Forward
the Foundation
Isaac
Azimov
I could not have written this book forty-or thirty, twenty,
or even tenyears ago. That is because, piece by piece, over the years, I have
been working back to Foundation's source: Hari Seldon. Today I enjoy the gift
given to me by time: Experience (some might call it wisdom, but I will refrain
from such bald self-aggrandizement). For it is only now that I am able to give
my readers Hari Seldon during the most crucial, creative years of his life
...You see, over time, Hari Seldon has evolved into my alter ego... In my
earlier books Hari Seldon was the stuff of legend-with Forward the Foundation I
have made him real.
Isaac Asimov, June 1991
DEMERZEL, ETO... While there is no question that Eto
Demerzel was the real power in the government during much of the reign of
Emperor Cleon I, historians are divided as to the nature of his rule. The
classic interpretation is that he was another in the long line of strong and
ruthless oppressors in the last century of the undivided Galactic Empire, but
there are revisionist views that have surfaced and that insist his was, if a
despotism, a benevolent one. Much is made, in this view, of his relationship
with Hari Seldon though that remains forever uncertain, particularly during the
unusual episode of Laskin Joranum, whose meteoric rise
ENCYCLOPEDIA GALACTICA
Part 1
ETO DEMERZEL
1
"Hari, said Yugo Amaryl, that your friend Demerzel is
in deep trouble. He emphasized the word friend very lightly and with
unmistakable air of distaste.
Hari Seldon detected the sour note and ignored it. He looked
up from his tricomputer and said, I tell you again, Yugo, that that's
nonsense. And then-with a trace of annoyance, just a trace-he added, Why are
you taking up my time by insisting?
Because I think it's important. Amaryl sat down defiantly.
It was a gesture that indicated he was not going to be moved easily. Here he
was and here he would stay.
Eight years before, he had been a heatsinker in the Dahl
Sector-as low on the social scale as it was possible to be. He had been lifted
out of that position by Seldon made into a mathematician and an
intellectual-more than that, into a psychohistorian.
Never for one minute did he forget what he had been and who
he was now and to whom he owed the change. That meant that if he had to speak
harshly to Hari Seldon-for Seldon's own good-no consideration of respect and
love for the older man and no regard for his own career would stop him. He owed
such harshness-and much more-to Seldon.
Look, Hari, he said, chopping at the air with his left
hand, for some reason that is beyond my understanding, you think highly of
this Demerzel, but I don't. no one whose opinion I respect-except you-thinks
well of him. I don't care what happens to him personally, Hari, but as long as
I think you do, I have no choice but to bring this to your attention.
Seldon smiled, as much at the other's earnestness as at what
he considered to be the uselessness of his concern. He was fond of Yugo
Amaryl-more than fond. Yugo was one of the four people he had encountered during
that short period of his life when he was in flight across the face of the
planet Trantor-Eto Demerzel, Dors Venabili, Yugo Amaryl, and Raych-four, the
likes of which he had not found since.
In a particular and, in each case, different way, these four
were indispensable to him-Yugo Amaryl, because of his quick understanding of
the principles of psychohistory and of his imaginative probings into new areas.
It was comforting to know that if anything happened to Seldon himself before
the mathematics of the field could be completely worked out-and how slowly it
proceeded, and how mountainous the obstacles there would at least remain one
good mind that would continue the research.
He said, I'm sorry, Yugo. I don't mean to be impatient with
you or to reject out of hand whatever it is you are so anxious to make me
understand. It's just this job of mine; it's this business of being a
department head...
Amaryl found it his turn to smile and he repressed a slight
chuckle. I'm sorry, Hari, and I shouldn't laugh, but you have no natural
aptitude for the position.
As well I know, but I'll have to learn. I have to seem to
be doing something harmless and there is nothing-nothing-more harmless than
being the head of the Mathematics Department at Streeling University. I can
fill my day with unimportant tasks, so that no one need know or ask about the
course of our psychohistorical research, but the trouble is, I do fill my day
with unimportant tasks and I have insufficient time to... His eyes glanced
around his office at the material stored in computers to which only he and
Amaryl had the key and which, even if anyone else stumbled upon them, had been
carefully phrased in an invented symbology that no one else would understand.
Amaryl said, Once you work your way further into your
duties, you'll begin to delegate and then you'll have more time.
I hope so, said Seldon dubiously. But tell me, what is it
about Eto Demerzel that is so important?
Simply that Eto Demerzel, our great Emperor's First
Minister, is busily creating an insurrection.
Seldon frowned. Why would he want to do that?
I didn't say he wants to. He's simply doing it-whether he
knows it or not-and with considerable help from some of his political enemies. That's
all right with me, you understand. I think that, under ideal conditions, it
would be a good thing to have him out of the Palace, off Trantor... beyond the
Empire, for that matter. But you think highly of him, as I've said, and so I'm
warning you, because I suspect that you are not following the recent political
course of events as closely as you should.
There are more important things to do, said Seldon mildly.
Like psychohistory. I agree. But how are we going to
develop psychohistory with any hope of success if we remain ignorant of
politics? 1 mean, present-day politics. Now-now-is the time when the present is
turning into the future. We can't just study the past. We know what happened in
the past. It's against the present and the near future that we can check our
results.
It seems to me, said Seldon, that I have heard this
argument before.
And you'll hear it again. It doesn't seem to do me any good
to explain this to you.
Seldon sighed, sat back in his chair, and regarded Amaryl
with a smile. The younger man could be abrasive, but he took psychohistory
seriously-and that repaid all.
Amaryl still had the mark of his early years as a
heatsinker. He had the broad shoulders and the muscular build of one who had
been used to hard physical labor. He had not allowed his body to turn flabby
and that was a good thing, for it inspired Seldon to resist the impulse to
spend all of his time at the desk as well. He did not have Amaryl's sheer
physical strength, but he still had his own talents as a Twister-for all that
he had just turned forty and could not keep it up forever. But for now, he
would continue. Thanks to his daily workouts, his waist was still trim, his legs
and arms firm.
He said, This
concern for Demerzel cannot be purely a matter of his being a friend of mine.
You must have some other motive.
There's no
puzzle to that. As long as you're a friend of Demerzel, your position here at
the University is secure and you can continue to work on psychohistorical
research.
There you are.
So I do have a reason to be friends with him. It isn't beyond your
understanding at all.
You have an
interest in cultivating him. That, I understand. But as for friendship-that, I
don't understand. However-if Demerzel lost lower, quite apart from the effect
it might have on your position, then Cleon himself would be running the Empire
and the rate of its decline would increase. Anarchy might then be upon us
before we have worked out all the implications of psychohistory and made it
possible for the science to save all humanity.
I see. But, you
know, I honestly don't think that we're going to work out psychohistory in time
to prevent the Fall of the Empire.
Even if we could
not prevent the Fall, we could cushion the effects, couldn't we?
Perhaps.
There you are,
then. The longer we have to work in peace, the greater the chance we will have
to prevent the Fall or, at least, ameliorate the effects. Since that is the
case, working backward, it may be necessary to save Demerzel, whether we-or, at
least, I-like it or not.
Yet you just
said that you would like to see him out of the Palace and away from Trantor and
beyond the Empire.
Yes, under ideal
conditions, I said. But we are not living under ideal conditions and we need
our First Minister, even if he is an instrument of repression and despotism.
I see. But why
do you think the Empire is so close to dissolution that the loss of a First
Minister will bring it about?
Psychohistory.
Are you using it
for predictions? We haven't even gotten the framework in place. What
predictions can you make?
There's
intuition, Hari.
There's always
been intuition. We want something more, don't we? We want a mathematical
treatment that will give us probabilities of specific future developments under
this condition or that. If intuition suffices to guide us, we don't need
psychohistory at all.
It's not
necessarily a matter of one or the other, Hari. I'm talking about both: the
combination, which may be better than either-at least until psychohistory is
perfected.
If ever, said
Seldon. But tell me, where does this danger to Demerzel arise? What is it that
is likely to harm him or overthrow him? Are we talking about Demerzel's overthrow?
Yes, said
Amaryl and a grim look settled on his face.
Then tell me.
Have pity on my ignorance.
Amaryl flushed.
You're being condescending, Hari. Surely you've heard of Jo-Jo Joranum.
Certainly. He's
a demagogue... Wait, where's he from? Nishaya, right? A very unimportant world.
Goat herding, I think. High-quality cheeses.
That's it. Not
just a demagogue, however. He commands a strong following and it's getting
stronger. He aims, he says, for social justice and greater political
involvement by the people.
Yes, said
Seldon. I've heard that much. His slogan is: Government belongs to the
people.
Not quite, Hari.
He says: Government is the people.
Seldon nodded.
Well, you know, I rather sympathize with the thought.
So do I. I'm all
for it-if Joranum meant it. But he doesn't, except as a stepping-stone. It's a
path, not a goal. He wants to get rid of Demerzel. After that it will be easy
to manipulate Cleon. Then Joranum will take the throne himself and he will be the
people. You've told me yourself that there have been a number of episodes of
this sort in Imperial history-and these days the Empire is weaker and less
stable than it used to be. A blow which, in earlier centuries, merely staggered
it might now shatter it. The Empire will welter in civil war and never recover
and we won't have psychohistory in place to teach us what must be done.
Yes, I see your
point, but surely it's not going to be that easy to get rid of Demerzel.
You don't know
how strong Joranum is growing.
It doesn't
matter how strong he's growing. A shadow of thought seemed to pass over
Seldon's brow. I wonder that his parents came to name him Jo-Jo. There's
something juvenile about that name.
His parents had
nothing to do with it. His real name is Laskin, a very common name on Nishaya.
He chose Jo-Jo himself, presumably from the first syllable of his last name.
The more fool
he, wouldn't you say?
No, I wouldn't.
His followers shout it Jo... Jo... Jo... Jo'-over and over. It's hypnotic.
Well, said
Seldon, making a move to return to his tricomputer and adjust the
multidimensional simulation it had created, we'll see what happens.
Can you be that
casual about it? I'm telling you the danger is imminent.
No, it isn't,
said Seldon, eyes steely, his voice suddenly hardening. You don't have all the
facts.
What facts don't
I have?
We'll discuss
that another time, Yugo. For now, continue with your work and let me worry
about Demerzel and the state of the Empire.
Amaryl's lips
tightened, but the habit of obedience to Seldon was strong. Yes, Hari.
But not
overwhelmingly strong. He turned at the door and said, You're making a
mistake, Hari.
Seldon smiled
slightly. I don't think so, but I have heard your warning and I will not
forget. Still, all will be well.
And as Amaryl
left, Seldon's smile faded. Would, indeed, all be well?
2
But Seldon, while
he did not forget Amaryl's warning, did not think of it with any great degree
of concentration. His fortieth birthday came and went-with the usual
psychological blow.
Forty! He was not
young any longer. Life no longer stretched before him as a vast uncharted
field, its horizon lost in the distance. He had been on Trantor for eight years
and the time had passed quickly. Another eight years and he would be nearly
fifty. Old age would be looming.
And he had not
even made a decent beginning in psychohistory? Yugo Amaryl spoke brightly of
laws and worked out his equations by making daring assumptions based on
intuition. But how could one possibly test those assumptions? Psychohistory was
not yet an experimental science. The complete study of psychohistory would
require experiments that would involve worlds of people, centuries of time-and
a total lack of ethical responsibility.
It posed an impossible
problem and he resented having to spend any time whatever on departmental
tasks, so he walked home at the end of the day in a morose mood.
Ordinarily he
could always count on a walk through the campus to rouse his spirits. Streeling
University was high-domed and the campus gave the feeling of being out in the
open without the necessity of enduring the kind of weather he had experienced
on his one (and only) visit to the Imperial Palace. There were trees, lawns,
walks, almost as though he were on the campus of his old college on his home
world of Helicon.
The illusion of
cloudiness had been arranged for the day with the sunlight (no sun, of course,
just sunlight) appearing and disappearing at odd intervals. And it was a little
cool, just a little.
It seemed to
Seldon that the cool days came a little more frequently than they used to. Was
Trantor saving energy? Was it increasing inefficiency? Or (and he scowled
inwardly as he thought it) was he getting old and was his blood getting thin?
He placed his hands in his jacket pockets and hunched up his shoulders.
Usually he did
not bother guiding himself consciously. His body knew the way perfectly from
his offices to his computer room and from there to his apartment and back.
Generally he negotiated the path with his thoughts elsewhere, but today a sound
penetrated his consciousness. A sound without meaning.
Jo... Jo...
Jo... Jo...
It was rather
soft and distant, but it brought back a memory. Yes, Amaryl's warning. The
demagogue. Was he here on campus?
His legs swerved
without Seldon's making a conscious decision and brought him over the low rise
to the University Field, which was used for calisthenics, sports, and student
oratory.
In the middle of
the Field was a moderate-sized crowd of students who were chanting
enthusiastically. On a platform was someone he didn't recognize, someone with a
loud voice and a swaying rhythm.
It wasn't this
man, Joranum, however. He had seen Joranum on holovision a number of times.
Since Amaryl's warning, Seldon had paid close attention. Joranum was large and
smiled with a kind of vicious camaraderie. He had thick sandy hair and light
blue eyes.
This speaker was
small, if anything-thin, wide-mouthed, dark-haired, and loud. Seldon wasn't
listening to the words, though he did hear the phrase power from the one to
the many and the many-voiced shout in response.
Fine, thought
Seldon, but just how does he intend to bring this about and is he serious?
He was at the
outskirts of the crowd now and looked around far someone he knew. He spotted
Finangelos, a pret-math undergraduate. Not a bad young man, dark and
woolly-haired.
Finangelos, he
called out.
Professor
Seldon said Finangelos after a moment of staring as though unable to recognize
Seldon without a keyboard at his fingertips he trotted over. Did you come to
listen to this guy?
I didn't come
for any purpose but to find out what the noise was. Who is he?
His name is
Namarti, Professor. He's speaking for Jo-Jo.
I hear that,
said Seldon as he listened to the chant again. It began each time the speaker
made a telling point, apparently. But who is this Namarti? I don't recognize
the name. What department is he in?
He's not a
member of the University, Professor. He's one of Jo-Jo's men.
If he's not a
member of the University, he has no right to speak here without a permit. Does
he have one, do you suppose?
I wouldn't know,
Professor.
Well then, let's
find out.
Seldon started
into the crowd, but Finangelos caught his sleeve. Don't start anything,
Professor. He's got goons with him.
There were six
young men behind the speaker, spaced rather widely, legs apart, arms folded,
scowling.
Goons?
For rough stuff,
in case anyone tries anything funny.
Then he's
certainly not a member of the University and even a permit wouldn't cover what
you call his goons. Finangelos, signal through to the University security
officers. They should have been here by now without a signal.
I guess they
don't want trouble, muttered Finangelos. Please, Professor, don't try
anything. If you want me to get the security officers, I will, but you just
wait till they come.
Maybe I can
break this up before they come.
He began pushing
his way through. It wasn't difficult. Some of those present recognized him and
all could see the professorial shoulder patch. He reached the platform, placed
his hands on it, and vaulted up the three feet with a small grunt. He thought,
with chagrin, that he could have done it with one hand ten years before and
without the grunt.
He straightened
up. The speaker had stopped talking and was looking at him with wary and
ice-hard eyes.
Seldon said
calmly, Your permit to address the students, sir.
Who are you?
said the speaker. He said it loudly, his voice carrying.
I'm a member of
the faculty of this University, said Seldon, equally loudly. Your permit,
sir?
I deny your
right to question me on the matter. The young men behind the speaker had
gathered closer.
If you have
none, I would advise you to leave the University grounds immediately.
And if I don't?
Well, for one
thing, the University security officers are on their way. He turned to the
crowd. Students, he called out, we have the right of free speech and freedom
of assembly on this campus, but it can be taken away from us if we allow
outsiders, without permits, to make unauthorized...
A heavy hand fell
on his shoulder and he winced. He turned around and found it was one of the men
Finangelos had referred to as goons.
The man said,
with a heavy accent whose provenance Seldon could not immediately identify,
Get out of here fast.
What good will
that do? said Seldon. The security officers will be here any minute.
In that case,
said Namarti with a feral grin, there'll be a riot. That doesn't scare us.
Of course it
wouldn't, said Seldon. You'd like it, but there won't be a riot. You'll all
go quietly. He turned again to the students and shrugged off the hand on his
shoulder. We'll see to that, won't we?
Someone in the
crowd shouted, That's Professor Seldon! He's all right! Don't pound him!
Seldon sensed
ambivalence in the crowd. There would be some, he knew, who would welcome a
dust-up with the University security officers, just on general principles. On
the other hand, there had to be some who liked him personally and still others
who did not know him but who would not want to see violence against a member of
the faculty.
A woman's voice
rang out. Watch out, Professor!
Seldon sighed and
regarded the large young men he faced. He didn't know if he could do it, if his
reflexes were quick enough, his muscles sturdy enough, even given his prowess
at Twisting.
One goon was
approaching him, overconfidently of course. Not quickly, which gave Seldon a
little of the time his aging body would need. The goon held out his arm
confrontationally, which made it easier.
Seldon seized the
arm, whirled, and bent, arm up, and then down (with a grunt why did he have to
grunt?), and the goon went flying through the air, propelled partly by his own
momentum. He landed with a thump on the outer edge of the platform, his right
shoulder dislocated.
There was a wild
cry from the audience at this totally unexpected development. Instantly an
institutional pride erupted.
Take them,
Prof! a lone voice shouted. Others took up the cry.
Seldon smoothed
back his hair, trying not to puff. With his foot he shoved the groaning fallen
goon off the platform.
Anyone else? he
asked pleasantly. Or will you leave quietly?
He faced Namarti
and his five henchmen and as they paused irresolutely, Seldon said, I warn
you. The crowd is on my side now. If you try to rush me, they'll take you
apart. Okay, who's next? Let's go. One at a time.
He had raised his
voice with the last sentence and made small come-hither motions with his
fingers. The crowd yelled its pleasure.
Namarti stood
there stolidly. Seldon leaped past him and caught his neck in the crook of his
arm. Students were climbing onto the platform now, shouting One at a time! One
at a time! and getting between the bodyguards and Seldon.
Seldon increased
the pressure on the other's windpipe and whispered in his ear, There's a way
to do this, Namarti, and I know how: I've practiced it for years. If you make a
move and try to break away, I'll ruin your larynx so that you'll never talk
above a whisper again. If you value your voice, do as I say. When I let up, you
tell your bunch of bullies to leave. If you say anything else, they'll be the
last words you'll say normally. And if you ever come back to this campus again,
no more Mr. Nice Guy. I'll finish the job.
He released the
pressure momentarily. Namarti said huskily, All of you. Get out. They
retreated rapidly, helping their stricken comrade.
When the
University security officers arrived a few moments later, Seldon said, Sorry,
gentlemen. False alarm.
He left the Field
and resumed his walk home with more than a little chagrin. He had revealed a
side of himself he did not want to reveal. He was Hari Seldon, mathematician,
not Hari Seldon, sadistic twister.
Besides, he
thought gloomily, Dors would hear of this. In fact, he'd better tell her
himself, lest she hear a version that made the incident seem worse than it
really was.
She would not be
pleased.
3
She wasn't.
Dors was waiting
for him at the door of their apartment in an easy stance, hand on one hip,
looking very much as she had when he had first met her at this very University
eight years before: slim, shapely, with curly reddish-gold hair-very beautiful
in his eyes but not very beautiful in any objective sense, though he had never
been able to assess her objectively after the first few days of their
friendship.
Dors Venabili!
That's what he thought when he saw her calm face. There were many worlds, even
many sectors on Trantor where it would have been common to call her Dors
Seldon, but that, he always thought, would put the mark of ownership on her and
he did not wish it, even though the custom was sanctioned by existence back
into the vague mists of the pre-Imperial past.
Dors said, softly
and with a sad shake of her head that barely disturbed her loose curls, I've
heard, Hari. Just what am I going to do with you?
A kiss would not
be amiss.
Well, perhaps,
but only after we probe this a little. Come in. The door closed behind them.
You know, dear, I have my course and my research. I'm still doing that
dreadful history of the Kingdom of Trantor, which you tell me is essential to
your own work. Shall I drop it all and take to wandering around with you, protecting
you? It's still my job, you know. It's more than ever my job, now that you're
making progress with psychohistory.
Making progress?
I wish I were. But you needn't protect me.
Needn't I? I
sent Raych out looking for you. After all, you were late and I was concerned.
You usually tell me when you're going to be late. I'm sorry if that makes me
sound as though I'm your keeper, Hari, but I am your keeper.
Does it occur to
you, Keeper Dors, that every once in a while I like to slip my leash?
And if something
happens to you, what do I tell Demerzel?
Am I too late
for dinner? Have we clicked for kitchen service?
No. I was
waiting for you. And as long as you're here, you click it. You're a great deal
pickier than I am when it comes to food. And don't change the subject.
Didn't Raych
tell you that I was all right? So what's there to talk about?
When he found
you, you were in control of the situation and he got back here first, but not
by much. I didn't hear any details. Tell me-What-were-you-doing?
Seldon shrugged.
There was an illegal gathering, Dors, and I broke it up. The University could
have gotten a good deal of trouble it didn't need if I hadn't.
And it was up to
you to prevent it? Hari. you're not a Twister anymore. You're an...
He put in
hastily, An old man?
For a Twister,
yes. You're forty. How do you feel?
Well... A little
stiff.
I can well
imagine. And one of these days, when you try to pretend you're a young
Heliconian athlete, you'll break a rib. Now tell me about it.
Well, I told you
how Amaryl warned me that Demerzel was in trouble because of the demagoguery of
Jo-Jo Joranum.
Jo-Jo. Yes, I
know that much. What don't I know? What happened today?
There was a
rally at the Field. A Jo-Jo partisan named Namarti was addressing the crowd...
Namarti is
Gambol Deen Namarti, Joranum's right-hand man.
Well, you know
more about it than I do. In any case, he was addressing a large crowd and he
had no permit and I think he was hoping there would be some sort of riot. They
feed on these disorders and if he could close down the University even
temporarily, he would charge Demerzel with the destruction of academic freedom.
I gather they blame him for everything. So I stopped them. Sent them off
without a riot.
You sound
proud.
Why not? Not bad
for a man of forty.
Is that why you
did it? To test your status at forty?
Seldon
thoughtfully clicked the dinner menu. Then he said, No. I really was concerned
that the University would get into needless trouble. And I was concerned about
Demerzel. I'm afraid that Yugo's tales of danger had impressed me more than I
realized. That was stupid, Dors, because I know that Demerzel can take care of
himself. I couldn't explain that to Yugo or to anyone but you.
He drew in a deep
breath. It's amazing what a pleasure it is that I can at least talk to you
about it. You know and I know and Demerzel knows and no one else knows-at
least, that I know of-that Demerzel is untouchable.
Dors touched a
contact on a recessed wall panel and the dining section of their living
quarters lit up with a soft peach-colored glow. Together, she and Hari walked
to the table, which was already set with linen, crystal, and utensils. As they
sat, the dinner began to arrive-there was never any long delay at this time of
evening-and Seldon accepted it quite casually. He had long since grown
accustomed to the social position that made it unnecessary for them to
patronize the faculty dinners.
Seldon savored
the seasonings they had learned to enjoy during their stay at Mycogen-the only
thing about that strange, male-dominated, religion-permeated,
living-in-the-past sector they had not detested.
Dors said softly,
How do you mean, untouchable?
Come, dear, he
can alter emotions. You haven't forgotten that. If Joranum really became
dangerous, he could behe made a vague gesture with his hands altered made
to change his mind.
Dors looked
uncomfortable and the meal proceeded in an unusual silence. It wasn't until it
was over and the remains-dishes, cutlery, and all-swirled down the disposal
chute in the center of the table (which then smoothly covered itself over) that
she said, I'm not sure I want to talk about this, Hari, but I can't let you be
fooled by your own innocence.
Innocence? He
frowned.
Yes. We've never
talked about this. I never thought it would come up, but Demerzel has
shortcomings. He is not untouchable, he may be harmed, and Joranum is indeed a
danger to him.
Are you
serious?
Of course I am.
You don't understand robots-certainly not one as complex as Demerzel. And I
do.
4
There was a short
silence again, but only because thoughts are silent. Seldon's were tumultuous
enough.
Yes, it was true.
His wife did seem to have an uncanny knowledge of robots. Hari had wondered
about this so often over the years that he had finally given up, tucked it away
in the back of his mind. If it hadn't been for Eto Demerzel-a robot-Hari would
never have met Dors. For Dors worked for Demerzel; it was Demerzel who
assigned Dors to Hari's case eight years ago to protect him during his flight
throughout the various sectors of Trantor. Even though now she was his wife,
his help-meet, his 'better half, Hari still occasionally wondered about
Dors's strange connection with the robot Demerzel. It was the only area of Dors's
life where Hari truly felt he did not belong-nor welcome. And that brought to
mind the most painful question of all: Was it out of obedience to Demerzel that
Dors stayed with Hari or was it out of love for him? He wanted to believe the
latter-and yet...
His life with
Dors Venabili was a happy one, but it was so at a cost, at a condition. The
condition was all the more stringent, in that it had been settled not through
discussion or agreement but by a mutual unspoken understanding.
Seldon understood
that he found in Dors everything he would have wanted in a wife. True, he had
no children, but he had neither expected any, nor, to tell the truth, had
greatly wanted any. He had Raych, who was as much a son of his emotionally as
if he had inherited the entire Seldonian genome-perhaps more so.
The mere fact
that Dors was causing him to think about the matter was breaking the agreement
that had kept them in peace and comfort all these years and he felt a faint but
growing resentment at that.
But he pushed
those thoughts, the questions, away again. He had learned to accept her role as
his protector and would continue to do so. After all, it was he with whom she
shared a home, a table, and a bed-not Eto Demerzel.
Dors's voice
brought him out of his reverie.
I said Are you
sulking, Hari?
He started
slightly, for there was the sound of repetition in her voice, and he realized
he had been shrinking steadily deeper into his mind and away from her.
I'm sorry, dear.
I'm not sulking. Not deliberately sulking. I'm just wondering how I ought to
respond to your statement.
About robots?
She seemed quite calm as she said the word.
You said I don't
know as much about them as you do. How do I respond to that? He paused, then
added quietly (knowing he was taking a chance), That is, without offense.
I didn't say you
didn't know about robots. If you're going to quote me, do so with precision. I
said you didn't understand about robots. I'm sure that you know a great deal,
perhaps more than I do, but to know is not necessarily to understand.
Now, Dors,
you're deliberately speaking in paradoxes to be annoying. A paradox arises only
out of an ambiguity that deceives either unwittingly or by design. I don't like
that in science and I don't like it in casual conversation, either, unless it
is meant humorously, which I think is not the case now.
Dors laughed in
her particular way, softly, almost as though amusement were too precious to be
shared in an overliberal manner. Apparently the paradox has annoyed you into
pomposity and you are always humorous when you are pompous. However, I'll
explain. It's not my intention to annoy you. She reached over to pat his hand
and it was to Seldon's surprise (and slight embarrassment) that he found that
he had clenched his hand into a fist.
Dors said, You
talk about psychohistory a great deal. To me, at any rate. You know that?
Seldon cleared
his throat. I throw myself on your mercy as far as that's concerned. The
project is secret-by its very nature. Psychohistory won't work unless the
people it affects know nothing about it, so I can talk about it only to Yugo
and to you. To Yugo, it is all intuition. He's brilliant, but he is so apt to
leap wildly into darkness that I must play the role of caution, of forever
pulling him back. But I have my wild thoughts, too, and it helps me to be able
to hear them aloud, evenand he smiled when I have a pretty good notion that
you don't understand a word I'm saying.
I know I'm your
sounding board and I don't mind. I really don't mind, Hari, so don't begin
making inner resolutions to change your behavior. Naturally I don't understand
your mathematics. I'm just a historian-and not even a historian of science. The
influence of economic change on political development is what is taking up my
time now...
Yes, and I'm
your sounding board on that or hadn't you noticed? I'll need it for
psychohistory when the time comes, so I suspect you'll be an indispensable help
to me.
Good! Now that
we've settled why you stay with me-I knew it couldn't be for my ethereal
beauty-let me go on to explain that occasionally, when your discussion veers
away from the strictly mathematical aspects, it seems to me that I get your
drift. You have, on a number of occasions, explained what you call the
necessity of minimalism. I think I understand that. By it, you mean...
I know what I
mean.
Dors looked hurt.
Less lofty, please, Hari. I'm not trying to explain to you. I want to explain
it to myself. You say you're my sounding board, so act like one. Turnabout is
fair play, isn't it?
Turnabout is
fine, but if you're going to accuse me of loftiness when I say one little...
Enough! Shut up!
You have told me that minimalism is of the highest importance in applied
psychohistory; in the art of attempting to change an undesired development into
a desired one or, at any rate, a toss undesired one. You have said that a
change must be applied that is as minute, as minimal, as possible...
Yes, said
Seldon eagerly, that is because...
No, Hari. I'm
trying to explain. We both know that you understand it. You must have
minimalism because every change, any change, has a myriad of side effects that
can't always be allowed for. If the change is side effects too many, then it
becomes certain that the outcome will be far removed from anything you've
planned and that it would be entirely unpredictable.
Right, said
Seldon. That's the essence of a chaotic effect. The problem is whether any
change is small enough to make the consequence reasonably predictable or
whether human history is inevitably and unalterably chaotic in every respect.
It was that which, at the start, made me think that psychohistory was not...
I know, but
you're not letting me make my point. Whether any change would be small enough
is not the issue. The point is that any change greater than the minimal is
chaotic. The required minimum may be zero, but if it is not zero, then it is
still very small-and it would be a major problem to find some change that is
small enough and yet is significantly greater than zero. Now, that, I gather,
is what you mean by the necessity of minimalism.
More or less,
said Seldon. Of course, as always, the matter is expressed more compactly and
more rigorously in the language of mathematics. See here...
Save me, said
Dors. Since you know this about psychohistory, Hari, you ought to know it
about Demerzel, too. You have the knowledge but not the understanding, because
it apparently doesn't occur to you to apply the rules of psychohistory to the
Laws of Robotics.
To which Seldon
replied faintly, Now I don't see what you're getting at.
He requires
minimality, too, doesn't he, Hari? By the First Law of Robotics, a robot can't
harm a human being. That is the prime rule for the usual robot, but Demerzel is
something quite unusual and for him, the Zeroth Law is a reality and it takes
precedence even over the First Law. The Zeroth Law states that a robot can't
harm humanity as a whole. But that puts Demerzel into the same bind in which
you exist when you labor at psychohistory. Do you see?
I'm beginning
to.
I hope so. If
Demerzel has the ability to change minds, he has to do so without bringing
about side effects he does not wish-and since he is the Emperor's First
Minister, the side effects he must worry about are numerous, indeed.
And the
application to the present case?
Think about it!
You can't tell anyone-except me, of course-that Demerzel is a robot, because he
has adjusted you so that you can't. But how much adjustment did that take? Do
you want to tell people that he is a robot? Do you want to ruin his
effectiveness when you depend on him for protection, for support of your
grants, for influence quietly exerted on your behalf? Of course not. The change
he had to make then was a very tiny one, just enough to keep you from blurting
it out in a moment of excitement or carelessness. It is so small a change that
there are no particular side effects. That is how Demerzel tries to run the
Empire generally.
And the case of
Joranum?
Is obviously
completely different from yours. He is, for whatever motives, unalterably
opposed to Demerzel. Undoubtedly, Demerzel could change that, but it would be
at the price of introducing a considerable wrench in Joranum's makeup that
would bring about results Demerzel could not predict. Rather than take the
chance of harming Joranum, of producing side effects that would harm others
and, possibly, all of humanity, he must leave Joranum alone until he can find
some small change-some small change-that will save the situation without harm.
That is why Yugo is right and why Demerzel is vulnerable.
Seldon had
listened but did not respond. He seemed lost in thought. Minutes passed before
he said, If Demerzel can do nothing in this matter, then I must.
If he can do
nothing, what can you do?
The case is
different. I am not bound by the Laws of Robotics. I need not concern myself
obsessively with minimalism. And to begin with, I must see Demerzel.
Dors looked
faintly anxious. Must you? Surely it wouldn't be wise to advertise a
connection between the two of you.
We have reached
a time where we can't make a fetish of pretending there is no connection.
Naturally I won't go to see him behind a flourish of trumpets and an
announcement on holovision, but I must see him.
5
Seldon found
himself raging at the passage of time. Eight years ago, when he had first
arrived on Trantor, he could take instant action. He had only a hotel room and
its contents to forsake and he could range through the sectors of Trantor at
will.
Now he found
himself with department meetings, with decisions to make, with work to do. It
was not so easy to dash off at will to see Demerzel-and if he could, Demerzel
also had a full schedule of his own. To find a time when they both could meet
would not be easy.
Nor was it easy to
have Dors shake her head at him. I don't know what you intend to do, Hari.
And he answered
impatiently, I don't know what I intend to do, either, Dors. I hope to find
out when I see Demerzel.
Your first duty
is to psychohistory. He'll tell you so.
Perhaps. I'll
find out.
And then, just as
he had arranged a time for the meeting with the First Minister, eight days
hence, he received a message on his department office wall screen in slightly
archaic lettering. And to match that was the more than slightly archaic
message: I CRAVE AN AUDIENCE WITH PROFESSOR HARI SELDON.
Seldon stared at
it with astonishment. Even the Emperor was not addressed in quite that
centuries-old turn of phrase.
Nor was the
signature printed as it usually was for clarity. It was scripted with a
flourish that left it perfectly legible and yet gave it the aura of a careless
work of art dashed off by a master. The signature was: LASKIN JORANUM. It was
Jo-Jo himself, craving an audience.
Seldon found
himself chuckling. It was clear why the choice of words and why the script. It
made what was a simple request a device for stimulating curiosity. Seldon had
no great desire to meet the man-or would have had none ordinarily. But what was
worth the archaism and the artistry? He wanted to find out.
He had his
secretary set the time and the place of the appointment. It would be in his
office, certainly not in his apartment. A business conversation, nothing
social.
And it would come
before the projected meeting with Demerzel.
Dors said, It's
no surprise to me, Hari. You hurt two of his people, one of them his chief
aide; you spoiled a little rally he was holding; and you made him, in the
person of his representatives, seem foolish. He wants to take a look at you and
I think I had better be with you.
Seldon shook his
head. I'll take Raych. He knows all the tricks I know and he's a strong and
active twenty-year-old. Although I'm sure there'll be no need for protection.
How can you be
sure?
Joranum is
coming to see me on the University grounds. There will be any number of
youngsters in the vicinity. I'm not exactly an unpopular figure with the
student body and I suspect that Joranum is the kind of man who does his
homework and knows that I'll be safe on home territory. I'm sure that he will be
perfectly polite-completely friendly.
Hmph, said Dors
with a light twist of one corner of her lip.
And quite
deadly, Seldon finished.
6
Hari Seldon kept
his face expressionless and bent his head just sufficiently to allow a sense of
reasonable courtesy. He had taken the trouble to look up a variety of
holographs of Joranum, but, as is often the case, the real thing, unguarded,
shifting constantly in response to changing conditions, is never quite the same
as a holograph-however carefully prepared. Perhaps, thought Seldon, it is the
response of the viewer to the real thing that makes it different.
Joranum was a
tall man-as tall as Seldon, at any rate-but larger in other directions. It was
not due to a muscular physique, for he gave the impression of softness, without
quite being fat. A rounded face, a thick head of hair that was sandy rather
than yellow, light blue eyes. He wore a subdued coverall and his face bore a
half-smile that gave the illusion of friendliness, while making it clear,
somehow, that it was only an illusion.
Professor
Seldonhis voice was deep and under strict control, an orator's voiceI am
delighted to meet you. It is kind of you to permit this meeting. I trust you
are not offended that I have brought a companion, my right-hand man, with me,
although I have not cleared that with you in advance. He is Gambol Deen
Namarti-three names, you notice. I believe you have met him.
Yes, I have. I
remember the incident well. Seldon looked at Namarti with a touch of the
sardonic. At the previous encounter, Namarti had been speaking at the
University Field. Seldon viewed him carefully now-under relaxed conditions.
Namarti was of moderate height, with a thin face, sallow complexion, dark hair,
and a wide mouth. He did not have Joranum's half-smile or any noticeable
expression-except for a sense of cautious wariness.
My friend Dr.
Namarti-his degree is in ancient literature-has come at his own request, said
Joranum, his smile intensifying a bit, to apologize.
Joranum glanced
quickly at Namarti-and Namarti, his lips tightening just at first, said in a
colorless voice, I am sorry, Professor, for what happened at the Field. I was not
quite aware of the strict rules governing University rallies and I was a little
carried away by my own enthusiasm.
Understandably
so, said Joranum. Nor was he entirely aware of your identity. I think we may
all now forget the matter.
I assure you,
gentlemen, said Seldon, that I have no great desire to remember it. This is
my son, Raych Seldon, so you see I have a companion, too.
Raych had grown a
mustache, black and abundant-the masculine mark of the Dahlite. He had had none
when he first met Seldon eight years before, when he was a street boy, ragged
and hungry. He was short but lithe and sinewy and his expression was the
haughty one he had adopted in order to add a few spiritual inches to his
physical height.
Good morning,
young man, said Joranum.
Good morning,
sir, said Raych.
Please sit down,
gentlemen, said Seldon. May I offer you something to eat or drink?
Joranum held up
his hands in polite refusal. No, sir. This is not a social call. He seated
himself in the place indicated. Though I hope there will be many such calls in
the future.
If this is to be
about business, then let's begin.
The news reached
me, Professor Seldon, of the little incident that you have so kindly agreed to
forget and I wondered why you took the chance of doing what you did. It was a
risk, you must admit.
I didn't think
so, actually.
But I did. So I
took the liberty of finding out everything I could about you, Professor Seldon.
You're an interesting man. From Helicon, I discovered.
Yes, that's
where I was born. The records are clear.
And you've been
here on Trantor for eight years.
That is also a
matter of public record.
And you made
yourself quite famous at the start by delivering a mathematical paper on-what
do you call it? psychohistory?
Seldon shook his
head very slightly. How often he had regretted that indiscretion. Of course, he
had had no idea at the time that it was an indiscretion. He said, A youthful
enthusiasm. It came to nothing.
Is that so?
Joranum looked around him with an air of pleased surprise. Yet here you are,
the head of the Mathematics Department at one of Trantor's greatest
Universities, and only forty years old, I believe. I'm forty-two, by the way,
so I don't look upon you as very old at all. You must be a very competent
mathematician to be in this position.
Seldon shrugged.
I wouldn't care to make a judgment in that matter.
Or you must have
powerful friends.
We would all
like to have powerful friends, Mr. Joranum, but I think you will find none
here. University professors rarely have powerful friends or, I sometimes think,
friends of any kind. He smiled.
And so did
Joranum. Wouldn't you consider the Emperor a powerful friend, Professor
Seldon?
I certainly
would, but what has that to do with me?
I am under the
impression that the Emperor is a friend of yours.
I'm sure the
records will show, Mr. Joranum, that I had an audience with His Imperial
Majesty eight years ago. It lasted perhaps an hour or less and I saw no signs
of any great friendliness in him at the time. Nor have I spoken to him sinceor
even seen him-except on holovision, of course.
But, Professor,
it is not necessary to see or speak to the Emperor to have him as a powerful
friend. It is sufficient to see or speak to Eto Demerzel, the Emperor's First
Minister. Demerzel is your protector and, since he is, we may as well say the
Emperor is.
Do you find
First Minister Demerzel's supposed protection of me anywhere in the records? Or
anything at all in the records from which you can deduce that protection?
Why search the
records when it is well known that there is a connection between the two of
you. You know it and I know it. Let us take it then as given and continue. And
pleasehe raised his handsdo not take the trouble to give me any heartfelt
denials. It's a waste of time.
Actually, said
Seldon, I was going to ask why you should think that he would want to protect
me. To what end?
Professor? Are
you trying to hurt me by pretending to think I am a monster of naivete? I
mentioned your psychohistory, which Demerzel wants.
And I told you
that it was a youthful indiscretion that came to nothing.
You may tell me
a great many things, Professor. I am not compelled to accept what you tell me.
Come, let me speak frankly. I have read your original paper and have tried to
understand it with the help of some mathematicians on my staff. They tell me it
is a wild dream and quite impossible...
I quite agree
with them, said Seldon.
But I have the
feeling that Demerzel is waiting for it to be developed and put to use. And if
he can wait, so can I. It would be more useful to you, Professor Seldon, to
have me wait.
Why so?
Because Demerzel
will not endure in his position for much longer. Public opinion is turning
against him steadily. It may be that when the Emperor wearies of an unpopular
First Minister who threatens to drag the throne down with him, he will find a
replacement. It may even be my poor self whom the Emperor's fancy will seize
upon. And you will still need a protector, someone who can see to it that you
can work in peace and with ample funds for whatever you need in the way of
equipment and assistants.
And would you be
that protector?
Of course-and
for the same reason that Demerzel is. I want a successful psychohistoric
technique so that I can rule the Empire more efficiently.
Seldon nodded
thoughtfully, waited a moment, then said, But in that case, Mr. Joranum, why
must I concern myself in this? I am a poor scholar, living a quiet life,
engaged in out-of-the-way mathematical and pedagogical activities. You say that
Demerzel is my present protector and that you will be my future protector. I
can go quietly about my business, then. You and the First Minister may fight it
out. Whoever prevails, I have a protector still-or, at least, so you tell me.
Joranum's fixed
smile seemed to fade a bit. Namarti, at his side, turned his dour face toward
Joranum and made as though to say something, but Joranum's hand moved slightly
and Namarti coughed and did not speak.
Joranum said,
Dr. Seldon. Are you a patriot?
Why, of course.
The Empire has given humanity millennia of peace mostly peace, at any rate-and
fostered steady advancement.
So it has-but at
a slower pace in the last century or two.
Seldon shrugged.
I have not studied such matters.
You don't have
to. You know that, politically, the last century or two has been a time of
turmoil. Imperial reigns have been short and sometimes have been shortened
further by assassination...
Even mentioning
that, put in Seldon, is close to treason. I'd rather you didn't...
Well, there.
Joranum threw himself back in his seat. See how insecure you are. The Empire
is decaying. I'm willing to say so openly. Those who follow me do so because
they know only too well it is. We need someone at the Emperor's right hand who
can control the Empire, subdue the rebellious impulses that seem to be arising
everywhere, give the armed forces the natural leadership they should have, lead
the economy...
Seldon made an
impatient stopping motion with his arm. And you're the one to do it, are you?
I intend to be the
one. It won't be an easy job and I doubt there would be many volunteers-for
good reason. Certainly Demerzel can't do it. Under him, the decline of the
Empire is accelerating to a total breakdown.
But you can stop
it?
Yes, Dr. Seldon.
With your help. With psychohistory.
Perhaps Demerzel
could stop the breakdown with psychohistory-if psychohistory existed.
Joranum said
calmly, It exists. Let us not pretend it does not. But its existence does not
help Demerzel. Psychohistory is only a tool. It needs a brain to understand it
and an arm to wield it.
And you have
those, I take it?
Yes. I know my
own virtues. I want psychohistory.
Seldon shook his
head. You may want it all you please. I don't have it.
You do have it.
I will not argue the point. Joranum leaned closer as though wishing to
insinuate his voice into Seldon's ear, rather than allowing the sound waves to
carry it there. You say you are a patriot. I must replace Demerzel to avoid
Imperial destruction. However, the manner of replacement might itself weaken
the Empire desperately. I do not wish that. You can advise me how to achieve
the end smoothly, subtly, without harm or damage-for the sake of the Empire.
Seldon said, I
cannot. You accuse me of knowledge I do not possess. I would like to be of
assistance, but I cannot.
Joranum stood up
suddenly. Well, you know my mind and what it is I want of you. Think about it.
And I ask you to think about the Empire. You may feel you owe Demerzel-this despoiler
of all the millions of planets of humanity-your friendship. Be careful. What
you do may shake the very foundation of the Empire. I ask you to help me in the
name of the quadrillions of human beings who fill the Galaxy. Think of the
Empire.
His voice had
dropped to a thrilling and powerful half-whisper. Seldon felt himself almost
trembling. I will always think of the Empire, he said.
Joranum said,
Then that is all I ask right now. Thank you for consenting to see me.
Seldon watched
Joranum and his companion leave as the office doors slid open noiselessly and
the men strode out.
He frowned.
Something was bothering him-and he was not sure what it was.
7
Namarti's dark
eyes remained fixed on Joranum as they sat in their carefully shielded office
in the Streeling Sector. It was not an elaborate headquarters; they were as yet
weak in Streeling, but they would grow stronger.
It was amazing
how the movement was growing. It had started from nothing three years back and
now its tentacles stretched-in some places more thickly than others, of
course-throughout Trantor. The Outer Worlds were as yet largely untouched.
Demerzel had labored mightily to keep them content, but that was his mistake.
It was here on Trantor that rebellions were dangerous. Elsewhere, they could be
controlled. Here, Demerzel could be toppled. Odd that he should not realize
that, but Joranum had always held to the theory that Demerzel's reputation was
overblown, that he would prove an empty shell if anyone dared oppose him, and
that the Emperor would destroy him quickly if his own security seemed at stake.
So far, at least,
all of Joranum's predictions had come to pass. He had never once lost his way
except in minor matters, such as that recent rally at Streeling University in
which this Seldon fellow had interfered.
That might be why
Joranum had insisted on the interview with him. Even a minor toe stub must be
taken care of. Joranum enjoyed the feeling of infallibility and Namarti had to
admit that the vision of a constant string of successes was the surest way of
ensuring the continuation of success. People tended to avoid the humiliation of
failure by joining the obviously winning side even against their own opinions.
But had the
interview with this Seldon been a success or was it a second stub of the toe to
be added to the first? Namarti had not enjoyed having been brought along in
order to be made to humbly apologize and he didn't see that it had done any
good.
Now Joranum sat
there, silent, obviously lost in thought, gnawing at the edge of one thumb as
though trying to draw some sort of mental nourishment from it.
Jo-Jo, said
Namarti softly. He was one of the very few people who could address Joranum by
the diminutive that the crowds shouted out endlessly in public. Joranum solicited
the love of the mob in this way, among others, but he demanded respect from
individuals in private, except for those special friends who had been with him
from the start.
Jo-Jo, he said
again.
Joranum looked
up. Yes, G. D., what is it? He sounded a little testy.
What are we
going to do about this Seldon fellow, Jo-Jo?
Do? Nothing
right now. He may join us.
Why wait? We can
put pressure on him. We can pull a few strings at the University and make life
miserable for him.
No no. So far,
Demerzel has been letting us go our way. The fool is overconfident. The last
thing we want to do,. though, is to push him into action before we are quite
ready. And a heavy-handed move against Seldon may do it. I suspect Demerzel
places enormous importance on Seldon.
Because of this
psychohistory you two talked about?
Indeed.
What is it? I
have never heard of it.
Few people have.
It's a mathematical way of analyzing human society that ends by predicting the
future.
Namarti frowned
and felt his body move slightly away from Joranum. Was this a joke of
Joranum's? Was this intended to make him laugh? Namarti had never been able to
work out when or why people expected him to laugh. He had never had an urge to.
He said, Predict
the future? How?
Ah? If I knew
that, what need would I have of Seldon?
Frankly I don't
believe it, Jo-Jo. How can you foretell the future? It's fortune-telling.
I know, but
after this Seldon broke up your little rally, I had him looked into. All the
way. Eight years ago, he came to Trantor and presented a paper on psychohistory
at a convention of mathematicians and then the whole thing died. It was never
referred to again by anyone. Not even by Seldon.
It sounds as
though there were nothing to it, then.
Oh no, just the
reverse. If it had faded slowly, if it had been subjected to ridicule, I would
have said there was nothing to it. But to be cut off suddenly and completely
means that the whole thing has been placed in the deepest of freezes. That is
why Demerzel may have been doing nothing to stop us. Perhaps he is not being
guided by a foolish overconfidence; perhaps he is being guided by
psychohistory, which must be predicting something that Demerzel plans to take
advantage of at the right time. If so, we might fail unless we can make use of
psychohistory ourselves.
Seldon claims it
doesn't exist.
Wouldn't you if
you were he?
I still say we
ought to put pressure on him.
It would be
useless, G. D. Didn't you ever hear the story of the Ax of Venn?
No.
You would if you
were from Nishaya. It's a famous folktale back home. In brief, Venn was a
woodcutter who had a magic ax that, with a single light blow, could chop down
any tree. It was enormously valuable, but he never made any effort to hide it
or preserve it-and yet it was never stolen, because no one could lift or swing
the ax but Venn himself.
Well, at the
present moment, no one can handle psychohistory but Seldon himself. If he were
on our side only because we had forced him, we could never be certain of his
loyalty. Might he not urge a course of action that would seem to work in our
favor but would be so subtly drawn that, after a while, we found ourselves
quite suddenly destroyed. No, he must come to our side voluntarily and labor
for us because he wishes us to win.
But how can we
bring him around?
There's Seldon's
son. Raych, I think he's called. Did you observe him?
Not
particularly.
G. D., G. D.,
you miss points if you don't observe everything. That young man listened to me
with his heart in his eyes. He was impressed. I could tell. If there's one
thing I can tell, it is just how I impress others. I know when I have shaken a
mind, when I have edged someone toward conversion.
Joranum smiled.
It was not the pseudowarm ingratiating smile of his public demeanor. It was a
genuine smile this time-cold, somehow, and menacing.
We'll see what
we can do with Raych, he said, and if, through him, we can reach Seldon.
8
Raych looked at
Hari Seldon after the two politicians had gone and fingered his mustache. It
gave him satisfaction to stroke it. Here in the Streeling Sector, some men wore
mustaches, but they were usually thin despicable things of uncertain color-thin
despicable things, even if dark. Most men did not wear them at all and suffered
with naked upper lips. Seldon didn't, for instance, and that was just as well.
With his color of hair, a mustache would have been a travesty.
He watched Seldon
closely, waiting for him to cease being lost in thought, and then found he could
wait no longer.
Dad? he said.
Seldon looked up
and said, What? He sounded a little annoyed at having his thoughts
interrupted, Raych decided.
Raych said, I
don't think it was right for you to see those two guys.
Oh? Why not?
Well, the thin
guy, whatever his name is, was the guy you made trouble for at the Field. He
can't have liked it.
But he
apologized.
He didn't mean
it. But the other guy, Joranum-he can be dangerous. What if they had had
weapons?
What? Here in
the University? In my office? Of course not. This isn't Billibotton. Besides,
if they had tried anything, I could have handled both of them together.
Easily.
I don't know,
Dad, said Raych dubiously. You're getting...
Don't say it,
you ungrateful monster, said Seldon, lifting an admonishing finger. You'll
sound just like your mother and I have enough of that from her. I am not
getting old-or, at least, not that old. Besides, you were with me and you're
almost as skilled a Twister as I am.
Raych's nose wrinkled.
Twisting ain't much good. (It was no use. Raych heard himself speak and knew
that, even eight years out of the morass of Dahl, he still slipped into using
the Dahlite accent that marked him firmly as a member of the lower class. And
he was short, too, to the point where he sometimes felt stunted. But he had his
mustache and no one ever patronized him twice.)
He said, What
are you going to do about Joranum?
For now,
nothing.
Well, look, Dad,
I saw Joranum on TrantorVision a couple of times. I even made some holotapes of
his speeches. Everyone is talking about him, so I thought I would see what he
has to say. And, you know, he makes some kind of sense. I don't like him and I
don't trust him, but he does make some kind of sense. He wants all sectors to
have equal rights and equal opportunities-and there ain't nothing wrong with
that, is there?
Certainly not.
All civilized people feel that way.
So why don't we
have that sort of stuff? Does the Emperor feel that way? Does Demerzel?
The Emperor and
the First Minister have an entire Empire to worry about. They can't concentrate
all their efforts on Trantor itself. It's easy for Joranum to talk about
equality. He has no responsibilities. If he were in the position to rule, he
would find that his efforts would be greatly diluted by an Empire of
twenty-five million planets. Not only that, but he would find himself stopped
at every point by the sectors themselves. Each one wants a great deal of
equality for itself-but not much equality for others. Tell me, Raych, are you
of the opinion that Joranum ought to have a chance to rule, just to show what
he can do?
Raych shrugged.
I don't know. I wonder. But if he had tried anything on you, I would have been
at his throat before he could move two centimeters.
Your loyalty to
me, then, exceeds your concern for the Empire.
Sure. You're my
dad.
Seldon looked at
Raych fondly, but behind that look he felt a trace of uncertainty. How far
could Joranum's nearly hypnotic influence go?
9
Hari Seldon sat
back in his chair, the vertical back giving as he did so and allowing him to
assume a half-reclining position. His hands were behind his head and his eyes
were unfocused. His breathing was very soft, indeed.
Dors Venabili was
at the other end of the room, with her viewer turned off and the microfilms
back in place. She had been through a rather concentrated period of revision of
her opinions on the Florina Incident in early Trantorian history and she found
it rather restful to withdraw for a few moments and to speculate on what it was
that Seldon was considering.
It had to be
psychohistory. It would probably take him the rest of his life, tracking down
the byways of this semichaotic technique, and he would end with it incomplete,
leaving the task to others (to Amaryl, if that young man had not also worn
himself out on the matter) and breaking his heart at the need to do that.
Yet it gave him a
reason for living. He would live longer with the problem filling him from end
to end-and that pleased her. Someday she would lose him, she knew, and she
found that the thought afflicted her. It had not seemed it would at the start,
when her task had been the simple one of protecting him for the sake of what he
knew.
When had it
become a matter of personal need? How could there be so personal a need? What
was there about the man that caused her to feel uneasy when he was not in her
sight, even when she knew he was safe so that the deeply ingrained orders
within her were not called into action? His safety was all that she had been
ordered to be concerned with. How did the rest intrude itself?
She had spoken of
it to Demerzel long before, when the feeling had made itself unmistakable.
He had regarded
her gravely and said, You are complex, Dors, and there are no simple answers.
In my life there have been several individuals whose presence made it easier
for me to think, pleasanter to make my responses. I have tried to judge the
ease of my responses in their presence and the unease of my responses in their
final absence to see whether I was the net gainer or loser. In the process, one
thing became plain. The pleasantness of their company outweighed the regret of
their passing. On the whole, then, it is better to experience what you
experience now than not to.
She thought: Hari
will someday leave a void, and each day that someday is closer, and I must not
think of it.
It was to rid
herself of the thought that she finally interrupted him. What are you thinking
of, Hari?
What? Seldon
focused his eyes with an apparent effort.
Psychohistory, I
assume. I imagine you've traced another blind pathway.
Well now. That's
not on my mind at all. He laughed suddenly. Do you want to know what I'm
thinking of? Hair!
Hair? Whose?
Right now,
yours. He was looking at her fondly.
Is there
something wrong with it? Should I dye it another color? Or perhaps, after all
these years, it should go gray.
Come! Who needs
or wants gray in your hair. But it's led me to other things. Nishaya, for
instance.
Nishaya? What's
that?
It was never
part of the pre-Imperial Kingdom of Trantor, so I'm not surprised you haven't
heard of it. It's a world, a small one. Isolated. Unimportant. Overlooked. I
only know anything at all about it because I've taken the trouble to look it
up. Very few worlds out of twenty-five million can really make much of a
sustained splash, but I doubt that there's another one as insignificant as
Nishaya. Which is very significant, you see.
Dors shoved her
reference material to one side and said, What is this new penchant you have
for paradox, which you always tell me you detest? What is this significance of
insignificance?
Oh, I don't mind
paradoxes when I perpetrate them. You see, Joranum comes from Nishaya.
Ah, it's Joranum
you're concerned with.
Yes. I've been
viewing some of his speeches-at Raych's insistence. They don't make very much
sense, but the total effect can be almost hypnotic. Raych is very impressed by
him.
I imagine that
anyone of Dahlite origins would be, Hari. Joranum's constant call for sector
equality would naturally appeal to the downtrodden heatsinkers. You remember
when we were in Dahl?
I remember it
very well and of course I don't blame the lad. It just bothers me that Joranum
comes from Nishaya.
Dors shrugged.
Well, Joranum has to come from somewhere and, conversely, Nishaya, like any
other world, must send its people out at times, even to Trantor.
Yes, but, as
I've said, I've taken the trouble to investigate Nishaya. I've even managed to
make hyperspatial contact with some minor official which cost a considerable
quantity of credits that I cannot, in good conscience, charge to the
department.
And did you find
anything that was worth the credits?
I rather think
so. You know, Joranum is always telling little stories to make his points,
stories that are legends on his home planet of Nishaya. That serves a good
purpose for him here on Trantor, since it makes him appear to be a man of the
people, full of homespun philosophy. Those tales litter his speeches. They make
him appear to be from a small world, to have been brought up on an isolated
farm surrounded by an untamed ecology. People like it, especially Trantorians,
who would rather die than be trapped somewhere in an untamed ecology but who
love to dream about one just the same.
But what of it
all?
The odd point is
that not one of the stories was familiar to the person I spoke to on Nishaya.
That's not
significant, Hari. It may be a small world, but it's a world. What is current
in Joranum's birth section of the world may not be current in whatever place
your official came from.
No no.
Folktales, in one form or another, are usually worldwide. But aside from that,
I had considerable trouble in understanding the fellow. He spoke Galactic
Standard with a thick accent. I spoke to a few others on the world, just to
check, and they all had the same accent.
And what of
that?
Joranum doesn't
have it. He speaks a fairly good Trantorian. It's a lot better than mine,
actually. I have the Heliconian stress on the letter r. He doesn't. According
to the records, he arrived on Trantor when he was nineteen. It is just
impossible, in my opinion, to spend the first nineteen years of your life
speaking that barbarous Nishayan version of Galactic Standard and then come to
Trantor and lose it. However long he's been here, some trace of the accent
would have remained. Look at Raych and the way he lapses into his Dahlite way
of speaking on occasion.
What do you
deduce from all this?
What I
deduce-what I've been sitting here all evening, deducing like a deduction
machine-is that Joranum didn't come from Nishaya at all. In fact, I think he
picked Nishaya as the place to pretend to come from, simply because it is so
backwoodsy, so out-of-the-way, that no one would think of checking it. He must
have made a thorough computer search to find the one world least likely to
allow him to be caught in a lie.
But that's
ridiculous, Hari. Why should he want to pretend to be from a world he did not
come from? It would mean a great deal of falsification of records.
And that's
precisely what he has probably done. He probably has enough followers in the
civil service to make that possible. Probably no one person has done as much in
the way of revision and all of his followers are too fanatical to talk about
it.
But still...
Why?
Because I
suspect Joranum doesn't want people to know where he really comes from.
Why not? All
worlds in the Empire are equal, both by laws and by custom.
I don't know
about that. These high-ideal theories are somehow never borne out in real
life.
Then where does
he come from? Do you have any idea at all?
Yes. Which
brings us back to this matter of hair.
What about
hair?
I sat there with
Joranum, staring at him and feeling uneasy, without knowing why I was feeling
uneasy. Then finally I realized that it was his hair that made me uneasy. There
was something about it, a life, a gloss... a perfection to it that I've never
seen before. And then I knew. His hair is artificial and carefully grown on a
scalp that ought to be innocent of such things.
Ought to be?
Dors's eyes narrowed. It was clear that she suddenly understood. Do you
mean...
Yes, I do mean.
He's from the past-centered, mythology-ridden Mycogen Sector of Trantor. That's
what he's been laboring to hide.
10
Dors Venabili
thought coolly about the matter. It was her only mode of thought-cool. Not for
her the hot flashes of emotion.
She closed her
eyes to concentrate. It had been eight years since she and Hari had visited
Mycogen and they hadn't been there long. There had been little to admire there
except the food.
The pictures
arose. The harsh, puritanical, male-centered society; the emphasis on the past;
the removal of all body hair, a painful process deliberately self-imposed to
make themselves different so that they would know who they were; their
legends; their memories (or fancies) of a time when they ruled the Galaxy, when
their lives were prolonged, when robots existed.
Dors opened her
eyes and said, Why, Hari?
Why what, dear?
Why should he
pretend not to be from Mycogen?
She didn't think
he would remember Mycogen in greater detail than she; in fact, she knew he
wouldn't, but his mind was better than hers-different, certainly. Hers was a
mind that only remembered and drew the obvious inferences in the fashion of a
mathematic line of deduction. He had a mind that leaped unexpectedly. Seldon
liked to pretend that intuition was solely the province of his assistant, Yugo
Amaryl, but Dors was not fooled by that. Seldon liked to pose as the unworldly
mathematician who stared at the world out of perpetually wondering eyes, but
she was not fooled by that, either.
Why should he
pretend not to be from Mycogen? she repeated as he sat there, his eyes lost in
an inward look that Dors always associated with his attempt to squeeze one more
tiny drop of usefulness and validity out of the concepts of psycho-history.
Seldon said
finally, It's a harsh society, a limiting society. There are always those who
chafe over its manner of dictating every action and every thought. There are
always those who find they cannot entirely be broken to the harness, who want
the greater liberties available in the more secular world outside. It's
understandable.
So they force
the growth of artificial hair?
No, not
generally. The average Breakaway-that's what the Mycogenians call the deserters
and they despise them, of course-wears a wig. It's much simpler but much less
effective. Really serious Breakaways grow false hair, I'm told. The process is
difficult and expensive but is almost unnoticeable. I've never come across it
before, though I've heard of it. I've spent years studying all eight hundred
sectors of Trantor, trying to work out the basic rules and mathematics of
psychohistory. I have little enough to show for it, unfortunately, but I have
learned a few things.
But why, then,
do the Breakaways have to hide the fact that they're from Mycogen? They're not
persecuted that I know of.
No, they're not.
In fact, there's no general impression that Mycogenians are inferior. It's
worse than that. The Mycogenians aren't taken seriously. They're
intelligent-everyone admits that-highly educated, dignified, cultured, wizards
with food, almost frightening in their capacity to keep their sector
prosperous-but no one takes them seriously. Their beliefs strike people outside
Mycogen as ridiculous, humorous, unbelievably foolish. And that view clings
even to Mycogenians who are Breakaways. A Mycogenian attempt to seize power in
the government would be crushed by laughter. Being feared is nothing. Being
despised, even, can be lived with. But being laughed at-that's fatal. Joranum
wants to be First Minister, so he must have hair, and, to be comfortable, he
must represent himself as having been brought up on some obscure world as far
from Mycogen as he can possibly manage.
Surely there are
some people who are naturally bald.
Never as
completely depilated as Mycogenians force themselves to be. On the Outer
Worlds, it wouldn't matter much. But Mycogen is a distant whisper to the Outer
Worlds. The Mycogenians keep themselves so much to themselves that it is a rare
one, indeed, who has ever left Trantor. Here on Trantor, though, it's
different. People might be bald, but they usually have a fringe of hair that
advertises them as nonMycogenian-or they grow facial hair. Those very few who are
completely hairless-usually a pathological condition-are out of luck. I imagine
they have to go around with a doctor's certificate to prove they are not
Mycogenians.
Dors, frowning
slightly, said, Does this help us any?
I'm not sure.
Couldn't you let
it be known that he is a Mycegonian?
I'm not sure
that could be done easily. He must have covered his tracks well and even if it
could be done...
Yes?
Seldon shrugged.
I don't want to invite an appeal to bigotry. The social situation on Trantor is
bad enough without running the risk of loosing passions that neither I nor
anyone else could then control. If I do have to resort to the matter of
Mycogen, it will only be as a last resort.
Then you want
minimalism, too.
Of course.
Then what will you
do?
I made an
appointment with Demerzel. He may know what to do.
Dors looked at
him sharply. Hari, are you falling into the trap of expecting Demerzel to
solve every problem for you?
No, but perhaps
he'll solve this one.
And if he
doesn't?
Then I'll have
to think of something else, won't I?
Like what?
A look of pain
crossed Seldon's face. Dors, I don't know. Don't expect me to solve every
problem, either.
11
Eto Demerzel was
not frequently seen, except by the Emperor Cleon. It was his policy to remain
in the background for a variety of reasons, one of which was that his
appearance changed so little with time.
Hari Seldon had
not seen him over a period of some years and had not spoken to him truly in
private since the days of his early time on Trantor.
In light of
Seldon's recent unsettling meeting with Laskin Joranum, both Seldon and
Demerzel felt it would be best not to advertise their relationship. A visit by
Hari Seldon to the First Minister's office at the Imperial Palace would not go
unnoticed, and so for reasons of security they had decided to meet in a small
yet luxuriously appointed suite at the Dome's Edge Hotel, just outside the
Palace grounds.
Seeing Demerzel
now brought back the old days achingly. The mere fact that Demerzel still
looked exactly as he always had made the ache sharper. His face still had its
strong regular features. He was still tall and sturdy-looking, with the same
dark hair with the hint of blond. He was not handsome, but was gravely
distinguished. He looked like someone's ideal picture of what an Imperial First
Minister ought to look like, not at all like any such official in history
before his time ever had. It was his appearance, Seldon thought, that gave him
half his power over the Emperor, and therefore over the Imperial Court, and
therefore over the Empire.
Demerzel advanced
toward him, a gentle smile curving his lips without altering in any way the
gravity of his countenance.
Hart, he said.
It is pleasant to see you. I was half-afraid you would change your mind and
cancel.
I was more than
half-afraid you would, First Minister.
Eto-if you fear
using my real name.
I couldn't. It
won't come out of me. You know that.
It will to me.
Say it. I would rather like to hear it.
Seldon hesitated,
as though he couldn't believe his lips could frame the words or his vocal cords
sound them. Daneel, he said at length.
R. Daneel
Olivaw, said Demerzel. Yes. You will dine with me, Hari. If I dine with you,
I won't have to eat, which will be a relief.
Gladly, though
one-way eating is not my idea of a convivial time. Surely a bite or two...
To please
you...
Just the same,
said Seldon, I can't help but wonder if it is wise to spend too much time
together.
It is. Imperial
orders. His Imperial Majesty wants me to.
Why, Daneel?
In two more
years the Decennial Convention will be meeting again. You look surprised. Have
you forgotten?
Not really. I
just haven't thought about it.
Were you not
going to attend? You were a hit at the last one.
Yes. With my
psychohistory. Some hit.
You attracted
the attention of the Emperor. no other mathematician did.
It was you who
were initially attracted, not the Emperor. Then I had to flee and stay out of
the Imperial notice until such time as I could assure you that I had made a
start on my psychohistorical research, after which you allowed me to remain in
safe obscurity.
Being the head
of a prestigious Mathematics Department is scarcely obscurity.
Yes, it is,
since it hides my psychohistory.
Ah, the food is
arriving. For a while, let's talk about other things as befits friends. How is
Dors?
Wonderful. A
true wife. Hounds me to death with her worries over my safety.
That is her
job.
So she reminds
me-frequently. Seriously, Daneel, I can never be sufficiently grateful to you
for bringing us together.
Thank you, Hari,
but, to be truthful, I did not foresee married happiness for either of you,
especially not Dors...
Thank you for
the gift just the same, however short of the actual consequences your
expectations were.
I'm delighted,
but it is a gift, you will find, that may be of dubious further consequence-as
is my friendship.
To this, Seldon
could make no reply and so, at a gesture from Demerzel, he turned to his meal.
After a while, he
nodded at the morsel of fish on his fork and said, I don't actually recognize
the organism, but this is Mycogenian cooking.
Yes, it is. I
know you are fond of it.
It's the
Mycogenians' excuse for existence. Their only excuse. But they have special
meaning to you. I mustn't forget that.
The special
meaning has come to an end. Their ancestors, long, long ago, inhabited the
planet of Aurora. They lived three hundred years and more and were the lords of
the Fifty Worlds of the Galaxy. It was an Auroran who first designed and
produced me. I don't forget that; I remember it far more accurately-and with
less distortion-than their Mycogenian descendants do. But then, long, long ago,
I left them. I made my choice as to what the good of humanity must be and I
have followed it, as best I could, all this time.
Seldon said with
sudden alarm, Can we be overheard?
Demerzel seemed
amused. If you have only thought of that now, it is far too late. But fear
not, I have taken the necessary precautions. Nor have you been seen by too many
eyes when you came. Nor will you be seen by too many when you leave. And those
who do see you will not be surprised. I am well known to be an amateur
mathematician of great pretensions but of little ability. That is a source of
amusement to those at the court who are not entirely my friends and it would
not surprise anyone here that I should be concerned about laying the groundwork
for the forthcoming Decennial Convention. It is about the convention that I
wish to consult you.
I don't know
that I can help. There is only one thing I could possibly talk about at the
convention-and I can't talk about it. If I attend at all, it will only be as
part of the audience. I do not intend to present any papers.
I understand.
Still, if you would like to hear something curious, His Imperial Majesty
remembers you.
Because you have
kept me in his mind, I suppose.
No. I have not
labored to do so. However, His Imperial Majesty occasionally surprises me. He
is aware of the forthcoming convention and he apparently remembers your talk at
the earlier one. He remains interested in the matter of psychohistory and more
may come of it, I must warn you. It is not beyond the bounds of possibility
that he may ask to see you. The court will surely consider it a great honor-to
receive the Imperial call twice in a single lifetime.
You're joking.
What could be served by my seeing him?
In any case, if
you are called to an audience, you can scarcely refuse. How are your young
proteg6s, Yugo and Raych?
Surely you know.
I imagine you keep a close eye on me.
Yes, I do. On
your safety but not on every aspect of your life. I am afraid my duties fill
much of my time and I am not all-seeing.
Doesn't Dors
report?
She would in a
crisis. Not otherwise. She is reluctant to play the role of spy in
nonessentials. Again the small smile.
Seldon grunted.
My boys are doing well. Yugo is increasingly difficult to handle. He's more of
a psychohistorian than I am and I think he feels I hold him back. As for Raych,
he's a lovable rascal-always was. He won me over when he was a dreadful street
urchin and what's more surprising is that he won over Dors. I honestly believe,
Daneel, that if Dors grew sick of me and wanted to leave me, she would stay on
anyway for her love of Raych.
Demerzel nodded
and Seldon continued somberly. If Rashelle of Wye hadn't found him lovable, I
would not be here today. I would have been shot down... He stirred uneasily.
I hate to think of that, Daneel. It was such an entirely accidental and
unpredictable event. How could psychohistory have helped in any way?
Have you not
told me that, at best, psychohistory can deal only in probabilities and with
vast numbers, not with individuals?
But if the
individual happens to be crucial...
I suspect you
will find that no individual is ever truly crucial. Not even I-or you.
