
all lost on the two Foundationers. The queer pronunciation and the archaic
grammar and word order of the Alphan language made it impossible to understand
at the intense sound levels. To the Foundationers, it was like listening to the
sounds of a zoo in fright.
It was not till
after lunch that they rejoined Bliss in a small structure, which Trevize found
to be rather inconsiderably different from Hiroko's quarters, and which had
been assigned them as their own temporary living quarters. Fallom was in the
second room, enormously relieved to be alone, according to Bliss, and
attempting to nap.
Pelorat looked at
the door-gap in the wall and said uncertainly, There's very little privacy
here. How can we speak freely?
I assure you,
said Trevize, that once we pull the canvas barrier across the door, we won't
be disturbed. The canvas makes it impenetrable by all the force of social
custom.
Pelorat glanced
at the high, open windows. We can be overheard.
We need not
shout. The Alphans won't eavesdrop. Even when they stood outside the windows of
the dining room at breakfast, they remained at a respectful distance.
Bliss smiled.
You've learned so much about Alphan customs in the time you spent alone with
gentle little Hiroko, and you've gained such confidence in their respect for
privacy. What happened?
Trevize said, If
you're aware that the tendrils of my mind have undergone a change for the
better and can guess the reason, I can only ask you to leave my mind alone.
You know very
well that Gaia will not touch your mind under any circumstances short of
life-crisis, and you know why. Still, I'm not mentally blind. I could sense
what happened a kilometer away. Is this your invariable custom on space
voyages, my erotomaniac friend?
Erotomaniac?
Come, Bliss. Twice on this entire trip. Twice!
We were only on
two worlds that had functioning human females on them. Two out of two, and we
had only been a few hours on each.
You are well
aware I had no choice on Comporellon.
That makes
sense. I remember what she looked like. For a few moments, Bliss dissolved in
laughter. Then she said, Yet I don't think Hiroko held you helpless in her
mighty grip, or inflicted her irresistible will on your cringing body.
Of course not. I
was perfectly willing. But it was her suggestion, just the same.
Pelorat said,
with just a tinge of envy in his voice, Does this happen to you all the time,
Golan?
Of course it
must, Pel, said Bliss. Women are helplessly drawn to him.
I wish that were
so, said Trevize, but it isn't. And I'm glad it isn't-I do have other things
I want to do in life. Just the same, in this case I was irresistible. After
all, we were the first people from another world that Hiroko had ever seen or,
apparently, that anyone now alive on Alpha had ever seen: I gathered from
things she let slip, casual remarks, that she had the rather exciting notion
that I might be different from Alphans, either anatomically or in my technique.
Poor thing. I'm afraid she was disappointed.
Oh? said Bliss.
Were you?
No, said
Trevize. I have been on a number of worlds and I have had my experiences. And
what I had discovered is that people are people and sex is sex, wherever one
goes. If there are noticeable differences, they are usually both trivial and
unpleasant. The perfumes I've encountered in my time! I remember when a young
woman simply couldn't manage unless there was music loudly played, music that
consisted of a desperate screeching sound. So she played the music and then I
couldn't manage. I assure you-if it's the same old thing, then I'm satisfied.
Speaking of
music, said Bliss, we are invited to a musicale after dinner. A very formal
thing, apparently, that is being held in our honor. I gather the Alphans are
very proud of their music.
Trevize grimaced.
Their pride will in no way make the music sound better to our ears.
Hear me out,
said Bliss. I gather that their pride is that they play expertly on very
archaic instruments. Very archaic. We may get some information about Earth by
way of them.
Trevize's
eyebrows shot up. An interesting thought. And that reminds me that both of you
may already have information. Janov, did you see this Monolee that Hiroko told
us about?
Indeed I did,
said Pelorat. I was with him for three hours and Hiroko did not exaggerate. It
was a virtual monologue on his part and when I left to come to lunch, he clung
to me and would not let me go until I promised to return whenever I could in
order that I might listen to him some more.
And did he say
anything of interest?
Well, he,
too-like everybody else-insisted that Earth was thoroughly and murderously
radioactive; that the ancestors of the Alphans were the last to leave and that
if they hadn't, they would have died. And, Golan, he was so emphatic that I
couldn't help believing him. I'm convinced that Earth is dead, and that our
entire search is, after all, useless.
79.
TREVIZE sat back
in his chair, staring at Pelorat, who was sitting on a narrow cot. Bliss,
having risen from where she had been sitting next to Pelorat, looked from one
to the other.
Finally, Trevize
said, Let me be the judge as to whether our search is useless or not, Janov.
Tell me what the garrulous old man had to say to you in brief, of course.
Pelorat said, I
took notes as Monolee spoke. It helped reinforce my role a scholar, but I don't
have to refer to them. He was quite stream-of-consciousness in his speaking.
Each thing he said would remind him of something else, but, of course, I have
spent my life trying to organize information in the search of the relevant and
significant, so that it's second nature for me now to be able to condense a
long and incoherent discourse...
Trevize said
gently, Into something just as long and incoherent? To the point, dear Janov.
Pelorat cleared
his throat uneasily. Yes, certainly, old chap. I'll try to make a connected
and chronological tale out of it. Earth was the original home of humanity and
of millions of species of plants and animals. It continued so for countless
years until hyperspatial travel was invented. Then the Spacer worlds were
founded. They broke away from Earth, developed their own cultures, and came to
despise and oppress the mother planet.
After a couple
of centuries of this, Earth managed to regain its freedom, though Monolee did
not explain the exact manner in which this was done, and I dared not ask
questions, even if he had given me a chance to interrupt, which he did not, for
that might merely have sent him into new byways. He did mention a culture-hero
named Elijah Baley, but the references were so characteristic of the habit of
attributing to one figure the accomplishments of generations that there was
little value in attempting to...
Bliss said, Yes,
Pel dear, we understand that part.
Again, Pelorat
paused in midstream and reconsidered. Of course. My apologies. Earth initiated
a second wave of settlements, founding many new worlds in a new fashion. The
new group of Settlers proved more vigorous than the Spacers, outpaced them,
defeated them, outlasted them, and, eventually, established the Galactic
Empire. During the course of the wars between the Settlers and the Spacers-no,
not wars, for he used the word 'conflict,' being very careful about that-the
Earth became radioactive.
Trevize said,
with clear annoyance, That's ridiculous, Janov. How can a world become
radioactive? Every world is very slightly radioactive to one degree or another
from the moment of formation, and that radioactivity slowly decays. It doesn't
become radioactive.
Pelorat shrugged.
I'm only telling you what he said. And he was only telling me what he had
heard-from someone who only told him what he had heard-and so on. It's
folk-history, told and retold over the generations, with who knows what
distortions creeping in at each retelling.
I understand
that, but are there no books, documents, ancient histories which have frozen
the story at an early time and which could give us something more accurate than
the present tale?
Actually, I
managed to ask that question, and the answer is no. He said vaguely that there
were books about it in ancient times and that they had long ago been lost, but
that what he was telling us was what had been in those books.
Yes, well
distorted. It's the same story. In every world we go to, the records of Earth
have, in one way or another, disappeared. Well, how did he say the
radioactivity began on Earth?
He didn't, in
any detail. The closest he came to saying so was that the Spacers were
responsible, but then I gathered that the Spacers were the demons on whom the
people of Earth blamed all misfortune. The radioactivity...
A clear voice
overrode him here. Bliss, am I a Spacer?
Fallom was
standing in the narrow doorway between the two rooms, hair tousled and the
nightgown she was wearing (designed to fit Bliss's more ample proportions)
having slid off one shoulder to reveal an undeveloped breast.
Bliss said, We
worry about eavesdroppers outside and we forget the one inside. Now, Fallom,
why do you say that? She rose and walked toward the youngster.
Fallom said, I
don't have what they have, she pointed at the two men, or what you have,
Bliss. I'm different. Is that because I'm a Spacer?
You are,
Fallom, said Bliss soothingly, but little differences don't matter. Come back
to bed.
Fallom became
submissive as she always did when Bliss willed her to be so. She turned and
said, Am I a demon? What is a demon?
Bliss said over
her shoulder, Wait one moment for me. I'll be right back.
She was, within
five minutes. She was shaking her head. She'll be sleeping now till I wake
her. I should have done that before, I suppose, but any modification of the
mind must be the result of necessity. She added defensively, I can't have her
brood on the differences between her genital equipment and ours.
Pelorat said,
Someday she'll have to know she's hermaphroditic.
Someday, said
Bliss, but not now. Go on with the story, Pel.
Yes, said
Trevize, before something else interrupts us.
Well, Earth
became radioactive, or at least its crust did. At that time, Earth had had an
enormous population that was centered in huge cities that existed for the most
part underground...
Now, that, put
in Trevize, is surely not so. It must be local patriotism glorifying the
golden age of a planet, and the details were simply a distortion of Trantor in
its golden age, when it was the Imperial capital of a Galaxy-wide system of
worlds.
Pelorat paused,
then said, Really, Golan, you mustn't teach me my business. We mythologists
know very well that myths and legends contain borrowings, moral lessons, nature
cycles, and a hundred other distorting influences, and we labor to cut them
away and get to what might be a kernel of truth. In fact, these same techniques
must be applied to the most sober histories, for no one writes the clear and
apparent truth-if such a thing can even be said to exist. For now, I'm telling
you more or less what Monolee told me, though I suppose I am adding distortions
of my own, try as I might not to do so.
Well, well,
said Trevize. Go on, Janov. I meant no offense.
And I've taken
none. The huge cities, assuming they existed, crumbled and shrank as the
radioactivity slowly grew more intense until the population was but a remnant
of what it had been, clinging precariously to regions that were relatively
radiation-free. The population was kept down by rigid birth control and by the
euthanasia of people over sixty.
Horrible, said
Bliss indignantly.
Undoubtedly,
said Pelorat, but that is what they did, according to Monolee, and that might
be true, for it is certainly not complimentary to the Earthpeople and it is not
likely that an uncomplimentary lie would be made up. The Earthpeople, having
been despised and oppressed by the Spacers, were now despised and oppressed by
the Empire, though here we may have exaggeration there out of self-pity, which
is a very seductive emotion. There is the case...
Yes, yes,
Pelorat, another time. Please go on with Earth.
I beg your
pardon. The Empire, in a fit of benevolence, agreed to substitute imported
radiation-free soil and to cart away the contaminated soil. Needless to say,
that was an enormous task which the Empire soon tired of, especially as this
period (if my guess is right) coincided with the fall of Kandar V, after which
the Empire had many more things to worry about than Earth.
The
radioactivity continued to grow more intense, the population continued to fall,
and finally the Empire, in another fit of benevolence, offered to transplant
the remnant of the population to a new world of their own-to this world, in
short.
At an earlier
period, it seems an expedition had stocked the ocean so that by the time 'the
plans for the transplantation of Earthpeople were being developed, there was a
full oxygen atmosphere and an ample supply of food on Alpha. Nor did any of the
worlds of the Galactic Empire covet this world because there is a certain
natural antipathy to planets that circle stars of a binary system. There are so
few suitable planets in such a system, I suppose, that even suitable ones are
rejected because of the assumption that there must be something wrong with
them. This is a common thought-fashion. There is the well-known case, for
instance, of...
Later with the
well-known case, Janov, said Trevize. On with the transplantation.
What remained,
said Pelorat, hurrying his words a little, was to prepare a land-base. The
shallowest part of the ocean was found and sediment was raised from deeper
parts to add to the shallow sea-bottom and, finally, to produce the island of
New Earth. Boulders and coral were dredged up and added to the island. Land
plants were seeded so that root systems might help make the new land firm.
Again, the Empire had set itself an enormous task. Perhaps continents were
planned at first, but by the time this one island was produced, the Empire's
moment of benevolence had passed.
What was left of
Earth's population was brought here. The Empire's fleets carried off its men
and machinery, and they never returned. The Earthpeople, living on New Earth,
found themselves in complete isolation.
Trevize said,
Complete? Did Monolee say that no one from elsewhere in the Galaxy has ever
come here till we did?
Almost
complete, said Pelorat. There is nothing to come here for, I suppose, even if
we set aside the superstitious distaste for binary systems. Occasionally, at
long intervals, a ship would come, as ours did, but it would eventually leave
and there has never been a follow-up. And that's it.
Trevize said, Did
you ask Monolee where Earth was located?
Of course I
asked that. He didn't know.
How can he know
so much about Earth's history without knowing where it is located?
I asked him
specifically, Golan, if the star that was only a parsec or so distant from
Alpha might be the sun about which Earth revolved. He didn't know what a parsec
was, and I said it was a short distance, astronomically speaking. He said,
short or long, he did not know where Earth was located and he didn't know
anyone who knew, and, in his opinion, it was wrong to try to find it. It should
be allowed, he said, to move endlessly through space in peace.
Trevize said, Do
you agree with him?
Pelorat shook his
head sorrowfully. Not really. But he said that at the rate the radioactivity continued
to increase, the planet must have become totally uninhabitable not long after
the transplantation took place and that by now it must be burning intensely so
that no one can approach.
Nonsense, said
Trevize firmly. A planet cannot become radioactive and, having done so,
continuously increase in radioactivity. Radioactivity can only decrease.
But Monolee is
so sure of it. So many people we've talked to on various worlds unite in
this-that Earth is radioactive. Surely, it is useless to go on.
80.
TREVIZE drew a
deep breath, then said, in a carefully controlled voice, Nonsense, Janov.
That's not true.
Pelorat said,
Well, now, old chap, you mustn't believe something just because you want to
believe it.
My wants have
nothing to do with it. In world after world we find all records of Earth wiped
out. Why should they be. wiped out if there is nothing to hide; if Earth is a
dead, radioactive world that cannot be approached?
I don't know,
Golan.
Yes, you do.
When we were approaching Melpomenia, you said that the radioactivity might be
the other side of the coin. Destroy records to remove accurate information;
supply the tale of radioactivity to insert inaccurate information. Both would
discourage any attempt to find Earth, and we mustn't be deluded into
discouragement.
Bliss said,
Actually, you seem to think the nearby star is Earth's sun. Why, then,
continue to argue the question of radioactivity? What does it matter? Why not
simply go to the nearby star and see if it is Earth, and, if so, what it is
like?
Trevize said,
Because those on Earth must be, in their way, extraordinarily powerful, and I
would prefer to approach with some knowledge of the world and its inhabitants.
As it is, since I continue to remain ignorant of Earth, approaching it is
dangerous. It is my notion that I leave the rest of you here on Alpha and that
I proceed to Earth by myself. One life is quite enough to risk.
No, Golan, said
Pelorat earnestly. Bliss and the child might wait here, but I must go with
you. I have been searching for Earth since before you were born and I cannot
stay behind when the goal is so close, whatever dangers might threaten.
Bliss and the
child will not wait here, said Bliss. I am Gaia, and Gaia can protect us even
against Earth.
I hope you're
right, said Trevize gloomily, but Gaia could not prevent the elimination of
all early memories of Earth's role in its founding.
That was done in
Gaia's early history when it was not yet well organized, not yet advanced.
Matters are different now.
I hope that is
so. Or is it that you have gained information about Earth this morning that we
don't have? I did ask that you speak to some of the older women that might be
available here.
And so I did.
Trevize said,
And what did you find out?
Nothing about
Earth. There is a total blank there.
Ah.
But they are
advanced biotechnologists. ,
Oh?
On this small
island, they have grown and tested innumerable strains of plants and animals
and designed a suitable ecological balance, stable and self. supporting,
despite the few species with which they began. They have improved on the ocean
life that they found when they arrived here a few thousand years ago,
increasing their nutritive value and improving their taste. It is their
biotechnology that has made this world such a cornucopia of plenty. They have
plans for themselves, too.
What kind of
plans?
Bliss said, They
know perfectly well they cannot reasonably expect to expand their range under
present circumstances, confined as they are to the one small patch of land that
exists on their world, but they dream of becoming amphibious.
Of becoming
what?