Perhaps you're
right. I find that, no matter how I work away under these assumptions, I
nevertheless think of myself as crucial, in a kind of supernormal egotism that
transcends all sense. And you are crucial, too, which is something I have come
here to discuss with you-as frankly as possible. I must know.
Know what? The
remains of the meal had been cleared away by a porter and the room's lighting
dimmed somewhat so that the walls seemed to close in and give a feeling of
great privacy.
Seldon said,
Joranum. He bit off the word, as though feeling the mention of the name alone
should be sufficient.
Ah Yes.
You know about
him?
Of course. How
could I not know?
Well, I want to
know about him, too.
What do you want
to know?
Come, Daneel,
don't play with me. Is he dangerous?
Of course he is
dangerous. Do you have any doubt of that?
I mean, to you?
To your position as First Minister?
That is exactly
what I mean. That is how he is dangerous.
And you allow
it?
Demerzel leaned
forward, placing his left elbow on the table between them. There are things
that don't wait for my permission, Hari. Let us be philosophical about it. His
Imperial Majesty, Cleon, First of that Name, has now been on the throne for
eighteen years and for all that time I have been his Chief of Staff and then
his First Minister, having served in scarcely lesser capacities during the last
years of the reign of his father. It is a long time and First Ministers rarely
remain that long in power.
You are not the
ordinary First Minister, Daneel, and you know it. You must remain in power
while psychohistory is being developed. Don't smile at me. It's true. When we
first met, eight years ago, you told me the Empire was in a state of decay and
decline. Have you changed your mind about that?
No, of course
not.
In fact, the
decline is more marked now, isn't it?
Yes, it is,
though I labor to prevent that.
And without you,
what would happen? Joranum is raising the Empire against you.
Trantor, Hari.
Trantor. The Outer Worlds are solid and reasonably contented with my deeds so
far, even in the midst of a declining economy and lessening trade.
But Trantor is
where it counts. Trantor-the Imperial world we're living on, the capital of the
Empire, the core, the administrative centeris what can overthrow you. You
cannot keep your post if Trantor says no.
I agree.
And if you go,
who will then take care of the Outer Worlds and what will keep the decline from
being precipitate and the Empire from degenerating rapidly into anarchy?
That is a
possibility, certainly.
So you must be
doing something about it. Yugo is convinced that you are in deadly danger and
can't maintain your position. His intuition tells him so. Dors says the same
thing and explains it in terms of the Three Laws or Four of-of...
Robotics, put
in Demerzel.
Young Raych
seems attracted to Joranum's doctrines-being of Dahlite origin, you see. And
I-I am uncertain, so I come to you for comfort, I suppose. Tell me that you
have the situation well in hand.
I would do so if
I could. However, I have no comfort to offer. I am in danger.
Are you doing
nothing?
No. I'm doing a
great deal to contain discontent and blunt Joranum's message. If I had not done
so, then perhaps I would be out of office already. But what I'm doing is not
enough.
Seldon hesitated.
Finally he said, I believe that Joranum is actually a Mycogenian.
Is that so?
It is my
opinion. I had thought we might use that against him, but I hesitate to unleash
the forces of bigotry.
You are wise to
hesitate. There are many things that might be done that have side effects we do
not want. You see, Hari, I don't fear leaving my post-if some successor could
be found who would continue those principles that I have been using to keep the
decline as slow as possible. On the other hand, if Joranum himself were to
succeed me, then that, in my opinion, would be fatal.
Then anything we
can do to stop him would be suitable.
Not entirely.
The Empire can grow anarchic, even if Joranum is destroyed and I stay. I must
not, then, do something that will destroy Joranum and allow me to stay-if that
very deed promotes the Fall of the Empire. I have not yet been able to think of
anything I might do that would surely destroy Joranum and just as surely avoid
anarchy.
Minimalism,
whispered Seldon.
Pardon me?
Dors explained
that you would be bound by minimalism.
And so I am.
Then my visit
with you is a failure, Daneel.
You mean that
you came for comfort and didn't get it.
I'm afraid so.
But I saw you
because I sought comfort as well.
From me?
From
psychohistory, which should envision the route to safety that I cannot.
Seldon sighed
heavily. Daneel, psychohistory has not yet been developed to that point.
The First
Minister looked at him gravely. You've had eight years, Hari.
It might be
eight or eight hundred and it might not be developed to that point. It is an
intractable problem.
Demerzel said, I
do not expect the technique to have been perfected, but you may have some
sketch, some skeleton, some principle that you can use as guidance. Imperfectly,
perhaps, but better than mere guesswork.
No more than I
had eight years ago, said Seldon mournfully. Here's what it amounts to, then.
You must remain in power and Joranum must be destroyed in such a way that
Imperial stability is maintained as long as possible so that I may have a
reasonable chance to work out psychohistory. This cannot be done, however,
unless I work out psychohistory first. Is that it?
It would seem
so, Hari.
Then we argue in
a useless circle and the Empire is destroyed.
Unless something
unforeseen happens. Unless you make something unforeseen happen.
I? Daneel, how
can I do it without psychohistory?
I don't know,
Hari.
And Seldon rose
to go-in despair.
12
For days
thereafter Hari Seldon neglected his departmental duties to use his computer in
its news-gathering mode.
There were not
many computers capable of handling the daily news from twenty-five million
worlds. There were a number of them at Imperial headquarters, where they were
absolutely necessary. Some of the larger Outer World capitals had them as well,
though most were satisfied with hyperconnection to the Central Newspost on
Trantor.
A computer at an
important Mathematics Department could, if it were sufficiently advanced, be
modified as an independent news source and Seldon had been careful to do that
with his computer. It was, after all, necessary for his work on psychohistory,
though the computer's capabilities were carefully ascribed to other,
exceedingly plausible reasons.
Ideally the
computer would report anything that was out of the ordinary on any world of the
Empire. A coded and unobtrusive warning light would make itself evident and
Seldon could track it down easily. Such a light rarely showed, for the
definition of out of the ordinary was tight and intense and dealt with
large-scale and rare upheavals.
What one did in
its absence was to ring in various worlds at random not all twenty-five
million, of course, but some dozens. It was a depressing and even debilitating
task, for there were no worlds that didn't have their daily relatively minor
catastrophes. A volcanic eruption here, a flood there, an economic collapse of
one sort or another yonder, and, of course, riots. There had not been a day in
the last thousand years that there had not been riots over something or other
on each of a hundred or more different worlds.
Naturally such
things had to be discounted. One could scarcely worry about riots any more than
one could about volcanic eruptions when both were constants on inhabited
worlds. Rather, if a day should come in which not one riot was reported
anywhere, that might be a sign of something so unusual as to warrant the
gravest concern.
Concern was what
Seldon could not make himself feel. The Outer Worlds, with all their disorders
and misfortunes, were like a great ocean on a peaceful day, with a gentle swell
and minor heavings-but no more. He found no evidence of any overall situation that
clearly showed a decline in the last eight years or even in the last eighty.
Yet Demerzel (in Demerzel's absence, Seldon could no longer think of him as
Daneel) said the decline was continuing and he had his finger on the Empire's
pulse from day to day in ways that Seldon could not duplicate-until such time
as he would have the guiding power of psychohistory at his disposal.
It could be that
the decline was so small that it was unnoticeable till some crucial point was
reached-like a domicile that slowly wears out and deteriorates, showing no
signs of that deterioration until one night when the roof collapses.
When would the
roof collapse? That was the problem and Seldon had no answer.
And on occasion,
Seldon would check on Trantor itself. There, the news was always considerably
more substantial. For one thing, Trantor was the most highly populated of all
the worlds, with its forty billion people. For another, its eight hundred
sectors formed a mini-Empire all its own. For a third, there were the tedious rounds
of governmental functions and the doings of the Imperial family to follow.
What struck
Seldon's eyes, however, was in the Dahl Sector. The elections for the Dahl
Sector Council had placed five Joranumites into office. This was the first
time, according to the commentary, that Joranumites had achieved sector office.
It was not
surprising. Dahl was a Joranumite stronghold if any sector was, but Seldon
found it a disturbing indication of the progress being made by the demagogue.
He ordered a microchip of the item and took it home with him that evening.
Raych looked up
from his computer as Seldon entered and apparently felt the need to explain
himself. I'm helping Mom on some reference material she needs, he said.
What about your
own work?
Done, Dad. All
done.
Good. Look at
this. He showed Raych the chip in his hand before slipping it into the
microprojector.
Raych glanced at
the news item hanging in the air before his eyes and said, Yes, I know.
You do?
Sure. I usually
keep track of Dahl. You know, home sector and all.
And what do you
think about it?
I'm not
surprised. Are you? The rest of Trantor treats Dahl like dirt. Why shouldn't
they go for Joranum's views?
Do you go for
them also?
Well... Raych
twisted his face thoughtfully. I got to admit some things he says appeal to
me. He says he wants equality for all people. What's wrong with that?
Nothing at
all-if he means it. If he's sincere. If he isn't just using it as a ploy to get
votes.
True enough,
Dad, but most Dahlites probably figure: What's there to lose? We don't have
equality now, though the laws say we do.
It's a hard
thing to legislate.
That's not
something to cool you off when you're sweating to death.
Seldon was
thinking rapidly. He had been thinking since he had come across this item. He
said, Raych, you haven't been in Dahl since your mother and I took you out of
the sector, have you?
Sure I was, when
I went with you to Dahl five years ago on your visit there.
Yes yesSeldon
waved a hand in dismissalbut that doesn't count. We stayed at an intersector
hotel, which was not Dahlite in the least, and, as I recall, Dors never once
let you out on the streets alone. After all, you were only fifteen. How would
you like to visit Dahl now, alone, in charge of yourself-now that you're fully
twenty?
Raych chuckled.
Mom would never allow that.
I don't say that
I enjoy the prospect of facing her with it, but I don't intend to ask her
permission. The question is: Would you be willing to do this for me?
Out of curiosity?
Sure. I'd like to see what's happened to the old place.
Can you spare
the time from your studies?
Sure. I'll never
miss a week or so. Besides, you can tape the lectures and I'll catch up when I
get back. I can get permission. After all, my old man's on the faculty-unless
you've been fired, Dad.
Not yet. But I'm
not thinking of this as a fun vacation.
I'd be surprised
if you did. I don't think you know what a fun vacation is, Dad. I'm surprised
you know the phrase.
Don't be
impertinent. When you go there, I want you to meet with Laskin Joranum.
Raych looked
startled. How do I do that? I don't know where he's gonna be.
He's going to be
in Dahl. He's been asked to speak to the Dahl Sector Council with its new Joranumite
members. We'll find out the exact day and you can go a few days earlier.
And how do I get
to see him, Dad? I don't figure he keeps open house.
I don't, either,
but I'll leave that up to you. You would have known how to do it when you were
twelve. I hope your keen edge hasn't blunted too badly in the intervening
years.
Raych smiled. I
hope not. But suppose I do see him. What then?
Well, find out
what you can. What's he's really planning. What he's really thinking.
Do you really
think he's gonna tell me?
I wouldn't be
surprised if he does. You have the trick of inspiring confidence, you miserable
youngster. Let's talk about it.
And so they did.
Several times.
Seldon's thoughts
were painful. He was not sure where all this was leading to, but he dared not
consult Yugo Amaryl or Demerzel or (most of all) Dors. They might stop him.
They might prove to him that his idea was a poor one and he didn't want that
proof. What he planned seemed the only gateway to salvation and he didn't want
it blocked.
But did the
gateway exist at all? Raych was the only one, it seemed to Seldon, who could
possibly manage to worm himself into Joranum's confidence, but was Raych the
proper tool for the purpose? He was a Dahlite and sympathetic to Joranum. How
far could Seldon trust him?
Horrible? Raych
was his son-and Seldon had never had occasion to mistrust Raych before.
13
If Seldon doubted
the efficacy of his notion, if he feared that it might explode matters
prematurely or move them desperately in the wrong direction, if he was filled
with an agonizing doubt as to whether Raych could be entirely trusted to
fulfill his part suitably, he nevertheless had no doubt-no doubt whatever-as to
what Dors's reaction would be when presented with the fait accompli.
And he was not
disappointed-if that was quite the word to express his emotion.
Yet, in a manner,
he was disappointed, for Dors did not raise her voice in horror as he had
somehow thought she would, as he had prepared himself to withstand.
But how was he to
know? She was not as other women were and he had never seen her truly angry.
Perhaps it was not in her to be truly angry or what he would consider to be
truly angry.
She was merely
cold-eyed and spoke with low-voiced bitter disapproval. You sent him to Dahl?
Alone? Very softly. Questioningly.
For a moment
Seldon quailed at the quiet voice. Then he said firmly, I had to. It was
necessary.
Let me
understand. You sent him to that den of thieves, that haunt of assassins, that
conglomeration of all that is criminal?
Dors! You anger
me when you speak like that. I would expect only a bigot to use those
stereotypes.
You deny that
Dahl is as I have described?
Of course. There
are criminals and slums in Dahl. I know that very well. We both know that. But
not all of Dahl is like that. And there are criminals and slums in every
sector, even in the Imperial Sector and in Streeling.
There are
degrees, are there not? One is not ten. If all the worlds are crime-ridden, if
all the sectors are crime-ridden, Dahl is among the worst, is it not? You have
the computer. Check the statistics.
I don't have to.
Dahl is the poorest sector on Trantor and there is a positive correlation
between poverty, misery, and crime. I grant you that.
You grant me
that! And you sent him alone? You might have gone with him, or asked me to go
with him, or sent half a dozen of his schoolmates with him. They would have
welcomed a respite from their work, I'm sure.
What I need him
for requires that he be alone.
And what do you
need him for?
But Seldon was
stubbornly silent about that.
Dors said, Has
it come to this? You don't trust me?
It's a gamble. I
alone dare take the risk. I can't involve you or anyone else.
But it's not you
taking the risk. It's poor Raych.
He's not taking
any risk, said Seldon impatiently. He's twenty years old, young and vigorous
and as sturdy as a tree-and I don't mean the saplings we have here under glass
on Trantor. I'm talking about a good solid tree in the Heliconian forests. And
he's a twister, which the Dahlites aren't.
You and your
twisting, said Dors, her coldness not thawing one whit. You think that's the
answer to everything. The Dahlites carry knives. Every one of them. Blasters,
too, I'm sure.
I don't know
about blasters. The laws are pretty strict when it comes to blasters. As for
knives, I'm positive Raych carries one. He even carries a knife on campus here,
where it's strictly against the law. Do you think he won't have one in Dahl?
Dors remained
silent.
Seldon was also
silent for a few minutes, then decided it might be time to placate her. He
said, Look, I'll tell you this much. I'm hoping he'll see Joranum, who will be
visiting Dahl.
Oh? And what do
you expect Raych to do? Fill him with bitter regrets over his wicked politics
and send him back to Mycogen?
Come. Really. If
you're going to take this sardonic attitude, there's no use discussing it. He looked
away from her, out the window at the blue-gray sky under the dome. What I
expect him to doand his voice faltered for a moment is save the Empire.
To be sure. That
would be much easier.
Seldon's voice
firmed. It's what I expect. You have no solution. Demerzel himself has no
solution. He as much as said that the solution rests with me. That's what I'm
striving for and that's what I need Raych for in Dahl. After all, you know that
ability of his to inspire affection. It worked with us and I'm convinced it
will work with Joranum. If I am right, all may be well.
Dors's eyes
widened a trifle. Are you now going to tell me that you are being guided by
psychohistory?
No. I'm not
going to lie to you. I have not reached the point where I can be guided in any
way by psychohistory, but Yugo is constantly talking about intuition-and I have
mine.
Intuition!
What's that? Define it!
Easily.
Intuition is the art, peculiar to the human mind, of working out the correct
answer from data that is, in itself, incomplete or even, perhaps, misleading.
And you've done
it.
And Seldon said
with firm conviction, Yes, I have.
But to himself,
he thought what he dared not share with Dors. What if Raych's charm were gone?
Or, worse, what if the consciousness of being a Dahlite became too strong for
him?
14
Billibotton was
Billibotton-dirty, sprawling, dark, sinuous Billibotton-exuding decay and yet
full of a vitality that Raych was convinced was to be found nowhere else on
Trantor. Perhaps it was to be found nowhere else in the Empire, though Raych
knew nothing, firsthand, of any world but Trantor.
He had last seen
Billibotton when he was not much more than twelve, but even the people seemed
to be the same; still a mixture of the hangdog and the irreverent; filled with
a synthetic pride and a grumbling resentment; the men marked by their dark rich
mustaches and the women by their sacklike dresses that now looked tremendously
slatternly to Raych's older and more worldly wise eyes.
How could women
with dresses like that attract men? But it was a foolish question. Even when he
was twelve, he had had a pretty clear idea of how easily and quickly they could
be removed.
So he stood
there, lost in thought and memory, passing along a street of store windows and
trying to convince himself that he remembered this particular place or that and
wondering if, among them all, there were people he did remember who were now
eight years older. Those, perhaps, who had been his boyhood friends-and he
thought uneasily of the fact that, while he remembered some of the nicknames
they had pinned on each other, he could not remember any real names.
In fact, the gaps
in his memory were enormous. It was not that eight years was such a long time,
but it was two fifths of the lifetime of a twenty-year-old and his life since
leaving Billibotton had been so different that all before it had faded like a
misty dream.
But the smells
were there. He stopped outside a bakery, low and dingy, and smelled the coconut
icing that reeked through the air-that he had never quite smelled elsewhere.
Even when he had stopped to buy tarts with coconut icing, even when they were
advertised as Dahl-style, they had been faint imitations-no more.
He felt strongly
tempted. Well, why not? He had the credits and Dors was not there to wrinkle
her nose and wonder aloud how clean-or, more likely, not clean-the place might
be. Who worried about clean in the old days?
The shop was dim
and it took a while for Raych's eyes to acclimate. There were a few low tables
in the place, with a couple of rather insubstantial chairs at each, undoubtedly
where people might have a light repast, the equivalent of moka and tarts. A
young man sat at one of the tables, an empty cup before him, wearing a
once-white T-shirt that probably would have looked even dirtier in a better
light.
The baker or, in
any case, a server stepped out from a room in the rear and said in a rather
surly fashion, What'll ya have?
A coke-icer,
said Raych in just as surly a fashion (he would not be a Billibottoner if he
displayed courtesy), using the slang term he remembered well from the old days.
The term was
still current, for the server handed him the correct item, using his bare
fingers. The boy, Raych, would have taken that for granted, but now the man,
Raych, felt taken slightly aback.
You want a bag?
No, said Raych,
I'll eat it here. He paid the server and took the coke-icer from the other's
hand and bit into its richness, his eyes half closing as he did so. It had been
a rare treat in his boyhood-sometimes when he had scrounged the necessary
credit to buy one with, sometimes when he had received a bite from a
temporarily wealthy friend, most often when he had lifted one when nobody was
watching. Now he could buy as many as he wished.
Hey, said a
voice.
Raych opened his
eyes. It was the man at the table, scowling at him.
Raych said
gently, Are you speaking to me, bub?
Yeah. What'chuh
Join'?
Eatin' a
coke-icer. What's it to ya? Automatically he had assumed the Billibotton way
of talking. It was no strain at all.
What'chuh doin'
in Billibotton?
Born here.
Raised here. In a bed. Not in a street, like you. The insult came easily, as
though he had never left home.
That so? You
dress pretty good for a Billibottoner. Pretty fancy-dancy. Got a perfume stink
about ya. And he held up a little finger to imply effeminacy.
I won't talk
about your stink. I went up in the world.
Up in the world?
La-dee-da. Two other men stepped into the bakery. Raych frowned slightly, for
he wasn't sure whether they had been summoned or not. The man at the table said
to the newcomers, This guy's gone up in the world. Says he's a Billibottoner.
One of the two
newcomers shambled a mock salute and grinned with no appearance of amiability.
His teeth were discolored. Ain't that nice? It's always good to see a
Billibottoner go up in the world. Gives 'em a chance to help their poor
unfor'chnit sector people. Like, credits. You can always spare a credit or two
for the poor, hey?
How many you
got, mister? said the other, the grin disappearing.
Hey, said the
man behind the counter. All you guys get out of my store. I don't want no
trouble in here.
There'll be no
trouble, said Raych. I'm leaving.
He made to go,
but the seated man put a leg in his way. Don't go, pal. We'd miss yer
company.
(The man behind
the counter, clearly fearing the worst, disappeared into the rear.)
Raych smiled. He
said, One time when I was in Billibotton, guys, I was with my old man and old
lady and there were ten guys who stopped us. Ten. I counted them. We had to
take care of them.
Yeah? said the
one who had been speaking. Yer old man took care of ten?
My old man? Nah.
He wouldn't waste his time. My old lady did. And I can do it better than she
can. And there are only three of you. So, if you don't mind, out of the way.
Sure. Just leave
all your credits. Some of your clothes, too.
The man at the
table rose to his feet. There was a knife in his hand.
There you are,
said Raych. Now you're going to waste my time. He had finished his coke-icer
and he half-turned. Then, as quickly as thought, he anchored himself to the
table, while his right leg shot out and the point of his toe landed unerringly
in the groin of the man with the knife.
Down he went with
a loud cry. Up went the table, driving the second man toward the wall and keeping
him there, while Raych's right arm flashed out, with the edge of the palm
striking hard against the larynx of the third, who coughed and went down.
It had taken two
seconds and Raych now stood there with a knife in each hand and said, Now
which one of you wants to move?
They glared at
him but remained frozen in place and Raych said, In that case, I will now
leave.
But the server,
who had retreated to the back room, must have summoned help, for three more men
had now entered the store, while the server screeched, Troublemakers! Nothing
but troublemakers!
The newcomers
were dressed alike in what was obviously a uniform-but one that Raych had never
seen. Trousers were tucked into boots, loose green T-shirts were belted, and
odd semispherical hats that looked vaguely comic were perched on top of their
heads. On the front of the left shoulder of each T-shirt were the letters Jc.
They had the
Dahlite look about them but not quite the Dahlite mustache. The mustaches were
black and thick, but they were carefully trimmed at lip level and were kept
from luxuriating too widely. Raych allowed himself an internal sneer. They
lacked the vigor of his own wild mustache, but he had to admit they looked neat
and clean.
The leader of
these three men said, I'm Corporal Quinber. What's been going on here?
The defeated
Billibottoners were scrambling to their feet, clearly the worse for wear. One
was still doubled over, one was rubbing his throat, and the third acted as
though one of his shoulders had been wrenched.
The corporal
stared at them with a philosophic eye, while his two men blocked the door. He
turned to Raych-the one man who seemed untouched. Are you a Billibottoner,
boy?
Born and bred,
but I've lived elsewhere for eight years. He let the Billibotton accent
recede, but it was still there, at least to the extent that it existed in the
corporal's speech as well. There were other parts of Dahl aside from
Billibotton and some parts with considerable aspirations to gentility.
Raych said, Are
you security officers? I don't seem to recall the uniform you're...
We're not
security officers. You won't find security officers in Billibotton much. We're
the Joranum Guard and we keep the peace here. We know these three and they've
been warned. We'll take care of them. You're our problem, buster. Name.
Reference number.
Raych told them.
And what
happened here?
Raych told them.
And your
business here?
Raych said, Look
here. Do you have the right to question me? If you're not security officers...
Listen, said
the corporal in a hard voice, don't you question rights. We're all there is in
Billibotton and we have the right because we take the right. You say you beat
up these three men and I believe you. But you won't beat us up. We're not
allowed to carry blasters... And with that, the corporal slowly pulled out a
blaster.
Now tell me your
business here.
Raych sighed. If
he had gone directly to a sector hall, as he should have done-if he had not
stopped to drown himself in nostalgia for Billibotton and coke-icers
He said, I have
come on important business to see Mr. Joranum, and since you seem to be part of
his organi-'
To see the
leader?
Yes, Corporal.
With two knives
on you?
For
self-defense. I wasn't going to have them on me when I saw Mr. Joranum.
So you say.
We're taking you into custody, mister. We'll get to the bottom of this. It may
take time, but we will.
But you don't
have the right. You're not the legally const
Well, find
someone to complain to. Till then, you're ours.
And the knives were
confiscated and Raych was taken into custody.
15
Cleon was no
longer quite the handsome young monarch that his holographs portrayed. Perhaps
he still was-in the holographs-but his mirror told a different story. His most
recent birthday had been celebrated with the usual pomp and ritual, but it was
his fortieth just the same.
The Emperor could
find nothing wrong with being forty. His health was perfect. He had gained a
little weight but not much. His face would perhaps look older, if it were not
for the microadjustments that were made periodically and that gave him a
slightly enameled look.
He had been on
the throne for eighteen years-already one of the longer reigns of the
century-and he felt there was nothing that might necessarily keep him from reigning
another forty years and perhaps having the longest reign in Imperial history as
a result.
Cleon looked at
the mirror again and thought he looked a bit better if he did not actualize the
third dimension.
Now take
Demerzel-faithful, reliable, necessary, unbearable Demerzel. no change in him.
He maintained his appearance and, as far as Cleon knew, there had been no
microadjustments, either. Of course, Demerzel was so close-mouthed about
everything. And he had never been young. There had been no young look about him
when he first served Cleon's father and Cleon had been the boyish Prince
Imperial. And there was no young look about him now. Was it better to have
looked old at the start and to avoid change afterward?
Change!
It reminded him
that he had called Demerzel in for a purpose and not just so that he might
stand there while the Emperor ruminated. Demerzel would take too much Imperial
rumination as a sign of old age.
Demerzel, he
said.
Sire?
This fellow
Joranum. I tire of hearing of him.
There is no
reason you should hear of him, Sire. He is one of those phenomena that are
thrown to the surface of the news for a while and then disappears.
But he doesn't
disappear.
Sometimes it
takes a while, Sire.
What do you
think of him, Demerzel?
He is dangerous
but has a certain popularity. It is the popularity that increases the danger.
If you find him
dangerous and if I find him annoying, why must we wait? Can't he simply be
imprisoned or executed or something?
The political
situation on Trantor, Sire, is delicate...
It is always
delicate. When have you told me that it is anything but delicate?
We live in
delicate times, Sire. It would be useless to move strongly against him if that
would but exacerbate the danger.
I don't like it.
I may not be widely read-an Emperor doesn't have the time to be widely read-but
I know my Imperial history, at any rate. There have been a number of cases of
these populists, as they are called, that have seized power in the last couple
of centuries. In every case, they reduced the reigning Emperor to a mere
figurehead. I do not wish to be a figurehead, Demerzel.
It is
unthinkable that you would be, Sire.
It won't be
unthinkable if you do nothing.
I am attempting
to take measures, Sire, but cautious ones.
There's one
fellow, at least, who isn't cautious. A month or so ago, a University
professor-a professor-stopped a potential Joranumite riot single-handedly. He
stepped right in and put a stop to it.
So he did, Sire.
How did you come to hear of it?
Because he is a
certain professor in whom I am interested. How is it that you didn't speak to
me of this?
Demerzel said,
almost obsequiously, Would it be right for me to trouble you with every
insignificant detail that crosses my desk?
Insignificant?
This man who took action was Hari Seldon.
That was,
indeed, his name.
And the name was
a familiar one. Did he not present a paper, some years ago, at the last
Decennial Convention that interested us?
Yes, Sire.
Cleon looked
pleased. As you see, I do have a memory. I need not depend on my staff for
everything. I interviewed this Seldon fellow on the matter of his paper, did I
not?
Your memory is
indeed flawless, Sire.
What happened to
his idea? It was a fortune-telling device. My flawless memory does not bring to
mind what he called it.
Psychohistory,
Sire. It was not precisely a fortune-telling device but a theory as to ways of
predicting general trends in future human history.
And what
happened to it?
Nothing, Sire.
As I explained at the time, the idea turned out to be wholly impractical. It
was a colorful idea but a useless one.
Yet he is
capable of taking action to stop a potential riot. Would he have dared do this
if he didn't know in advance he would succeed? Isn't that evidence that
this-what? psychohistory is working?
It is merely
evidence that Hari Seldon is foolhardy, Sire. Even if the psychohistoric theory
were practical, it would not have been able to yield results involving a single
person or a single action.
You're not the
mathematician, Demerzel. He is. I think it is time I questioned him again.
After all, it is not long before the Decennial Convention is upon us once
more.
It would be a
useless...
Demerzel, I
desire it. See to it.
Yes, Sire.
16
Raych was
listening with an agonized impatience that he was trying not to show. He was
sitting in an improvised cell, deep in the warrens of Billibotton, having been
accompanied through alleys he no longer remembered. (He, who in the old days
could have threaded those same alleys unerringly and lost any pursuer.)
The man with him,
clad in the green of the Joranumite Guard, was either a missionary, a
brainwasher, or a kind of theologian-manque. At any rate, he had announced his
name to be Sander Nee and he was delivering a long message in a thick Dahlite
accent that he had clearly learned by heart.
If the people of
Dahl want to enjoy equality, they must show themselves worthy of it. Good rule,
quiet behavior, seemly pleasures are all requirements. Aggressiveness and the
bearing of knives are the accusations others make against us to justify their
intolerance. We must be clean in word and...
Raych broke in.
I agree with you, Guardsman Nee, every word. But I must see Mr. Joranum.
Slowly the
guardsman shook his head. You can't 'less you got some appointment, some permission.
Look, I'm the
son of an important professor at Streeling University, a mathematics
professor.
Don't know no
professor. I thought you said you was from Dahl.
Of course I am.
Can't you tell the way I talk?
And you got an
old man who's a professor at a big University? That don't sound likely.
Well, he's my
foster father.
The guardsman
absorbed that and shook his head. You know anyone in Dahl?
There's Mother
Rittah. She'll know me. (She had been very old when she had known him. She
might be senile by now-or dead.)
Never heard of
her.
(Who else? He had
never known anyone likely to penetrate the dim consciousness of this man facing
him. His best friend had been another youngster named Smoodgie-or at least that
was the only name he knew him by. Even in his desperation, Raych could not see
himself saying: Do you know someone my age named Smoodgie?)
Finally he said,
There's Yugo Amaryl.
A dim spark
seemed to light Nee's eyes. Who?
Yugo Amaryl,
said Raych eagerly. He works for my foster father at the University.
He a Dahlite,
too? Everyone at the University Dahlites?
Just he and I.
He was a heatsinker.
What's he doing
at the University?
My father took
him out of the heatsinks eight years ago.
Well... I'll
send someone.
Raych had to
wait. Even if he escaped, where would he go in the intricate alleyways of
Billibotton without being picked up instantly?
Twenty minutes
passed before Nee returned with the corporal who had arrested Raych in the
first place. Raych felt a little hope; the corporal, at least, might
conceivably have some brains.
The corporal
said, Who is this Dahlite you know?
Yugo Amaryl,
Corporal, a heatsinker who my father found here in Dahl eight years ago and
took to Streeling University with him.
Why did he do
that?
My father
thought Yugo could do more important things than heatsink, Corporal.
Like what?
Mathematics.
He...
The corporal held
up his hand. What heatsink did he work in?
Raych thought for
a moment. I was only a kid then, but it was at C-2, I think.
Close enough.
C-3.
Then you know
about him, Corporal?
Not personally,
but the story is famous in the heatsinks and I've worked there, too. And maybe
that's how you've heard of it. Have you any evidence that you really know Yugo
Amaryl?
Look. Let me
tell you what I'd like to do. I'm going to write down my name on a piece of
paper and my father's name. Then I'm going to write down one word. Get in
touch-any way you want-with some official in Mr. Joranum's group-Mr. Joranum
will be here in Dahl tomorrow-and just read him my name, my father's name, and
the one word. If nothing happens, then I'll stay here till I rot, I suppose,
but I don't think that will happen. In fact, I'm sure that they will get me out
of here in three seconds and that you'll get a promotion for passing along the
information. If you refuse to do this, when they find out I am here-and they
will-you will be in the deepest possible trouble. After all, if you know that
Yugo Amaryl went off with a big-shot mathematician, just tell yourself that
same big-shot mathematician is my father. His name is Hari Seldon.
The corporal's
face showed clearly that the name was not unknown to him.
He said, What's
the one word you're going to write down?
Psychohistory.
The corporal
frowned. What's that?
That doesn't
matter. Just pass it along and see what happens.
The corporal
handed him a small sheet of paper, torn out of a notebook. All right. Write it
down and we'll see what happens.
Raych realized
that he was trembling. He wanted very much to know what would happen. It
depended entirely on who it was that the corporal would talk to and what magic
the word would carry with it.
17
Hari Seldon
watched the raindrops form on the wraparound windows of the Imperial ground-car
and a sense of nostalgia stabbed at him unbearably.
It was only the
second time in his eight years on Trantor that he had been ordered to visit the
Emperor in the only open land on the planet-and both times the weather had been
bad. The first time, shortly after he had arrived on Trantor, the bad weather
had merely irritated him. He had found no novelty in it. His home world of
Helicon had its share of storms, after all, particularly in the area where he
had been brought up.
But now he had
lived for eight years in make-believe weather, in which storms consisted of
computerized cloudiness at random intervals, with regular light rains during
the sleeping hours. Raging winds were replaced by zephyrs and there were no
extremes of heat and cold-merely little changes that made you unzip the front
of your shirt once in a while or throw on a light jacket. And he had heard
complaints about even so mild a deviation.
But now Hari was
seeing real rain coming down drearily from a cold sky-and he had not seen such
a thing in years-and he loved it; that was the thing. It reminded him of
Helicon, of his youth, of relatively carefree days, and he wondered if he might
persuade the driver to take the long way to the Palace.
Impossible! The
Emperor wanted to see him and it was a long enough trip by ground-car, even if
one went in a straight line with no interfering traffic. The Emperor, of
course, would not wait.
It was a
different Cleon from the one Seldon had seen eight years before. He had put on
about ten pounds and there was a sulkiness about his face. Yet the skin around
his eyes and cheeks looked pinched and Hari recognized the results of one too
many microadjustments. In a way, Seldon felt sorry for Cleon-for all his might
and Imperial sway, the Emperor was powerless against the passage of time.
Once again Cleon
met Hari Seldon alone-in the same lavishly furnished room of their first
encounter. As was the custom, Seldon waited to be addressed.
After briefly
assessing Seldon's appearance, the Emperor said in an ordinary voice, Glad to
see you, Professor. Let us dispense with formalities, as we did on the former
occasion on which I met you.
Yes, Sire, said
Seldon stiffly. It was not always safe to be informal, merely because the
Emperor ordered you to be so in an effusive moment.
Cleon gestured
imperceptibly and at once the room came alive with automation as the table set
itself and dishes began to appear. Seldon, confused, could not follow the
details.
The Emperor said
casually, You will dine with me, Seldon?
It had the formal
intonation of a question but the force, somehow, of an order.
I would be
honored, Sire, said Seldon. He looked around cautiously. He knew very well
that one did not (or, at any rate, should not) ask questions of the Emperor,
but he saw no way out of it. He said, rather quietly, trying to make it not
sound like a question, The First Minister will not dine with us?
He will not,
said Cleon. He has other tasks at this moment and I wish, in any case, to
speak to you privately.
They ate quietly
for a while, Cleon gazing at him fixedly and Seldon smiling tentatively. Cleon
had no reputation for cruelty or even for irresponsibility, but he could, in
theory, have Seldon arrested on some vague charge and, if the Emperor wished to
exert his influence, the case might never come to trial. It was always best to
avoid notice and at the moment Seldon couldn't manage it.
Surely it had
been worse eight years ago, when he had been brought to the Palace under armed
guard. This fact did not make Seldon feel relieved, however.
Then Cleon spoke.
Seldon he said. The First Minister is of great use to me, yet I feel that,
at times, people may think I do not have a mind of my own. Do you think that?
Never, Sire,
said Seldon calmly. no use protesting too much.
I don't believe
you. However, I do have a mind of my own and I recall that when you first came
to Trantor you had this psychohistory thing you were playing with.
I'm sure you
also remember, Sire, said Seldon softly, that I explained at the time it was
a mathematical theory without practical application.
So you said. Do
you still say so?
Yes, Sire.
Have you been
working on it since?
On occasion I
toy with it, but it comes to nothing. Chaos unfortunately interferes and
predictability is not...
The Emperor
interrupted. There is a specific problem I wish you to tackle. Do help
yourself to the dessert, Seldon. It is very good.
What is the
problem, Sire?
This man
Joranum. Demerzel tells me-oh, so politely-that I cannot arrest this man and I
cannot use armed force to crush his followers. He says it will simply make the situation
worse.
If the First
Minister says so, I presume it is so.
But I do not
want this man Joranum.... At any rate, I will not be his puppet. Demerzel does
nothing.
I am sure that
he is doing what he can, Sire.
If he is working
to alleviate the problem, he certainly is not keeping me informed.
That may be,
Sire, out of a natural desire to keep you above the fray. The First Minister
may feel that if Joranum should-if he should...
Take over, said
Cleon with a tone of infinite distaste.
Yes, Sire. It
would not be wise to have it appear that you were personally opposed to him.
You must remain untouched for the sake of the stability of the Empire.
I would much
rather assure the stability of the Empire without Joranum. What do you suggest,
Seldon?
I, Sire?
You, Seldon,
said Cleon impatiently. Let me say that I don't believe you when you say that
psychohistory is just a game. Demerzel stays friendly with you. Do you think I
am such an idiot as not to know that? He expects something from you. He expects
psychohistory from you and since I am no fool, I expect it, too. Seldon, are
you for Joranum? The truth!
No, Sire, I am
not for him. I consider him an utter danger to the Empire.
Very well, I
believe you. You stopped a potential Joranumite riot at your University grounds
single-handedly, I understand.
It was pure
impulse on my part, Sire.
Tell that to
fools, not to me. You had worked it out by psychohistory.
Sire!
Don't protest.
What are you doing about Joranum? You must be doing something if you are on the
side of the Empire.
Sire, said
Seldon cautiously, uncertain as to how much the Emperor knew. I have sent my
son to meet with Joranum in the Dahl Sector.
Why?
My son is a
Dahlite-and shrewd. He may discover something of use to us.
May?
Only may, Sire.
You'll keep me
informed?
Yes, Sire.
And, Seldon, do
not tell me that psychohistory is just a game, that it does not exist. I do not
want to hear that. I expect you to do something about Joranum. What it might
be, I can't say, but you must do something. I will not have it otherwise. You
may go.
Seldon returned
to Streeling University in a far darker mood than when he had left. Cleon had
sounded as though he would not accept failure.
It all depended
on Raych now.
18
Raych sat in the
anteroom of a public building in Dahl into which he had never ventured-never
could have ventured-as a ragamuffin youth. He felt, in all truth, a little
uneasy about it now, as though he were trespassing.
He tried to look
calm, trustworthy, lovable.
Dad had told him
that this was a quality he carried around with him, but he had never been
conscious of it. If it came about naturally, he would probably spoil it by
trying too hard to seem to be what he really was.
He tried relaxing
while keeping an eye on the official who was manipulating a computer at the
desk. The official was not a Dahlite. He was, in fact, Gambol Deen Namarti, who
had been with Joranum at the meeting with Dad that Raych had attended.
Every once in a
while, Namarti would look up from his desk and glance at Raych with a hostile
glare. This Namarti wasn't buying Raych's lovability. Raych could see that.
Raych did not try
to meet Namarti's hostility with a friendly smile. It would have seemed too
artificial. He simply waited. He had gotten this far. If Joranum arrived, as he
was expected to, Raych would have a chance to speak to him.
Joranum did
arrive, sweeping in, smiling his public smile of warmth and confidence.
Namarti's hand came up and Joranum stopped. They spoke together in low voices
while Raych watched intently and tried in vain to seem as if he wasn't. It
seemed plain to Raych that Namarti was arguing against the meeting and Raych
bridled a bit at that.
Then Joranum
looked at Raych, smiled, and pushed Namarti to one side. It occurred to Raych
that, while Namarti was the brains of the team, it was Joranum who clearly had
the charisma.
Joranum strode
toward him and held out a plump, slightly moist hand. Well well. Professor
Seldon's young man. How are you?
Fine, thank you,
sir.
You had some
trouble getting here, I understand.
Not too much,
sir.
And you've come
with a message from your father, I trust. I hope he is reconsidering his
decision and has decided to join me in my great crusade.
I don't think
so, sir.
Joranum frowned
slightly. Are you here without his knowledge?
No, sir. He sent
me.
I see. Are you
hungry, lad?
Not at the
moment, sir.
Then would you
mind if I eat? I don't get much time for the ordinary amenities of life, he
said, smiling broadly.
It's all right
with me, sir.
Together, they
moved to a table and sat down. Joranum unwrapped a sandwich and took a bite.
His voice slightly muffled, he said, And why did he send you, son?
Raych shrugged.
I think he thought I might find out something about you that he could use
against you. He's heart and soul with First Minister Demerzel.
And you're not?
No, sir. I'm a
Dahlite.
I know you are,
Mr. Seldon, but what does that mean?
It means I'm
oppressed, so I'm on your side and I want to help you. Of course, I wouldn't
want my father to know.
There's no
reason he should know. How do you propose to help me? He glanced quickly at Namarti,
who was leaning against his desk, listening, with his arms folded and his
expression lowering. Do you know anything about psychohistory?
No, sir. My
father don't talk to me about that-and if he did, I wouldn't get it. I don't
think he's getting anywhere with that stuff.
Are you sure?
Sure I'm sure.
There's a guy there, Yugo Amaryl, also a Dahlite, who talks about it sometimes.
I'm sure nothing is happening.
Ah! And can I
see Yugo Amaryl sometime, do you suppose?
I don't think
so. He ain't much for Demerzel, but he's all for my father. He wouldn't cross
him.
But you would?
Raych looked
unhappy and he muttered stubbornly, I'm a Dahlite.
Joranum cleared
his throat. Then let me ask you again. How do you propose to help me, young
man?
I've got
something to tell you that maybe you won't believe.
Indeed? Try me.
If I don't believe it, I will tell you so.
It's about First
Minister Eto Demerzel.
Well?
Raych looked
around uneasily. Can anyone hear me?
Just Namarti and
myself.
All right, then
listen. This guy Demerzel ain't a guy. He's a robot.
What! exploded
Joranum.
Raych felt moved
to explain. A robot is a mechanical man, sir. He ain't human. He's a machine.
Namarti broke out
passionately, Jo-Jo, don't believe that. It's ridiculous.
But Joranum held
up an admonitory hand. His eyes were gleaming. Why do you say that?
My father was in
Mycogen once. He told me all about it. In Mycogen they talk about robots a
lot.
Yes, I know. At
least, I have heard so.
The Mycogenians
believe that robots were once very common among their ancestors, but they were
wiped out.
Namarti's eyes
narrowed. But what makes you think that Demerzel is a robot? From what little
I have heard of these fantasies, robots are made out of metal, aren't they?
That's so, said
Raych earnestly. But what I heard is that there were a few robots that look
just like human beings and they live forever...
Namarti shook his
head violently. Legends! Ridiculous legends! JoJo, why are we listening...
But Joranum cut
him off quickly. No, G. D. I want to listen. I've heard these legends, too.
But it's
nonsense, Jo-Jo.
Don't be in such
a rush to say nonsense. And even if it were, people live and die by nonsense.
It's not what is so much as what people think is. Tell me, young man, putting
legends to one side, what makes you think Demerzel is a robot? Let's suppose
that robots exist. What is it, then, about Demerzel that makes you say he is a robot?
Did he tell you so?
No, sir, said
Raych.
Did your father
tell you so? asked Joranum.
No, sir. It's
just my own idea, but I'm sure of it.
Why? What makes
you so sure?
It's just
something about him. He doesn't change. He doesn't get older. He doesn't show
emotions. Something about him looks like he's made of metal.
Joranum sat back
in his chair and looked at Raych for an extended time. It was almost possible
to hear his thoughts buzzing.
Finally he said,
Suppose he is a robot, young man. Why should you care? Does it matter to you?
Of course it
matters to me, said Raych. I'm a human being. I don't want no robot in charge
of running the Empire.
Joranum turned to
Namarti with a gesture of eager approval. Do you hear that, G. D.? I'm a human
being. I don't want no robot in charge of running the Empire. Put him on
holovision and have him say it. Have him repeat it over and over till it's
drummed into every person on Trantor...
Hey, said
Raych, finally catching his breath. I can't say that on holovision. I can't
let my father find out...
No, of course
not, said Joranum quickly. We couldn't allow that. We'll just use the words.
We'll find some other Dahlite. Someone from each of the sectors, each in his
own dialect, but always the same message: I don't want no robot in charge of
running the Empire.
Namarti said,
And what happens when Demerzel proves he's not a robot?
Really, said
Joranum. How will he do that? It would be impossible for him to do so.
Psychologically impossible. What? The great Demerzel, the power behind the
throne, the man who has twitched the strings attached to Cleon I all these
years and those attached to Cleon's father before him? Will he climb down now
and whine to the public that he is, too, a human being? That would be almost as
destructive to him as being a robot. G. D., we have the villain in a no-win
situation and we owe it all to this fine young man here.
Raych flushed.
Joranum said,
Raych is your name, isn't it? Once our party is in a position to do so, we
won't forget. Dahl will be treated well and you will have a good position with
us. You're going to be Dahl's sector leader someday, Raych, and you're not
going to regret you've done this. Are you, now?
Not on your
life, said Raych fervently.
In that case,
we'll see that you get back to your father. You let him know that we intend him
no harm, that we value him greatly. You can tell him you found that out in any
way you please. And if you find anything else you think we might be able to
use-about psychohistory, in particular, you let us know.
You bet. But do
you mean it when you say you'll see to it that Dahl gets some breaks?
Absolutely.
Equality of sectors, my boy. Equality of worlds. We'll have a new Empire with
all the old villainies of privilege and inequality wiped out.
And Raych nodded
his head vigorously. That's what I want.
19
Cleon, Emperor of
the Galaxy, was walking hurriedly through the arcade that led from his private
quarters in the Small Palace to the offices of the rather tremendous staff that
lived in the various annexes of the Imperial Palace, which served as the nerve
center of the Empire.
Several of his
personal attaches walked after him, with looks of the deepest concern on their
faces. The Emperor did not walk to others. He summoned them and they came to
him. If he did walk, he never showed signs of haste or emotional trauma. How
could he? He was the Emperor and, as such, far more a symbol of all the worlds
than a human being.
Yet now he seemed
to be a human being. He motioned everyone aside with an impatient wave of his
right hand. In his left hand he held a gleaming hologram.
The First
Minister, he said in an almost strangled voice, not at all like the carefully
cultivated tones he had painstakingly assumed along with the throne. Where is
he?
And all the high
functionaries who were in his way fumbled and gasped and found it impossible to
manage coherence. He brushed past them angrily, making them all feel,
undoubtedly, as though they were living through a waking nightmare.
Finally he burst
into Demerzel's private office, panting slightly, and shouted-literally
shoutedDemerzel!
Demerzel looked
up with a trace of surprise and rose smoothly to his feet, for one did not sit
in the presence of the Emperor unless specifically invited to. Sire? he said.
And the Emperor
slammed the hologram down on Demerzel's desk and said, What is this? Will you
tell me that?
Demerzel looked
at what the Emperor had given him. It was a beautiful hologram, sharp and
alive. One could almost hear the little boy-perhaps ten years old-speaking the
words that were included in the caption: I don't want no robot in charge of
running the Empire.
Demerzel said
quietly, Sire, I have received this, too.
And who else
has?
I am under the impression,
Sire, that it is a flier that is being widely spread over Trantor.
Yes, and do you
see the person at whom that brat is looking? He tapped his Imperial forefinger
at it. Isn't that you?
The resemblance
is striking, Sire.
Am I wrong in
supposing that the whole intent of this flier, as you call it, is to accuse you
of being a robot?
That does seem
to be its intention, Sire.
And stop me if
I'm wrong, but aren't robots the legendary mechanical human beings one finds
in-in thrillers and children's stories?
The Mycogenians
have it as an article of faith, Sire, that robots...
I'm not
interested in the Mycogenians and their articles of faith. Why are they
accusing you of being a robot?
Merely a
metaphorical point, I'm sure, Sire. They wish to portray me as a man of no
heart, whose views are the conscienceless calculations of a machine.
That's too
subtle, Demerzel. I'm no fool. He tapped the hologram again. They're trying
to make people believe you are really a robot.
We can scarcely
prevent it, Sire, if people choose to believe that.
We cannot afford
it. It detracts from the dignity of your office. Worse than that, it detracts
from the dignity of the Emperor, The implication is that I-I would choose as my
First Minister a mechanical man. That is impossible to endure. See here,
Demerzel, aren't there laws that forbid the denigration of public officers of
the Empire?
Yes, there
are-and quite severe ones, Sire, dating back to the great Law Codes of
Aburamis.
And to denigrate
the Emperor himself is a capital offense, is it not?
Death is the
punishment, Sire. Yes.
Well, this not
only denigrates you, it denigrates me-and whoever did it should be executed
forthwith. It was this Joranum, of course, who is behind it.
Undoubtedly.
Sire, but proving it might be rather difficult.
Nonsense! I have
proof enough! I want an execution.
The trouble is,
Sire, that the laws of denigration are virtually never enforced. Not in this
century, certainly.
And that is why
society is becoming so unstable and the Empire is being shaken to its roots.
The laws are still in the books, so enforce them.
Demerzel said,
Consider, Sire, if that would be wise. It would make you appear to be a tyrant
and a despot. Your rule has been a most successful one through kindness and
mildness...
Yes and see
where that got me. Let's have them fear me for a change, rather than love me-in
this fashion.
I strongly
recommend that you not do so, Sire. It may be the spark that will start a
rebellion.
What would you
do, then? Go before the people and say, Look at me. I am no robot."
No, Sire, for as
you say that would destroy my dignity and, worse yet, yours.
Then?
I am not
certain, Sire. I have not yet thought it through.
Not yet thought
it through? Get in touch with Seldon.
Sire?
What is so
difficult to understand about my order? Get in touch with Seldon!
You wish me to
summon him to the Palace, Sire?
No, there's no
time for that. I presume you can set up a sealed communication line between us
that cannot be tapped.
Certainly,
Sire.
Then do so.
Now!
20
Seldon lacked
Demerzel's self-possession, being, as he was, only flesh and blood. The summons
to his office and the sudden faint glow and tingle of the scrambler field was
indication enough that something unusual was taking place. He had spoken by
sealed lines before but never to the full extent of Imperial security.
He expected some
government official to clear the way for Demerzel himself. Considering the
slowly mounting tumult of the robot flier, he could expect nothing less.
But he did not
expect anything more, either, and when the image of the Emperor himself, with
the faint glitter of the scramble field outlining him, stepped into his office
(so to speak), Seldon fell back in his seat, mouth wide open, and could make
only ineffectual attempts to rise.
Cleon motioned
him impatiently to keep his seat. You must know what's going on, Seldon.
Do you mean
about the robot flier, Sire?
That's exactly
what I mean. What's to be done?
Seldon, despite
the permission to remain seated, finally rose. There's more, Sire. Joranum is
organizing rallies all over Trantor on the robot issue. At least, that's what I
hear on the newscasts.
It hasn't
reached me yet. Of course not. Why should the Emperor know what is going on?
It is not for
the Emperor to be concerned, Sire. I'm sure that the First Minister...
The First
Minister will do nothing, not even keep me informed. I turn to you and your
psychohistory. Tell me what to do.
Sire?
I'm not going to
play your game, Seldon. You've been working on psychohistory for eight years.
The First Minister tells me I must not take legal action against Joranum. What,
then, do I do?
Seldon stuttered.
S-sire! Nothing!
You have nothing
to tell me?
No, Sire. That
is not what I mean. I mean you must do nothing. Nothing! The First Minister is
quite right if he tells you that you must not take legal action. It will make
things worse.
Very well. What
will make things better?
For you to do
nothing. For the First Minister to do nothing. For the government to allow
Joranum to do just as he pleases.
How will that
help?
And Seldon said,
trying to suppress the note of desperation in his voice, That will soon be
seen.
The Emperor
seemed to deflate suddenly, as though all the anger and indignation had been
drawn out of him. He said, Ah! I understand! You have the situation well in
hand!
Sire! I have not
said that...
You need not
say. I have heard enough. You have the situation well in hand, but I want
results. I still have the Imperial Guard and the armed forces. They will be
loyal and, if it comes to actual disorders, I will not hesitate. But I will
give you your chance first.
His image flashed
out and Seldon sat there, simply staring at the empty space where the image had
been.
Ever since the
first unhappy moment when he had mentioned psychohistory at the Decennial
Convention eight years before, he had had to face the fact that he didn't have
what he had incautiously talked about.
All he had was
the wild ghost of some thoughts-and what Yugo Amaryl called intuition.
21
In two days
Joranum had swept Trantor, partly by himself, mostly through his lieutenants.
As Hari muttered to Dors, it was a campaign that had all the marks of military
efficiency. He was born to be a war admiral in the old days, he said. He's
wasted on politics.
And Dors said,
Wasted? At this rate, he's going to make himself First Minister in a week and,
if he wishes, Emperor in two weeks. There are reports that some of the military
garrisons are cheering him.
Seldon shook his
head. It will collapse, Dors.
What? Joranum's
party or the Empire?
Joranum's party.
The story of the robot has created an instant stir, especially with the
effective use of that flier, but a little thought, a little coolness, and the
public will see it for the ridiculous accusation it is.
But, Hari, said
Dors tightly, you needn't pretend with me. It is not a ridiculous story. How
could Joranum possibly have found out that Demerzel is a robot?
Oh, that. ' Why,
Raych told him so.
Raych!
That's right. He
did his job perfectly and got back safely with the promise of being made Dahl's
sector leader someday. Of course he was believed. I knew he would be.
You mean you
told Raych that Demerzel was a robot and had him pass on the news to Joranum?
Dors looked utterly horrified.
No, I couldn't
do that. You know I couldn't tell Raych-or anyone-that Demerzel was a robot. I
told Raych as firmly as I could that Demerzel was not a robot-and even that
much was difficult. But I did ask him to tell Joranum that he was. He is under
the firm impression that he lied to Joranum.
But why, Hari?
Why?
It's not
psychohistory, I'll tell you that. Don't you join the Emperor in thinking I'm a
magician. I just wanted Joranum to believe that Demerzel was a robot. He's a
Mycogenian by birth, so he was filled from youth with his culture's tales of
robots. Therefore, he was predisposed to believe and he was convinced that the
public would believe with him.
Well, won't
they?
Not really.
After the initial shock is over, they will realize that it's madcap fiction-or
they will think so. I've persuaded Demerzel that he must give a talk on
subetheric holovision to be broadcast to key portions of the Empire and to
every sector on Trantor. He is to talk about everything but the robot issue.
There are enough crises, we all know, to fill such a talk. People will listen
and will hear nothing about robots. Then, at the end, he will be asked about
the flier and he need not answer a word. He need only laugh.
Laugh? I've
never known Demerzel to laugh. He almost never smiles.
This time, Dors,
he'll laugh. It is the one thing that no one ever visualizes a robot doing.
You've seen robots in holographic fantasies, haven't you? They're always
pictured as literal-minded, unemotional, inhuman... That's what people are sure
to expect. So Demerzel need merely laugh. And on top of that... Do you remember
Sunmaster Fourteen, the religious leader of Mycogen?
Of course I do.
Literal-minded, unemotional, inhuman. He's never laughed, either.
And he won't
this time. I've done a lot of work on this Joranum matter since I had that
little set-to at the Field. I know Joranum's real name. I know where he was
born, who his parents were, where he had his early training, and all of it,
with documentary proof, has gone to Sunmaster Fourteen. I don't think Sunmaster
likes Breakaways.
But I thought
you said you don't wish to spark off bigotry.
I don't. If I
had given the information to the holovision people, I would have, but I've
given it to Sunmaster, where, after all, it belongs.
And he'll start
off the bigotry.
Of course he
won't. no one on Trantor would pay any attention to Sunmaster-whatever he might
say.
Then what's the
point?
Well, that's
what we'll see, Dors. I don't have a psychohistorical analysis of the
situation. I don't even know if one is possible. I just hope that my judgment
is right.
22
Eto Demerzel
laughed.
It was not the
first time. He sat there, with Hari Seldon and Dors Venabili in a tap-free
room, and, every once in a while, at a signal from Hari, he would laugh.
Sometimes he leaned back and laughed uproariously, but Seldon shook his head.
That would never sound convincing.
So Demerzel
smiled and then laughed with dignity and Seldon made a face. I'm stumped, he
said. It's no use trying to tell you funny stories. You get the point only
intellectually. You will simply have to memorize the sound.
Dors said, Use a
holographic laughtrack.
No! That would
never be Demerzel. That's a bunch of idiots being paid to yak. It's not what I
want. Try again, Demerzel.
Demerzel tried
again until Seldon said, All right, then, memorize that sound and reproduce it
when you're asked the question. You've got to look amused. You can't make the
sound of laughing, however proficient, with a grave face. Smile a little, just
a little. Pull back the corner of your mouth. Slowly Demerzel's mouth widened
into a grin. Not bad. Can you make your eyes twinkle?
What do you
mean, 'twinkle,"' said Dors indignantly. No one makes their eyes twinkle.
That's a metaphorical expression.
No, it's not,
said Seldon. There's the hint of tears in the eye-sadness, joy, surprise,
whatever-and the reflection of light from that hint of fluid is what does it.
Well, do you
seriously expect Demerzel to produce tears?
And Demerzel
said, matter-of-factly, My eyes do produce tears for general cleansing-never
in excess. Perhaps, though, if I imagine my eyes to be slightly irritated...
Try it, said
Seldon. It can't hurt.
And so it was
that when the talk on subetheric holovision was over and the words were
streaking out to millions of worlds at thousands of times the effective speed
of light words that were grave, matter-of-fact, informative, and without
rhetorical embellishment-and that discussed everything but robots-Demerzel
declared himself ready to answer questions.
He did not have
to wait long. The very first question was: Mr. First Minister, are you a
robot?
Demerzel simply
stared calmly and let the tension build. Then he smiled, his body shook
slightly, and he laughed. It was not a loud uproarious laugh, but it was a rich
one, the laugh of someone enjoying a moment of fantasy. It was infectious. The
audience tittered and then laughed along with him.
Demerzel waited
for the laughter to die down and then, eyes twinkling, said, Must I really
answer that? Is it necessary to do so? He was still smiling as the screen
darkened.
23
I'm sure it
worked, said Seldon. Naturally we won't have a complete reversal instantly.
It takes time. But things are moving in the right direction now. I noticed that
when I stopped Namarti's talk at the University Field. The audience was with
him until I faced him and showed spunk against odds. The audience began to
change sides at once.
Do you think
this is an analogous situation? asked Dors dubiously.
Of course. If I
don't have psychohistory, I can use analogy-and the brains I was born with, I
suppose. There was the First Minister, beleaguered on all sides with the
accusation, and he faced it down with a smile and a laugh, the most nonrobot
thing he could have done, so that in itself was an answer to the question. Of
course sympathy began to slide to his side. Nothing would stop that. But that's
only the beginning. We have to wait for Sunmaster Fourteen and hear what he has
to say.
Are you
confident there, too?
Absolutely.
24
Tennis was one of
Hari's favorite sports, but he preferred to play rather than watch others. He
watched with impatience, therefore, as the Emperor Cleon, dressed in sports
fashion, loped across the court to return the ball. It was Imperial tennis,
actually, so-called because it was a favorite of Emperors, a version of the game
in which a computerized racket was used that could alter its angle slightly
with appropriate pressures on the handle. Hari had tried to develop the
technique on several occasions but found that mastering the computerized racket
would take a great deal of practice-and Hari Seldon's time was far too precious
for what was clearly a trivial pursuit.
Cleon placed the
ball in a nonreturnable position and won the game. He trotted off the court to
the careful applause of the functionaries who were watching and Seldon said to
him, Congratulations, Sire. You played a marvelous game.
Cleon said
indifferently, Do you think so, Seldon? They're all so careful to let me win.
I get no pleasure out of it.
5eldon said, In
that case, Sire, you might order your opponents to play harder.
It wouldn't
help. They'd be careful to lose anyway. And if they did win, I would get even
less pleasure out of losing than out of winning meaninglessly. Being an Emperor
has its woes, Seldon. Joranum would have found that out-if he had ever
succeeded in becoming one.
He disappeared
into his private shower facility and emerged in due time, scrubbed and dried
and dressed rather more formally.
And now, Seldon
he said, waving all the others away, the tennis court is as private a place as
we can find and the weather is glorious, so let us not go indoors. I have read
the Mycogenian message of this Sunmaster Fourteen. Will it do?
Entirely, Sire.
As you have read, Joranum was denounced as a Mycogenian Breakaway and is
accused of blasphemy in the strongest terms.
And does that
finish him?
It diminishes
his importance fatally, Sire. There are few who accept the mad story of the
First Minister's robothood now. Furthermore, Joranum is revealed as a liar and
a poseur and, worse, one who was caught at it.
Caught at it,
yes, said Cleon thoughtfully. You mean that merely to be underhanded is to be
sly and that may be admirable, while to be caught is to be stupid and that is
never admirable.
You put it
succinctly, Sire.
Then Joranum is
no longer a danger.
We can't be
certain of that, Sire. He may recover, even now. He still has an organization
and some of his followers will remain loyal. History yields examples of men and
women who have come back after disasters as great as this one-or greater.
In that case,
let us execute him, Seldon.
Seldon shook his
head. That would be inadvisable, Sire. You would not want to create a martyr
or to make yourself appear to be a despot.
Cleon frowned.
Now you sound like Demerzel. Whenever I wish to take forceful action, he
mutters the word despot. There have been Emperors before me who have taken
forceful action and who have been admired as a result and have been considered
strong and decisive.
Undoubtedly,
Sire, but we live in troubled times. Nor is execution necessary. You can
accomplish your purpose in a way that will make you seem enlightened and
benevolent.
Seem
enlightened?
Be enlightened,
Sire. I misspoke. To execute Joranum would be to take revenge, which might be
regarded as ignoble. As Emperor, however, you have a kindly-even
paternal-attitude toward the beliefs of all your people. You make no
distinctions, for you are the Emperor of all alike.
What is it
you're saying?
I mean, Sire,
that Joranum has offended the sensibilities of the Mycogenians and you are
horrified at his sacrilege, he having been born one of them. What better can
you do but hand Joranum over to the Mycogenians and allow them to take care of
him? You will be applauded for your proper Imperial convern.
And the
Mycogenians will execute him, then?
They may, Sire.
Their laws against blasphemy are excessively severe. At best, they will
imprison him for life at hard labor.
Cleon smiled.
Very good. I get the credit for humanity and tolerance and they do the dirty
work.
They would,
Sire, if you actually handed Joranum over to them. That would, however, still
create a martyr.
Now you confuse
me. What would you have me do?
Give Joranum the
choice. Say that your regard for the welfare of all the people in your Empire
urges you to hand him over to the Mycogenians for trial but that your humanity
fears the Mycogenians may be too severe. Therefore, as an alternative, he may
choose to be banished to Nishaya, the small and secluded world from which he
claimed to have come, to live the rest of his life in obscurity and peace.
You'll see to it that he's kept under guard, of course.
And that will
take care of things?
Certainly.
Joranum would be committing virtual suicide if he chose to be returned to
Mycogen-and he doesn't strike me as the suicidal type. He will certainly choose
Nishaya, and though that is the sensible course of action, it is also an
unheroic one. As a refugee in Nishaya, he can scarcely lead any movement
designed to take over the Empire. His following is sure to disintegrate. They
could follow a martyr with holy zeal, but it would be difficult, indeed, to
follow a coward.
Astonishing! How
did you manage all this, Seldon? There was a distinct note of admiration in
Cleon's voice.
Seldon said,
Well, it seemed reasonable to suppose...
Never mind,
said Cleon abruptly. I don't suppose you'll tell me the truth or that I would
understand you if you did, but I'll tell you this much. Demerzel is leaving
office. This last crisis has proved to be too much for him and I agree with him
that it is time for him to retire. But I can't do without a First Minister and,
from this moment onward, you are he.
Sire. '
exclaimed Seldon in mingled astonishment and horror.
First Minister
Hari Seldon. said Cleon calmly. The Emperor wishes it.
25
Don't be
alarmed, said Demerzel. It was my suggestion. I've been here too long and the
succession of crises has reached the point where the consideration of the Three
Laws paralyzes me. You are the logical successor.
I am not the
logical successor, said Seldon hotly. What do I know about running an Empire?
The Emperor is foolish enough to believe that I solved this crisis by
psychohistory. Of course I didn't.
That doesn't
matter, Hari. If he believes you have the psychohistorical answer, he will follow
you eagerly and that will make you a Good First Minister.
He may follow me
straight into destruction.
I feel that your
good sense-or intuition-will keep you on target... with or without
psychohistory.
But what will I
do without you-Daneel?
Thank you for
calling me that. I am Demerzel no more, only Daneel. As to what you will do
without me... Suppose you try to put into practice some of Joranum's ideas of
equality and social justice? He may not have meant them-he may have used them
only as ways of capturing allegiance-but they are not bad ideas in themselves.
And find ways of having Raych help you in that. He clung to you against his own
attraction to Joranum's ideas and he must feel torn and half a traitor. Show
him he isn't. In addition, you can work all the harder on psychohistory, for
the Emperor will be there with you, heart and soul.
But what will
you do, Daneel?
I have other
things in the Galaxy to which I must attend. There is still the Zeroth Law and
I must labor for the good of humanity, insofar as I can determine what that
might be. And, Hari...
Yes, Daneel.
You still, have
Dors.
Seldon nodded.
Yes, I still have Dors. He paused for a moment before grasping Daneel's firm
hand with his own. Good-bye, Daneel.
Good-bye, Hari,
Daneel replied.
And with that,
the robot turned, his heavy First Minister's robe rustling as he walked away,
head up, back ramrod straight, along the Palace hallway.
Seldon stood
there for a few minutes after Daneel had gone, lost in thought. Suddenly he began
moving in the direction of the First Minister's apartment. Seldon had one more
thing to tell Daneel-the most important thing of all.
Seldon hesitated
in the softly lit hallway before entering. But the room was empty. The dark
robe was draped over a chair. The First Minister's chambers echoed Hari's last
words to the robot: Good-bye, my friend. Eto Demerzel was gone; R. Daneel
Olivaw had vanished.
PART II
CLEON I
CLEON I-...
Though often receiving panegyrics for being the last Emperor under whom the
First Galactic Empire was reasonably united and reasonably prosperous, the
quarter-century reign of Cleon I was one of continuous decline. This cannot be
viewed as his direct responsibility, for the Decline of the Empire was based on
political and economic factors too strong for anyone to deal with at the time.
He was fortunate in his selection of First Ministers-Eto Demerzel and then Hari
Seldon, in whose development of psychohistory the Emperor never lost faith.
Cleon and Seldon, as the objects of the final Joranumite Conspiracy, with its
bizarre climax
ENCYCLOPEDIA
GALACTICA
1
Mandell Gruber
was a happy man. He seemed so to Hari Seldon, certainly. Seldon stopped his
morning constitutional to watch him.
Gruber, perhaps
in his late forties, a few years younger than Seldon, was a bit gnarled from
his continuing work in the Imperial Palace grounds, but he had a cheerful,
smoothly shaven face, topped by a pink skull, not much of which was hidden by
his thin sandy hair. He whistled softly to himself as he inspected the leaves
of the bushes for any signs of insect infestation.
He was not the
Chief Gardener, of course. The Chief Gardener of the Imperial Palace grounds
was a high functionary who had a palatial office in one of the buildings of the
enormous Imperial complex, with an army of men and women under him. The chances
are he did not inspect the Palace grounds more often than once or twice a year.
Gruber was but
one of that army. His title, Seldon knew, was Gardener First-Class and it had
been well earned, with thirty years of faithful service.
Seldon called to
him as he paused on the perfectly level crushed gravel walk, Another marvelous
day, Gruber.
Gruber looked up
and his eyes twinkled. Yes, indeed, First Minister, and it's sorry I am for
those who be cooped up indoors.
You mean as I am
about to be.
There's not much
about you, First Minister, for people to sorrow over, but if you're
disappearing into those buildings on a day like this, it's a bit of sorrow that
we fortunate few can feel for you.
I thank you for
your sympathy, Gruber, but you know we have forty billion Trantorians under the
dome. Are you sorry for all of them?
Indeed, I am. I
am grateful I am not of Trantorian extraction myself so that I could qualify as
a gardener. There be few of us on this world that work in the open, but here I
be, one of the fortunate few. "'
The weather
isn't always this ideal.
That is true.
And I have been out here in the sluicing rains and the whistling winds. Still,
as long as you dress fittingly.... Look... And Gruber spread his arms open,
wide as his smile, as if to embrace the vast expanse of the Palace grounds. I
have my friends-the trees and the lawns and all the animal life forms to keep
me company-and growth to encourage in geometric form, even in the winter. Have
you ever seen the geometry of the grounds, First Minister?
I am looking at
it right now, am I not?
I mean the plans
spread out so you can really appreciate it all-and marvelous it is, too. It was
planned by Tapper Savand, over a hundred years ago, and it has been little
changed since. Tapper was a great horticulturist, the greatest-and he came from
my planet.
That was
Anacreon, wasn't it?
Indeed. A
far-off world near the edge of the Galaxy, where there is still wilderness and
life can be sweet. I came here when I was still an earwet lad, when the present
Chief Gardener took power under the old Emperor. Of course, now they're talking
of redesigning the grounds. Gruber sighed deeply and shook his head. That
would be a mistake. They are just right as they are now properly proportioned,
well balanced, pleasing to the eye and spirit. But it is true that in history,
the grounds have occasionally been redesigned. Emperors grow tired of the old
and are always seeking the new, as if new is somehow always better. Our present
Emperor, may he live long, has been planning the redesign with the Chief
Gardener. At least, that is the word that runs from gardener to gardener. This
last he added quickly, as if abashed at spreading Palace gossip.
It might not
happen soon.
I hope not,
First Minister. Please, if you have the chance to take some time from all the
heart-stopping work you must be after doing, study the design of the grounds.
It is a rare beauty and, if I have my way, there should not be a leaf moved out
of place, nor a flower, nor a rabbit, anywhere in all these hundreds of square
kilometers.
Seldon smiled.
You are a dedicated man, Gruber. I would not be surprised if someday you were
Chief Gardener.
May Fate protect
me from that. The Chief Gardener breathes no fresh air, sees no natural sights,
and forgets all he has learned of nature. He lives thereGruber pointed
scornfullyand I think he no longer knows a bush from a stream unless one of
his underlings leads him out and places his hand on one or dips it into the
other.
For a moment it
seemed as though Gruber would expectorate his scorn, but he could not find any
place on which he could bear to spit.
Seldon laughed
quietly. Gruber, it's good to talk to you. When I am overcome with the duties
of the day, it is pleasant to take a few moments to listen to your philosophy
of life.
Ah, First
Minister, it is no philosopher I am. My schooling was very sketchy.
You don't need
schooling to be a philosopher. Just an active mind and experience with life.
Take care, Gruber. I just might have you promoted.
If you but leave
me as I am, First Minister, you will have my total gratitude.
Seldon was
smiling as he moved on, but the smile faded as his mind turned once more to his
current problems. Ten years as First Minister-and if Gruber knew how heartily
sick Seldon was of his position, his sympathy would rise to enormous heights.
Could Gruber grasp the fact that Seldon's progress in the techniques of
psychohistory showed the promise of facing him with an unbearable dilemma?
2
Seldon's
thoughtful stroll across the grounds was the epitome of peace. It was hard to
believe here, in the midst of the Emperor's immediate domain, that he was on a
world that, except for this area, was totally enclosed by a dome. Here, in this
spot, he might be on his home world of Helicon or on Gruber's home world of
Anacreon.
Of course, the
sense of peace was an illusion. The grounds were guarded-thick with security.
Once, a thousand
years ago, the Imperial Palace grounds-much less palatial, much less
differentiated from a world only beginning to construct domes over individual
regions-had been open to all citizens and the Emperor himself could walk along
the paths, unguarded, nodding his head in greeting to his subjects.
No more. Now
security was in place and no one from Trantor itself could possibly invade the
grounds. That did not remove the danger, however, for that, when it came, came
from discontented Imperial functionaries and from corrupt and suborned
soldiers. It was within the grounds that the Emperor and his staff were most in
danger. What would have happened if, on that occasion, nearly ten years before,
Seldon had not been accompanied by Dors Venabili?
It had been in
his first year as First Minister and it was only natural, he supposed (after
the fact), that there would be jealous heart-burning over his unexpected choice
for the post. Many others, far better qualified in training-in years of service
and, most of all, in their own eyes-could view the appointment with anger. They
did not know of psychohistory or of the importance the Emperor attached to it
and the easiest way to correct the situation was to corrupt one of the sworn
protectors of the First Minister.
Dors must have
been more suspicious than Seldon himself was. Or else, with Demerzel's
disappearance from the scene, her instructions to guard Seldon had been
strengthened. The truth was that, for the first few years of his First
Ministership, she was at his side more often than not.
And on the late
afternoon of a warm sunny day, Dors noted the glint of the westering sun-a sun
never seen under Trantor's dome-on the metal of a blaster.
Down, Hari! she
cried suddenly and her legs crushed the grass as she raced toward the sergeant.
Give me that
blaster, Sergeant, she said tightly.
The would-be
assassin, momentarily immobilized by the unexpected sight of a woman running
toward him, now reacted quickly, raising the drawn blaster.
But she was
already at him, her hand enclosing his right wrist in a steely grip and lifting
his arm high. Drop it, she said through clenched teeth.
The sergeant's
face twisted as he attempted to yank his arm loose.
Don't try,
Sergeant, said Dors. My knee is three inches from your groin and, if you so
much as blink, your genitals will be history. So just freeze. That's right.
Okay, now open your hand. If you don't drop the blaster right now, I will
shatter your arm.
A gardener came
running up with a rake. Dors motioned him away. The sergeant dropped the
blaster to the ground.
Seldon had
arrived. I'll take over, Dors.
You will not.
Get in among those trees and take the blaster with you. Others may be
involved-and ready to act.
Dors had not
loosened her grip on the sergeant. She said, Now, Sergeant, I want the name of
whoever it was who persuaded you to make an attempt on the First Minister's
life-and the name of everyone else ho is in this with you.
The sergeant was
silent.
Don't be
foolish, said Dors. Speak! She twisted his arm and he sank down to his
knees. She put her shoe on his neck. If you think silence becomes you, I can
crush your larynx and you will be silent forever. And even before that, I am
going to damage you badly-t won't (cave one bone unbroken. You had better
talk.
The sergeant
talked.
Later Seldon had
said to her, How could you do that, Dors? I never believed you capable of
such... violence.
Dors said coolly,
I did not actually hurt him much, Hari. The threat was sufficient. In any
case, your safety was paramount.
You should have
let me take care of him.
Why? To salvage
your masculine pride? You wouldn't have been fast enough, for one thing.
Secondly, no matter what you would have succeeded in doing, you are a man and
it would have been expected. I am a woman and women, in popular thought, are
not considered as ferocious its men and most, in general, do not have the
strength to do what I did. The story will improve in the telling and everyone
will be terrified of me. no one will dare to try to harm you for fear of me.
For fear of you
and for fear of execution. The sergeant and his cohorts are to be killed, you
know.
At this, an
anguished look clouded Dors's usually composed visage, as if she could not
stand the thought of the traitorous sergeant being put to death, even though he
would have cut down her beloved Hari without a second thought.
But, she
exclaimed, there is no need to execute the conspirators. Exile will do the
job.
No, it won't,
said Seldon. It's too late. Cleon will hear of nothing but executions. I can
quote him-if you wish.
You mean he's
already made up his mind?
At once. I told
him that exile or imprisonment would be all that was necessary, but he said no.
He said, Every time I try to solve a problem by direct and forceful action,
first Demerzel and then you talk of despotism and tyranny. But this is my
Palace. These are my grounds. These are my guardsmen. My safety depends on the
security of this place and the loyalty of my people. Do you think that any
deviation from absolute loyalty can be met with anything but instant death? How
else would you be safe? How else would I be safe?
I said there
would have to be a trial. Of course, he said, a short military trial and I
don't expect a single vote for anything but execution. I shall make that quite
clear.
Dors looked appalled.
You're taking this very quietly. Do you agree with the Emperor?
Reluctantly
Seldon nodded. I do.
Because there
was an attempt on your life. Have you abandoned your principles for mere
revenge?
Now, Dors, I'm
not a vengeful person. However, it was not myself alone at risk or even the
Emperor. If there is anything that the recent history of the Empire shows us,
it is that Emperors come and go. It is psychohistory that must be protected.
Undoubtedly, even if something happens to me, psychohistory will someday be
developed, but the Empire is falling fast and we cannot wait-and only I have
advanced far enough to obtain the necessary techniques in time.
Then you should
teach what you know to others, said Dors gravely.
I'm doing so.
Yugo Amaryl is a reasonable successor and I have gathered a group of
technicians who will someday be useful, but they won't be as... He paused.
They won't be as
good as you-as wise, as capable? Really?
I happen to
think so, said Seldon. And I happen to be human. Psychohistory is mine and,
if I can possibly manage it, I want the credit.
Human, sighed
Dors, shaking her head almost sadly.
The executions
went through. no such purge had been seen in over a century. Two Ministers,
five officials of lower ranks, and four soldiers, including the hapless
sergeant, met their deaths. Every guardsman who could not withstand the most
rigorous investigation was relieved of duty and exiled to the remote Outer
Worlds.
Since then, there
had been no whisper of disloyalty and so notorious had become the care with
which the First Minister was guarded, to say nothing of the terrifying
woman-called The Tiger Woman by many-who watched over him, that it was no
longer necessary for Dors to accompany him everywhere. Her invisible presence
was an adequate shield and the Emperor Cleon enjoyed nearly ten years of quiet
and absolute security.
Now, however,
psychohistory was finally reaching the point where predictions, of a sort,
could be made and, as Seldon crossed the grounds in his passage from his office
(First Minister) to his laboratory (psychohistorian), he was uneasily aware of
the likelihood that this era of peace might be coming to an end.
3
Yet, even so,
Hari Seldon could not repress the surge of satisfaction that he felt as he entered
his laboratory.
How things had
changed.
It had begun
twenty years earlier with his own doodlings on his second-rate Heliconian
computer. It was then that the first hint of what was to become parachaotic
math came to him in a cloudy fashion.
Then there were
the years at Streeling University, when he and Yugo Amaryl, working together,
attempted to renormalize the equations, get rid of the inconvenient infinities,
and find a way around the worst of the chaotic effects. They made very little
progress, indeed.
But now, after
ten years as First Minister, he had a whole floor of the latest computers and a
whole staff of people working on a large variety of problems.
Of necessity,
none of his staff-except for Yugo and himself, of course-could really know much
more than the immediate problem they were dealing with. Each of them worked
with only a small ravine or outcropping on the gigantic mountain range of
psychohistory that only Seldon and Amaryl could see as a mountain range-and
even they could see it only dimly, its peaks hidden in clouds, its slopes
veiled by mist.
Dors Venabili was
right, of course. He would have to begin initiating his people into the entire
mystery. The technique was getting well beyond what only two men could handle.
And Seldon was aging. Even if he could look forward to some additional decades,
the years of his most fruitful breakthroughs were surely behind him.
Even Amaryl would
be thirty-nine within a month and, though that was still young, it was perhaps
not overly young for a mathematician-and he had been working on the problem
almost as long as Seldon himself. His capacity for new and tangential thinking
might be dwindling, too.
Amaryl had seen
him enter and was now approaching. Seldon watched him fondly. Amaryl was as
much a Dahlite as Seldon's foster son, Raych, was, and yet Amaryl, despite his
muscular physique and short stature, did not seem Dahlite at all. He lacked the
mustache, he lacked the accent, he lacked, it would seem, Dahlite consciousness
of any kind. He had even been impervious to the lure of Jo-Jo Joranum, who had
appealed so thoroughly to the people of Dahl.
It was as though
Amaryl recognized no sectoral patriotism, no planetary patriotism, not even
Imperial patriotism. He belonged-completely and entirely-to psychohistory.
Seldon felt a
twinge of insufficiency. He himself remained conscious of his first two decades
on Helicon and there was no way he could keep from thinking of himself as a
Heliconian. He wondered if that consciousness was not sure to betray him by
causing him to skew his thinking about psychohistory. Ideally, to use
psychohistory properly, one should be above worlds and sectors and deal only
with humanity in the faceless abstract-and this was what Amaryl did.
And Seldon
didn't, he admitted to himself, sighing silently.
Amaryl said, We
are making progress, Hari, I suppose.
You suppose,
Yugo? Merely suppose?
I don't want to
jump into outer space without a suit. He said this quite seriously (he did not
have much of a sense of humor, Seldon knew) and they moved into their private
office. It was small, but it was also well shielded.
Amaryl sat down
and crossed his legs. He said, Your latest scheme for getting around chaos may
be working in part-at the cost of sharpness, of course.
Of course. What
we gain in the straightaway, we lose in the roundabouts. That's the way the
Universe works. We've just got to fool it somehow.
We've fooled it
a little bit. It's like looking through frosted glass.
Better than the
years we spent trying to look through lead.
Amaryl muttered
something to himself, then said, We can catch glimmers of light and dark.
Explain!
I can't, but I
have the Prime Radiant, which I've been working on like a-a...
Try lamec.
That's an animal-a beast of burden-we have on Helicon. It doesn't exist on
Trantor.
If the lamec
works hard, then that is what my work on the Prime Radiant has been like.
He pressed the
security keypad on his desk and a drawer unsealed and slid open noiselessly. He
took out a dark opaque cube that Seldon scrutinized with interest. Seldon
himself had worked out the Prime Radiant's circuitry, but Amaryl had put it
together-a clever man with his hands was Amaryl.
The room darkened
and equations and relationships shimmered in the air. Numbers spread out
beneath them, hovering just above the desk surface, as if suspended by
invisible marionette strings.
Seldon said,
Wonderful. Someday, if we live long enough, we'll have the Prime Radiant
produce a river of mathematical symbolism that will chart past and future
history. In it we can find currents and rivulets and work out ways of changing
them in order to make them follow other currents and rivulets that we would
prefer.
Yes, said
Amaryl dryly, if we can manage to live with the knowledge that the actions we
take, which we will mean for the best, may turn out to be for the worst.
Believe me,
Yugo, I never go to bed at night without that particular thought gnawing at me.
Still, we haven't come to it yet. All we have is this which, as you say, is no
more than seeing light and dark fuzzily through frosted glass.
True enough.
And what is it
you think you see, Yugo? Seldon watched Amaryl closely, a little grimly. He
was gaining weight, getting just a bit pudgy. He spent too much time bent over
the computers (and now over the Prime Radiant)-and not enough in physical
activity. And, though he saw a woman now and then, Seldon knew, he had never
married. A mistake! Even a workaholic is forced to take time off to satisfy a
mate, to take care of the needs of children.
Seldon thought of
his own still-trim figure and of the manner in which Dors strove to make him
keep it that way.
Amaryl said,
What do I see? The Empire is in trouble.
The Empire is
always in trouble.
Yes, but it's
more specific. There's a possibility that we may have trouble at the center.
At Trantor?
I presume. Or at
the Periphery. Either there will be a bad situation here-perhaps civil war-or
the outlying Outer Worlds will begin to break away.
Surely it
doesn't take psychohistory to point out these possibilities.
The interesting
thing is that there seems a mutual exclusivity. One or the other. The
likelihood of both together is very small. Here! Look! It's your own
mathematics. Observe!
They bent over
the Prime Radiant display for a long time.
Seldon said
finally, I fail to see why the two should be mutually exclusive.
So do I, Hari,
but where's the value of psychohistory if it shows us only what we would see
anyway? This is showing us something we wouldn't see. What it doesn't show us
is, first, which alternative is better, and second, what to do to make the
better come to pass and depress the possibility of the worse.
Seldon pursed his
lips, then said slowly, I can tell you which alternative is preferable. Let
the Periphery go and keep Trantor.
Really?
No question. We
must keep Trantor stable, if for no other reason than that we're here.
Surely our own
comfort isn't the decisive point.
No, but
psychohistory is. What good will it do us to keep the Periphery intact if
conditions on Trantor force us to stop work on psychohistory? I don't say that
we'll be killed, but we may be unable to work. The development of psychohistory
is on what our fate will depend. As for the Empire, if the Periphery secedes it
will only begin a disintegration that may take a long time to reach the core.
Even if you're
right, Hari, what do we do to keep Trantor stable?
To begin with,
we have to think about it.
A silence fell
between them and then Seldon said, Thinking doesn't make me happy. What if the
Empire is altogether on the wrong track and has been for all its history? I
think of that every time I talk to Gruber.
Who's Gruber?
Mandell Gruber.
A gardener.
Oh. The one who
came running up with the rake to rescue you at the time of the assassination
attempt?
Yes. I've always
been grateful to him for that. He had only a rake against possibly other
conspirators with blasters. That's loyalty. Anyhow, talking to him is like a
breath of fresh air. I can't spend all my time talking to court officials and
to psychohistorians.
Thank you.
Come! You know what
I mean. Gruber likes the open. He wants the wind and the rain and the biting
cold and everything else that raw weather can bring to him. I miss it myself
sometimes.
I don't. I
wouldn't care if I never go out there.
You were brought
up under the dome-but suppose the Empire consisted of simple unindustrialized
worlds, living by herding and farming, with thin populations and empty spaces.
Wouldn't we all be better off?
It sounds
horrible to me.
I found some
spare time to check it as best I could. It seems to me it's a case of unstable
equilibrium. A thinly populated world of the type I describe either grows
moribund and impoverished, falling off into an uncultured near-animal level-or
it industrializes. It is standing on a narrow point and topples over in either
direction and, as it just so happens, almost every world in the Galaxy has
fallen over into industrialization.
Because that's
better.
Maybe. But it
can't continue forever. We're watching the results of the overtoppling now. The
Empire cannot exist for much longer because it has-it has overheated. I can't
think of any other expression. What will Follow we don't know. If, through
psychohistory, we manage to prevent the Fall or, more likely, force a recovery
after the Fall, is that merely to ensure another period of overheating? Is that
the only future humanity has, to push the boulder, like Sisyphus, up to the top
of a hill, only to see it roll to the bottom again?
Who's Sisyphus?
A character in a
primitive myth. Yugo, you must do more reading.
Amaryl shrugged.
So I can learn about Sisyphus? Not important. Perhaps psychohistory will show
us a path to an entirely new society, one altogether different from anything we
have seen, one that would be stable and desirable.
I hope so,
sighed Seldon. I hope so, but there's no sign of it yet. For the near future,
we will just have to labor to let the Periphery go. That will mark the
beginning of the Fall of the Galactic Empire.
4
And so I said,
said Hari Seldon. That will mark the beginning of the Fall of the Galactic
Empire. And so it will, Dors.
Dors listened,
tight-lipped. She accepted Seldon's First Ministership as she accepted
everything-calmly. Her only mission was to protect him and his psychohistory,
but that task, she well knew, was made harder by his position. The best
security was to go unnoticed and, as long as the Spaceship-and-Sun, the symbol
of the Empire, shone down upon Seldon, all of the physical barriers in existence
would be unsatisfactory.
The luxury in
which they now lived-the careful shielding from spy beams, as well as from
physical interference; the advantages to her own historical research of being
able to make use of nearly unlimited funds-did not satisfy her. She would
gladly have exchanged it all for their old quarters at Streeling University.
Or, better yet, for a nameless apartment in a nameless sector where no one knew
them.
That's all very
well, Hari dear, she said, but it's not enough.
What's not
enough?
The information
you're giving me. You say we might lose the Periphery. How? Why?
Seldon smiled
briefly. How nice it would be to know, Dors, but psychohistory is not yet at
the stage where it could tell us.
In your opinion,
then. Is it the ambition of local faraway governors to declare themselves
independent?
That's a factor,
certainly. It's happened in past history-as you know far better than I-but
never for long. Maybe this time it will be permanent.
Because the
Empire is weaker?
Yes, because
trade flows less freely than it once did, because communications are stiffer
than they once were, because the governors in the Periphery are, in actual
fact, closer to independence than they have ever been. If one of them arises
with particular ambitions...
Can you tell
which one it might be?
Not in the
least. All we can force out of psychohistory at this stage is the definite
knowledge that if a governor of unusual ability and ambition arises, he would
find conditions more suitable for his purposes than he would have in the past.
It could be other things, too-some great natural disaster or some sudden civil
war between two distant Outer World coalitions. None of that can be precisely
predicted as of now, but we can tell that anything of the sort that happens
will have more serious consequences than it would have had a century ago.
But if you don't
know a little more precisely what will happen in the Periphery, how can you so
guide actions as to make sure the Periphery goes, rather than Trantor?
By keeping a
close eye on both and trying to stabilize Trantor and not trying to stabilize
the Periphery. We can't expect psychohistory to order events automatically
without much greater knowledge of its workings, so we have to make use of
constant manual controls, so to speak. In days to come, the technique will be
refined and the need for manual control will decrease.
But that, said
Dors, is in days to come. Right?
Right. And even
that is only a hope.
And just what
kind of instabilities threaten Trantor-if we hang on to the Periphery?
The same
possibilities-economic and social factors, natural disasters, ambitious
rivalries among high officials. And something more. I have described the Empire
to Yugo as being overheated-and Trantor is the most overheated portion of all.
It seems to be breaking down. The infrastructure-water supply, heating, waste
disposal, fuel lines, everything-seems to be having unusual problems and that's
something I've been turning my attention to more and more lately.
What about the
death of the Emperor?
Seldon spread his
hands. That happens inevitably, but Cleon is in good health. He's only my age,
which I wish was younger, but he isn't too old. His son is totally inadequate
for the succession, but there will be enough claimants. More than enough to
cause trouble and make his death distressing, but it might not prove a total
catastrophe-in the historic sense.
Let's say his
assassination, then.
Seldon looked up
nervously. Don't say that. Even if we're shielded, don't use the word.
Hari, don't be
foolish. It's an eventuality that must be reckoned with. There was a time when
the Joranumites might have taken power and, if they had, the Emperor, one way
or another...
Probably not. He
would have been more useful as a figurehead. And in any case, forget it.
Joranum died last year on Nishaya, a rather pathetic figure.
He had
followers.
Of course.
Everyone has followers. Did you ever come across the Globalist party on my
native world of Helicon in your studies of the early history of the Kingdom of
Trantor and of the Galactic Empire?
No, I haven't. I
don't want to hurt your feelings, Hari, but I don't recall coming across any
piece of history in which Helicon played a role.
I'm not hurt,
Dors. Happy the world without a history, I always say. In any case, about
twenty-four hundred years ago, there arose a group of people on Helicon who
were quite convinced that Helicon was the only inhabited globe in the Universe.
Helicon was the Universe and beyond it there was only a solid sphere of sky
speckled with tiny stars.
How could they
believe that? said Dors. They were part of the Empire, I presume.
Yes, but
Globalists insisted that all evidence to the effect that the Empire existed was
either illusion or deliberate deceit, that Imperial emissaries and officials
were Heliconians playing a part for some reason. They were absolutely immune to
reason.
And what
happened?
I suppose it's
always pleasant to think that your particular world is the world. At their
peak, the Globalists may have persuaded 10 percent of the population of the
planet to be part of the movement. Only 10 percent, but they were a vehement
minority that drowned out the indifferent majority and threatened to take
over.
But they didn't,
did they?
No, they didn't.
What happened was that Globalism caused a diminishing of Imperial trade and the
Heliconian economy slid into the doldrums. When the belief began to affect the
pocketbooks of the population, it lost popularity rapidly. The rise and fall
puzzled many at the time, but psychohistory, I'm sure, would have shown it to
be inevitable and would have made it unnecessary to give it any thought.
I see. But,
Hari, what is the point of this story? I presume there's some connection with
what we were discussing.
The connection
is that such movements never completely die, no matter how ridiculous their
tenets may seem to sane people. Right now, on Helicon, right now there are
still Globalists. Not many, but every once in a while seventy or eighty of them
get together in what they call a Global Congress and take enormous pleasure in
talking to each other about Globalism. Well, it is only ten years since the
Joranumite movement seemed such a terrible threat on this world and it would
not be at all surprising if there weren't still some remnants left. There may
still be some remnants a thousand years from now.
Isn't it
possible that a remnant may be dangerous?
I doubt it. It
was Jo-Jo's charisma that made the movement dangerous-and he's dead. He didn't
even die a heroic death or one that was in any way remarkable; he just withered
away and died in exile, a broken man.
Dors stood up and
walked the length of the room quickly, swinging her arms at her sides and
clenching her fists. She returned and stood before the seated Seldon.
Hari, she said,
let me speak my mind. If psychohistory points to the possibility of serious
disturbances on Trantor, then if there are Joranumites still left, they may
still be plotting the Emperor's death.
Seldon laughed
nervously. You jump at shadows, Dors. Relax.
But he found that
he could not dismiss what she had said quite that easily.
5
The Wye Sector
had a tradition of opposition to the Entun Dynasty of Cleon I that had been
ruling the Empire for over two centuries. The opposition dated back to a time
when the line of Mayors of Wye had contributed members who had served as
Emperor. The Wyan Dynasty had neither lasted long nor had it been conspicuously
successful, but the people and rulers of Wye found it difficult to forget that
they had once been-however imperfectly and temporarily-supreme. The brief
period when Rashelle, as the self-appointed Mayor of Wye, had challenged the
Empire, eighteen years earlier, had added both to Wye's pride and to its
frustration.
All this made it
reasonable that the small band of leading conspirators should feel as safe in
Wye as they would feel anywhere on Trantor.
Five of them sat
around a table in a room in a run-down portion of the sector. The room was
poorly furnished but well shielded.
In a chair which,
by its marginal superiority in quality to the others, sat the man who might
well be judged to be the leader. He had a thin face, a sallow complexion, and a
wide mouth with lips so pale as to be nearly invisible. There was a touch of
gray in his hair, but his eyes burned with an inextinguishable anger.
He was staring at
the man seated exactly opposite him-distinctly older and softer, his hair
almost white, his plump cheeks tending to quiver when he spoke.
The leader said
sharply, Well? It is quite apparent that you have done nothing. Explain that!
The older man
said, I am an old Joranumite, Namarti. Why do I have to explain my actions?
Gambol Deen
Namarti, once the right-hand man of Laskin Jo-Jo Joranum, said, There are
many old Joranumites. Some are incompetent, some are soft, some have forgotten.
Being an old Joranumite may mean no more than that one is an old fool.
The older man sat
back in his chair. Are you calling me an old fool? Me? Kaspal Kaspalov? I was
with Jo-Jo when you had not yet joined the party, when you were a ragged
nothing in search of a cause.
I am not calling
you a fool, said Namarti sharply. I say simply that some old Joranumites are
fools. You have a chance now to show me that you are not one of them.
My association
with Jo-Jo...
Forget that.
He's dead!
I should think
his spirit lives on.
If that thought
will help us in our fight, then his spirit lives on. But to others-not to us.
We know he made mistakes.
I deny that.
Don't insist on
making a hero out of a mere man who made mistakes. He thought he could move the
Empire by the strength of oratory alone, by words...
History shows
that words have moved mountains in the past.
Not Joranum's
words, obviously, because he made mistakes. He hid his Mycogenian origins far
too clumsily. Worse, he let himself be tricked into accusing First Minister Eto
Demerzel of being a robot. I warned him against that accusation, but he
wouldn't listen-and it destroyed him. Now let's start fresh, shall we? Whatever
use we make of Joranum's memory for outsiders, let us not ourselves be
transfixed by it.
Kaspalov sat
silent. The other three transferred their gaze from Namarti to Kaspalov and
back, content to let Namarti carry the weight of the discussion.
With Joranum's
exile to Nishaya, the Joranumite movement fell apart and seemed to vanish,
said Namarti harshly. It would, indeed, have vanished-but for me. Bit by bit
and rubble by rubble, I rebuilt it into a network that extends over all of
Trantor. You know this, I take it.
I know it,
Chief, mumbled Kaspalov. The use of the title made it plain that Kaspalov was
seeking reconciliation.
Namarti smiled
tightly. He did not insist on the title, but he always enjoyed hearing it used.
He said, You're part of this network and you have your duties.
Kaspalov stirred.
He was clearly debating with himself internally and finally he said slowly,
You tell me, Chief, that you warned Joranum against accusing the old First
Minister of being a robot. You say he didn't listen, but at least you had your
say. May I have the same privilege of pointing out what I think is a mistake
and have you listen to me as Joranum listened to you, even if, like him, you
don't take the advice given you?
Of course you
can speak your piece, Kaspalov. You are here in order that you might do so.
What is your point?
These new
tactics of ours, Chief, are a mistake. They create disruption and do damage.
Of course! They
are designed to do that. Namarti stirred in his seat, controlling his anger
with an effort. Joranum tried persuasion. It didn't work. We will bring Trantor
down by action.
For how long?
And at what cost?
For as long as
it takes-and at very little cost, actually. A power stoppage here, a water
break there, a sewage backup, an air-conditioning halt. Inconvenience and
discomfort-that's all it means.
Kaspalov shook
his head. These things are cumulative.
Of course,
Kaspalov, and we want public dismay and resentment to be cumulative, too.
Listen, Kaspalov. The Empire is decaying. Everyone knows that. Everyone capable
of intelligent thought knows that. The technology will fail here and there,
even if we do nothing. We're just helping it along a little.
It's dangerous,
Chief. Trantor's infrastructure is incredibly complicated. A careless push may
bring it down in ruins. Pull the wrong string and Trantor may topple like a
house of cards.
It hasn't so
far.
It may in the
future. And what if the people find out that we are behind it? They would tear
us apart. There would be no need to call in the security establishment or the
armed forces. Mobs would destroy us.
How would they
ever learn enough to blame us? The natural target for the people's resentment
will be the government-the Emperor's advisers. They will never look beyond
that.
And how do we
live with ourselves, knowing what we have done?
This last was
asked in a whisper, the old man clearly moved by strong emotion. Kaspalov
looked pleadingly across the table at his leader, the man to whom he had sworn
allegiance. He had done so in the belief that Namarti would truly continue to
bear the standard of freedom passed on by Jo-Jo Joranum; now Kaspalov wondered
if this is how Jo-Jo would have wanted his dream to come to pass.
Namarti clucked
his tongue, much as a reproving parent does when confronting an errant child.
Kaspalov, you
can't seriously be turning sentimental on us, are you? Once we are in power, we
will pick up the pieces and rebuild. We will gather in the people with all of
Joranum's old talk of popular participation in government, with greater
representation, and when we are firmly in power we will establish a more
efficient and forceful government. We will then have a better Trantor and a
stronger Empire. We will set up some sort of discussion system whereby
representatives of other worlds can talk themselves into a daze-but we will do
the governing.
Kaspalov sat
there, irresolute.
Namarti smiled
joylessly. You are not certain? We can't lose. It's been working perfectly and
it will continue working perfectly. The Emperor doesn't know what's going on.
He hasn't the faintest notion. And his First Minister is a mathematician. He
ruined Joranum, true, but since then he has done nothing.
He has something
called-called...
Forget it.
Joranum attached a great deal of importance to it, but it was a part of his
being Mycogenian, like his robot mania. This mathematician has nothing...
Historical
psychoanalysis or something like that. I heard Joranum once say...
Forget it. Just
do your part. You handle the ventilation in the Anemoria Sector, don't you?
Very well, then. Have it misfunction in a manner of your choosing. It either
shuts down so that the humidity rises or it produces a peculiar odor or
something else. None of this will kill anyone, so don't get yourself into a
fever of virtuous guilt. You will simply make people uncomfortable and raise
the general level of discomfort and annoyance. Can we depend on you?
But what would
only be discomfort and annoyance to the young and healthy may be more than that
to infants, the aged, and the sick....
Are you going to
insist that no one at all must be hurt?
Kaspalov mumbled
something.
Namarti said,
It's impossible to do anything with a guarantee that no one at all will be
hurt. You just do your job. Do it in such a way that you hurt as few as
possible-if your conscience insists upon it-but do it!
Kaspalov said,
Look! I have one thing more to say, Chief.
Then say it,
said Namarti wearily.
We can spend
years poking at the infrastructure. The time must come when you take advantage
of gathering dissatisfaction to seize the government. How do you intend to do
that?
You want to know
exactly how we'll do it?
Yes. The faster
we strike, the more limited the damage, the more efficiently the surgery is
performed.
Namarti said
slowly, I have not yet decided on the nature of this surgical strike. But it
will come. Until then, will you do your part?
Kaspalov nodded
his head in resignation. Yes, Chief.
Well then, go,
said Namarti with a sharp gesture of dismissal.
Kaspalov rose,
turned, and left. Namarti watched him go. He said to the man at his right,
Kaspalov is not to be trusted. He has sold out and it's only so that he can
betray us that he wants to know my plans for the future. Take care of him.
The other nodded
and all three left, leaving Namarti alone in the room. He switched off the
glowing wall panels, leaving only a lonely square in the ceiling to provide the
light that would keep him from being entirely in the darkness.
He thought: Every
chain has weak links that must be eliminated. We have had to do this in the
past and the result is that we have an organization that is untouchable.
And in the
dimness, he smiled, twisting his face into a kind of feral joy. After all, the
network extended even into the Palace itself-not quite firmly, not quite
reliably, but it was there. And it would be strengthened.
6
The weather was
holding up over the undomed area of the Imperial Palace grounds-warm and sunny.
It didn't often
happen. Hari remembered Dors telling him once how this particular area with its
cold winters and frequent rains had been chosen as the site.
It wasn't
actually chosen, she said. It was a family estate of the Morovian family in
the early days of the Kingdom of Trantor. When the Kingdom became an Empire,
there were numerous sites where the Emperor could live-summer resorts, winter
places, sports lodges, beach properties. And, as the planet was slowly domed,
one reigning Emperor, living here, liked it so much that it remained undomed.
And, just because it was the only area left undomed, it became special-a place
apart-and that uniqueness appealed to the next Emperor... and the next... and
the next.. .. And so, a tradition was born.
And as always,
when hearing something like that, Seldon would think: And how would
psychohistory handle this? Would it predict that one area would remain undomed
but be absolutely unable to say which area? Could it go even so far? Could it
predict that several areas would remain undomed or none-and be wrong? How could
it account for the personal likes and dislikes of an Emperor who happened to be
on the throne at the crucial time and who made a decision in a moment of whimsy
and nothing more. That way lay chaos-and madness.
Cleon I was
clearly enjoying the good weather.
I'm getting old,
Seldon, he said. I don't have to tell you that. We're the same age, you and
I. Surely it's a sign of age when I don't have the impulse to play tennis or go
fishing, even though they've newly restocked the lake, but am willing to walk
gently over the pathways.
He was eating
nuts as he spoke, which resembled what on Seldon's native world of Helicon
would have been called pumpkin seeds, but which were larger and a little less
delicate in taste. Cleon cracked them gently between his teeth, peeled the thin
shells and popped the kernels into his mouth.
Seldon did not
like the taste particularly but, of course, when he was offered some by the
Emperor, he accepted them and ate a few.
The Emperor had a
number of shells in his hand and looked vaguely around for a receptacle of some
sort that he could use for disposal. He saw none, but he did notice a gardener
standing not far away, his body at attention (as it should be in the Imperial
presence) and his head respectfully bowed.
Cleon said,
Gardener!
The gardener
approached quickly. Sire!
Get rid of these
for me, he said, tapping the shells into the gardener's hand.
Yes, Sire.
Seldon said, I
have a few, too, Gruber.
Gruber held out
his hand and said, almost shyly, Yes, First Minister.
He hurried away
and the Emperor looked after him curiously. Do you know the fellow, Seldon?
Yes, indeed,
Sire. An old friend.
The gardener is
an old friend? What is he? A mathematical colleague fallen on hard times?
No, Sire.
Perhaps you remember the story. It was the time whenhe cleared his throat,
searching for the most tactful way to recall the incidentthe sergeant
threatened my life shortly after I was appointed to my present post through your
kindness.
The
assassination attempt. Cleon looked up to heaven, as though seeking patience.
I don't know why everyone is so afraid of that word.
Perhaps, said
Seldon smoothly, slightly despising himself for the ease with which he had
become able to flatter, the rest of us are more perturbed at the possibility
of something untoward happening to our Emperor than you yourself are.
Cleon smiled
ironically. I dare say. And what has this to do with Gruber? Is that his
name?
Yes, Sire.
Mandell Gruber. I'm sure you will recall, if you cast your mind back, that
there was a gardener who came rushing up with a rake to defend me against the
armed sergeant.
Ah yes. Was that
fellow the gardener who did that?
He was the man,
Sire. I've considered him a friend ever since and I meet him almost every time
I am on the grounds. I think he watches for me, feels proprietary toward me.
And, of course, I feel kindly toward him.
I don't blame
you. And while we're on the subject, how is your formidable lady, Dr. Venabili?
I don't see her often.
She's a
historian, Sire. Lost in the past.
She doesn't
frighten you? She'd frighten me. I've been told how she treated that sergeant.
One could almost be sorry for him.
She grows savage
on my behalf, Sire, but has not had occasion to do so lately. It's been very
quiet.
The Emperor
looked after the disappearing gardener. Have we ever rewarded that man?
I have done so,
Sire. He has a wife and two daughters and I have arranged that each daughter
will have a sum of money put aside for the education of any children she may
have.
Very good. But
he needs a promotion, I think. Is he a good gardener?
Excellent,
Sire.
The Chief
Gardener, Malcomber-I'm not quite sure I remember his name-is getting on and
is, perhaps, not up to the job anymore. He is well into his late seventies. Do
you think this Gruber might be able to take over?
I'm certain he
can, Sire, but he likes his present job. It keeps him out in the open in all kinds
of weather.
A peculiar
recommendation for a job. I'm sure he can get used to administration and I do
need someone for some sort of renewal of the grounds. Hmmm. I must think upon
this. Your friend Gruber may be just the man I need. By the way, Seldon, what
did you mean by saying it's been very quiet?
I merely meant,
Sire, that there has been no sign of discord at the Imperial Court. The
unavoidable tendency to intrigue seems to be as near a minimum as it is ever
likely to get.
You wouldn't say
that if you were Emperor, Seldon, and had to contend with all these officials
and their complaints. How can you tell me things are quiet when reports seem to
reach me every other week of some serious breakdown here and there on Trantor?
These things are
bound to happen.
I don't recall
such things happening so frequently in previous years.
Perhaps that was
because they didn't, Sire. The infrastructure grows older with time. To make
the necessary repairs properly would take time, labor, and enormous expense.
This is not a time when a rise in taxes will be looked on favorably.
There's never
any such time. I gather that the people are experiencing serious
dissatisfaction over these breakdowns. It must stop and you must see to it,
Seldon. What does psychohistory say?
It says what
common sense says, that everything is growing older.
Well, all this
is quite spoiling the pleasant day for me. I leave it in your hands, Seldon.
Yes, Sire, said
Seldon quietly.
The Emperor
strode off and Seldon thought that it was all spoiling the pleasant day for
him, too. This breakdown at the center was the alternative he didn't want. But
how was he to prevent it and switch the crisis to the Periphery?
Psychohistory
didn't say.
7
Raych Seldon felt
extraordinarily contented, for it was the first dinner en famille that he had
had in some months with the two people he thought of as his father and mother.
He knew perfectly well that they were not his parents in any biological sense,
but it didn't matter. He merely smiled at them with complete love.
The surroundings
were not as warm as they had been at Streeling in the old days, when their home
had been small and intimate, a virtual gem in the larger setting of the
University. Now, unfortunately, nothing could hide the grandeur of the First
Minister's Palace suite.
Raych sometimes
stared at himself in the mirror and wondered how it could be. He was not tall,
only 163 centimeters in height, distinctly shorter than either parent. He was
rather stocky but muscular-and not fat, with black hair and the distinctive
Dahlite mustache that he kept as dark and as thick as possible.
In the mirror he
could still see the street urchin he had once been before the chanciest of
great chances had dictated his meeting with Hari and Dors. Seldon had been much
younger then and his appearance now made it plain that Raych himself was almost
as old now as Seldon had been when they met. Amazingly, Dors had hardly changed
at all. She was as sleek and fit as the day Raych had first showed Hari and
Dors the way to Mother Rittah's in Billibotton. And he, Raych, born to poverty
and misery, was now a member of the civil service, a small cog in the Ministry
of Population.
Seldon said, How
are things going at the Ministry, Raych? Any progress?
Some, Dad. The
laws are passed. The court decisions are made. Speeches are pronounced. Still,
it's difficult to move people. You can preach brotherhood all you want, but no
one feels like a brother. What gets me is that the Dahlites are as bad as any
of the others. They want to be treated as equals, they say, and so they do,
but, given a chance, they have no desire to treat others as equals.
Dors said, It's
all but impossible to change people's minds and hearts, Raych. It's enough to
try and perhaps eliminate the worst of the injustices.
The trouble is,
said Seldon, that through most of history, no one's been working on this
problem. Human beings have been allowed to fester in the delightful game of
I'm-better-than-you and cleaning up that mess isn't easy. If we allow things to
follow their own bent and grow worse for a thousand years, we can't complain if
it takes, say, a hundred years to work an improvement.
Sometimes, Dad,
said Raych, I think you gave me this job to punish me.
Seldon's eyebrows
raised. What motivation could I have had to punish you?
For feeling
attracted to Joranum's program of sector equality and for greater popular
representation in government.
I don't blame
you for that. These are attractive suggestions, but you know that Joranum and
his gang were using it only as a device to gain power. Afterward...
But you had me
entrap him, despite my attraction to his views.
Seldon said, it
wasn't easy for me to ask you to do that.
And now you keep
me working at the implementation of Joranum's program, just to show me how hard
the task is in reality.
Seldon said to
Dors, How do you like that, Dors? The boy attributes to me a kind of sneaky
underhandedness that simply isn't part of my character.
Surely, said
Dors with the ghost of a smile playing at her lips, you are attributing no
such thing to your father.
Not really. In
the ordinary course of life, there's no one straighter than you, Dad. But if
you have to, you know you can stack the cards. Isn't that what you hope to do
with psychohistory?
Seldon said
sadly, So far, I've done very little with psychohistory.
Too bad. I keep
thinking that there is some sort of psychohistorical solution to the problem of
human bigotry.
Maybe there is,
but, if so, I haven't found it.
When dinner was
over, Seldon said, You and I, Raych, are going to have a little talk now.
Indeed? said
Dors. I take it I'm not invited.
Ministerial
business, Dors.
Ministerial
nonsense, Hari. You're going to ask the poor boy to do something I wouldn't
want him to do.
Seldon said
firmly, I'm certainly not going to ask him to do anything he doesn't want to
do.
Raych said, It's
all right, Mom. Let Dad and me have our talk. I promise I'll tell you all about
it afterward.
Dors's eyes
rolled upward. You two will plead state secrets. I know
As a matter of
fact, said Seldon firmly, that's exactly what I must discuss. And of the
first magnitude. I'm serious, Dors.
Dors rose, her
lips tightening. She left the room with one final injunction. Don't throw the
boy to the wolves, Hari.
And after she was
gone, Seldon said quietly, I'm afraid that throwing you to the wolves is
exactly what I'll have to do, Raych.
8
They faced each
other in Seldon's private office, his thinking place, as he called it. There,
he had spent uncounted hours trying to think his way past and through the
complexities of Imperial and Trantorian government.
He said, Have
you read much about the recent breakdowns we've been having in planetary
services, Raych?
Yes, said
Raych, but you know, Dad, we've got an old planet here. What we gotta do is
get everyone off it, dig the whole thing up, replace everything, add the latest
computerizations, and then bring everyone back-or at least half of everyone.
Trantor would be much better off with only twenty billion people.
Which twenty
billion? asked Seldon smiling.
I wish I knew,
said Raych darkly. The trouble is, we can't redo the planet, so we just gotta
keep patching.
I'm afraid so,
Raych, but there are some peculiar things about it. Now I want you to check me
out. I have some thoughts about this.
He brought a
small sphere out of his pocket.
What's that?
asked Raych.
It's a map of
Trantor, carefully programmed. Do me a favor, Raych, and clear off this
tabletop.
Seldon placed the
sphere more or less in the middle of the table and placed his hand on a keypad
in the arm of his desk chair. He used his thumb to close a contact and the light
in the room went out while the tabletop glowed with a soft ivory light that
seemed about a centimeter deep. The sphere had flattened and expanded to the
edges of the table.
The light slowly
darkened in spots and took on a pattern. After some thirty seconds, Raych said
in surprise, It is a map of Trantor.
Of course. I
told you it was. You can't buy anything like this at a sector mall, though.
This is one of those gadgets the armed forces play with. It could present
Trantor as a sphere, but a planar projection would more clearly show what I
want to show.
And what is it
you want to show, Dad?
Well, in the
last year or two, there have been breakdowns. As you say, it's an old planet
and we've got to expect breakdowns, but they've been coming more frequently and
they would seem, almost uniformly, to be the result of human error.
Isn't that
reasonable?
Yes, of course.
Within limits. This is true, even where earthquakes are involved.
Earthquakes? On
Trantor?
I admit Trantor
is a fairly nonseismic planet-and a good thing, too, because enclosing a world
in a dome when the world is going to shake itself badly several times a year
and smash a section of that dome would be highly impractical. Your mother says
that one of the reasons Trantor, rather than some other world, became the
Imperial capital is that it was geologically moribund-that's her unflattering
expression. Still, it might be moribund, but it's not dead. There are
occasional minor earthquakes three of them in the last two years.
I wasn't aware
of that, Dad.
Hardly anyone
is. The dome isn't a single object. It exists in hundreds of sections, each one
of which can be lifted and set ajar to relieve tensions and compressions in
case of an earthquake. Since an earthquake, when one does occur, lasts for only
ten seconds to a minute, the opening endures only briefly. It comes and goes so
rapidly that the Trantorians beneath are not even aware of it. They are much
more aware of a mild tremor and a faint rattling of crockery than of the
opening and closing of the dome overhead and the slight intrusion of the
outside weather-whatever it is.
That's good,
isn't it?
It should be.
It's computerized, of course. The onset of an earthquake anywhere sets off the
key controls for the opening and closing of that section of the dome so that it
opens just before the vibration becomes strong enough to do damage.
Still good.
But in the case
of the three minor earthquakes over the last two years, the dome controls
failed in each case. The dome never opened and, in each case, repairs were
required. It took some time, it took some money, and the weather controls were
less than optimum for a considerable period of time. Now, what, Raych, are the
chances that the equipment would have failed in all three cases?
Not high?
Not high at all.
Less than one in a hundred. One can suppose that someone had gimmicked the
controls in advance of an earthquake. Now, about once a century, we have a
magma leak, which is far more difficult to control-and I'd hate to think of the
results if it went unnoticed until it was too late. Fortunately that hasn't
happened and isn't likely to, but consider... Here on this map you will find
the location of the breakdowns that have plagued us over the past two years and
that seem to be attributable to human error, though we haven't once been able
to tell to whom each might be attributed.
That's because
everyone is busy protecting his back.
I'm afraid
you're right. That's a characteristic of any bureaucracy and Trantor's is the
largest in history. But what do you think of the locations?
The map had lit
up with bright little red markings that looked like small pustules covering the
land surface of Trantor.
Well, said
Raych cautiously, they seem to be evenly spread.
Exactly. and
that's what's interesting. One would expect that the older sections of Trantor,
the longest-domed sections, would have the most decayed infrastructure and
would be more liable to events requiring quick human decision and laying the
groundwork for possible human error. I'll superimpose the older sections of
Trantor on the map in a bluish color and you'll notice that the breakdowns
don't seem to be taking place any oftener on the blue areas.
And?
And what I think
it means, Raych, is that the breakdowns are not of natural origin but are
deliberately caused and spread out in this fashion to affect as many people as
possible, thus creating a dissatisfaction that is as widespread as possible.
It don't seem
likely.
No? Then let's
look at the breakdowns as spread through time rather than through space.
The blue areas
and the red spots disappeared and, for a time, the map of Trantor was blank-and
then the markings began to appear and disappear one at a time, here and there.
Notice, said
Seldon, that they don't appear in clumps in time, either. One appears, then
another, then another, and so on, almost like the steady ticking of a
metronome.
Do ya think
that's on purpose, too?
It must be.
Whoever is bringing this about wants to cause as much disruption with as little
effort as possible, so there's no use doing two at once, where one will
partially cancel the other in the news and in the public consciousness. Each
incident must stand out in full irritation.
The map went out
and the lights went on. Seldon returned the sphere, shrunken back to its
original size, to his pocket.
Raych said, Who
would be doing all this?
Seldon said
thoughtfully, A few days ago I received a report of a murder in Wye Sector.
That's not
unusual, said Raych. Even though Wye isn't one of your really lawless
sectors, there must be lots of murders there every day.
Hundreds, said
Seldon, shaking his head. We've had bad days when the number of deaths by
violence on Trantor as a whole approaches the million-a-day mark. Generally
there's not much chance of finding every culprit, every murderer. The dead just
enter the books as statistics. This one, however, was unusual. The man had been
knifed-but unskillfully. He was still alive when found, just barely. He had time
to gasp out one word before he died and that word was Chief.
That roused a
certain curiosity and he was actually identified. He works in Anemoria and we
don't know what he was doing in Wye. But some worthy officer managed to dig up
the fact that he was an old Joranumite. His name was Kaspal Kaspalov and he is
well known to have been one of the intimates of Laskin Joranum. And now he's
deadknifed.
Raych frowned.
Do you suspect another Joranumite Conspiracy, Dad? There aren't any
Joranumites around anymore.
It wasn't long
ago that your mother asked me if I thought that the Joranumites were still
active and I told her that any odd belief always retained a certain cadre,
sometimes for centuries. They're usually not very important, just splinter
groups that simply don't count. Still, what if the Joranumites have kept up an
organization, what if they have retained a certain strength, what if they are
capable of killing someone they consider a traitor in their ranks, and what if
they are producing these breakdowns as a preliminary to seizing control?
That's an awful
lot of what if 's, Dad.
I know that. And
I might be totally wrong. The murder happened in Wye and, as it so happens,
there have been no infrastructure breakdowns in Wye.
What does that
prove?
It might prove
that the center of the conspiracy is in Wye and that the conspirators don't
want to make themselves uncomfortable, only the rest of Trantor. It also might
mean that it's not the Joranumites at all but members of the old Wyan family
who still dream of ruling the Empire once again.
Oh boy, Dad.
You're building all this on very little.
I know. Now
suppose it is another Joranumite Conspiracy. Joranum had, as his right-hand
man, Gambol Deen Namarti. We have no record of Namarti's death, no record of
his having left Trantor, no record of his life over the last decade or so.
That's not terribly surprising. After all, it's easy to lose one person among
forty billion. There was a time in my life when I tried to do just that. Of
course, Namarti may be dead. That would be the easiest explanation, but he may
not be.
What do we do
about it?
Seldon sighed.
The logical thing would be to turn to the security establishment, but I can't.
I don't have Demerzel's presence. He could cow people; I can't. He had a
powerful personality; I'm just a-mathematician. I shouldn't be First Minister
at all; I'm not cut out for it. And I wouldn't be-if the Emperor weren't
fixated on psychohistory to a far greater extent than it deserves.
You're kinda
whipping yourself, ain't you, Dad?
Yes. I suppose I
am, but I have a picture of myself going to the security establishment, for
instance, with what I have just shown you on the maphe pointed to the
now-empty tabletopand arguing that we were in great danger of some conspiracy
of unknown consequence and nature. They would listen solemnly and, after I had
left, they would laugh among themselves about the crazy mathematician-and
then do nothing.
Then what do we
do about it? said Raych, returning to the point.
It's what you
will do about it, Raych. I need more evidence and I want you to find it for me.
I would send your mother, but she won't leave me under any circumstances. I
myself can't leave the Palace grounds at this time. Next to Dors and myself, I
trust you. More than Dors and myself, in fact. You're still quite young, you're
strong, you're a better Heliconian Twister than I ever was, and you're smart.
Mind you, now, I
don't want you to risk your life. no heroism, no derring-do. I couldn't face
your mother if anything happened to you. Just find out what you can. Perhaps
you'll find that Namarti is alive and operating-or dead. Perhaps you'll find
out that the Joranumites are an active group-or moribund. Perhaps you'll find
out that the Wyan ruling family is active-or not. Any of that would be
interesting-but not vital. What I want you to find out is whether the
infrastructure breakdowns are of human manufacture, as I think they are, and,
far more important still, if they are deliberately caused, what else the
conspirators plan to do. It seems to me they must have plans for some major
coup and, if so, I must know what that will be.
Raych said
cautiously, Do you have some kinda plan to get me started?
Yes indeed,
Raych. I want you to go down to the area of Wye where Kaspalov was killed. Find
out if you can if he was an active Joranumite and see if you can't join a
Joranumite cell yourself.
Maybe that's
possible. I can always pretend to be an old Joranumite. It's true that I was
pretty young when Jo-Jo was sounding off, but I was very impressed by his
ideas. It's even sorta true.
Well yes, but
there's one important catch. You might be recognized. After all, you're the son
of the First Minister. You have appeared on holovision now and then and you
have been interviewed concerning your views on sector equality.
Sure, but...
No buts, Raych.
You'll wear elevated shoes to add three centimeters to your height and we'll
have someone show you how to change the shape of your eyebrows and make your
face fuller and change the timbre of your voice.
Raych shrugged.
A lotta trouble for nothing.
And, said
Seldon with a distinct quaver, you will shave off your mustache.
Raych's eyes
widened and for a moment he sat there in appalled silence. Finally he said in a
hoarse whisper, Shave my mustache?
Clean as a
whistle. no one would recognize you without it.
But it can't be
done. Like cutting off your... Like castration.
Seldon shook his
head. It's just a cultural curiosity. Yugo Amaryl is as Dahlite as you are and
he wears no mustache.
Yugo is a nut. I
don't think he's alive at all, except for his mathematics.
He's a great
mathematician and the absence of a mustache does not alter that fact. Besides,
it's not castration. Your mustache will grow back in two weeks.
Two weeks! It'll
take two years to reach this-this...
He put his hand
up, as though to cover and protect it.
Seldon said
inexorably, Raych, you have to do it. It's a sacrifice you must make. If you
act as my spy with your mustache, you may-come to harm. I can't take that
chance.
I'd rather die,
said Raych violently.
Don't be
melodramatic, said Seldon severely. You would not rather die and this is
something you must do. Howeverand here he hesitateddon't say anything about
it to your mother. I will take care of that.
Raych stared at
his father in frustration and then said in a low and despairing tone, All
right, Dad.
Seldon said, I
will get someone to supervise your disguise and then you will go to Wye by
air-jet. Buck up, Raych, it's not the end of the world.
Raych smiled
wanly and Seldon watched him leave, a deeply troubled look on his face. A
mustache could easily be regrown, but a son could not. Seldon knew perfectly
well that he was sending Raych into danger.
9
We all have our
small illusions and Cleon-Emperor of the Galaxy, King of Trantor, and a wide
collection of other titles that on rare occasions could be called out in a long
sonorous roll-was convinced that he was a person of democratic spirit.
It always angered
him when he was warned off a course of action by Demerzel (or, later, by
Seldon) on the grounds that such action would be looked on as tyrannical or
despotic.
Cleon was not a
tyrant or despot by disposition, he was certain; he only wanted to take firm
and decisive action.
He spoke many
times with nostalgic approval of the days when Emperors could mingle freely
with their subjects, but now, of course, when the history of coups and
assassinations-actual or attempted-had become a dreary fact of life, the
Emperor had, of necessity, been shut off from the world.
It is doubtful
that Cleon, who had never in his life met with people except under the most
constricted of conditions, would really have felt at home in offhand encounters
with strangers, but he always imagined he would enjoy it. He was excited,
therefore, for the rare chance of talking to one of the underlings on the
grounds, to smile and to doff the trappings of Imperial rule for a few minutes.
It made him feet democratic.
There was this
gardener whom Seldon had spoken of, for instance. It would be fitting, even a
pleasure, to reward him belatedly for his loyalty and bravery-and to do so
himself, rather than leaving it to some functionary.
He therefore
arranged to meet the fellow in the spacious rose garden, which was in full
bloom. That would be appropriate, Cleon thought, but, of course, they would
have to bring the gardener there first. It was unthinkable for the Emperor to
be made to wait. It is one thing to be democratic, quite another to be inconvenienced.
The gardener was
waiting for him among the roses, his eyes wide, his lips trembling. It occurred
to Cleon that it was possible that no one had told the man the exact reason for
the meeting. Well, he would reassure him in kindly fashion-except that, now he
came to think of it, he could not remember the fellow's name.
He turned to one
of the officials at his side and said, What is the gardener's name?
Sire, it is
Mandell Gruber. He has been a gardener here for thirty years.
The Emperor nodded
and said, Ah, Gruber. How glad I am to meet a worthy and hardworking
gardener.
Sire, mumbled
Gruber, his teeth chattering. I am not a man of many talents, but it is always
my best I try to do on behalf of your gracious self.
Of course, of
course, said the Emperor, wondering if the gardener suspected him of sarcasm.
These men of the lower class lacked the finer feelings that came with
refinement and manners, which always made any attempt at democratic display
difficult.
Cleon said, I
have heard from my First Minister of the loyalty with which you once came to
his aid and of your skill in taking care of the grounds. The First Minister
tells me that he and you are quite friendly.
Sire, the First
Minister is most gracious to me, but I know my place. I never speak to him
unless he speaks first.
Quite, Gruber.
That shows good manners on your part, but the First Minister, like myself, is a
man of democratic impulses and I trust his judgment of people.
Gruber bowed low.
The Emperor said,
As you know, Gruber, Chief Gardener Malcomber is quite old and longs to
retire. The responsibilities are becoming greater than even he can bear.
Sire, the Chief
Gardener is much respected by all the gardeners. May he be spared for many
years so that we can all come to him for the benefit of his wisdom and
judgment.
Well said,
Gruber, said the Emperor carelessly, but you very well know that that is just
mumbo-jumbo. He is not going to be spared, at least not with the strength and
wit necessary for the position. He himself requests retirement within the year
and I have granted him that. It remains to find a replacement.
Oh, Sire, there
are fifty men and women in this grand place who could be Chief Gardener.
I dare say,
said the Emperor, but my choice has fallen upon you. The Emperor smiled
graciously. This was the moment he had been waiting for. Gruber would now, he
expected, fall to his knees in an ecstasy of gratitude.
He did not and
the Emperor frowned.
Gruber said,
Sire, it is an honor that is too great for me-entirely.
Nonsense, said
Cleon, offended that his judgment should be called into question. It is about
time that your virtues are recognized. You will no longer have to be exposed to
weather of all kinds at all times of the year. You will have the Chief
Gardener's office, a fine place, which I will have redecorated for you, and
where you can bring your family. You do have a family, don't you, Gruber?
Yes, Sire. A
wife and two daughters. And a son-in-law.
Very good. You
will be very comfortable and you will enjoy your new life, Gruber. You will be
indoors, Gruber, and out of the weather, like a true Trantorian.
Sire, consider
that I am an Anacreonian by upbringing...
I have
considered, Gruber. All worlds are alike to the Emperor. It is done. The new
job is what you deserved.
He nodded his
head and stalked off. Cleon was satisfied with this latest show of his
benevolence. Of course, he could have used a little more gratitude from the
fellow, a little more appreciation, but at least the task was done.
And it was much
easier to have this done than to settle the matter of the failing
infrastructure.
Cleon had, in a
moment of testiness, declared that whenever a breakdown could be attributed to
human error, the human being in question should forthwith be executed.
Just a few
executions, he said, and it will be remarkable how careful everyone will
become.
I'm afraid,
Sire, Seldon had said, that this type of despotic behavior would not
accomplish what you wish. It would probably force the workers to go on
strike-and if you try to force them back to work, there would then be an
insurrection-and if you try to replace them with soldiers, you will find they
do not know how to control the machinery, so that breakdowns will begin to take
place much more frequently.
It was no wonder
that Cleon turned to the matter of appointing a Chief Gardener with relief.
As for Gruber, he
gazed after the departing Emperor with the chill of sheer horror. He was going
to be taken from the freedom of the open air and condemned to the constriction
of four walls. Yet how could one refuse the Emperor?
10
Raych looked in
the mirror of his Wye hotel room somberly (it was a pretty run-down hotel room,
but Raych was not supposed to have too many credits). He did not like what he
saw. His mustache was gone; his sideburns were shortened; his hair was clipped
at the sides and back.
He
looked-plucked.
Worse than that.
As a result of the change in his facial contours, he looked baby-faced.
It was
disgusting.
Nor was he making
any headway. Seldon had given him the security reports on Kaspal Kaspalov's
death, which he had studied. There wasn't much there. Just that Kaspalov had
been murdered and that the local security officers had come up with nothing of
importance in connection with that murder. It seemed quite clear that the
security officers attached little or no importance to it, anyway.
That was not
surprising. In the last century, the crime rate had risen markedly in most
worlds, certainly in the grandly complex world of Trantor, and nowhere were the
local security officers up to the job of doing anything useful about it. In
fact, the security establishment had declined in numbers and efficiency
everywhere and (while this was hard to prove) had become more corrupt. It was
inevitable this should be so, with pay refusing to keep pace with the cost of
living. One must pay civil officials to keep them honest. Failing that, they
would surely make up for their inadequate salaries in other ways.
Seldon had been
preaching this doctrine for some years now, but it did no good. There was no
way to increase wages without increasing taxes and the populace would not sit
still for increased taxes. It seemed they would rather lose ten times the
credits in graft.
It was all part
(Seldon had said) of the general deterioration of Imperial society over the
previous two centuries.
Well, what was
Raych to do? He was here at the hotel where Kaspalov had lived during the days
immediately before his murder. Somewhere in the hotel there might be someone
who had something to do with that-or who knew someone who had.
It seemed to
Raych that he must make himself conspicuous. He must show an interest in
Kaspalov's death and then someone would get interested in him and pick him up.
It was dangerous, but if he could make himself sound harmless enough, they
might not attack him immediately.
Well
Raych looked at
his timeband. There would be people enjoying their predinner aperitifs in the
bar. He might as well join them and see what would happen-if anything.
11
In some respects,
Wye could be quite puritanical. (This was true of all the sectors, though the
rigidity of one sector might be completely different from the rigidity of
another.) Here, the drinks were not alcoholic but were synthetically designed
to stimulate in other ways. Raych did not like the taste, finding himself
utterly unused to it, but it meant that he could sip his drink slowly and look
around.
He caught the eye
of a young woman several tables away and had difficulty in looking away. She
was attractive and it was clear that Wye's ways were not puritanical in every
fashion.
After a few
moments, the young woman smiled slightly and rose. She drifted toward Raych's
table, while Raych watched her speculatively. He could scarcely (he thought
with marked regret) afford a side adventure just now.
She stopped for a
moment when she reached Raych and then let herself slide smoothly into an
adjacent chair.
Hello, she
said. You don't look like a regular here.
Raych smiled.
I'm not. Do you know all the regulars?
Just about, she
said, unembarrassed. My name is Manella. What's yours?
Raych was more
regretful than ever. She was quite tall, taller than he himself was without his
heels-something he always found attractive-had a milky complexion, and long,
softly wavy hair that had distinct glints of dark red in it. Her clothing was
not too garish and she might, if she had tried a little harder, have passed as
a respectable woman of the not-too-hardworking class.
Raych said, My
name doesn't matter. I don't have many credits.
Oh. Too bad.
Manella made a face. Can't you get a few?
I'd like to. I
need a job. Do you know of any?
What kind of
job?
Raych shrugged.
I don't have any experience in anything fancy, but I ain't proud.
Manella looked at
him thoughtfully. I'll tell you what, Mr. Nameless. Sometimes it doesn't take
any credits at all.
Raych froze at
once. He had been successful enough with women, but with his mustache-his
mustache. What could she see in his baby face?
He said, Tell
you what. I had a friend living here a couple of weeks ago and I can't find
him. Since you know all the regulars, maybe you know him. His name is
Kaspalov. He raised his voice slightly. Kaspal Kaspalov.
Manella stared at
him blankly and shook her head. I don't know anybody by that name.
Too bad. He was
a Joranumite and so am L Again, a blank look. Do you know what a Joranumite
is?
She shook her
head. N-no. I've heard the word, but I don't know what it means. Is it some
kind of job?
Raych felt
disappointed.
He said, It
would take too long to explain.
It sounded like a
dismissal and, after a moment of uncertainty, Manella rose and drifted away.
She did not smile and Raych was a little surprised that she had remained as
long as she did.
(Well, Seldon had
always insisted that Raych had the capacity to inspire affection-but surely not
in a businesswoman of this sort. For them, payment was the thing.)
His eyes followed
Manella automatically as she stopped at another table, where a man was seated
by himself. He was of early middle age, with butter-yellow hair, slicked back.
He was very smooth-shaven, but it seemed to Raych that he could have used a
beard, his chin being too prominent and a bit asymmetric.
Apparently
Manella had no better luck with this beardless one. A few words were exchanged
and she moved on. Too bad, but surely it was impossible for her to fail often.
She was unquestionably desirable.
Raych found
himself thinking, quite involuntarily, of what the upshot would be if he, after
all, could... And then Raych realized that he had been joined by someone else.
It was a man this time. It was, in fact, the man to whom Manella had just
spoken. He was astonished that his own preoccupation had allowed him to be thus
approached and, in effect, caught by surprise. He couldn't very well afford
this sort of thing.
The man looked at
him with a glint of curiosity in his eyes. You were just talking to a friend
of mine.
Raych could not
help smiling broadly. She's a friendly person.
Yes, she is. And
a good friend of mine. I couldn't help overhearing what you said to her.
Wasn't nothing
wrong, I think.
Not at all, but
you called yourself a Joranumite.
Raych's heart
jumped. His remark to Manella had hit dead-center after all. It had meant
nothing to her, but it seemed to mean something to her friend.
Did that mean he
was on the road now? Or merely in trouble?
12
Raych did his
best to size up his new companion, without allowing his own face to lose its
smooth naivete. The man had sharp greenish eyes and his right hand clenched
almost threateningly into a fist as it rested on the table.
Raych looked
owlishly at the other and waited.
Again, the man
said, I understand you call yourself a Joranumite.
Raych did his
best to look uneasy. It was not difficult. He said, Why do you ask, mister?
Because I don't
think you're old enough.
I'm old enough.
I used to watch Jo-Jo Joranum's speeches on holovision.
Can you quote
them?
Raych shrugged.
No, but I got the idea.
You're a brave
young man to talk openly about being a Joranumite. Some people don't like
that.
I'm told there
are lots of Joranumites in Wye.
That may be. Is
that why you came here?
I'm looking for
a job. Maybe another Joranumite would help me.
There are
Joranumites in Dahl, too. Where are you from?
There was no
question that he recognized Raych's accent. That could not be disguised.
He said, I was
born in Millimaru, but I lived mostly in Dahl when I was growing up.
Doing what?
Nothing much.
Going to school some.
And why are you
a Joranumite?
Raych let himself
heat up a bit. He couldn't have lived in downtrodden, discriminated-against
Dahl without having obvious reasons for being a Joranumite. He said, Because I
think there should be more representative government in the Empire, more
participation by the people, and more equality among the sectors and the
worlds. Doesn't anyone with brains and a heart think that?
And you want to
see the Emperorship abolished?
Raych paused. One
could get away with a great deal in the way of subversive statements, but
anything overtly anti-Emperor was stepping outside the bounds. He said, I
ain't saying that. I believe in the Emperor, but ruling a whole Empire is too
much for one man.
It isn't one
man. There's a whole Imperial bureaucracy. What do you think of Hari Seldon,
the First Minister?
Don't think
nothing about him. Don't know about him.
All you know is
that people should be more represented in the affairs of government. Is that
right?
Raych allowed
himself to look confused. That's what Jo-Jo Joranum used to say. I don't know
what you call it. I heard someone once call it democracy, but I don't know
what that means.
Democracy is
something that some worlds have tried. Some still do. I don't know that those
worlds are run better than other worlds. So you're a democrat?
Is that what you
call it? Raych let his head sink, as if in deep thought. I feel more at home
as a Joranumite.
Of course, as a
Dahlite...
I just lived
there awhile.
...you're all
for people's equalities and such things. The Dahlites, being an oppressed
group, would naturally think in that fashion.
I hear that Wye
is pretty strong in Joranumite thinking. They're not oppressed.
Different
reason. The old Wye Mayors always wanted to be Emperors. Did you know that?
Raych shook his
head.
Eighteen years
ago, said the man, Mayor Rashelle nearly carried through a coup in that
direction. So the Wyans are rebels, not so much Joranumite as anti-Cleon.
Raych said, I
don't know nothing about that. I ain't against the Emperor.
But you are for
popular representation, aren't you? Do you think that some sort of elected
assembly could run the Galactic Empire without bogging down in politics and
partisan bickering? Without paralysis?
Raych said, Huh?
I don't understand.
Do you think a
great many people could come to some decision quickly in times of emergency? Or
would they just sit around and argue?
I don't know,
but it doesn't seem right that just a few people should have all the say over
all the worlds.
Are you willing
to fight for your beliefs? Or do you just like to talk about them?
No one asked me
to do any fighting, said Raych.
Suppose someone
did. How important do you think your beliefs about democracy-or Joranumite
philosophy-are?
I'd fight for
them-if I thought it would do any good.
There's a brave
lad. So you came to Wye to fight for your beliefs.
No, said Raych
uncomfortably, I can't say I did. I came to look for a job, sir. It ain't easy
to find no jobs these days-and I ain't got no credits. A guy's gotta live.
I agree. What's
your name?
The question shot
out without warning, but Raych was ready for it. Planchet, sir.
First or last
name?
Only name, as
far as I know.
You have no
credits and, I gather, very little education.
Afraid so.
And no
experience at any specialized job?
I ain't worked
much, but I'm willing.
All right. I'll
tell you what, Planchet. He took a small white triangle out of his pocket and
pressed it in such a way as to produce a printed message on it. Then he rubbed
his thumb across it, freezing it. I'll tell you where to go. You take this with
you and it may get you a job.
Raych took the
card and glanced at it. The signals seemed to fluoresce, but Raych could not
read them. He looked at the other man warily. What if they think I stole it?
It can't be
stolen. It has my sign on it and now it has your name.
What if they ask
me who you are?
They won't. You
say you want a job. There's your chance. I don't guarantee it, but there's your
chance. He gave him another card. This is where to go. Raych could read this
one.
Thank you, he
mumbled.
The man made
little dismissing gestures with his hand.
Raych rose and
left-and wondered what he was getting into.
13
Up and down. Up
and down. Up and down.
Gleb Andorin
watched Gambol Deen Namarti trudging up and down. Namarti was obviously unable
to sit still under the driving force of the violence of his passion.
Andorin thought:
He's not the brightest man in the Empire or even in the movement, not the
shrewdest, certainly not the most capable of rational thought. He has to be
held back constantly-but he's driven as none of the rest of us are. We would
give up, let go, but he won't. Push, pull, prod, kick. Well, maybe we need
someone like that. We must have someone like that or nothing will ever happen.
Namarti stopped,
as though he felt Andorin's eyes boring into his back. He turned around and
said, If you're going to lecture me again on Kaspalov, don't bother.
Andorin shrugged
lightly. Why bother lecturing you? The deed is done. The harm-if any-has been
done.
What harm,
Andorin? What harm? If I had not done it, then we would have been harmed. The
man was on the edge of being a traitor. Within a month, he would have gone
running
I know. I was
there. I heard what he said.
Then you
understand there was no choice. no choice. You don't think I liked to have an
old comrade killed, do you? I had no choice.
Very well. You
had no choice.
Namarti resumed
his tramping, then turned again. Andorin, do you believe in gods?
Andorin stared,
In what?
In gods.
I never heard
the word. What is it?
Namarti said,
It's not Galactic Standard. Supernatural influences. How's that?
Oh, supernatural
influences. Why didn't you say so? No, I don't believe in that sort of thing.
By definition, something is supernatural if it exists outside the laws of
nature and nothing exists outside the laws of nature. Are you turning into a
mystic? Andorin asked it as though he were joking, but his eyes narrowed with
sudden concern.
Namarti stared
him down. Those blazing eyes of his could stare anyone down. Don't be a fool.
I've been reading about it. Trillions of people believe in supernatural
influences.
I know, said
Andorin. They always have.
They've done so
since before the beginning of history. The word 'gods' is of unknown origin. It
is, apparently, a hangover from some primeval language of which no trace any
longer exists, except that word. Do you know how many different varieties of
beliefs there are in various kinds of gods?
Approximately as
many as the varieties of fools among the Galactic population, I should say.
Namarti ignored
that. Some people think the word dates back to the time when all humanity
existed on but a single world.
Itself a
mythological concept. That's just as lunatic as the notion of supernatural
influences. There never was one original human world.