Amphibious. They
plan to develop gills in addition to lungs. They dream of being able to spend
substantial periods of time underwater; of finding shallow regions and building
structures on the ocean bottom. My informant was quite glowing about it but she
admitted that this had been a goal of the Alphans for some centuries now and
that little, if any, progress has been made.
Trevize said,
That's two fields in which they might be more advanced than we are; weather
control and biotechnology. I wonder what their techniques are.
We'd have to
find specialists, said Bliss, and they might not be willing to talk about
it.
Trevize said,
It's not our primary concern here, but it would clearly pay the Foundation to
attempt to learn from this miniature world.
Pelorat said, We
manage to control the weather fairly well on Terminus, as it is.
Control is good
on many worlds, said Trevize, but always it's a matter of the world as a
whole. Here the Alphans control the weather of a small portion of the world and
they must have techniques we don't have. Anything else, Bliss?
Social
invitations. These appear to be a holiday-making people, in whatever time they
can take from farming and fishing. After dinner, tonight there'll be a music
festival. I told you about that already. Tomorrow, during the day, there will
be a beach festival. Apparently, all around the rim of the island there will be
a congregation of everyone who can get away from the fields in order that they
might enjoy the water and celebrate the sun, since it will be raining the next
day. In the morning, the fishing fleet will come back, beating the rain, and by
evening there will be a food festival, sampling the catch.
Pelorat groaned.
The meals are ample enough as it is. What would a food festival be like?
I gather that it
will feature not quantity, but variety. In any case, all four of us are invited
to participate in all the festivals, especially the music festival tonight.
On the antique
instruments? asked Trevize.
That's right.
What makes them
antique, by the way? Primitive computers?
No, no. That's
the point. It isn't electronic music at all, but mechanical. They described it
to me. They scrape strings, blow in tubes, and bang on surfaces.
I hope you're
making that up, said Trevize, appalled.
No, I'm not. And
I understand that your Hiroko will be blowing on one of the tubes-I forget its
name-and you ought to be able to endure that.
As for myself,
said Pelorat, I would love to go. I know very little about primitive music and
I would like to hear it.
She is not my
Hiroko, said Trevize coldly. But are the instruments of the type once used
on Earth, do you suppose?
So I gathered,
said Bliss. At least the Alphan women said they were designed long before
their ancestors came here.
In that case,
said Trevize, it may be worth listening to all that scraping, tootling, and
banging, for whatever information it might conceivably yield concerning Earth.
81.
ODDLY enough, it
was Fallom who was most excited at the prospect of a musical evening. She and
Bliss had bathed in the small outhouse behind their quarters. It had a bath
with running water, hot and cold (or, rather, warm and cool), a washbowl, and a
commode. It was totally clean and usable and, in the late afternoon sun, it was
even well lit and cheerful.
As always, Fallom
was fascinated with Bliss's breasts and Bliss was reduced to saying (now that
Fallom understood Galactic) that on her world that was the way people were. To
which Fallom said, inevitably, Why? and Bliss, after some thought, deciding
there was no sensible way of answering, returned the universal reply,
Because!
When they were
done, Bliss helped Fallom put on the undergarment supplied them by the Alphans
and worked out the system whereby the skirt went on over it. Leaving Fallom
unclothed from the waist up seemed reasonable enough. She herself, while making
use of Alphan garments below the waist (rather tight about the hips), put on
her own blouse. It seemed silly to be too inhibited to expose breasts in a
society where all women did, especially since her own were not large and were
as shapely as any she had seen but-there it was.
The two men took
their turn at the outhouse next, Trevize muttering the usual male complaint
concerning the time the women had taken.
Bliss turned
Fallom about to make sure the skirt would hold in place over her boyish hips
and buttocks. She said, It's a very pretty skirt, Fallom. Do you like it?
Fallom stared at
it in a mirror and said, Yes, I do. Won't I be cold with nothing on, though?
and she ran her hands down her bare chest.
I don't think
so, Fallom. It's quite warm on this world.
You have
something on.
Yes, I do.
That's how it is on my world. Now, Fallom, we're going to be with a great many
Alphans during dinner and afterward. Do you think you can bear that?
Fallom looked
distressed, and Bliss went on, I will sit on your right side and I will hold
you. Pel will sit on the other side, and Trevize will sit across the table from
you. We won't let anyone talk to you, and you won't have to talk to anyone.
I'll try,
Bliss, Fallom piped in her highest tones.
Then afterward,
said Bliss, some Alphans will make music for us in their own special way. Do
you know what music is? She hummed in the best imitation of electronic harmony
that she could.
Fallom's face lit
up. You mean The last word was in her own language, and she burst into song.
Bliss's eyes
widened. It was a beautiful tune, even though it was wild, and rich in trills.
That's right. Music, she said.
Fallom said
excitedly, Jemby madeshe hesitated, then decided to use the Galactic word
music all the time. It made music on a Again a word in her own language.
Bliss repeated
the word doubtfully, On a feeful?
Fallom laughed.
Not feeful,
With both words
juxtaposed like that, Bliss could hear the difference, but she despaired of
reproducing the second. She said, What does it look like?
Fallom's as yet
limited vocabulary in Galactic did not suffice for an accurate description, and
her gestures did not produce any shape clearly in Bliss's mind.
He showed me how
to use the Fallom said proudly. I used my fingers just the way Jemby did, but
it said that soon I wouldn't have to.
That's
wonderful, dear, said Bliss. After dinner, we'll see if the Alphans are as
good as your Jemby was.
Fallom's eyes
sparkled and pleasant thoughts of what was to follow carried her through a
lavish dinner despite the crowds and laughter and noise all about her. Only
once, when a dish was accidentally upset, setting off shrieks of excitement
fairly close to them, did Fallom look frightened, and Bliss promptly held her
close in a warm and protective hug.
I wonder if we
can arrange to eat by ourselves, she muttered to Pelorat. Otherwise, we'll
have to get off this world. It's bad enough eating all this Isolate animal
protein, but I must be able to do it in peace.
It's only high
spirits, said Pelorat, who would have endured anything within reason that he
felt came under the heading of primitive behavior and beliefs.
And then the
dinner was over, and the announcement came that the music festival would soon
begin.
82.
THE HALL in which
the music festival was to be held was about as large as the dining room, and
there were folding seats (rather uncomfortable, Trevize found out) for about a
hundred fifty people. As honored guests, the visitors were led to the front
row, and various Alphans commented politely and favorably on their clothes.
Both men were
bare above the waist and Trevize tightened his abdominal muscles whenever he
thought of it and stared down, on occasion, with complacent self-admiration at
his dark-haired chest. Pelorat, in his ardent observation of everything about
him, was indifferent to his own appearance. Bliss's blouse drew covert stares
of puzzlement but nothing was said concerning it.
Trevize noted
that the hall was only about half-full and that the large majority of the
audience were women, since, presumably, so many men were out to sea.
Pelorat nudged
Trevize and whispered, They have electricity.
Trevize looked at
the vertical tubes on the walls, and at others on the ceiling. They were softly
luminous.
Fluorescence,
he said. Quite primitive.
Yes, but they do
the job, and we've got those things in our rooms and in the outhouse. I thought
they were just decorative. If we can find out how to work them, we won't have
to stay in the dark.
Bliss said
irritably, They might have told us.
Pelorat said,
They thought we'd know; that anyone would know.
Four women now
emerged from behind screens and seated themselves in a group in the space at
the front. Each held an instrument of varnished wood of a similar shape, but
one that was not easily describable. The instruments were chiefly different in
size. One was quite small, two somewhat larger, and the fourth considerably
larger. Each woman also held a long rod in the other hand.
The audience
whistled softly as they came in, in response to which the four women bowed.
Each had a strip of gauze bound fairly tightly across the breasts as though to
keep them from interfering with the instrument.
Trevize,
interpreting the whistles as signs of approval, or of pleased anticipation,
felt it only polite to add his own. At that, Fallom added a trill that was far
more than a whistle and that was beginning to attract attention when pressure
from Bliss's hand stopped her.
Three of the
women, without preparation, put their instruments under their chins, while the
largest of the instruments remained between the legs of the fourth woman and
rested on the floor. The long rod in the right hand of each was sawed across
the strings stretching nearly the length of the instrument, while the fingers
of the left hand shifted rapidly along the upper ends of those strings.
This, thought
Trevize, was the scraping he had expected, but it didn't sound like scraping
at all. There was a soft and melodious succession of notes; each instrument
doing something of its own and the whole fusing pleasantly.
It lacked the
infinite complexity of electronic music (real music, as Trevize could not
help but think of it) and there was a distinct sameness to it. Still, as time
passed, and his ear grew accustomed to this odd system of sound, he began to
pick out subtleties. It was wearisome to have to do so, and he thought,
longingly, of the clamor and mathematical precision and purity of the real
thing, but it occurred to him that if he listened to the music of these simple
wooden devices long enough he might well grow to like it.
It was not till
the concert was some forty-five minutes old that Hiroko stepped out. She
noticed Trevize in the front row at once and smiled at him. He joined the
audience in the soft whistle of approval with a whole heart. She looked
beautiful in a long and most elaborate skirt, a large flower in her hair, and
nothing at all over her breasts since (apparently) there was no danger of their
interference with the instrument.
Her instrument
proved to be a dark wooden tube about two thirds of a meter long and nearly two
centimeters thick. She lifted the instrument to her lips and blew across an
opening near one end, producing a thin, sweet note that wavered in pitch as her
fingers manipulated metal objects along the length of the tube.
At the first
sound, Fallom clutched at Bliss's arm and said, Bliss, that's a and the word
sounded like feeful to Bliss.
Bliss shook her
head firmly at Fallom, who said, in a lower voice, But it is!
Others were
looking in Fallom's direction. Bliss put her hand firmly over Fallom's mouth,
and leaned down to mutter an almost subliminally forceful Quiet! into her
ear.
Fallom listened
to Hiroko's playing quietly thereafter, but her fingers moved spasmodically, as
though they were operating the objects along the length of the instrument.
The final player
in the concert was an elderly man who had an instrument with fluted sides
suspended over his shoulders. He pulled it in and out while one hand flashed
across a succession of white and dark objects at one end, pressing them down in
groups.
Trevize found
this sound particularly wearing, rather barbaric, and unpleasantly like the
memory of the barking of the dogs on Aurora-not that the sound was like
barking, but the emotions it gave rise to were similar. Bliss looked as though
she would like to place her hands over her ears, and Pelorat had a frown on his
face. Only Fallom seemed to enjoy it, for she was tapping her foot lightly, and
Trevize, when he noticed that, realized, to his own surprise, that there was a
beat to the music that matched Fallom's footfall.
It came to an end
at last and there was a perfect storm of whistling, with Fallom's trill clearly
heard above it all.
Then the audience
broke up into small conversational groups and became as loud and raucous as
Alphans seemed to be on all public occasions. The various individuals who had
played in the concert stood about in front of the room and spoke to those
people who came up to congratulate them.
Fallom evaded
Bliss's grasp and ran up to Hiroko.
Hiroko, she
cried out, gaspingly. Let me see the
The what, dear
one? said Hiroko.
The thing you
made the music with.
Oh. Hiroko laughed.
That's a flute, little one.
May I see it?
Well. Hiroko
opened a case and took out the instrument. It was in three parts, but she put
it together quickly, held it toward Fallom with the mouthpiece near her lips,
and said, There, blow thou thy breath across this.
I know. I know,
said Fallom eagerly, and reached for the flute.
Automatically,
Hiroko snatched it away and held it high. Blow, child, but touch not.
Fallom seemed
disappointed. May I just look at it, then? I won't touch it.
Certainly, dear
one.
She held out the
flute again and Fallom stared at it earnestly.
And then, the
fluorescent lighting in the room dimmed very slightly, and the sound of a
flute's note, a little uncertain and wavering, made itself heard.
Hiroko, in
surprise, nearly dropped the flute, and Fallom cried out, I did it. I did it.
Jemby said someday I could do it.
Hiroko said, Was
it thou that made the sound?
Yes, I did. I
did.
But how didst
thou do so, child?
Bliss said, red
with embarrassment, I'm sorry, Hiroko. I'll take her away.
No, said
Hiroko. I wish her to do it again.
A few of the
nearest Alphans had gathered to watch. Fallom furrowed her brow as though
trying hard. The fluorescents dimmed rather more than before, and again there
was the note of the flute, this time pure and steady. Then it became erratic as
the metal objects along the length of the flute moved of their own accord.
It's a little
different from the Fallom said, a little breathlessly, as though the breath
that had been activating the flute had been her own instead of power-driven
air.
Pelorat said to
Trevize, She must be getting the energy from the electric current that feeds
the fluorescents.
Try again, said
Hiroko in a choked voice.
Fallom closed her
eyes. The note was softer now and under firmer control. The flute played by
itself, maneuvered by no fingers, but moved by distant energy, transduced
through the still immature lobes of Fallom's brain. The notes which began as almost
random settled into a musical succession and now everyone in the hall had
gathered around Hiroko and Fallom, as Hiroko held the flute gently with thumb
and forefinger at either end, and Fallom, eyes closed, directed the current of
air and the movement of the keys.
It's the piece I
played, whispered Hiroko.
I remember it,
said Fallom, nodding her head slightly, trying not to break her concentration.
Thou didst not
miss a note, said Hiroko, when it was done.
But it's not
right, Hiroko. You didn't do it right.
Bliss said,
Fallow! That's not polite. You mustn't...
Please, said
Hiroko peremptorily, do not interfere. Why is it not right, child?
Because I would
play it differently.
Show me, then.
Again the flute
played, but in more complicated fashion, for the forces that pushed the keys
did so more quickly, in more rapid succession and in more elaborate
combinations than before. The music was more complex, and infinitely more
emotional and moving. Hiroko stood rigid and there was not a sound to be heard
anywhere in the room.
Even after Fallom
had finished playing, there was not a sound until Hiroko drew a deep breath and
said, Little one, hast thou ever played that before?
No, said
Fallom, before this I could only use my fingers, and I can't do my fingers
like that. Then, simply and with no trace of vaunting, No one can.
Canst thou play
anything else?
I can make
something up.
Dost thou
mean-improvise?
Fallom frowned at
the word and looked toward Bliss. Bliss nodded and Fallom said, Yes.
Please do so,
then, said Hiroko.
Fallom paused and
thought for a minute or two, then began slowly, in a very simple succession of
notes, the whole being rather dreamy. The fluorescent lights dimmed and
brightened as the amount of power exerted intensified and faded. no one seemed
to notice, for it seemed to be the effect of the music rather than the cause,
as though a ghostly electrical spirit were obeying the dictates of the sound
waves.
The combination
of notes then repeated itself a bit more loudly, then a bit more complexly,
then in variations that, without ever losing the clearly heard basic
combination, became more stirring and more exciting until it was almost
impossible to breathe. And finally, it descended much more rapidly than it had ascended
and did so with the effect of a swooping dive that brought the listeners to
ground level even while they still retained the feeling that they were high in
the air.
There followed
sheer pandemonium that split the air, and even Trevize, who was used to a
totally different kind of music, thought sadly, And now I'll never hear that
again.
When a most
reluctant quiet had returned, Hiroko held out her flute. Here, Fallow, this is
thine!
Fallom reached
for it eagerly, but Bliss caught hold of the child's outstretched arm and said,
We can't take it, Hiroko. It's a valuable instrument.
I have another,
Bliss. Not quite as good, but that is how it should be. This instrument
belongeth to the person who playeth it best. Never have I heard such music and
it would be wrong for me to own an instrument I cannot use to full potential.
Would that I knew how the instrument could be made to play without being
touched.
Fallom took the
flute and, with an expression of deep content, held it tightly to her chest.
83.
EACH OF the two
rooms of their quarters were lit by one fluorescent light. The outhouse had a
third. The lights were dim, and were uncomfortable to read by, but at least the
rooms were no longer dark.
Yet they now
lingered outside. The sky was full of stars, something that was always
fascinating to a native of Terminus, where the night sky was all but starless
and in which only the faint foreshortened cloud of the Galaxy was prominent.