There would have
to be, Andorin, said Namarti, annoyed. Human beings can't have evolved on
different worlds and ended as a single species.
Even so, there's
no effective human world. It can't be located, it can't he defined, so it can't
be spoken of sensibly, so it effectively doesn't exist.
These gods,
said Namarti, continuing to follow his own line of thought, are supposed to
protect humanity and keep it safe or at least to care for those portions of
humanity that know how to make use of the gods. At a time when there was only
one human world, it makes sense to suppose they would be particularly
interested in caring for that one tiny world with a few people. They would care
for such a world as though they were big brothers-or parents.
Very nice of
them. I'd like to see them try to handle the entire Empire.
What if they
could? What if they were infinite?
What if the Sun
were frozen? What's the use of what if?
I'm just
speculating. Just thinking. Haven't you ever let your mind wander freely? Do
you always keep everything on a leash?
I should imagine
that's the safest way, keeping it on a leash. What does your wandering mind
tell you, Chief?
Namarti's eyes
flashed at the other, as though he suspected sarcasm, but Andorin's face
remained good-natured and blank.
Namarti said,
What my mind is telling me is this... If there are gods, they must be on our
side.
Wonderful-if
true. Where's the evidence?
Evidence?
Without the gods, it would just be a coincidence, I suppose, but a very useful
one. Suddenly Namarti yawned and sat down, looking exhausted.
Good, thought
Andorin. His galloping mind has finally wound itself down and he may talk sense
now.
This matter of
internal breakdown of the infrastructure... said Namarti, his voice distinctly
lower.
Andorin
interrupted. You know, Chief, Kaspalov was not entirely wrong about this. The
longer we keep it up, the greater the chance that Imperial forces will discover
the cause. The whole program must, sooner or later, explode in our faces.
Not yet. So far,
everything is exploding in the Imperial face. The unrest on Trantor is
something I can feel. He raised his hands, rubbing his fingers together. I
can feel it. And we are almost through. We are ready for the next step.
Andorin smiled
humorlessly. I'm not asking for details, Chief. Kaspalov did and look where
that got him. I am not Kaspalov.
It's precisely
because you're not Kaspalov that I can tell you. And because I know something
now I didn't then.
I presume, said
Andorin, only half-believing what he was saying, that you intend a strike on
the Imperial Palace grounds.
Namarti looked
up. Of course. What else is there to do? The problem, however, is how to
penetrate the grounds effectively. I have my sources of information there, but
they are only spies. I'll need men of action on the spot.
To get men of
action into the most heavily guarded region in all the galaxy will not be
easy.
Of course not.
That's what has been giving me an unbearable headache till now-and then the
gods intervened.
Andorin said
gently (it was taking all his self-restraint to keep from showing his disgust),
I don't think we need a metaphysical discussion. What has happened-leaving the
gods to one side?
My information
is that His Gracious and Ever to Be Beloved Emperor Cleon I has decided to
appoint a new Chief Gardener. This is the first new appointee in nearly a
quarter of a century.
And if so?
Do you see no
significance?
Andorin thought
for a moment. I am not a favorite of your gods. I don't see any significance.
If you have a
new Chief Gardener, Andorin, the situation is the same as having a new
administrator of any other type-the same as if you had a new First Minister or
a new Emperor. The new Chief Gardener will certainly want his own staff. He
will force into retirement what he considers dead wood and will hire younger
gardeners by the hundreds.
That's
possible.
It's more than
possible. It's certain. Exactly that happened when the present Chief Gardener
was appointed and the same when his predecessor was appointed and so on.
Hundreds of strangers from the Outer Worlds...
Why from the
Outer Worlds?
Use your
brains-if you have any, Andorin. What do Trantorians know about gardening when
they've lived under domes all their lives, tending potted plants, zoos, and
carefully arranged crops of grains and fruit trees? What do they know about
life in the wild?
Ahhh. Now I
understand.
So there will be
these strangers flooding the grounds. They will be carefully checked, I
presume, but they won't be as tightly screened as they would be if they were
Trantorians. And that means, surely, that we should be able to supply just a
few of our own people, with false identifications, and get them inside. Even if
some are screened out, a few might make it-a few must make it. Our people will
enter, despite the supertight security established since the failed coup in the
early days of First Minister Seldon. (He virtually spat out the name, as he
always did.) We'll finally have our chance.
Now it was
Andorin who felt dizzy, as if he'd fallen into a spinning vortex. It seems odd
for me to say so, Chief, but there is something to this gods business after
all, because I have been waiting to tell you something that I now see fits in
perfectly.
Namarti stared at
the other suspiciously and looked around the room, as though he suddenly feared
for security. But such fear was groundless. The room was located deep in an
old-fashioned residential complex and was well shielded. no one could overhear
and no one, even with detailed directions, could find it easily-nor get through
the layers of protection provided by loyal members of the organization.
Namarti said,
What are you talking about?
I've found a man
for you. A young man-very naive. A quite likable fellow, the kind you feel you
can trust as soon as you see him. He's got an open face, wide-open eyes; he's
lived in Dahl; he's an enthusiast for equality; he thinks Joranum was the
greatest thing since Dahlite cokeicers; and I'm sure we can easily talk him
into doing anything for the cause.
For the cause?
said Namarti, whose suspicions were not in the least alleviated. Is he one of
us?
Actually, he's
not one of anything. He's got some vague notions in his head that Joranum
wanted sector equality.
That was his
lure. Sure.
It's ours, too,
but the kid believes it. He talks about equality and popular participation in
government. He even mentioned democracy.
Namarti
snickered. In twenty thousand years, democracy has never been used for very
long without falling apart.
Yes, but that's
not our concern. It's what drives the young man and I tell you, Chief, I knew
we had our tool just about the moment I saw him, but I didn't know how we could
possibly use him. Now I know. We can get him onto the Imperial Palace grounds
as a gardener.
How? Does he
know anything about gardening?
No. I'm sure he
doesn't. He's never worked at anything but unskilled labor. He's operating a
hauler right now and I think that he had to be taught how to do that. Still, if
we can get him in as a gardener's helper, if he just knows how to hold a pair
of shears, then we've got it.
Got what?
Got someone who
can approach anyone we wish-and do so without raising the flutter of a
suspicion-and get close enough to strike. I'm telling you he simply exudes a kind
of honorable stupidity, a kind of foolish virtue that inspires confidence.
And he'll do
what we tell him to do?
Absolutely.
How did you meet
this person?
It wasn't I. It
was Manella who really spotted him.
Who?
Manella. Manella
Dubanqua.
Oh. That friend
of yours. Namarti's face twisted into a look of prissy disapproval.
She's the friend
of many people, said Andorin tolerantly. That's one of the things that makes
her so useful. She can weigh a man quickly and with very little to go on. She
talked to this fellow because she was attracted to him at sight-and I assure
you that Manella is not one who is usually attracted by anything but the bottom
line-so, you see, this man is rather unusual. She talked to this fellow-his
name is Planchet, by the way-and then told me, I have a live one for you,
Gleb. I'll trust her on the matter of live ones any day of the week.
Namarti said
slyly, And what do you think this wonderful tool of yours would do once he had
the run of the grounds, eh, Andorin?
Andorin took a
deep breath. What else? If we do everything right, he will dispose of our dear
Emperor Cleon, First of that Name, for us.
Namarti's face
blazed into anger. What? Are you mad? Why should we want to kill Cleon? He's
our hold on the government. He's the facade behind which we can rule. He's our
passport to legitimacy. Where are your brains? We need him as a figurehead. He
won't interfere with us and we'll be stronger for his existence.
Andorin's fair
face turned blotchy red and his good humor finally exploded. What do you have
in mind, then? What are you planning? I'm getting tired of always having to
second-guess.
Namarti raised
his hand. All right. All right. Calm down. I meant no harm. But think a bit,
will you? Who destroyed Joranum? Who destroyed our hopes ten years ago? It was
that mathematician. And it is he who rules the Empire now with his idiotic talk
about psychohistory. Cleon is nothing. It is Hari Seldon we must destroy. It is
Hari Seldon whom I've been turning into an object of ridicule with these
constant breakdowns. The miseries they entail are placed at his doorstep. It is
all being interpreted as his inefficiency, his incapacity. There was a trace
of spittle in the corners of Namarti's mouth. When he's cut down, there will
be a cheer from the Empire that will drown out every holovision report for
hours. It won't even matter if they know who did it. He raised his hand and
let it drop, as if he were plunging a knife into someone's heart. We will be
looked upon as heroes of the Empire, as saviors. Eh? Eh? Do you think your
youngster can cut down Hari Seldon?
Andorin had
recovered his sense of equanimity-at least outwardly.
I'm sure he
would, he said with forced lightness. For Cleon, he might have some respect;
the Emperor has a mystical aura about him, as you know. (He stressed the you
faintly and Namarti scowled.) He would have no such feelings about Seldon.
Inwardly,
however, Andorin was furious. This was not what he wanted. He was being
betrayed.
14
Manella brushed
the hair out of her eyes and smiled up at Raych. I told you it wouldn't cost
you any credits.
Raych blinked and
scratched at his bare shoulder. But are you going to ask me for some now?
She shrugged and
smiled rather impishly. Why should I?
Why shouldn't
you?
Because I'm
allowed to take my own pleasure sometimes.
With me?
There's no one
else here.
There was a long
pause and then Manella said soothingly, Besides, you don't have that many
credits anyway. How's the job?
Raych said, Ain't
much but better than nothing. Lots better. Did you tell that guy to get me
one?
Manella shook her
head slowly. You mean Gleb Andorin? I didn't tell him to do anything. I just
said he might be interested in you.
Is he going to
be annoyed because you and I...
Why should he?
None of his business. And none of yours, either.
What's he do? I
mean, what does he work at?
I don't think he
works at anything. He's rich. He's a relative of the old Mayors.
Of Wye?
Right. He
doesn't like the Imperial government. None of those old Mayor people do. He
says Cleon should...
She stopped
suddenly and said, I'm talking too much. Don't you go repeating anything I
say.
Me? I ain't
heard you say nothing at all. And I ain't going to.
All right.
But what about
Andorin? Is he high up in Joranumite business? Is tae an important guy there?
I wouldn't
know.
Don't he ever
talk about that kind of stuff?
Not to me.
Oh, said Raych,
trying not to sound annoyed.
Manella looked at
him shrewdly. Why are you so interested?
I want to get in
with them. I figure I'll get higher up that way. Better job. More credits. You
know.
Maybe Andorin
will help you. He likes you. I know that much.
Could you make
him like me more?
I can try. I
don't know why he shouldn't. I like you. I like you more than I like him.
Thank you,
Manella. I like you, too. A lot. He ran his hand down the side of her body and
wished ardently that he could concentrate more on her and less on his assignment.
15
Gleb Andorin,
said Hari Seldon wearily, rubbing his eyes.
And who is he?
asked Dors Venabili, her mood as cold as it had teen every day since Raych had
left.
Until a few days
ago I never heard of him, said Seldon. That's the trouble with trying to run
a world of forty billion people. You never hear of anyone, except for the few
who obtrude themselves on your notice. With all the computerized information in
the world, Trantor remains a planet of anonymities. We can drag up people with
their reference numbers and their statistics, but whom do we drag up? Add
twenty-five million Outer Worlds and the wonder is that the Galactic Empire has
remained a working phenomenon for all these millennia. Frankly I think it has
existed only because it very largely runs itself. And now it is finally running
down.
So much for
philosophizing, Hari, said Dors. Who is this Andorin?
Someone I admit
I ought to have known about. I managed to cajole the security establishment
into calling up some files on him. He's a member of the Wyan Mayoralty
family-the most prominent member, in fact so the security people have kept tabs
on him. They think he has ambitions but is too much of a playboy to do anything
about them.
And is he
involved with the Joranumites?
Seldon made an
uncertain gesture. I'm under the impression that the security establishment
knows nothing about the Joranumites. That may mean that the Joranumites no
longer exist or that, if they do, they are of no importance. It may also mean
that the security establishment just isn't interested. Nor is there any way in
which I can force it to be interested. I'm only thankful the officers give me
any information at all. And I am the First Minister.
Is it possible
that you're not a very good First Minister? said Dors, dryly.
That's more than
possible. It's probably been generations since there's been an appointee less
suited to the job than myself. But that has nothing to do with the security
establishment. It's a totally independent arm of the government. I doubt that
Cleon himself knows much about it, though, in theory, the security officers are
supposed to report to him through their director. Believe me, if we only knew
more about the security establishment, we'd be trying to stick its actions into
our psychohistorical equations, such as they are.
Are the security
officers on our side, at least?
I believe so,
but I can't swear to it.
And why are you
interested in this what's-his-name?
Gleb Andorin.
Because I received a roundabout message from Raych.
Dors's eyes
flashed. Why didn't you tell me? Is he all right?
As far as I
know, but I hope he doesn't try any further messages. If he's caught
communicating, he won't be all right. In any case, he has made contact with
Andorin.
And the
Joranumites, too?
I don't think
so. It would sound unlikely, for the connection is not something that would
make sense. The Joranumite movement is predominantly lower-class-a proletarian
movement, so to speak. And Andorin is an aristocrat of aristocrats. What would
he be doing with the Joranumites?
If he's of the
Wyan Mayoralty family, he might aspire to the Imperial throne, might he not?
They've been
aspiring for generations. You remember Rashelle, I trust. She was Andorin's
aunt.
Then he might be
using the Joranumites as a stepping-stone, don't you think?
If they exist.
And if they do-and if a stepping-stone is what Andorin wants-I think he'd find
himself playing a dangerous game. The Joranumites-if they exist-would have
their own plans and a man like Andorin may find he's simply riding a greti...
What's a greti?
Some extinct
animal of a ferocious type, I think. It's just a proverbial phrase back on
Helicon. If you ride a greti, you find you can't get off, for then it will eat
you.
Seldon paused.
One more thing. Raych seems to be involved with a woman who knows Andorin and
through whom, he thinks, he may get important information. I'm telling you this
now so that you won't accuse me afterward of keeping anything from you.
Dors frowned. A
woman?
One, I gather,
who knows a great many men who will talk to her unwisely, sometimes, under
intimate circumstances.
One of those.
Her frown deepened. I don't like the thought of Raych...
Come, come.
Raych is thirty years old and undoubtedly has much experience. You can leave
this woman-or any woman, I think-safely to Raych's good sense. He turned
toward Dors with a look so worn, so weary, and said, Do you think I like this?
Do you think I like any of this?
And Dors could
find nothing to say.
16
Gambol Deen
Namarti was not, at even the best of times, noted for his politeness and
suavity-and the approaching climax of a decade of planning had left his
disposition sour.
He rose from his
chair with some agitation and said, You've taken your time getting here,
Andorin.
Andorin shrugged.
But I'm here.
And this young
man of yours-this remarkable tool that you're touting. Where is he?
He'll be here
eventually.
Why not now?
Andorin's rather
handsome head seemed to sink a bit, as though he were lost in thought or coming
to a decision, and then he said abruptly, I don't want to bring him until I
know where I stand.
What does that
mean?
Simple words in
Galactic Standard. How long has it been your aim to get rid of Hari Seldon?
Always! Always!
Is that so hard to understand? We deserve revenge for what he did to Jo-Jo.
Even if he hadn't done that, since he's the First Minister, we'd have to put
him out of the way.
But it's
Cleon-Cleon-who must be brought down. If not only he, then at least he, in
addition to Seldon.
Why does a
figurehead concern you?
You weren't born
yesterday. I've never had to explain my part in this because you're not so
ignorant a fool as not to know. What can I possibly care about your plans if
they don't include a replacement on the throne?
Namarti laughed.
Of course. I've known for a long time that you look upon me as your footstool,
your way of climbing up to the Imperial throne.
Would you expect
anything else?
Not at all. I
will do the planning, take the chances, and then, when all is quite done, you
gather in the reward. It makes sense, doesn't it?
Yes, it does
make sense, for the reward will be yours, too. Won't you become the First Minister?
Won't you be able to count on the full support of a new Emperor, one who is
filled with gratitude? Won't I beand his face twisted with irony as he spat
out the wordsthe new figurehead?
Is that what you
plan to be? A figurehead?
I plan to be the
Emperor. I supplied advances of credit when you had none. I supplied the cadre
when you had none. I supplied the respectability you needed to build a large
organization here in Wye. I can still withdraw everything I've brought in.
I don't think
so.
Do you want to
risk it? Don't think you can treat me the way you treated Kaspalov, either. If
anything happens to me, Wye will become uninhabitable for you and yours-and you
will find that no other sector will supply you with what you need.
Namarti sighed.
Then you insist on having the Emperor killed.
I didn't say
killed. I said brought down. The details I leave to you. This last
statement was accompanied with an almost dismissive wave of the hand, a flick
of the wrist, as if Andorin were already sitting on the Imperial throne.
And then you'll
be Emperor?
Yes.
No, you won't.
You'll be dead-and not at my hands, either. Andorin, let me teach you some of
the facts of life. If Cleon is killed, then the matter of the succession comes
up and, to avoid civil war, the Imperial Guard will at once kill every member
of the Wyan Mayoral family they can find-you first of all. On the other hand,
if only the First Minister is killed, you will be safe.
Why?
A First Minister
is only a First Minister. They come and go. It is possible that Cleon himself
may have grown tired of him and arranged the murder. Certainly we would see to
it that rumors of this sort are spread. The Imperial Guard would hesitate and
would give us a chance to put the new government into place. Indeed, it is
quite possible that they themselves would be grateful for the end of Seldon.
And with the new
government in place, what am I to do? Keep on waiting? Forever?
No. Once I'm
First Minister, there will be ways of dealing with Cleon. I may even be able to
do something with the Imperial Guard-and even with the security
establishment-and use them all as my instruments. I will then manage to find
some safe way of getting rid of Cleon and replacing him with you.
Andorin burst
out, Why should you?
Namarti said,
What do you mean, why should I?
You have a
personal grudge against Seldon. Once he is gone, why should you run unnecessary
risks at the highest level? You will make your peace with Cleon and I will have
to retire to my crumbling estate and my impossible dreams. And perhaps, to play
it safe, you will have me killed.
Namarti said,
No! Cleon was born to the throne. He comes from several generations of
Emperors-the proud Entun Dynasty. He would he very difficult to handle, a
plague. You, on the other hand, would come to the throne as a member of a new
dynasty, without any strong ties to tradition, for the previous Wyan Emperors
were, you will admit, totally undistinguished. You will be seated on a shaky
throne and will need someone to support you-me. And I will need someone who is
dependent upon me and whom I can therefore handle you. Come, Andorin, ours is
not a marriage of love, which fades in a year; it is a marriage of convenience,
which can last as long as we both live. Let us trust each other.
You swear I will
be Emperor.
What good would
swearing do if you couldn't trust my word? Let us say I would find you an
extraordinarily useful Emperor and I would want you to replace Cleon as soon as
that can safely be managed. Now introduce me to this man you think will be the
perfect tool for your purposes.
Very well. And
remember what makes him different. I have studied him. He's a not-very-bright
idealist. He will do what he's told, unconcerned by danger, unconcerned by
second thoughts. And he exudes a kind of trustworthiness so that his victim
will trust him, even if he has a blaster in his hand.
I find that
impossible to believe.
Wait till you
meet him, said Andorin.
17
Raych kept his
eyes down. He had taken a quick look at Namarti and it was all he needed. He
had met the man ten years before, when Raych had been sent to lure Jo-Jo
Joranum to his destruction, and one look was more than enough.
Namarti had
changed little in ten years. Anger and hatred were still the dominant
characteristics one could see in him-or that Raych could see in him, at any
rate, for he realized he was not an impartial witness-and those seemed to have
marinated him into leathery permanence. His face was a trifle more gaunt, his
hair was flecked with gray, but his thin-lipped mouth was set in the same harsh
line and his dark eyes were as brilliantly dangerous as ever.
That was enough
and Raych kept his eyes averted. Namarti, he felt, was not the type of person
who would take to someone who could stare lm straight in the face.
Namarti seemed to
devour Raych with his own eyes, but the slight sneer his face always seemed to
wear remained.
He turned to
Andorin, who stood uneasily to one side, and said, quite ;is though the subject
of conversation were not present, This is the man, then.
Andorin nodded and
his lips moved in a soundless Yes, Chief.
Namarti said to
Raych abruptly, Your name.
Planchet, sir.
You believe in
our cause?
Yes, sir. He
spoke carefully, in accordance with Andorin's instructions. I am a democrat
and want greater participation of the people in the governmental process.
Namarti's eyes
flicked in Andorin's direction. A speechmaker.
He looked back at
Raych. Are you willing to undertake risks for the cause?
Any risk, sir.
You will do as
you are told? no questions? no hanging back?
I will follow
orders.
Do you know
anything about gardening?
Raych hesitated.
No, sir.
You're a
Trantorian, then? Born under the dome?
I was born in
Millimaru, sir, and I was brought up in Dahl.
Very well, said
Namarti. Then to Andorin, Take him out and deliver him temporarily to the men
waiting there. They will take good care of him. Then come back, Andorin. I want
to speak to you.
When Andorin
returned, a profound change had come over Namarti. Ibis eyes were glittering
and his mouth was twisted into a feral grin.
Andorin, he
said, the gods we spoke of the other day are with us to an extent I couldn't
have imagined.
I told you the
man was suitable for our purposes.
Far more
suitable than you think. You know, of course, the tale of how Hari Seldon our
revered First Minister, sent his son-or foster son, rather-to see Joranum and
to set the trap into which Joranum, against my advice, fell.
Yes, said
Andorin, nodding wearily, I know the story. He said it with the air of one
who knew the story entirely too well.
I saw that boy
only that once, but his image burned into my brain. Do you suppose that ten
years' passage and false heels and a shaved mustache could fool me? That
Planchet of yours is Raych, the foster son of Hari Seldon.
Andorin paled and
held his breath for a moment. He said, Are you sure of that, Chief?
As sure as I am
that you're standing here in front of me and that you have introduced an enemy
into our midst.
I had no
idea...
Don't get
nervous, said Namarti. I consider it the best thing you have ever done in
your idle aristocratic life. You have played the role that the gods have marked
out for you. If I had not known who he was, he might have fulfilled the
function for which he was undoubtedly intended: to be a spy in our midst and an
informant of our most secret plans. But since I know who he is, it won't work
that way. Instead, we now have everything. Namarti rubbed his hands together
in delight and, haltingly, as if he realized how far out of character it was
for him, he smiled-and laughed.
18
Manella said
thoughtfully, I guess I won't be seeing you anymore, Planchet.
Raych was drying
himself after his shower. Why not?
Gleb Andorin
doesn't want me to.
Why not?
Manella shrugged
her smooth shoulders. He says you have important work to do and no more time
to fool around. Maybe he means you'll get a better job.
Raych stiffened.
What kind of work? Did he mention anything in particular?
No, but he said
he would be going to the Imperial Sector.
Did he? Does he
often tell you things like that?
You know how it
is, Planchet. When a fellow's in bed with you, he talks a lot.
I know, said
Raych, who was always careful not to. What else does he say?
Why do you ask?
She frowned a bit. He always asks about you, too. I noticed that about men.
They're curious about each other. Why is that, do you suppose?
What do you tell
him about me?
Not much. Just
that you're a very decent sort of guy. Naturally I don't tell him that I like
you better than I like him. That would hurt his feelings-and it might hurt me,
too.
Raych was getting
dressed. So it's good-bye, then.
For a while, I
suppose. Gleb may change his mind. Of course, I'd like to go to the Imperial
Sector-if he'd take me. I've never been there.
Raych almost
slipped, but he managed to cough, then said, I've never been there, either.
It's got the
biggest buildings and the nicest places and the fanciest restaurants-and that's
where the rich people live. I'd like to meet some rich people-besides Gleb, I
mean.
Raych said, I
suppose there's not much you can get out of a person like me.
You're all
right. You can't think of credits all the time, but you've got to think of them
some of the time. Especially since I think Gleb is getting tired of me.
Raych felt
compelled to say, No one could get tired of you, and then found, a little to his
own confusion, that he meant it.
Manella said,
That's what men always say, but you'd be surprised. Anyway, it's been good,
you and I, Planchet. Take care of yourself and, who knows, we may see each
other again.
Raych nodded and
found himself at a loss for words. There was no way in which he could say or do
anything to express his feelings.
He turned his
mind in other directions. He had to find out what the Namarti people were
planning. If they were separating him from Manella, the crisis must be rapidly
approaching. All he had to go on was that odd question about gardening.
Nor could he get
any further information back to Seldon. He had been kept under close scrutiny
since his meeting with Namarti and all avenues of communication were cut
off-surely another indication of an approaching crisis.
But if he were to
find out what was going on only after it was done-and if he could communicate
the news only after it was no longer news-he would have failed.
19
Hari Seldon was
not having a good day. He had not heard from Raych since his first communique;
he had no idea what was happening.
Aside from his
natural concern for Raych's safety (surely he would hear if something really
bad had happened), there was his uneasiness over what might be planned.
It would have to
be subtle. A direct attack on the Palace itself was totally out of the
question. Security there was far too tight. But if so, what else could be
planned that would be sufficiently effective?
The whole thing
was keeping him awake at night and distracted by day.
The signal light
flashed.
First Minister.
Your two o'clock appointment, sir...
What two o'clock
appointment is this?
Mandell Gruber,
the gardener. He has the necessary certification.
Seldon
remembered. Yes. Send him in.
This was no time
to see Gruber, but he had agreed to it in a moment of weakness-the man had
seemed distraught. A First Minister should not have such moments of weakness,
but Seldon had been Seldon long before he had become First :Minister.
Come in,
Gruber, he said kindly.
Gruber stood
before him, head ducking mechanically, eyes darting this way and that. Seldon
was quite certain the gardener had never been in any room as magnificent as
this one and he had the bitter urge to say: Do you like it? Please take it. I
don't want it.
But he only said,
What is it, Gruber? Why are you so unhappy
There was no
immediate answer; Gruber merely smiled vacantly.
Seldon said, Sit
down, man. Right there in that chair.
Oh no, First
Minister. It would not be fitting. I'll get it dirty.
If you do, it
will be easy to clean. Do as I say. Good! Now just sit there a minute or two
and gather your thoughts. Then, when you are ready, tell me what's the matter.
Gruber sat silent
for a moment, then the words came out in a panting rush. First Minister. It is
Chief Gardener I am to be. The blessed Emperor himself told me so.
Yes, I have
heard of that, but that surely isn't what is troubling you. Your new post is a
matter of congratulations and I do congratulate you. I may even have
contributed to it, Gruber. I have never forgotten your bravery at the time I
was nearly killed and you can be sure I mentioned it to His Imperial Majesty.
It is a suitable reward, Gruber, and you would deserve the promotion in any
case, for it is quite clear from your record that you are fully qualified for
the post. So, now that that's out of the way, tell me what is troubling you.
First Minister,
it is the very post and promotion that's troubling me. It is something I cannot
manage, for I am not qualified.
We are convinced
you are.
Gruber grew
agitated. And is it in an office I will have to sit? I can't sit in an office.
I could not go out in the open air and work with the plants and animals. I would
be in prison, First Minister.
Seldon's eyes
opened wide. No such thing, Gruber. You needn't stay in the office longer than
you have to. You could wander around the grounds freely, supervising
everything. You will have all the outdoors you want and you will merely spare
yourself the hard work.
I want the hard
work, First Minister, and it's no chance at all they will let me come out of
the office. I have watched the present Chief Gardener. He couldn't leave his
office, though he wanted to, ever so. There is too much administration, too
much bookkeeping. Sure, if he wants to know what is going on, we must go to his
office to tell him. He watches things on holovision he said with infinite
contempt as though you can tell anything about growing, living things from
pictures. It is not for me, First Minister.
Come, Gruber, be
a man. It's not all that bad. You'll get used to it. You'll work your way in
slowly.
Gruber shook his
head. First off-at the very first-I will have to deal with all the new gardeners.
I'll be buried. Then, with sudden energy, It is a job I do not want and must
not have, First Minister.
Right now,
Gruber, perhaps you don't want the job, but you are not alone. I'll tell you
that right now I wish I were not First Minister. This job is too much for me. I
even have a notion that there are times when the Emperor himself is tired of
his Imperial robes. We're all in this Galaxy to do our work and the work isn't
always pleasant.
I understand
that, First Minister, but the Emperor must be Emperor, for he was born to that.
And you must be First Minister, for there is no one else who can do the job.
But in my case, it is just Chief Gardener we are ruminating upon. There are
fifty gardeners in the place who could do it as well as I could and who
wouldn't mind the office. You say that you spoke to the Emperor about how I
tried to help you. Can't you speak to him again and explain that if he wants to
reward me for what I did, he can leave me as I am?
Seldon leaned
back in his chair and said solemnly, Gruber, I would do that for you if I
could, but I must explain something to you and I can only hope that you will
understand it. The Emperor, in theory, is absolute ruler of the Empire. In
actual fact, there is very little he can do. I run the Empire right now much
more than he does and there is very little I can do, too. There are millions
and billions of people at all levels of government, all making decisions, all
making mistakes, some acting wisely and heroically, some acting foolishly and thievishly.
There's no controlling them. Do you understand me, Gruber?
I do, but what
has this to do with my case?
Because there is
only one place where the Emperor is really absolute ruler-and that is over the
Imperial grounds. Here, his word is law and the layers of officials beneath him
are few enough for him to handle. For him to be asked to rescind a decision he
has made in connection with the Imperial Palace grounds would be to invade the
only area that he would consider inviolate. If I were to say, Take back your
decision on Gruber, Your Imperial Majesty, he would be much more likely to
relieve me of my duties than to take back his decision. That might be a good
thing for me, but it wouldn't help you any.
Gruber said,
Does that mean there's no way things can be changed?
That's exactly
what it means. But don't worry, Gruber, I'll help you all I can. I'm sorry. But
now I have really spent all the time with you that I am able to spare.
Gruber rose to
his feet. In his hands he twisted his green gardening cap. There was more than
a suspicion of tears in his eyes. Thank you, First Minister. I know you would
like to help. You're-you're a good man, First Minister.
He turned and
left, sorrowing.
Seldon looked
after him thoughtfully and shook his head. Multiply Gruber's woes by a
quadrillion and you would have the woes of all the people of the twenty-five
million worlds of the Empire and how was he, Seldon, to work out salvation for
all of them, when he was helpless to solve the problem of one single man who
had come to him for help?
Psychohistory
could not save one man. Could it save a quadrillion?
He shook his head
again, checked the nature and time of his next appointment, and then suddenly
stiffened. He shouted into his communications wire in sudden wild abandon,
quite unlike his usually strict control. Get that gardener back! Get him back
here right now!
20
What's this
about new gardeners? exclaimed Seldon. This time he did not ask Gruber to sit
down.
Gruber's eyes
blinked rapidly. He was in a panic at having been recalled so unexpectedly.
N-new g-gardeners? he stammered.
You said all
the new gardeners. Those were your words. What new gardeners?
Gruber was
astonished. Sure, if there is a new Chief Gardener, there will be new
gardeners. It is the custom.
I have never
heard of this.
The last time we
had a change of Chief Gardeners, you were not First Minister. It is likely you
were not even on Trantor.
But what's it
all about?
Well, gardeners
are never discharged. Some die. Some grow too old and are pensioned off and
replaced. Still, by the time a new Chief Gardener is ready for his duties, at
least half the staff is aged and beyond their best years. They are all
pensioned off generously and new gardeners are brought in.
For youth.
Partly and
partly because by that time there are usually new plans for the gardens and it
is new ideas and new schemes we must have. There are almost five hundred square
kilometers in the gardens and parklands and it usually takes some years to
reorganize it and it is myself who will have to supervise it all. Please, First
Minister. Gruber was gasping. Surely a clever man like your own self can find
a way to change the blessed Emperor's mind.
Seldon paid no
attention. His forehead was creased in concentration. Where do the new
gardeners come from?
There are
examinations on all the worlds-there are always people waiting to serve as
replacements. They'll be coming in by the hundreds in a dozen batches. It will
take me a year, at the least...
From where do
they come? From where?
From any of a
million worlds. We want a variety of horticultural knowledge. Any citizen of
the Empire can qualify.
From Trantor,
too?
No, not from
Trantor. There is no one from Trantor in the gardens. His voice grew
contemptuous. You can't get a gardener out of Trantor. The parks they have
here under the dome aren't gardens. They are potted plants and the animals are
in cages. Trantorians, poor specimens that they are, know nothing about open
air, free water, and the true balance of nature.
All right,
Gruber. I will now give you a job. It will be up to you to get me the names of
every new gardener scheduled to arrive over the coming weeks. Everything about
them. Name. World. Reference number. Education. Experience. Everything. I want
it all here on my desk just as quickly as possible. I'm going to send people to
help you. People with machines. What kind of a computer do you use?
Only a simple
one for keeping track of plantings and species and things like that.
All right. The
people I send will be able to do anything you can't do. I can't tell you how
important this is.
If I should do
this...
Gruber, this is
not the time to make bargains. Fail me and you will not be Chief Gardener.
Instead, you will be discharged without a pension.
Alone again,
Seldon barked into his communication wire, Cancel all appointments for the
rest of the afternoon.
He then let his
body flop in his chair, feeling every bit of his fifty years and feeling his
headache worsen. For years, for decades, security had been built up around the
Imperial Palace grounds, thicker, more solid, more impenetrable, as each new
layer and each new device was added.
-And every once
in a while, hordes of strangers were let into the grounds. no questions asked,
probably, but one: Can you garden?
The stupidity
involved was too colossal to grasp.
And he had barely
caught it in time. Or had he? Was he, even now, too late?
21
Gleb Andorin
gazed at Namarti through half-closed eyes. He never liked the man, but there
were times when he liked him less than he usually did and this was one of those
times. Why should Andorin, a Wyan of royal birth (that's what it amounted to,
after all) have to work with this parvenu, this near-psychotic paranoid?
Andorin knew why
and he had to endure, even when Namarti was once again in the process of
telling the story of how he had built up the movement during a period of ten
years to its present pitch of perfection. Did he tell this to everyone, over
and over? Or was it just Andorin who was his chosen vessel?
Namarti's face
seemed to shine with malignant glee as he said, in an odd singsong, as though
it were a matter of rote, Year after year. I worked on those lines, even
through hopelessness and uselessness, building an organization, chipping away
at confidence in the government, creating and intensifying dissatisfaction.
When there was the banking crisis and the week of the moratorium, I...
He paused
suddenly. I've told you this many times and you're sick of hearing it, aren't
you?
Andorin's lips
twitched in a brief dry smile. Namarti was not such an idiot as not to know
what a bore he was; he just couldn't help it. Andorin said, You've told me
this many times. He allowed the remainder of the question to hang in the air,
unanswered. The answer, after all, was an obvious affirmative. There was no
need to face him with it.
A slight flush
crossed Namarti's sallow face. He said, But it could have gone on forever-the
building, the chipping, without ever coming to a point-if I hadn't had the
proper tool in my hands. And without any effort on my part, the tool came to
me.
The gods brought
you Planchet, said Andorin neutrally.
You're right.
There will be a group of gardeners entering the Imperial Palace grounds soon.
He paused and seemed to savor the thought.
Men and women.
Enough to serve as a mask for the handful of our operatives who will accompany
them. Among them will be you-and Planchet. And what will make you and Planchet
unusual is that you will be carrying blasters.
Surely, said
Andorin with deliberate malice behind a polite expression, we'll be stopped at
the gates and held for questioning. Bringing an illicit blaster onto the Palace
grounds...
You won't be
stopped, said Namarti, missing the malice. You won't be searched. That's been
arranged. You will all be greeted as a matter of course by some Palace
official. I don't know who would ordinarily be in charge of that task-the Third
Assistant Chamberlain in Charge of Grass and Leaves, for all I know-but in this
case, it will be Seldon himself. The great mathematician will hurry out to
greet the new gardeners and welcome them to the grounds.
You're sure of
that, I suppose.
Of course, I am.
It's all been arranged. He will learn, at more or less the last minute, that
his foster son is among those listed as new gardeners and it will be impossible
for him to refrain from coming out to see him. And when Seldon appears,
Planchet will raise his blaster. Our people will raise the cry of Treason! In
the confusion and hurly-burly, Planchet will kill Seldon and then you will kill
Planchet. You will then drop your blaster and leave. There are those who will
help you leave. It's been arranged.
Is it absolutely
necessary to kill Planchet?
Namarti frowned. Why?
Do you object to one killing and not to another? When Planchet recovers, do you
wish him to tell the authorities all he knows about us? Besides, this is a
family feud we are arranging. Don't forget that Planchet is, in actual fact,
Raych Seldon. It will look as though the two had fired simultaneously-or as
though Seldon had given orders that if his son made any hostile move, he was to
be shot down. We will see to it that the family angle will be given full
publicity. It will be reminiscent of the bad old days of the Bloody Emperor
Manowell. The people of Trantor will surely be repelled by the sheer wickedness
of the deed. That, piled on top of all the inefficiencies and breakdowns
they've been witnessing and living through, will raise the cry for a new
government-and no one will be able to refuse them, least of all the Emperor.
And then we'll step in.
Just like that?
No, not just
like that. I don't live in a dream world. There is likely to be some interim
government, but it will fail. We'll see to it that it fails and we'll come out
in the open and revive the old Joranumite arguments that the Trantorians have
never forgotten. And in time-in not too much time-I will be First Minister.
And I?
Will eventually
be the Emperor.
Andorin said,
The chance of all this working is small. This is arranged. That is arranged.
The other thing is arranged. All of it has to come together and mesh perfectly
or it will fail. Somewhere, someone is bound to mess up. It's an unacceptable
risk.
Unacceptable?
For whom? For you?
Certainly. You
expect me to make certain that Planchet will kill his father and you expect me
to then kill Planchet. Why me? Aren't there tools worth less than I who might
more easily be risked?
Yes, but to
choose anyone else would make failure certain. Who but you has so much riding
on this mission that there is no chance you will turn back in a fit of vapors
at the last minute?
The risk is
enormous.
Isn't it worth
it to you? You're playing for the Imperial throne.
And what risk
are you taking, Chief? You will remain here, quite comfortable, and wait to
hear the news.
Namarti's lip
curled. What a fool you are, Andorin! What an Emperor you will make! Do you
suppose I take no risk because I will be here? If the gambit fails, if the plot
miscarries, if some of our people are taken, do you think they won't tell
everything they know? If you were somehow caught, would you face the tender
treatment of the Imperial Guard without ever telling them about me?
And with a
failed assassination attempt at hand, do you suppose they won't comb Trantor to
find me? Do you suppose that in the end they will fail to find me? And when
they do find me, what do you suppose I will have to face at their hands? Risk?
I run a worse risk than any of you, just sitting here doing nothing. It boils
down to this, Andorin. Do you or do you not wish to be Emperor?
Andorin said in a
low voice, I wish to be Emperor. And so things were set in motion.
22
Raych had no
trouble seeing that he was being treated with special care. The whole group of
would-be gardeners was now quartered in one of the hotels in the Imperial
Sector, although not one of the prime hotels, of course.
The gardeners
were an odd lot, from fifty different worlds, but Raych had little chance to
speak to any of them. Andorin, without being too obvious about it, had managed
to keep him apart from the others.
Raych wondered
why. It depressed him. In fact, he had been feeling somewhat depressed since he
had left Wye. It interfered with his thinking process and he fought it-but not
with entire success.
Andorin was
himself wearing rough clothes and was attempting to look like a workman. He
would be playing the part of a gardener as a way of running the showwhatever
the show might be.
Raych felt
ashamed that he had not been able to penetrate the nature of that show. They
had closed in on him and prevented all communication, so he hadn't even had the
chance to warn his father. They might be doing this for every Trantorian who
had been pushed into the group, for all he knew, just as an extreme precaution.
Raych estimated that there might be a dozen Trantorians among them, all of them
Namarti's people, of course, men and women both.
What puzzled him
was that Andorin treated him with what was almost affection. He monopolized
him, insisted on having all his meals with him, treated him quite differently
from the way in which he treated anyone else.
Could it be
because they had shared Manella? Raych did not know enough about the mores of
the Wye Sector to be able to tell whether there might not be a polyandrous
touch to their society. If two men shared a woman, did that make them, in a
way, fraternal? Did it create a bond?
Raych had never
heard of such a thing, but he knew better than to suppose he had a grasp of
even a tiny fraction of the infinite subtleties of galactic societies-even of
Trantorian societies.
But now that his
mind had brought him back to Manella, he dwelled on her for a while. He missed
her terribly and it occurred to him that missing her might be the cause of his
depression, though, to tell the truth, what he was feeling now, as he was
finishing lunch with Andorin, was almost despair-though he could think of no
cause for it.
Manella!
She had said she
wanted to visit the Imperial Sector and presumably she could wheedle Andorin to
her liking. He was desperate enough to ask a foolish question. Mr. Andorin, I
keep wondering if maybe you brought Miss Dubanqua along with you. Here, to the Imperial
Sector.
Andorin looked
utterly astonished. Then he laughed gently. Manella? Do you see her doing any
gardening? Or even pretending she could? no no, Manella is one of those women
invented for our quiet moments. She has no function at all, otherwise. Then
Why do you ask, Planchet?
Raych shrugged.
I don't know. It's sort of dull around here. I sort of thought... His voice
trailed away.
Andorin watched
him carefully. Finally he said, Surely you're not of the opinion that it
matters much which woman you are involved with? I assure you it doesn't matter
to her which man she's involved with. Once this is over, there will be other
women. Plenty of them.
When will this
be over?
Soon. And you're
going to be part of it in a very important way. Andorin watched Raych
narrowly.
Raych said, How
important? Aren't I gonna be just-a gardener? His voice sounded hollow and he
found himself unable to put a spark in it.
You'll be more
than that, Planchet. You'll be going in with a blaster.
With a what?
A blaster.
I never held a
blaster. Not in my whole life.
There's nothing
to it. You lift it. You point it. You close the contact and someone dies.
I can't kill
anyone.
I thought you
were one of us, that you would do anything for the cause.
I didn't
mean-kill. Raych couldn't seem to collect his thoughts. Why must he kill? What
did they really have in mind for him? And how would he be able to alert the
Imperial Guard before the killing would be carried out?
Andorin's face
hardened suddenly, an instant conversion from friendly interest to stern
decision. He said, You must kill.
Raych gathered
all his strength. No. I ain't gonna kill nobody. That's final.
Andorin said,
Planchet, you will do as you are told.
Not murder.
Even murder.
How you gonna
make me?
I shall simply
tell you to.
Raych felt dizzy.
What made Andorin so confident?
He shook his
head. No.
Andorin said,
We've been feeding you, Planchet, ever since you left Wye. I made sure you ate
with me. I supervised your diet. Especially the meal you just ate.
Raych felt the
horror rise within him. He suddenly understood. Desperance!
Exactly, said
Andorin. You're a sharp devil, Planchet.
It's illegal.
Yes, of course.
So's murder.
Raych knew about
desperance. It was a chemical modification of a perfectly harmless
tranquilizer. The modified form, however, did not produce tranquillity but
despair. It had been outlawed because of its use in mind control, though there
were persistent rumors that the Imperial Guard used it.
Andorin said, as
though it were not hard to read Raych's mind, It's called desperance because
that's an old word meaning hopelessness. I think you're feeling hopeless.
Never,
whispered Raych.
Very resolute of
you, but you can't fight the chemical. And the more hopeless you feel, the more
effective the drug.
No chance.
Think about it,
Planchet. Namarti recognized you at once, even without your mustache. He knows
you are Raych Seldon and, at my direction, you are going to kill your father.
Raych muttered,
Not before I kill you.
He rose from his
chair. There should be no problem at all in this. Andorin might be taller, but
he was slender and clearly no athlete. Raych would break him in two with one
arm-but he swayed as he rose. He shook his head, but it wouldn't clear.
Andorin rose,
too, and backed away. He drew his right hand from where it had been resting
within his left sleeve. He was holding a weapon.
He said
pleasantly, I came prepared. I have been informed of your prowess as a
Heliconian Twister and there will be no hand-to-hand combat.
He looked down at
his weapon. This is not a blaster, he said. I can't afford to have you
killed before you accomplish your task. It's a neuronic whip. Much worse, in a
way. I will aim at your left shoulder and, believe me, the pain will be so
excruciating that the world's greatest stoic would not be able to endure it.
Raych, who had
been advancing slowly and grimly, stopped abruptly. He had been twelve years
old when he had had a taste-a small one-of a neuronic whip. Once struck, no one
ever forgets the pain, however long he lives, however full of incidents his
life is.
Andorin said,
Moreover, I will use full strength so that the nerves in your upper arms will
be stimulated first into unbearable pain and then damaged into uselessness. You
will never use your left arm again. I will spare the right so you can handle
the blaster. Now if you sit down and accept matters, as you must, you may keep
both arms. Of course, you must eat again so your desperance level increases.
Your situation will only worsen.
Raych felt the
drug-induced despair settle over him and that despair served, in itself, to
deepen the effect. His vision was turning double and he could think of nothing
to say.
Raych only knew
that he would have to do what Andorin would tell him to do. He had played the
game and he had lost.
23
No! Hari Seldon
was almost violent. I don't want you out there, Dors.
Dors Venabili
stared back at him with an expression as firm as his own. Then I won't let you
go, either, Hari.
I must be
there.
It is not your
place. It is the Gardener First-Class who must greet these new people.
So it is. But
Gruber can't do it. He's a broken man.
He must have an
assistant of some sort. Or let the old Chief Gardener do it. He holds the
office till the end of the year.
The old Chief
Gardener is too ill. BesidesSeldon hesitatedthere are ringers among the
gardeners. Trantorians. They're here, for some reason. I have the names of
every one of them.
Have them taken
into custody, then. Every last one of them. It's simple. Why are you making it
so complex?
Because we don't
know why they're here. Something's up. I don't see what twelve gardeners can
do, but... No, let me rephrase that. I can see a dozen things they can do, but
I don't know which one of those things they've planned. We will, indeed, take
them into custody, but I must know more about everything before it's done.
We have to know
enough to winkle out everyone in the conspiracy from top to bottom and we must
know enough of what they're doing to be able to make the proper punishment
stick. I don't want to get twelve men and women on what is essentially a
misdemeanor charge. They'll plead desperation, the need for a job. They'll
complain that it isn't fair for Trantorians to be excluded. They'll get plenty
of sympathy and we'll be left looking like fools. We must give them a chance to
convict themselves of more than that. Besides...
There was a long
pause and Dors said wrathfully, Well, what's the new besides?
Seldon's voice
lowered. One of the twelve is Raych, using the alias Planchet.
What?
Why are you
surprised? I sent him to Wye to infiltrate the Joranumite movement and he's
succeeded in infiltrating something. I have every faith in him. If he's there,
he knows why he's there and he must have some sort of plan to put a spoke in
the wheel. But I want to be there, too. I want to see him. I want to be in a
position to help him if I can.
If you want to
help him, have fifty guards of the Palace standing shoulder to shoulder on
either side of your gardeners.
No. Again, we'll
end up with nothing. The Imperial Guard will be in place but not in evidence.
The gardeners in question must think they have a clear hand to do whatever it
is they plan to do. Before they can do so, but after they have made it quite
plain what they intend-we'll have them.
That's risky.
It's risky for Raych.
Risks are
something we have to take. There's more riding on this than individual lives.
That is a
heartless thing to say.
You think I have
no heart? Even if it broke, my concern would have to be with psycho...
Don't say it.
She turned away, as if in pain.
I understand,
said Seldon, but you mustn't be there. Your presence would be so inappropriate
that the conspirators will suspect we know too much and will abort their plan.
I don't want their plan aborted.
He paused, then
said softly, Dors, you say your job is to protect me. That comes before
protecting Raych and you know that. I wouldn't insist on it, but to protect me
is to protect psychohistory and the entire human species. That must come first.
What I have of psychohistory tells me that 1, in turn, must protect the center at
all costs and that is what I am trying to do. Do you understand?
Dors said, I
understand, then turned away from him.
Seldon thought:
And I hope I'm right.
If he weren't,
she would never forgive him. Far worse, he would never forgive
himself-psychohistory or not.
24
They were lined
up beautifully, feet spread apart, hands behind their hacks, every one in a
natty green uniform, loosely fitted and with wide pockets. There was very
little gender differential and one could only guess that some of the shorter
ones were women. The hoods covered whatever hair they had, but then, gardeners
were supposed to clip their hair quite short-either sex-and there could be no
facial hair.
Why that should
be, one couldn't say. The word tradition covered it all, as it covered so
many things, some useful, some foolish.
Facing them was
Mandell Gruber, flanked on either side by an assistant. Gruber was trembling,
his wide-opened eyes glazed.
Hari Seldon's
lips tightened. If Gruber could but manage to say, The Emperor's gardeners
greet you all, that would be enough. Seldon himself would then take over.
His eyes swept
over the new contingent and he located Raych.
His heart jumped
a bit. It was the mustacheless Raych in the front row, standing more rigid than
the rest, staring straight ahead. His eyes did not move to meet Seldon's; he
showed no sign of recognition, however subtle.
Good, thought
Seldon. He's not supposed to. He's giving nothing away.
Gruber muttered a
weak welcome and Seldon jumped in.
He advanced with
an easy stride, putting himself immediately before Gruber, and said, Thank
you, Gardener First-Class. Men and women, gardeners of the Emperor, you are to
undertake an important task. You will be responsible for the beauty and health
of the only open land on our great world of Trantor, capital of the Galactic
Empire. You will see to it that if we don't have the endless vistas of open
undomed worlds, we will have a small jewel here that will outshine anything
else in the Empire.
You will all be
under Mandell Gruber, who will shortly become Chief Gardener. He will report to
me, when necessary, and I will report to the Emperor. This means, as you can
all see, that you will be only three levels removed from the Imperial presence
and you will always be under his benign watch. I am certain that even now he is
surveying us from the Small Palace, his personal home, which is the building
you see to the right-the one with the opal-layered dome-and that he is pleased
with what he sees.
Before you start
work, of course, you will all undertake a course of training that will make you
entirely familiar with the grounds and its needs. You will
He had, by this
time, moved, almost stealthily, to a point directly in front of Raych, who
still remained motionless, unblinking.
Seldon tried not
to look unnaturally benign and then a slight frown crossed his face. The person
directly behind Raych looked familiar. He might have gone unrecognized if
Seldon had not studied his hologram. Wasn't that Gleb Andorin of Wye? Raych's
patron in Wye, in fact? What was he doing here?
Andorin must have
noticed Seldon's sudden regard, for he muttered something between scarcely
opened lips and Raych's right arm, moving forward from behind his back, plucked
a blaster out of the wide pocket of his green doublet. So did Andorin.
Seldon felt
himself going into near-shock. How could blasters have been allowed onto the
grounds? Confused, he barely heard the cries of 'Treason! and the sudden
noise of running and shouting.
All that really
occupied Seldon's mind was Raych's blaster pointing directly at him and Raych
looking at him without any sign of recognition. Seldon's mind filled with
horror as he realized that his son was going to shoot and that he himself was
only seconds from death.
25
A blaster,
despite its name, does not blast in the proper sense of the term. It
vaporizes and blows out an interior and-if anything-causes an implosion. There
is a soft sighing sound, leaving what appears to be a blasted object.
Hari Seldon did
not expect to hear that sound. He expected only death. It was, therefore, with
surprise that he heard the distinctive soft sighing sound and he blinked
rapidly as he looked down at himself, slackjawed.
He was alive? (He
thought it as a question, not a statement.)
Raych was still
standing there, his blaster pointing forward, his eyes glazed. He was
absolutely motionless, as though some motive power had ceased.
Behind him was
the crumpled body of Andorin, fallen in a pool of blood, and standing next to
him, blaster in hand, was a gardener. The hood had slipped away; the gardener
was clearly a woman with freshly clipped hair.
She allowed
herself a glance at Seldon and said, Your son knows me as Manella Dubanqua.
I'm a security officer. Do you want my reference number, First Minister?
No, said Seldon
faintly. Imperial Guard had converged on the scene. My son! What's wrong with
my son?
Desperance, I
think, said Manella. That can be washed out eventually. She reached forward
to take the blaster out of Raych's hand. I'm sorry I didn't act sooner. I had
to wait for an overt move and, when it came, it almost caught me napping.
I had the same
trouble. We must take Raych to the Palace hospital.
A confused noise
suddenly emanated from the Small Palace. It occurred to Seldon that the Emperor
was, indeed, watching the proceedings and, if so, he must be grandly furious,
indeed.
Take care of my
son, Miss Dubanqua, said Seldon. I must see the Emperor.
He set off at an
undignified run through the chaos on the Great Lawns and dashed into the Small
Palace without ceremony. Cleon could scarcely grow any angrier over that.
And there, with
an appalled group watching in stupor-there, on the semicircular stairway-was
the body of His Imperial Majesty, Cleon I, smashed all but beyond recognition.
His rich Imperial robes now served as a shroud. Cowering against the wall,
staring stupidly at the horrified faces surrounding him, was Mandell Gruber.
Seldon felt he
could take no more. He took in the blaster lying at Gruber's feet. It had been
Andorin's, he was sure. He asked softly, Gruber, what have you done?
Gruber, staring
at him, babbled, Everyone screaming and yelling. I thought, Who would know?
They would think someone else had killed the Emperor. But then I couldn't run.
But, Gruber.
Why?
So I wouldn't
have to be Chief Gardener. And he collapsed.
Seldon stared in
shock at the unconscious Gruber.
Everything had
worked out by the narrowest of margins. He himself was alive. Raych was alive.
Andorin was dead and the Joranumite Conspiracy would now be hunted down to the
last person.
The center would
have held, just as psychohistory had dictated.
And then one man,
for a reason so trivial as to defy analysis, had killed the Emperor.
And now, thought
Seldon in despair, what do we do? What happens next?
PART III
DORS VENABILI
VENABILI, DORS.
The life of Hari Seldon is well encrusted with legend and uncertainty, so that
little hope remains of ever obtaining a biography that can be thoroughly
factual. Perhaps the most puzzling aspect of his life deals with his consort,
Dors Venabili. There is no information whatever concerning Dors Venabili,
except for her birth on the world of Cinna, prior to her arrival at Streeling
University to become a member of the history faculty. Shortly after that, she
met Seldon and remained his consort for twenty-eight years. If anything, her
life is more interlarded with legend than Seldon's is. There are quite
unbelievable tales of her strength and speed and she was widely spoken of, or
perhaps whispered of, as The Tiger Woman. Still more puzzling than her
coming, however, is her going, for after a certain time, we hear of her no more
and there is no indication as to what happened.
Her role as a
historian is evidenced by her works on
ENCYCLOPEDIA
GALACTICA
1
Wanda was almost
eight years old now, going by Galactic Standard Time as everyone did. She was
quite the little lady-grave in manner, with straight light-brown hair. Her eyes
were blue but were darkening and she might well end with the brown eyes of her
father.
She sat there,
lost in thought. Sixty.
That was the
number that preoccupied her. Grandfather was going to have a birthday and it
was going to be his sixtieth-and sixty was a large number. It bothered her
because yesterday she had had a bad dream about it.
She went in
search of her mother. She would have to ask.
Her mother was
not hard to find. She was talking to Grandfather-about the birthday surely.
Wanda hesitated. It wouldn't be nice to ask in front of Grandfather.
Her mother had no
trouble whatever sensing Wanda's consternation. She said, One minute, Hari,
and let's see what's bothering Wanda. What is it, dear?
Wanda pulled at
her hand. Not here, Mother. Private.
Manella turned to
Hari Seldon. See how early it starts? Private lives. Private problems. Of
course, Wanda, shall we go to your room?
Yes, Mother.
Wanda was clearly relieved.
Hand in hand,
they went and then her mother said, Now what is the problem, Wanda?
It's
Grandfather, Mother.
Grandfather! I
can't imagine him doing anything to bother you.
Well, he is.
Wanda's eyes filled with sudden tears. Is he going to die?
Your
grandfather? What put that into your head, Wanda?
He's going to be
sixty. That's so old.
No, it isn't.
It's not young, but it's not old, either. People live to be eighty, ninety,
even a hundred-and your grandfather is strong and healthy. He'll live a long
time.
Are you sure?
She was sniffing.
Manella grasped
her daughter by the shoulders and looked her straight in the eyes. We must all
die someday, Wanda. I've explained that to you before. Just the same, we don't
worry about it till the someday is much closer. She wiped Wanda's eyes gently.
Grandfather is going to stay alive till you're all grown up and have babies of
your own. You'll see. Now come back with me. I want you to talk to
Grandfather.
Wanda sniffed
again.
Seldon looked at
the little girl with a sympathetic expression on her return and said, What is
it, Wanda? Why are you unhappy?
Wanda shook her
head.
Seldon turned his
gaze to the girl's mother. Well, what is it, Manella?
Manella shook her
head. She'll have to tell you herself.
Seldon sat down
and tapped his lap. Come, Wanda. Have a seat and tell me your troubles.
She obeyed and
wriggled a bit, then said, I'm scared.
Seldon put his
arm around her. Nothing to be scared of in your old grandfather.
Manella made a
face. Wrong word.
Seldon looked up
at her. Grandfather?
No. Old.
That seemed to
break the dike. Wanda burst into tears. You're old, Grandfather.
I suppose so.
I'm sixty. He bent his face down to Wanda's and whispered, I don't like it,
either, Wanda. That's why I'm glad you're only seven going on eight.
Your hair is
white, Grandpa.
It wasn't
always. It just turned white recently.
White hair means
you're going to die, Grandpa.
Seldon looked
shocked. He said to Manella, What is all this?
I don't know,
Hari. It's her own idea.
I had a bad
dream, said Wanda.
Seldon cleared
his throat. We all have bad dreams now and then, Wanda. It's good we do. Bad
dreams get rid of bad thoughts and then we're better off.
It was about you
dying, Grandfather.
I know. I know.
Dreams can be about dying, but that doesn't make them important. Look at me.
Don't you see how alive I am-and cheerful-and laughing? Do I look as though I'm
dying? Tell me.
N-no.
There you are,
then. Now you go out and play and forget all about this. I'm just having a
birthday and everyone will have a good time. Go ahead, dear.
Wanda left in
reasonable cheer, but Seldon motioned to Manella to stay.
2
Seldon said,
Wherever do you think Wanda got such a notion?
Come now, Hari.
She had a Salvanian gecko that died, remember? One of her friends had a father
who died in an accident and she sees deaths on holovision all the time. It is
impossible for any child to be so protected as not to be aware of death.
Actually I wouldn't want her to be so protected. Death is an essential part of
life; she must learn that.
I don't mean
death in general, Manella. I mean my death in particular. What has put that
into her head?
Manella
hesitated. She was very fond, indeed, of Hari Seldon. She thought, Who would
not be, so how can I say this?
But how could she
not say this? So she said, Hari, you yourself put it into her head.
I?
Of course,
you've been speaking for months of turning sixty and complaining loudly of
growing old. The only reason people are setting up this party is to console
you.
It's no fun
turning sixty, said Seldon indignantly. Wait! Wait! You'll find out.
I will-if I'm
lucky. Some people don't make it to sixty. Just the same, if turning sixty and
being old are all you talk about, you end up frightening an impressionable
little girl.
Seldon sighed and
looked troubled. I'm sorry, but it's hard. Look at my hands. They're getting
spotted and soon they'll be gnarled. I can do hardly anything in the way of
Twisting any longer. A child could probably force me to my knees.
In what way does
that make you different from other sixty-year-olds? At least your brain is
working as well as ever. How often have you said that that's all that counts?
I know. But I
miss my body.
Manella said with
just a touch of malice, Especially when Dors doesn't seem to get any older.
Seldon said
uneasily, Well yes, I suppose... He looked away, clearly unwilling to talk
about the matter.
Manella looked at
her father-in-law gravely. The trouble was, he knew nothing about children-or
about people generally. It was hard to think that he had spent ten years as
First Minister under the old Emperor and yet ended up knowing as little about
people as he did.
Of course, he was
entirely wrapped up in this psychohistory of his, that dealt with quadrillions
of people, which ultimately meant dealing with no people at all-as individuals.
And how could he know about children when he had had no contact with any child
except Raych, who had entered his life as a twelve-year-old? Now he had Wanda,
who was-and would probably remain to him-an utter mystery.
Manella thought
all this lovingly. She had the incredible desire to protect Hari Seldon from a
world he did not understand. It was the only point at which she and her
mother-in-law, Dors Venabili, met and coalesced-this desire to protect Hari
Seldon.
Manella had saved
Seldon's life ten years before. Dors, in her strange way, had considered this
an invasion of her prerogative and had never quite forgiven Manella.
Seldon, in his
turn, had then saved Manella's life. She closed her eyes briefly and the whole
scene returned to her, almost as though it were happening to her right now.
3
It was a week
after the assassination of Cleon-and a horrible week it shad been. All of
Trantor was in chaos.
Hari Seldon still
kept his office as First Minister, but it was clear he had no power. He called
in Manella Dubanqua.
I want to thank
you for saving Raych's life and my own. I haven't
I a chance to do
so yet. Then with a sigh, I have scarcely had a chance to do anything this
past week.
Manella asked,
What happened to the mad gardener?
Executed! At
once! no trial! I tried to save him by pointing out that was insane. But there
was no question about it. If he had done anything else, committed any other
crime, his madness would have been recognized and he would have been spared.
Committed-locked up and treated-but spared, nonetheless. But to kill the
Emperor... Seldon shook his head sadly.
Manella said,
What's going to happen now, First Minister?
I'll tell you
what I think. The Entun Dynasty is finished. Cleon's son will not succeed. I
don't think he wants to. He fears assassination in his turn and I don't blame
him one bit. It would be much better for him to retire to one of the family
estates on some Outer World and live a quiet Because he is a member of the Imperial
House, he will untie allowed to do this. You and I may be less fortunate.
Manella frowned.
In what way, sir?
Seldon cleared
his throat. It is possible to argue that because you killed Gleb Andorin, he
dropped his blaster, which became available to Mandell Gruber, who used it to
kill Cleon. Therefore you bear a strong share of the responsibility of the
crime and it may even be said that it was all prearranged.
But that's
ridiculous. I am a member of the security establishment, fulfilling my duties-doing
what I was ordered to do.
Seldon smiled
sadly. You're arguing rationally and rationality is not going to be in fashion
for a while. What's going to happen now, in the absence of a legitimate
successor to the Imperial throne, is that we are bound to have a military
government.
(In later years,
when Manella came to understand the workings of psychohistory, she wondered if
Seldon had used the technique to work out what was going to happen, for the
military rule certainly came to pass. At the time, however, he made no mention
of his fledgling theory.)
If we do have a
military government, he went on, then it will be necessary for them to
establish a firm rule at once, crush any signs of disaffection, act vigorously
and cruelly, even in defiance of rationality and justice. If they accuse you,
Miss Dubanqua, of being part of a plot to kill the Emperor, you will be
slaughtered, not as an act of justice but as a way of cowing the people of
Trantor.
For that matter,
they might say that I was part of the plot, too. After all, I went out to greet
the new gardeners when it was not my place to do so. Had I not done so, there
would have been no attempt to kill me, you would not have struck back, and the
Emperor would have lived. Do you see how it all fits?
I can't believe
they will do this.
Perhaps they
won't. I'll make them an offer that, just perhaps, they may not wish to
refuse.
What would that
be?
I will offer to
resign as First Minister. They don't want me, they won't have me. But the fact
is that I do have supporters at the Imperial Court and, even more important,
people in the Outer Worlds who find me acceptable. That means that if the
members of the Imperial Guard force me out, then even if they don't execute me,
they will have some trouble. If, on the other hand, I resign, stating that I
believe the military government is what Trantor and the Empire needs, then I
actually help them, you see?
He mused a little
and said, Besides, there is the little matter of psychohistory.
(That was the
first time Manella had ever heard the word.)
What's that?
Something I'm
working on. Cleon believed in its powers very strongly-more strongly than I did
at the time-and there's a considerable feeling in the court that psychohistory
is, or might be, a powerful tool that could be made to work on the side of the
government-whatever the government might be.
Nor does it
matter if they know nothing about the details of the science. I'd rather they
didn't. Lack of knowledge can increase what we might call the superstitious
aspect of the situation. In which case, they will let me continue working on my
research as a private citizen. At least, I hope so. And that brings me to you.
What about me?
I'm going to ask
as part of the deal that you be allowed to resign h the security establishment
and that no action be taken against you ~ the events in connection with the
assassination. I ought to be able to
'But you're talking
about ending my career.
Your career is,
in any case, over. Even if the Imperial Guard doesn't up an order of execution
against you, can you imagine that you will Be allowed to continue working as a
security officer?
But what do I
do? How do I make a living?
I'll take care
of that, Miss Dubanqua. In all likelihood, I'll go back to Streeling
University, with a large grant for my psychohistorical research, I'm sure that
I can find a place for you.
Manella,
round-eyed, said, Why should you...
Seldon said, I
can't believe you're asking. You saved Raych's life and own. Is it conceivable
that I don't owe you anything?
And it was as he
said. Seldon resigned gracefully from the post he had held for ten years. He
was given a fulsome letter of appreciation for His services by the just-formed
military government, a junta led by certain members of the Imperial Guard and
the armed forces. He returned to Streeling University and Manella Dubanqua,
relieved of her own post as security officer, went with Seldon and his family.
4
Raych came in,
blowing on his hands. I'm all for deliberate variety in the weather. You don't
want things under a dome to always be the same. Today though, they made it just
a little too cold and worked up a wind, besides. I think it's about time
someone complained to weather control.
I don't know
that it's weather control's fault, said Seldon. It's getting harder to
control things in general.
I know.
Deterioration. Raych brushed his thick black mustache with the back of his hand.
He did that often, as though he had never quite managed to get over the few
months during which he had been mustacheless in Wye. He had also put on a
little weight around the middle and, overall, had come to seem very comfortable
and middleclass. Even his Dahl accent had faded somewhat.
He took off his
light coverall and said, And how's the old birthday boy?
Resenting it.
Wait, wait, my son. One of these days, you'll be celebrating your fortieth
birthday. We'll see how funny you'll think that is.
Not as funny as
sixty.
Stop joking,
said Manella, who had been chafing Raych's hands, trying to warm them.
Seldon spread his
own hands. We're doing the wrong thing, Raych. Your wife is of the opinion
that all this talk about my turning sixty has sent little Wanda into a decline
over the possibility of my dying.
Really? said
Raych. That accounts for it, then. I stopped in to see her and she told me at
once, before I even had a chance to say a word, that she had had a bad dream.
Was it about your dying?
Apparently,
said Seldon.
Well, she'll get
over that. no way of stopping bad dreams.
I'm not
dismissing it that easily, said Manella. She's brooding over it and that's
not healthy. I'm going to get to the bottom of this.
As you say,
Manella, said Raych agreeably. You're my dear wife and whatever you say-about
Wanda-goes. And he brushed his mustache again.
His dear wife! It
hadn't been so easy to make her his dear wife. Raych remembered his mother's
attitude toward the possibility. Talk about nightmares. It was he who had the
periodic nightmares in which he had to face down the furious Dors Venabili once
more.
5
Raych's first
clear memory, after emerging from his desperance-induced ordeal, was that of
being shaved.
He felt the
vibrorazor moving along his cheek and he said weakly, Don't cut anywhere near
my upper lip, barber. I want my mustache back.
The barber, who
had already received his instructions from Seldon held up a mirror to reassure
him.
Dors Venabili,
who was sitting at his bedside, said, Let him work, Raych. Don't excite
yourself.
Raych's eyes
turned toward her momentarily and he was quiet. When the barber left, Dors
said, How do you feel, Raych?
Rotten, he
muttered. I'm so depressed, I can't stand it.
That's the
lingering effect of the desperance you've been dosed with. The effects will
wash out.
I can't believe
it. How long has it been?
Never mind. It
will take time. You were pumped full of it.
He looked around
restlessly. Has Manella been to see me?
That woman?
(Raych was getting used to hearing Dors speak of Manella with those words and
in that tone of voice.) No. You're not fit for visitors yet.
Interpreting the
look on Raych's face, Dors quickly added, I'm an exception because I'm your
mother, Raych. Why would you want that woman to see you, anyway? You're in no
condition to be seen.
All the more
reason to see her, muttered Raych. I want her to see me at my worst. He then
turned to one side dispiritedly. I want to sleep.
Dors Venabili
shook her head. Later that day she said to Seldon I don't know what we're
going to do about Raych. Hari. He's quite unreasonable.
Seldon said,
He's not well, Dors. Give the young man a chance.
He keeps
muttering about that woman. Whatever her name is.
Manella
Dubanqua. It's not a hard name to remember.
I think he wants
to set up housekeeping with her. Live with her. Marry her.
Seldon shrugged.
Raych is thirty-old enough to make up his own mind.
As his parents,
we have something to say-surely.
Hari sighed. And
I'm sure you've said it, Dors. And once you've said it, I'm sure he'll do as he
wishes.
Is that your
final word? Do you intend to do nothing while he makes plans to marry a woman
like that?
What do you
expect me to do, Dors? Manella saved Raych's life. Do you expect him to forget
that? She saved mine, too, for that matter.
That seemed to
feed Dors's anger. She said, And you also saved her. The score is even.
I didn't
exactly...
Of course you
did. The military rascals who now run the Empire would have slaughtered her if
you didn't step in and sell them your resignation and your support in order to
save her.
Though I may
have evened the score, which I don't think I have, Raych has not. And, Dors
dear, I would be very careful when it came to using unfortunate terms to
describe our government. These times are not going to be as easy as the times
when Cleon ruled and there will always be informers to repeat what they hear
you say.
Never mind that.
I don't like that woman. I presume that, at least, is permissible.
Permissible,
certainly, but of no use.
Hari looked down
at the floor, deep in thought. Dors's usually unfathomable black eyes were
positively flashing in anger. Hari looked up.
What I'd like to
know, Dors, is why? Why do you dislike Manella so? She saved our lives. If it
had not been for her quick action, both Raych and I would be dead.
Dors snapped
back, Yes, Hari. I know that better than anyone. And if she had not been there,
I would not have been able to do a thing to prevent your murder. I suppose you
think I should be grateful. But every time I look at that woman, I am reminded
of my failure. I know these feelings are not truly rational-and that is
something I can't explain. So do not ask me to like her, Hari. I cannot.
But the next day
even Dors had to back down when the doctor said, Your son wishes to see a
woman named Manella.
He's in no
condition to see visitors, snapped Dors.
On the contrary.