Hiroko had
accompanied them back to their chambers for fear they would get lost in the
dark, or that they would stumble. All the way back, she held Fallom's hand, and
then, after lighting the fluorescents for them, remained outside with them,
still clutching at the youngster.
Bliss tried
again, for it was clear to her that Hiroko was in a state of a difficult
conflict of emotions. Really, Hiroko, we cannot take your flute.
No, Fallom must
have it. But she seemed on edge just the same.
Trevize continued
to look at the sky. The night was truly dark, a darkness that was scarcely
affected by the trickle of light from their own chambers; and much less so by
the tiny sparks of other houses farther off.
He said, Hiroko,
do you see that star that is so bright? What is it called? Hiroko looked up
casually and said, with no great appearance of interest, That's the
Companion.
Why is it called
that?
It circleth our
sun every eighty Standard Years. It is an evening star at this time of year.
Thou canst see it in daytime, too, when it lieth above the horizon.
Good, thought
Trevize. She's not totally ignorant of astronomy. He said, Do you know that
Alpha has another companion, a very small, dim one that's much much farther
away than that bright star. You can't see it without a telescope. (He hadn't
seen it himself, hadn't bothered to search for it, but the ship's computer had
the information in its memory banks.)
She said
indifferently, We were told that in school.
But now what
about that one? You see those six stars in a zigzag line?
Hiroko said,
That is Cassiopeia.
Really? said
Trevize, startled. Which star?
All of them. The
whole zigzag. It is Cassiopeia. .
Why is it called
that?
I lack the
knowledge. I know nothing of astronomy, respected Trevize.
Do you see the
lowermost star in the zigzag, the one that's brighter than the other stars?
What is that?
It is a star. I
know not its name.
But except for
the two companion stars, it's the closest of all the stars to Alpha. It is only
a parsec away.
Hiroko said,
Sayest thou so? I know that not.
Might it not be
the star about which Earth revolves?
Hiroko looked at
the star with a faint flash of interest. I know not. I have never heard any
person say so.
Don't you think
it might be?
How can I say?
None knoweth where Earth might be. I-I must leave thee, now. I will be taking
my shift in the fields tomorrow morning before the beach festival. I'll see you
all there, right after lunch. Yes? Yes?
Certainly,
Hiroko.
She left
suddenly, half-running in the dark. Trevize looked after her, then followed the
others into the dimly lit cottage.
He said, Can you
tell whether she was lying about Earth, Bliss?
Bliss shook her
head. I don't think she was. She is under enormous tension, something I was
not aware of until after the concert. It existed before you asked her about the
stars.
Because she gave
away her flute, then?
Perhaps. I can't
tell. She turned to Fallom. Now, Fallom, I want you to go into your room.
When you're ready for bed, go to the outhouse, use the potty, then wash your
hands, your face, and your teeth.
I would like to
play the flute, Bliss.
Just for a
little while, and very quietly. Do you understand, Fallom? And you must stop
when I tell you to.
Yes, Bliss.
The three were
now alone; Bliss in the one chair and the men sitting each on his cot.
Bliss said, Is
there any point in staying on this planet any longer?
Trevize shrugged.
We never did get to discuss Earth in connection with the ancient instruments,
and we might find something there. It might also pay to wait for the fishing
fleet to return. The men might know something the stay-at-homes don't.
Very unlikely, I
think, said Bliss. Are you sure it's not Hiroko's dark eyes that hold you?
Trevize said
impatiently, I don't understand, Bliss. What have you to do with what I choose
to do? Why do you seem to arrogate to yourself the right of sitting in moral
judgment on me?
I'm not
concerned with your morals. The matter affects our expedition. You want to find
Earth so that you can finally decide whether you are right in choosing Galaxia
over Isolate worlds. I want you to so decide. You say you need to visit Earth
to make the decision and you seem to be convinced that Earth revolves about
that bright star in the sky. Let us go there, then. I admit it would be useful
to have some information about it before we go, but it is clear to me that the
information is not forthcoming here. I do not wish to remain simply because you
enjoy Hiroko.
Perhaps we'll
leave, said Trevize. Let me think about it, and Hiroko will play no part in
my decision, I assure you.
Pelorat said, I
feel we ought to move on to Earth, if only to see whether it is radioactive or
not. I see no point in waiting longer.
Are you sure
it's not Bliss's dark eyes that drive you? said Trevize, a bit spitefully.
Then, almost at once, No, I take that back, Janov. I was just being childish.
Still-this is a charming world, quite apart from Hiroko, and I must say that
under other circumstances, I would be tempted to remain indefinitely. Don't you
think, Bliss, that Alpha destroys your theory about Isolates?
In what way?
asked Bliss.
You've been
maintaining that every truly isolated world turns dangerous and hostile.
Even
Comporellon, said Bliss evenly, which is rather out of the main current of
Galactic activity for all that it is, in theory, an Associated Power of the
Foundation Federation.
But not Alpha.
This world is totally isolated, but can you complain of their friendliness and
hospitality? They feed us, clothe us, shelter us, put on festivals in our
honor, urge us to stay on. What fault is there to find with them?
None,
apparently. Hiroko even gives you her body.
Trevize said
angrily, Bliss, what bothers you about that? She didn't give me her body. We
gave each other our bodies. It was entirely mutual, entirely pleasurable. Nor
can you say that you hesitate to give your body as it suits you.
Please, Bliss,
said Pelorat. Golan is entirely right. There is no reason to object to his private
pleasures.
As long as they
don't affect us, said Bliss obdurately.
They do not
affect us, said Trevize. We will leave, I assure you. A delay to search
further for information will not be long.
Yet I don't
trust Isolates, said Bliss, even when they come bearing gifts.
Trevize flung up
his arms. Reach a conclusion, then twist the evidence to fit. How like a...
Don't say it,
said Bliss dangerously. I am not a woman. I am Gaia. It is Gaia, not I, who is
uneasy.
There is no
reason to... And at that point there was a scratching at the door.
Trevize froze.
What's that? he said, in a low voice.
Bliss shrugged
lightly. Open the door and see. You tell us this is a kindly world that offers
no danger.
Nevertheless,
Trevize hesitated, until a soft voice from the other side of the door called
out softly, Please. It is P
It was Hiroko's
voice. Trevize threw the door open.
Hiroko entered
quickly. Her cheeks were wet.
Close the door,
she gasped.
What is it?
asked Bliss.
Hiroko clutched
at Trevize. I could not stay away. I tried, but I endured it not. Go thou, and
all of you. Take the youngster with you quickly. Take the ship away-away from
Alpha-while it is yet dark.
But why? asked
Trevize.
Because else
wilt thou die; and all of you.
84.
THE THREE
Outworlders stared frozenly at Hiroko for a long moment. Then Trevize said,
Are you saying your people will kill us?
Hiroko said, as
the tears rolled down her cheeks, Thou art already on the road to death,
respected Trevize. And the others with you. Long ago, those of learning devised
a virus, harmless to us, but deadly to Outworlders. We have been made immune.
She shook Trevize's arm in distraction. Thou art infected.
How?
When we had our
pleasure. It is one way.
Trevize said,
But I feel entirely well.
The virus is as
yet inactive. It will be made active when the fishing fleet returns. By our
laws, all must decide on such a thing-even the men. All will surely decide it
must be done, and we keep you here till that time, two mornings hence. Leave
now while it is yet dark and none suspects.
Bliss said
sharply, Why do your people do this?
For our safety.
We are few and have much. We do not wish Outworlders to intrude. If one cometh
and then reporteth our lot, others will come, and so when, once in a long
while, a ship arriveth, we must make certain it leaveth not.
But then, said
Trevize, why do you warn us away?
Ask not the
reason. Nay, but I will tell you, since I hear it again. Listen...
From the next
room, they could hear Fallom playing softly-and infinitely sweetly.
Hiroko said, I
cannot bear the destruction of that music, for the young one will also die.
Trevize said
sternly, Is that why you gave the flute to Fallom? Because you knew you would
have it once again when she was dead?
Hiroko looked
horrified. Nay, that was not in my mind. And when it came to mind at length, I
knew it must not be done. Leave with the child, and with her, take the flute
that I may never see it more. Thou wilt be safe back in space and, left
inactive, the virus now in thy body will die after a time. In return, I ask
that none of you ever speak of this world, that none else may know of it.
We will not
speak of it, said Trevize.
Hiroko looked up.
In a lower voice, she said, May I not kiss thee once ere thou leavest?
Trevize said,
No. I have been infected once and surely that is enough. And then, a little
less roughly, he added, Don't cry. People will ask why you are crying and
you'll be unable to reply. I'll forgive what you did to me in view of your
present effort to save us.
Hiroko
straightened, carefully wiped her cheeks with the back of her hands, took a
deep breath, and said, I thank thee for that, and left quickly.
Trevize said, We
will put out the light, and we will wait awhile, and then we will leave. Bliss,
tell Fallom to stop playing her instrument. Remember to take the flute, of
course. Then we will make our way to the ship, if we can find it in the dark.
I will find it,
said Bliss. Clothing of mine is on board and, however dimly, that, too, is
Gaia. Gaia will have no trouble finding Gaia. And she vanished into her room
to collect Fallom.
Pelorat said, Do
you suppose that they've managed to damage our ship in order to keep us on the
planet?
They lack the
technology to do it, said Trevize grimly. When Bliss emerged, holding Fallom
by the hand, Trevize put out the lights.
They sat quietly
in the dark for what seemed half the night, and might have been half an hour.
Then Trevize slowly and silently opened the door. The sky seemed a bit more
cloudy, but stars shone. High in the sky now was Cassiopeia, with what might be
Earth's sun burning brightly at its lower tip. The air was still and there was
no sound.
Carefully,
Trevize stepped out, motioning the others to follow. One of his hands dropped,
almost automatically, to the butt of his neuronic whip. He was sure he would
not have to use it, but
Bliss took the
lead, holding Pelorat's hand, who held Trevize's. Bliss's other hand held
Fallom, and Fallom's other hand held the flute. Feeling gently with her feet in
the nearly total darkness, Bliss guided the others toward where she felt, very
weakly, the Gaia-ness of her clothing on board the Far Star.
PART SEVENEARTH
Chapter 19
Radioactive?
85.
THE Far Star took
off quietly, rising slowly through the atmosphere, leaving the dark island
below. The few faint dots of light beneath them dimmed and vanished, and as the
atmosphere grew thinner with height, the ship's speed grew greater, and the
dots of light in the sky above them grew more numerous and brighter.
Eventually, they
looked down upon the planet, Alpha, with only a crescent illuminated and that
crescent largely wreathed in clouds.
Pelorat said, I
suppose they don't have an active space technology. They can't follow us.
I'm not sure
that that cheers me up much, said Trevize, his face dour, his voice
disheartened. I'm infected.
But with an
inactive strain, said Bliss.
Still, it can be
made active. They had a method. What is the method?
Bliss shrugged.
Hiroko said the virus, left inactive, would eventually die in a body unadapted
to it-as yours is.
Yes? said
Trevize angrily. How does she know that? For that matter, how do I know that
Hiroko's statement wasn't a self-consoling lie? And isn't it possible that the
method of activation, whatever it is, might not be duplicated naturally? A
particular chemical, a type of radiation, a-a-who knows what? I may sicken
suddenly, and then the three of you would die, too. Or if it happens after we
have reached a populated world, there may be a vicious pandemic which fleeing
refugees would carry to other worlds.
He looked at
Bliss. Is there something you can do about it?
Slowly, Bliss
shook her head. Not easily. There are parasites making up Gaia-microorganisms,
worms. They are a benign part of the ecological balance. They live and
contribute to the world consciousness, but never overgrow. They live without
doing noticeable harm. The trouble is, Trevize, the virus that affects you is
not part of Gaia.
You say not
easily, said Trevize, frowning. Under the circumstances, can you take the
trouble to do it even though it might be difficult? Can you locate the virus in
me and destroy it? Can you, failing that, at least strengthen my defenses?
Do you realize
what you ask, Trevize? I am not acquainted with the microscopic flora of your
body. I might not easily tell a virus in the cells of your body from the normal
genes inhabiting them. It would be even more difficult to distinguish between
viruses your body is accustomed to and those with which Hiroko infected you. I
will try to do it, Trevize, but it will take time and I may not succeed.
Take time, said
Trevize. Try.
Certainly, said
Bliss.
Pelorat said, If
Hiroko told the truth, Bliss, you might be able to find viruses that seem to be
already diminishing in vitality, and you could accelerate their decline.
I could do
that, said Bliss. It is a good thought.
You won't
weaken? said Trevize. You will have to destroy precious bits of life when you
kill those viruses, you know.
You are being
sardonic, Trevize, said Bliss coolly, but, sardonic or not, you are pointing
out a true difficulty. Still, I can scarcely fail to put you ahead of the
virus. I will kill them if I have the chance, never fear. After all, even if I
fail to consider youand her mouth twitched as though she were repressing a
smile then certainly Pelorat and Fallom are also at risk, and you might feel
more confidence in my feeling for them than in my feeling for you. You might
even remember that I myself am at risk.
I have no faith
in your self-love, muttered Trevize. You're perfectly ready to give up your
life for some high motive. I'll accept your concern for Pelorat, however.
Then, he said, I don't hear Fallom's flute. Is anything wrong with her?
No, said Bliss.
She's asleep. A perfectly natural sleep that I had nothing to do with. And I
would suggest that, after you work out the Jump to the star we think is Earth's
sun, we all do likewise. I need it badly and I suspect you do, too, Trevize.
Yes, if I can
manage. You were right, you know, Bliss.
About what,
Trevize?
About Isolates.
New Earth was not a paradise, however much it might have seemed like one. That
hospitality-all that outgoing friendliness at first was to put us off our
guard, so that one of us might be easily infected. And all the hospitality
afterward, the festivals of this and that, were designed to keep us there till
the fishing fleet returned and the activation could be carried through. And it
would have worked but for Fallom and her music. It might be you were right
there, too.
About Fallom?
Yes. I didn't
want to take her along, and I've never been happy with her being on the ship.
It was your doing, Bliss, that we have her here and it was she who,
unwittingly, saved us. And yet...
And yet what?
Despite that,
I'm still uneasy at Fallom's presence. I don't know why.
If it will make
you feel better, Trevize, I don't know that we can lay all the credit at
Fallom's feet. Hiroko advanced Fallom's music as her excuse for committing what
the other Alphans would surely consider to be an act of treason. She may even
have believed this, but there was something in her mind in addition, something
that I vaguely detected but could not surely identify, something that perhaps
she was ashamed to let emerge into her conscious mind. I am under the
impression that she felt a warmth for you, and would not willingly see you die,
regardless of Fallom and her music.
Do you really
think so? said Trevize, smiling slightly for the first time since they had
left Alpha.
I think so. You
must have a certain proficiency at dealing with women. You persuaded Minister
Lizalor to allow us to take our ship and leave Comporellon, and you helped
influence Hiroko to save our lives. Credit where it's due.
Trevize smiled
more broadly. Well, if you say so. On to Earth, then. He disappeared into the
pilot-room with a step that was almost jaunty.
Pelorat,
lingering behind, said, You soothed him after all, didn't you, Bliss?
No, Pelorat, I
never touched his mind.
You certainly
did when you pampered his male vanity so outrageously.
Entirely
indirect, said Bliss, smiling.
Even so, thank
you, Bliss.
86.
AFTER THE Jump,
the star that might well be Earth's sun was still a tenth of a parsec away. It
was the brightest object in the sky by far, but it was still no more than a
star.
Trevize kept its
light filtered for ease of viewing, and studied it somberly.
He said, There
seems no doubt that it is the virtual twin of Alpha, the star that New Earth
circles. Yet Alpha is in the computer map and this star is not. We don't have a
name for this star, we aren't given its statistics, we lack any information
concerning its planetary system, if it has one.
Pelorat said,
Isn't that what we would expect if Earth circles this sun?
Such a blackout
of information would fit with the fact that all information about Earth seems
to have been eliminated.