He is. He's doing quite well. Besides, he insists and is doing so most
strenuously. I don't know that we'd be wise to refuse him.
So they brought
in Manella and Raych greeted her effusively and with the first faint sign of
happiness since he had arrived at the hospital.
He made an
unmistakable small gesture of dismissal at Dors. Lips tightened, she left.
And the day came
when Raych said, She'll have me, Mom.
Dors said, Do
you expect me to be surprised, you foolish man? Of course she'll have you.
You're her only chance, now that she's been disgraced, ousted from the security
establishment...
Raych said, Mom,
if you're trying to lose me, this is exactly the way of doing it. Don't say
things like that.
I'm only
thinking of your welfare.
I'll think of my
own good, thank you. I'm no one's ticket to respectability-if you'll stop to
think of it. I'm not exactly handsome. I'm short. Dad isn't First Minister
anymore and I talk solid lower-class. What's there for her to be proud of in
me? She can do a lot better, but she wants me. And let me tell you, I want
her.
But you know
what she is.
Of course I know
what she is. She's a woman who loves me. She's the woman I love. That's what
she is.
And before you
fell in love with her, what was she? You know some of what she had to do while
undercover in Wye you were one of her assignments. How many others were
there? Are you able to live with her past? With what she did in the name of
duty? Now you can afford to be idealistic. But someday you will have your first
quarrel with her-or your second or your nineteenth-and you'll break down and
say, You!
Raych shouted
angrily, Don't say that! When we fight, I'll call her unreasonable,
irrational, nagging, whining, inconsiderate-a million adjectives that will fit
the situation. And she'll have words for me. But they'll all be sensible words
that can be withdrawn when the fight is over.
You think so-but
just wait till it happens.
Raych had turned
white. He said, Mother, you've been with Father now for almost twenty years.
Father is a hard man to disagree with, but there have been times when you two
have argued. I've heard you. In all those twenty years, has he ever called you
by any name that would in any way compromise your role as human being? For that
matter, have I done so? Can you conceive of me doing so now-no matter how angry
I get?
Dors struggled.
Her face did not show emotion in quite the same way that Raych's did or
Seldon's would, but it was clear that she was momentarily incapable of speech.
In fact, said
Raych, pushing his advantage (and feeling horrible at doing so) the fact of
the matter is that you are jealous because Manella saved Dad's life. You don't
want anyone to do that but you. Well, you had no chance to do so. Would you
prefer it if Manella had not shot Andorin-if Dad had died? And me, too?
Dors said in a
choked voice, He insisted on going out to meet the gardeners alone. He would
not allow me to come.
But that wasn't
Manella's fault.
Is that why you
want to marry her? Gratitude?
No. Love.
And so it was,
but Manella said to Raych after the ceremony, Your mother may have attended
the wedding because you insisted, Raych, but she looked like one of those
thunderclouds they sometimes send sailing under the dome.
Raych laughed.
She doesn't have the face to be a thundercloud. You're just imagining it.
Not at all. How
will we ever get her to give us a chance?
We'll just be
patient. She'll get over it.
But Dors Venabili
didn't.
Two years after
the wedding, Wanda was born. Dors's attitude toward the child was all Raych and
Manella could have wanted, but Wanda's mother remained that woman to Raych's
mother.
6
Hari Seldon was
fighting off melancholy. He was lectured in turn by Dors, by Raych, by Yugo,
and by Manella. All united to tell him that sixty was not old.
They simply did
not understand. He had been thirty when the first hint of psychohistory had
come to him, thirty-two when he delivered his famous lecture at the Decennial
Convention, following which everything seemed to happen to him at once. After
his brief interview with Cleon, He had fled across Trantor and met Demerzel,
Dors, Yugo, and Raych, to say nothing of the people of Mycogen, of Dahl, and of
Wye.
He was forty when
he became First Minister and fifty when he had relinquished the post. Now he
was sixty.
He had spent
thirty years on psychohistory. How many more years would he require? How many
more years would he live? Would he die with the Psychohistory Project
unfinished after all?
It was not the
dying that bothered him, he told himself. It was the matter of leaving the
Psychohistory Project unfinished.
He went to see
Yugo Amaryl. In recent years they had somehow drifted apart, as the
Psychohistory Project had steadily increased in size. In the first years at
Streeling, it had merely been Seldon and Amaryl working together-no one else.
Now
Amaryl was nearly
fifty-not exactly a young man-and he had somehow lost his spark. In all these
years, he had developed no interest in anything but psychohistory: no woman, no
companion, no hobby, no subsidiary activity.
Amaryl blinked at
Seldon who couldn't help but note the changes in the man's appearance. Part of
it may have been because Yugo had had to have his eyes reconstructed. He saw
perfectly well, but there was an unnatural look about them and he tended to
blink slowly. It made him appear sleepy.
What do you
think, Yugo? said Seldon. Is there any light at the end of the tunnel?
Light? Yes, as a
matter of fact, said Amaryl. There's this new fellow, Tamwile Elar. You know
him, of course.
Oh yes. I'm the
one who hired him. Very vigorous and aggressive. How's he doing?
I can't say I'm
really comfortable with him, Hari. His loud laughter gets on my nerves. But
he's brilliant. The new system of equations fits right into the Prime Radiant
and they seem to make it possible to get around the problem of chaos.
Seem? Or will?
Too early to
say, but I'm very hopeful. I have tried a number of things that would have
broken them down if they were worthless and the new equations survived them
all. I'm beginning to think of them as the achaotic equations.
I don't
imagine, said Seldon we have anything like a rigorous demonstration
concerning these equations?
No, we don't,
though I've put half a dozen people on it, including Elar, of course. Amaryl
turned on his Prime Radiant-which was every bit as advanced as Seldon's was-and
he watched as the curving lines of luminous equations curled in midair-too
small, too fine to be read without amplification. Add the new equations and we
may be able to begin to predict.
Each time I
study the Prime Radiant now, said Seldon thoughtfully, I wonder at the
Electro-Clarifier and how tightly it squeezes material into the lines and
curves of the future. Wasn't that Elar's idea, too?
Yes. With the
help of Cinda Monay, who designed it.
It's good to
have new and brilliant men and women in the Project. Somehow it reconciles me
to the future.
You think
someone like Elar may be heading the Project someday? asked Amaryl, still
studying the Prime Radiant.
Maybe. After you
and I have retired-or died.
Amaryl seemed to
relax and turned off the device. I would like to complete the task before we
retire or die.
So would I,
Yugo. So would I.
Psychohistory
has guided us pretty well in the last ten years.
That was true
enough, but Seldon knew that one couldn't attach too much triumph to that.
Things had gone smoothly and without major surprises.
Psychohistory had
predicted that the center would hold after Cleon's death-predicted it in a very
dim and uncertain way-and it did hold. Trantor was reasonably quiet. Even with
an assassination and the end of a dynasty, the center had held.
It did so under
the stress of military rule-Dors was quite right in speaking of the junta as
those military rascals. She might have even gone farther in her accusations
without being wrong. Nevertheless, they were holding the Empire together and
would continue to do so for a time. Long enough, perhaps, to allow
psychohistory to play an active role in the events that were to transpire.
Lately Yugo had
been speaking about the possible establishment of Foundations-separate,
isolated, independent of the Empire itself serving as seeds for developments
through the forthcoming dark ages and into a new and better Empire. Seldon
himself had been working on the consequences of such an arrangement.
But he lacked the
time and, he felt (with a certain misery), he lacked the youth as well. His
mind, however firm and steady, did not have the resiliency and creativity that
it had had when he was thirty and with each passing year, he knew he would have
less.
Perhaps he ought
to put the young and brilliant Elar on the task, taking him off everything
else. Seldon had to admit to himself, shamefacedly, that the possibility did
not excite him. He did not want to have invented psychohistory so that some
stripling could come in and reap the final fruits of fame. In fact, to put it
at its most disgraceful, Seldon felt jealous of Elar and realized it just
sufficiently to feel ashamed of the emotion.
Yet, regardless
of his less rational feelings, he would have to depend on other younger
men-whatever his discomfort over it. Psychohistory was no longer the private
preserve of himself and Amaryl. The decade of his being First Minister had
converted it into a large government-sanctioned and budgeted undertaking and,
quite to his surprise, after resigning from his post as First Minister and
returning to Streeling University, it had grown still larger. Hari grimaced at
its ponderous-and pompous-official name: the Seldon Psychohistory Project at
Streeling University. But most people simply referred to it as the Project.
The military
junta apparently saw the Project as a possible political weapon and while that
was so, funding was no problem. Credits poured in. In return, it was necessary
to prepare annual reports, which, however, were quite opaque. Only fringe
matters were reported on and even then the mathematics was not likely to be
within the purview of any of the members of the junta.
It was clear as
he left his old assistant that Amaryl, at least, was more than satisfied with
the way psychohistory was going and yet Seldon felt the blanket of depression
settle over him once more.
He decided it was
the forthcoming birthday celebration that was bothering him. It was meant as a
celebration of joy, but to Hari it was not even a gesture of consolation-it
merely emphasized his age.
Besides, it was
upsetting his routine and Hari was a creature of habit. His office and a number
of those adjoining had been cleared out and it had been days since he had been
able to work normally. His proper offices would be converted into halls of
glory, he supposed, and it would be many days before he could get back to work.
Only Amaryl absolutely refused to budge and was able to maintain his office.
Seldon had
wondered, peevishly, who had thought of doing all this. It wasn't Dors, of
course. She knew him entirely too well. Not Amaryl or Raych, who never even
remembered their own birthdays. He had suspected Manella and had even
confronted her on the matter.
She admitted that
she was all for it and had given orders for the arrangements to take place, but
she said that the idea for the birthday party had been suggested to her by
Tamwile Elar.
The brilliant
one, thought Seldon. Brilliant in everything.
He sighed. If
only the birthday were all over.
Dors poked her
head through the door. Am I allowed to come in?
No, of course
not. Why should you think I would?
This is not your
usual place.
I know, sighed
Seldon. I have been evicted from my usual place because of the stupid birthday
party. How I wish it were over.
There you are.
Once that woman gets an idea in her head, it takes over and grows like the big
bang.
Seldon changed
sides at once. Come. She means well, Dors.
Save me from the
well-meaning, said Dors. In any case, I'm here to discuss something else.
Something which may be important.
Go ahead. What
is it?
I've been
talking to Wanda about her dream... She hesitated.
Seldon made a
gargling sound in the back of his throat, then said, can't believe it. Just let
it go.
No. Did you
bother to ask her for the details of the dream?
Why should I put
the little girl through that?
Neither did
Raych, nor Manella. It was left up to me.
But why should
you torture her with questions about it?
Because I had
the feeling I should, said Dors grimly. In the first place, she didn't have
the dream when she was home in her bed.
Where was she,
then?
In your office.
What was she
doing in my office?
She wanted to see
the place where the party would be and she walked into your office and, of
course, there was nothing to see, as it's been cleared out in preparation. But
your chair was still there. The large one-tall back, tall wings,
broken-down-the one you won't let me replace.
Hari sighed, as
if recalling a longstanding disagreement. It's not broken-down. I don't want a
new one. Go on.
She curled up in
your chair and began to brood over the fact that maybe you weren't really going
to have a party and she felt bad. Then, she tells me, she must have fallen
asleep because nothing is clear in her mind, except that in her dream there
were two men-not women, she was sure about that-two men, talking.
And what were
they talking about?
She doesn't know
exactly. You know how difficult it is to remember details under such
circumstances. But she says it was about dying and she thought it was you
because you were so old. And she remembers two words clearly. They were
lemonade death.
What?
Lemonade death.
What does that
mean?
I don't know. In
any case, the talking ceased, the men left, and there she was in the chair,
cold and frightened-and she's been upset about it ever since.
Seldon mulled
over Dors's report. Then he said, Look, dear, what importance can we attach to
a child's dream?
We can ask
ourselves first, Hari, if it even was a dream.
What do you
mean?
Wanda doesn't
say outright it was. She says she must have fallen asleep. Those are her
words. She didn't say she fell asleep, she said she must have fallen asleep.
What do you
deduce from that?
She may have
drifted off into a half-doze and, in that state, heard two men-two real men,
not two dream men-talking.
Real men?
Talking about killing me with lemonade death?
Something like
that, yes.
Dors, said
Seldon forcefully, I know that you're forever foreseeing danger for me, but
this is going too far. Why should anyone want to kill me?
It's been tried
twice before.
So it has, but
consider the circumstances. The first attempt came shortly after Cleon
appointed me First Minister. Naturally this was an offense to the
well-established court hierarchy and I was very resented. A few thought they
might settle matters by getting rid of me. The second time was when the
Joranumites were trying to seize power and they thought I was standing in their
way-plus Namarti's distorted dream of revenge.
Fortunately
neither assassination attempt succeeded, but why should there now be a third? I
am no longer First Minister and haven't been for ten years. I am an aging
mathematician in retirement and surely no one has anything to fear from me. The
Joranumites have been rooted out and destroyed and Namarti was executed long
ago. There is absolutely no motivation for anyone to want to kill me.
So please, Dors,
relax. When you're nervous about me, you get unsettled, which makes you more
nervous still, and I don't want that to happen.
Dors rose from
her seat and leaned across Hari's desk. It's easy for you to say that there is
no motive to kill you, but none is needed. Our government is now a completely
irresponsible one and if they wish...
Stop! commanded
Seldon loudly. Then, very quietly, Not a word, Dors. Not a word against the
government. That could get us in the very trouble you're foreseeing.
I'm only talking
to you, Hari.
Right now you
are, but if you get into the habit of saying foolish things, you don't know
when something will slip out in someone else's presence-someone who will then
be glad to report you. Just learn, as a matter of necessity, to refrain from
political commentary.
I'll try, Hari,
said Dors, but she could not keep the indignation out of her voice. She turned
on her heel and left.
Seldon watched
her go. Dors had aged gracefully, so gracefully that at times she seemed not to
have aged at all. Though she was two years younger than Seldon, her appearance
had not changed nearly as much as his had in the twenty-eight years they had
been together. Naturally.
Her hair was
frosted with gray, but the youthful luster beneath the gray still shone
through. Her complexion had grown more sallow; her voice was a bit huskier,
and, of course, she wore clothes that were suitable for middle age. However,
her movements were as agile and as quick as ever. It was as if nothing could be
allowed to interfere with her ability to protect Hari in case of an emergency.
Hari sighed. This
business of being protected-more or less against his will, at all times-was
sometimes a heavy burden.
8
Manella came to
see Seldon almost immediately afterward.
Pardon me, Hari,
but what has Dors been saying
Seldon looked up
again. Nothing but interruptions.
It wasn't
anything important. Wanda's dream.
Manella's lips
pursed. I knew it. Wanda said Dors was asking her questions about it. Why
doesn't she leave the girl alone? You would think that having a bad dream was
some sort of felony.
As a matter of
fact, said Seldon soothingly, it's just a matter of something Wanda
remembered as part of the dream. I don't know if Wanda told you, but apparently
in her dream she heard something about 'lemonade death. '
Hmm! Manella
was silent for a moment. Then she said, That doesn't really matter so much.
Wanda is crazy about lemonade and she's expecting lots of it at the party. I
promised she'd have some with Mycogenian drops in it and she's looking forward
to it.
So that if she
heard something that sounded anything like lemonade, it would be translated
into lemonade in her mind.
Yes. Why not?
Except that, in
that case, what do you suppose it was that was actually said? She must have
heard something in order to misinterpret it.
I don't think
that's necessarily so. But why are we attaching so much importance to a little
girl's dream? Please, I don't want anyone talking to her about it anymore. It's
too upsetting.
I agree. I'll
see to it that Dors drops the subject-at least with Wanda.
All right. I
don't care if she is Wanda's grandmother, Hari. I'm her mother, after all, and
my wishes come first.
Absolutely,
said Seldon soothingly and looked after Manella as she left. That was another
burden-the unending competition between those two women.
9
Tamwile Elar was
thirty-six years old and had joined Seldon's Psychohistory Project as Senior
Mathematician four years earlier. He was a tall man, with a habitual twinkle in
his eye and with more than a touch of self-assurance as well.
His hair was
brown and had a loose wave in it, the more noticeable because he wore it rather
long. He had an abrupt way of laughing, but there was no fault to be found with
his mathematical ability.
Elar had been
recruited from the West Mandanov University and Seldon always had to smile when
he remembered how suspicious Yugo Amaryl had been of him at first. But then,
Amaryl was suspicious of everyone. Deep in his heart (Seldon felt sure), Amaryl
felt that psychohistory ought to have remained his and Hari's private province.
But even Amaryl
was now willing to admit that Elar's membership in the group had eased his own
situation tremendously. Yugo said, His techniques for avoiding chaos are
unique and fascinating. no one else in the Project could have worked it out the
way he did. Certainly nothing of this sort ever occurred to me. It didn't occur
to you, either, Hari.
Well, said
Seldon grumpily, I'm getting old.
If only, said
Amaryl, he didn't laugh so loud.
People can't
help the way they laugh.
Yet the truth was
that Seldon found himself having a little trouble accepting Elar. It was rather
humiliating that he himself had come nowhere near the achaotic equations, as
they were now called. It didn't bother Seldon that he had never thought of the
principle behind the Electro-Clarifier-that was not really his field. The
achaotic equations, however, he should, indeed, have thought of-or at least
gotten close to.
He tried
reasoning with himself. Seldon had worked out the entire basis for
psychohistory and the achaotic equations grew naturally out of that basis.
Could Elar have done Seldon's work three decades earlier? Seldon was convinced
that Elar couldn't have. And was it so remarkable that Elar had thought up the
principle of achaotism once the basis was in place?
All this was very
sensible and very true, yet Seldon still found himself uneasy when facing Elar.
Just slightly edgy. Weary age facing flamboyant youth.
Yet Elar never
gave him obvious cause for feeling the difference in years. He never failed to
show Seldon full respect or in any way to imply that the older man had passed
his prime.
Of course, Elar
was interested in the forthcoming festivities and had even, as Seldon had
discovered, been the first to suggest that Seldon's birthday be celebrated.
(Was this a nasty emphasis on Seldon's age? Seldon dismissed the possibility.
If he believed that, it would mean he was picking up some of Dors's tricks of
suspicion.
Elar strode
toward him and said, Maestro... And Seldon winced, as always. He much
preferred to have the senior members of the Project call him Hari, but it
seemed such a small point to make a fuss over.
Maestro, said
Elar. The word is out that you've been called in for a conference with General
Tennar.
Yes. He's the
new head of the military junta and I suppose he wants to see me to ask what
psychohistory is all about. They've been asking me that since the days of Cleon
and Demerzel. (The new head! The junta was like a kaleidoscope, with some of
its members periodically falling from grace and others rising from nowhere.)
But it's my
understanding he wants it now-right in the middle of the birthday celebration.
That doesn't
matter. You can all celebrate without me.
No, we can't,
Maestro. I hope you don't mind, but some of us got together and put in a call
to the Palace and put the appointment off for a week.
What? said
Seldon annoyed. Surely that was presumptuous of you-and risky, besides.
It worked out
well. They've put it off and you'll need that time.
Why would I need
a week?
Elar hesitated.
May I speak frankly, Maestro?
Of course you
can. When have I ever asked that anyone speak to me m any way but frankly?
Elar flushed
slightly, his fair skin reddening, but his voice remained steady. It's not
easy to say this, Maestro. You're a genius at mathematics. no one on the
Project has any doubt of that. no one in the Empire-they knew you and
understood mathematics-would have any doubt Tout it. However, it is not given
to anybody to be a universal genius.
I know that as
well as you do, Elar.
I know you do.
Specifically, though, you lack the ability to handle ordinary people-shall we
say, stupid people. You lack a certain deviousness, a certain ability to
sidestep, and if you are dealing with someone who is both powerful in
government and somewhat stupid, you can easily endanger the Project and, for
that matter, your own life, simply because you are too frank.
What is this? Am
I suddenly a child? I've been dealing with politicians for a long time. I was
First Minister for ten years, as perhaps you may remember.
Forgive me,
Maestro, but you were not an extraordinarily effective one. You dealt with
First Minister Demerzel, who was very intelligent, by all accounts, and with
the Emperor Cleon, who was very friendly. Now you will encounter military
people who are neither intelligent nor friendly-another matter entirely.
I've even dealt
with military people and survived.
Not with General
Dugal Tennar. He's another sort of thing altogether. I know him.
You know him?
You have met him?
I don't know him
personally, but he's from Mandanov, which, as you know, is my sector, and he
was a power there before he joined the junta and rose through its ranks.
And what do you
know about him?
Ignorant,
superstitious, violent. He is not someone you can handle easily-or safely. You
can use the week to work out methods for dealing with him.
Seldon bit his
lower lip. There was something to what Elar said and Seldon recognized the fact
that, while he had plans of his own, it would still be difficult to try to
manipulate a stupid, self-important, short-tempered person with overwhelming
force at his disposal.
He said uneasily,
I'll manage somehow. The whole matter of a military junta is, in any case, an
unstable situation in the Trantor of today. It has already lasted longer than
might have seemed likely.
Have we been
testing that? I was not aware that we were making stability decisions on the
junta.
Just a few
calculations by Amaryl, making use of your achaotic equations. He paused. By
the way, I've come across some references to them as the Elar Equations.
Not by me,
Maestro.
I hope you don't
mind, but I don't want that. Psychohistoric elements are to be described
functionally and not personally. As soon as personalities intervene, bad
feelings arise.
I understand and
quite agree, Maestro.
In fact, said
Seldon with a touch of guilt, I have always felt it wrong that we speak of the
basic Seldon Equations of Psychohistory. The trouble is that's been in use for
so many years, it's not practical to try to change it.
If you'll excuse
my saying so, Maestro, you're an exceptional case. no one, I think, would
quarrel with your receiving full credit for inventing the science of
psychohistory. But, if I may, I wish to get back to your meeting with General
Tennar.
Well, what else
is there to say?
I can't help but
wonder if it might be better if you did not see him, did not speak to him, did
not deal with him.
How am I to
avoid that if he calls me in for a conference?
Perhaps you can
plead illness and send someone in your place.
Whom?
Elar was silent
for a moment, but his silence was eloquent.
Seldon said,
You, I take it.
Might that not
be the thing to do? I am a fellow sectoral citizen of the General, which may
carry some weight. You are a busy man, getting 011 in years, and it would be
easy to believe that you are not entirely well. And if I see him, rather than yourself-please
excuse me, Maestro-I can wiggle and maneuver more easily than you can.
Lie, you mean.
If necessary.
You'll be taking
a huge chance.
Not too huge. I
doubt that he will order my execution. If he becomes annoyed with me, as he
well might, then I can plead-or you can plead on my behalf-youth and
inexperience. In any case, if I get into trouble, that will be far less
dangerous than if you were to do so. I'm thinking of the Project, which can do
without me a great deal more easily than it can without you.
Seldon said with
a frown, I'm not going to hide behind you, Elar. If the man wants to see me,
he will see me. I refuse to shiver and shake and ask you to take chances for
me. What do you think I am?
A frank and
honest man-when the need is for a devious one.
I will manage to
be devious-if I must. Please don't underestimate me, Elar.
Elar shrugged
hopelessly. Very well. I can only argue with you up to a certain point.
In fact, Elar, I
wish you had not postponed the meeting. I would rather skip my birthday and see
the General than the reverse. This birthday celebration was not my idea. His
voice died away in a grumble.
Elar said, I'm
sorry.
Well, said
Seldon with resignation, we'll see what happens.
He turned and
left. Sometimes he wished ardently that he could run what was called a tight
ship, making sure that everything went as he wished it to, leaving little or
no room for maneuvering among his subordinates. To do that, however, would take
enormous time, enormous effort, would deprive him of any chance of working on
psychohistory himself-and, besides, he simply lacked the temperament for it.
He sighed. He
would have to speak to Amaryl.
10
Seldon strode
into Amaryl's office, unannounced.
Yugo, he said
abruptly, the session with General Tennar has been postponed. He seated
himself in a rather pettish manner.
It took Amaryl
his usual few moments to disconnect his mind from his work. Looking up finally,
he said, What was his excuse?
It wasn't he.
Some of our mathematicians arranged a week's postponement so that it wouldn't
interfere with the birthday celebration. I find all of this to be extremely
annoying.
Why did you let
them do that?
I didn't. They
just went ahead and arranged things. Seldon shrugged. In a way, it's my
fault. I've whined so long about turning sixty that everyone thinks they have
to cheer me up with festivities.
Amaryl said, Of
course, we can use the week.
Seldon sat
forward, immediately tense. Is something wrong?
No. Not that I
can see, but it won't hurt to examine it further. Look, Hari, this is the first
time in nearly thirty years that psychohistory has leached the point where it
can actually make a prediction. It's not much of one-it's just a small pinch of
the vast continent of humanity-but it's t lie best we've had so far. All right.
We want to take advantage of that, see how it works, prove to ourselves that
psychohistory is what we think it is: a predictive science. So it won't hurt to
make sure that we haven't overlooked anything. Even this tiny bit of prediction
is complex and I welcome another week of study.
Very well, then.
I'll consult you on the matter before I go to see the General for any
last-minute modifications that have to be made. Meanwhile, Yugo, do not allow
any information concerning this to leak out to the others-not to anyone. If it
fails, I don't want the people of the Project to grow downhearted. You and I
will absorb the failure ourselves and keep on trying.
A rare wistful
smile crossed Amaryl's face. You and I. Do you remember when it really was
just the two of us?
I remember it
very well and don't think that I don't miss those days. We didn't have much to
work with...
Not even the
Prime Radiant, let alone the Electro-Clarifier.
But those were
happy days.
Happy, said
Amaryl, nodding his head.
11
The University
had been transformed and Hari Seldon could not refrain from being pleased.
The central rooms
of the Project complex had suddenly sprouted in color and light, with
holography filling the air with shifting three-dimensional images of Seldon at
different places and different times. There was Dors Venabili smiling, looking
somewhat younger-Raych as a teenager, still unpolished-Seldon and Amaryl,
looking unbelievably young, bent over their computers. There was even a
fleeting sight of Eto Demerzel, which filled Seldon's heart with yearning for
his old friend and the security he had felt before Demerzel's departure.
The Emperor Cleon
appeared nowhere in the holographics. It was not because holographs of him did
not exist, but it was not wise, under the rule of the junta, to remind people
of the past Imperium.
It all poured
outward, overflowing, filling room after room, building after building.
Somehow, time had been found to convert the entire University into a display
the likes of which Seldon had never seen or even imagined. Even the dome lights
were darkened to produce an artificial night against which the University would
sparkle for three days.
Three days!
said Seldon, half-impressed, half-horrified.
Three days,
said Dors Venabili, nodding her head. The University would consider nothing
less.
The expense! The
labor! said Seldon, frowning.
The expense is
minimal, said Dors, compared to what you have done for the University. And
the labor is all voluntary. The students turned out and took care of
everything.
A from-the-air
view of the University appeared now, panoramically, and Seldon stared at it
with a smile forcing itself onto his countenance.
Dors said,
You're pleased. You've done nothing but grouse these past few months about how
you didn't want any celebration for being an old man-and now look at you.
Well, it is flattering.
I had no idea that they would do anything like this.
Why not? You're
an icon, Hari. The whole world-the whole Empire-knows about you.
They do not,
said Seldon, shaking his head vigorously. Not one in a billion knows anything
at all about me-and certainly not about psychohistory. no one outside the
Project has the faintest knowledge of how psychohistory works and not everyone
inside does, either.
That doesn't
matter, Hari. It's you. Even the quadrillions who don't know anything about you
or your work know that Hari Seldon is the greatest mathematician in the
Empire.
Well, said
Seldon, looking around, they certainly are making me feel that way right now.
But three days and three nights! The place will be reduced to splinters.
No, it won't.
All the records have been stored away. The computers and other equipment have
been secured. The students have set up a virtual security force that will
prevent anything from being damaged.
You've seen to
all of that, haven't you, Dors? said Seldon, smiling at her fondly.
A number of us
have. It's by no means all me. Your colleague Tamwile Elar has worked with
incredible dedication.
Seldon scowled.
What's the
matter with Elar? said Dors.
Seldon said, He
keeps calling me Maestro.
Dors shook her head.
Well, there's a terrible crime.
Seldon ignored
that and said, And he's young.
Worse and worse.
Come, Hari, you're going to have to learn to grow old gracefully-and to begin
with you'll have to show that you're enjoying yourself. That will please others
and increase their enjoyment and surely you would want to do that. Come on. Move
around. Don't hide here with me. Greet everyone. Smile. Ask after their health.
And remember that, after the banquet, you're going to have to make a speech.
I dislike
banquets and I doubly dislike speeches.
You'll have to,
anyway. Now move!
Seldon sighed
dramatically and did as he was told. He cut quite an imposing figure as he
stood in the archway leading into the main hall. I'he voluminous First
Minister's robes of yesteryear were gone, as were the Heliconian-style garments
he had favored in his youth. Now Seldon wore an outfit that bespoke his
elevated status: straight pants, crisply pleated, a modified tunic on top.
Embroidered in silver thread above his heart was the insignia: SELDON
PSYCHOHISTORY PROJECT AT STREELING UNIVERSITY. It sparkled like a beacon
against the dignified titanium-gray hue of his clothing. Seldon's eyes twinkled
in a face now lined by age, his sixty years given away as much by his wrinkles
as by his white hair.
He entered the
room in which the children were feasting. The room had been entirely cleared,
except for trestles with food upon them. The children rushed up to him as soon
as they saw him-knowing, as they did, that he was the reason for the feast-and
Seldon tried to avoid their clutching fingers.
Wait, wait,
children, he said. Now stand back.
He pulled a small
computerized robot from his pocket and placed it on the floor. In an Empire
without robots, this was something that he could expect to be eye-popping. It
had the shape of a small furry animal, but it also had the capacity to change
shapes without warning (eliciting squeals of children's laughter each time) and
when it did so, the sounds and motions it made changed as well.
Watch it, said
Seldon, and play with it, and try not to break it. Later on, there'll be one
for each of you.
He slipped out
into the hallway leading back to the main hall and realized, as he did so, that
Wanda was following him.
Grandpa, she
said.
Well, of course,
Wanda was different. He swooped down and lifted her high in the air, turned her
over, and put her down.
Are you having a
good time, Wanda? he asked.
Yes, she said,
but don't go into that room.
Why not, Wanda?
It's my room. It's the office where I work.
It's where I had
my bad dream.
I know, Wanda,
but that's all over, isn't it? He hesitated, then he led Wanda to one of the
chairs lining the hallway. He sat down and placed her on his lap.
Wanda, he said,
are you sure it was a dream?
I think it was a
dream.
Were you really
sleeping?
I think I was.
She seemed uncomfortable
talking about it and Seldon decided to let it go. There was no use pushing her
any further.
He said, Well,
dream or not, there were two men and they talked of lemonade death, didn't
they?
Wanda nodded
reluctantly.
Seldon said,
You're sure they said lemonade?
Wanda nodded
again.
Might they have
said something else and you thought they said lemonade?
Lemonade is what
they said.
Seldon had to be
satisfied with that. Well, run off and have a good time, Wanda. Forget about
the dream.
All right,
Grandpa. She cheered up as soon as the matter of the dream was dismissed and
off she went to join the festivities.
Seldon went to
search for Manella. It took him an extraordinarily long time to find her,
since, at every step, he was stopped, greeted, and conversed with.
Finally he saw
her in the distance. Muttering, Pardon me... Pardon me... There's someone I
must... Pardon me-, he worked his way over to her with considerable trouble.
Manella, he
said and drew her off to one side, smiling mechanically in all directions.
Yes, Hari, she
said. Is something wrong?
It's Wanda's
dream.
Don't tell me
she's still talking about it.
Well, it's still
bothering her. Listen, we have lemonade at the party, haven't we?
Of course, the
children adore it. I've added a couple of dozen different Mycogenian taste buds
to very small glasses of different shapes and the children try them one after
the other to see which taste best. The adults have been drinking it, too. I
have. Why don't you taste it, Hari? It's great.
I'm thinking. If
it wasn't a dream, if the child really heard two men speak of lemonade
death... He paused, as though ashamed to continue.
Manella said,
Are you thinking that someone poisoned the lemonade? That's ridiculous. By now
every child in the place would be sick or dying.
I know,
muttered Seldon. I know.
He wandered off
and almost didn't see Dors when he passed her. She seized his elbow.
Why the face?
she said. You look concerned.
I've been
thinking of Wanda's lemonade death.
So have I, but I
can't make anything of it so far.
I can't help but
think of the possibility of poisoning.
Don't. I assure
you that every bit of food that came into this party has been molecularly
checked. I know you'll think that's my typical paranoia, but my task is
guarding you and that is what I must do.
And everything
is...
No poison. I
promise you.
Seldon smiled,
Well, good. That's a relief. I didn't really think...
Let's hope not,
said Dors dryly. What concerns me far more than this myth of poison is that I
have heard that you're going to be seeing that monster Tennar in a few days.
Don't call him a
monster, Dors. Be careful. We're surrounded by cars and tongues.
Dors immediately
lowered her voice. I suppose you're right. Look ;round. All these smiling
faces-and yet who knows which of our friends' will be reporting back to the
head and his henchmen when the night is over? Ah, humans! Even after all these
thousands of centuries, to think that such base treachery still exists. It
seems to me to be so unnecessary. Yet I know the harm it can do. That is why I
must go with you, Hari.
Impossible,
Dors. It would just complicate matters for me. I'll go Myself and I'll have no
trouble.
You would have
no idea how to handle the General.
Seldon looked
grave. And you would? You sound exactly like Elar. He, too, is convinced that
I am a helpless old fool. He, too, wants to come with me-or, rather, to go in
my place. I wonder how many people on Trantor are willing to take my place, he
added with clear sarcasm. Dozens? Millions?
12
For ten years the
Galactic Empire had been without an Emperor, but there was no indication of
that fact in the way the Imperial Palace grounds were operated. Millennia of
custom made the absence of an Emperor meaningless.
It meant, of
course, that there was no figure in Imperial robes to preside over formalities
of one sort or another. no Imperial voice gave orders; no Imperial wishes made
themselves known; no Imperial gratifications or annoyances made themselves
felt; no Imperial pleasures warmed either Palace; no Imperial sicknesses cast
them in gloom. The Emperor's own quarters in the Small Palace were empty-the
Imperial family did not exist.
And yet the army
of gardeners kept the grounds in perfect condition. An army of service people
kept the buildings in top shape. The Emperor's bed-never slept in-was made with
fresh sheets every day; the rooms were cleaned; everything worked as it always
worked; and the entire Imperial staff, from top to bottom, worked as they had
always worked. The top officials gave commands as they would have done if the
Emperor had lived, commands that they knew the Emperor would have given. In
many cases, in particular in the higher echelons, the personnel were the same
as those who had been there on Cleon's last day of life. The new personnel who
had been taken on were carefully molded and trained into the traditions they
would have to serve.
It was as though
the Empire, accustomed to the rule of an Emperor, insisted on this ghost rule
to hold the Empire together.
The junta knew this-or,
if they didn't, they felt it vaguely. In ten years none of those military men
who had commanded the Empire had moved into the Emperor's private quarters in
the Small Palace. Whatever these men were, they were not Imperial and they knew
they had no rights there. A populace that endured the loss of liberty would not
endure any sign of irreverence to the Emperor-alive or dead.
Even General
Tennar had not moved into the graceful structure that had housed the Emperors
of a dozen different dynasties for so long. He Hid made his home and office in
one of the structures built on the outskirts of the grounds-eyesores, but
eyesores that were built like fortresses, sturdy enough to withstand a siege,
with outlying buildings in which an enormous force of guards was housed.
Tennar was a
stocky man, with a mustache. It was not a vigorous overflowing Dahlite mustache
but one that was carefully clipped and fitted to the upper lip, leaving a strip
of skin between the hair and the line of the lip. It was a reddish mustache and
Tennar had cold blue eyes. He had probably been a handsome man in his younger
days, but his face was pudgy now and his eyes were slits that expressed anger
more often than any other emotion.
So he said
angrily-as one would, who felt himself to be absolute master of millions of
worlds and yet who dared not call himself an Emperor-to Hender Linn, I can
establish a dynasty of my own. He hooked around with a scowl. This is not a
fitting place for the master of the Empire.
Linn said softly,
To be master is what is important. Better to be a master in a cubicle than a
figurehead in a palace.
Best yet, to be
master in a palace. Why not?
Linn bore the
title of colonel, but it is quite certain that he had never engaged in any
military action. His function was that of telling Tennar what he wanted to
hear-and of carrying his orders, unchanged, to others. On occasion-if it seemed
safe-he might try to steer Tennar into more prudent courses.
Linn was well
known as Tennar's lackey and knew that was how he was known. It did not
bother him. As lackey, he was safe-and he had seen the downfall of those who
had been too proud to be lackeys.
The time might,
of course, come when Tennar himself would be buried in the ever-changing junta
panorama, but Linn felt, with a certain amount of philosophy, that he would be
aware of it in time and save himself. Or he might not. There was a price for
everything.
No reason why
you can't found a dynasty, General, said Linn. Many others have done it in the
long Imperial history. Still, it takes lime. The people are slow to adapt. It
is usually only the second or even third of the dynasty who is fully accepted
as Emperor.
I don't believe
that. I need merely announce myself as new Em1wror. Who will dare quarrel with
that? My grip is tight.
So it is,
General. Your power is unquestioned on Trantor and in most of the Inner Worlds,
yet it is possible that many in the farther Outer Worlds will not just
yet-accept a new Imperial dynasty.
Inner Worlds or
Outer Worlds, military force rules all. That is an old Imperial maxim.
And a good one,
said Linn, but many of the provinces have armed forces of their own, nowadays,
that they may not use on your behalf. These are difficult times.
You counsel
caution, then.
I always counsel
caution, General.
And someday you
may counsel it once too often.
Linn bent his
head. I can only counsel what seems to me to be good and useful to you,
General.
As in your
constant harping to me about this Hari Seldon.
He is your
greatest danger, General.
So you keep
saying, but I don't see it. He's just a college professor.
Linn said, So he
is, but he was once First Minister.
I know, but that
was in Cleon's time. Has he done anything since? With times being difficult and
with the governors of the provinces being fractious, why is a professor my
greatest danger?
It is sometimes
a mistake, said Linn carefully (for one had to be careful in educating the
General), to suppose that a quiet unobtrusive man can be harmless. Seldon has
been anything but harmless to those he has opposed. Twenty years ago the
Joranumite movement almost destroyed Cleon's powerful First Minister, Eto
Demerzel.
Tennar nodded,
but the slight frown on his face betrayed his effort to remember the matter.
It was Seldon
who destroyed Joranum and who succeeded Demerzel as First Minister. The
Joranumite movement survived, however, and Seldon engineered its destruction,
too, but not before it succeeded in bringing about the assassination of Cleon.
But Seldon
survived that, didn't he?
You are
perfectly correct. Seldon survived.
That is strange.
To have permitted an Imperial assassination should have meant death for a First
Minister.
So it should
have. Nevertheless, the junta has allowed him to live. It seemed wiser to do
so.
Why?
Linn sighed
internally. There is something called psychohistory, General.
I know nothing
about that, said Tennar flatly.
Actually he had a
vague memory of Linn trying to talk to him on a number of occasions concerning
this strange collection of syllables. He had never wanted to listen and Linn
had known better than to push the matter. Tennar didn't want to listen now,
either, but there seemed to be a hidden urgency in Linn's words. Perhaps,
Tennar thought, he had now better listen.
Almost no one
knows anything about it, said Linn, yet there are a few-uh-intellectuals, who
find it of interest.
And what is it?
It is a complex
system of mathematics.
Tennar shook his
head. Leave me out of that, please. I can count my military divisions. That's
all the mathematics I need.
The story is,
said Linn, that psychohistory may make it possible to predict the future.
The General's
eyes bulged. You mean this Seldon is a fortune
Not in the usual
fashion. It is a matter of science.
I don't believe
it.
It is hard to
believe, but Seldon has become something of a cult figure here on Trantor-and
in certain places in the Outer Worlds. Now psychohistory-if it can be used to
predict the future or if even people merely think it can be so used-can be a
powerful tool with which to uphold the regime. I'm sure you have already seen
this, General. One need merely predict our regime will endure and bring forth
peace and prosperity for the Empire. People, believing this, will help make it
a self-fulfilling prophecy. On the other hand, if Seldon wishes the reverse, he
can predict civil war and ruin. People will believe that, too, and that would
destabilize the regime.
In that case,
Colonel, we simply make sure that the predictions of psychohistory are what we
want them to be.
It would be
Seldon who would have to make them and he is not a friend of the regime. It is
important, General, that we differentiate between the Project that is working
at Streeling University to perfect psychohistory and Hari Seldon. Psychohistory
can be extremely useful to us, but it will be so only if someone other than
Seldon were in charge.
Are there others
who could be?
Oh yes. It is
only necessary to get rid of Seldon.
What is so
difficult with that? An order of execution-and it is done.
It would be
better, General, if the government was not seen to be directly involved in such
a thing.
I have arranged
to have him meet with you, so that you can use your skill to probe his
personality. You would then be able to judge whether certain suggestions I have
in mind are worthwhile or not.
When is the
meeting to take place?
It was to take
place very soon, but his representatives at the Project asked for a few days
leeway, because they were in the process of celebrating his birthday-his
sixtieth, apparently. It seemed wise to allow that and to permit a week's
delay.
Why? demanded
Tennar. I dislike any display of weakness.
Quite right,
General. Quite right. Your instincts are, as always, correct. However, it
seemed to me that the needs of the state might require us to know what and how
the birthday celebration-which is taking place right now-might involve.
Why?
All knowledge is
useful. Would you care to see some of the festivities?
General Tennar's
face remained dark. Is that necessary?
I think you will
find it interesting, General.
The
reproduction-sight and sound-was excellent and for quite a while the hilarity
of the birthday celebration filled the rather stark room in which the General
sat.
Linn's low voice
served as commentary. Most of this, General, is taking place in the Project
complex, but the rest of the University is involved. We will have an air view
in a few moments and you will see that the celebration covers a wide area. In
fact, though I don't have the evidence available right now, there are corners
of the planet here and there, in various University and sectoral settings
mostly, where what we might call sympathy celebrations of one sort or another
are taking place. The celebrations are still continuing and will endure for
another day at least.
Are you telling
me that this is a Trantor-wide celebration?
In a specialized
way. It affects mostly the intellectual classes, but it is surprisingly
widespread. It may even be that there is some shouting on worlds other than
Trantor.
Where did you
get this reproduction?
Linn smiled. Our
facilities in the Project are quite good. We have reliable sources of
information, so that little can happen that doesn't come our way at once.
Well then, Linn,
what are all your conclusions about this?
It seems to me,
General, and I'm sure that it seems so to you, that Hari Seldon is the focus of
a personality cult. He has so identified himself with psychohistory that if we
were to get rid of him in too open a manner, we would entirely destroy the
credibility of the science. It would be useless to us.
On the other
hand, General, Seldon is growing old and it is not difficult to imagine him
being replaced by another man: someone we could choose and who would be
friendly to our great aims and hopes for the Empire. If Seldon could be removed
in such a way that it is made to seem natural, then that is all we need.
The General said,
And you think I ought to see him?
Yes, in order to
weigh his quality and decide what we ought to do. But we must be cautious, for
he is a popular man.
I have dealt
with popular people before, said Tennar darkly.
13
Yes, said Hari
Seldon wearily, it was a great triumph. I had a wonderful time. I can hardly
wait until I'm seventy so I can repeat it. But the fact is, I'm exhausted.
So get yourself
a good night's sleep, Dad, said Raych, smiling. That's an easy cure.
I don't know how
well I can relax when I have to see our great leader in a few days.
Not alone, you
won't see him, said Dors Venabili grimly.
Seldon frowned.
Don't say that again, Dors. It is important for me to see him alone.
It won't be safe
with you alone. Do you remember what happened ten years ago when you refused to
let me come with you to greet the gardeners?
There is no
danger of my forgetting when you remind me of it twice a week, Dors. In this
case, though, I intend to go alone. What can he want to do to me if I come in
as an old man, utterly harmless, to find out what he wants?
What do you
imagine he wants? said Raych, biting at his knuckle.
I suppose he
wants what Cleon always wanted. It will turn out that he has found out that
psychohistory can, in some way, predict the future and he will want to use it
for his own purposes. I told Cleon the science wasn't up to it nearly thirty
years ago and I kept telling him that all through my tenure as First
Minister-and now I'll have to tell General Tennar the same thing.
How do you know
he'll believe you? said Raych.
I'll think of
some way of being convincing.
Dors said, I do
not wish you to go alone.
Your wishing,
Dors, makes no difference.
At this point,
Tamwile Elar interrupted. He said, I'm the only nonfamily person here. I don't
know if a comment from me would be welcome.
Go ahead, said
Seldon. Come one, come all.
I would like to
suggest a compromise. Why don't a number of us go with the Maestro. Quite a few
of us. We can act as his triumphal escort, a kind of finale to the birthday
celebration. Now wait, I don't mean that we will all crowd into the General's
offices. I don't even mean entering the Imperial Palace grounds. We can just
take hotel rooms in the Imperial Sector at the edge of the grounds-the Dome's
Edge Hotel would be just right-and we'll give ourselves a day of pleasure.
That's just what
I need, snorted Seldon. A day of pleasure.
Not you,
Maestro, said Elar at once. You'll be meeting with General Tennar. The rest
of us, though, will give the people of the Imperial Sector a notion of your
popularity-and perhaps the General will take note also. And if he knows we're
all waiting for your return, it may keep him from being unpleasant.
There was a
considerable silence after that. Finally Raych said, It sounds too showy to
me. It don't fit in with the image the world has of Dad.
But Dors said,
I'm not interested in Hari's image. I'm interested in Hari's safety. It
strikes me that if we cannot invade the General's presence or the Imperial
grounds, then allowing ourselves to accumulate, so to speak, as near the
General as we can, might do us well. Thank you, Dr. Elar, for a very good
suggestion.
I don't want it
done, said Seldon.
But I do, said
Dors, and if that's as close as I can get to offering you personal protection,
then that much I will insist on.
Manella, who had
listened to it all without comment till then, said, Visiting the Dome's Edge
Hotel could be a lot of fun.
It's not fun I'm
thinking of, said Dors, but I'll accept your vote in favor.
And so it was.
The following day some twenty of the higher echelon of the Psychohistory
Project descended on the Dome's Edge Hotel, with rooms overlooking the open
spaces of the Imperial Palace grounds.
The following
evening Hari Seldon was picked up by the General's armed guards and taken off
to the meeting.
At almost the
same time Dors Venabili disappeared, but her absence was not noted for a long
time. And when it was noted, no one could guess what had happened to her and
the gaily festive mood turned rapidly into apprehension.
14
Dors Venabili had
lived on the Imperial Palace grounds for ten years. As wife of the First
Minister, she had entry to the grounds and could pass freely from the dome to
the open, with her fingerprints as the pass.
In the confusion
that followed Cleon's assassination, her pass had never been removed and now
when, for the first time since that dreadful clay, she wanted to move from the
dome into the open spaces of the grounds, she could do so.
She had always
known that she could do so easily only once, for, upon discovery, the pass
would be canceled-but this was the one time to do it.
There was a
sudden darkening of the sky as she moved into the open ;rod she felt a distinct
lowering of the temperature. The world under the dome was always kept a little
lighter during the night period than natural night would require and was kept a
little dimmer during the day period. And, of course, the temperature beneath
the dome was always a bit milder than the outdoors.
Most Trantorians
were unaware of this, for they spent their entire lives under the dome. To Dors
it was expected, but it didn't really matter.
She took the
central roadway, into which the dome opened at the site of the Dome's Edge
Hotel. It was, of course, brightly lit, so that the darkness of the sky didn't
matter at all.
Dors knew that
she would not advance a hundred meters along the roadway without being stopped,
less perhaps in the present paranoid lays of the junta. Her alien presence
would be detected at once.
Nor was she
disappointed. A small ground-car skittered up and the guardsman shouted out the
window, What are you doing here? Where are you going?
Dors ignored the
question and continued to walk.
The guardsman
called out, Halt! Then he slammed on the brakes and stepped out of the car,
which was exactly what Dors had wanted him to do.
The guardsman was
holding a blaster loosely in his hand-not threatening to use it, merely
demonstrating its existence. He said, Your reference number.
Dors said, I
want your car.
What! The
guardsman sounded outraged. Your reference number. Immediately! And now the
blaster came up.
Dors said
quietly, You don't need my reference number, then she walked toward the
guardsman.
The guardsman
took a backward step. If you don't stop and present your reference number,
I'll blast you.
No! Drop your
blaster.
The guardsman's
lips tightened. His finger began to edge toward the contact, but before he
could reach it, he was lost.
He could never
describe afterward what happened in any accurate way. All he could say was How
was I to know it was The Tiger Woman? (The time came when he would be proud of
the encounter.) She moved so fast, I didn't see exactly what she did or what
happened. One moment I was going to shoot her down-I was sure she was some sort
of madwoman-and the next thing I knew, I was completely overwhelmed.
Dors held the
guardsman in a firm grip, the hand with the blaster forced high. She said,
Either drop the blaster at once or I will break your arm.
The guardsman
felt a kind of death grip around his chest that all but prevented him from
breathing. Realizing he had no choice, he dropped the blaster.
Dors Venabili
released him, but before the guardsman could make a move to recover, he found
himself facing his own blaster in Dors's hand.
Dors said, I
hope you've left your detectors in place. Don't try to report what's happened
too quickly. You had better wait and decide what it is you plan to tell your
superiors. The fact that an unarmed woman took your blaster and your car may
well put an end to your usefulness to the junta.
Dors started the
car and began to speed down the central roadway. A ten-year stay on the grounds
told her exactly where she was going. The car she was in-an official
ground-car-was not an alien intrusion into the grounds and would not be picked
up as a matter of course. However, she had to take a chance on speed, for she
wanted to reach her destination rapidly. She pushed the car to a speed of two
hundred kilometers per hour.
The speed, at
least, eventually did attract attention. She ignored radioed cries, demanding
to know why she was speeding, and before long the car's detectors told her that
another ground-car was in hot pursuit.
She knew that
there would be a warning sent up ahead and that there would be other
ground-cars waiting for her to arrive, but there was little any of them could
do, short of trying to blast her out of existence-something apparently no one
was willing to try, pending further investigation.
When she reached
the building she had been heading for, two ground-cars were waiting for her.
She climbed serenely out of her own car and walked toward the entrance.
Two men at once
stood in her way, obviously astonished that the driver of the speeding car was
not a guardsman but a woman dressed in civilian clothes.
What are you
doing here? What was the rush?
Dors said
quietly, Important message for Colonel Header Linn.
Is that so?
said the guardsman harshly. There were now four men between her and the
entrance. Reference number, please.
Dors said, Don't
delay me.
Reference number,
I said.
You're wasting
my time.
One of the
guardsmen said suddenly, You know who she looks like? The old First Minister's
wife. Dr. Venabili. The Tiger Woman.
There was an odd
backward step on the part of all four, but one of them said, You're under
arrest.
Am I? said
Dors. If I'm The Tiger Woman, you must know that I am considerably stronger
than any of you and that my reflexes are considerably faster. Let me suggest
that all four of you accompany me quietly inside and we'll see what Colonel
Linn has to say.
You're under
arrest came the repetition and four Masters were aimed at Dors.
Well, said
Dors. If you insist.
She moved rapidly
and two of the guardsmen were suddenly on the ground, groaning, while Dors was
standing with a blaster in each hand.
She said, I have
tried not to hurt them, but it is quite possible that I Dave broken their
wrists. That leaves two of you and I can shoot faster than you can. If either
of you makes the slightest move-the slightest-I will have to break the habit of
a lifetime and kill you. It will sicken me to do so and I beg you not to force
me into it.
There was
absolute silence from the two guardsmen still standing-no motion.
I would
suggest, said Dors, that you two escort me into the colonel's presence and
that you then seek medical help for your comrades.
The suggestion
was not necessary. Colonel Linn emerged from his office. What is going on
here? What is...
Dors turned to
him. Ah! Let me introduce myself. I am Dr. Dors Venabili, the wife of
Professor Hari Seldon. I have come to see you on important business. These four
tried to stop me and, as a result, two are badly hurt. Send them all about
their business and let me talk to you. I mean you no harm.
Linn stared at
the four guardsmen, then at Dors. He said calmly, You mean me no harm? Though
four guardsmen have not succeeded in stopping you, I have four thousand at my
instant call.
Then call them,
said Dors. However quickly they come, it will not be in time to save you,
should I decide to kill you. Dismiss your guardsmen and let us talk civilly.
Linn dismissed
the guardsmen and said, Well, come in and we will talk. Let me warn you,
though, Dr. Venabili-I have a long memory.
And I, said
Dors. They walked into Linn's quarters together.
15
Linn said with
utmost courtesy, Tell me exactly why you are here, Dr. Venabili.
Dors smiled
without menace-and yet not exactly pleasantly, either. To begin with, she
said, I have come here to show you that I can come here.
Yes. My husband
was taken to his interview with the General in an official ground-car under
armed guard. I myself left the hotel at a the same time he did, on foot and
unarmed-and here I am-and I believe I got here before he did. I had to wade
through five guardsmen, including the guardsman whose car I appropriated, in
order to reach you. I would have waded through fifty.
Linn nodded his
head phlegmatically. I understand that you are sometimes called The Tiger
Woman.
I have been
called that. Now, having reached you, my task is to make certain that no harm
comes to my husband. He is venturing into the General's lair-if I can be
dramatic about it-and I want him to emerge unharmed and unthreatened.
As far as I am
concerned, I know that no harm will come to your husband as a result of this
meeting. But if you are concerned, why do you come to me? Why didn't you go
directly to the General?
Because, of the
two of you, it is you that has the brains.
There was a short
pause and Linn said, That would be a most dangerous remark-if overheard.
More dangerous
for you than for me, so make sure it is not overheard. Now, if it occurs to you
that I am to be simply soothed and put off and that, if my husband is
imprisoned or marked for execution, that there will really be nothing I can do
about it, disabuse yourself.
She indicated the
two blasters that lay on the table before her. I entered the grounds with
nothing. I arrived in your immediate vicinity with two Masters. If I had no
Masters, I might have had knives, with which I am an expert. And if I had
neither blasters nor knives, I would still be a formidable person. This table
we're sitting at is metal-obviously-and sturdy.
It is.
Dors held up her
hands, fingers splayed, as if to show that she held no weapon. Then she dropped
them to the table and, palms down, caressed its surface.
Abruptly Dors
raised her fist and then brought it down on the table with a loud crash, which
sounded almost as if metal were striking metal. She smiled and lifted her hand.
No bruise, Dors
said. No pain. But you'll notice that the table is slightly bent where I
struck it. If that same blow had come down with the name force on a person's
head, the skull would have exploded. I have never done such a thing; in fact, I
have never killed anyone, though I have injured several. Nevertheless, if
Professor Seldon is harmed...
You are still
threatening.
I am promising.
I will do nothing if Professor Seldon is unharmed. Otherwise, Colonel Linn, I
will be forced to maim or kill you and-I promise you again-I will do the same
to General Tennar.
Linn said, You
cannot withstand an entire army, no matter how tigerish a woman you are. What
then?
Stories spread,
said Dors, and are exaggerated. I have not really done much in the way of
tigerishness, but many more stories are told of me than are true. Your
guardsmen fell back when they recognized me and they themselves will spread the
story, with advantage, of how I made my way to you. Even an army might hesitate
to attack me, Colonel Linn, but even if they did and even if they destroyed me,
beware the indignation of the people. The junta is maintaining order, but it is
doing so only barely and you don't want anything to upset matters. Think, then,
of how easy the alternative is. Simply do not harm Professor Hari Seldon.
We have no
intention of harming him.
Why the
interview, then?
What's the
mystery? The General is curious about psychohistory. The government records are
open to us. The old Emperor Cleon was interested. Demerzel, when he was First
Minister, was interested. Why should we not be in our turn? In fact, more so.
Why more so?
Because time has
passed. As I understand it, psychohistory began as a thought in Professor
Seldon's mind. He has been working on it, with increasing vigor and with larger
and larger groups of people, for nearly thirty years. He has done so almost
entirely with government support, so that, in a way, his discoveries and
techniques belong to the government. We intend to ask him about psychohistory, which,
by now, must be far advanced beyond what existed in the times of Demerzel and
Cleon, and we expect him to tell us what we want to know. We want something
more practical than the vision of equations curling their way through air. Do
you understand me?
Yes, said Dors,
frowning.
And one more
thing. Do not suppose that the danger to your husband comes from the government
only and that any harm that reaches him will mean that you must attack us at
once. I would suggest that Professor Seldon may have purely private enemies. I
have no knowledge of such things, but surely it is possible.
I shall keep
that in mind. Right now, I want to have you arrange that I join my husband
during his interview with the General. I want to know, beyond doubt, that he is
safe.
That will be
hard to arrange and will take some time. It would be impossible to interrupt
the conversation, but if you wait till it is ended...
Take the time
and arrange it. Do not count on double-crossing me and remaining alive.
16
General Tennar
stared at Hari Seldon in a rather pop-eyed manner and his fingers tapped
lightly at the desk where he sat.
Thirty years,
he said. Thirty years and you are telling me you still have nothing to show
for it?
Actually,
General, twenty-eight years.
Tennar ignored
that. And all at government expense. Do you know how many billions of credits
have been invested in your Project, Professor?
I haven't kept
up, General, but we have records that could give me the answer to your question
in seconds.
And so have we.
The government, Professor, is not an endless source of funds. These are not the
old times. We don't have Cleon's old Free-and-easy attitude toward finances.
Raising taxes is hard and we need credits for many things. I have called you
here, hoping that you can benefit us in some way with your psychohistory. If
you cannot, then I must tell you, quite frankly, that we will have to shut off
the faucet. If you ran continue your research without government funding, do
so, for unless you show me something that would make the expense worth it, you
will have to do just that.
General, you
make a demand I cannot meet, but, if in response, you and government support,
you will be throwing away the future. Give me wile and eventually
Various
governments have heard that eventually from you for decades. Isn't it true,
Professor, that you say your psychohistory predicts that the junta is unstable,
that my rule is unstable, that in a short time it will collapse?
Seldon frowned.
The technique is not yet firm enough for me to say that this is something that
psychohistory states.
I put it to you
that psychohistory does state it and that this is common knowledge within your
Project.
No, said Seldon
warmly. No such thing. It is possible that some among us have interpreted some
relationships to indicate that the junta may be an unstable form of government,
but there are other relationships that may easily be interpreted to show it is
stable. That is the reason why we must continue our work. At the present moment
it is all too easy to use incomplete data and imperfect reasoning to reach any
conclusion we wish.
But if you
decide to present the conclusion that the government is unstable and say that
psychohistory warrants it-even if it does not actually do so-will it not add to
the instability?
It may very well
do that, General. And if we announced that the government is stable, it may
well add to the stability. I have had this very same discussion with Emperor
Cleon on a number of occasions. It is possible to use psychohistory as a tool
to manipulate the emotions of the people and achieve short-term effects. In the
long run, however, the predictions are quite likely to prove incomplete or
downright erroneous and psychohistory will lose all its credibility and it will
be as though it had never existed.
Enough! Tell me
straight out! What do you think psychohistory shows about my government?
It shows, we
think, that there are elements of instability in it, but we are not certain-and
cannot be certain-exactly in what way this can be made worse or made better.
In other words,
psychohistory simply tells you what you would know without psychohistory and it
is that in which government has invested uncounted piles of credits.
The time will
come when psychohistory will tell us what we could not know without it and then
the investment will pay itself back many, many times over.
And how long
will it be before that time comes?
Not too long, I
hope. We have been making rather gratifying progress in the last few years.
Tennar was
tapping his fingernail on his desk again. Not enough. Tell me something
helpful now. Something useful.
Seldon pondered,
then said, I can prepare a detailed report for you, but it will take time.
Of course it
will. Days, months, years-and somehow it will never be written. Do you take me
for a fool?
No, of course
not, General. However, I don't want to be taken for a fool, either. I can tell
you something that I will take sole responsibility for. I have seen it in my
psychohistorical research, but I may have misinterpreted what I saw. However,
since you insist...
I insist.
You mentioned
taxes a little while ago. You said raising taxes was difficult. Certainly. It
is always difficult. Every government must do its work by collecting wealth in
one form or another. The only two ways in which such credits can be obtained
are, first, by robbing a neighbor, or second, persuading a government's own
citizens to grant the credits willingly and peaceably.
Since we have
established a Galactic Empire that has been conducting its business in
reasonable fashion for thousands of years, there is no possibility of robbing a
neighbor, except as the result of an occasional rebellion and its repression.
This does not happen often enough to support a government-and, if it did, the
government would be too unstable to last long, in any case.
Seldon drew a
deep breath and went on. Therefore, credits must be raised by asking the citizens
to hand over part of their wealth for government use. Presumably, since the
government will then work efficiently, the citizens can better spend their
credits in this way than to hoard it-each man to himself-while living in a
dangerous and chaotic anarchy.
However, though
the request is reasonable and the citizenry is better off paying taxes as their
price for maintaining a stable and efficient government, they are nevertheless
reluctant to do so. In order to overcome this reluctance, governments must make
it appear that they are not taking too many credits, and that they are
considering each citizen's rights and benefits. In other words, they must lower
the percentage taken out of low incomes; they must allow deductions of various
kinds to be made before the tax is assessed, and so on.
As time goes on,
the tax situation inevitably grows more and more complex as different worlds,
different sectors within each world, and different economic divisions all
demand and require special treatment. Me result is that the tax-collecting
branch of the government grows in size and complexity and tends to become
uncontrollable. The average citizen cannot understand why or how much he is
being taxed; what he can get away with and what he can't. The government and
the tax agency itself are often in the dark as well.
What's more, an
ever-larger fraction of the funds collected must be put into running the
overelaborate tax agency-maintaining records, pursuing tax delinquents-so the
amount of credits available for good ,end useful purposes declines despite
anything we can do.
In the end, the
tax situation becomes overwhelming. It inspires discontent and rebellion. The
history books tend to ascribe these things to greedy businessmen, to corrupt
politicians, to brutal warriors, to ambitious viceroys-but these are just the
individuals who take advantage of the tax overgrowth.
The General said
harshly, Are you telling me that our tax system is overcomplicated?
Seldon said, If
it were not, it would be the only one in history that wasn't, as far as I know.
If there is one thing that psychohistory tells me is inevitable, it is tax
overgrowth.
And what do we
do about it?
That I cannot
tell you. It is that for which I would like to prepare a report that-as you
say-may take a while to get ready.
Never mind the
report. The tax system is overcomplicated, isn't it? Isn't that what you are
saying?
It is possible
that it is, said Seldon cautiously.
And to correct
that, one must make the tax system simpler-as simple as possible, in fact.
I would have to
study...
Nonsense. The
opposite of great complication is great simplicity. I don't need a report to
tell me that.
As you say,
General, said Seldon.
At this point the
General looked up suddenly, as though he had been called-as, indeed, he had
been. His fists clenched and holovision images of Colonel Linn and Dors
Venabili suddenly appeared in the room.
Thunderstruck,
Seldon exclaimed, Dors! What are you doing here?
The General said
nothing, but his brow furrowed into a frown.
17
The General had
had a bad night and so, out of apprehension, had the colonel. They faced each
other now-each at a loss.
The General said,
Tell me again what this woman did.
Linn seemed to
have a heavy weight on his shoulders. She's The Tiger Woman. That's what they
call her. She doesn't seem to be quite human, somehow. She's some sort of
impossibly trained athlete, full of self-confidence, and, General, she's quite
frightening.
Did she frighten
you? A single woman?
Let me tell you
exactly what she did and let me tell you a few other things about her. I don't
know how true all the stories about her are, but what happened yesterday
evening is true enough.
He told the story
again and the General listened, puffing out his cheeks.
Bad, he said.
What do we do?
I think our
course is plain before us. We want psychohistory-'
Yes, we do,
said the General. Seldon told me something about taxation that... But never
mind. That is beside the point at the moment. Go on.
Linn, who, in his
troubled state of mind, had allowed a small fragment of impatience to show on
his face, continued, As I say, we want psychohistory without Seldon. He is, in
any case, a used-up man. The more I study him, the more I see an elderly
scholar who is living on his past deeds. He has had nearly thirty years to make
a success of psychohistory and he has failed. Without him, with new men at the
helm, psychohistory may advance more rapidly.
Yes, I agree.
Now what about the woman?
Well, there you
are. We haven't taken her into consideration because she has been careful to
remain in the background. But I strongly suspect now that it will be difficult,
perhaps impossible, to remove Seldon quietly and without implicating the
government, as long as the woman remains alive.
Do you really
believe that she will mangle you and me-if she thinks we have harmed her man?
said the General, his mouth twisting in contempt.
I really think
she will and that she will start a rebellion as well. It will he exactly as she
promised.
You are turning
into a coward.
General, please.
I am trying to be sensible. I'm not backing off. We must take care of this
Tiger Woman. He paused thoughtfully. As a matter of fact, my sources have
told me this and I admit to having paid far too little attention to the
matter.
And how do you
think we can get rid of her?
Linn said, I
don't know. Then, more slowly, But someone else might.
18
Seldon had had a
bad night also, nor was the new day promising to be much better. There weren't
too many times when Hari felt annoyed with Dors. But this time, he was very
annoyed.
He said, What a
foolish thing to do! Wasn't it enough that we were all staying at the Dome's
Edge Hotel? That alone would have been sufficient to drive a paranoid ruler
into thoughts of some sort of conspiracy.
How? We were
unarmed, Hari. It was a holiday affair, the final touch of your birthday
celebration. We posed no threat.
Yes, but then
you carried out your invasion of the Palace grounds. It was unforgivable. You
raced to the Palace to interfere with my session with the General, when I had
specifically-and several times-made it plain that I didn't want you there. I
had my own plans, you know.
Dors said, Your
desires and your orders and your plans all take second place to your safety. I
was primarily concerned about that.
I was in no
danger.
That is not
something I can carelessly assume. There have been two attempts on your life.
What makes you think there won't be a third?
The two attempts
were made when I was First Minister. I was probably worth killing then. Who
would want to kill an elderly mathematician?
Dors said,
That's exactly what I want to find out and that's what I want to stop. I must
begin by doing some questioning right here at the Project.
No. You will
simply be upsetting my people. Leave them alone.
That's exactly
what I can't do. Hari, my job is to protect you and for twenty-eight years I've
been working at that. You cannot stop me now.
Something in the
blaze of her eyes made it quite clear that, whatever Seldon's desires or orders
might be, Dors intended to do as she pleased.
Seldon's safety
came first.
19
May I interrupt
you, Yugo?
Of course,
Dors, said Yugo Amaryl with a large smile. You are lover an interruption.
What can I do for you?
I am trying to
find out a few things, Yugo, and I wonder if you would humor me in this.
If I can.
You have
something in the Project called the Prime Radiant. I hear it now and then. Hari
speaks of it, so I imagine I know what it looks like when it is activated, but
I have never actually seen it in operation. I would like to.
Amaryl looked
uncomfortable. Actually the Prime Radiant is just about the most closely
guarded part of the Project and you aren't on the list of the members who have
access.
I know that, but
we've known each other for twenty-eight years...
And you're
Hari's wife. I suppose we can stretch a point. We only have two full Prime
Radiants. There's one in Hari's office and one here. Right there, in fact.
Dors looked at
the squat black cube on the central desk. It looked utterly undistinguished.
Is that it?
That's it. It
stores the equations that describe the future.
How do you get
at those equations?
Amaryl moved a
contact and at once the room darkened and then came to life in a variegated
glow. All around Dors were symbols, arrows, mathematical signs of one sort or
another. They seemed to be moving, spiraling, but when she focused her eyes on
any particular portion, it seemed to be standing still.
She said, Is
that the future, then?
It may be, said
Amaryl, turning off the instrument. I had it at full expansion so you could
see the symbols. Without expansion, nothing is visible but patterns of light
and dark.
And by studying
those equations, you are able to judge what the future holds in store for us?
In theory. The
room was now back to its mundane appearance. But there are two difficulties.
Oh? What are they?
To begin with,
no human mind has created those equations directly. We have merely spent
decades programming more powerful computers and they have devised and stored
the equations, but, of course, we don't know if they are valid and have
meaning. It depends entirely on how valid and meaningful the programming is in
the first place.
They could be
all wrong, then?
They could be.
Amaryl rubbed his eyes and Dors could not help thinking how old and tired he
seemed to have grown in the last couple of years. He was younger than Hari by
nearly a dozen years, but he seemed much older.
Of course,
Amaryl went on in a rather weary voice, we hope that they aren't all wrong,
but that's where the second difficulty comes in. Although Hari and I have been
testing and modifying them for decades, we can never be sure what the equations
mean. The computer has constructed them, so it is to be presumed they must mean
something-but what? There are portions that we think we have worked out. In
fact, right now, I'm working on what we call Section A-23, a particularly
knotty system of relationships. We have not yet been able to match it with
anything in the real Universe. Still, each year sees us further advanced and I
look forward confidently to the establishment of psychohistory as a legitimate
and useful technique for dealing with the future.
How many people
have access to these Prime Radiants?
Every
mathematician in the Project has access but not at will. There have to be
applications and time allotted and the Prime Radiant has to be adjusted to the
portion of the equations a mathematician wishes to refer to. It gets a little
complicated when everyone wants to use the Prime Radiant at the same time.
Right now, things are slow, possibly because we're still in the aftermath of
Hari's birthday celebration.
Is there any
plan for constructing additional Prime Radiants?
Amaryl thrust out
his lips. Yes and no. It would be very helpful if we had a third, but someone
would have to be in charge of it. It can't just be a community possession. I
have suggested to Hari that Tamwile Elar-you know him, I think...
Yes, I do.
That Elar have a
third Prime Radiant. His achaotic equations and the Electro-Clarifier he
thought up make him clearly the third man in the Project after Hari and myself.
Hari hesitates, however.
Why? Do you
know?
If Elar gets
one, he is openly recognized as the third man, over the Head of other
mathematicians who are older and who have more senior status in the Project.
There might be some political difficulties, so to speak. I think that we can't
waste time in worrying about internal politics, but Hari... Well, you know
Hari.
Yes, I know
Hari. Suppose I tell you that Linn has seen the Prime Radiant.
Linn?
Colonel Hender
Linn of the junta. Tennar's lackey.
I doubt that
very much, Dors.
He has spoken of
spiraling equations and I have just seen them produced by the Prime Radiant. I
can't help but think he's been here and seen it working.
Amaryl shook his
head, I can't imagine anyone bringing a member of the junta into Hari's
office-or mine.
Tell me, who in
the Project do you think is capable of working with the junta in this fashion?
No one, said
Amaryl flatly and with clearly unlimited faith. That would be unthinkable.
Perhaps Linn never saw the Prime Radiant but was merely told about it.
Who would tell
him about it?
Amaryl thought a
moment and said, No one.
Well now, you
talked about internal politics a while ago in connection with the possibility
of Elar having a third Prime Radiant. I suppose in a Project such as this one
with hundreds of people, there are little feuds going on all the
time-frictions-quarrels.
Oh yes. Poor
Hari talks to me about it every once in a while. He has to deal with them in
one way or another and I can well imagine what a headache it must be for him.
Are these feuds
so bad that they interfere with the working of the Project?
Not seriously.
Are there any
people who are more quarrelsome than others or any duo draw more resentment
than others? In short, are there people you can get rid of and perhaps remove
90 percent of the friction at the cost of 5 or 6 percent of the personnel?
Amaryl raised his
eyebrows. It sounds like a good idea, but I don't know whom to get rid of. I
don't really participate in all the minutiae of internal politics. There's no
way of stopping it, so for my part, I merely avoid it.
That's strange,
said Dors. Aren't you in this way denying any credibility to psychohistory?
In what way?
How can you
pretend to reach a point where you can predict and guide the future, when you
cannot analyze and correct something as homegrown as personal frictions in the
very Project that promises so much?
Amaryl chuckled
softly. It was unusual, for he was not a man who was given to humor and
laughter. I'm sorry, Dors, but you picked on the one problem that we have
solved, after a manner of speaking. Hari himself identified the equations that
represented the difficulties of personal friction years ago and I myself then
added the final touch last year.
I found that
there were ways in which the equations could be changed so as to indicate a
reduction in friction. In every such case, however, a reduction in friction
here meant an increase in friction there. Never at any time was there a total
decrease or, for that matter, a total increase in the friction within a closed
group-that is, one in which no old members leave and no new members come in.
What I proved, with the help of Elar's achaotic equations, was that this was
true despite any conceivable action anyone could take. Hari calls it the law
of conservation of personal problems.
It gave rise to
the notion that social dynamics has its conservation laws as physics does and
that, in fact, it is these laws that offer us the best possible tools for
solving the truly troublesome aspects of psychohistory.
Dors said,
Rather impressive, but what if you end up finding that nothing at all can be
changed, that everything that is bad is conserved, and that to save the Empire
from destruction is merely to increase destruction of another kind?
Actually some
have suggested that, but I don't believe it.
Very well. Back
to reality. Is there anything in the frictional problems within the Project
that threaten Hari? I mean, with physical harm.
Harm Hari? Of
course not. How can you suggest such a thing?
Might there not
be some who resent Hari, for being too arrogant, too pushy, too self-absorbed,
too eager to grab all the credit? Or, if none of these things apply, might they
not resent him simply because he has run the Project for so long a time?
I never heard
anyone say such a thing about Hari.
Dors seemed
dissatisfied. I doubt that anyone would say such things in your hearing, of
course. But thank you, Yugo, for being so helpful and for giving me so much of
your time.
Amaryl stared
after her as she left. He felt vaguely troubled, but then returned to his work
and let other matters drift away.
20
One way Hari
Seldon had (out of not too many ways) for pulling away from his work for a time
was to visit Raych's apartment, just outside the university grounds. To do this
invariably filled him with love for his foster son. There were ample grounds.
Raych had been good, capable, and loyal-but besides that was the strange
quality Raych had of inspiring trust and love in others.
Hari had observed
it when Raych was a twelve-year-old street boy, who somehow pulled at his own
and at Dors's heartstrings. He remembered how Raych had affected Rashelle, the
onetime Mayor of Wye. Hari remembered how Joranum had trusted Raych, which led
to his own destruction. Raych had even managed to win the heart of the
beautiful Manella. Hari did not completely understand this particular quality
that Raych embodied, but he enjoyed whatever contact he had with his foster
son.
He entered the
apartment with his usual All well here?
Raych put aside
the holographic material he was working with and rose to greet him, All well,
Dad.
I don't hear
Wanda.
For good reason.
She's out shopping with her mother.
Seldon seated
himself and looked good-humoredly at the chaos of reference material. How's
the book coming?
It's doing fine.
It's me who might not survive. He sighed. But for once, we'll get the
straight poop on Dahl. Nobody's ever written a book devoted to that section,
wouldja believe?
Seldon had always
noted that, whenever Raych talked of his home sector, his Dahlite accent always
strengthened.
Raych said, And
how are you, Dad? Glad the festivities are over?
Enormously. I
hated just about every minute of it.
Not so anyone
could notice.
Listen, I had to
wear a mask of sorts. I didn't want to spoil the celebration for everyone
else.
You must have
hated it when Mom chased after you onto the Palace grounds. Everyone I know has
been talking about that.
I certainly did
hate it. Your mother, Raych, is the most wonderful person in the world, but she
is very difficult to handle. She might have spoiled my plans.
What plans are
those, Dad?
Seldon settled
back. It was always pleasant to speak to someone in whom he had total trust and
who knew nothing about psychohistory. More than once he had bounced thoughts
off Raych and had worked them out into more sensible forms than would have been
the case if those same thoughts had been mulled over in his mind. He said, Are
we shielded?
Always.
Good. What I did
was to set General Tennar thinking along curious lines.
What lines?
Well, I
discussed taxation a bit and pointed out that, in the effort to make taxation
rest evenly on the population, it grew more and more complex, unwieldy, and
costly. The obvious implication was that the tax system must be simplified.
That seems to
make sense.
Up to a point,
but it is possible that, as a result of our little discussion, Tennar may
oversimplify. You see, taxation loses effectiveness at both extremes.
Overcomplicate it and people cannot understand it and pay for an overgrown and
expensive tax organization. Oversimplify it and people consider it unfair and
grow bitterly resentful. The simplest tax is a poll tax, in which every
individual pays the same amount, but the unfairness of treating rich and poor
alike in this way is too evident to overlook.
And you didn't
explain this to the General?
Somehow, I
didn't get a chance.
Do you think the
General will try a poll tax?
I think he will
plan one. If he does, the news is bound to leak out and that alone would suffice
to set off riots and possibly upset the government.
And you've done
this on purpose, Dad?
Of course.
Raych shook his
head. I don't quite understand you, Dad. In your personal life, you're as
sweet and gentle as any person in the Empire. Yet you can deliberately set up a
situation in which there will be riots, suppression, deaths. There'll be a lot
of damage done, Dad. Have you thought of that?
Seldon leaned
back in his chair and said sadly, I think of nothing else, Raych. When I first
began my work on psychohistory, it seemed a purely academic piece of research
to me. It was something that could not he worked out at all, in all likelihood,
and, if it was, it would not be something that could be practically applied.
But the decades pass and we know more and more and then comes the terrible urge
to apply it.
So that people
can die?
No, so that
fewer people can die. If our psychohistorical analyses are correct now, then
the junta cannot survive for more than a few years and there are various alternative
ways in which it can collapse. They will all he fairly bloody and desperate.
This method-the taxation gimmick-should do it more smoothly and gently than any
other if-I repeat-our analyses are correct.
If they're not
correct, what then?
In that case, we
don't know what might happen. Still, psychohistory must reach the point where
it can be used and we've been searching for years for something in which we
have worked out the consequences with a certain assuredness and can find those
consequences tolerable as compared with alternatives. In a way, this taxation
gimmick is the first great psychohistoric experiment.
I must admit, it
sounds like a simple one.
It isn't. You
have no idea how complex psychohistory is. Nothing is simple. The poll tax has
been tried now and then throughout history. It is never popular and it
invariably gives rise to resistance of one form or another, but it almost never
results in the violent overthrow of a government. After all, the powers of
governmental oppression may be too strong or there may be methods whereby the
people can bring to bear their opposition in a peaceful manner and achieve
redress. If a poll tax were invariably or even just sometimes fatal, then no
government would ever try it. It is only because it isn't fatal that it is
tried repeatedly. The situation on Trantor is, however, not exactly normal.
There are certain instabilities that seem clear in psychohistorical analysis,
which make it seem that resentment will be particularly strong and repression
particularly weak.
Raych sounded
dubious. I hope it works, Dad, but don't you think that the General will say
that he was working under psychohistorical advice and bring you down with him?
I suppose he
recorded our little session together, but if he publicizes that, it will show
clearly that I urged him to wait till I could analyze the situation properly
and prepare a report-and he refused to wait.
And what does
Mom think of all this?
Seldon said, I
haven't discussed it with her. She's off on another tangent altogether.
Really?
Yes. She's
trying to sniff out some deep conspiracy in the Project-aimed at me! I imagine
she thinks there are many people in the Project who would like to get rid of
me. Seldon sighed. I'm one of them, I think. I would like to get rid of me as
director of the Project and leave the gathering responsibilities of
psychohistory to others.
Raych said,
What's bugging Mom is Wanda's dream. You know how Mom feels about protecting
you. I'll bet even a dream about your dying would be enough to make her think
of a murder conspiracy against you.
I certainly hope
there isn't one.
And at the idea
of it both men laughed.
21
The small
Electro-Clarification Laboratory was, for some reason, maintained at a
temperature somewhat lower than normal and Dors Venabili wondered idly why that
might be. She sat quietly, waiting for the one occupant of the lab to finish
whatever it was she was doing.
Dors eyed the
woman carefully. Slim, with a long face. Not exactly attractive, with her thin
lips and receding jawline, but a look of intelligence shone in her dark brown
eyes. The glowing nameplate on her desk said: CINDA MONAY.
She turned to
Dors at last and said, My apologies, Dr. Venabili, but there are some
procedures that can't be interrupted even for the wife of the director.
I would have
been disappointed in you if you had neglected the procedure on my behalf. I
have been told some excellent things about you.
That's always
nice to hear. Who's been praising me?
Quite a few,
said Dors. I gather that you are one of the most prominent nonmathematicians
in the Project.
Monay winced.
There's a certain tendency to divide the rest of us from the aristocracy of
mathematics. My own feeling is that, if I'm prominent, then I'm a prominent
member of the Project. It makes no difference that I'm a nonmathematician.
That certainly
sounds reasonable to me. How long have you been with the Project?
Two and a half
years. Before that I was a graduate student in radiational physics at Streeling
and, while I was doing that, I served a couple of years with the Project as an
intern.
You've done well
at the Project, I understand.
I've been
promoted twice, Dr. Venabili.
Have you
encountered any difficulties here, Dr. Monay? Whatever you say will be held
confidential.
The work is
difficult, of course, but if you mean, have I run into any social difficulties,
the answer is no. At least not any more than one would expect in any large and
complex project, I imagine.
And by that you
mean?
Occasional spats
and quarrels. We're all human.
But nothing
serious?
Monay shook her
head. Nothing serious.
My
understanding, Dr. Monay, said Dors, is that you have been responsible for
the development of a device important to the use of the Prime Radiant. It makes
it possible to cram much more information into the Prime Radiant.
Monay broke into
a radiant smile. Do you know about that? Yes, the Electro-Clarifier. After
that was developed, Professor Seldon established this small laboratory and put
me in charge of other work in that direction.
I'm amazed that
such an important advance did not bring you up into the higher echelons of the
Project.
Oh well, said
Monay, looking a trifle embarrassed. I don't want to take all the credit.
Actually my work was only that of a technician-a very skilled and creative
technician, I like to think-but there you are.
And who worked
with you?
Didn't you know?
It was Tamwile Elar. He worked out the theory that made the device possible and
I designed and built the actual instrument.
Does that mean
he took the credit, Dr. Monay?
No no. You
mustn't think that. Dr. Elar is not that kind of man. He gave me full credit
for my share of the work. In fact, it was his idea to call the device by our
names-both our names-but he couldn't.
Why not?
Well, that's
Professor Seldon's rule, you know. All devices and equations are to be given
functional names and not personal ones-to avoid resentment. So the device is
just the Electro-Clarifier. When we're working together, however, he gives the
device our names and, I tell you, Dr. Venabili, it sounds grand. Perhaps
someday, all of the Project personnel will use the personal name. I hope so.
I hope so, too,
said Dors politely. You make Elar sound like a very decent individual.
He is. He is,
said Monay earnestly. He is a delight to work for. Right now, I'm working on a
new version of the device, which is more powerful and which I don't quite
understand. I mean, what it's to be used for. However, he's directing me there.
And are you
making progress?
Indeed. In fact,
I've given Dr. Elar a prototype, which he plans to test. If it works out, we
can proceed further.
It sounds good,
agreed Dors. What do you think would happen if Professor Seldon were to resign
as director of the Project? If he were to retire?
Monay looked
surprised. Is the professor planning to retire?
Not that I know
of. I'm presenting you with a hypothetical case. Suppose he retires. Who do you
think would be a natural successor? I think from what you have said that you
would favor Professor Elar as the new director.
Yes, I would,
responded Monay after a trifling hesitation. He's far and away the most
brilliant of the new people and I think he could run the Project in the best
possible way. Still, he's rather young. There are a considerable number of old
fossils-well, you know what I mean-who would resent being passed over by a
young squirt.
Is there any old
fossil you're thinking of in particular? Remember, this is confidential.
Quite a few of
them, but there's Dr. Amaryl. He's the heir apparent.
Yes, I see what
you mean. Dors rose. Well, thank you so much for your help. I'll let you
return to your work now.
She left,
thinking about the Electro-Clarifier. And about Amaryl.
22
Yugo Amaryl said,
Here you are again, Dors.
Sorry, Yugo. I'm
bothering you twice this week. Actually you don't see anyone very often, do
you?
Amaryl said, I
don't encourage people to visit me, no. They tend to interrupt me and break my
line of thought. Not you, Dors. You're altogether special, you and Hari.
There's never a day I don't remember what you two have done for me.
Dors waved her
hand. Forget it, Yugo. You've worked hard for Hari and any trifling kindness
we did for you has long been overpaid. How is the Project going? Hari never
talks about it-not to me, anyway.
Amaryl's face
lightened and his whole body seemed to take on an infusion of life. Very well.
Very well. It's difficult to talk about it without mathematics, but the
progress we've made in the last two years is amazing-more than in all the time
before that. It's as though, after we've been hammering away and hammering
away, things have finally begun to break loose.
I've been
hearing that the new equations worked out by Dr. Elar have helped the
situation.
The achaotic
equations? Yes. Enormously.
And the
Electro-Clarifier has been helpful, too. I spoke to the woman who designed it.
Cinda Monay?
Yes. That's the
one.
A very clever
woman. We're fortunate to have her.
Tell me, Yugo.
You work at the Prime Radiant virtually all the time, don't you?
I'm more or less
constantly studying it. Yes.
And you study it
with the Electro-Clarifier.
Certainly.
Don't you ever
think of taking a vacation, Yugo?
Amaryl looked at
her owlishly, blinking slowly. A vacation?
Yes. Surely
you've heard the word. You know what a vacation is.
Why should I
take a vacation?
Because you seem
dreadfully tired to me.
A little, now
and then. But I don't want to leave the work.
Do you feel more
tired now than you used to?
A little. I'm
getting older, Dors.
You're only
forty-nine.
That's still
older than I've ever been before.
Well, let it go.
Tell me, Yugo-just to change the subject. How is Hari doing at his work? You've
been with him so long that no one could possibly know him better than you do.
Not even I. At least, as far as his work is concerned.
He's doing very
well, Dors. I see no change in him. He still has the quickest and brightest
brain in the place. Age is having no effect on him at least, not so far.
That's good to
hear. I'm afraid that his own opinion of himself is not as high as yours is.
He's not taking his age well. We had a difficult time getting him to celebrate
his recent birthday. Were you at the festivities, by the way? I didn't see
you.
I attended part
of the time. But, you know, parties of that kind are not the sort of thing I
feel at home with.
Do you think
Hari is wearing out? I'm not referring to his mental brilliance. I'm referring
to his physical capacities. In your opinion, is he growing tired-too tired to
bear up under his responsibilities?
Amaryl looked
astonished. I never gave it any thought. I can't imagine him growing tired.
He may be, just
the same. I think he has the impulse, now and then, to give up his post and
hand the task over to some younger man.
Amaryl sat back
in his chair and put down the graphic stylus he had been fiddling with ever
since Dors had entered. What! That's ridiculous! Impossible!
Are you sure?
Absolutely. He
certainly wouldn't consider such a thing without discussing it with me. And he
hasn't.
Be reasonable,
Yugo. Hari is exhausted. He tries not to show it, but he is. What if he does
decide to retire? What would become of the Project? What would become of
psychohistory?
Amaryl's eyes
narrowed. Are you joking, Dors?
No. I'm just
trying to look into the future.
Surely, if Hari
retires, I succeed to the post. He and I ran the Project for years before
anyone else joined us. He and I. no one else. Except for him, no one knows the
Project as I do. I'm amazed you don't take my succession for granted, Dors.
Dors said,
There's no question in my mind or in anyone else's that you are the logical
successor, but do you want to be? You may know everything about psychohistory,
but do you want to throw yourself into the politics and complexities of a large
Project and abandon much of your work in order to do so? Actually it's trying
to keep everything moving smoothly that's been wearing Hari down. Can you take
on that part of the job?
Yes, I can and
it's not something I intend to discuss. Look here, Dors. Did you come here to
break the news that Hari intends to ease me out?
Dors said,
Certainly not! How could you think that of Hari! Have you ever known him to
turn on a friend?
Very well, then.
Let's drop the subject. Really, Dors, if you don't mind, there are things I
must do. Abruptly he turned away from her and bent over his work once more.
Of course. I
didn't mean to take up this much of your time.
Dors left,
frowning.
23
Raych said, Come
in, Mom. The coast is clear. I've sent Manella and Wanda off somewhere.
Dors entered,
looked right and left out of sheer habit, and sat down in the nearest chair.
Thanks, said
Dors. For a while she simply sat there, looking as if the weight of the Empire
were on her shoulders.
Raych waited,
then said, I never got a chance to ask you about your wild trip into the
Palace grounds. It isn't every guy who has a mom who can do that.
We're not
talking about that, Raych.
Well then, tell
me. You're not one for giving anything away by facial expressions, but you look
sorta down. Why is that?
Because I feel,
as you say, sorta down. In fact, I'm in a bad mood because I have terribly
important things on my mind and there's no use talking to your father about it.
He's the most wonderful man in the world, but he's very hard to handle. There's
no chance that he'd take an interest in the dramatic. He dismisses it all as my
irrational fears for his life-and my subsequent attempts to protect him.
Come on, Mom,
you do seem to have irrational fears where Dad's concerned. If you've got
something dramatic in mind, it's probably all wrong.
Thank you. You
sound just like he does and you leave me frustrated. Absolutely frustrated.
Well then,
unburden yourself, Mom. Tell me what's on your mind. From the beginning.
It starts with
Wanda's dream.
Wanda's dream!
Mom! Maybe you'd better stop right now. I know that Dad won't want to listen if
you start that way. I mean, come on. A little kid has a dream and you make a
big deal of it. That's ridiculous.
I don't think it
was a dream, Raych. I think what she thought was a dream were two real people,
talking about what she thought concerned the death of her grandfather.
That's a wild
guess on your part. What possible chance does this have of being true?
Just suppose it
is true. The one phrase that remained with her was lemonade death. Why should
she dream that? It's much more likely that she heard that and distorted the
words she heard-in which case, what were the undistorted words?
I can't tell
you, said Raych, his voice incredulous.
Dors did not fail
to catch that. You think this is just my sick invention. Still, if I happen to
be right, I might be at the start of unraveling a conspiracy against Hari right
here in the Project.
Are there
conspiracies in the Project? That sounds as impossible to me as finding
significance in a dream.
Every large
project is riddled with angers, frictions, jealousies of all sorts.
Sure. Sure.
We're talking nasty words and faces and nose thumbing and tale bearing. That's
nothing at all like talking conspiracy. It's not like talking about killing
Dad.
It's just a
difference in degree. A small difference-maybe.
You'll never
make Dad believe that. For that matter, you'll never make me believe that.
Raych walked hastily across the room and back again, And you've been trying to
nose out this so-called conspiracy, have you?
Dors nodded.
And you've
failed.
Dors nodded.
Doesn't it occur
to you that you've failed because there is no conspiracy, Mom?
Dors shook her
head. I've failed so far, but that doesn't shake my belief that one exists. I
have that feeling.
Raych laughed.
You sound very ordinary, Mom. I would expect more from you than I have that
feeling."
There is one
phrase that I think can be distorted into lemonade. That's layman-aided.
Laymanayded?
What's that?
Layman-aided.
Two words. A layman is what the mathematicians at the Project call
nonmathematicians.
Well?
Suppose,
interjected Dors firmly, someone spoke of laymanaided death, meaning that
some way could be found to kill Hari in which one or more nonmathematicians
would play an essential role. Might that not have sounded to Wanda like
lemonade death, considering that she had never heard the phrase layman-aide
any more than you did, but that she was extraordinarily fond of lemonade?
Are you trying
to tell me that there were people in Dad's private office, of all places. How
many people, by the way?
Wanda, in
describing her dream, says two. My own feeling is that one of the two was none
other than Colonel Hender Linn of the junta and that he was being shown the
Prime Radiant and that there must have been a discussion involving the
elimination of Hari.
You're getting
wilder and wilder, Mom. Colonel Linn and another man in Dad's office talking
murder and not knowing that there was a little girl hidden in a chair,
overhearing them? Is that it?
More or less.
In that case, if
there is mention of laymen, then one of the people, presumably the one that
isn't Linn, must be a mathematician.
It would seem to
be so.
That seems
utterly impossible. But even if it were true, which mathematician do you
suppose might be in question? There are at least fifty in ilic Project.
I haven't
questioned them all. I've questioned a few and some laymen, too, for that
matter, but I have uncovered no leads. Of course, I can't be too open in my
questions.
In short, no one
you have interviewed has given you any lead on any dangerous conspiracy.
No.
I'm not
surprised. They haven't done so, because...
I know your
because, Raych. Do you suppose people are going to break down and give away
conspiracies under mild questioning? I am in no position to try to beat the
information out of anyone. Can you imagine what your father would say if I
upset one of his precious mathematicians?
Then, with a
sudden change in the intonation of her voice, she said, Raych, have you talked
to Yugo Amaryl lately?
No, not
recently. He's not one of your sociable creatures, you know. If you pulled the
psychohistory out of him, he'd collapse into a little pile of dry skin.
Dors made a face
at the picture and said, I've talked to him twice recently and he seems to me
to be a little withdrawn. I don't mean just tired. It is almost as though he's
not aware of the world.
Yes. That's
Yugo.
Is he getting
worse lately?
Raych thought
awhile. He might be. He's getting older, you know. We all are. Except you,
Mom.
Would you say
that Yugo had crossed the line and become a little unstable, Raych?
Who? Yugo? He
has nothing to be unstable about. Or with. Just leave him at his psychohistory
and he'll mumble quietly to himself for the rest of his life.
I don't think
so. There is something that interests him-and very strongly, too. That's the
succession.
What
succession?
I mentioned that
someday your father might want to retire and it turns out that Yugo is
determined-absolutely determined-to be his successor.
I'm not
surprised. I imagine that everyone agrees that Yugo is the natural successor.
I'm sure Dad thinks so, too.
But he seemed to
me to be not quite normal about it. He thought I was coming to him to break the
news that Hari had shoved him aside in favor of someone else. Can you imagine
anyone thinking that of Hari?
It is
surprising... Raych interrupted himself and favored his mother with a long
look. He said, Mom, are you getting ready to tell me that it might be Yugo
who's at the heart of this conspiracy you're speaking of? That he wants to get
rid of Dad and take over?
Is that entirely
impossible?
Yes, it is, Mom.
Entirely. If there's anything wrong with Yugo, it's overwork and nothing else.
Staring at all those equations or whatever they are, all day and half the
night, would drive anyone crazy. Dors rose to her feet with a jerk. You're
right. Raych, startled, said, What's the matter? What you've said. It's
given me an entirely new idea. A crucial one, I think. Turning, without
another word, she left.
24
Dors Venabili
disapproved, as she said to Hari Seldon You've spent four days at the Galactic
Library. Completely out of touch and again you managed to go without me.
Husband and wife
stared at each other's image on their holoscreens. Hari had just returned from
a research trip to the Galactic Library in Imperial Sector. He was calling Dors
from his Project office to let her know he'd returned to Streeling. Even in anger,
thought Hari, Dors is beautiful. He wished he could reach out and touch her
cheek.
Dors, he began,
a placating note in his voice, I did not go alone. I had a number of people
with me and the Galactic Library, of all places, is safe for scholars, even in
these turbulent times. I am going to have to be at the Library more and more
often, I think, as time goes on.
And you're going
to continue to do it without telling me?
Dors, I can't
live according to these death-filled views of yours. Nor Rio I want you running
after me and upsetting the librarians. They're not the junta. I need them and I
don't want to make them angry. But I do think that I-we-should take an
apartment nearby.
Dors looked grim,
shook her head, and changed the subject. Do you know that I had two talks with
Yugo recently?
Good. I'm glad
you did. He needs contact with the outside world.
Yes, he does,
because something's wrong with him. He's not the 1'ugo we've had with us all
these years. He's become vague, distant, and oddly enough-passionate on only
one point, as nearly as I can tell-his determination to succeed you on your
retirement.
That would be
natural-if he survives me.
Don't you expect
him to survive you?
Well, he's
eleven years younger than I am, but the vicissitudes of circumstance...
What you really
mean is that you recognize that Yugo is in a bad way. He looks and acts older
than you do, for all his younger age, and that seems to be a rather recent
development. Is he ill?
Physically? I
don't think so. He has his periodic examinations. I'll admit, though, that he
seems drained. I've tried to persuade him to take a vacation for a few months-a
whole year's sabbatical, if he wishes. I've suggested that he leave Trantor
altogether, just so that he is as far away from the Project as possible for a
while. There would be no problem in financing his stay on Getorin-which is a
pleasant resort world not too many light-years away.
Dors shook her
head impatiently. And, of course, he won't. I suggested a vacation to him and
he acted as though he didn't know the meaning of the word. He absolutely
refused.
So what can we
do? said Seldon.
Dors said, We
can think a little. Yugo worked for a quarter of a century on the Project and
seemed to maintain his strength without any trouble at all and now suddenly he
has weakened. It can't be age. He's not yet fifty.
Are you
suggesting something?
Yes. How long
have you and Yugo been using this Electro-Clarifier thing on your Prime
Radiants?
About two
years-maybe a little more.
I presume that
the Electro-Clarifier is used by anyone who uses the Prime Radiant.
That's right.
Which means Yugo
and you, mostly?
Yes.
And Yugo more
than you?
Yes. Yugo
concentrates fiercely on the Prime Radiant and its equations. 1, unfortunately,
have to spend much of my time on administrative duties.
And what effect
does the Electro-Clarifier have on the human body?
Seldon looked
surprised. Nothing of any significance that I am aware of.
In that case,
explain something to me, Hari. The Electro-Clarifier has been in operation for
over two years and in that time you've grown measurably more tired, crotchety,
and a little-out of touch. Why is that?
I'm getting
older, Dors.
Nonsense.
Whoever told you that sixty is crystallized senility? You're using your age as
a crutch and a defense and I want you to stop it. Yugo, though he's younger,
has been exposed to the Electro-Clarifier more than you have and, as a result,
he is more tired, more crotchety, and, in my opinion, a great deal less in
touch than you are. And he is rather childishly intense about the succession.
Don't you see anything significant in this?
Age and
overwork. That's significant.
No, it's the
Electro-Clarifier. It's having a long-term effect on the two of you.
After a pause,
Seldon said, I can't disprove that, Dors, but I don't see how it's possible.
The Electro-Clarifier is a device that produces an unusual electronic field,
but it is still only a field of the type to which human beings are constantly
exposed. It can't do any unusual harm. In any case, we can't give up its use.
There's no way of continuing the progress of the Project without it.
Now, Hari, I
must ask something of you and you must cooperate with me on this. Go nowhere
outside the Project without telling me and do nothing out of the ordinary
without telling me. Do you understand?
Dors, how can I
agree to this? You're trying to put me into a straitjacket.
It's just for a
while. A few days. A week.
What's going to
happen in a few days or a week?
Dors said, Trust
me. I will clear up everything.
25
Hari Seldon
knocked gently with an old-fashioned code and Yugo Amaryl looked up. Hari, how
nice of you to drop around.
I should do it more
often. In the old days we were together all the time. Now there are hundreds of
people to worry about-here, there, and everywhere-and they get between us. Have
you heard the news?
What news?
The junta is
going to set up a poll tax-a nice substantial one. It will be announced on
TrantorVision tomorrow. It will be just Trantor for now and the Outer Worlds
will have to wait. That's a little disappointing. I had hoped it would be
Empire-wide all at once, but apparently I didn't give the General enough credit
for caution.
Amaryl said,
Trantor will be enough. The Outer Worlds will know that their turn will follow
in not too long a time.
Now we'll have
to see what happens.
What will happen
is that the shouting will start the instant the announcement is out and the
riots will begin, even before the new tax goes into effect.
Are you sure of
it?
Amaryl put his
Prime Radiant into action at once and expanded the appropriate section. See
for yourself, Hari. I don't see how that can be misinterpreted and that's the
prediction under the particular circumstances that now exist. If it doesn't
happen, it means that everything we've worked out in psychohistory is wrong and
I refuse to believe that.
I'll try to have
courage, said Seldon, smiling. Then How do you feel lately, Yugo?
Well enough.
Reasonably well. And how are you, by the way? I've heard rumors that you're
thinking of resigning. Even Dors said something about that.
Pay no attention
to Dors. These days she's saying all sorts of things.
She has a bug in
her head about some sort of danger permeating the Project.
What kind of
danger?
It's better not
to ask. She's just gone off on one of her tangents and, as always, that makes
her uncontrollable.
Amaryl said, See
the advantage I have in being single? Then, in a lower voice, If you do
resign, Hari, what are your plans for the future?
Seldon said,
You'll take over. What other plans can I possibly have?
And Amaryl
smiled.
26
In the small
conference room in the main building, Tamwile Elar listened to Dors Venabili
with a gathering look of confusion and anger on his face. Finally he burst out,
Impossible!
He rubbed his
chin, then went on cautiously, I don't mean to offend you, Dr. Venabili, but
your suggestions are ridic cannot be right. I'here's no way in which anyone can
think that there are, in this Psychohistory Project, any feelings so deadly as
to justify your suspicions. I would certainly know if there were and I assure
you there are not. Don't think it.
I do think it,
said Dors stubbornly, and I can find evidence for it.
Elar said, I
don't know how to say this without offense, Dr. Venabili, but if a person is
ingenious enough and intent enough on proving something, he or she can find all
the evidence he or she wants-or, at least, something he or she believes is
evidence.
Do you think I'm
paranoid?
I think that in
your concern for the Maestro-something in which I'm with you all the
way-you're, shall we say, overheated.
Dors paused and
considered Elar's statement. At least you're right that a person with
sufficient ingenuity can find evidence anywhere. I can build a case against
you, for instance.
Elar's eyes
widened as he stared at her in total astonishment. Against me? I would like to
hear what case you can possibly have against me.
Very well. You
shall. The birthday party was your idea, wasn't it?
Elar said, I
thought of it, yes, but I'm sure others did, too. With the Maestro moaning
about his advancing years, it seemed a natural way of cheering him up.
I'm sure others
may have thought of it, but it was you who actually pressed the issue and got
my daughter-in-law fired up about it. She took over the details and you
persuaded her that it was possible to put together a really large celebration.
Isn't that so?
I don't know if
I had any influence on her, but even if I did, what's wrong with that?
In itself,
nothing, but in setting up so large and widespread and prolonged a celebration,
were we not advertising to the rather unstable and suspicious men of the junta
that Hari was too popular and might be a danger to them?
No one could
possibly believe such a thing was in my mind.
Dors said, I am
merely pointing out the possibility. In planning the birthday celebration, you
insisted that the central offices be cleared out...
Temporarily. For
obvious reasons.
...and insisted
that they remain totally unoccupied for a while. no work was done-except by
Yugo Amaryl-during that time.
I didn't think
it would hurt if the Maestro had some rest in advance of the party. Surely you
can't complain about that.
But it meant
that you could consult with other people in the empty offices and do so in
total privacy. The offices are, of course, well shielded.
I did consult
there-with your daughter-in-law, with caterers, suppliers, and other tradesmen.
It was absolutely necessary, wouldn't you say?
And if one of
those you consulted with was a member of the junta?
Elar looked as
though Dors had hit him. I resent that, Dr. Venabili. What do you take me
for?
Dors did not
answer directly. She said, You went on to talk to Dr. Seldon about his
forthcoming meeting with the General and urged him-rather pressingly-to let you
take his place and run the risks that might follow. The result was, of course,
that Dr. Seldon insisted rather vehemently on seeing the General himself, which
one can argue was precisely what you wanted him to do.
Elar emitted a
short nervous laugh. With all due respect, this does sound like paranoia,
Doctor.
Dors pressed on.
And then, after the party, it was you, wasn't it, who was the first to suggest
that a group of us go to the Dome's Edge Hotel?
Yes and I remember
you saying it was a good idea.
Might it not
have been suggested in order to make the junta uneasy, as yet another example
of Hari's popularity? And might it not have been arranged to tempt me into
invading the Palace grounds?
Could I have
stopped you? said Elar, his incredulity giving way to anger. You had made up
your own mind about that.
Dors paid no
attention. And, of course, you hoped that by entering the Palace grounds I
might make sufficient trouble to turn the junta even further against Hari.
But why, Dr.
Venabili? Why would I be doing this?
One might say it
was to get rid of Dr. Seldon and to succeed him as director of the Project.
How can you
possibly think this of me? I can't believe you are serious. You're just doing
what you said you would at the start of this exercise just showing me what can
be done by an ingenious mind intent on finding so-called evidence.
Let's turn to
something else. I said that you were in a position to use the empty rooms for
private conversations and that you may have been there with a member of the
junta.
That is not even
worth a denial.
But you were
overheard. A little girl wandered into the room, curled up in a chair out of
sight, and overheard your conversation.
Elar frowned.
What did she hear?
She reported
that two men were talking about death. She was only a child and could not
repeat anything in detail, but two words did impress her and they were
lemonade death.
Now you seem to
be changing from fantasy to-if you'll excuse me madness. What can lemonade
death mean and what would it have to do with me?
My first thought
was to take it literally. The girl in question is very fond of lemonade and
there was a good deal of it at the party, but no one Had poisoned it.
Thanks for
granting sanity that much.
Then I realized
the girl had heard something else, which her imperfect command of the language
and her love of the beverage had perverted into lemonade.
And have you
invented a distortion? Elar snorted.
It did seem to
me for a while that what she might have heard was hymen-aided death. '
What does that
mean?
An assassination
carried through by laymen-by nonmathematicians.
Dors stopped and
frowned. Her hand clutched her chest.
Elar said with
sudden concern, Is something wrong, Dr. Venabili?
No, said Dors,
seeming to shake herself.
For a few moments
she said nothing further and Elar cleared his throat. There was no sign of
amusement on his face any longer, as he said, Your comments, Dr. Venabili, are
growing steadily more ridiculous and-well, I don't care if I do offend you, but
I have grown tired of them. Shall we put an end to this?
We are almost at
an end, Dr. Elar. Layman-aided may indeed be ridiculous, as you say. I had
decided that in my own mind, too. You are, in part, responsible for the
development of the Electro-Clarifier, aren't you?
Elar seemed to
stand straighter as he said with a touch of pride, Entirely responsible.
Surely not
entirely. I understand it was designed by Cinda Monay.
A designer. She
followed my instructions.
A layman. The
Electro-Clarifier is a layman-aided device.
With suppressed
violence Elar said, I don't think I want to hear that phrase again. Once more,
shall we put an end to this?
Dors forged on,
as if she hadn't heard his request. Though you give her no credit now, you
gave Cinda credit to her face-to keep her working eagerly, I suppose. She said
you gave her credit and she was very grateful because of it. She said you even
called the device by her name and yours, though that's not the official name.
Of course not.
It's the Electro-Clarifier.
And she said she
was designing improvements, intensifiers, and so on-and that you had the
prototype of an advanced version of the new device for testing.
What has all
this to do with anything?
Since Dr. Seldon
and Dr. Amaryl have been working with the Electro-Clarifier, both have in some
ways deteriorated. Yugo, who works with it more, has also suffered more.
The
Electro-Clarifier can, in no way, do that kind of damage.
Dors put her hand
to her forehead and momentarily winced. She said, And now you have a more
intense Electro-Clarifier that might do more damage, that might kill quickly,
rather than slowly.
Absolute
nonsense.
Now consider the
name of the device, a name which, according to the woman who designed it, you
are the only one to use. I presume you called it the Elar-Monay Clarifier.
I don't ever
recall using that phrase, said Elar uneasily.
Surely you did.
And the new intensified Elar-Monay Clarifies could he used to kill with no
blame to be attached to anyone just a sad accident through a new and untried
device. It would be the Elar-Monay death and a little girl heard it as
lemonade death.
Dors's hand
groped at her side.
Elar said softly,
You are not well, Dr. Venabili.
I am perfectly
well. Am I not correct?
Look, it doesn't
matter what you can twist into lemonade. Who knows what the little girl may
have heard? It all boils down to the deadliness of the Electro-Clarifier. Bring
me into court or before a scientific investigating board and let experts-as
many as you likecheck the effect of the Electro-Clarifier, even the new
intensified one, on human beings. They will find it has no measurable effect.
I don't believe
that, muttered Venabili. Her hands were now at her forehead and her eyes were
closed. She swayed slightly.
Elar said, It is
clear that you are not well, Dr. Venabili. Perhaps that means it is my turn to
talk. May I?
Dors's eyes
opened and she simply stared.
I'll take your
silence for consent, Doctor. Of what use would it be for me to try to to get
rid of Dr. Seldon and Dr. Amaryl in order to take my place as director? You
would prevent any attempt I made at assassination, as you now think you are
doing. In the unlikely case that I succeeded in such a project and was rid of
the two great men, you would tear me to pieces afterward. You're a very unusual
woman-strong and Post beyond belief-and while you are alive, the Maestro is
safe.
Yes, said Dors,
glowering.
I told this to
the men of the junta. Why should they not consult me on matters involving the
Project? They are very interested in psychohistory, as well they ought to be.
It was difficult for them to believe what I told them about you-until you made
your foray into the Palace grounds. That convinced them, you can be sure, and
they agreed with my plan.
Aha. Now we come
to it, Dors said weakly.
I told you the
Electro-Clarifier cannot harm human beings. It cannot. Amaryl and your precious
Hari are just getting old, though you refuse to accept it. So what? They are
fine-perfectly human. The electromagnetic field has no effect of any importance
on organic materials. Of course, it may have adverse effects on sensitive
electromagnetic machinery and, if we could imagine a human being built of metal
and electronics, it might have an effect on it. Legends tell us of such
artificial human beings. The Mycogenians have based their religion on them and
they call such beings robots. If there were such a thing as a robot, one would
imagine it would be stronger and faster by far than an ordinary human being,
that it would have properties, in fact, resembling those you have, Dr.
Venabili. And such a robot could, indeed, be stopped, hurt, even destroyed by
an intense Electro-Clarifier, such as the one that I have here, one that has
been operating at low energy since we began our conversation. That is why you
are feeling ill, Dr. Venabili-and for the first time in your existence, I'm
sure.
Dors said
nothing, merely stared at the man. Slowly she sank into a chair.
Elar smiled and
went on, Of course, with you taken care of, there will be no problem with the
Maestro and with Amaryl. The Maestro, in fact, without you, may fade out at
once and resign in grief, while Amaryl is merely a child in his mind. In all
likelihood, neither will have to be killed. How does it feel, Dr. Venabili, to
be unmasked after all these years? I must admit, you were very good at
concealing your true nature. It's almost surprising that no one else discovered
the truth before now. But then, I am a brilliant mathematician-an observer, a
thinker, a deducer. Even I would not have figured it out were it not for your
fanatical devotion to the Maestro and the occasional bursts of superhuman power
you seemed to summon at will-when he was threatened.
Say good-bye,
Dr. Venabili. All I have to do now is to turn the device to full power and you
will be history.
Dors seemed to
collect herself and rose slowly from her seat, mumbling, I may be better
shielded than you think. Then, with a grunt, she threw herself at Elar.
Elar, his eyes
widening, shrieked and reeled back.
Then Dors was on
him, her hand flashing. Its side struck Elar's neck, smashing the vertebrae and
shattering the nerve cord. He fell dead on the floor.
Dors straightened
with an effort and staggered toward the door. She had to find Hari. He had to
know what had happened.
27
Hari Seldon rose
from his seat in horror. He had never seen Dors look so, her face twisted, her
body canted, staggering as though she were drunk.
Dors! What
happened! What's wrong!
He ran to her and
grasped her around the waist, even as her body gave way and collapsed in his arms.
He lifted her (she weighed more than :m ordinary woman her size would have, but
Seldon was unaware of that ;it the moment) and placed her on the couch.
What happened?
he said.
She told him,
gasping, her voice breaking now and then, while he cradled her head and tried
to force himself to believe what was happening.
Elar is dead,
she said. I finally killed a human being. First time. Makes it worse.
How badly are
you damaged, Dors?
Badly. Elar
turned on his device-full-when I rushed him.
You can be
readjusted.
How? There's no
one-on Trantor-who knows how. I need I Daneel.
Daneel. Demerzel.
Somehow, deep inside, Hari had always known. His friend-a robot-had provided
him with a protector-a robot-to ensure that psychohistory and the seeds of the
Foundations were given a chance to take root. The only problem was, Hari had
fallen in love with his protector-a robot. It all made sense now. All the
nagging doubts and the questions could be answered. And somehow, it didn't
matter one bit. All that mattered was Dors.
We can't let
this happen.
It must. Dors's
eyes fluttered open and looked at Seldon. Must. Tried to save you, but
missed-vital point-who will protect you now?
Seldon couldn't
see her clearly. There was something wrong with his eyes. Don't worry about
me, Dors. It's you, It's you...
No. You, Hari.
Tell Manella-Manella-I forgive her now. She did better than I. Explain to
Wanda. You and Raych-take care of each other.
No no no, said
Seldon, rocking back and forth. You can't do this. Hang on, Dors. Please.
Please, my love.
Dors's head shook
feebly and she smiled even more feebly. Goodbye, Hari, my love. Remember
always-all you did for me.
I did nothing
for you.
You loved me and
your love made me-human.
Her eyes remained
open, but Dors had ceased functioning.
Yugo Amaryl came
storming into Seldon's office. Hari, the riots are beginning, sooner and
harder even than exp...
And then he
stared at Seldon and Dors and whispered, What happened?
Seldon looked up
at him in agony. Riots! What do I care about riots now? What do I care about
anything now?
PART IV
WANDA SELDON
SELDON, WANDA-...
In the waning years of Hari Seldon's life, he grew most attached to (some say
dependent upon) his granddaughter, Wanda. Orphaned in her teens, Wanda Seldon
devoted herself to her grandfather's Psychohistory Project, filling the vacancy
left by Yugo Amaryl....
The content of
Wanda Seldon's work remains largely a mystery, for it was conducted in
virtually total isolation. The only individuals allowed access to Wanda
Seldon's research were Hari himself and a young man named Stettin Palver (whose
descendant Preem would four hundred years later contribute to the rebirth of
Trantor, as the planet rose from the ashes of the Great Sack [300 F. E. 1).
Although the full
extent of Wanda Seldon's contribution to the Foundation is unknown, it was
undoubtedly of the greatest magnitude....
ENCYCLOPEDIA
GALACTICA
1
Hari Seldon
walked into the Galactic Library (limping a little, as he did more and more
often these days) and made for the banks of skitters, the little vehicles that
slid their way along the interminable corridors of the building complex.
He was held up,
however, by the sight of three men seated at one of the galactography alcoves,
with the Galactograph showing the Galaxy in full three-dimensional
representation and, of course, its worlds slowly pinwheeling around its core,
spinning at right angles to that as well.
From where Seldon
stood he could see that the border Province of Anacreon was marked off in
glowing red. It skirted the edge of the Galaxy and took up a great volume, but
it was sparsely populated with stars. Anacreon was not remarkable for either
wealth or culture but was remarkable for its distance from Trantor: ten
thousand parsecs away.
Seldon acting on
impulse, took a seat at a computer console near the three and set up a random
search he was sure would take an indefinite period. Some instinct told him that
such an intense interest in Anacreon must be political in nature-its position
in the Galaxy made it one of the least secure holdings of the current Imperial
regime. His eyes remained on his screen, but Seldon's ears were open for the
discussion near him. One didn't usually hear political discussions in the
Library. They were, in point of fact, not supposed to take place.
Seldon did not
know any of the three men. That was not entirely surprising. There were
habitues of the Library, quite a few, and Seldon knew most of them by sight-and
some even to talk to-but the Library was open to all citizens. no
qualifications. Anyone could enter and use its facilities. (For a limited
period of time, of course. Only a select few, like Seldon were allowed to set
up shop in the Library. Seldon had I1uen granted the use of a locked private
office and complete access to Library resources.)
One of the men
(Seldon thought of him as Hook Nose, for obvious reasons) spoke in a low urgent
voice.
Let it go, he
said. Let it go. It's costing us a mint to try to hold on and, even if we do,
it will only be while they're there. They can't stay there forever and, as soon
as they leave, the situation will revert to what it was.
Seldon knew what
they were talking about. The news had come over TrantorVision only three days
ago that the Imperial government had decided on a show of force to bring the
obstreperous Governor of Anacreon into line. Seldon's own psychohistorical
analysis had shown him that it was a useless procedure, but the government did
not generally listen when its emotions were stirred. Seldon smiled slightly and
grimly at hearing Hook Nose say what he himself had said-and the young man said
it without the benefit of any knowledge of psychohistory.
Hook Nose went
on. If we leave Anacreon alone, what do we lose? It's still there, right where
it always was, right at the edge of the Empire. It can't pick up and go to
Andromeda, can it? So it still has to trade with us and life continues. What's
the difference if they salute the Emperor or not? You'll never be able to tell
the difference.
The second man,
whom Seldon had labeled Baldy, for even more obvious reasons, said, Except
this whole business doesn't exist in a vacuum. If Anacreon goes, the other
border provinces will go. The Empire will break up.
So what? whispered
Hook Nose fiercely. The Empire can't run itself effectively anymore, anyway.
It's too big. Let the border go and take care of itself-if it can. The Inner
Worlds will be all the stronger and better off. The border doesn't have to be
ours politically; it will still be ours economically.
And now the third
man (Red Cheeks) said, I wish you were right, but that's not the way it's
going to work. If the border provinces establish their independence, the first
thing each will do will be to try to increase its power at the expense of its
neighbors. There'll be war and conflict and every one of the governors will
dream of becoming Emperor at last. It will be like the old days before the
Kingdom of Trantor-a dark age that will last for thousands of years.
Baldy said,
Surely things won't be that bad. The Empire may break up, but it will heal
itself quickly when people find out that the breakup just means war and
impoverishment. They'll look back on the golden days of the intact Empire and
all will be well again. We're not barbarians, you know. We'll find a way.
Absolutely,
said Hook Nose. We've got to remember that the Empire has faced crisis after
crisis in its history and has pulled through time and again.
But Red Cheeks
shook his head as he said, This is not just another crisis. This is something
much worse. The Empire has been deteriorating for generations. Ten years' worth
of the junta destroyed the economy and since the fall of the junta and the rise
of this new Emperor, the Empire has been so weak that the governors on the
Periphery don't have to do anything. It's going to fall of its own weight.
And the
allegiance to the Emperor... began Hook Nose.
What
allegiance? said Red Cheeks. We went for years without an Emperor after Cleon
was assassinated and no one seemed to mind much. And this new Emperor is just a
figurehead. There's nothing he can do. There's nothing anyone can do. This
isn't a crisis. This is the end.
The other two
stared at Red Cheeks, frowning. Baldy said, You really believe it! You think
that the Imperial government will just sit there and let it all happen?
Yes! Like you
two, they won't believe it is happening. That is, until it's too late.
What would you
want them to do if they did believe it? asked Baldy.
Red Cheeks stared
into the Galactograph, as if he might find an answer there. I don't know.
Look, in due course of time I'll die; things won't be too bad by then. Afterward,
as the situation gets worse, other people can worry about it. I'll be gone. And
so will the good old days. Maybe forever. I'm not the only one who thinks this,
by the way. Ever hear of someone named Hari Seldon?
Sure, said Hook
Nose at once. Wasn't he First Minister under Cleon?
Yes, said Red
Cheeks. He's some sort of scientist. I heard him give a talk a few months
back. It felt good to know I'm not the only one who believes the Empire is
falling apart. He said...
And he said
everything's going to pot and there's going to be a permanent dark age? Baldy
interjected.
Well no, said
Red Cheeks. He's one of these real cautious types. Ire says it might happen,
but he's wrong. It will happen.
Seldon had heard
enough. He limped toward the table where the three men sat and touched Red
Cheeks on the shoulder.
Sir, he said,
may I speak to you for a moment?
Startled, Red
Cheeks looked up and then he said, Hey, aren't you Professor Seldon?
I always have
been, said Seldon. He handed the man a reference tile bearing his photograph.
I would like to see you here in my Library office at 4 P. m., day after
tomorrow. Can you manage that?
I have to work.
Call in sick if
you have to. It's important.
Well, I'm not
sure, sir.
Do it, said
Seldon. If you get into any sort of trouble over it, I'll straighten it out.
And meanwhile, gentlemen, do you mind if I study the Galaxy simulation for a
moment? It's been a long time since I've looked at one.
They nodded
mutely, apparently abashed at being in the presence of a former First Minister.
One by one the men stepped back and allowed Seldon access to the Galactograph
controls.
Seldon's finger
reached out to the controls and the red that had marked off the Province of
Anacreon vanished. The Galaxy was unmarked, a glowing pinwheel of mist
brightening into the spherical glow at the center, behind which was the
Galactic black hole.
Individual stars
could not be made out, of course, unless the view were magnified, but then only
one portion or another of the Galaxy would be shown on the screen and Seldon
wanted to see the whole thing to get a look at the Empire that was vanishing.
He pushed a
contact and a series of yellow dots appeared on the Galactic image. They
represented the habitable planets-twenty-five million of them. They could be
distinguished as individual dots in the thin fog that represented the outskirts
of the Galaxy, but they were more and more thickly placed as one moved in
toward the center. There was a belt of what seemed solid yellow (but which
would separate into individual dots under magnification) around the central
glow. The central glow itself remained white and unmarked, of course. no
habitable planets could exist in the midst of the turbulent energies of the
core.
Despite the great
density of yellow, not one star in ten thousand, Seldon knew, had a habitable
planet circling it. This was true, despite the planet-molding and terraforming
capacities of humanity. Not all the molding in the Galaxy could make most of
the worlds into anything a human being could walk on in comfort and without the
protection of a spacesuit.
Seldon closed
another contact. The yellow dots disappeared, but one tiny region glowed blue:
Trantor and the various worlds directly dependent on it. As close as it could
be to the central core and yet remaining insulated from its deadliness, it was
commonly viewed as being located at the center of the Galaxy, which it
wasn't-not truly. As usual, one had to be impressed by the smallness of the
world of Trantor, a tiny place in the vast realm of the Galaxy, but within it
was squeezed the largest concentration of wealth, culture, and governmental
authority that humanity had ever seen.
And even that was
doomed to destruction.
It was almost as
though the men could read his mind or perhaps they interpreted the sad
expression on his face.
Baldy asked
softly, Is the Empire really going to be destroyed?
Seldon replied,
softer still, It might. It might. Anything might happen.
He rose, smiled
at the men, and left, but in his thoughts he screamed: It will! It will!
2
Seldon sighed as
he climbed into one of the skitters that were ranked side by side in the large
alcove. There had been a time, just a few years ago, when he had gloried in
walking briskly along the interminable corridors of the Library, telling
himself that even though he was past sixty he could manage it.
But now, at
seventy, his legs gave way all too quickly and he had to take a skitter.
Younger men took them all the time because skitters saved them trouble, but
Seldon did it because he had to-and that made all the difference.
After Seldon
punched in the destination, he closed a contact and the skitter lifted a
fraction of an inch above the floor. Off it went at a rather casual pace, very
smoothly, very silently, and Seldon leaned back and watched the corridor walls,
the other skitters, the occasional walkers.
He passed a
number of Librarians and, even after all these years, he still smiled when he
saw them. They were the oldest Guild in the Empire, the one with the most
revered traditions, and they clung to ways that were more appropriate centuries
before-maybe millennia before.
Their garments
were silky and off-white and were loose enough to be almost gownlike, coming
together at the neck and billowing out from there.
Trantor, like all
the worlds, oscillated, where the males were concerned, between facial hair and
smoothness. The people of Trantor itself or at least most of its sectors-were
smooth-shaven and had been smooth-shaven for as far back as he knew-excepting
such anomalies as the mustaches worn by Dahlites, such as his own foster son,
Raych.
The Librarians,
however, clung to the beards of long ago. Every Librarian had a rather short
neatly cultivated beard running from ear to ear but leaving bare the upper lip.
That alone was enough to mark them for what they were and to make the
smooth-shaven Seldon feel a little uncomfortable when surrounded by a crowd of
them.
Actually the most
characteristic thing of all was the cap each wore (perhaps even when asleep,
Seldon thought). Square, it was made of a velvety material, in four parts that
came together with a button at the top. The caps came in an endless variety of
colors and apparently each color had significance. If you were familiar with
Librarian lore, you could tell a particular Librarian's length of service, area
of expertise, grades of accomplishment, and so on. They helped fix a pecking
order. Every Librarian could, by a glance at another's hat, tell whether to be
respectful (and to what degree) or overbearing (and to what degree).
The Galactic Library
was the largest single structure on Trantor (possibly in the Galaxy), much
larger than even the Imperial Palace, and it had once gleamed and glittered, as
though boasting of its size and magnificence. However, like the Empire itself,
it had faded and withered. It was like an old dowager still wearing the jewels
of her youth but upon a body that was wrinkled and wattled.
The skitter
stopped in front of the ornate doorway of the Chief Librarian's office and
Seldon climbed out.
Las Zenow smiled
as he greeted Seldon. Welcome, my friend, he said in his high-pitched voice.
(Seldon wondered if he had ever sung tenor in his younger days but had never
dared to ask. The Chief Librarian was a compound of dignity always and the
question might have seemed offensive.)
Greetings, said
Seldon. Zenow had a gray beard, rather more than halfway to white, and he wore
a pure white hat. Seldon understood that without any explanation. It was a case
of reverse ostentation. The total absence of color represented the highest peak
of position.
Zenow rubbed his
hands with what seemed to be an inner glee. I've called you in, Hari, because
I've got good news for you. We've found it!
By it, Las,
you mean...
A suitable
world. You wanted one far out. I think we've located the ideal one. His smile
broadened. You just leave it to the Library. Hari. We can find anything.
I have no doubt,
Las. Tell me about this world.
Well, let me
show you its location first. A section of the wall slid aside, the lights in
the room dimmed, and the Galaxy appeared in three-dimensional form, turning
slowly. Again, red lines marked off the Province of Anacreon, so that Seldon
could almost swear that the episode with the three men had been a rehearsal for
this.
And then a
brilliant blue dot appeared at the far end of the province. There it is, said
Zenow. It's an ideal world. Sizable, well-watered, good oxygen atmosphere,
vegetation, of course. A great deal of sea life. It's there just for the
taking. no planet-molding or terraforming required or, at least, none that
cannot be done while it is actually occupied.
Seldon said, Is
it an unoccupied world, Las?
Absolutely
unoccupied. no one on it.
But why-if it's
so suitable? I presume that, if you have all the details about it, it must have
been explored. Why wasn't it colonized?
It was explored,
but only by unmanned probes. And there was no colonization-presumably because
it was so far from everything. The planet revolves around a star that is
farther from the central black hole than that of any inhabited planet-farther
by far. Too far, I suppose, for prospective colonists, but I think not too far
for you. You said, The farther, the better.
Yes, said
Seldon, nodding. I still say so. Does it have a name or is there just a
letter-number combination?
Believe it or
not, it has a name. Those who sent out the probes named it Terminus, an archaic
word meaning the end of the line. Which it would seem to be.
Seldon said, Is
the world part of the territory of the Province of Anacreon?
Not really,
said Zenow. If you'll study the red line and the red shading, you will see
that the blue dot of Terminus lies slightly outside it fifty light-years
outside it, in fact. Terminus belongs to nobody; it's not even part of the
Empire, as a matter of fact.
You're right,
then, Las. It does seem like the ideal world I've been looking for.
Of course, said
Zenow thoughtfully, once you occupy Terminus, I imagine the Governor of
Anacreon will claim it as being under his jurisdiction.
That's possible,
said Seldon, but we'll have to deal with that when 1 he matter comes up.
Zenow rubbed his
hands again. What a glorious conception. Setting up a huge project on a
brand-new world, far away and entirely isolated, so that year by year and
decade by decade a huge Encyclopedia of all human knowledge can be put
together. An epitome of what is present in this Library. If I were only
younger, I would love to join the expedition.
Seldon said
sadly, You're almost twenty years younger than I am. (Almost everyone is far
younger than I am, he thought, even more sadly.)
Zenow said, Ah
yes, I heard that you just passed your seventieth birthday. I hope you enjoyed
it and celebrated appropriately.
Seldon stirred.
I don't celebrate my birthdays.
Oh, but you did.
I remember the famous story of your sixtieth birthday.
Seldon felt the
pain, as deeply as though the dearest loss in all the world had taken place the
day before. Please don't talk about it, he said.
Abashed, Zenow
said, I'm sorry. We'll talk about something else. If, indeed, Terminus is the
world you want, I imagine that your work on the preliminaries to the
Encyclopedia Project will be redoubled. As you know, the Library will be glad
to help you in all respects.
I'm aware of it,
Las, and I am endlessly grateful. We will, indeed, keep working.
He rose, not yet
able to smile after the sharp pang induced by the reference to his birthday
celebration of ten years back. He said, So I must go to continue my labors.
And as he left,
he felt, as always, a pang of conscience over the deceit he was practicing. Las
Zenow did not have the slightest idea of Seldon's true intentions.
3
Hari Seldon
surveyed the comfortable suite that had been his personal office at the
Galactic Library these past few years. It, like the rest of the Library, had a
vague air of decay about it, a kind of weariness-something that had been too
long in one place. And yet Seldon knew it might remain here, in the same place,
for centuries more-with judicious rebuildings-for millennia even.
How did he come
to be here?
Over and over
again, he felt the past in his mind, ran his mental tendrils along the line of
development of his life. It was part of growing older, no doubt. There was so
much more in the past, so much less in the future, that the mind turned away
from the looming shadow ahead to contemplate the safety of what had gone
before.
In his case,
though, there was that change. For over thirty years psychohistory had
developed in what might almost be considered a straight line-progress
creepingly slow but moving straight ahead. Then six years ago there had been a
right-angled turn-totally unexpected.
And Seldon know
exactly how it had happened, how a concatenation of events came together to
make it possible.
It was Wanda, of
course, Seldon's granddaughter. Hari closed his eyes and settled into his chair
to review the events of six years before.
Twelve-year-old
Wanda was bereft. Her mother, Manella, had had another child, another little
girl, Bellis, and for a time the new baby was a total preoccupation.
Her father,
Raych, having finished his book on his home sector of Dahl, found it to be a
minor success and himself a minor celebrity. He was called upon to talk on the
subject, something he accepted with alacrity, for he was fiercely absorbed in
the subject and, as he said to Hari with a grin, When I talk about Dahl, I
don't have to hide my Dahlite accent. In fact, the public expects it of me.
The net result,
though, was that he was away from home a considerable amount of time and when
he wasn't, it was the baby he wanted to see.
As for Dors-Dors
was gone-and to Hari Seldon that wound was ever-fresh, ever-painful. And he had
reacted to it in an unfortunate manner. It had been Wanda's dream that had set
in motion the current of events that had ended with the loss of Dors.
Wanda had had
nothing to do with it-Seldon knew that very well. And yet he found himself
shrinking from her, so that he also failed her in the crisis brought about by
the birth of the new baby.
And Wanda
wandered disconsolately to the one person who always seemed glad to see her,
the one person she could always count on. That WAS Yugo Amaryl, second only to
Hari Seldon in the development of psychohistory and first in his absolute
round-the-clock devotion to it. Hari had had Dors and Raych, but psychohistory
was Yugo's life; he had no wife and children. Yet whenever Wanda came into his
presence, something within him recognized her as a child and he dimly felt-for
just that moment-a sense of loss that seemed to be assuaged only by showing the
child affection. To be sure, he tended to treat her as a rather undersized
adult, but Wanda seemed to like that.
It was six years
ago that she had wandered into Yugo's office. Yugo looked up at her with his
owlish reconstituted eyes and, as usual, took a moment or two to recognize her.
Then he said,
Why, it's my dear friend Wanda. But why do you look so sad? Surely an
attractive young woman like you should never feel sad.
And Wanda, her
lower lip trembling, said, Nobody loves me.
Oh come, that's
not true.
They just love
that new baby. They don't care about me anymore.
I love you,
Wanda.
Well, you're the
only one then, Uncle Yugo. And even though she could no longer crawl onto his
lap as she had when she was younger, she cradled her head on his shoulder and
wept.
Amaryl, totally
unaware of what he should do, could only hug the girl and say, Don't cry.
Don't cry. And out of sheer sympathy and because he had so little in his own
life to weep about, he found that tears were trickling down his own cheeks as
well.
And then he said
with sudden energy, Wanda, would you like to see something pretty?
What? sniffled
Wanda.
Amaryl knew only
one thing in life and the Universe that was pretty. He said, Did you ever see
the Prime Radiant?
No. What is it?
It's what your
grandfather and I use to do our work. See? It's right here.
He pointed to the
black cube on his desk and Wanda looked at it woefully. That's not pretty,
she said.
Not now, agreed
Amaryl. But watch when I turn it on.
He did so. The
room darkened and filled with dots of light and flashes of different colors.
See? Now we can magnify it so all the dots become mathematical symbols.
And so they did.
There seemed a rush of material toward them and there, in the air, were signs
of all sorts, letters, numbers, arrows, and shapes that Wanda had never seen
before.
Isn't it
pretty? asked Amaryl.
Yes, it is,
said Wanda, staring carefully at the equations that (she didn't know)
represented possible futures. I don't like that part, though. I think it's
wrong. She pointed at a colorful equation to her left.
Wrong? Why do
you say it's wrong said Amaryl, frowning.
Because it's
not... pretty. I'd do it a different way.
Amaryl cleared
his throat. Well, I'll try to fix it up. And he moved closer to the equation
in question, staring at it in his owlish fashion.
Wanda said,
Thank you very much, Uncle Yugo, for showing me your pretty lights. Maybe
someday I'll understand what they mean.
That's all right,
said Amaryl. I hope you feel better.
A little,
thanks, and, after flashing the briefest of smiles, she left the room.
Amaryl stood
there, feeling a trifle hurt. He didn't like having the Prime Radiant's product
criticized-not even by a twelve-year-old girl who knew no better.
And as he stood
there, he had no idea whatsoever that the psychohistorical revolution had
begun.
4
That afternoon
Amaryl went to Hari Seldon's office at Streeling University. That in itself was
unusual, for Amaryl virtually never left his own office, even to speak with a
colleague just down the hall.
Hari, said
Amaryl, frowning and looking puzzled. Something very odd has happened. Very
peculiar.
Seldon looked at
Amaryl with deepest sorrow. He was only fifty-three, but he looked much older,
bent, worn down to almost transparency. When forced, he had undergone doctors'
examinations and the doctors had all recommended that he leave his work for a
period of time (some said permanently) and rest. Only this, the doctors said,
might improve his health. Otherwise... Seldon shook his head. Take him away
from his work and he'll die all the sooner-and unhappier. We have no choice.
And then Seldon
realized that, lost in such thoughts, he was not hearing Amaryl speak.
He said, I'm
sorry, Yugo. I'm a little distracted. Begin again.
Amaryl said, I'm
telling you that something very odd has happened. Very peculiar.
What is it,
Yugo?
It was Wanda.
She came in to see me-very sad, very upset.
Why?
Apparently it's
the new baby.
Oh yes, Hari
said with more than a trace of guilt in his voice.
So she said and
cried on my shoulder-I actually cried a bit, too, Hari. And then I thought I'd
cheer her up by showing her the Prime Radiant. Here Amaryl hesitated, as if
choosing his next words carefully.
Go on, Yugo.
What happened?
Well, she stared
at all the lights and I magnified a portion, actually Section 428254. You're
acquainted with that?
Seldon smiled.
No, Yugo, I haven't memorized the equations quite as well as you have.
Well, you
should, said Amaryl severely. How can you do a good job if... But never mind
that. What I'm trying to say is that Wanda pointed to a part of it and said it
was no good. It wasn't pretty.
Why not? We all
have our personal likes and dislikes.
Yes, of course,
but I brooded about it and I spent some time going over it and, Hari, there was
something wrong with it. The programming was inexact and that area, the precise
area to which Wanda pointed, was no good. And, really, it wasn't pretty.
Seldon sat up
rather stiffly, frowning. Let me get this straight, Yugo. She pointed to
something at random, said it was no good, and she was right?
Yes. She
pointed, but it wasn't at random; she was very deliberate.
But that's
impossible.
But it happened.
I was there.
I'm not saying
it didn't happen. I'm saying it was just a wild coincidence.
Is it? Do you
think, with all your knowledge of psychohistory, you could take one glance at a
new set of equations and tell me that one portion is no good?
Seldon said,
Well then, Yugo, how did you come to expand that particular portion of the
equations? What made you choose that piece for magnification?
Amaryl shrugged.
That was coincidence-if you like. I just fiddled with the controls.
That couldn't be
coincidence, muttered Seldon. For a few moments he was lost in thought, then
he asked the question that pushed forward the psychohistorical revolution that
Wanda had begun.
He said, Yugo,
did you have any suspicions about those equations beforehand? Did you have any
reason to believe there was something wrong with them?
Amaryl fiddled
with the sash of his unisuit and seemed embarrassed. Yes, I think I did. You
see...
You think you
did?
I know I did. I
seemed to recall when I was setting it up-it's a new section, you know-my
fingers seemed to glitch on the programmer. It looked all right then, but I
guess I kept worrying about it inside. I remember thinking it looked wrong, but
I had other things to do and I just let it go. But then when Wanda happened to
point to precisely the area I had been concerned about, I decided to check up
on her-otherwise I would just have let it go as a childish statement.
And you turned
on that very fragment of the equations to show Wanda. As though it were
haunting your unconscious mind.
Amaryl shrugged.
Who knows?
And just before
that, you were very close together, hugging, both crying.
Amaryl shrugged
again, looking even more embarrassed.
Seldon said, I
think I know what happened, Yugo. Wanda read your mind.
Amaryl jumped, as
though he had been bitten. That's impossible!
Slowly Seldon
said, I once knew someone who had unusual mental powers of that sortand he
thought sadly of Eto Demerzel or, as Seldon had secretly known him, Daneel.
only he was somewhat more than human. But his ability to read minds, to sense
other people's thoughts, to persuade people to act in a certain way-that was a
mental ability. I think, somehow, that perhaps Wanda has that ability as well.
I can't believe
it, said Amaryl stubbornly.
I can, said
Seldon but I don't know what to do about it. Dimly lie felt the rumblings of
a revolution in psychohistorical research-but only dimly.
5
Dad, said Raych
with some concern, you look tired.
I dare say,
said Hari Seldon, I feel tired. But how are you?
Raych was
forty-four now and his hair was beginning to show a bit of gray, but his
mustache remained thick and dark and very Dahlite in appearance. Seldon
wondered if he touched it up with dye, but it would have been the wrong thing
to ask.
Seldon said, Are
you through with your lecturing for a while?
For a while. Not
for long. And I'm glad to be home and see the baby and Manella and Wanda-and
you, Dad.
Thank you. But I
have news for you, Raych. no more lecturing. I'm going to need you here.
Raych frowned.
What for? On two different occasions he had been sent to carry out delicate
missions, but those were back during the days of the Joranumite menace. As far
as he knew, things were quiet now, especially with the overthrow of the junta
and the reestablishment of a pale Emperor.
It's Wanda,
said Seldon.
Wanda? What's
wrong with Wanda?
Nothing's wrong
with her, but we're going to have to work out a complete genome for her-and for
you and Manella as well-and eventually for the new baby.
For Bellis, too?
What's going on?
Seldon hesitated.
Raych, you know that your mother and I always thought there was something
lovable about you, something that inspired affection and trust.
I know you
thought so. You said so often enough when you were trying to get me to do
something difficult. But I'll be honest with you. I never felt it.
No, you won over
me and... and Dors. (He had such trouble saying the name, even though four
years had passed since her destruction.) You won over Rashelle of Wye. You won
over Jo-Jo Joranum. You won over Manella. How do you account for all that?
Intelligence and
charm, said Raych, grinning.
Have you thought
you might have been in touch with their-our-minds?
No, I've never
thought that. And now that you mention it, I think it's ridiculous. With all
due respect, Dad, of course.
What if I told
you that Wanda seems to have read Yugo's mind during a moment of crisis?
Coincidence or
imagination, I should say.
Raych, I knew
someone once who could handle people's minds as easily as you and I handle
conversation.
Who was that?
I can't speak of
him. Take my word for it, though.
Well... said
Raych dubiously.
I've been at the
Galactic Library, checking on such matters. There is a curious story, about
twenty thousand years old and therefore back to the misty origins of
hyperspatial travel. It's about a young woman, not much more than Wanda's age,
who could communicate with an entire planet that circled a sun called Nemesis.
Surely a
fairytale.
Surely. And
incomplete, at that. But the similarity with Wanda is astonishing.
Raych said, Dad,
what are you planning?
I'm not sure,
Raych. I need to know the genome and I have to find others like Wanda. I have a
notion that youngsters are born-not often but occasionally-with such mental
abilities, but that, in general, it merely gets them in trouble and they learn
to mask it. And as they grow tip, their ability, their talent, is buried deep
within their minds-sort of an unconscious act of self-preservation. Surely in
the Empire or even just among Trantor's forty billion, there must be more of
that sort, like Wanda, and if I know the genome I want, I can test those I
think may be so.
And what would
you do with them if you found them, Dad?