Yes, but it
could also mean that it's a Spacer world that just happened not to be on the
list on the wall of the Melpomenian building. We can't be altogether sure that
that list was complete. Or this star could be without planets and therefore
perhaps not worth listing on a computer map which is primarily used for
military and commercial purposes. Janov, is there any legend that tells of
Earth's sun being a mere parsec or so from a twin of itself.
Pelorat shook his
head. I'm sorry, Golan, but no such legend occurs to me. There may be one,
though. My memory isn't perfect. I'll search for it.
It's not
important. Is there any name given to Earth's sun?
Some different
names are given. I imagine there must be a name in each of the different
languages.
I keep
forgetting that Earth had many languages.
It must have
had. It's the only way of making sense out of many of the legends.
Trevize said
peevishly, Well, then, what do we do? We can't tell anything about the
planetary system from this distance, and we have to move closer. I would like
to be cautious, but there's such a thing as excessive and unreasoning caution,
and I see no evidence of possible danger. Presumably anything powerful enough
to wipe the Galaxy clean of information about Earth may be powerful enough to
wipe us out even at this distance if they seriously did not wish to be located,
but nothing's happened. It isn't rational to stay here forever on the mere
possibility that something might happen if we move closer, is it?
Bliss said, I
take it the computer detects nothing that might be interpreted as dangerous.
When I say I see
no evidence of possible danger, it's the computer I'm relying on. I certainly
can't see anything with the unaided eye. I wouldn't expect to.
Then I take it
you're just looking for support in making what you consider a risky decision.
All right, then. I'm with you. We haven't come this far in order to turn back
for no reason, have we?
No, said
Trevize. What do you say, Pelorat?
Pelorat said,
I'm willing to move on, if only out of curiosity. It would be unbearable to go
back without knowing if we have found Earth.
Well, then,
said Trevize, we're all agreed.
Not all, said
Pelorat. There's Fallom.
Trevize looked
astonished. Are you suggesting we consult the child? Of what value would her
opinion be even if she had one? Besides, all she would want would be to get
back to her own world.
Can you blame
her for that? asked Bliss warmly.
And because the
matter of Fallom had arisen, Trevize became aware of her flute, which was sounding
in a rather stirring march rhythm.
Listen to her,
he said. Where has she ever heard anything in march rhythm?
Perhaps Jemby
played marches on the flute for her.
Trevize shook his
head. I doubt it. Dance rhythms, I should think, lullabies. Listen, Fallom
makes me uneasy. She learns too quickly.
I help her,
said Bliss. Remember that. And she's very intelligent and she has been
extraordinarily stimulated in the time she's been with us. New sensations have
flooded her mind. She's seen space, different worlds, many people, all for the
first time.
Fallom's march
music grew wilder and more richly barbaric.
Trevize sighed
and said, Well, she's here, and she's producing music that seems to breathe
optimism, and delight in adventure. I'll take that as her vote in favor of
moving in more closely. Let us do so cautiously, then, and check this sun's
planetary system.
If any, said
Bliss.
Trevize smiled
thinly. There's a planetary system. It's a bet. Choose your sum.
87.
You LOSE, said
Trevize abstractedly. How much money did you decide to bet?
None. I never
accepted the wager, said Bliss.
Just as well. I
wouldn't like to accept the money, anyway.
They were some 10
billion kilometers from the sun. It was still star-like, but it was nearly
1/4,000 as bright as the average sun would have been when viewed from the
surface of a habitable planet.
We can see two
planets under magnification, right now, said Trevize. From their measured
diameters and from the spectrum of the reflected light, they are clearly gas
giants.
The ship was well
outside the planetary plane, and Bliss and Pelorat, staring over Trevize's
shoulder at the viewscreen, found themselves looking at two tiny crescents of
greenish light. The smaller was in the somewhat thicker phase of the two.
Trevize said,
Janov! It is correct, isn't it, that Earth's sun is suppose to have four gas
giants.
According to the
legends. Yes, said Pelorat.
The nearest of
the four to the sun is the largest, and the second nearest has rings. Right?
Large prominent
rings, Golan. Yes. Just the same, old chap, you have to allow for exaggeration
in the telling and retelling of a legend. If we should not find a planet with
an extraordinary ring system, I don't think we ought to let that count
seriously against this being Earth's star.
Nevertheless,
the two we see may be the farthest, and the two nearer ones may well be on the
other side of the sun and too far . to be easily located against the background
of stars. We'll have to move still closer-and beyond the sun to the other
side.
Can that be done
in the presence of the star's nearby mass?
With reasonable
caution, the computer can do it, I'm sure. If it judges the danger to be too
great, however, it will refuse to budge us, and we can then move in cautious,
smaller steps.
His mind directed
the computer-and the starfield on the viewscreen changed. The star brightened
sharply and then moved off the viewscreen as the computer, following
directions, scanned the sky for another gas giant. It did so successfully.
All three
onlookers stiffened and stared, while Trevize's mind, almost helpless with
astonishment, fumbled at the computer to direct further magnification.
Incredible,
gasped Bliss.
88.
A GAS giant was
in view, seen at an angle that allowed most of it to be sunlit. About it, there
curved a broad and brilliant ring of material, tipped so as to catch the
sunlight on the side being viewed. It was brighter than the planet itself and
along it, one third of the way in toward the planet, was a narrow, dividing
line.
Trevize threw in
a request for maximum enhancement and the ring became ringlets, narrow and
concentric, glittering in the sunlight. Only a portion of the ring system was
visible on the viewscreen and the planet itself had moved o$: A further
direction from Trevize and one corner of the screen marked itself off and
showed, within itself, a miniature of the planet and rings under lesser
magnification.
Is that sort of
thing common? asked Bliss, awed.
No, said
Trevize. Almost every gas giant has rings of debris, but they tend to be faint
and narrow. I once saw one in which the rings were narrow, but quite bright.
But I never saw anything like this; or heard of it, either.
Pelorat said,
That's clearly the ringed giant the legends speak of. If this is really
unique...
Really unique,
as far as I know, or as far as the computer knows, said Trevize.
Then this must
be the planetary system containing Earth. Surely, no one could invent such a
planet. It would have had to have been seen to be described.
Trevize said,
I'm prepared to believe just about anything your legends say now. This is the
sixth planet and Earth would be the third?
Right, Golan.
Then I would say
we were less than 1.5 billion kilometers from Earth, and we haven't been
stopped. Gaia stopped us when we approached.
Bliss said, You
were closer to Gaia when you were stopped.
Ah, said
Trevize, but it's my opinion Earth is more powerful than Gaia, and I take this
to be a good sign. If we are not stopped, it may be that Earth does not object
to our approach.
Or that there is
no Earth, said Bliss.
Do you care to
bet this time? asked Trevize grimly.
What I think
Bliss means, put in Pelorat, is that Earth may be radioactive as everyone
seems to think, and that no one stops us because there is no life on the
Earth.
No, said
Trevize violently. I'll believe everything that's said about Earth, but that.
We'll just close in on Earth and see for ourselves. And I have the feeling we
won't be stopped.
89.
THE GAS giants
were well behind. An asteroid belt lay just inside the gas giant nearest the
sun. (That gas giant was the largest and most massive, just as the legends
said.)
Inside the
asteroid belt were four planets.
Trevize studied
them carefully. The third is the largest. The size is appropriate . and the
distance from the sun is appropriate. It could be habitable.
Pelorat caught
what seemed to be a note of uncertainty in Trevize's words.
He said, Does it
have an atmosphere?
Oh yes, said
Trevize. The second, third, and fourth planets all have atmospheres. And, as
in the old children's tale, the second's is too dense, the fourth's is not
dense enough, but the third's is just right.
Do you think it
might be Earth, then?
Think? said
Trevize almost explosively. I don't have to think. It is Earth. It has the
giant satellite you told me of.
It has? And
Pelorat's face broke into a wider smile than any that Trevize had ever seen
upon it.
Absolutely!
Here, look at it under maximum magnification.
Pelorat saw two
crescents, one distinctly larger and brighter than the other.
Is that smaller
one the satellite? he asked.
Yes. It's rather
farther from the planet than one might expect but it's definitely revolving
about it. It's only the size of a small planet; in fact, it's smaller than any
of the four inner planets circling the sun. Still, it's large for a satellite.
It's at least two thousand kilometers in diameter, which makes it in the size
range of the large satellites that revolve about gas giants.
No larger?
Pelorat seemed disappointed. Then it's not a giant satellite?
Yes, it is. A
satellite with a diameter of two to three thousand kilometers that is circling
an enormous gas giant is one thing. That same satellite circling a small, rocky
habitable planet is quite another. That satellite has a diameter over a quarter
that of Earth. Where have you heard of such near-parity involving a habitable
planet?
Pelorat said
timidly, I know very little of such things.
Trevize said,
Then take my word for it, Janov. It's unique. We're looking at something that
is practically a double planet, and there are few habitable planets that have
anything more than pebbles orbiting them. Janov, if you consider that gas giant
with its enormous ring system in sixth place, and this planet with its enormous
satellite in third-both of which your legends told you about, against all
credibility, before you ever saw them-then that world you're looking at must be
Earth. It cannot conceivably be anything else. We've found it, Janov; we've
found it.
90.
THEY WERE on the
second day of their coasting progress toward Earth, and Bliss yawned over the
dinner meal. She said, It seems to me we've spent more time coasting toward
and away from planets than anything else. We've spent weeks at it, literally.
Partly, said
Trevize, that's because Jumps are dangerous too close to a star. And in this
case, we're moving very slowly because I do not wish to advance into possible
danger too quickly.
I thought you
said you had the feeling we would not be stopped.
So I do, but I
don't want to stake everything on a feeling. Trevize looked at the contents of
the spoon before putting it into his mouth and said, You know, I miss the fish
we had on Alpha. We only had three meals there.
A pity, agreed
Pelorat.
Well, said
Bliss, we visited five worlds and had to leave each one of them so hurriedly
that we never had time to add to our food supplies and introduce variety. Even
when the world had food to offer, as did Comporellon and Alpha, and,
presumably...
She did not
complete the sentence, for Fallom, looking up quickly, finished it for her.
Solaria? Could you get no food there? There is plenty of food there. As much
as on Alpha. And better, too.
I know that,
Fallom, said Bliss. There was just no time.
Fallom stared at
her solemnly. Will I ever see Jemby again, Bliss? Tell me the truth.
Bliss said, You
may, if we return to Solaria.
Will we ever
return to Solaria?
Bliss hesitated.
I cannot say.
Now we go to
Earth, is that right? Isn't that the planet where you say we all originate?
Where our
forebears originated, said Bliss.
I can say
'ancestors,"' said Fallom.
Yes, we are
going to Earth.
Bliss said
lightly, Wouldn't anyone wish to see the world of their ancestors?
I think there's
more to it. You all seem so concerned.
But we've never
been there before. We don't know what to expect.
I think it is
more than that.
Bliss smiled.
You've finished eating, Fallom dear, so why not go to the room and let us have
a little serenade on your flute. You're playing it more beautifully all the
time. Come, come. She gave Fallom an accelerating pat on the rear end, and off
Fallom went, turning only once to give Trevize a thoughtful look.
Trevize looked
after her with clear distaste. Does that thing read minds?
Don't call her a
thing, Trevize, said Bliss sharply.
Does she read
minds? You ought to be able to tell.
No, she doesn't.
Nor can Gaia. Nor can the Second Foundationers. Reading minds in the sense of
overhearing a conversation, or making out precise ideas is not something that
can be done now, or in the foreseeable future. We can detect, interpret, and,
to some extent, manipulate emotions, but that is not the same thing at all.
How do you know
she can't do this thing that supposedly can't be done?
Because as you
have just said, I ought to be able to tell.
Perhaps she is
manipulating you so that you remain ignorant of the fact that she can.
Bliss rolled her
eyes upward. Be reasonable, Trevize. Even if she had unusual abilities, she
could do nothing with me for I am not Bliss, I am Gaia. You keep forgetting. Do
you know the mental inertia represented by an entire planet? Do you think one
Isolate, however talented, can overcome that?
You don't know
everything, Bliss, so don't be overconfident, said Trevize sullenly. That
the She has been with us not very long. I couldn't learn anything but the
rudiments of a language in that time, yet she already speaks Galactic perfectly
and with virtually a full vocabulary. Yes, I know you've been helping her, but
I wish you would stop.
I told you I was
helping her, but I also told you she's fearfully intelligent. Intelligent
enough so that I would like to have her part of Gaia. If we can gather her in;
if she's still young enough; we might learn enough about the Solarians to
absorb that entire world eventually. It might well be useful to us.
Does it occur to
you that the Solarians are pathological Isolates even by my standards?
They wouldn't
stay so as part of Gaia.
I think you're
wrong, Bliss. I think that Solarian child is dangerous and that we should get
rid of her.
How? Dump her
through the airlock? Kill her, chop her up, and add her to our food supply?
Pelorat said,
Oh, Bliss.
And Trevize said,
That's disgusting, and completely uncalled for. He listened for a moment. The
flute was sounding without flaw or waver, and they had been talking in
half-whispers. When this is all over, we've got to return her to Solaria, and
make sure that Solaria is forever cut off from the Galaxy. My own feeling is
that it should be destroyed. I distrust and fear it.
Bliss thought
awhile and said, Trevize, I know that you have the knack of coming to a right
decision, but I also know you have been antipathetic to Fallom from the start.
I suspect that may just be because you were humiliated on Solaria and have
taken a violent hatred to the planet and its inhabitants as a result. Since I
must not tamper with your mind, I can't tell that for sure. Please remember
that if we had not taken Fallom with us, we would be on Alpha right now-dead
and, I presume, buried.
I know that,
Bliss, but even so...
And her
intelligence is to be admired, not envied.
I do not envy
her. I fear her.
Her
intelligence?
Trevize licked
his lips thoughtfully. No, not quite.
What, then?
I don't know.
Bliss, if I knew what I feared, I might not have to fear it. It's something I
don't quite understand. His voice lowered, as though he were speaking to
himself. The Galaxy seems to be crowded with things I don't understand. Why
did I choose Gaia? Why must I find Earth? Is there a missing assumption in
psychohistory? If there is, what is it? And on top of all that, why does Fallom
make me uneasy?
Bliss said,
Unfortunately, I can't answer those questions. She rose, and left the room.
Pelorat looked
after her, then said, Surely things aren't totally black, Golan. We're getting
closer and closer to Earth and once we reach it all mysteries may be solved.
And so far nothing seems to be making any effort to stop us from reaching it.
Trevize's eyes
flickered toward Pelorat and he said in a low voice, I wish something would.
Pelorat said,
You do? Why should you want that?
Frankly, I'd
welcome a sign of life.
Pelorat's eyes
opened wide. Have you found that Earth is radioactive after all?
Not quite. But
it is warm. A bit warmer than I would have expected.
Is that bad?
Not necessarily.
It may be rather warm but that wouldn't make it necessarily uninhabitable. The
cloud cover is thick and it is definitely water vapor, so that those clouds,
together with a copious water ocean, could tend to keep things livable despite
the temperature we calculated from microwave emission. I can't be sure, yet.
It's just that...
Yes, Golan?
Well, if Earth
were radioactive, that might well account for its being warmer than expected.
But that doesn't
argue the reverse, does it? If it's warmer than expected, that doesn't mean it
must be radioactive.
No. No, it
doesn't. Trevize managed to force a smile. No use brooding, Janov. In a day
or two, I'll be able to tell more about it and we'll know for sure.
91.
FALLOM was
sitting on the cot in deep thought when Bliss came into the room. Fallom looked
up briefly, then down again.
Bliss said
quietly, What's the matter, Fallom?
Fallom said, Why
does Trevize dislike me so much, Bliss?
What makes you
think he dislikes you.
He looks at me
impatiently. Is that the word?
It might be the
word.
He looks at me
impatiently when I am near him. His face always twists a little.
Trevize is
having a hard time, Fallom.
Because he's
looking for Earth?
Yes.
Fallom thought
awhile, then said, He is particularly impatient when I think something into
moving.
Bliss's lips
tightened. Now, Fallom, didn't I tell you you must not do that, especially
when Trevize is present?