I have the
notion that they are what I need for the further development of psychohistory.
Raych said, And
Wanda is the first of the type you know about and you intend to make a
psychohistorian out of her?
Perhaps.
Like Yugo...
Dad, no!
Why no?
Because I want
her to grow up like a normal girl and become a normal woman. I will not have
you sitting her before the Prime Radiant and make her into a living monument to
psychohistorical mathematics.
Seldon said, It
may not come to that, Raych, but we must have her genome. You know that for
thousands of years there have been suggestions that every human being have his
genome on file. It's only the expense that's kept it from becoming standard
practice; no one doubts the usefulness of it. Surely you see the advantages. If
nothing else, we will know Wanda's tendencies toward a variety of physiological
disorders. If we had ever had Yugo's genome, I am certain he would not now be
dying. Surely we can go that far.
Well, maybe,
Dad, but no further. I'm willing to bet that Manella is going to be a lot
firmer on this than I am.
Seldon said,
Very well. But remember, no more lecture tours. I need you at home.
We'll see,
Raych said and left.
Seldon sat there
in a quandary. Eto Demerzel, the one person he knew who could handle minds,
would have known what to do. Dors, with her nonhuman knowledge, might have
known what to do.
For himself, he
had a dim vision of a new psychohistory-but nothing more than that.
6
It was not an
easy task to obtain a complete genome of Wanda. To begin with, the number of
biophysicists equipped to handle the genome was small and those that existed
were always busy.
Nor was it
possible for Seldon to discuss his needs openly, in order to interest the
biophysicists. It was absolutely essential, Seldon felt, that the true reason
for his interest in Wanda's mental powers be kept secret from all the Galaxy.
And if another
difficulty was needed, it was the fact that the process was infernally
expensive.
Seldon shook his
head and said to Mian Endelecki, the biophysicist he was now consulting, Why
so expensive, Dr. Endelecki? I am not an expert in the field, but it is my
distinct understanding that the process is completely computerized and that,
once you have a scraping of skin cells, the genome can be completely built and
analyzed in a matter of days.
That's true. But
having a deoxyribonucleic acid molecule stretching out for billions of
nucleotides, with every puring and pyrimidine in its place, is the least of it;
the very least of it, Professor Seldon. There is then the matter of studying
each one and comparing it to some standard.
Now, consider,
in the first place, that although we have records of complete genomes, they
represent a vanishingly small fraction of the number of genomes that exist, so
that we don't really know how standard they are.
Seldon asked,
Why so few?
A number of
reasons. The expense, for one thing. Few people are willing to spend the
credits on it unless they have strong reason to think there is something wrong
with their genome. And if they have no strong reason, they are reluctant to
undergo analysis for fear they will find something wrong. Now, then, are you
sure you want your granddaughter genomed?
Yes, I do. It is
terribly important.
Why? Does she
show signs of a metabolic anomaly?
No, she doesn't.
Rather the reverse-if I knew the antonym of 'anomaly. ' I consider her a most
unusual person and I want to know just what it is that makes her unusual.
Unusual in what
way?
Mentally, but
it's impossible for me to go into details, since I don't entirely understand
it. Maybe I will, once she is genomed.
How old is she?
Twelve. She'll
soon be thirteen.
In that case,
I'll need permission from her parents.
Seldon cleared
his throat. That may be difficult to get. I'm her grandfather. Wouldn't my
permission be enough?
For me,
certainly. But, you know, we're talking about the law. I don't wish to lose my
license to practice.
It was necessary
for Seldon to approach Raych again. This, too, was difficult, as he protested
once more that he and his wife, Manella, wanted Wanda to live a normal life of
a normal girl. What if her genome did turn out to be abnormal? Would she be
whisked away to be prodded and probed like a laboratory specimen? Would Hari,
in his fanatical devotion to his Psychohistory Project, press Wanda into a life
of all work and no play, shutting her off from other young people her age? But
Seldon was insistent.
Trust me, Raych.
I would never do anything to harm Wanda. But this must be done. I need to know
Wanda's genome. If it is as I suspect it is, we may be on the verge of altering
the course of psychohistory, of the future of the Galaxy itself!
And so Raych was
persuaded and somehow he obtained Manella's consent, as well. And together, the
three adults took Wanda to Dr. Endelecki's office.
Mian Endelecki
greeted them at the door. Her hair was a shining white, but her face showed no
sign of age.
She looked at the
girl, who walked in with a look of curiosity on her face but with no signs of
apprehension or fear. She then turned her gaze to the three adults who had
accompanied Wanda.
Dr. Endelecki
said with a smile, Mother, father, and grandfather-am I right?
Seldon answered,
Absolutely right.
Raych looked
hang-dog and Manella, her face a little swollen and her eyes a little red,
looked tired.
Wanda, began
the doctor. That is your name, isn't it?
Yes, ma'am,
said Wanda in her clear voice.
I'm going to tell
you exactly what I'm going to do with you. You're right-handed, I suppose.
Yes, ma'am.
Very well, then,
I'll spray a little patch on your left forearm with an anesthetic. It will just
feel like a cool wind. Nothing else. I'll then scrape a little skin from you
just a tiny bit. There'll be no pain, no blood, no mark afterward. When I'm
done, I'll spray a little disinfectant on it. The whole thing will take just a
few minutes. Does that sound all right to you?
Sure, said
Wanda, as she held out her arm.
When it was over,
Dr. Endelecki said, I'll put the scraping under the microscope, choose a
decent cell, and put my computerized gene analyzer to work. It will mark off
every last nucleotide, but there are billions of them. It will probably take
the better part of a day. It's all automatic, of course, so I won't be sitting
here watching it and there's no point in your doing so, either.
Once the genome
is prepared, it will take an even longer time to analyze it. If you want a
complete job, it may take a couple of weeks. That is why it's so expensive a
procedure. The work is hard and long. I'll call you in when I have it. She
turned away, as if she had dismissed the family, and busied herself with the
gleaming apparatus on the table in front of her.
Seldon said, If
you come across anything unusual, will you get in touch with me instantly? I
mean, don't wait for a complete analysis if you find something in the first
hour. Don't make me wait.
The chances of
finding anything in the first hour are very slim, but I promise you, Professor
Seldon that I will be in touch with you at once if it seems necessary.
Manella snatched
Wanda's arm and led her off triumphantly. Raych followed, feet dragging. Seldon
lingered and said, This is more important than you know, Dr. Endelecki.
Dr. Endelecki
nodded as she said, Whatever the reason, Professor, I'll do my best.
Seldon left, his
lips pressed tightly together. Why he had thought that somehow the genome would
be worked out in five minutes and that a glance at it in another five minutes
would give him an answer, he did not know. Now he would have to wait for weeks,
without knowing what would be found.
He ground his
teeth. Would his newest brainchild, the Second Foundation, ever be established
or was it an illusion that would remain always just out of reach?
7
Hari Seldon
walked into Dr. Endelecki's office, a nervous smile on his face.
He said, You
said a couple of weeks, Doctor. It's been over a month mow.
Dr. Endelecki
nodded. I'm sorry, Professor Seldon but you wanted everything exact and that
is what I have tried to do.
Well? The look
of anxiety on Seldon's face did not disappear. What did you find?
A hundred or so
defective genes.
What! Defective
genes. Are you serious, Doctor?
Quite serious.
Why not? There are no genomes without at least a hundred defective genes;
usually there are considerably more. It's not as bad as it sounds, you know.
No, I don't
know. You're the expert, Doctor, not I.
Dr. Endelecki
sighed and stirred in her chair. You don't know anything about genetics, do
you, Professor?
No, I don't. A
man can't know everything.
You're perfectly
right. I know nothing about this-what do you call it? this psychohistory of
yours.
Dr. Endelecki
shrugged, then continued. If you wanted to explain anything about it, you
would be forced to start from the beginning and I would probably not understand
it even so. Now, as to genetics...
Well?
An imperfect
gene usually means nothing. There are imperfect genes-so imperfect and so
crucial that they produce terrible disorders. These are very rare, though. Most
imperfect genes simply don't work with absolute accuracy. They're like wheels
that are slightly out of balance. A vehicle will move along, trembling a bit,
but it will move along.
Is that what
Wanda has?
Yes. More or
less. After all, if all genes were perfect, we would all look precisely the
same, we would all behave precisely the same. It's the difference in genes that
makes for different people.
But won't it get
worse as we grow older?
Yes. We all get
worse as we grow older. I noticed you limping when you came in. Why is that?
A touch of
sciatica, muttered Seldon.
Did you have it
all your life?
Of course not.
Well, some of
your genes have gotten worse with time and now you limp.
And what will
happen to Wanda with time?
I don't know. I
can't predict the future, Professor; I believe that is your province. However,
if I were to hazard a guess, I would say that nothing unusual will happen to
Wanda-at least, genetically-except the gathering of old age.
Seldon said, Are
you sure?
You have to take
my word for it. You wanted to find out about Wanda's genome and you ran the
risk of discovering things perhaps it is better not to know. But I tell you
that, in my opinion, I can see nothing terrible happening to her.
The imperfect
genes-should we fix them? Can we fix them?
No. In the first
place, it would be very expensive. Secondly, the chances are that they would
not stay fixed. And finally, people are against it.
But why?
Because they're
against science in general. You should know this as well as anyone, Professor.
I'm afraid the situation is such, especially since Cleon's death, that
mysticism has been gaining ground. People don't believe in fixing genes
scientifically. They would rather cure things by the laying on of hands or by
mumbo-jumbo of some sort or other. Frankly it is extremely difficult for me to
continue with my job. Very little funding is coming in.
Seldon nodded.
Actually I understand this situation all too well. Psychohistory explains it,
but I honestly didn't think the situation was growing so bad so rapidly. I've
been too involved in my own work to see the difficulties all around me. He
sighed. I've been watching the Galactic Empire slowly fall apart for over
thirty years now-and now that it's beginning to collapse much more rapidly, I
don't see how we can stop it in time.
Are you trying
to? Dr. Endelecki seemed amused.
Yes, I am.
Lots of luck.
About your sciatica. You know, fifty years ago it could have been cured. Not
now, though.
Why not?
Well, the
devices used for it are gone; the people who could have handled them are
working on other things. Medicine is declining.
Along with everything
else, mused Seldon. But let's get back to Wanda. I feel she is a most
unusual young woman with a brain that is different from most. What do her genes
tell you about her brain?
Dr. Endelecki
leaned back in her chair. Professor Seldon do you know just how many genes are
involved in brain function?
No.
I'll remind you
that, of all the aspects of the human body, the brain Junction is the most
intricate. In fact, as far as we know, there is nothing m the Universe as
intricate as the human brain. So you won't be surprised when I tell you that
there are thousands of genes that each play a i0ale in brain function.
Thousands?
Exactly. And it
is impossible to go through those genes and see anything specifically unusual.
I will take your word for it, as far as Wanda is concerned. She is an unusual
girl with an unusual brain, but I see nothing in her genes that can tell me
anything about that brain-except, of course, that it is normal.
Could you find
other people whose genes for mental functioning are like Wanda's, that have the
same brain pattern?
I doubt it very
much. Even if another brain were much like hers, there would still be enormous
differences in the genes. no use looking for similarities. Tell me, Professor,
just what is it about Wanda that makes you think her brain is so unusual?
Seldon shook his
head. I'm sorry. It's not something I can discuss.
In that case, I
am certain that I can find out nothing for you. How did you discover that there
was something unusual about her brain-this thing you can't discuss?
Accident,
muttered Seldon. Sheer accident.
In that case,
you're going to have to find other brains like hers-also by accident. Nothing
else can be done.
Silence settled
over both of them. Finally Seldon said, Is there anything else you can tell
me?
I'm afraid not.
Except that I'll send you my bill.
Seldon rose with
an effort. His sciatica hurt him badly. Well then, thank you, Doctor. Send the
bill and I'll pay it.
Hari Seldon left
the doctor's office, wondering just what he would do next.
8
Like any
intellectual, Hari Seldon had made use of the Galactic Library freely. For the
most part, it had been done long-distance through computer, but occasionally he
had visited it, more to get away from the pressures of the Psychohistory
Project than for any other purpose. And, for the past couple of years, since he
had first formulated his plan to find others like Wanda, he had kept a private
office there, so he could have ready access to any of the Library's vast
collection of data. He had even rented a small apartment in an adjacent sector
under the dome so that he would be able to walk to the Library when his
ever-increasing research there prevented him from returning to the Streeling
Sector.
Now, however, his
plan had taken on new dimensions and he wanted to meet Las Zenow. It was the
first time he had ever met him face-to-face.
It was not easy
to arrange a personal interview with the Chief Librarian of the Galactic
Library. His own perception of the nature and value of his office was high and
it was frequently said that when the Emperor wished to consult the Chief
Librarian, even he had to visit the Library himself and wait his turn.
Seldon however,
had no trouble. Zenow knew him well, though he had never seen Hari Seldon in
person. An honor, First Minister, he said in greeting.
Seldon smiled. I
trust you know that I have not held that post in sixteen years.
The honor of the
title is still yours. Besides, sir, you were also instrumental in ridding us of
the brutal rule of the junta. The junta, on a number of occasions, violated the
sacred rule of the neutrality of the Library.
(Ah, thought
Seldon that accounts for the readiness with which he saw me.)
Merely rumor,
he said aloud.
And now, tell
me, said Zenow, who could not resist a quick look at the time band on his
wrist, what can I do for you?
Chief
Librarian, began Seldon I have not come to ask anything easy of you. What I
want is more space at the Library. I want permission to bring in a number of my
associates. I want permission to undertake a long and elaborate program of the
greatest importance.
Las Zenow's face
drew into an expression of distress. You ask a great deal. Can you explain the
importance of all this?
Yes. The Empire
is in the process of disintegration.
There was a long
pause. Then Zenow said, I have heard of your research into psychohistory. I
have been told that your new science bears the promise of predicting the
future. Is it psychohistorical predictions of which you are speaking?
No. I have not
yet reached the point in psychohistory where I can speak of the future with
certainty. But you don't need psychohistory to know that the Empire is
disintegrating. You can see the evidence yourself.
Zenow sighed. My
work here consumes me utterly, Professor Seldon. I am a child when it comes to
political and social matters.
You may, if you
wish, consult the information contained in the Library. Why look around this
very office-it is chock-full of every conceivable sort of information from
throughout the entire Galactic Empire.
I'm the last to
keep up with it all, I'm afraid, Zenow said, smiling sadly. You know the old
proverb: The shoemaker's child has no shoes. It seems to me, though, that the
Empire is restored. We have an Emperor again.
In name only,
Chief Librarian. In most of the outlying provinces, the Emperor's name is
mentioned ritualistically now and then, but he plays no role in what they do.
The Outer Worlds control their own programs and, more important, they control
the local armed forces, which are outside the grip of the Emperor's authority.
If the Emperor were to try to exert his authority anywhere outside the Inner
Worlds, he would fail. I doubt that it will take more than twenty years, at the
outside, before some of the Outer Worlds declare their independence.
Zenow sighed
again. If you are right, we live in worse times than the Empire has ever seen.
But what has this to do with your desire for more office space and additional
staff here in the Library?
If the Empire
falls apart, the Galactic Library may not escape the general carnage.
Oh, but it
must, said Zenow earnestly. There have been bad times before and it has
always been understood that the Galactic Library on Trantor, as the repository
of all human knowledge, must remain inviolate. And so it will be in the
future.
It may not be.
You said yourself that the junta violated its neutrality.
Not seriously.
It might be more
serious next time and we can't allow this repository of all human knowledge to
be damaged.
How will your
increased presence here prevent that?
It won't. But
the project I am interested in will. I want to create a great Encyclopedia,
containing within it all the knowledge humanity will need to rebuild itself in
case the worst happens-an Encyclopedia Galactica, if you will. We don't need
everything the Library has. Much of it is trivial. The provincial libraries
scattered over the Galaxy may themselves be destroyed and, if not, all but the
most local data is obtained by computerized connection with the Galactic
Library in any case. What I intend, then, is something that is entirely
independent and that contains, in as concise a form as possible, the essential
information humanity needs.
And if it, too,
is destroyed?
I hope it will
not be. It is my intention to find a world far away on the outskirts of the
Galaxy, one where I can transfer my Encyclopedists and where they can work in
peace. Until such a place is found, however, I want the nucleus of the group to
work here and to use the Library facilities to decide what will be needed for
the project.
Zenow grimaced.
I see your point, Professor Seldon, but I'm not sure that it can be done.
Why not, Chief
Librarian?
Because being
Chief Librarian does not make me an absolute monarch. I have a rather large
Board-a kind of legislature-and please don't think that I can just push your
Encyclopedia Project through.
I'm astonished.
Don't be. I am
not a popular Chief Librarian. The Board has been fighting, for some years now,
for limited access to the Library. I have resisted. It galls them that I have
afforded you your small office space.
Limited access?
Exactly. The
idea is that if anyone needs information, he or she must communicate with a
Librarian and the Librarian will get the information for the person. The Board
does not wish people to enter the Library freely and deal with the computers
themselves. They say that the expense required to keep the computers and other
Library equipment in shape is becoming prohibitive.
But that's
impossible. There's a millennial tradition of an open Galactic Library.
So there is, but
in recent years, appropriations to the Library have been cut several times and
we simply don't have the funds we used to have. It is becoming very difficult
to keep our equipment up to the mark.
Seldon rubbed his
chin. But if your appropriations are going down, I imagine you have to cut
salaries and fire people-or, at least, not hire new ones.
You are exactly
right.
In which case,
how will you manage to place new labors on a shrinking work force by asking
your people to obtain all the information that the public will request?
The idea is that
we won't find all the information that the public will request but only those
pieces of information that we consider important.
So that not only
will you abandon the open Library but also the complete Library?
I'm afraid so.
I can't believe
that any Librarian would want this.
You don't know
Gennaro Mummery, Professor Seldon. At Seldon's blank look, Zenow continued.
Who is he? you wonder. The leader of that portion of the Board that wishes
to close off the Library. More and more of the Board are on his side. If I let
you and your colleagues into the Library as an independent force, a number of
Board members who may not be on Mummery's side but who are dead set against any
control of any part of the Library except by Librarians may decide to vote with
him. And in that case, I will be forced to resign as Chief Librarian.
See here, said
Seldon with sudden energy. All this business of possibly closing down the
Library, of making it less accessible, of refusing all information-all this
business of declining appropriations-all this is itself a sign of Imperial
disintegration. Don't you agree?
If you put it
that way, you may be right.
Then let me talk
to the Board. Let me explain what the future may hold and what I wish to do.
Perhaps I can persuade them, as I hope I've persuaded you.
Zenow thought for
a moment. I'm willing to let you try, but you must know in advance that your
plan may not work.
I've got to take
that chance. Please do whatever has to be done and let me know when and where I
can meet the Board.
Seldon left Zenow
in a mood of unease. Everything he had told the Chief Librarian was true-and
trivial. The real reason he needed the use of the Library remained hidden.
Partly this was
because he didn't yet see that use clearly himself.
9
Hari Seldon sat
at Yugo Amaryl's bedside-patiently, sadly. Yugo was utterly spent. He was
beyond medical help, even if he would have consented to avail himself of such
help, which he refused.
He was only
fifty-five. Seldon was himself sixty-six and yet he was in fine shape, except
for the twinge of sciatica-or whatever it was-that occasionally lamed him.
Amaryl's eyes
opened. You're still here, Hari?
Seldon nodded. I
won't leave you.
Till I die?
Yes. Then, in
an outburst of grief, he said, Why have you done this, Yugo? If you had lived
sensibly, you could have had twenty to thirty more years of life.
Amaryl smiled
faintly. Live sensibly? You mean, take time off? Go to resorts? Amuse myself
with trifles?
Yes. Yes.
And I would
either have longed to return to my work or I would have learned to like wasting
my time and, in the additional twenty to thirty years you speak of, I would
have accomplished no more. Look at you.
What about me?
For ten years
you were First Minister under Cleon. How much science did you do then?
I spent about a
quarter of my time on psychohistory, said Seldon gently.
You exaggerate.
If it hadn't been for me, plugging away, psychohistorical advance would have
screeched to a halt.
Seldon nodded.
You are right, Yugo. For that I am grateful.
And before and
since, when you spend at least half your time on administrative duties, who
doesdid-the real work? Eh?
You, Yugo.
Absolutely. His
eyes closed again.
Seldon said, Yet
you always wanted to take over those administrative duties if you survived me.
No! I wanted to
head the Project to keep it moving in the direction it had to move in, but I
would have delegated all administration.
Amaryl's
breathing was growing stertorous, but then he stirred and his eyes opened,
staring directly at Hari. He said, What will happen to psychohistory when I'm
gone? Have you thought of that?
Yes, I have. And
I want to speak to you about it. It may please you. Yugo, I believe that
psychohistory is being revolutionized.
Amaryl frowned
slightly. In what way? I don't like the sound of that.
Listen. It was
your idea. Years ago, you told me that two Foundations should be established.
Separate-isolated and safe-and arranged so that they would serve as nuclei for
an eventual Second Galactic Empire. Do you remember? That was your idea.
The
psychohistoric equations...
I know. They
suggested it. I'm busy working on it now, Yugo. I've managed to wangle an
office in the Galactic Library...
The Galactic
Library. Amaryl's frown deepened. I don't like diem. A bunch of
self-satisfied idiots.
The Chief
Librarian, Las Zenow, is not so bad, Yugo.
Did you ever
meet a Librarian named Mummery, Gennaro Mummery?
No, but I've
heard of him.
A miserable
human being. We had an argument once when he claimed I had misplaced something
or other. I had done no such thing and I grew very annoyed, Hari. All of a
sudden I was back in Dahl. One thing about the Dahlite culture, Hari, it is a
cesspool of invective. I used some of it on him and I told him he was
interfering with psychohistory and he would go down in history as a villain. I
didn't just say villain, either. Amaryl chuckled faintly. I left him
speechless.
Suddenly Seldon
could see where Mummery's animosity toward outsiders and, most probably,
psychohistory must come from-at least, in part-but he said nothing.
The point is,
Yugo, you wanted two Foundations, so that if one failed, the other would
continue. But we've gone beyond that.
In what way?
Do you remember
that Wanda was able to read your mind two years ago and see that something was
wrong with a portion of the equations in the Prime Radiant?
Yes, of course.
Well, we will
find others like Wanda. We will have one Foundation that will consist largely
of physical scientists, who will preserve the knowledge of humanity and serve
as the nucleus for the Second Empire. And there will be a Second Foundation of
psychohistorians only-mentalists, mind-touching psychohistorians-who will be
able to work on psychohistory in a multiminded way, advancing it far more quickly
than individual thinkers ever could. They will serve as a group who will
introduce fine adjustments as time goes on, you see. Ever in the background,
watching. They will be the Empire's guardians.
Wonderful! said
Amaryl weakly. Wonderful! You see how I've chosen the right time to die?
There's nothing left for me to do.
Don't say that,
Yugo.
Don't make such
a fuss over it, Hari. I'm too tired to do anything. Thank you-thank you-for
telling mehis voice was weakeningabout the revolution. It makes
me-happy-happy-hap...
And those were
Yugo Amaryl's last words.
Seldon bent over
the bed. Tears stung his eyes and rolled down his cheeks.
Another old
friend gone. Demerzel, Cleon, Dors, now Yugo... leaving him emptier and
lonelier as he grew old.
And the
revolution that had allowed Amaryl to die happy might never come to pass. Could
he manage to make use of the Galactic Library? Could he find more people like
Wanda? Most of all, how long would it take?
Seldon was
sixty-six. If only he could have started this revolution at thirty-two when he
first came to Trantor....
Now it might be
too late.
10
Gennaro Mummery
was making him wait. It was a studied discourtesy, even insolence, but Hari
Seldon remained calm.
After all, Seldon
needed Mummery badly and for him to become angry with the Librarian would only
hurt himself. Mummery would, in fact, be delighted with an angry Seldon.
So Seldon kept
his temper and waited and eventually Mummery did walk in. Seldon had seen him
before-but only at a distance. This was the first time they would be together
alone.
Mummery was short
and plump, with a round face and a dark little beard. He wore a smile on his
face, but Seldon suspected that smile of being a meaningless fixture. It
revealed yellowish teeth and Mummery's inevitable hat was of a similar shade of
yellow with a brown line snaking around it.
Seldon felt a
touch of nausea. It seemed to him that he would dislike Mummery, even if he had
no reason to do so.
Mummery said,
without any preliminaries, Well, Professor, what can I do for you? He looked
at the time-strip on the wall but made no apology for being late.
Seldon said, I
would like to ask you, sir, to put an end to your opposition to my remaining
here at the Library.
Mummery spread
his hands. You've been here for two years. What Opposition are you speaking
of?
So far, that
portion of the Board represented by you and those who believe as you do have
been unable to outvote the Chief Librarian, but there will be another meeting
next month and Las Zenow tells me he is uncertain of the result.
Mummery shrugged.
So am I uncertain. Your lease-if we can call it that-may well be renewed.
But I need more
than that, Librarian Mummery. I wish to bring in some colleagues. The project
in which I am engaged-the establishment of what is needed in the way of the
eventual preparation of a very special Encyclopedia-is not one I can do alone.
Surely your
colleagues can work wherever they please. Trantor is a large world.
We must work in
the Library. I am an old man, sir, and I am in a hurry.
Who can stay the
advance of time? I don't think the Board will allow you to bring in colleagues.
The thin edge of the wedge, Professor?
(Yes, indeed,
thought Seldon, but he said nothing.)
Mummery said, I
have not been able to keep you out, Professor. Not so far. But I think I can
continue to keep out your colleagues.
Seldon realized
that he was getting nowhere. He opened the touch of frankness a notch. He said,
Librarian Mummery, surely your animosity toward me is not personal. Surely you
understand the importance of the work I am doing.
You mean, your
psychohistory. Come, you have been working on it for over thirty years. What
has come of it?
That's the
point. Something may come of it now.
Then let
something come of it at Streeling University. Why must it be at the Galactic
Library?
Librarian
Mummery. Listen to me. What you want is to close the Library to the public. You
wish to smash a long tradition. Have you the heart to do that?
It's not heart
we need. It's funding. Surely the Chief Librarian has wept on your shoulder in
telling you our woes. Appropriations are down, salaries are cut, needed
maintenance is absent. What are we to do? We've got to cut services and we
certainly can't afford to support you and your colleagues with offices and
equipment.
Has this
situation been put to the Emperor?
Come, Professor,
you're dreaming. Isn't it true that your psychohistory tells you that the
Empire is deteriorating? I've heard you referred to as Raven Seldon, something
that, I believe, refers to a fabled bird of ill omen.
It's true that
we are entering bad times.
And do you
believe the Library is immune to those bad times? Professor, the Library is my
life and I want it to continue, but it won't continue unless we can find ways
of making our dwindling appropriations do. And you come here expecting an open
Library, with yourself as beneficiary. It won't do, Professor. It just won't
do.
Seldon said
desperately, What if I find the credits for you?
Indeed. How?
What if I talk
to the Emperor? I was once First Minister. He'll see me and he'll listen to
me.
And you'll get
funding from him? Mummery laughed.
If I do, if I
increase your appropriations, may I bring in my colleagues?
Bring in the
credits first, said Mummery, and we'll see. But I don't think you will
succeed.
He seemed very
sure of himself and Seldon wondered how often and how uselessly the Galactic
Library had already appealed to the Emperor.
And whether his
own appeal would get anywhere at all.
11
The Emperor Agis
XIV had no real right to the name. He had adopted it upon succeeding to the
throne with the deliberate purpose of connecting himself with the Agises who
had ruled two thousand years ago, most of them quite ably-particularly Agis VI,
who had ruled for forty-two years and who had kept order in a prosperous Empire
with a firm but nontyrannical hand.
Agis XIV did not
look like any of the old Agises-if the holographic records had any value. But,
then again, truth be told, Agis XIV did not look much like the official
holograph that was distributed to the public.
As a matter of fact,
Hari Seldon thought, with a twinge of nostalgia, that Emperor Cleon, for all
his flaws and weaknesses, had certainly looked Imperial.
Agis XIV did not.
Seldon had never seen him at close quarters and the few holographs he had seen
were outrageously inaccurate. The Imperial holographer knew his job and did it
well, thought Seldon wryly.
Agis XIV was
short, with an unattractive face and slightly bulging eyes that did not seem
alight with intelligence. His only qualification for the throne was that he was
a collateral relative of Cleon.
To do him credit,
however, he did not try to play the role of the mighty Emperor. It was
understood that he rather liked to be called the Citizen Emperor and that
only Imperial protocol and the outraged outcry of the Imperial Guard prevented
him from exiting the dome and wandering the walkways of Trantor. Apparently,
the story went, he wished to shake hands with the citizens and hear their
complaints in person.
(Score one for
him, thought Seldon, even if it could never come to pass.)
With a murmur and
a bow, Seldon said, I thank you, Sire, for consenting to see me.
Agis XIV had a
clear and rather attractive voice, quite out of keeping with his appearance. He
said, An ex-First Minister must surely have his privileges, although I must
give myself credit for amazing courage in agreeing to see you.
There was humor
in his words and Seldon found himself suddenly realizing that a man might not
look intelligent and yet might be intelligent just the same.
Courage, Sire?
Why, of course.
Don't they call you Raven Seldon?
I heard the
expression, Sire, the other day for the first time.
Apparently the
reference is to your psychohistory, which seems to predict the Fall of the
Empire.
It points out
the possibility only, Sire...
So that you are
coupled with a mythic bird of ill omen. Except that I think you yourself are
the bird of ill omen.
I hope not,
Sire.
Come, come. The
record is clear. Eto Demerzel, Cleon's old First Minister, was impressed with
your work and look what happened-he was forced out of his position and into
exile. The Emperor Cleon himself was impressed with your work and look what
happened-he was assassinated. The military junta was impressed with your work
and look what happened-they were swept away. Even the Joranumites, it is said,
were impressed with your work and, behold, they were destroyed. And now, O
Raven Seldon, you come to see me. What may I expect?
Why, nothing
evil, Sire.
I imagine not,
because unlike all these others I have mentioned, I am not impressed with your
work. Now tell me why you are here.
He listened
carefully and without interruption while Seldon explained the importance of
setting up a Project designed to prepare an encyclopedia that would preserve
human learning if the worst happened.
Yes yes, said
Agis XIV finally, so you are, indeed, convinced the Empire will fall.
It is a strong
possibility, Sire, and it would not be prudent to refuse to take that
possibility into account. In a way, I wish to prevent it if I can or ameliorate
the effects if I can't.
Raven Seldon if
you continue to poke your nose into matters, I am convinced that the Empire
will fall and that nothing can help it.
Not so, Sire. I
ask only permission to work.
Oh, you have
that, but I fail to see what it is you wish of me. Why have you told me all
this about an encyclopedia?
Because I wish
to work in the Galactic Library, Sire, or, more accurately, I wish others to
work there with me.
I assure you
that I won't stand in your way.
That is not
enough, Sire. I want you to help.
In what way,
ex-First Minister?
With funding.
The Library must have appropriations or it will close its doors to the public
and evict me.
Credits!' A
note of astonishment came into the Emperor's voice. You came to me for
credits?
Yes, Sire.
Agis XIV stood up
in some agitation. Seldon stood up at once also, but Agis waved him down.
Sit down. Don't
treat me as an Emperor. I'm not an Emperor. I didn't want this job, but they made
me take it. I was the nearest thing to the Imperial family and they jabbered at
me that the Empire needed an Emperor. So they have me and a lot of good I am to
them.
Credits! You
expect me to have credits! You talk about the Empire disintegrating. How do you
suppose it disintegrates? Are you thinking of rebellion? Of civil war? Of
disorders here and there?
No. Think of
credits. Do you realize that I cannot collect any taxes at all from half the
provinces in the Empire? They're still part of the Empire-Hail the Imperium!
All honor to the Emperor-but they don't pay anything and I don't have the
necessary force to collect it. And if I can't get the credits out of them, they
are not really part of the Empire, are they?
Credits! The
Empire runs a chronic deficit of appalling proportions.
There's nothing I
can pay for. Do you think there is enough funding to maintain the Imperial
Palace grounds? Just barely. I must cut corners. I must let the Palace decay. I
must let the number of retainers die down by attrition.
Professor
Seldon. If you want credits, I have nothing. Where will I find appropriations
for the Library? They should be grateful I manage to squeeze out something for
them each year at all. As he finished, the Emperor held out his hands, palms up,
as if to signify the emptiness of the Imperial coffers.
Hari Seldon was
stunned. He said, Nevertheless, Sire, even if you lack the credits, you still
have the Imperial prestige. Can you not order the Library to allow me to keep
my office and let my colleagues in to help me with our vital work?
And now Agis XIV
sat down again as though, once the subject was not credits, he was no longer in
a state of agitation.
He said, You
realize that, by long tradition, the Galactic Library is independent of the
Imperium, as far as its self-government is concerned. It sets up its rules and
has done so since Agis VI, my namesakehe smiledattempted to control the
news functions of the Library. He failed and, if the great Agis VI failed, do
you think I can succeed?
I'm not asking
you to use force, Sire. Merely expressing a polite wish. Surely, when no vital
function of the Library is involved, they will be pleased to honor the Emperor
and oblige his wishes.
Professor
Seldon, how little you know of the Library. I have but to express a wish,
however gently and tentatively, to make it certain that they will proceed, in
dudgeon, to do the opposite. They are very sensitive to the slightest sign of
Imperial control.
Seldon said,
Then what do I do?
Why, I'll tell
you what. A thought occurs to me. I am a member of the public and I can visit
the Galactic Library if I wish. It is located on the Palace grounds, so I won't
be violating protocol if I visit it. Well, you come with me and we shall be
ostentatiously friendly. I will not ask them for anything, but if they note us
walking arm-in-arm, then perhaps some of the precious Board of theirs may feel
more kindly toward you than otherwise. But that's all I can do.
And the deeply
disappointed Seldon wondered if that could possibly be enough.
12
Las Zenow said
with a certain trace of awe in his voice, I didn't know you were so friendly
with the Emperor, Professor Seldon.
Why not? He's a
very democratic fellow for an Emperor and he was interested in my experiences
as a First Minister in Cleon's time.
It made a deep
impression on us all. We haven't had an Emperor in our halls for many years.
Generally, when the Emperor needs something from the Library...
I can imagine.
He calls for it and it is brought to him as a matter of courtesy.
There was once a
suggestion, said Zenow chattily, that the Emperor be outfitted with a
complete set of computerized equipment in his palace, hooked directly into the
Library system, so that he would not need to wait for service. This was in the
old days when credits were plentiful, but, you know, it was voted down.
Was it?
Oh yes, almost
the entire Board agreed that it would make the Emperor too much a part of the
Library and that this would threaten our independence from the government.
And does this
Board, which will not bend to honor an Emperor, consent to let me remain at the
Library?
At the present
moment, yes. There is a feeling-and I've done my best to encourage it-that if
we are not polite to a personal friend of the Emperor, the chance of a rise in
appropriations will be gone altogether, so...
So credits-or
even the dim prospect of credits-talk.
I'm afraid so.
And can I bring
in my colleagues?
Zenow looked
embarrassed. I'm afraid not. The Emperor was seen walking only with you-not
with your colleagues. I'm sorry, Professor.
Seldon shrugged
and a mood of deep melancholy swept over him. He had no colleague to bring in,
anyhow. For some time he had hoped to locate others like Wanda and he had
failed. He, too, would need funding to mount an adequate search. And he, too,
had nothing.
13
Trantor, the
capital world-city of the Galactic Empire, had changed considerably since the day
Hari first stepped off the hypership from his native Helicon thirty-eight years
ago. Was it the pearly haze of an old man's memory that made the Trantor of old
shine so brightly in his mind's eye, Hari wondered. Or perhaps it had been the
exuberance of youth-how could a young man from a provincial Outer World such as
Helicon not be impressed by the gleaming towers, sparkling domes, the colorful,
rushing masses of people that had seemed to swirl through Trantor, day and
night.
Now, Hari thought
sadly, the walkways are nearly deserted, even in the full light of day. Roving
gangs of thugs controlled various areas of the city, competing among themselves
for territory. The security establishment had dwindled; those who were left had
their hands full processing complaints at the central office. Of course,
security officers were dispatched as emergency calls came through, but they
made it to the scene only after a crime was committed-they no longer made even
a pretense of protecting the citizens of Trantor. A person went out at his own
risk-and a great risk it was. And yet Hari Seldon still took that risk, in the
form of a daily walk, as if defying the forces that were destroying his beloved
Empire to destroy him as well.
And so Hari Seldon
walked along, limping-and thoughtful.
Nothing worked.
Nothing. He had been unable to isolate the genetic pattern that set Wanda
apart-and without that, he was unable to locate others like her.
Wanda's ability
to read minds had sharpened considerably in the six years since she had
identified the flaw in Yugo Amaryl's Prime Radiant. Wanda was special in more
ways than one. It was as if, once she realized that her mental ability set her
apart from other people, she was determined to understand it, to harness its
energy, to direct it. As she had progressed through her teen years, she had
matured, throwing off the girlish giggles that had so endeared her to Hari, at
the same time becoming even dearer to him in her determination to help him in
his work with the powers of her gift. For Hari Seldon had told Wanda about
his plan for a Second Foundation and she had committed herself to realizing
that goal with him.
Today, though,
Seldon was in a dark mood. He was coming to the conclusion that Wanda's
mentalic ability would get him nowhere. He had no credits to continue his
work-no credits to locate others like Wanda, no credits to pay his workers on
the Psychohistory Project at Streeling, no credits to set up his all-important
Encyclopedia Project at the Galactic Library.
Now what?
He continued to
walk toward the Galactic Library. He would have been better off taking a
gravicab, but he wanted to walk-limp or not. He needed time to think.
He heard a
cryThere he is!but paid no attention.
It came again.
There he is! Psychohistory!
The word forced
him to look up. Psychohistory.
A group of young
men was closing in around him.
Automatically
Seldon placed his back against the wall and raised his cane. What is it you
want?
They laughed.
Credits, old man. Do you have any credits?
Maybe, but why
do you want them from me? You said, Psychohistory! Do you know who I am?
Sure, you're
Raven Seldon said the young man in the lead. He seemed both comfortable and
pleased.
You're a creep,
shouted another.
What are you
going to do if I don't give you any credits?
We'll beat you
up, said the leader, and we'll take them.
And if I give
you my credits?
We'll beat you
up anyway! They all laughed.
Hari Seldon
raised his cane higher. Stay away. All of you.
By now he had
managed to count them. There were eight.
He felt himself
choking slightly. Once he and Dors and Raych had been attacked by ten and they
had had no trouble. He had been only thirty-two at the time and Dors-was Dors.
Now it was
different. He waved his cane.
The leader of the
hoodlums said, Hey, the old man is going to attack us. What are we going to
do?
Seldon looked
around swiftly. There were no security officers around. Another indication of
the deterioration of society. An occasional person or two passed by, but there
was no use calling for help. Their footsteps increased in speed and made a wide
detour. no one was going to run any risks of getting involved in an imbroglio.
Seldon said, The
first one of you who approaches gets a cracked head.
Yeah? And the
leader stepped forward rapidly and seized the cane. There was a short sharp
struggle and the cane was wrested from Seldon's grip. The leader tossed it to
one side.
Now what, old
man?
Seldon shrunk
back. He could only wait for the blows. They crowded around him, each eager to
land a blow or two. Seldon lifted his arms to try to ward them off. He could
still Twist-after a fashion. If he were facing only one or two, he might be
able to Twist his body, avoid their blows, strike back. But not against
eight-surely not against eight.
He tried, at any
rate, moving quickly to one side to avoid the blows and his right leg, with its
sciatica, doubled under him. He fell and knew himself to be utterly helpless.
Then he heard a
stentorian voice shouting, What's going on here? Get back, you thugs! Back or
I'll kill you all!
The leader said,
Well, another old man.
Not that old,
said the newcomer. With the back of one hand, he struck the leader's face,
turning it an ugly red.
Seldon said in
surprise, Raych, it's you.
Raych's hand
swept back. Stay out of this, Dad. Just get up and move away.
The leader,
rubbing his cheek, said, We'll get you for that.
No, you won't,
said Raych, drawing out a knife of Dahlite manufacture, long and gleaming. A
second knife was withdrawn and he now held one in each hand.
Seldon said
weakly, Still carrying knives, Raych?
Always, said
Raych. Nothing will ever make me stop.
I'll stop you,
said the leader, drawing out a blaster.
Faster than the
eye could follow, one of Raych's knives went sailing through the air and struck
the leader's throat. He made a loud gasp, then a gurgling sound, and fell,
while the other seven stared.
Raych approached
and said, I want my knife back. He drew it out of the hoodlum's throat and
wiped it on the man's shirtfront. In doing so, he stepped on the man's hand,
bent down, and picked up his blaster.
Raych dropped the
blaster into one of his capacious pockets. He said, I don't like to use a
blaster, you bunch of good-for-nothings, because sometimes I miss. I never miss
with a knife, however. Never! That man is dead. There are seven of you
standing. Do you intend to stay standing or will you leave?
Get him!
shouted one of the hoodlums and the seven made a concerted rush.
Raych took a
backward step. One knife flashed and then the other and two of the hoodlums
stopped with, in each case, a knife buried in his abdomen.
Give me back my
knives, said Raych, pulling each out with a cutting motion and wiping them.
These two are
still alive, but not for long. That leaves five of you on your feet. Are you
going to attack again or are you going to leave?
They turned and
Raych called out, Pick up your dead and dying. I don't want them.
Hastily they
flung the three bodies over their shoulders, then they turned tail and ran.
Raych bent to
pick up Seldon's cane. Can you walk, Dad?
Not very well,
said Seldon. I twisted my leg.
Well then, get
into my car. What were you doing walking, anyway?
Why not?
Nothing's ever happened to me.
So you waited
till something did. Get into my car and I'll give you a lift back to
Streeling.
He programmed the
ground-car quietly, then said, What a shame we didn't have Dors with us. Mom
would have attacked them with her bare lands and left all eight dead in five
minutes.
Seldon felt tears
stinging his eyelids. I know, Raych, I know. Do you think I don't miss her
every day?
I'm sorry, said
Raych in a low voice.
Seldon asked,
How did you know I was in trouble?
Wanda told me.
She said there were evil people lying in wait for you ,slid told me where they
were and I took right off.
Didn't you doubt
that she knew what she was talking about?
Not at all. We
know enough about her now to know that she has some sort of contact with your
mind and with the things around you.
Did she tell you
how many people were attacking me?
No. She just
said, Quite a few.
So you came out
all by yourself, did you, Raych?
I had no time to
put together a posse, Dad. Besides, one of me was enough.
Yes, it was.
Thank you, Raych.
14
They were back at
Streeling now and Seldon's leg was stretched out on a hassock.
Raych looked at
him somberly. Dad, he began, you're not to go walking around Trantor on your
own from now on.
Seldon frowned.
Why, because of one incident?
It was enough of
an incident. You can't take care of yourself any longer. You're seventy years
old and your right leg will not support you in an emergency. And you have
enemies...
Enemies!
Yes, indeed. And
you know it. Those sewer rats were not after simply anyone. They were not
looking for just any unwary person to rip off. They identified you by calling
out, Psychohistory! And they called you a creep. Why do you suppose that
was?
I don't know
why.
That's because
you live in a world all your own, Dad, and you don't know what's going on on
Trantor. Don't you suppose the Trantorians know that their world is going
downhill at a rapid rate? Don't you suppose they know that your psychohistory
has been predicting this for years? Doesn't it occur to you that they may blame
the messenger for the message? If things go bad-and they are going bad-there
are many who think that you are responsible for it.
I can't believe
that.
Why do you
suppose there's a faction at the Galactic Library that wants you out of there?
They don't want to be in the way when you are mobbed. So-you've got to take
care of yourself. You can't go out alone. I'll have to be with you or you will
have to have bodyguards. That's the way it's going to be, Dad.
Seldon looked
dreadfully unhappy.
Raych softened
and said, But not for long, Dad. I've got a new job. '
Seldon looked up.
A new job. What kind?
Teaching. At a
University. ' Which University? Santanni.
Seldon's lips
trembled. Santanni! That's nine thousand parsecs away from Trantor. It's a
provincial world on the other side of the Galaxy.
Exactly. That's
why I want to go there. I've been on Trantor all my life, Dad, and I'm tired of
it. There's no world in all the Empire that's deteriorating the way Trantor is.
It's become a haunt of crime with no one to protect us. The economy is limping,
the technology is failing. Santanni, on the other hand, is a decent world,
still humming along, and I want to be there to build a new life, along with
Manella and Wanda and Bellis. We're all going there in two months.
All of you!
And you, Dad.
And you. We wouldn't leave you behind on Trantor. You're coming with us to
Santanni.
Seldon shook his
head. Impossible, Raych. You know that.
Why impossible?
You know why.
The Project. My psychohistory. Are you asking me to abandon my life's work?
Why not? It's
abandoned you.
You're mad.
No, I'm not.
Where are you going with it? You have no credits. You can't get any. There's no
one left on Trantor who's willing to support you.
For nearly forty
years...
Yes, I admit
that. But after all that time, you've failed Dad. There's no crime in failing.
You've tried so hard and you've gone so far, but you've run into a
deteriorating economy, a falling Empire. It's the very thing you've been
predicting for so long that's stopping you at last. So...
No. I will not
stop. Somehow or other, I will keep going.
I tell you what,
Dad. If you're really going to be so stubborn, then take psychohistory with
you. Start it again on Santanni. There may be enough credits-and enthusiasm-to
support it there.
And the men and
women who have been working for me so faithfully?
Oh bull, Dad.
They've been leaving you because you can't pay them. You hang around here for
the rest of your life and you'll be alone. Oh, come on, Dad. Do you think I
like to talk to you this way? It's because no one has wanted to-because no one
has had the heart to-that you're in your present predicament. Let's be honest
with each other now. When ~. u walk the streets of Trantor and you're attacked
for no reason other than that you're Hari Seldon, don't you think it's time for
a little bit of truth?
Never mind the
truth. I have no intention of leaving Trantor.
Raych shook his
head. I was sure you'd be stubborn, Dad. You've got two months to change your
mind. Think about it, will you?
15
It had been a
long time since Hari Seldon had smiled. He had conducted the Project in the
same fashion that he always did: pushing always forward in the development of
psychohistory, making plans for the Foundation, studying the Prime Radiant.
But he did not
smile. All he did was to force himself through his work without any feeling of
impending success. Rather, there was a feeling of impending failure about
everything.
And now, as he
sat in his office at Streeling University, Wanda entered. He looked up at her
and his heart lifted. Wanda had always been special. Seldon couldn't put his
finger on just when he and the others had started accepting her pronouncements
with more than the usual enthusiasm; it just seemed always to have been that
way. As a little girl, she had saved his life with her uncanny knowledge of
lemonade death and all through her childhood she had somehow just known
things.
Although Dr.
Endelecki had asserted that Wanda's genome was perfectly normal in every way,
Seldon was still positive that his granddaughter possessed mental abilities far
beyond those of average humans. And he was just as sure that there were others
like her in the Galaxy-on Trantor, even. If only he could find them, these
mentalics, what a great contribution they could make to the Foundation. The
potential for such greatness all centered in his beautiful granddaughter.
Seldon gazed at her, framed in his office doorway, and he felt as if his heart
would break. In a few days, she would be gone.
How could he bear
it? She was such a beautiful girl-eighteen. Long blond hair, face a little
broad but with a tendency to smile. She was even smiling now and Seldon
thought, Why not? She's heading for Santanni and for a new life.
He said, Well,
Wanda, just a few more days.
No. I don't
think so, Grandpa.
He stared at her.
What?
Wanda approached
him and put her arms around him. I'm not going to Santanni.
Have your father
and mother changed their minds?
No, they're
going.
And you're not?
Why? Where are you going?
I'm going to
stay here, Grandpa. With you. She hugged him. Poor Grandpa!
But I don't
understand. Why? Are they allowing this?
You mean Mom and
Dad. Not really. We've been arguing over this for weeks, but I've won out. Why
not, Grandpa? They'll go to Santanni and they'll have each other-and they'll
have little Bellis, too. But if I go with them and leave you here, you'll have
no one. I don't think I could stand that.
But how did you
get them to agree?
Well, you know-I
pushed.
What does that
mean?
It's my mind. I
can see what you have in yours and in theirs and, as time goes on, I can see
more clearly. And I can push them to do what I want.
How do you do
that?
I don't know.
But after a while, they get tired of being pushed and they're willing to let me
have my way. So I'm going to stay with you.
Seldon looked up
at her with helpless love. This is wonderful, Wanda. But Bellis...
Don't worry
about Bellis. She doesn't have a mind like mine.
Are you
certain? Seldon chewed at his lower lip.
Quite certain.
Besides, Mom and Dad have to have someone, too.
Seldon wanted to
rejoice, but he couldn't do so openly. There were Raych and Manella. What of
them?
He said, Wanda,
what about your parents? Can you be so cold-blooded about them?
I'm not
cold-blooded. They understand. They realize I must be with you.
How did you
manage that?
I pushed, said
Wanda simply, and eventually they came to see it my way.
You can do
that?
It wasn't easy.
And you did it
because... Seldon paused.
Wanda said,
Because I love you. Of course. And because...
Yes?
I must learn
psychohistory. I know quite a bit of it already.
How?
From your mind.
From the minds of others at the Project, especially from Uncle Yugo before he
died. But it's in rags and tatters, so far. I want the real thing. Grandpa, I
want a Prime Radiant of my own. Her face lit up and her words came quickly,
with passion. I want to study psychohistory in great detail. Grandpa, you're
quite old and quite tired. I'm young and eager. I want to learn all I can, so I
can carry on when...
Seldon said,
Well, that would be wonderful-if you could do it-but there is no funding
anymore. I'll teach you all I can, but-we can't do anything.
We'll see,
Grandpa. We'll see.
16
Raych, Manella,
and little Bellis were waiting at the spaceport.
The hypership was
preparing for liftoff and the three had already checked their baggage.
Raych said, Dad,
come along with us.
Seldon shook his
head. I cannot.
If you change
your mind, we will always have a place for you.
I know it,
Raych. We've been together for almost forty years-and they've been good years.
Dors and I were lucky to find you.
I'm the lucky
one. His eyes filled with tears. Don't think I don't think of Mother every
day.
Yes. Seldon
looked away miserably. Wanda was playing with Bellis when the call rang out for
everyone to board the hypership.
They did, after a
tearful last embrace of Wanda by her parents. Raych looked back to wave at
Seldon and to try to plant a crooked smile on his face.
Seldon waved and
one hand moved out blindly to embrace Wanda's shoulders.
She was the only
one left. One by one through his long life, he had lost his friends and those
he had loved. Demerzel had left, never to return; Emperor Cleon was gone; his
beloved Dors was gone; his faithful friend Yugo Amaryl was gone; and now Raych,
his only son, was gone as well.
He was left only
with Wanda.
17
Hari Seldon said,
It is beautiful outside-a marvelous evening. Considering that we live under a
dome, you would think we would have beautiful weather like this every evening.
Wanda said
indifferently, We would grow tired of it, Grandpa, if it were beautiful all
the time. A little change from night to night is good for us.
For you, because
you're young, Wanda. You have many, many evenings ahead of you. I don't. I want
more good ones.
Now, Grandpa,
you're not old. Your leg is doing well and your mind m as sharp as ever. I
know.
Sure. Go ahead.
Make me feel better. He then said with an air of discomfort, I want to walk.
I want to get out of this tiny apartment and take a walk to the Library and
enjoy this beautiful evening.
What do you want
at the Library?
At the moment,
nothing. I want the walk. But...
Yes. But?
I promised Raych
I wouldn't go walking around Trantor without a bodyguard.
Raych isn't
here.
I know, mumbled
Seldon but a promise is a promise.
He didn't say
who the bodyguard should be, did he? Let's go for a walk and I'll be your
bodyguard.
You? Seldon
grinned.
Yes, me. I
hereby volunteer my services. Get yourself ready and we'll go for a walk.
Seldon was
amused. He had half a mind to go without his cane, since his leg was scarcely
painful of late, but, on the other hand, he had a new cane, one in which the
head had been filled with lead. It was both heavier and stronger than his old
cane and, if he was going to have none other than Wanda as a bodyguard, he
thought he had better bring his new cane.
The walk was
delightful and Seldon was terribly glad he had given in to the temptation-until
they reached a certain spot.
Seldon lifted his
cane in a mixture of anger and resignation and said, Look at that!
Wanda lifted her
eyes. The dome was glowing, as it always did in the evening, in order to lend
an air of first twilight. It grew darker as night went on, of course.
What Seldon was
pointing at, however, was a strip of darkness along the dome. A section of
lights had gone out.
Seldon said,
When I first came to Trantor, anything like that was unthinkable. There were
people tending the lights at all times. The city worked, but now it is falling
apart in all these little ways and what bothers me most is that no one cares.
Why aren't there petitions to the Imperial Palace? Why aren't there meetings of
indignation? It is as though the people of Trantor expect the city to be falling
apart and then they find themselves annoyed with me because I am pointing out
that this is exactly what is happening.
Wanda said
softly, Grandpa, there are two men behind us.
They had walked
into the shadows beneath the broken dome lights and Seldon asked, Are they
just walking?
No. Wanda did
not look at them. She did not have to. They're after you.
Can you stop
them-push them?
I'm trying, but
there are two and they are determined. It's-it's like pushing a wall.
How far behind
me are they?
About three
meters.
Closing in?
Yes, Grandpa.
Tell me when
they're a meter behind me. He slid his hand down his cane till he was holding
the thin end, leaving the leaded head swinging free.
Now, Grandpa!
hissed Wanda.
And Seldon
turned, swinging his cane. It came down hard upon the shoulder of one of the
men behind him, who went down with a scream, writhing on the pavement.
Seldon said,
Where's the other guy?
He took off.
Seldon looked
down on the man on the ground and put his foot on his chest. He said, Go
through his pockets, Wanda. Someone must have paid him and I'd like to find his
credit file-perhaps I can identify where they came from. He added
thoughtfully, I meant to hit him on the head.
You'd have
killed him, Grandpa.
Seldon nodded.
It's what I wanted to do. Rather shameful. I'm lucky I missed.
A harsh voice
said, What is all this? A figure in uniform came running up, perspiring.
Give me that cane, you!
Officer, said
Seldon mildly.
You can give me
your story later. We've got to call an ambulance for this poor man.
Poor man, said
Seldon angrily. He was going to assault me. I acted in self-defense.
I saw it
happen, said the security officer. This guy never laid a finger on you. You
turned on him and struck him without provocation. That's not self-defense.
That's assault and battery.
Officer, I'm
telling you that...
Don't tell me
anything. You can tell it in court.
Wanda said in a
sweet small voice, Officer, if you will just listen to us...
The officer said,
You go along home, young lady.
Wanda drew
herself up. I most certainly won't, Officer. Where my grandfather goes, there
go I. Her eyes flashed and the security officer muttered, Well, come along,
then.
18
Seldon was
enraged. I've never been in custody before in my entire life. A couple of
months ago eight men assaulted me. I was able to fight them off with the help
of my son, but while that was going on was there a security officer in sight?
Did people stop to help me? No. This time, I'm better prepared and I knocked a
man flat who had been about to assault me. Was there a security officer in
sight? Absolutely. She put the collar on me. There were people watching, too,
and they were amused at seeing an old man being taken in for assault and
battery. What kind of world do we live on?
Civ Novker,
Seldon's lawyer, sighed and said calmly, A corrupt world, but don't worry.
Nothing will happen to you. I'll get you out on bail and then, eventually,
you'll come back for trial before a jury of your peers and the most you'll
get-the very most-are some hard words from the bench. Your age and your
reputation...
Forget my
reputation, said Seldon, still angry. I'm a psychohistorian and, at the
present time, that is a dirty word. They'll be glad to see me in jail.
No, they won't,
said Novker. There may be some screwballs who have it in for you, but I'll see
to it that none of them gets on the jury.
Wanda said, Do
we really have to subject my grandfather to all this? He's not a young man
anymore. Can't we just appear before the magistrate and not bother with a jury
trial?
The lawyer turned
to her. It can be done. If you're insane, maybe. Magistrates are impatient
power-mad people who would just as soon put a person into jail for a year as
listen to him. no one goes up before a magistrate.
I think we
should, said Wanda.
Seldon said,
Well now, Wanda, I think we ought to listen to Civ... But as he said that, he
felt a strong churning in his abdomen. It was Wanda's push. Seldon said,
Well-if you insist.
She can't
insist, said the lawyer. I won't allow it.
Wanda said, My
grandfather is your client. If he wants something done his way, you've got to
do it.
I can refuse to
represent him.
Well then,
leave, said Wanda sharply, and we'll face the magistrate alone.
Novker thought
and said, Very well, then-if you're going to be so adamant. I've represented
Hari for years and I suppose I won't abandon him now. But I warn you, the
chances are he'll get a jail sentence and I'll have to work like the devil to
get it lifted-if I can do it . at all.
I'm not afraid,
said Wanda.
Seldon bit his
lip and the lawyer turned to him. What about you? Are you willing to let your
granddaughter call the shots?
Seldon thought a
bit, then admitted, much to the old lawyer's surprise, Yes. Yes, I am.
19
The magistrate
looked sourly at Seldon as he gave his story.
The magistrate
said, What makes you think it was the intention of this man you struck to
attack you? Did he strike you? Did he threaten you? Did he in any way place you
under bodily fear?
My granddaughter
was aware of his approach and was quite certain that he was planning to attack
me.
Surely, sir,
that cannot be enough. Is there anything else you can tell me before I pass
judgment?
Well now, wait a
while, said Seldon indignantly. Don't pass judgment so quickly. I was
assaulted a few weeks ago by eight men whom I held off with the help of my son.
So, you see, I have reason to think that I might be assaulted again.
The magistrate
shuffled his papers. Assaulted by eight men. Did you report that?
There were no
security officers around. Not one.
Aside from the
point. Did you report it?
No, sir.
Why not?
For one thing, I
was afraid of getting into long drawn-out legal proceedings. Since we had
driven off eight men and were safe, it seemed useless to ask for more trouble.
How did you
manage to ward off eight men just you and your son?
Seldon hesitated.
My son is now on Santanni and outside Trantorian control. Thus, I can tell you
that he had Dahlite knives and was expert in their use. He killed one man and
badly hurt two others. The rest ran, carrying off the dead and wounded.
But did you not
report the death of a man and the wounding of two others?
No, sir. Same
reason as before. And we fought in self-defense. However, if you can track down
the three dead and wounded, you will have evidence that we were attacked.
The magistrate
said, Track down one dead and two wounded nameless faceless Trantorians? Are
you aware that on Trantor over two thousand people are found dead every day-by
knife wounds alone. Unless these things are reported to us at once, we are
helpless. Your story of being assaulted once before will not hold water. What we
must do is deal with the events of today, which were reported and which had a
security officer as a witness.
So, let's
consider the situation as of now. Why do you think the fellow was going to
attack? Simply because you happened to be passing by? Because you seemed old
and defenseless? Because you looked like you might be carrying a great deal of
credits? What do you think?
I think,
Magistrate, it was because of who I am.
The magistrate
looked at his papers. You are Hari Seldon, a professor and a scholar. Why
should that make you subject to assault, particularly?
Because of my
views.
Your views.
Well... The magistrate shuffled some papers perfunctorily. Suddenly he stopped
and looked up, peering at Seldon. Wait-Hari Seldon. A look of recognition
spread across his face. You're the psychohistory buff, aren't you?
Yes,
Magistrate.
I'm sorry. I
don't know anything about it except the name and the fact that you go around
predicting the end of the Empire or something like that.
Not quite,
Magistrate. But my views have become unpopular because they are proving to be
true. I believe it is for that reason that there are those who want to assault
me or, even more likely, are being paid to assault me.
The magistrate
stared at Seldon and then called over the arresting security officer. Did you
check up on the man who was hurt? Does he have a record?
The security
officer cleared her throat. Yes, sir. He's been arrested several times.
Assault, mugging.
Oh, he's a
repeat offender, is he? And does the professor have a record?
No, sir.
So we have an
old and innocent man fighting off a known mugger-and you arrest the old and
innocent man. Is that it?
The security
officer was silent.
The magistrate
said, You may go, Professor.
Thank you, sir.
May I have my cane?
The magistrate
snapped his fingers at the officer, who handed over the cane.
But one thing,
Professor, said the magistrate. If you use that cane again, you had better be
absolutely certain you can prove it was in self-defense. Otherwise...
Yes, sir. And
Hari Seldon left the magistrate's chambers, leaning heavily on his cane but
with his head held high.
20
Wanda was crying
bitterly, her face wet with tears, her eyes red, her cheeks swollen.
Hari Seldon
hovered over her, patting her on the back, not knowing quite how to comfort
her.
Grandpa, I'm a
miserable failure. I thought I could push people and I could when they didn't
mind being pushed too much, like Mom and Dad-and even then it took a long time.
I even worked out a rating system of sorts, based on a ten-point scale-sort of
a mental pushing power gauge. Only I assumed too much. I assumed that I was a
ten, or at least a nine. But now I realize that, at most, I rate a seven.
Wanda's crying
had stopped and she sniffed occasionally as Hari stroked her hand.
Usually-usually-I have no trouble. If I concentrate, I can hear people's
thoughts and when I want, I push them. But those muggers! I could hear them all
right, but there was nothing I could do to push them away.
I thought you
did very well, Wanda.
I didn't. I had
a fan-fantasy. I thought people would come up behind you and in one mighty push
I'd send them flying. That way I was going to be your bodyguard. That's why I
offered to be your bod-bodyguard. Only I wasn't. Those two guys came up and I
couldn't do a thing.
But you could.
You made the first man hesitate. That gave me a chance to turn and clobber
him.
No no. I had
nothing to do with it. All I could do was warn you he was there and you did the
rest.
The second man
ran away.
Because you
clobbered the first guy. I had nothing to do with it. She broke out again in
tears of frustration. And then the magistrate. I insisted on the magistrate. I
thought I would push and he would let you go at once.
He did let me go
and it was practically at once.
No. He put you
through a miserable routine and saw the light only when he realized who you
were. I had nothing to do with it. I flopped everywhere. I could have gotten
you into so much trouble.
No, I refuse to
accept that, Wanda. If your pushing didn't work quite as well as you had hoped
it would, it was only because you were working under emergency conditions. You
couldn't have helped it. But, Wanda, look-I have an idea.
Catching the
excitement in his voice, she looked up. What kind of idea, Grandpa?
Well, it's like
this, Wanda. You probably realize that I've got to have credits. Psychohistory
simply can't continue without it and I cannot bear the thought of having it all
come to nothing after so many years of hard work.
I can't bear it,
either. But how can we get the credits?
Well, I'm going
to request an audience with the Emperor again. I've seen him once already and
he's a good man and I like him. But he's not exactly drowning in wealth.
However, if I take you with me and if you push him-gently-it may be that he
will find a source of credits, some source somewhere, and keep me going for a
while, till I can think of something else.
Do you really
think it will work, Grandpa?
Not without you.
But with you-maybe. Come, isn't it worth trying?
Wanda smiled.
You know I'll do anything you ask, Grandpa. Besides, it's our only hope.
21
It was not
difficult to see the Emperor. Agis's eyes sparkled as he greeted Hari Seldon.
Hello, old friend, he said. Have you come to bring me bad luck?
I hope not,
said Seldon.
Agis unhooked the
elaborate cloak he was wearing and, with a weary grunt, threw it into the
corner of the room, saying, And you lie there.
He looked at
Seldon and shook his head. I hate that thing. It's as heavy as sin and as hot
as blazes. I always have to wear it when I'm being smothered under meaningless
words, standing there upright like a carved image. It's just plain horrible.
Cleon was born to it and he had the appearance for it. I was not and I don't.
It's just my misery that I'm a third cousin of his on my mother's side so that
I qualified as Emperor. I'd be glad to sell it for a very small sum. Would you
like to be Emperor, Hari?
No no, I wouldn't
dream of it, so don't get your hopes up, said Seldon, laughing.
But tell me, who
is this extraordinarily beautiful young woman you have brought with you today?
Wanda flushed and
the Emperor said genially, You mustn't let me embarrass you, my dear. One of
the few perquisites an Emperor possesses is the right to say anything he
chooses. no one can object or argue :bout it. They can only say, Sire.
However, I don't want any Sires from you. I hate that word. Call me Agis.
That is not my birth name, either. It's my Imperial name and I've got to get
used to it. So... tell me what's doing, Hari. What's been happening to you
since the last time we met?
Seldon said
briefly, I've been attacked twice.
The Emperor
didn't seem to be sure whether this was a joke or not. He said, Twice?
Really?
The Emperor's
face darkened as Seldon told the story of the assaults. I suppose there wasn't
a security officer around when those eight men threatened you.
Not one.
The Emperor rose
from his chair and gestured at the other two to keep theirs. He walked back and
forth, as though he were trying to work off some anger. Then he turned and
faced Seldon.
For thousands of
years, he began, whenever something like this happened, people would say,
Why don't we appeal to the Emperor? or Why doesn't the Emperor do
something? And, in the end, the Emperor can do something and does do
something, even if it isn't always the intelligent thing to do. But I... Hari,
I'm powerless. Absolutely powerless.
Oh yes, there is
the so-called Commission of Public Safety, but they seem more concerned with my
safety than that of the public. It's a wonder we're having this audience at
all, for you are not at all popular with the Commission.
There's nothing
I can do about anything. Do you know what's happened to the status of the
Emperor since the fall of the junta and the restoration of-hah! Imperial
power?
I think I do.
I'll bet you
don't-fully. We've got democracy now. Do you know what democracy is?
Certainly.
Agis frowned. He
said, I'll bet you think it's a good thing.
I think it can
be a good thing.
Well, there you
are. It isn't. It's completely upset the Empire.
Suppose I want
to order more officers onto the streets of Trantor. In the old days, I would pull
over a piece of paper prepared for me by the Imperial Secretary and would sign
it with a flourish-and there would be more security officers.
Now I can't do
anything of the sort. I have to put it before the Legislature. There are
seventy-five hundred men and women who instantly turn into uncounted gaggles of
geese the instant a suggestion is made. In the first place, where is the
funding to come from? You can't have, say, ten thousand more officers without
having to pay ten thousand more salaries. Then, even if you agreed to something
of the sort, who selects the new security officers? Who controls them?
The Legislature
shouts at each other, argues, thunders, and lightens, and in the end-nothing is
done. Hari, I couldn't even do as small a thing as fix the broken dome lights
you noticed. How much will it cost? Who's in charge? Oh, the lights will be
fixed, but it can easily take a few months to do it. That's democracy.
Hari Seldon said,
As I recall, the Emperor Cleon was forever complaining that he could not do
what he wished to do.
The Emperor
Cleon, said Agis impatiently, had two first-class First Ministers-Demerzel
and yourself-and you each labored to keep Cleon from doing anything foolish. I
have seventy-five hundred First Ministers, all of whom are foolish from start
to finish. But surely, Hari, you haven't come to complain to me about the
attacks.
No, I haven't.
Something much worse. Sire-Agis-I need credits.
The Emperor
stared at him. After what I've been telling you, Hari? I have no credits. Oh
yes, there're credits to run this establishment, of course, but in order to get
them I have to face my seventy-five hundred legislators. If you think I can go
to them and say, I want credits for my friend, Hari Seldon and if you think
I'll get one quarter of what I ask for in anything less than two years, you're
crazy. It won't happen.
He shrugged and
said, more gently, Don't get me wrong, Hari. I would like to help you if I
could. I would particularly like to help you for the sake of your granddaughter.
Looking at her makes me feel as though I should give you all the credits you
would like-but it can't be done.
Seldon said,
Agis, if I don't get funding, psychohistory will go down the drain-after
nearly forty years.
It's come to
nothing in nearly forty years, so why worry?
Agis, said
Seldon there's nothing more I can do now. The assaults on me were precisely
because I'm a psychohistorian. People consider me a predictor of destruction.
The Emperor
nodded. You're bad luck, Raven Seldon. I told you this earlier.
Seldon stood up
wretchedly. I'm through, then.
Wanda stood, too,
next to Seldon the top of her head reaching her grandfather's shoulder. She
gazed fixedly at the Emperor.
As Hari turned to
go, the Emperor said, Wait. Wait. There's a little verse I once memorized:
Ill fares the
land
To hastening ills
a prey
Where wealth
accumulates
And men decay. '
What does it
mean? asked a dispirited Seldon.
It means that
the Empire is steadily deteriorating and falling apart, but that doesn't keep
some individuals from growing rich. Why not turn to some of our wealthy
entrepreneurs? They don't have legislators and can, if they wish, simply sign a
credit voucher.
Seldon stared.
I'll try that.
22
Mr. Bindris,
said Hari Seldon, reaching out his hand to shake the other's. I am so glad to
be able to see you. It was good of you to agree to see me.
Why not? said
Terep Bindris jovially. I know you well. Or, rather, I know of you well.
That's pleasant.
I take it you've heard of psychohistory, then.
Oh yes, what
intelligent person hasn't? Not that I understand anything about it, of course.
And who is this young lady you have with you?
My
granddaughter, Wanda.
A very pretty
young woman. He beamed. Somehow I feel I'd be putty in her hands.
Wanda said, I
think you exaggerate, sir.
No, really. Now,
please, sit down and tell me what it is I can do for you. He gestured
expansively with his arm, indicating that they be seated on two overstuffed,
richly brocaded chairs in front of the desk at which he sat. The chairs, like
the ornate desk, the imposing carved doors which had slid back noiselessly at
their arrival signal, and the gleaming obsidian floor of Bindris's vast office,
were of the finest quality. And, although his surroundings were impressive-and
imposing-Bindris himself was not. The slight cordial man would not be taken, at
first glance, for one of Trantor's leading financial powerbrokers.
We're here, sir,
at the Emperor's suggestion.
The Emperor?
Yes, he could
not help us, but he thought a man like you might be able to do so. The
question, of course, is credits.
Bindris's face
fell. Credits? he said. I don't understand.
Well, said
Seldon, for nearly forty years, psychohistory has been supported by the
government. However, times change and the Empire is no longer what it was.
Yes, I know
that. "'
The Emperor
lacks the credits to support us or, even if he did have the credits, he
couldn't get the request for funding past the Legislature. He recommends,
therefore, that I see businesspeople who, in the first place, still have
credits and, in the second place, can simply write out a credit voucher.
There was a
longish pause and Bindris finally said, The Emperor, I'm afraid, knows nothing
about business. How many credits do you want?