Well, it was
yesterday, right here in this room, and he was in the doorway and I didn't
notice. I didn't know he was watching. It was just one of Pel's book-films,
anyway, and I was trying to make it stand on one tip. I wasn't doing any harm.
It makes him
nervous, Fallom, and I want you not to do it, whether he's watching or not.
Does it make him
nervous because he can't do it?
Perhaps.
Can you do it?
Bliss shook her
head slowly. No, I can't.
It doesn't make
you nervous when I do it. It doesn't make Pel nervous, either.
People are
different.
I know, said
Fallom, with a sudden hardness that surprised Bliss and caused her to frown.
What do you
know, Fallow?
I'm different.
Of course, I
just said so. People are different.
My shape is different.
I can move things.
That's true.
Fallow said, with
a shade of rebelliousness, I must move things. Trevize should not be angry
with me for that, and you should not stop me.
But why must you
move things?
It is practice.
Exerceez. Is that the right word?
Not quite.
Exercise.
Yes. Jemby
always said I must train my-my...
Transducer-lobes?
Yes. And make
them strong. Then, when I was grown up, I could power all the robots. Even
Jemby.
Fallow, who did
power all the robots if you did not?
Bander. Fallom
said it very matter-of-factly.
Did you know
Bander?
Of course. I
viewed him many times. I was to be the next estate-head. The Bander estate
would become the Fallom estate. Jemby told me so.
You mean Bander
came to your...
Fallom's mouth
made a perfect O of shock. She said in a choked voice, Bander would never come
to... The youngster ran out of breath and panted a bit, then said, I viewed
Bander's image.
Bliss asked
hesitantly, How did Bander treat you?
Fallom looked at
Bliss with a faintly puzzled eye. Bander would ask me if I needed anything; if
I was comfortable. But Jemby was always near me so I never needed anything and
I was always comfortable.
Her head bent and
she stared at the floor. Then she placed her hands over her eyes and said, But
Jemby stopped. I think it was because Banderstopped, too.
Bliss said, Why
do you say that?
I've been
thinking about it. Bander powered all the robots, and if Jemby stopped, and all
the other robots, too, it must be that Bander stopped. Isn't that so?
Bliss was silent.
Fallow said, But
when you take me back to Solaria I will power Jemby and all the rest of the
robots, and I will be happy again.
She was sobbing.
Bliss said,
Aren't you happy with us, Fallom? Just a little? Sometimes?
Fallom lifted her
tear-stained face to Bliss and her voice trembled as she shook her head and
said, I want Jemby.
In an agony of
sympathy, Bliss threw her arms about the youngster. Oh, Fallom, how I wish I
could bring you and Jemby together again, and was suddenly aware that she was
weeping, too.
92.
PELORAT entered
and found them so. He halted in mid-step and said, What's the matter?
Bliss detached
herself and fumbled for a small tissue so that she might wipe her eyes. She
shook her head, and Pelorat at once said, with heightened concern, But what's
the matter?
Bliss said,
Fallow, just rest a little. I'll think of something to make things a little
better for you. Remember-I love you just the same way that Jemby did.
She seized
Pelorat's elbow and rushed him out into the living room, saying, It's nothing,
Pel. Nothing.
It's Fallom,
though, isn't it? She still misses Jemby.
Terribly. And
there's nothing we can do about it. I can tell her that I love her-and,
truthfully, I do. How can you help loving a child so intelligent and gentle?
Fearfully intelligent. Trevize thinks too intelligent. She's seen Bander in her
time you know-or viewed it, rather, as a holographic image. She's not moved by
that memory, however; she's very cold and matter-of-fact about it, and I can
understand why. There was only the fact that Bander was owner of the estate and
that Fallom would be the next owner that bound them. no other relationship at
all.
Does Fallom
understand that Bander is her father?
Her mother. If
we agree that Fallom is to be regarded as feminine, so is Bander.
Either way,
Bliss dear. Is Fallow aware of the parental relationship?
I don't know
that she would understand what that is. She may, of course, but she gave no
hint. However, Pel, she has reasoned out that Bander is dead, for it's dawned
on her that Jemby's inactivation must be the result of power loss and since
Bander supplied the power. That frightens me.
Pelorat said
thoughtfully, Why should it, Bliss? It's only a logical inference, after all.
Another logical
inference can be drawn from that death. Deaths must be few and far distant on
Solaria with its long-lived and isolated Spacers. Experience of natural death
must be a limited one for any of them, and probably absent altogether for a
Solarian child of Fallom's age. If Fallom continues to think of Bander's death,
she's going to begin to wonder why Bander died, and the fact that it happened
when we strangers were on the planet will surely lead her to the obvious cause
and effect.
That we killed
Bander?
It wasn't we who
killed Bander, Pel. It was I.
She couldn't
guess that.
But I would have
to tell her that. She is annoyed with Trevize as it is, and he is clearly the
leader of the expedition. She would take it for granted that it would be he who
would have brought about the death of Bander, and how could I allow Trevize to
bear the blame unjustly?
What would it
matter, Bliss? The child feels nothing for her fathmother. Only for her robot,
Jemby.
But the death of
the mother meant the death of her robot, too. I almost did own up to my
responsibility. I was strongly tempted.
Why?
So I could explain
it my way. So I could soothe her, forestall her own discovery of the fact in a
reasoning process that would work it out in a way that would offer no
justification for it.
But there was
justification. It was self-defense. In a moment, we all would have been dead,
if you had not acted.
It's what I
would have said, but I could not bring myself to explain. I was afraid she
wouldn't believe me.
Pelorat shook his
head. He said, sighing, Do you suppose it might have been better if we had not
brought her? The situation makes you so unhappy.
No, said Bliss
angrily, don't say that. It would have made me infinitely more unhappy to have
to sit here right now and remember that we had left an innocent child behind to
be slaughtered mercilessly because of what we had done.
It's the way of
Fallom's world.
Now, Pel, don't
fall into Trevize's way of thinking. Isolates find it possible to accept such
things and think no more about it. The way of Gaia is to save life, however,
not destroy it-or to sit idly by while it is destroyed. Life of all kinds must,
we all know, constantly be coming to an end in order that other life might
endure, but never uselessly, never to no end. Bander's death, though
unavoidable, is hard enough to bear; Fallom's would have been past all bounds.
Ah well, said
Pelorat, I suppose you're right. And in any case, it is not the problem of
Fallom concerning which I've come to see you. It's Trevize.
What about
Trevize?
Bliss, I'm
worried about him. He's waiting to determine the facts about Earth, and I'm not
sure he can withstand the strain.
I don't fear for
him. I suspect he has a sturdy and stable mind.
We all have our
limits. Listen, the planet Earth is warmer than he expected it to be; he told
me so. I suspect that he thinks it may be too warm for life, though he's
clearly trying to talk himself into believing that's not so.
Maybe he's
right. Maybe it's not too warm for life.
Also, he admits
it's possible that the warmth might possibly arise from a radioactive crust,
but he is refusing to believe that also. In a day or two, we'll be close enough
so that the truth of the matter will be unmistakable. What if Earth is
radioactive?
Then he'll have
to accept the fact.
But-I don't know
how to say this, or how to put it in mental terms. What if his mind...
Bliss waited,
then said wryly, Blows a fuse?
Yes. Blows a
fuse. Shouldn't you do something now to strengthen him? Keep him level and
under control, so to speak?
No, Pel. I can't
believe he's that fragile, and there is a firm Gaian decision that his mind
must not be tampered with.
But that's the
very point. He has this unusual rightness, or whatever you want to call it.
The shock of his entire project falling to nothingness at the moment when it
seems successfully concluded may not destroy his brain, but it may destroy his
rightness. It's a very unusual property he has. Might it not be unusually
fragile, too?
Bliss remained
for a moment in thought. Then she shrugged. Well, perhaps I'll keep an eye on
him.
93.
FOR THE next
thirty-six hours, Trevize was vaguely aware that Bliss and, to a lesser degree,
Pelorat, tended to dog his footsteps. Still, that was not utterly unusual in a
ship as compact as theirs, and he had other things on his mind.
Now, as he sat at
the computer, he was aware of them standing just inside the doorway. He looked
up at them, his face blank.
Well? he said,
in a very quiet voice.
Pelorat said,
rather awkwardly, How are you, Golan?
Trevize said,
Ask Bliss. She's been staring at me intently for hours. She must be poking
through my mind. Aren't you, Bliss?
No, I am not,
said Bliss evenly, but if you feel the need for my help, I can try. Do you
want my help?
No, why should
I? Leave me alone. Both of you.
Pelorat said,
Please tell us what's going on.
Guess!
Is Earth...
Yes, it is. What
everyone insisted on telling us is perfectly true. Trevize gestured at the
viewscreen, where Earth presented its nightside and was eclipsing the sun. It
was a solid circle of black against the starry sky, its circumference outlined
by a broken orange curve.
Pelorat said, Is
that orange the radioactivity?
No. Just
refracted sunlight through the atmosphere. It would be a solid orange circle if
the atmosphere weren't so cloudy. We can't see the radioactivity. The various
radiations, even the gamma rays, are absorbed by the atmosphere. However, they
do set up secondary radiations, comparatively feeble ones, but the computer can
detect them. They're still invisible to the eye, but the computer can produce a
photon of visible light for each particle or wave of radiation it receives and
put Earth into false color. Look.
And the black
circle glowed with a faint, blotchy blue.
How much
radioactivity is there? asked Bliss, in a low voice. Enough to signify that
no human life can exist there?
No life of any
kind, said Trevize. The planet is uninhabitable. The last bacterium, the last
virus, is long gone.
Can we explore
it? said Pelorat. I mean, in space suits.
For a few hours-before
we come down with irreversible radiation sickness.
Then what do we
do, Golan?
Do? Trevize
looked at Pelorat with that same expressionless face. Do you know what I would
like to do? I would like to take you and Bliss-and the child-back to Gaia and
leave you all there forever. Then I would like to go back to Terminus and hand
back the ship. Then I would like to resign from the Council, which ought to
make Mayor Branno very happy. Then I would like to live on my pension and let
the Galaxy go as it will. I won't care about the Seldon Plan, or about the
Foundation, or about the Second Foundation, or about Gaia. The Galaxy can
choose its own path. It will last my time and why should I care a snap as to
what happens afterward?
Surely, you
don't mean it, Golan, said Pelorat urgently.
Trevize stared at
him for a while, and then he drew a long breath. No, I don't, but, oh, how I
wish I could do exactly what I have just outlined to you.
Never mind that.
What will you do?
Keep the ship in
orbit about the Earth, rest, get over the shock of all this, and think of what
to do next. Except that...
Yes?
And Trevize
blurted out, What can I do next? What is there further to look for? What is
there further to find?
Chapter 20
The Nearby World
94.
FOR Four
successive meals, Pelorat and Bliss had seen Trevize only at meals. During the
rest of the time, he was either in the pilot-room or in his bedroom. At
mealtimes, he was silent. His lips remained pressed together and he ate little.
At the fourth meal,
however, it seemed to Pelorat that some of the unusual gravity had lifted from
Trevize's countenance. Pelorat cleared his throat twice, as though preparing to
say something and then retreating.
Finally, Trevize
looked up at him and said, Well?
Have you-have
you thought it out, Golan?
Why do you ask?
You seem less
gloomy.
I'm not less
gloomy, but I have been thinking. Heavily.
May we know
what? asked Pelorat.
Trevize glanced
briefly in Bliss's direction. She was looking firmly at her plate, maintaining
a careful silence, as though certain that Pelorat would get further than she at
this sensitive moment.
Trevize said,
Are you also curious, Bliss?
She raised her
eyes for a moment. Yes. Certainly.
Fallom kicked a
leg of the table moodily, and said, Have we found Earth?
Bliss squeezed
the youngster's shoulder. Trevize paid no attention.
He said, What we
must start with is a basic fact. All information concerning Earth has been
removed on various worlds. That is bound to bring us to an inescapable
conclusion. Something on Earth is being hidden. And yet, by observation, we see
that Earth is radioactively deadly, so that anything on it is automatically
hidden. no one can land on it, and from this distance, when we are quite near
the outer edge of the magnetosphere and would not care to approach Earth any
more closely, there is nothing for us to find.
Can you be sure
of that? asked Bliss softly.
I have spent my
time at the computer, analyzing Earth in every way it and I can. There is
nothing. What's more, I feel there is nothing. Why, then, has data concerning
the Earth been wiped out? Surely, whatever must be hidden is more effectively
hidden now than anyone can easily imagine, and there need be no human gilding
of this particular piece of gold.
It may be, said
Pelorat, that there was indeed something hidden on Earth at a time when it had
not yet grown so severely radioactive as to preclude visitors. People on Earth
may then have feared that someone might land and find this whatever-it-is. It
was then that Earth tried to remove information concerning itself. What we have
now is a vestigial remnant of that insecure time.
No, I don't
think so, said Trevize. The removal of information from the Imperial Library
at Trantor seems to have taken place very recently. He turned suddenly to
Bliss, Am I right?
Bliss said
evenly, I/we/Gaia gathered that much from the troubled mind of the Second
Foundationer Gendibal, when he, you, and I had the meeting with the Mayor of
Terminus.
Trevize said, So
whatever must have had to be hidden because there existed the chance of finding
it must still be in hiding now, and there must be danger of finding it now
despite the fact that Earth is radioactive.
How is that
possible? asked Pelorat anxiously.
Consider, said
Trevize. What if what was on Earth is no longer on Earth, but was removed when
the radioactive danger grew greater? Yet though the secret is no longer on
Earth, it may be that if we can find Earth, we would be able to reason out the
place where the secret has been taken. If that were so, Earth's whereabouts
would still have to be hidden.
Fallom's voice
piped up again. Because if we can't find Earth, Bliss says you'll take me back
to Jemby.
Trevize turned
toward Fallom and glared-and Bliss said, in a low voice, I told you we might,
Fallom. We'll talk about it later. Right now, go to your room and read, or play
the flute, or anything else you want to do. Go-go.
Fallom, frowning
sulkily, left the table.
Pelorat said,
But how can you say that, Golan? Here we are. We've located Earth. Can we now
deduce where whatever it is might be if it isn't on Earth?
It took a moment
for Trevize to get over the moment of ill humor Fallom had induced. Then, he
said, Why not? Imagine the radioactivity of Earth's crust growing steadily
worse. The population would be decreasing steadily through death and
emigration, and the secret, whatever it is, would be in increasing danger. Who
would remain to protect it? Eventually, it would have to be shifted to another world,
or the use of-whatever it was-would be lost to Earth. I suspect there would be
reluctance to move it and it is likely that it would be done more or less at
the last minute. Now, then, Janov, remember the old man on New Earth who filled
your ears with his version of Earth's history?
Monolee?
Yes. He. Did he
not say in reference to the establishment of New Earth that what was left of
Earth's population was brought to the planet?
Pelorat said, Do
you mean, old chap, that what we're searching for is now on New Earth? Brought
there by the last of Earth's population to leave?
Trevize said,
Might that not be so? New Earth is scarcely better known to the Galaxy in
general than Earth is, and the inhabitants are suspiciously eager to keep all
Outworlders away.
We were there,
put in Bliss. We didn't find anything.
We weren't
looking for anything but the whereabouts of Earth.
Pelorat said, in
a puzzled way, But we're looking for something with a high technology;
something that can remove information from under the nose of the Second
Foundation itself, and even from under the nose-excuse me, Bliss-of Gaia. Those
people on New Earth may be able to control their patch of weather and may have
some techniques of biotechnology at their disposal, but I think you'll admit
that their level of technology is, on the whole, quite low.
Bliss nodded. I
agree with Pel.
Trevize said,
We're judging from very little. We never did see the men of the fishing fleet.
We never saw any part of the island but the small patch we landed on. What
might we have found if we had explored more thoroughly? After all, we didn't
recognize the fluorescent lights till we saw them in action, and if it appeared
that the technology was low, appeared, I say...
Yes? said
Bliss, clearly unconvinced.
That could be
part of the veil intended to obscure the truth.
Impossible,
said Bliss.
Impossible? It
was you who told me, back on Gaia, that at Trantor, the larger civilization was
deliberately held at a level of low technology in order to hide the small
kernel of Second Foundationers. Why might not the same strategy be used on New
Earth?
Do you suggest,
then, that we return to New Earth and face infection again-this time to have it
activated? Sexual intercourse is undoubtedly a particularly pleasant mode of
infection, but it may not be the only one.
Trevize shrugged.
I am not eager to return to New Earth, but we may have to.
May! After all,
there is another possibility.
What is that?
New Earth
circles the star the people call Alpha. But Alpha is part of a binary system.
Might there not be a habitable planet circling Alpha's companion as well?
Too dim, I
should think, said Bliss, shaking her head. The companion is only a quarter
as bright as Alpha is.
Dim, but not too
dim. If there is a planet fairly close to the star, it might do.
Pelorat said,
Does the computer say anything about any planets for the companion?
Trevize smiled
grimly. I checked that. There are five planets of moderate size. no gas
giants.
And are any of
the five planets habitable?
The computer
gives no information at all about the planets, other than their number, and the
fact that they aren't large.
Oh, said
Pelorat deflated.
Trevize said,
That's nothing to be disappointed about. None of the Spacer worlds are to be
found in the computer at all. The information on Alpha itself is minimal. These
things are hidden deliberately and if almost nothing is known about Alpha's
companion, that might almost be regarded as a good sign.
Then, said
Bliss, in a business-like manner, what you are planning to do is this-visit
the companion and, if that draws a blank, return to Alpha itself.
Yes. And this
time when we reach the island of New Earth, we will be prepared. We will
examine the entire island meticulously before landing and, Bliss, I expect you
to use your mental abilities to shield...
And at that
moment, the Far Star lurched slightly, as though it had undergone a ship-sized
hiccup, and Trevize cried out, halfway between anger and perplexity, Who's at
the controls?
And even as he
asked, he knew very well who was.
95.
FALLOM, at the
computer console, was completely absorbed. Her small, longfingered hands were
stretched wide in order to fit the faintly gleaming handmarks on the desk.
Fallom's hands seemed to sink into the material of the desk, even though it was
clearly felt to be hard and slippery.
She had seen
Trevize hold his hands so on a number of occasions, and she hadn't seen him do
more than that, though it was quite plain to her that in so doing he controlled
the ship.
On occasion,
Fallom had seen Trevize close his eyes, and she closed hers now. After a moment
or two, it was almost as though she heard a faint, far-off voice-far off, but
sounding in her own head, through (she dimly realized) her transducer-lobes.
They were even more important than her hands. She strained to make out the
words.
Instructions, it
said, almost pleadingly. What are your instructions?
Fallom didn't say
anything. She had never witnessed Trevize saying anything to the computer-but
she knew what it was that she wanted with all her heart. She wanted to go back
to Solaria, to the comforting endlessness of the mansion, to Jemby-Jemby-Jemby
She wanted to go
there and, as she thought of the world she loved, she imagined it visible on
the viewscreen as she had seen other worlds she didn't want. She opened her
eyes and stared at the viewscreen willing some other world there than this
hateful Earth, then staring at what she saw, imagining it to be Solaria. She
hated the empty Galaxy to which she had been introduced against her will. Tears
came to her eyes, and the ship trembled.
She could feel
that tremble, and she swayed a little in response.
And then she
heard loud steps in the corridor outside and, when she opened her eyes,
Trevize's face, distorted, filled her vision, blocking out the viewscreen, which
held all she wanted. He was shouting something, but she paid no attention. It
was he who had taken her from Solaria by killing Bander, and it was he who was
preventing her from returning by thinking only of Earth, and she was not going
to listen to him.
She was going to
take the ship to Solaria, and, with the intensity of her resolve, it trembled
again.
96.
BLISS clutched
wildly at Trevize's arm. Don't! Don't!
She clung
strongly, holding him back, while Pelorat stood, confused and frozen, in the background.
Trevize was
shouting, Take your hands off the computer! Bliss, don't get in my way. I
don't want to hurt you.
Bliss said, in a
tone that seemed almost exhausted, Don't offer violence to the child. I'd have
to hurt you-against all instructions.
Trevize's eyes
darted wildly from Fallom to Bliss. He said, Then you get her off, Bliss.
Now!
Bliss pushed him
away with surprising strength (drawing it, Trevize thought afterward, from
Gaia, perhaps).
Fallom, she
said, lift your hands.
No, shrieked
Fallom. I want the ship to go to Solaria. I want it to go there. There. She
nodded toward the viewscreen with her head, unwilling to let even one hand
release its pressure on the desk for the purpose.
But Bliss reached
for the child's shoulders and, as her hands touched Fallom, the youngster began
to tremble.
Bliss's voice
grew soft. Now, Fallom, tell the computer to be as it was and come with me.
Come with me. Her hands stroked the child, who collapsed in an agony of
weeping.
Fallom's hands
left the desk, and Bliss, catching her under the armpits, lifted her into a
standing position. She turned her, held her firmly against her breast, and
allowed the child to smother her wrenching sobs there.
Bliss said to
Trevize, who was now standing dumbly in the doorway, Step out of the way,
Trevize, and don't touch either of us as we pass.
Trevize stepped
quickly to one side.
Bliss paused a
moment, saying in a low voice to Trevize, I had to get into her mind for a
moment. If I've caused any damage, I won't forgive you easily.
It was Trevize's
impulse to tell her he didn't care a cubic millimeter of vacuum for Fallom's
mind; that it was the computer for which he feared. Against the concentrated
glare of Gaia, however (surely it wasn't only Bliss whose sole expression could
inspire the moment of cold terror he felt), he kept silent.
He remained
silent for a perceptible period, and motionless as well, after Bliss and Fallom
had disappeared into their room. He remained so, in fact, until Pelorat said
softly, Golan, are you all right? She didn't hurt you, did she?
Trevize shook his
head vigorously, as though to shake off the touch of paralysis that had
afflicted him. I'm all right. The real question is whether that's all right.
He sat down at the computer console, his hands resting on the two handmarks
which Fallom's hands had so recently covered.
Well? said
Pelorat anxiously.
Trevize shrugged.
It seems to respond normally. I might conceivably find something wrong later
on, but there's nothing that seems off now. Then, more angrily, The computer
should not combine effectively with any hands other than mine, but in that
hermaphrodite's case, it wasn't the hands alone. It was the transducer-lobes,
I'm sure...
But what made
the ship shake? It shouldn't do that, should it?
No. It's a
gravitic ship and we shouldn't have these inertial effects. But that
she-monster... He paused, looking angry again.
Yes?
I suspect she
faced the computer with two self-contradictory demands, and each with such
force that the computer had no choice but to attempt to do both things at once.
In the attempt to do the impossible, the computer must have released the
inertia-free condition of the ship momentarily. At least that's what I think
happened.
And then,
somehow, his face smoothed out. And that might be a good thing, too, for it
occurs to me now that all my talk about Alpha Centauri and its companion was
flapdoodle. I know now where Earth must have transferred its secret.
97.
PELORAT stared,
then ignored the final remark and went back to an earlier puzzle. In what way
did Fallom ask for two self-contradictory things?
Well, she said
she wanted the ship to go to Solaria.
Yes. Of course,
she would.
But what did she
mean by Solaria? She can't recognize Solaria from space. She's never really
seen it from space. She was asleep when we left that world in a hurry. And
despite her readings in your library, together with whatever Bliss has told
her, I imagine she can't really grasp the truth of a Galaxy of hundreds of
billions of stars and millions of populated planets. Brought up, as she was,
underground and alone, it is all she can do to grasp the bare concept that
there are different worlds-but how many? Two? Three? Four? To her any world she
sees is likely to be Solaria, and given the strength of her wishful thinking,
is Solaria. And since I presume Bliss has tried to quiet her by hinting that if
we don't find Earth, we'll take her back to Solaria, she may even have worked
up the notion that Solaria is close to Earth.
But how can you
tell this, Golan? What makes you think it's so?
She as much as
told us so, Janov, when we burst in upon her. She cried out that she wanted to
go to Solaria and then added there-there, nodding her head at the viewscreen.
And what is on the viewscreen? Earth's satellite. It wasn't there when I left
the machine before dinner; Earth was. But Fallom must have pictured the
satellite in her mind when she asked for Solaria, and the computer, in
response, must therefore have focused on the satellite. Believe me, Janov, I
know how this computer works. Who would know better?
Pelorat looked at
the thick crescent of light on the viewscreen and said thoughtfully, It was
called moon in at least one of Earth's languages; Luna, in another
language. Probably many other names, too. Imagine the confusion, old chap, on a
world with numerous languages-the misunderstandings, the complications, the...
Moon? said
Trevize. Well, that's simple enough. Then, too, come to think of it, it may be
that the child tried, instinctively, to move the ship by means of its
transducer-lobes, using the ship's own energy-source, and that may have helped
produce the momentary inertial confusion. But none of that matters, Janov. What
does matter is that all this has brought this moon yes, I like the name-to the
screen and magnified it, and there it still is. I'm looking at it now, and
wondering.
Wondering what,
Golan?
At the size of
it. We tend to ignore satellites, Janov. They're such little things, when they
exist at all. This one is different, though. It's a world. It has a diameter of
about thirty-five hundred kilometers.
A world? Surely
you wouldn't call it a world. It can't be habitable. Even a thirty-five-hundred-kilometer
diameter is too small. It has no atmosphere. I can tell that just looking at
it. no clouds. The circular curve against space is sharp, so is the inner curve
that bounds the light and dark hemisphere.
Trevize nodded,
You're getting to be a seasoned space traveler, Janov. You're right. no air.
no water. But that only means the moon's not habitable on its unprotected
surface. What about underground?
Underground?
said Pelorat doubtfully.
Yes.
Underground. Why not? Earth's cities were underground, you tell me. We know
that Trantor was underground. Comporellon has much of its capital city
underground. The Solarian mansions were almost entirely underground. It's a
very common state of affairs.
But, Golan, in
every one of these cases, people were living on a habitable planet. The surface
was habitable, too, with an atmosphere and with an ocean. Is it possible to
live underground when the surface is uninhabitable?
Come, Janov,
think! Where are we living right now? The Far Star is a tiny world that has an
uninhabitable surface. There's no air or water on the outside. Yet we live
inside in perfect comfort. The Galaxy is full of space stations and space
settlements of infinite variety, to say nothing of spaceships, and they're all
uninhabitable except for the interior. Consider the moon a gigantic spaceship.
With a crew
inside?
Yes. Millions of
people, for all we. know; and plants and animals; and an advanced technology.
Look, Janov, doesn't it make sense? If Earth, in its last days, could send out
a party of Settlers to a planet orbiting Alpha Centauri; and if, possibly with
Imperial help, they could attempt to terraform it, seed its oceans, build dry
land where there was none; could Earth not also send a party to its satellite
and terraform its interior?
Pelorat said
reluctantly, I suppose so.
It would be
done. If Earth has something to hide, why send it over a parsec away, when it
could be hidden on a world less than a hundred millionth the distance to Alpha.
And the moon would be a more efficient hiding place from the psychological
standpoint. no one would think of satellites in connection with life. For that
matter I didn't. With the moon an inch before my nose, my thoughts went haring
off to Alpha. If it hadn't been for Fallom... His lips tightened, and he shook
his head. I suppose I'll have to credit her for that. Bliss surely will if I
don't.
Pelorat said,
But see here, old man, if there's something hiding under the surface of the
moon, how do we find it? There must be millions of square kilometers of
surface...
Roughly forty
million.
And we would
have to inspect all of that, looking for what? An opening? Some sort of
airlock?
Trevize said,
Put that way, it would seem rather a task, but we're not just looking for
objects, we're looking for life; and for intelligent life at that. And we've
got Bliss, and detecting intelligence is her talent, isn't it?
98.
BLISS looked at
Trevize accusingly. I've finally got her to sleep. I had the hardest time. She
was wild. Fortunately, I don't think I've damaged her.
Trevize said
coldly, You might try removing her fixation on Jemby, you know, since I
certainly have no intention of ever going back to Solaria.
Just remove her
fixation, is that it? What do you know about such things, Trevize? You've never
sensed a mind. You haven't the faintest idea of its complexity. If you knew
anything at all about it, you wouldn't talk about removing a fixation as though
it were just a matter of scooping jam out of a jar.
Well, weaken it
at least.
I might weaken
it a bit, after a month of careful dethreading.
What do you
mean, dethreading?
To someone who
doesn't know, it can't be explained.
What are you
going to do with the child, then?
I don't know
yet; it will take a lot of consideration.
In that case,
said Trevize, let me tell you what we're going to do with the ship.
I know what
you're going to do. It's back to New Earth and another try at the lovely
Hiroko, if she'll promise not to infect you this time.
Trevize kept his
face expressionless. He said, No, as a matter of fact. I've changed my mind.
We're going to the moon-which is the name of the satellite, according to
Janov.
The satellite?
Because it's the nearest world at hand? I hadn't thought of that.
Nor I. Nor would
anyone have thought of it. Nowhere in the Galaxy is there a satellite worth
thinking about-but this satellite, in being large, is unique. What's more,
Earth's anonymity covers it as well. Anyone who can't find the Earth can't find
the moon, either.
Is it
habitable?
Not on the
surface, but it is not radioactive, not at all, so it isn't absolutely
uninhabitable. It may have life-it may be teeming with life, in fact-under the
surface. And, of course, you'll be able to tell if that's so, once we get close
enough.
Bliss shrugged.
I'll try. But, then, what made you suddenly think of trying the satellite?
Trevize said
quietly, Something Fallom did when she was at the controls.
Bliss waited, as
though expecting more, then shrugged again. Whatever it was, I suspect you
wouldn't have gotten the inspiration if you had followed your own impulse and
killed her.
I had no
intention of killing her, Bliss.
Bliss waved her
hand. All right. Let it be. Are we moving toward the moon now?
Yes. As a matter
of caution, I'm not going too fast, but if all goes well, we'll be in its
vicinity in thirty hours.
99.
THE MOON was a
wasteland. Trevize watched the bright daylit portion drifting past them below.
It was a monotonous panorama of crater rings and mountainous areas, and of
shadows black against the sunlight. There were subtle color changes in the soil
and occasional sizable stretches of flatness, broken by small craters.
As they
approached the nightside, the shadows grew longer and finally fused together.
For a while, behind them, peaks glittered in the sun, like fat stars, far
outshining their brethren in the sky. Then they disappeared and below was only
the fainter light of the Earth in the sky, a large bluish-white sphere, a
little more than half full. The ship finally outran the Earth, too, which sank
beneath the horizon so that under them was unrelieved blackness, and above only
the faint powdering of stars, which, to Trevize, who had been brought up on the
starless world of Terminus, was always miracle enough.
Then, new bright
stars appeared ahead, first just one or two, then others, expanding and
thickening and finally coalescing. And at once they passed the terminator into
the daylit side. The sun rose with infernal splendor, while the viewscreen
shifted away from it at once and polarized the glare of the ground beneath.
Trevize could see
quite well that it was useless to hope to find any way into the inhabited
interior (if that existed) by mere eye inspection of this perfectly enormous
world.
He turned to look
at Bliss, who sat beside him. She did not look at the viewscreen; indeed, she
kept her eyes closed. She seemed to have collapsed into the chair rather than
to be sitting in it.
Trevize,
wondering if she were asleep, said softly, Do you detect anything else?
Bliss shook her
head very slightly. No, she whispered. There was just that faint whiff.
You'd better take me back there. Do you know where that region was?
The computer
knows.
It was like
zeroing in on a target, shifting this way and that and then finding it. The
area in question was still deep in the nightside and, except that the Earth
shone fairly low in the sky and gave the surface a ghostly ashen glow between
the shadows, there was nothing to make out, even though the light in the
pilot-room had been blacked out for better viewing.
Pelorat had
approached and was standing anxiously in the doorway. Have we found
anything?. he asked, in a husky whisper.
Trevize held up
his hand for silence. He was watching Bliss. He knew it would be days before
sunlight would return to this spot on the moon, but he also knew that for what
Bliss was trying to sense, light of any kind was irrelevant.
She said, It's
there.
Are you sure?
Yes.
And it's the
only spot?
It's the only
spot I've detected. Have you been over every part of the moon's surface?
We've been over
a respectable fraction of it.
Well, then, in
that respectable fraction, this is all I have detected. It's stronger now, as
though it has detected us and it doesn't seem dangerous. The feeling I get is a
welcoming one.
Are you sure?
It's the feeling
I get.
Pelorat said,
Could it be faking the feeling?
Bliss said, with
a trace of hauteur, I would detect a fake, I assure you.
Trevize muttered
something about overconfidence, then said, What you detect is intelligence, I
hope.
I detect strong
intelligence. Except... And an odd note entered her voice.
Except what?
Ssh. Don't
disturb me. Let me concentrate. The last word was a mere motion of her lips.
Then she said, in
faint elated surprise, It's not human.
Not human, said
Trevize, in much stronger surprise. Are we dealing with robots again? As on
Solaria?
No. Bliss was
smiling. It's not quite robotic, either.
It has to be one
or the other.
Neither. She
actually chuckled. It's not human, and yet it's not like any robot I've
detected before.
Pelorat said, I
would like to see that. He nodded his head vigorously, his eyes wide with
pleasure. It would be exciting. Something new.
Something new,
muttered Trevize with a sudden lift of his own spirits-and a flash of
unexpected insight seemed to illuminate the interior of his skull.
100.
DOWN THEY sank to
the moon's surface, in what was almost jubilation. Even Fallom had joined them
now and, with the abandonment of a youngster, was hugging herself with
unbearable joy as though she were truly returning to Solaria.
As for Trevize,
he felt within himself a touch of sanity telling him that it was strange that
Earth-or whatever of Earth was on the moon-which had taken such measures to
keep off all others, should now be taking measures to draw them in. Could the
purpose be the same in either way? Was it a case of If you can't make them
avoid you, draw them in and destroy them? Either way, would not Earth's secret
remain untouched?
But that thought
faded and drowned in the flood of joy that deepened steadily as they came
closer to the moon's surface. Yet over and beyond that, he managed to cling to
the moment of illumination that had reached him just before they had begun
their gliding dive to the surface of the Earth's satellite.
He seemed to have
no doubt as to where the ship was going. They were just above the tops of the
rolling hills now, and Trevize, at the computer, felt no need to do anything.
It was as though he and the computer, both, were being guided, and he felt only
an enormous euphoria at having the weight of responsibility taken away from
him.
They were sliding
parallel to the ground, toward a cliff that raised its menacing height as a
barrier against them; a barrier glistening faintly in Earth-shine and in the
light-beam of the Far Star. The approach of certain collision seemed to mean
nothing to Trevize, and it was with no surprise whatever that he became aware
that the section of cliff directly ahead had fallen away and that a corridor,
gleaming in artificial light, had opened before them.
The ship slowed to
a crawl, apparently of its own accord, and fitted neatly into the
openingentering-sliding along. The opening closed behind it, and another then
opened before it. Through the second opening went the ship, into a gigantic
hall that seemed the hollowed interior of a mountain.
The ship halted
and all aboard rushed to the airlock eagerly. It occurred to none of them, not
even to Trevize, to check. whether there might be a breathable atmosphere
outside-or any atmosphere at all.
There was air,
however. It was breathable and it was comfortable. They looked about themselves
with the pleased air of people who had somehow come home and it was only after
a while that they became aware of a man who was waiting politely for them to
approach.
He was tall, and
his expression was grave. His hair was bronze in color, and cut short. His
cheekbones were broad, his eyes were bright, and his clothing was rather after
the fashion one saw in ancient history books. Although he seemed sturdy and
vigorous there was, just the same, an air of weariness about him-not in
anything that one could see, but rather in something appealing to no
recognizable sense.
It was Fallom who
reacted first. With a loud, whistling scream, she ran toward the man, waving
her arms and crying, Jemby! Jemby! in a breathless fashion.
She never
slackened her pace, and when she was close enough, the man stooped and lifted
her high in the air. She threw her arms about his neck, sobbing, and still
gasping, Jemby!
The others
approached more soberly and Trevize said, slowly and distinctly (could this man
understand Galactic?), We ask pardon, sir. This child has lost her protector
and is searching for it desperately. How it came to fasten on you is a puzzle
to us, since it is seeking a robot; a mechanical...
The man spoke for
the first time. His voice was utilitarian rather than musical, and there was a
faint air of archaism clinging to it, but he spoke Galactic with perfect ease.
I greet you all
in friendship, he said-and he seemed unmistakably friendly, even though his
face continued to remain fixed in its expression of gravity. As for this
child, he went on, she shows perhaps a greater perceptivity than you think,
for I am a robot. My name is Daneel Olivaw.
Chapter 21
The Search Ends
101.
TREVIZE found
himself in a complete state of disbelief. He had recovered from the odd
euphoria he had felt just before and after the landing on the moon-a euphoria,
he now suspected, that had been imposed on him by this self-styled robot who now
stood before him.
Trevize was still
staring, and in his now perfectly sane and untouched mind, he remained lost in
astonishment. He had talked in astonishment, made conversation in astonishment,
scarcely understood what he said or heard as he searched for something in the
appearance of this apparent man, in his behavior, in his manner of speaking,
that bespoke the robot.
No wonder,
thought Trevize, that Bliss had detected something that was neither human nor
robot, but, that was, in Pelorat's words, something new. Just as well, of
course, for it had turned Trevize's thoughts into another and more enlightening
channel-but even that was now crowded into the back of his mind.
Bliss and Fallom
had wandered off to explore the grounds. It had been Bliss's suggestion, but it
seemed to Trevize that it came after a lightning-quick glance had been
exchanged between herself and Daneel. When Fallom refused and asked to stay
with the being she persisted in calling Jemby, a grave word from Daneel and a
lift of the finger was enough to cause her to trot off at once. Trevize and
Pelorat remained.
They are not
Foundationers, sirs, said the robot, as though that explained it all. One is
Gaia and one is a Spacer.
Trevize remained
silent while they were led to simply designed chairs under a tree. They seated
themselves, at a gesture from the robot, and when he sat down, too, in a
perfectly human movement, Trevize said, Are you truly a robot?
Truly, sir,
said Daneel.
Pelorat's face
seemed to shine with joy. He said, There are references to a robot named
Daneel in the old legends. Are you named in his honor?
I am that
robot, said Daneel. It is not a legend.
Oh no, said
Pelorat. If you are that robot, you would have to be thousands of years old.
Twenty thousand,
said Daneel quietly.
Pelorat seemed
abashed at that, and glanced at Trevize, who said, with a touch of anger, If
you are a robot, I order you to speak truthfully.
I do not need to
be told to speak truthfully, sir. I must do so. You are faced then, sir, with
three alternatives. Either I am a man who is lying to you; or I am a robot who
has been programmed to believe that it is twenty thousand years old but, in
fact, is not; or I am a robot who is twenty thousand years old. You must decide
which alternative to accept.
The matter may
decide itself with continued conversation, said Trevize dryly. For that
matter, it is hard to believe that this is the interior of the moon. Neither
the lighthe looked up as he said that, for the light was precisely that of
soft, diffuse sunlight, though no sun was in the sky, and, for that matter, no
sky was clearly visible nor the gravity seems credible. This world should have
a surface gravity of less than 0.2g.
The normal
surface gravity would be 0.16g actually, sir. It is built up, however, by the
same forces that give you, on your ship, the sensation of normal gravity, even
when you are in free fall, or under acceleration. Other energy needs, including
the light, are also met gravitically, though we use solar energy where that is
convenient. Our material needs are all supplied by the moon's soil, except for
the light elements-hydrogen, carbon, and nitrogen-which the moon does not
possess. We obtain those by capturing an occasional comet. One such capture a
century is more than enough to supply our needs.
I take it Earth
is useless as a source of supply.
Unfortunately,
that is so, sir. Our positronic brains are as sensitive to radioactivity as
human proteins are.
You use the
plural, and this mansion before us seems, large, beautiful, and elaborate-at
least as seen from the outside. There are then other beings on the moon.
Humans? Robots?
Yes, sir. We
have a complete ecology on the moon and a vast and complex hollow within which
that ecology exists. The intelligent beings are all robots, however, more or
less like myself. You will see none of them, however. As for this mansion, it
is used by myself only and it is an establishment that is modeled exactly on
one I used to live in twenty thousand years ago.
Which you
remember in detail, do you? .
Perfectly, sir.
I was manufactured, and existed for a time-how brief a time it seems to me,
now-on the Spacer world of Aurora.
The one with
the... Trevize paused.
Yes, sir. The
one with the dogs.
You know about
that?
Yes, sir.
How do you come
to be here, then, if you lived at first on Aurora?
Sir, it was to
prevent the creation of a radioactive Earth that I came here in the very
beginnings of the settlement of the Galaxy. There was another robot with me,
named Giskard, who could sense and adjust minds.
As Bliss can?
Yes, sir. We
failed, in a way, and Giskard ceased to operate. Before the cessation, however,
he made it possible for me to have his talent and left it to me to care for the
Galaxy; for Earth, particularly.
Why Earth,
particularly?
In part because
of a man named Elijah Baley, an Earthman.
Pelorat put in
excitedly, He is the culture-hero I mentioned some time ago, Golan.
A culture-hero,
sir?
What Dr. Pelorat
means, said Trevize, is that he is a person to whom much was attributed, and
who may have been an amalgamation of many men in actual history, or who may be
an invented person altogether.
Daneel considered
for a moment, and then said, quite calmly, That is not so, sirs. Elijah Baley
was a real man and he was one man. I do not know what your legends say of him,
but in actual history, the Galaxy might never have been settled without him. In
his honor, I did my best to salvage what I could of Earth after it began to
turn radioactive. My fellow-robots were distributed over the Galaxy in an
effort to influence a person here-a person there. At one time I maneuvered a
beginning to the recycling of Earth's soil. At another much later time, I maneuvered
a beginning to the terraforming of a world circling the nearby star, now called
Alpha. In neither case was I truly successful. I could never adjust human minds
entirely as I wished, for there was always the chance that I might do harm to
the various humans who were adjusted. I was bound, you see-and am bound to this
day-by the Laws of Robotics.
Yes?
It did not
necessarily take a being with Daneel's mental power to detect uncertainty in
that monosyllable.
The First Law,
he said, is this, sir: A robot may not injure a human being or, through
inaction, allow a human being to come to harm. The Second Law: A robot must
obey the orders given it by human beings except where such orders would
conflict with the First Law. The Third Law: A robot must protect its own
existence, as long as such protection does not conflict with the First or
Second Law.Naturally, I give you these laws in the approximation of language.
In actual fact they represent complicated mathematical configurations of our
positronic brain-paths.
Do you find it
difficult to deal with those Laws?
I must, sir. The
First Law is an absolute that almost forbids the use of my mental talents
altogether. When dealing with the Galaxy it is not likely that any course of
action will prevent harm altogether. Always, some people, perhaps many people,
will suffer so that a robot must choose minimum harm. Yet, the complexity of
possibilities is such that it takes time to make that choice and one is, even
then, never certain.
I see that, said
Trevize.
All through
Galactic history, said Daneel, I tried to ameliorate the worst aspects of the
strife and disaster that perpetually made itself felt in the Galaxy. I may have
succeeded, on occasion, and to some extent, but if you know your Galactic
history, you will know that I did not succeed often, or by much.
That much I
know, said Trevize, with a wry smile.
Just before
Giskard's end, he conceived of a robotic law that superseded even the first. We
called it the 'Zeroth Law' out of an inability to think of any other name that
made sense. The Zeroth Law is: A robot may not injure humanity or, through
inaction, allow humanity to come to harm. This automatically means that the
First Law must be modified to be: 'A robot may not injure a human being, or,
through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm, except where that would
conflict with the Zeroth Law. ' And similar modifications must be made in the
Second and Third Laws.
Trevize frowned.
How do you decide what is injurious, or not injurious, to humanity as a
whole?
Precisely, sir,
said Daneel. In theory, the Zeroth Law was the answer to our problems. In
practice, we could never decide. A human being is a concrete object. Injury to
a person can be estimated and judged. Humanity is an abstraction. How do we
deal with it?
I don't know,
said Trevize.
Wait, said
Pelorat. You could convert humanity into a single organism. Gaia.
That is what I
tried to do, sir. I engineered the founding of Gaia. If humanity could be made
a single organism, it would become a concrete object, and it could be dealt
with. It was, however, not as easy to create a superorganism as I had hoped. In
the first place, it could not be done unless human beings valued the
superorganism more than their individuality, and I had to find a mind-cast that
would allow that. It was a long time before I thought of the Laws of Robotics.
Ah, then, the
Gaians are robots. I had suspected that from the start.
In that case,
you suspected incorrectly, sir. They are human beings, but they have brains
firmly inculcated with the equivalent of the Laws of Robotics. They have to
value life, really value it. And even after that was done, there remained a
serious flaw. A superorganism consisting of human beings only is unstable. It
cannot be set up. Other animals must be added-then plants-then the inorganic
world. The smallest superorganism that is truly stable is an entire world, and
a world large enough and complex enough to have a stable ecology. It took a
long time to understand this, and it is only in this last century that Gaia was
fully established and that it became ready to move on toward Galaxia-and, even
so, that will take a long time, too. Perhaps not as long as the road already
traveled, however, since we now know the rules.
But you needed
me to make the decision for you. Is that it, Daneel?
Yes, sir. The
Laws of Robotics would not allow me, nor Gaia, to make the decision and chance
harm to humanity. And meanwhile, five centuries ago, when it seemed that I
would never work out methods for getting round all the difficulties that stood
in the way of establishing Gaia, I turned to the second-best and helped bring
about the development of the science of psychohistory.
I might have
guessed that, mumbled Trevize. You know, Daneel, I'm beginning to believe you
are twenty thousand years old.
Thank you, sir.
Pelorat said,
Wait a while. I think I see something. Are you part of Gaia yourself, Daneel?
Would that be how you knew about the dogs on Aurora? Through Bliss?
Daneel said, In
a way, sir, you are correct. I am associated with Gaia, though I am not part of
it.
Trevize's
eyebrows went up. That sounds like Comporellon, the world we visited
immediately after leaving Gaia. It insists it is not part of the Foundation
Confederation, but is only associated with it.
Slowly, Daneel
nodded. I suppose that analogy is apt, sir. I can, as an associate of Gaia,
make myself aware of what Gaia is aware of-in the person of the woman, Bliss,
for instance. Gaia, however, cannot make itself aware of what I am aware of, so
that I maintain my freedom of action. That freedom of action is necessary until
Galaxia is well established.
Trevize looked
steadily at the robot for a moment, then said, And did you use your awareness
through Bliss in order to interfere with events on our journey to mold them to
your better liking?
Daneel sighed in
a curiously human fashion. I could not do much, sir. The Laws of Robotics
always hold me back. And yet, I lightened the load on Bliss's mind, taking a
small amount of added responsibility on myself, so that she might deal with the
wolves of Aurora and the Spacer on Solaria with greater dispatch and with less
harm to herself. In addition, I influenced the woman on Comporellon and the one
on New Earth, through Bliss, in order to have them look with favor on you, so
that you might continue on your journey.
Trevize smiled,
half-sadly. I ought to have known it wasn't L
Daneel accepted
the statement without its rueful self-deprecation. On the contrary, sir, he
said, it was you in considerable part. Each of the two women looked with favor
upon you from the start. I merely strengthened the impulse already
present-about all one can safely do under the strictures of the Laws of
Robotics. Because of those strictures-and for other reasons as well-it was only
with great difficulty that I brought you here, and only indirectly. I was in
great danger at several points of losing you.
And now I am
here, said Trevize. What is it you want of me? To confirm my decision in
favor of Galaxia?
Daneel's face,
always expressionless, somehow managed to seem despairing. No, sir. The mere
decision is no longer enough. I brought you here, as best I could in my present
condition, for something far more desperate. I am dying.
102.
PERHAPS it was
because of the matter-of-fact way in which Daneel said it; or perhaps because a
lifetime of twenty thousand years made death seem no tragedy to one doomed to
live less than half a percent of that period; but, in any case, Trevize felt no
stir of sympathy.
Die? Can a
machine die?
I can cease to
exist, sir. Call it by whatever word you wish. I am old. Not one sentient being
in the Galaxy that was alive when I was first given consciousness is still
alive today; nothing organic; nothing robotic. Even I myself lack continuity.
In what way?
There is no
physical part of my body, sir, that has escaped replacement, not only once but
many times. Even my positronic brain has been replaced on five different
occasions. Each time the contents of my earlier brain were etched into the
newer one to the last positron. Each time, the new brain had a greater capacity
and complexity than the old, so that there was room for more memories, and for
faster decision and action. But...
But?
The more
advanced and complex the brain, the more unstable it is, and the more quickly
it deteriorates. My present brain is a hundred thousand times as sensitive as
my first, and has ten million times the capacity; but whereas my first brain
endured for over ten thousand years, the present one is but six hundred years
old and is unmistakably senescent. With every memory of twenty thousand years
perfectly recorded and with a perfect recall mechanism in place, the brain is
filled. There is a rapidly declining ability to reach decisions; an even more
rapidly declining ability to test and influence minds at hyperspatial
distances. Nor can I design a sixth brain. Further miniaturization will run
against the blank wall of the uncertainty principle, and further complexity
will but assure decay almost at once.
Pelorat seemed
desperately troubled. But surely, Daneel, Gaia can carry on without you. Now
that Trevize has judged and selected Galaxia...
The process
simply took too long, sir, said Daneel, as always betraying no emotion. I had
to wait for Gaia to be fully established, despite the unanticipated
difficulties that arose. By the time a human being-Mr. Trevize-was located who
was capable of making the key decision, it was too late. Do not think, however,
that I took no measure to lengthen my life span. Little by little I have
reduced my activities, in order to conserve what I could for emergencies. When
I could no longer rely on active measures to preserve the isolation of the
Earth/moon system, I adopted passive ones. Over a period of years, the
humaniform robots that have been working with me have been, one by one, called
home. Their last tasks have been to remove all references to Earth in the
planetary archives. And without myself and my fellow-robots in full play, Gaia
will lack the essential tools to carry through the development of Galaxia in
less than an inordinate period of time.
And you knew all
this, said Trevize, when I made my decision?
A substantial
time before, sir, said Daneel. Gaia, of course, did not know.
But then, said
Trevize angrily, what was the use of carrying through the charade? What good
has it been? Ever since my decision, I have scoured the Galaxy, searching for
Earth and what I thought of as its 'secret'-not knowing the secret was you-in
order that I might confirm the decision. Well, I have confirmed it. I know now
that Galaxia is absolutely essential-and it appears to be all for nothing. Why
could you not have left the Galaxy to itself and me to myself?
Daneel said, Because,
sir, I have been searching for a way out, and I have been carrying on in the
hope that I might find one. I think I have. Instead of replacing my brain with
yet another positronic one, which is impractical, I might merge it with a human
brain instead; a human brain that is not affected by the Three Laws, and will
not only add capacity to my brain, but add a whole new level of abilities as
well. That is why I have brought you here.
Trevize looked
appalled. You mean you plan to merge a human brain into yours? Have the human
brain lose its individuality so that you can achieve a two-brain Gaia?
Yes, sir. It
would not make me immortal, but it might enable me to live long enough to
establish Galaxia.
And you brought
me here for that? You want my independence of the Three Laws and my sense of
judgment made part of you at the price of my individuality? No!
Daneel said, Yet
you said a moment ago that Galaxia is essential for the welfare of the
human...
Even if it is,
it would take a long time to establish, and I would remain an individual in my
lifetime. On the other hand, if it were established rapidly, there would be a
Galactic loss of individuality and my own loss would be part of an unimaginably
greater whole. I would, however, certainly never consent to lose my
individuality while the rest of the Galaxy retains theirs.
Daneel said, It
is, then, as I thought. Your brain would not merge well and, in any case, it
would serve a better purpose if you retained an independent judgmental
ability.
When did you
change your mind? You said that it was for merging that you brought me here.
Yes, and only by
using the fullest extent of my greatly diminished powers. Still, when I said,
'That is why I have brought you here,' please remember that in Galactic Standard,
the word 'you' represents the plural as well as the singular. I was referring
to all of you.
Pelorat stiffened
in his seat. Indeed? Tell me then, Daneel, would a human brain that was merged
with your brain share in all your memories-all twenty thousand years of it,
back to legendary times?
Certainly, sir.
Pelorat drew a
long breath. That would fulfill a lifetime search, and it is something I would
gladly give up my individuality for. Please let me have the privilege of
sharing your brain.
Trevize asked
softly, And Bliss? What about her?
Pelorat hesitated
for no more than a moment. Bliss will understand, he said. She will, in any
case, be better off without me-after a while.
Daneel shook his
head. Your offer, Dr. Pelorat, is a generous one, but I cannot accept it. Your
brain is an old one and it cannot survive for more than two or three decades at
best, even in a merger with my own. I need something else. See! He pointed and
said, I've called her back.
Bliss was
returning, walking happily, with a bounce to her steps.
Pelorat rose
convulsively to his feet. Bliss! Oh no!
Do not be
alarmed, Dr. Pelorat, said Daneel. I cannot use Bliss. That would merge me
with Gaia, and I must remain independent of Gaia, as I have already explained.
But in that
case, said Pelorat, who...
And Trevize,
looking at the slim figure running after Bliss, said, The robot has wanted
Fallom all along, Janov.
103.
Brass returned,
smiling, clearly in a state of great pleasure.
We couldn't pass
beyond the bounds of the estate, she said, but it all reminded me very much
of Solaria. Fallom, of course, is convinced it is Solaria. I asked her if she
didn't think that Daneel had an appearance different from that of Jemby-after
all, Jemby was metallic-and Fallom said, No, not really. I don't know what
she meant by not really.
She looked across
to the middle distance where Fallom was now playing her flute for a grave
Daneel, whose head nodded in time. The sound reached them, thin, clear, and
lovely.
Did you know she
took the flute with her when we left the ship? asked Bliss. I suspect we
won't be able to get her away from Daneel for quite a while.
The remark was
met with a heavy silence, and Bliss looked at the two men in quick alarm.
What's the matter?
Trevize gestured
gently in Pelorat's direction. It was up to him, the gesture seemed to say.
Pelorat cleared
his throat and said, Actually, Bliss, I think that Fallom will be staying with
Daneel permanently.
Indeed? Bliss,
frowning, made as though to walk in Daneel's direction, but Pelorat caught her
arm. Bliss dear, you can't. He's more powerful than Gaia even now, and Fallom
must stay with him if Galaxia is to come into existence. Let me explain-and,
Golan, please correct me if I get anything wrong.
Bliss listened to
the account, her expression sinking into something close to despair.
Trevize said, in
an attempt at cool reason, You see how it is, Bliss. The child is a Spacer and
Daneel was designed and put together by Spacers. The child was brought up by a
robot and knew nothing else on an estate as empty as this one. The child has
transductive powers which Daneel will need, and she will live for three or four
centuries, which may be what is required for the construction of Galaxia.
Bliss said, her
cheeks flushed and her eyes moist, I suppose that the robot maneuvered our
trip to Earth in such a way as to make us pass through Solaria in order to pick
up a child for his use.
Trevize shrugged.
He may simply have taken advantage of the opportunity. I don't think his
powers are strong enough at the moment to make complete puppets of us at
hyperspatial distances.
No. It was
purposeful. He made certain that I would feel strongly attracted to the child
so that I would take her with me, rather than leave her to be killed; that I
would protect her even against you when you showed nothing but resentment and
annoyance at her being with us.
Trevize said,
That might just as easily have been your Gaian ethics, which Daneel could have
strengthened a bit, I suppose. Come, Bliss, there's nothing to be gained.
Suppose you could take Fallom away. Where could you then take her that would
make her as happy as she is here? Would you take her back to Solaria where she
would be killed quite pitilessly; to some crowded world where she would sicken
and die; to Gaia, where she would wear her heart out longing for Jemby; on an
endless voyage through the Galaxy, where she would think that every world we
came across was her Solaria? And would you find a substitute for Daneel's use
so that Galaxia could be constructed?
Bliss was sadly
silent.
Pelorat held out
his hand to her, a bit timidly. Bliss, he said, I volunteered to have my
brain fused with Daneel's. He wouldn't take it because he said I was too old. I
wish he had, if that would have saved Fallom for you.
Bliss took his
hand and kissed it. Thank you, Pel, but the price would be too high, even for
Fallom. She took a deep breath, and tried to smile. Perhaps, when we get back
to Gaia, room will be found in the global organism for a child for me-and I
will place Fallom in the syllables of its name.
And now Daneel,
as though aware that the matter was settled, was walking toward them, with
Fallom skipping along at his side.
The youngster broke
into a run and reached them first. She said to Bliss, Thank you, Bliss, for
taking me home to Jemby again and for taking care of me while we were on the
ship. I shall always remember you. Then she flung herself at Bliss and the two
held each other tightly.
I hope you will
always be happy, said Bliss. I will remember you, too, Fallom dear, and
released her with reluctance.
Fallom turned to
Pelorat, and said, Thank you, too, Pel, for letting me read your book-films.
Then, without an additional word, and after a trace of hesitation, the thin,
girlish hand was extended to Trevize. He took it for a moment, then let it go.
Good luck,
Fallom, he muttered.
Daneel said, I
thank you all, sirs and madam, for what you have done, each in your own way.
You are free to go now, for your search is ended. As for my own work, it will
be ended, too, soon enough, and successfully now.
But Bliss said,
Wait, we are not quite through. We don't know yet whether Trevize is still of
the mind that the proper future for humanity is Galaxia, as opposed to a vast
conglomeration of Isolates.
Daneel said, He
has already made that clear a while ago, madam. He has decided in favor of
Galaxia.
Bliss's lips
tightened. I'd rather hear that from him. Which is it to be, Trevize?
Trevize said
calmly, Which do you want it to be, Bliss? If I decide against Galaxia, you
may get Fallom back.
Bliss said, I am
Gaia. I must know your decision, and its reason, for the sake of the truth and
nothing else.
Daneel said,
Tell her, sir. Your mind, as Gaia is aware, is untouched.
And Trevize said,
The decision is for Galaxia. There is no further doubt in my mind on that
point.
104.
Bliss remained
motionless for the time one might take to count to fifty at a moderate rate, as
though she were allowing the information to reach all parts of Gaia, and then
she said, Why?
Trevize said,
Listen to me. I knew from the start that there were two possible futures for
humanity-Galaxia, or else the Second Empire of Seldon's Plan. And it seemed to
me that those two possible futures were mutually exclusive. We couldn't have
Galaxia unless, for some reason, Seldon's Plan had some fundamental flaw in it.
Unfortunately, I
knew nothing about Seldon's Plan except for the two axioms on which it is
based: one, that there be involved a large enough number of human beings to
allow humanity to be treated statistically as a group of individuals
interacting randomly; and second, that humanity not know the results of
psychohistorical conclusions before the results are achieved.
Since I had
already decided in favor of Galaxia, I felt I must be subliminally aware of
flaws in Seldon's Plan, and those flaws could only be in the axioms, which were
all I knew of the plan. Yet I could see nothing wrong with the axioms. I
strove, then, to find Earth, feeling that Earth could not be so thoroughly
hidden for no purpose. I had to find out what that purpose was.
I had no real
reason to expect to find a solution once I found Earth, but I was desperate and
could think of nothing else to do. And perhaps Daneel's desire for a Solarian
child helped drive me.
In any case, we
finally reached Earth, and then the moon, and Bliss detected Daneel's mind,
which he, of course, was deliberately reaching out to her. She described that
mind as neither quite human nor quite robotic. In hindsight, that proved to
make sense, for Daneel's brain is far advanced beyond any robot that ever
existed, and would not be sensed as simply robotic. Neither would it be sensed as
human, however. Pelorat referred to it as 'something new' and that served as a
trigger for something new of my own; a new thought.
Just as, long
ago, Daneel and his colleague worked out a fourth law of robotics that was more
fundamental than the other three, so I could suddenly see a third basic axiom
of psychohistory that was more fundamental than the other two; a third axiom so
fundamental that no one ever bothered to mention it.
Here it is. The
two known axioms deal with human beings, and they are based on the unspoken
axiom that human beings are the only intelligent species in the Galaxy, and
therefore the only organisms whose actions are significant in the development
of society and history. That is the unstated axiom: that there is only one species
of intelligence in the Galaxy and that it is Homo Sapiens. If there were
'something, new:' if there were other species of intelligence widely different
in nature, then their behavior would not be described accurately by the
mathematics of psychohistory and Seldon's Plan would have no meaning. Do you
see?
Trevize was
almost shaking with the earnest desire to make himself understood. Do you
see? he repeated.
Pelorat said,
Yes, I see, but as devil's advocate, old chap...
Yes? Go on.
Human beings are
the only intelligences in the Galaxy.
Robots? said
Bliss. Gain?
Pelorat thought
awhile, then said hesitantly-, Robots have played no significant role in human
history since the disappearance of the Spacers. Gaia has played no significant
role until very recently. Robots are the creation of human beings, and Gaia is
the creation of robots-and both robots and Gala, insofar as they must be bound
by the Three Laws, have no choice but to yield to human will. Despite the
twenty thousand years Daneel has labored, and the long development of Gaia, a
single word from Golan Trevize, a human being, would put an end to both those
labors and that development. It follows, then, that humanity is the only
significant species of intelligence in the Galaxy, and psychohistoryremains
valid.
The only form of
intelligence in the Galaxy, repeated Trevize slowly. I agree. Yet we speak so
much and so often of the Galaxy that it is all but impossible for us to see
that this is not enough. The Galaxy is not the universe. There are other
galaxies.
Pelorat and Bliss
stirred uneasily. Daneel listened with benign gravity, his hand slowly stroking
Fallom's hair.
Trevize said,
Listen to me again. Just outside the Galaxy are the Magellanic Clouds, where
no human ship has ever penetrated. Beyond that are other small galaxies, and
not very far away is the giant Andromeda Galaxy, larger than our own. Beyond
that are galaxies by the billions.
Our own Galaxy has developed only one species of an
intelligence great enough to develop a technological society, but what do we
know of the other galaxies? Ours may be atypical. In some of the others-perhaps
even in allthere may be many competing intelligent species, struggling with
each other, and each incomprehensible to us. Perhaps it is their mutual
struggle that preoccupies them, but what if, in some galaxy, one species gains
domination over the rest and then has time to consider the possibility of
penetrating other galaxies.
Hyperspatially,
the Galaxy is a point-and so is all the Universe. We have not visited any other
galaxy, and, as far as we know, no intelligent species from another galaxy has
ever visited us-but that state of affairs may end someday. And if the invaders
come, they are bound to find ways of turning some human beings against other
human beings. We have so long had only ourselves to fight that we are used to
such internecine quarrels. An invader that finds us divided against ourselves
will dominate us all, or destroy us all. The only true defense is to produce
Galaxia, which cannot be turned against itself and which can meet invaders with
maximum power.
Bliss said, The
picture you paint is a frightening one. Will we have time to form Galaxia?
Trevize looked
up, as though to penetrate the thick layer of moonrock that separated him from
the surface and from space; as though to force himself to see those far distant
galaxies, moving slowly through unimaginable vistas of space.
He said, In all
human history, no other intelligence has impinged on us, to our knowledge. This
need only continue a few more centuries, perhaps little more than one ten
thousandth of the time civilization has already existed, and we will be safe.
After all, and here Trevize felt a sudden twinge of trouble, which he forced
himself to disregard, it is not as though we had the enemy already here and
among us.
And he did not
look down to meet the brooding eyes of Fallom-hermaphroditic, transductive,
different-as they rested, unfathomably, on him.