Mr. Bindris,
we're talking about an enormous task. I'm going to need several million.
Several
million!
Yes, sir.
Bindris frowned.
Are we talking about a loan here? When do you expect to be able to pay it
back?
Well, Mr.
Bindris, I can't honestly say I ever expect to be able to pay it back. I'm
looking for a gift.
Even if I wanted
to give you the credits-and let me tell you, for some strange reason I very
much want to do so-I couldn't. The Emperor may have his Legislature, but I have
my Board members. I can't make a gift of that sort without the Board's
permission and they'll never grant it.
Why not? Your
firm is enormously wealthy. A few million would mean nothing to you.
That sounds good,
said Bindris, but I'm afraid that the firm is in a state of decline right now.
Not sufficiently to bring us into serious trouble, but enough to make us
unhappy. If the Empire is in a state of decay, different individual parts of it
are decaying, too. We are in no position to Land out a few million. I'm truly
sorry.
Seldon sat there
silently and Bindris seemed unhappy. He shook his Head at last and said, Look,
Professor Seldon, I would really like to help you out, particularly for the
sake of the young lady you have with you. It just can't be done. However, we're
not the only firm in Trantor. Try others, Professor. You may have better luck
elsewhere.
Well, said
Seldon, raising himself to his feet with an effort, we shall try.
23
Wanda's eyes were
filled with tears, but the emotion they represented was not sorrow but fury.
Grandpa, she
said, I don't understand it. I simply don't understand it. We've been to four
different firms. Each one was ruder and nastier to us than the one before. The
fourth one just kicked us out. And since then, no one will let us in.
It's no mystery,
Wanda, said Seldon gently. When we saw Bindris, he didn't know what we were
there for and he was perfectly friendly until I asked for a gift of a few million
credits. Then he was a great deal less friendly. I imagine the word went out as
to what we wanted and each additional time there was less friendliness until
now, when people won't receive us at all. Why should they? They're not going to
give us the credits we need, so why waste time with us?
Wanda's anger
turned on herself. And what did I do? I just sat there. Nothing.
I wouldn't say
that, said Seldon. Bindris was affected by you. It seems to me that he really
wanted to give me the credits, largely because of you. You were pushing him and
accomplishing something.
Not nearly
enough. Besides, all he cared about was that I was pretty.
Not pretty,
muttered Seldon. Beautiful. Very beautiful.
So what do we do
now, Grandpa? asked Wanda. After all these years, psychohistory will
collapse.
I suppose that,
said Seldon in a way, it's something that can't be helped. I've been
predicting the breakdown of the Empire for nearly forty years and now that it's
come, psychohistory breaks down with it.
But
psychohistory will save the Empire, at least partly.
I know it will,
but I can't force it to.
Are you just
going to let it collapse?
Seldon shook his
head. I'll try to keep it from doing so, but I must admit that I don't know
how I'm going to do it.
Wanda said, I'm
going to practice. There must be some way I can strengthen my push, make it
easier for me to force people to do what I want them to do.
I wish you could
manage.
What are you
going to do, Grandpa?
Well, nothing
much. Two days ago, when I was on my way to see the Chief Librarian, I
encountered three men in the Library who were arguing about psychohistory. For
some reason, one of them impressed me very much. I urged him to come see me and
he agreed. The appointment is for this afternoon at my office.
Are you going to
have him work for you?
I would like
to-if I have enough credits to pay him with. But it can't hurt to talk with
him. After all, what can I lose?
24
The young man
arrived at precisely 4 T. S. T. (Trantorian Standard Time) and Seldon smiled.
He loved punctual people. He placed his hands on his desk and made ready to
heave to his feet, but the young man said, Please, Professor, I know you have
a bad leg. You needn't stand up.
Seldon said,
Thank you, young man. However, that does not mean that you cannot sit down.
Please do.
The young man
removed his jacket and sat down.
Seldon said, You
must forgive me... when we met and set up this appointment, I neglected to
learn your name-which is... ?
Stettin Palver,
said the young man.
Ah. Palver!
Palver! The name sounds familiar.
It should,
Professor. My grandfather boasted frequently of having known you.
Your
grandfather. Of course. Joramis Palver. He was two years younger than I was, as
I recall. I tried to get him to join me in psychohistory, but he refused. He
said there was no chance of his ever learning enough mathematics to make it
possible. Too bad! How is Joramis, by the way?
Palver said
solemnly, I'm afraid that Joramis has gone the way of old men generally. He's
dead.
Seldon winced.
Two years younger than he himself was-and dead. An old friend and they had lost
touch to such a degree that, when death came, it did so unknowingly.
Seldon sat there
for a while and finally muttered, I'm sorry.
The young man
shrugged. He had a good life.
And you, young
man, where did you have your schooling?
Langano
University.
Seldon frowned.
Langano? Stop me if I'm wrong, but that's not on Trantor, is it?
No. I wanted to
try a different world. The Universities on Trantor, as you undoubtedly know
very well, are all overcrowded. I wanted to find a place where I could study in
peace.
And what did you
study?
Nothing much.
History. Not the sort of thing that would lead one to a good job.
(Another wince,
even worse than the first. Dors Venabili had been a historian.)
Seldon said, But
you're back here on Trantor. Why is that?
Credits. Jobs.
As an historian?
Palver laughed.
Not a chance. I run a device that pulls and hauls. Not exactly a professional
occupation.
Seldon looked at
Palver with a twinge of envy. The contours of Palver's arms and chest were
highlighted by the thin fabric of his shirt. He was well muscled. Seldon had
never himself been quite that muscular.
Seldon said, I
presume that when you were at the University, you were on the boxing team.
Who, me? Never.
I'm a Twister.
A Twister!
Seldon's spirits jumped. Are you from Helicon?
Palver said with
a certain contempt, You don't have to come from Helicon to be a good Twister.
No, thought
Seldon, but that's where the best ones come from.
However, he said
nothing.
He did say,
though, Well, your grandfather would not join me. How about you?
Psychohistory?
I heard you
talking to the others when I first encountered you and it seemed to me that you
were talking quite intelligently about psychohistory. Would you like to join
me, then?
As I said,
Professor, I have a job.
Pushing and
hauling. Come, come.
It pays well.
Credits aren't
everything.
They're quite a
bit. Now you, on the other hand, can't pay me much. I'm quite certain that
you're short of credits.
Why do you say
that?
I'm guessing, in
a way, I suppose. But am I wrong?
Seldon's lips
pressed together hard, then he said, No, you're not wrong and I can't pay you
much. I'm sorry. I suppose that ends our little interview.
Wait, wait,
wait. Palver held up his hands. Not quite so fast, please. We're still
talking about psychohistory. If I work for you, I will be taught psychohistory,
right?
Of course.
In that case,
credits aren't everything, after all. I'll make you a deal. You teach me all
the psychohistory you can and you pay me whatever you can and I'll get by
somehow. How about it?
Wonderful, said
Seldon joyously. That sounds great. Now, one more thing.
Oh?
Yes. I've been
attacked twice in recent weeks. The first time my son came to my defense, but
he has since gone to Santanni. The second time I made use of my lead-filled
walking stick. It worked, but I was dragged before a magistrate and accused of
assault and battery...
Why the
attacks? interjected Palver.
I am not
popular. I have been preaching the Fall of the Empire for so long that, now
that it is coming, I am blamed for it.
I see. Now then,
what does all that have to do with the one more thing you mentioned?
I want you to be
my bodyguard. You're young, you're strong, and, most of all, you're a Twister.
You're exactly what I need.
I suppose it can
be managed, Palver said with a smile.
25
See there,
Stettin, Seldon said as the two were taking an early evening stroll in one of
Trantor's residential sectors near Streeling. The older man pointed to
debris-assorted refuse jettisoned from passing groundcars or dropped by
careless pedestrians-strewn along the walkway. In the old days, Seldon
continued, you would never see litter like this. The security officers were
vigilant and municipal maintenance crews provided round-the-clock upkeep of all
public areas. But, most important, no one would even think of dumping his trash
in such a manner. Trantor was our home; we took pride in it. NowSeldon shook
his head sadly, resignedly, and sighedit's... He broke off abruptly.
You there, young
man! Seldon shouted at a ill-kempt fellow who had moments before passed them,
going in the opposite direction. He was munching a treat just popped into his
mouth; the wrapper had been tossed to the ground without so much as a downward
glance. Pick that up and dispose of it properly, Seldon admonished as the
young man eyed him sullenly.
Pick it up
yourself, the boy snarled and then he turned and walked away.
It's another
sign of society's breakdown, as predicted by your psychohistory, Professor
Seldon, Palver said.
Yes, Stettin.
All around us the Empire is falling apart, piece by piece. In fact, it's
already smashed-there's no turning back now. Apathy, decay, and greed have all
played their parts in destroying the once-glorious Empire. And what will take
its place? Why...
Here Seldon broke
off at the sight of Palver's face. The younger man seemed to be listening
intently-but not to Seldon's voice. His head was cocked to one side and his
face had a far-off look. It was as if Palver were straining to hear some sound
inaudible to everyone but himself.
Suddenly he
snapped back to the here and now. With an urgent glance around them, Palver
took hold of Seldon's arm. Hari, quick, we must get away. They're coming...
And then the still evening was broken by the harsh sound of rapidly approaching
footsteps. Seldon and Palver spun around, but it was too late; a band of
attackers was upon them. This time, however, Hari Seldon was prepared. He
immediately swung his cane in a wide arc around Palver and himself. At this,
the three attackers-two boys and a girl, all teenage ruffians-laughed.
So, you're not
goin' to make it easy, are you, old man? snorted the boy who appeared to be
the group's ringleader. Why, me and my buddies, we'll take you out in two
seconds flat. We'll... All of a sudden, the ringleader was down, the victim of
a perfectly placed Twist-kick to his abdomen. The two ruffians who were still
standing quickly dropped to a crouch in preparation for attack. But Palver was
quicker. They, too, were felled almost before they knew what hit them.
And then it was
over-almost as soon as it started. Seldon stood off to the side, leaning
heavily on his cane, shaking at the thought of his narrow escape. Palver,
panting slightly from exertion, surveyed the scene. The three attackers were
out cold on the deserted walkway under the darkening dome.
Come on, let's
get out of here quickly! Palver urged again, only this time it was not the
attackers they would be fleeing.
Stettin, we
can't leave, protested Seldon. He gestured toward the unconscious would-be
muggers. They're really nothing more than children. They may be dying. How can
we just walk away? It's inhumane-that's what it is-and humanity is exactly what
I've been working all these years to protect. Seldon struck the ground with
his cane for emphasis and his eyes gleamed with conviction.
Nonsense,
retorted Palver. What's inhumane is the way muggers like that prey on innocent
citizens like you. Do you think they'd have given you a second thought? They'd
just as soon stick a knife in your gut to steal your last credit-and then kick you
as they ran! They'll come to soon enough and slink away to lick their wounds.
Or someone will find them and call the central office.
But, Hari, you
must think. After what happened last time, you stand to lose everything if
you're linked to another beating. Please, Hari, we must run! With this, Palver
grabbed Seldon's arm and Seldon after a List backward glance, allowed himself
to be led away.
As the footsteps
of the rapidly departing Seldon and Palver diminished in the distance, another
figure emerged from his hiding place behind some trees. Chuckling to himself,
the sullen-eyed youth muttered,
You're a fine
one to tell me what's right and what's wrong, Professor. With that, he spun on
his heel and headed off to summon the security officers.
26
Order! I will
have order! bellowed Judge Tejan Popjens Lih. The public hearing of Professor
Raven Seldon and his young associate, Stettin Palver, had generated a hue and
cry among the populace of Trantor. Here was the man who had predicted the Fall
of the Empire, the decay of civilization, who exhorted others to harken back to
the golden age of civility and order-here was he who, according to an
eyewitness, had ordered the brutal beating of three young Trantorians for no
apparent provocation. Ah yes, it promised to be a spectacular hearing, one
which would lead, no doubt, to an even more spectacular trial.
The judge pressed
a contact set into a recessed panel on her bench and a sonorous gong resounded
through the packed courtroom. I will have order, she repeated to the
now-hushed throng. If need be, the courtroom will be cleared. That is a
warning. It will not be repeated.
The judge cut an
imposing figure in her scarlet robe. Originally from the Outer World of
Lystena, Lih's complexion had a slight bluish cast, which turned darker when
she became exercised, practically purple when she was really angry. It was
rumored that, for all her years on the bench, in spite of her reputation as a
top judicial mind, notwithstanding her position as one of the most revered
interpreters of Imperial law, Lih was ever so slightly vain about the colorful
appearance she gave, the way in which the bright red robes set off her soft
turquoise skin.
Nevertheless, Lih
had a reputation for coming down hard on those who brooked Imperial law; she
was one of the few judges left who upheld the civil code without wavering.
I have heard of
you, Professor Seldon, and your theories about our imminent destruction. And I
have spoken with the magistrate who recently heard another case in which you
were involved, one in which you struck a man with your lead-filled cane. In
that instance, too, you claimed to be the victim of assault. Your reasoning
stemmed, I believe, from a previous unreported incident in which you and your
son allegedly were assaulted by eight hoodlums. You were able to convince my
esteemed colleague, Professor Seldon of your plea of self-defense, even though
an eyewitness testified otherwise. This time, Professor, you will have to be
much more convincing.
The three
hoodlums who were bringing charges against Seldon and Palver snickered in their
seats at the plaintiff's table. They presented a much different appearance
today than they had the evening of the attack. The young men were sporting
clean loose-fitting unisuits; the young lady was wearing a crisply pleated
tunic. All in all, if one didn't look (or listen) too closely, the three
presented a reassuring picture of Trantorian youth.
Seldon's lawyer,
Civ Novker (who was representing Palver as well), approached the bench. Your
Honor, my client is an upstanding member of the Trantorian community. He is a
former First Minister of stellar repute. He is a personal acquaintance of our
Emperor Agis XIV. What possible benefit could Professor Seldon derive from
attacking innocent young people? He is one of the most vocal proponents of
stimulating the intellectual creativity of Trantorian youth-his Psychohistory
Project employs numerous student volunteers; he is a beloved member of the
Streeling University faculty.
Further... Here
Novker paused, sweeping his gaze around the packed courtroom, as if to say,
Wait till you hear this-you'll be ashamed that you ever for a second doubted
the veracity of my client's claims, Professor Seldon is one of the very few
private individuals officially allied with the prestigious Galactic Library. He
has been granted unlimited use of Library facilities for work on what he calls
the Encyclopedia Galactica, a veritable paean to Imperial civilization.
I ask you, how
can this man even be questioned in such a matter?
With a flourish
of his arm, Novker gestured toward Seldon who was sitting at the defendant's
table with Stettin Palver, looking decidedly uncomfortable. Hari's cheeks were
flushed from the unaccustomed praise (after all, lately his name was the
subject of derisive snickers rather than flowery plaudits) and his hand shook
slightly on the carved Dandle of his trusty cane.
Judge Lih gazed
down at Seldon clearly unimpressed. What benefit, indeed, Counselor. I have
been asking myself that very question. I've lain make these past nights,
racking my brains for a plausible reason. Why should a man of Professor
Seldon's stature commit unprovoked assault and battery when he himself is one
of our most outspoken critics of the so-called breakdown of civil order?
And then it
dawned on me. Perhaps, in his frustration at not being believed, Professor
Seldon feels he must prove to the worlds that his predictions of doom and gloom
really are coming to pass. After all, here is a man who has spent his entire career
foretelling the Fall of the Empire and all he can really point to are a few
burned-out bulbs in the dome, an occasional glitch in public transport, a
budget cut here or there nothing very dramatic. But an attack-or two or
three-now, that would be something.
Lih sat back and
folded her hands in front of her, a satisfied expression on her face. Seldon
stood, leaning heavily on the table for support. With great effort, he
approached the bench, waving off his lawyer, walking headlong into the steely
gaze of the judge.
Your Honor,
please permit me to say a few words in my defense.
Of course,
Professor Seldon. After all, this is not a trial, only a hearing to air all
allegations, facts, and theories pertinent to ~ a case before deciding whether
or not to go ahead with a trial. I have merely expressed a theory; I am most
interested to hear what you have to say.
Seldon cleared
his throat before beginning. I have devoted my life to the Empire. I have
faithfully served the Emperors. My science of psychohistory, rather than being
a harbinger of destruction, is intended to be used as an agent for
rejuvenation. With it we can be prepared for whatever course civilization
takes. If, as I believe, the Empire continues to break down, psychohistory will
help us put into place building blocks for a new and better civilization
founded on all that is good from the old. I love our worlds, our peoples, our
Empire-what would it behoove me to contribute to the lawlessness that saps its
strength daily?
I can say no
more. You must believe me. I, a man of intellect, of equations, of science-I am
speaking from my heart. Seldon turned and made his way slowly back to his
chair beside Palver. Before sitting, his eyes sought Wanda, sitting in the
spectators' gallery. She smiled wanly and winked at him.
From the heart
or not, Professor Seldon, this decision will require much thought on my part.
We have heard from your accusers; we have heard from you and Mr. Palver. There
is one more party whose testimony I need. I'd like to hear from Rial Nevas, who
has come forward as an eyewitness to this incident.
As Nevas
approached the bench, Seldon and Palver looked at each other in alarm. It was
the boy whom Hari had admonished just before the attack.
Lih was asking
the youth a question. Would you describe, Mr. Nevas, exactly what you
witnessed on the night in question?
Well, started
Nevas, fixing Seldon with his sullen stare, I was walkin' along, mindin' my
own business, when I saw those two,he turned and pointed at Seldon and
Palveron the other side of the walkway, comin' toward me. And then I saw
those three kids. (Another point of the finger, this time toward the three
sitting at the plaintiff's table.) The two older guys were walkin' behind the
kids. They didn't see me, though, on account of I was on the other side of the
walkway and besides, they were concentratin' on their victims. Then wham! Just
like that, that old guy swings at 'em with his stick, then the younger guy
jumps 'em and kicks 'em and before you know it, they're all down on the ground.
Then the old guy and his pal, they just took off, just like that. I couldn't
believe it.
That's a lie!
Seldon exploded. Young man, you're playing with our lives here! Nevas only
stared back at Seldon impassively.
Judge, Seldon
implored, can't you see that he is lying? I remember this fellow. I scolded
him for littering just minutes before we were attacked. I pointed it out to
Stettin as another instance of the breakdown of our society, the apathy of the
citizenry, the...
Enough,
Professor Seldon, commanded the judge. Another outburst like that and I will
have you ejected from this courtroom. Now, Mr. Nevas, she said, turning back
to the witness. What did you do throughout the sequence of events you just
described?
I, uh, I hid.
Behind some trees. I hid. I was afraid they'd come after me if they saw me, so
I hid. And when they were gone, well, I ran and called the security officers.
Nevas had started
to sweat and he inserted a finger into the constricting collar of his unisuit.
He fidgeted, shifting his weight from one foot to the other as he stood on the
raised speaker's platform. He was uncomfortably aware of the crowd's eyes upon
him; he tried to avoid looking into the audience, but each time he did, he
found himself drawn to the ,,toady gaze of a pretty blond girl sitting in the
first row. It was as if she was asking him a question, pressing him for an
answer, willing him to ,,peak.
Mr. Nevas, what
do you have to say about Professor Seldon's allegation that he and Mr. Palver
did see you prior to the attack, that the professor actually exchanged words
with you?
Well, uh, no,
you see, it was just like I said... I was walkin' along and-' And now Nevas
looked over at Seldon's table. Seldon looked at the young man sadly, as if he
realized all was lost. But Seldon's companion, Stettin Palver, turned a fierce
gaze on Nevas and Nevas jumped, startled, at the words he heard: Tell the
truth! It was as if Palver had spoken, but Palver's lips hadn't moved. And
then, confused, Nevas snapped his head in the direction of the blond girl; he
thought he heard her speak-Tell the truth! but her lips were still as well.
Mr. Nevas, Mr.
Nevas, the judge's voice broke in on the youth's jumbled thoughts. Mr. Nevas,
if Professor Seldon and Mr. Palver were walking toward you, behind the three
plaintiffs, how is it that you noticed Seldon and Palver first? That is how you
put it in your statement, is it not?
Nevas glanced
around the courtroom wildly. He couldn't seem to escape the eyes, all the eyes
screaming at him to Tell the truth! Looking over at Hari Seldon, Rial Nevas
said simply, I'm sorry and, to the amazement of the entire courtroom
assemblage, the fourteen-year-old boy started to cry.
27
It was a lovely
day, neither too warm nor too cold, not too bright nor too gray. Even though
the groundskeeping budget had given out years ago, the few straggly perennials
lining the steps leading up to the Galactic Library managed to add a cheerful
note to the morning. (The Library, having been built in the classical style of
antiquity, was fronted with one of the grandest stairways to be found in the
entire Empire, second only to the steps at the Imperial Palace itself. Most
Library visitors, however, preferred to enter via the gliderail) Seldon had
high hopes for the day.
Since he and
Stettin Palver had been cleared of all charges in their recent assault and
battery case, Hari Seldon felt like a new man. Although the experience had been
painful, its very public nature had advanced Seldon's cause. Judge Tejan
Popjens Lih, who was considered one of, if not the most influential judge on
Trantor, had been quite vociferous in her opinion, delivered the day following
Rial Nevas's emotional testimony.
When we come to
such a crossroads in our civilized society, the judge intoned from her
bench, that a man of Professor Hari Seldon's standing is made to bear the
humiliation, abuse, and lies of his peers simply because of who he is and what
he stands for, it is truly a dark day for the Empire. I admit that I, too, was
taken in-at first. Why wouldn't Professor Seldon, I reasoned, resort to such
trickery in an attempt to prove his predictions? But, as I came to see, I was
most grievously wrong. Here the judge's brow furrowed, a dark blue flush began
creeping up her neck and into her cheeks. For I was ascribing to Professor
Seldon motives born of our new society, a society in which honesty, decency,
and goodwill are likely to get one killed, a society in which it appears one
must resort to dishonesty and trickery merely to survive.
How far we have
strayed from our founding principles. We were lucky this time, fellow citizens
of Trantor. We owe a debt of thanks to Professor Hari Seldon for showing us our
true selves; let us take his example to heart and resolve to be vigilant
against the baser forces of our human nature.
Following the
hearing, the Emperor had sent Seldon a congratulatory bolo-disc. On it he
expressed the hope that perhaps now Seldon would find renewed funding for his
Project.
As Seldon slid up
the entrance gliderail, he reflected on the current status of his Psychohistory
Project. His good friend-the former Chief Librarian Las Zenow-had retired.
During his tenure, Zenow had been a strong proponent of Seldon and his work.
More often than not, however, Zenow's hands had been tied by the Library Board.
But, he had assured Seldon, the affable new Chief Librarian, Tryma Acarnio, was
as progressive as he himself, and was popular with many factions among the
Board membership.
Hari, my
friend, Zenow had said before leaving Trantor for his home world of Wencory,
Acarnio is a good man, a person of deep intellect and an open mind. I'm sure
he'll do all that he can to help you and the Project. I've left him the entire
data file on you and your EncyIopedia; I know he'll be as excited as I about
the contribution to humanity it represents. Take care, my friend-I'll remember
you fondly.
And so today Hari
Seldon was to have his first official meeting with the new Chief Librarian. He
was cheered by the reassurances Las Zenow had left with him and he was looking
forward to sharing his plans for the future of the Project and the
Encyclopedia.
Tryma Acarnio
stood as Hari entered the Chief Librarian's office.
Already he had
made his mark on the place; whereas Zenow had stuffed every nook and cranny of
the room with holo-discs and tridijournals from the different sectors of
Trantor, and a dizzying array of visiglobes representing various worlds of the
Empire had spun in midair, Acarnio had swept clear the mounds of data and
images that Zenow had liked to keep at his fingertips. A large holoscreen now
dominated one wall on which, Seldon presumed, Acarnio could view any
publication or broadcast that he desired.
Acarnio was short
and stocky, with a slightly distracted look-from a childhood corneal correction
that had gone awry-that belied a fearsome intelligence and constant awareness
of everything going on around him at all times.
Well, well.
Professor Seldon. Come in. Sit down. Acarnio gestured to a straight-backed
chair facing the desk at which he sat. It was, I felt, quite fortuitous that
you requested this meeting. You see, I had intended to get in touch with you as
soon as I settled in.
Seldon nodded,
pleased that the new Chief Librarian had considered him enough of a priority to
plan to seek him out in the hectic early days of his tenure.
But, first,
Professor, please let me know why you wanted to see me before we move on to my,
most likely, more prosaic concerns.
Seldon cleared
his throat and leaned forward. Chief Librarian, Las Zenow has no doubt told
you of my work here and of my idea for an Encyclopedia Galactica. Las was quite
enthusiastic, and a great help, providing a private office for me here and
unlimited access to the Library's vast resources. In fact, it was he who
located the eventual home of the Encyclopedia Project, a remote Outer World
called Terminus.
There was one
thing, however, that Las could not provide. In order to keep the Project on
schedule, I must have office space and unlimited access granted to a number of
my colleagues, as well. It is an enormous undertaking, just gathering the
information to be copied and transferred to Terminus before we can begin the actual
work of compiling the Encyclopedia.
Las was not
popular with the Library Board, as you undoubtedly are aware. You, however,
are. And so I ask you, Chief Librarian: Will you see to it that my colleagues
are granted insiders' privileges so that we may continue our most vital work?
Here Hari
stopped, almost out of breath. He was sure that his speech, which he had gone
over and over in his mind the night before, would have the desired effect. He
waited, confident in Acarnio's response.
Professor
Seldon, Acarnio began. Seldon's expectant smile faded. There was an edge to
the Chief Librarian's voice that Seldon had not expected. My esteemed
predecessor provided me-in exhaustive detail an explication of your work here
at the Library. He was quite enthusiastic about your research and committed to
the idea of your colleagues joining you here. As was I, Professor Seldonat
Acarnio's pause, Seldon looked up sharplyat first. I was prepared to call a
special meeting of the Board to propose that a larger suite of offices be
prepared for you and your Encyclopedists. But, Professor Seldon, all that has
now changed.
Changed! But
why?
Professor
Seldon, you have just finished serving as principal defendant in a most
sensational assault and battery case.
But I was
acquitted, Seldon broke in. The case never even made it to trial.
Nonetheless,
Professor, your latest foray into the public eye has given you an
undeniable-how shall I say it? tinge of ill repute. Oh yes, you were acquitted
of all charges. But in order to get to that acquittal, your name, your past,
your beliefs, and your work were paraded before the eyes of all the worlds. And
even if one progressive right-thinking judge has proclaimed you faultless, what
of the millions-perhaps billions-of other average citizens who see not a
pioneering psychohistorian striving to preserve his civilization's glory but a
raving lunatic shouting doom and gloom for the great and mighty Empire?
You, by the very
nature of your work, are threatening the essential fabric of the Empire. I
don't mean the huge, nameless, faceless, monolithic Empire. No, I am referring
to the heart and soul of the Empire-its people. When you tell them the Empire
is failing, you are saying that they are failing. And this, my dear Professor,
the average citizen cannot face.
Seldon, like it
or not, you have become an object of derision, a subject of ridicule, a
laughingstock.
Pardon me, Chief
Librarian, but for years now I have been, to some circles, a laughingstock.
Yes, but only to
some circles. But this latest incident-and the very public forum in which it
was played out-has opened you up to ridicule not only here on Trantor but
throughout the worlds. And, Professor, if, by providing you an office, we, the
Galactic Library, give tacit approval to your work, then, by inference, we, the
Library, also become a laughingstock throughout the worlds. And no matter how
strongly I may personally believe in your theory and your Encyclopedia, as
Chief Librarian of the Galactic Library on Trantor, I must think of the Library
first.
And so,
Professor Seldon, your request to bring in your colleagues is denied.
Hari Seldon
jerked back in his chair as if struck.
Further,
Acarnio continued, I must advise you of a two-week temporary suspension of all
Library privileges-effective immediately. The Board has called that special
meeting, Professor Seldon. In two weeks' time we will notify you whether or not
we've decided that our association with you must be terminated.
Here, Acarnio
stopped speaking and, placing his palms on the glossy, spotless surface of his
desk, stood up. That is all, Professor Seldon-for now.
Hari Seldon stood
as well, although his upward movement was not as smooth, nor as quick, as Tryma
Acarnio's..
May I be
permitted to address the Board? asked Seldon. Perhaps if I were able to
explain to them the vital importance of psychohistory and the Encyclopedia...
I'm afraid not,
Professor, said Acarnio softly and Seldon caught a brief glimmer of the man
Las Zenow had told him about. But, just as quickly, the icy bureaucrat was back
as Acarnio guided Seldon to the door.
As the portals
slid open, Acarnio said, Two weeks, Professor Seldon. Till then. Hari stepped
through to his waiting skitter and the doors slid shut.
What am I going
to do now? wondered Seldon disconsolately. Is this the end of my work?
28
Wanda dear, what
is it that has you so engrossed? asked Hari Seldon as he entered his
granddaughter's office at Streeling University. The room had been the office of
the brilliant mathematician Yugo Amaryl, whose death had impoverished the
Psychohistory Project. Fortunately,
Wanda had
gradually taken over Yugo's role in recent years, further refining and
adjusting the Prime Radiant.
Why, I'm working
on an equation in Section 33A2D17. See, I've recalibrated this sectionshe
gestured to a glowing violet patch suspended in midair in front of her face
taking into consideration the standard quotient and There! Just what I
thought-I think. She stepped back and rubbed her eyes.
What is it,
Wanda? Hari moved in closer to study the equation. Why, this looks like the
Terminus equation and yet... Wanda, this is an inverse of the Terminus
equation, isn't it?
Yes, Grandpa.
See, the numbers weren't working quite right in the Terminus equation-look.
Wanda touched a contact in a recessed wallstrip and another patch sprang to
life in vivid red on the other side of the room. Seldon and Wanda walked over
to inspect it. You see how it's all hanging together fine now, Grandpa? It's
taken me weeks to get it this way.
How did you do
it? asked Hari, admiring the equation's lines, its logic, its elegance.
At first, I
concentrated on it from over here only. I blocked out all else. In order to get
Terminus to work, work on Terminusstands to reason, doesn't it? But then I
realized that I couldn't just introduce this equation into the Prime Radiant
system and expect it to blend right in smoothly, as if nothing happened. A
placement means a displacement somewhere else. A weight needs a counterweight.
I think the
concept to which you are referring is what the ancients called din and yang. '
Yes, more or
less. Yin and yang. So, you see, I realized that to perfect the yin of
Terminus, I had to locate its yang. Which I did, over there. She moved back to
the violet patch, tucked away at the other edge of the Prime Radiant sphere.
And once I adjusted the figures here, the Terminus equation fell into place as
well. Harmony! Wanda looked pleased with herself, as if she'd solved all the
problems of the Empire.
Fascinating,
Wanda, and later on you must tell me what you think it all means for the
Project. But right now you must come with me to the holoscreen. I received an
urgent message from Santanni a few minutes ago. Your father wants us to call
him immediately.
Wanda's smile
faded. She had been alarmed at the recent reports of fighting on Santanni. As
Imperial budget cutbacks went into effect, the citizens of the Outer Worlds
suffered most. They had limited access to the richer, more populous Inner
Worlds and it became more and more difficult to trade their worlds' products
for much needed imports. Imperial hyperships going in and out of Santanni were
few and the distant world felt isolated from the rest of the Empire. Pockets of
rebellion had erupted throughout the planet.
Grandfather, I
hope everything's all right, said Wanda, her fear revealed by her voice.
Don't worry,
dear. After all, they must be safe if Raych was able to send us a message.
In Seldon's
office, he and Wanda stood before the holoscreen as it activated. Seldon
punched a code on the keypad alongside the screen and they waited a few seconds
for the intragalactic connection to be established. Slowly the screen seemed to
stretch back into the wall, as if it were the entrance to a tunnel-and out of
the tunnel, dimly at first, came the familiar figure of a stocky powerfully
built man. As the connection sharpened, the man's features became clearer. When
Seldon and Wanda were able to make out Raych's bushy Dahlite mustache, the
figure sprang to life.
Dad! Wanda!
said Raych's three-dimensional hologram, projected to Trantor from Santanni.
Listen, I don't have much time. He flinched, as if startled by a loud noise.
Things have gotten pretty bad here. The government has fallen and a
provisional party has taken over. Things are a mess, as you can imagine. I just
put Manella and Bellis on a hypership to Anacreon. I told them to get in touch
with you from there. The name of the ship is the Arcadia VII.
You should have
seen Manella, Dad. Mad as anything that she had to go. The only way I was able
to convince her to leave was to point out that it was for Bellis's sake.
I know what
you're thinking, Dad and Wanda. Of course I would have gone with them-if I
could have. But there wasn't enough room. You should've seen what I had to go
through just to get them onto the ship. Raych flashed one of his lopsided
grins that Seldon and Wanda loved so much, then continued. Besides, since I'm
here, I have to help guard the University-we may be part of the Imperial
University system, but we're a place of learning and building, not of
destruction. I tell you, if one of those hot-headed Santanni rebels comes near
our stuff...
Raych, Hari
broke in, How bad is it? Are you close to the fighting?
Dad, are you in
danger? asked Wanda.
They waited a few
seconds for their message to travel the nine thousand parsecs across the Galaxy
to Raych.
I-I-1 couldn't
quite make out what you said, the hologram replied. There's a bit of fighting
going on. It's sort of exciting, actually, Raych said, breaking into that grin
again. So I'm going to sign off now. Remember, find out what happened to the
Arcadia III going to Anacreon. I'll be back in touch as soon as I'm able.
Remember, I... The transmission broke off and the hologram faded. The
holoscreen tunnel collapsed in on itself so that Seldon and Wanda were left
staring at a blank wall.
Grandpa, said
Wanda, what do you think he was going to say?
I have no idea,
dear. But there is one thing I do know and that is that your father can take
care of himself. I pity any rebel who gets near enough for a well-placed
Twist-kick from your dad! Come, let's get back to that equation and in a few
hours we'll check on the Arcadia HI.
Commander, have
you no idea what happened to the ship? Hari Seldon was again engaged in
intragalactic conversation, but this time it was with an Imperial navy
commander stationed at Anacreon. For this communication, Seldon was making use
of the visiscreen-much less realistic than the holoscreen but also much
simpler.
I'm telling you,
Professor, that we have no record of that hypership requesting permission to
enter the Anacreonic atmosphere. Of course, communications with Santanni have
been broken for several hours and sporadic at best for the last week. It is
possible that the ship tried to reach us on a Santanni-based channel and could
not get through, but I doubt it.
No, it's more
likely that the Arcadia 1171 changed destination. Voreg, perhaps, or Sarip.
Have you tried either of those worlds, Professor?
No, said Seldon
wearily, but I see no reason if the ship was bound for Anacreon that it would
not go to Anacreon. Commander, it is vital that I locate that ship.
Of course, the
commander ventured, the Arcadia 1/71 might not have made it. Out safely, I
mean. There's a lot of fighting going on. Those rebels don't care who they blow
up. They just train their lasers and pretend it's the Emperor Agis they're
blasting. I tell you, it's a whole different game out here on the fringe,
Professor.
My
daughter-in-law and granddaughter are on that ship, Commander, Seldon said in
a tight voice.
Oh, I'm sorry,
Professor, said an abashed commander. I'll be in touch with you as soon as I
hear anything.
Dispiritedly Hari
closed the visiscreen contact. How tired I am, he thought. And, he mused, I'm
not surprised-I've known that this would come for nearly forty years.
Seldon chuckled
bitterly to himself. Perhaps that commander had thought he was shocking Seldon,
impressing him with the vivid detail of life on the fringe. But Seldon knew
all about the fringe. And as the fringe came apart, like a piece of knitting
with one loose thread, the whole piece would unravel to the core: Trantor.
Seldon became
aware of a soft buzzing sound. It was the door signal. Yes?
Grandpa, said
Wanda, entering the office, I'm scared.
Why, dear?
asked Seldon with concern. He didn't want to tell her yet what he had
learned-or hadn't learned-from the commander on Anacreon.
Usually,
although they're so far away, I feel Dad and Mom and Bellis feel them in
hereshe pointed to her head and in hereshe placed her hand over her heart.
But now, today, I don't feel them-it feels less, as if they're fading, like
one of the dome bulbs. And I want to stop it. I want to pull them back, but I
can't.
Wanda, I really
think this is merely a product of your concern for your family in light of the
rebellion. You know that uprisings occur all over the Empire all the
time-little eruptions to let off steam. Come now, you know that chances of
anything happening to Raych, Manella, or Bellis are vanishingly small. Your dad
will call any day to say all is well; your mom and Bellis will land on Anacreon
at any moment and enjoy a little vacation. We are the ones to be pitied-we're
stuck here up to our ears in work! So, sweetheart, go to bed and think only
good thoughts. I promise you, tomorrow, under the sunny dome, things will look
much better.
All right,
Grandpa, said Wanda, not sounding entirely convinced. But tomorrow-if we
haven't heard by tomorrow-we'll have to-to...
Wanda, what can
we do, except wait? asked Hari, his voice gentle.
Wanda turned and
left, the weight of her worries showing in the slope of her shoulders. Hari
watched her go, finally allowing his own worries to come to the surface.
It had been three
days since the hologram transmission from Raych. Since then-nothing. And today
the naval commander at Anacreon denied ever having heard of a ship called
Arcadia VII
Hari had tried
earlier to get through to Raych on Santanni, but all communication beams were
down. It was as if Santanni-and the Arcadia VII-had simply broken off from the
Empire, like a petal from a flower.
Seldon knew what
he had to do now. The Empire might be down, but it was not out. Its power, when
properly wielded, was still awesome. Seldon placed an emergency transmission to
Emperor Agis XIV.
29
What a
surprise-my friend Hari! Agis's visage beamed at Seldon through the
holoscreen. I am glad to hear from you, although you usually request the more
formal personal audience. Come, you've piqued my interest. Why the urgency?
Sire, began
Seldon, my son, Raych, and his wife and daughter live on Santanni.
Ah, Santanni,
the Emperor said as his smile faded. A bunch of misguided wretches if I
ever...
Sire, please,
broke in Seldon, surprising both the Emperor and himself with this flagrant
breach of Imperial protocol. My son was able to get Manella and Bellis onto a
hypership, the Arcadia VII, bound for Anacreon. He, however, had to remain.
That was three days ago. The ship has not landed at Anacreon. And my son seems
to have disappeared. My calls to Santanni have gone unanswered and now the
communication beams are broken.
Please, Sire,
can you help me?
Hari, as you
know, officially all ties between Santanni and Trantor have been severed.
However, I still hold some influence in selected areas of Santanni. That is,
there are still a few loyal to me who have not yet been found out. Although I
cannot make direct contact with any of my operatives on that world, I can share
with you any reports I receive from there. These are, of course, highly
confidential, but considering your situation and our relationship, I will allow
you access to those pieces that might interest you.
I am expecting
another dispatch within the hour. If you like, I'll recontact you when it
arrives. In the meantime, I'll have one of my aides go over all transmissions
from Santanni for the past three days to look for anything pertaining to Raych,
Manella, or Bellis Seldon.
Thank you, Sire.
I thank you most humbly. And Hari Seldon dipped his head as the Emperor's
image faded from the holoscreen.
Sixty minutes
later Hari Seldon was still sitting at his desk, waiting to hear from the
Emperor. The past hour had been one of the most difficult he had ever spent,
second only to the hours after Dors's destruction.
It was the not
knowing that did Hari in. He had made a career of knowing-the future as well as
the present. And now he had no idea at all about three of the people most
precious to him.
The holoscreen
buzzed softly and Hari pressed a contact in response. Agis appeared.
Hari, began the
Emperor. From the soft slow sadness in his voice, Hari knew this call brought
bad news.
My son, said
Hari.
Yes, replied
the Emperor. Raych was killed, earlier today, in a bombardment on Santanni
University. I've learned from my sources that Raych knew the attack was coming
but refused to desert his post. You see, a good number of the rebels are
students and Raych felt that if they knew that he was still there, they would
never.. . But hate overcame all reason.
The University
is, you see, an Imperial University. The rebels feel they must destroy all
things Imperial before rebuilding anew. The fools! Why... And here Agis
stopped, as if suddenly realizing that Seldon did not care about Santanni
University or the plans of the rebels-not right now, at least.
Hari, if it
makes you feel any better, remember that your son died in defense of knowledge.
It was not the Empire Raych fought and died for but humanity itself.
Seldon looked up
out of tear-filled eyes. Weakly he asked, And Manella and little Bellis? What
of them? Have you found the Arcadia Hl?
That search has
proved fruitless, Hari. The Arcadia VII left Santanni, as you were told. But it
seems to have disappeared. It may have been hijacked by rebels or it may have
made an emergency detour-at this point, we just don't know.
Seldon nodded.
Thank you, Agis. Although you have brought me tragic news, at least you have
brought it. Not knowing was worse. You are a true friend.
And so, my
friend, said the Emperor, I'll leave you to yourself now-and your memories.
The Emperor's image faded from the screen as Hari Seldon folded his arms in
front of him on his desk, put his head down, and wept.
30
Wanda Seldon
adjusted the waistband of her unisuit, pulling it a little tighter around her
middle. Taking up a hand hoe, she attacked some weeds that had sprung up in her
small flower garden outside the Psychohistory Building at Streeling. Generally
Wanda spent the bulk of her time in her office, working with her Prime Radiant.
She found solace in its precise statistical elegance; the unvarying equations
were somehow reassuring in this Empire gone so crazy. But when thoughts of her
beloved father, mother, and baby sister became too much to bear, when even her
research could not keep her mind off the horrible losses she'd so recently
undergone, Wanda invariably found herself out here, scratching at the
terraformed ground, as if coaxing a few plants to life might somehow, in some
tiny measure, ameliorate her pain.
Since her
father's death a month ago and the disappearance of Manella and Bellis, Wanda,
who had always been slim, had been losing weight. Whereas a few months ago Hari
Seldon would have been concerned over his darling granddaughter's loss of
appetite, now he, stuck in his own grief, seemed not to notice.
A profound change
had come over Hari and Wanda Seldon-and the few remaining members of the
Psychohistory Project. Hari seemed to have given up. He now spent most of his
days sitting in an armchair in the Streeling solarium, staring out at the
University grounds, warmed by the bright bulbs overhead. Occasionally Project
members told Wanda that his bodyguard, a man named Stettin Palver, would badger
Seldon into a walk out under the dome or try to engage him in a discussion of
the future direction of the Project.
Wanda retreated
deeper into her study of the Prime Radiant's fascinating equations. She could
feel the future her grandfather had worked so hard to achieve finally taking
shape, and he was right: The Encyclopedists must be established on Terminus;
they would be the Foundation.
And Section
33A2D17-in it Wanda could see what Seldon referred to as the Second, or secret,
Foundation. But how? Without Seldon's active interest, Wanda was at a loss as
to how to proceed. And her sorrow over the destruction of her family cut so
deep that she didn't seem to have the strength to figure it out.
The members of
the Project itself, those fifty or so hardy souls who remained, continued their
work as well as possible. The majority were Encyclopedists, researching the
source materials they would need to copy and catalogue for their eventual move
to Terminus-when and if they gained full access to the Galactic Library. At
this point, they were working on faith alone. Professor Seldon had lost his
private office at the Library, so the prospects of any other Project member
gaining special access were slim.
The remaining
Project members (other than the Encyclopedists) were historical analysts and
mathematicians. The historians interpreted past and current human actions and
events, turning their findings over to the mathematicians, who in turn fit
those pieces into the great Psychohistorical Equation. It was long painstaking
work.
Many Project
members had left because the rewards were so few-psychohistorians were the butt
of many jokes on Trantor and limited funds had forced Seldon to enact drastic
pay cuts. But the constant reassuring presence of Hari Seldon had-till
now-overcome the difficult working conditions of the Project. Indeed, the
Project members who had stayed on had, to a person, done so out of respect and
devotion to Professor Seldon.
Now, thought
Wanda Seldon bitterly, what reason is left for them to stay? A light breeze
blew a piece of her blond hair across her eyes; she pushed it back
absentmindedly and continued her weeding.
Miss Seldon, may
I have a moment of your time? Wanda turned and looked up. A young man-she judged
him to be in his early twenties stood on the gravel path next to her. She
immediately sensed him to be strong and fearsomely intelligent. Her grandfather
had chosen wisely. Wanda rose to speak with him.
I recognize you.
You are my grandfather's bodyguard, are you not? Stettin Palver, I believe?
Yes, that's
correct, Miss Seldon, Palver said and his cheeks reddened slightly, as if he
were pleased that so pretty a girl should have given him any notice. Miss
Seldon, it is your grandfather I'd like to talk to you about. I'm very worried
about him. We must do something.
Do what, Mr.
Palver? I am at a loss. Since my fathershe swallowed hard, as if she were
having difficulty speakingdied and my mother and sister disappeared, it is
all I can do to get him out of bed in the morning. And to tell you the truth,
it has affected me very deeply as well. You understand, don't you? She looked
into his eyes and knew that he did.
Miss Seldon,
Palver said softly, I am terribly sorry about your losses. But you and
Professor Seldon are alive and you must keep working at psychohistory. The
professor seems to have given up. I was hoping that maybe you-we-could come up
with something to give him hope again. You know, a reason to go on.
Ah, Mr. Palver,
thought Wanda, maybe Grandpa has it right. 1 wonder if there truly is any
reason to go on. But she said, I'm sorry, Mr. Palver, I can think of nothing.
She gestured toward the ground with her hoe. And now, as you can see, I must
get back to these pesky weeds.
I don't think
your grandfather has got it right. I think there truly is a reason to go on. We
just have to find it.
The words struck
her with full force. How had he known what she had been thinking? Unless...
You can handle minds, can't you? Wanda asked, holding her breath, as if
afraid to hear Palver's response.
Yes, I can, the
young man replied. I always have, I think. At least, I can't remember not
doing it. Half the time I'm not even consciously aware of it-I just know what
people are thinking-or have thought.
Sometimes, he
continued, encouraged by the understanding he felt emanating from Wanda, I get
flashes of it coming from someone else. It's always in a crowd, though, and I
can't locate whoever it is. But I know there are others like me-us-around.
Wanda grabbed
Palver's hand excitedly, her gardening tool tossed to the ground, forgotten.
Have you any idea what this might mean? For Grandpa, for psychohistory? One of
us alone can do only so much, but both of us together... Wanda started walking
into the Psychohistory Building, leaving Palver standing on the gravel path.
Almost to the entrance she stopped and turned. Come, Mr. Palver, we must tell
my grandfather, Wanda said without opening her mouth. Yes, 1 suppose we should,
answered Palver as he joined her.
31
Do you mean to
say I have been searching Trantor-wide for someone with your powers, Wanda, and
he's been here with us for the past few months and we never knew it? Hari
Seldon was incredulous. He had been dozing in the solarium when Wanda and
Palver shook him awake to give him their amazing news.
Yes, Grandpa.
Think about it. I've never had occasion to meet Stettin. Your time with him has
primarily been away from the Project and I spend the majority of my time
closeted in my office, working with the Prime Radiant. When would we have met?
In fact, the one time our paths did cross, the results were most significant.
When was that?
asked Seldon, searching his memory.
Your last
hearing-before Judge Lih, Wanda replied immediately. Remember the eyewitness
who swore that you and Stettin had attacked those three muggers? Remember how
he broke down and told the truth and even he didn't seem to know why. But
Stettin and I have pieced it together. We were both pushing Rial Nevas to come
clean. He had been very steadfast in his original claim; I doubt that either
one of us would have been able to push him alone. But togethershe stole a shy
glance at Palver, who was standing off to the sideour power is awesome!
Hari Seldon took
all this in and then made as if to speak. But Wanda continued. In fact, we
plan to spend the afternoon testing our mentalic abilities, separately and
together. From the little we've discovered so far, it seems as if Stettin's
power is slightly lower than mine-perhaps a five on my rating scale. But his
five, combined with my seven, gives us a twelve! Think of it, Grandpa.
Awesome!
Don't you see,
Professor? Palver spoke up. Wanda and I are that breakthrough you're looking
for. We can help you convince the worlds of the validity of psychohistory, we
can help find others like us, we can help put psychohistory back on track.
Hari Seldon gazed
up at the two young people standing in front of him. Their faces were aglow
with youth and vigor and enthusiasm and he realized it did his old heart good.
Perhaps all was not lost, after all. He had not thought he would survive this
latest tragedy, the death of his son and the disappearance of his son's wife
and child, but now he could see that Raych lived on in Wanda. And in Wanda and
Stettin, he now knew, lived the future of the Foundation.
Yes, yes,
agreed Seldon nodding forcefully. Come you two, help me up. I must get back to
my office to plan our next step.
32
Professor Seldon
come in, said Chief Librarian Tryma Acarnio in an icy tone of voice. Hari
Seldon accompanied by Wanda and Palver, entered the Chief Librarian's imposing
office.
Thank you, Chief
Librarian, said Seldon as he settled into a chair and faced Acarnio across the
vast desk. May I introduce my granddaughter Wanda and my friend Stettin
Palver. Wanda is a most valuable member of the Psychohistory Project, her
specialty being in the field of mathematics. And Stettin, well, Stettin is
turning into a first-rate general psychohistorian-when he's not performing his
duties as my bodyguard, that is. Seldon chuckled amiably.
Yes, well,
that's all well and good, Professor, said Acarnio, baffled by Seldon's good
humor. He had expected the professor to come in groveling, begging for another
chance at special Library privileges.
But I don't
understand what it is you wanted to see me about. I assume you realize that our
position is firm: We cannot allow a Library association with someone so
extremely unpopular with the general population. We are, after all, a public
library and we must keep the public's sentiments in mind. Acarnio settled
back-perhaps now the groveling would begin.
I realize that I
have not been able to sway you. However, I thought that if you heard from a
couple of the Project's younger members-the psychohistorians of tomorrow, as it
were-that perhaps you'd get a better feel about what a vital role the
Project-and the Encyclopedia, in particular-will play in our future. Please
hear Wanda and Stettin out.
Acarnio cast a
cold eye toward the two young people flanking Seldon. Very well, then, he
said, pointedly eyeing the timestrip on the wall. Five minutes and no more. I
have a Library to run.
Chief
Librarian, began Wanda, as my grandfather has undoubtedly explained to you,
psychohistory is a most valuable tool to be used for the preservation of our culture.
Yes, preservation, she repeated, upon seeing Acarnio's eyes widen at the
word. Undue emphasis has been placed on the destruction of the Empire. By
doing so, the true value of psychohistory has been overlooked. For, with
psychohistory, as we are able to predict the inevitable decline of our
civilization, so are we able to take steps toward its preservation. That is
what the Encyclopedia Galactica is all about. And that is why we need your
help, and the help of your great Library.
Acarnio could not
resist smiling. The young lady had an undeniable charm. She was so earnest, so
well spoken. He gazed at her sitting in front of him, her blond hair pulled
back in a rather severe scholarly style, one which could not hide her
attractive features but, rather, showed them off. What she was saying was
starting to make sense. Maybe Wanda Seldon was right-maybe he had been looking
at this problem from the wrong angle. If it were actually a matter of
preservation, rather than destruction...
Chief
Librarian, began Stettin Palver, this great Library has stood for millennia.
It, perhaps even more than the Imperial Palace, represents the vast power of
the Empire. For, the Palace houses only the Empire's leader, while the Library
is home to the sum total of Imperial knowledge, culture, and history. Its value
is incalculable.
Does it not make
sense to prepare a tribute to this great repository? The Encyclopedia Galactica
will be just that-a giant summary of all the knowledge contained within these
very walls. Think of it!
All of a sudden
it seemed so very clear to Acarnio. How could he have let the Board (especially
that sourpuss Gennaro Mummery) convince him to rescind Seldon's privileges? Las
Zenow, a person whose judgment he greatly esteemed, had been a wholehearted supporter
of Seldon's Encyclopedia.
He glanced again
at the three in front of him, waiting for his decision. The Board would be
hard-pressed to find anything to complain about with the Project members-if the
young people now in his office were a representative sample of the kind of
persons involved with Seldon.
Acarnio rose and
walked across his office, his brow furrowed, as if framing his thoughts. He
picked up a milky crystal sphere from a table and hefted it in his palm.
Trantor,
Acarnio began thoughtfully, seat of the Empire, center of all the Galaxy.
Quite amazing, when you think of it. We have, perhaps, been too quick to judge
Professor Seldon. Now that your Project, this Encyclopedia Galactica, has been
presented to me in such a lighthe gave a brief nod to Wanda and PalverI
realize how important it would be to allow you to continue your work here. And,
of course, to grant access to a number of your colleagues.
Seldon smiled
gratefully and squeezed Wanda's hand.
It is not only
for the greater glory of the Empire that I am recommending this, continued
Acarnio, apparently warming to the idea (and the sound of his own voice). You
are famous, Professor Seldon. Whether people think of you as a crackpot or a
genius, everyone seems to have an opinion. If an academic of your stature is
allied with the Galactic Library, it can only increase our prestige as a
bastion of intellectual pursuit of the highest order. Why, the luster of your
presence can be used to raise much-needed funds to update our collections,
increase our staff, keep our doors open to the public longer...
And the prospect
of the Encyclopedia Galactica itself-what a monumental project! Imagine the
reaction when the public learns that the Galactic Library is involved with such
an undertaking designed to highlight the splendor of our civilization-our
glorious history, our brilliant achievements, our magnificent cultures. And to
think that I, Chief Librarian Tryma Acarnio, is responsible for making sure
that this great Project gets its start... Acarnio gazed intently into the
crystal sphere, lost in reverie.
Yes, Professor
Seldon, Acarnio pulled himself back to the here and now. You and your
colleagues will be granted full insiders' privileges-and a suite of offices in
which to work. He placed the crystal sphere back on its table and, with a
swish of robes, moved back to his desk.
It might take a
little doing, of course, to persuade the Board-but I am confident that I can
handle them. Just leave it to me.
Seldon, Wanda,
and Palver looked at each other in triumph, with small smiles playing at the
corner of their mouths. Tryma Acarnio gestured that they could go and so they
did, leaving the Chief Librarian settled in his chair, dreaming of the glory
and honor that would come to the Library under his aegis.
Amazing, said
Seldon when the three were safely ensconced in their ground-car. If you could
have seen him at our last meeting. He said I was threatening the essential
fabric of our Empire or some such rot. And today, after just a few minutes
with you two
It wasn't too
hard, Grandpa, Wanda said as she pressed a contact, moving the ground-car out
into traffic. She sat back as the auto-propel took over; Wanda had punched
their destination coordinates into the control panel. He is a man with a
strong sense of self-importance. All we had to do was play up the positive
aspects of the Encyclopedia and his ego took over from there.
He was a goner
the minute Wanda and I walked in, Palver said from the back. With both of us
pushing him, it was a piece of cake. Palver reached forward and squeezed
Wanda's shoulder affectionately. She smiled, reached up, and patted his hand.
I must alert the
Encyclopedists as soon as possible, Seldon said. Although there are only
thirty-two left, they are good and dedicated workers. I'll get them installed
at the Library and then I'll tackle the next hurdle-credits. Perhaps this
alliance with the Library is what I need to convince people to give us funding.
Let's see... I'll call upon Terep Bindris again and I'll take you two with me.
He was kindly disposed toward me, at least at first. But how will he be able to
resist us now?
The ground-car
eventually came to a halt outside the Psychohistory Building at Streeling. The
side panels slid open, but Seldon did not immediately move to disembark. He
turned to face Wanda.
Wanda, you know
what you and Stettin were able to accomplish with Acarnio; I'm sure you both
can push some credits out of a few financial benefactors as well.
I know how you
hate to leave your beloved Prime Radiant, but these visits will give you two a
chance to practice, to hone your skills, to get an idea of just what you can
do.
All right,
Grandpa, although I'm sure that, now that you have the Library's imprimatur,
you will find that resistance to your requests has lessened.
There's another
reason I think it's important for the two of you to get out and around
together. Stettin, I believe you said that on certain occasions you've felt
another mind like yours but haven't been able to identify it.
Yes, answered
Palver, I've had flashes, but each time I was in a crowd. And, in my
twenty-four years, I can remember feeling such a flash just four or five
times.
But, Stettin,
said Seldon, his voice low with intensity, each flash was, potentially, the
mind of another person like you and Wanda-another mentalic. Wanda's never felt
these flashes because, frankly, she's been sheltered all her life. The few
times she's been out in a crowd there must not have been any other mentalics
around.
That's one
reason-perhaps the most important reason-for you two to get out-with me or
without me. We must find other mentalics. The two of you alone are strong
enough to push a single person. A large group of you, all pushing together,
will have the power to move an Empire!
With that. Hari
Seldon swung his legs around and hoisted himself out of the ground-car. As
Wanda and Palver watched him limp up the pathway to the Psychohistory Building,
they were only dimly aware of the enormous responsibility Seldon had just
placed on their young shoulders.
33
It was
midafternoon and the Trantorian sun glinted on the metal skin covering the
great planet. Hari Seldon stood at the edge of the Streeling University
observation deck, attempting to shield his eyes from the harsh glare with his
hand. It had been years since he'd been out from under the dome, save for his
few visits to the Palace, and somehow those didn't count; one was still very
much enclosed on the Imperial grounds.
Seldon no longer
traveled around only if accompanied. In the first place, Palver spent the
majority of his time with Wanda, either working on the Prime Radiant, absorbed
in mentalic research, or searching for others like them. But if he had wanted,
Seldon could have found another young man-a University student or a Project
member-to act as his bodyguard.
However, Seldon
knew that a bodyguard was no longer necessary. Since the much publicized
hearing and the reestablishment of ties with the Galactic Library, the
Commission for Public Safety had taken a keen interest in Seldon. Seldon knew
that he was being followed; he had caught sight of his shadow on a number of
occasions in the past few months. He also had no doubt that his home and office
had been infiltrated by listening devices, but he himself activated a static
shield whenever he engaged in sensitive communications.
Seldon was not
sure what the Commission thought of him-perhaps they were not yet sure
themselves. Regardless of whether they believed him to be a prophet or a
crackpot, they made it their business to know where he was at all times-and that
meant that, until the Commission deemed otherwise, at all times Seldon was
safe.
A light breeze
billowed the deep blue cloak Seldon had draped over his unisuit and ruffed the
few wispy white hairs remaining on his head. He glanced down over the railing, taking
in the seamless steel blanket below. Beneath that blanket, Seldon knew, rumbled
the machinery of a vastly complicated world. If the dome were transparent, one
would see ground-cars racing, gravicabs swooshing through an intricate network
of interconnecting tunnels, space hyperships being loaded and unloaded with
grain and chemicals and jewels bound for and from practically every world of
the Empire.
Below the
gleaming metal cover, the lives of forty billion people were being conducted,
with all the attendant pain, joy, and drama of human life. It was an image he
loved dearly-this panorama of human achievement-and it pierced his heart to
know that, in just a few centuries, all that now lay before him would be in
ruins. The great dome would be ripped and scarred, torn away to reveal the
desolate wasteland of what was once the seat of a thriving civilization. He
shook his head in sadness, for he knew there was nothing he could do to prevent
that tragedy. But, as Seldon foresaw the ruined dome, he also knew that from
the ground laid bare by the last battles of the Empire living shoots would
spring and somehow Trantor would reemerge as a vital member of the new Empire.
The Plan saw to that.
Seldon lowered
himself onto one of the benches ringing the deck's perimeter. His leg was
throbbing painfully; the exertion of the trip had been a bit much. But it had
been worth it to gaze once again at Trantor, to feel the open air around him
and see the vast sky above.
Seldon thought
wistfully of Wanda. He rarely saw his granddaughter at all anymore and
invariably Stettin Palver was present when he did. In the three months since
Wanda and Palver had met, they seemed to be inseparable. Wanda assured Seldon
that the constant involvement was necessary for the Project, but Seldon
suspected it went deeper than mere devotion to one's job.
He remembered the
telltale signs from his early days with Dors. It was there in the way the two
young people looked at each other, with an intensity born not only of
intellectual stimulation but emotional motivation as well.
Further, by their
very natures, Wanda and Palver seemed to be more comfortable with each other
than with other people. In fact, Seldon had discovered that when no one else
was around, Wanda and Palver didn't even talk to each other; their mentalic
abilities were sufficiently advanced that they had no need of words to
communicate.
The other Project
members were not aware of Wanda's and Palver's unique talents. Seldon had felt
it best to keep the mentalics' work quiet, at least until their role in the
Plan was firmly defined. Actually the Plan itself was firmly defined-but solely
in Seldon's mind. As a few more pieces fell into place, he would reveal his
Plan to Wanda and Palver and someday, of necessity, to one or two others.
Seldon stood
slowly, stiffly. He was due back at Streeling in an hour to meet Wanda and
Palver. They had left word for him that they were bringing a great surprise.
Another piece for the puzzle, Seldon hoped. He looked out one last time over
Trantor and, before turning to make his way back to the gravitic repulsion
elevator, smiled and softly said, Foundation.
34
Hari Seldon
entered his office to find that Wanda and Palver had already arrived and were
seated around the conference table at the far end of the room. As was usual
with those two, the room was completely silent.
Then Seldon
stopped short, noticing that a new fellow was sitting with them. How
strange-out of politeness, Wanda and Palver usually reverted to standard speech
when in the company of other people, yet none of the three was speaking.
Seldon studied
the stranger-an odd-looking man, about thirty-five years old, with the myopic
look of one caught up for too long in his studies. If it weren't for a certain
determined set to the stranger's jaw, Seldon thought he might be dismissed as
ineffectual, but that would obviously be a mistake. There was both strength and
kindness in the man's face. A trustworthy face, Seldon decided.
Grandfather,
Wanda said, rising gracefully from her chair. Seldon's heart ached as he looked
at his granddaughter. She'd changed so much in the past few months, since the
loss of her family. Whereas before she had always called him Grandpa, now it
was the more formal Grandfather. In the past it seemed she could barely refrain
from grins and giggles; lately her serene gaze was lightened only occasionally
by a beatific smile. But-now as always-she was beautiful and that beauty was
surpassed only by her stunning intellect.
Wanda, Palver,
Seldon said, kissing the former on the cheek and slapping the latter on the
shoulder.
Hello, Seldon
said, turning to the stranger, who had also stood. I am Hari Seldon.
I am most
honored to meet you, Professor, the man replied. I am Bor Alurin. Alurin
offered a hand to Seldon in the archaic and, hence, most formal mode of
greeting.
Bor is a
psychologist, Hari, said Palver, and a great fan of your work.
More important,
Grandfather, said Wanda, Bor is one of us.
One of you?
Seldon looked searchingly from one to the other. Do you mean... ? Seldon's
eyes sparkled.
Yes,
Grandfather. Yesterday Stettin and I were walking through Ery Sector, getting
out and around, as you'd suggested, probing for others. All of a sudden-wham!
there it was.
We recognized
the thought patterns immediately and began to look around, trying to establish
a link, Palver said, taking up the story. We were in a commercial area, near
the spaceport, so the walkways were clogged with shoppers and tourists and
Outworld traders. It seemed hopeless, but then Wanda simply stopped and
signaled Come here and out of the crowd Bor appeared. He just walked up to us
and signaled Yes?
Amazing, Seldon
said, beaming at his granddaughter. And Dr. it is Doctor, isn't it? Alurin,
what do you make of all this?
Well, began the
psychologist thoughtfully, I am pleased. I've always felt different somehow
and now I know why. And if I can be of any help to you, why... The
psychologist looked down at his feet, as if all of a sudden he realized he was
being presumptuous. What I mean is, Wanda and Stettin said I may be able to
contribute in some way to your Psychohistory Project. Professor, nothing would
please me more.
Yes yes. That's
quite true, Dr. Alurin. In fact, I think you may make a great contribution to
the Project-if you'll join me. Of course, you'll have to give up whatever it is
you do now, whether it is teaching or private practice. Can you manage that?
Why, yes,
Professor, of course. I may need a little help convincing my wife... At this
he chuckled slightly, glancing shyly at each of his three companions in turn.
But I seem to have a way with that.
So it's set,
then, said Seldon briskly. You will join the Psychohistory Project. I promise
you, Dr. Alurin, this is a decision you will not regret.
Wanda, Stettin,
Seldon said later, after Bor Alurin had left. This is a most welcome
breakthrough. How quickly do you think you can find more mentalics?
Grandfather, it
took us over a month to locate Bor-we cannot predict with what frequency others
will be found.
To tell you the
truth, all this out and around takes us away from our work on the Prime
Radiant and it is distracting as well. Now that I have Stettin to talk to,
verbal communication is somewhat too harsh, too loud.
Seldon's smile
faded. He had been afraid of this. As Wanda and Palver had been honing their
mentalic skills, so their tolerance for ordinary life had diminished. It only
made sense; their mentalic manipulations set them apart.
Wanda, Stettin,
I think it may be time for me to tell you more about the idea Yugo Amaryl had
years ago and about the Plan I've devised as a result of that idea. I haven't
been ready to elaborate upon it until now, because until this moment, all the
pieces have not been in place.
As you know,
Yugo felt we must establish two Foundations-each as a fail-safe measure for the
other. It was a brilliant idea, one which I wish Yugo could have lived long
enough to see realized. Here Seldon paused, heaving a regretful sigh.
But I digress.
Six years ago, when I was certain that Wanda had mentalic, or mind-touching,
capabilities, it came to me that not only should there be two Foundations but
that they should be distinct in nature, as well. One would be made up of
physical scientists-the Encyclopedists will be their pioneer group on Terminus.
The second would be made up of true psychohistorians; mentalists-you. That is
why I've been so eager for you to find others like you.
Finally, though,
is this: The Second Foundation must be secret. Its strength will lie in its
seclusion, in its telepathic omnipresence and omnipotence.
You see, a few
years ago, when it became apparent that I would require the services of a bodyguard,
I realized that the Second Foundation must be the strong, silent, secret
bodyguard of the primary Foundation.
Psychohistory is
not infallible-its predictions are, however, highly probable. The Foundation,
especially in its infancy, will have many enemies, as do I today.
Wanda, you and
Palver are the pioneers of the Second Foundation, the guardians of the Terminus
Foundation.
But how,
Grandfather? demanded Wanda. We are just two-well, three, if you count Bor.
To guard the entire Foundation, we would need...
Hundreds?
Thousands? Find however many it takes, Granddaughter. You can do it. And you
know how.
Earlier, when
relating the story of finding Dr. Alurin, Stettin said you simply stopped and
communicated out to the mentalic presence you felt and he came to you. Don't
you see? All along I've been urging you to go out and find others like you. But
this is difficult, almost painful for you. I realize now that you and Stettin
must seclude yourselves, in order to form the nucleus of the Second Foundation.
From there you will cast your nets into the ocean of humanity.
Grandfather,
what are you saying? Wanda asked in a whisper. She had left her seat and was
kneeling next to Seldon's chair. Do you want me to leave?
No, Wanda,
Seldon replied, his voice choked with emotion. I don't want you to leave, but
it is the only way. You and Stettin must isolate yourselves from the crude
physicality of Trantor. As your mentalic abilities grow stronger, you will
attract others to you-the silent and secret Foundation will grow.
We will be in
touch-occasionally, of course. And each of us has a Prime Radiant. You see,
don't you, the truth-and the absolute necessity of what I am saying, don't
you?
Yes, I do,
Grandfather, said Wanda. More important, I feel the brilliance of it as well.
Rest assured; we won't let you down.
I know you
won't, dear, Seldon said wearily.
How could he do
this-how could he send his darling granddaughter away? She was his last link to
his happiest days, to Dors, Yugo, and Raych. She was the only other Seldon in
the Galaxy.
I shall miss you
terribly, Wanda, Seldon said as a tear worked its way down his finely creased
cheek.
But,
Grandfather, Wanda said as she stood with Palver, preparing to leave. Where
shall we go? Where is the Second Foundation?
Seldon looked up
and said, The Prime Radiant has already told you, Wanda.
Wanda looked at
Seldon blankly, searching her memory.
Seldon reached
out and clutched at his granddaughter's hand.
Touch my mind,
Wanda. It is there. Wanda's eyes widened as she reached into Seldon's mind.
I see, Wanda
whispered to Seldon.
Section 33A2D17.
Star's End.
PART V
EPILOGUE
I am Hari Seldon.
Former First Minister to Emperor Cleon I. Professor Emeritus of Psychohistory
at Streeling University on Trantor. Director of the Psychohistory Research
Project. Executive Editor of the Encyclopedia Galactica. Creator of the
Foundation.
It all sounds
quite impressive, I know. I have done a great deal in my eighty-one years and I
am tired. Looking back over my life, I wonder if I could have-should have-done
certain things differently. For instance: Was I so concerned with the grand
sweep of psychohistory that the people and events that intersected my life
sometimes seemed inconsequential by comparison?
Perhaps I
neglected to make some small incidental adjustments here or there that would
have in no way compromised the future of humanity but might have dramatically
improved the life of an individual dear to me. Yugo, Raych... I can't help but
wonder... Was there something I could have done to save my beloved Dors?
Last month I
finished recording the Crisis holograms. My assistant, Gaal Dornick, has taken
them to Terminus to oversee their installation in the Seldon Vault. He will
make sure that the Vault is sealed and that the proper instructions are left
for the eventual openings of the Vault, during the Crises.
I'll be dead by
then, of course.
What will they
think, those future Foundationers, when they see me (or, more accurately, my
hologram) during the First Crisis, almost fifty years from now? Will they
comment on how old I look or how weak my voice is or how small I seem, bundled
in this wheelchair? Will they understand-appreciate-the message I've left for
them? Ah well, there's really no point in speculating. As the ancients would
say: The die is cast.
I heard from Gaal
yesterday. All is going well on Terminus. Bor Alurin and the Project members
are flourishing in exile. I shouldn't gloat, but I can't help but chuckle
when I recall the self-satisfied look on the face of that pompous idiot Linge
Chen when he banished the Project to Terminus two years ago. Although
ultimately the exile was couched in terms of an Imperial Charter (A
state-supported scientific institution and part of the personal domain of His
August Majesty, the Emperorthe Chief Commissioner wanted us off Trantor and
out of his hair, but he could not bear the thought of giving up complete
control), it is still a source of secret delight to know that it was Las Zenow
and I who chose Terminus as Foundation's home.
My one regret
where Linge Chen is concerned is that we were not able to save Agis. That
Emperor was a good man and a noble leader, even if he was Imperial in name
only. His mistake was to believe in his title and the Commission of Public
Safety would not tolerate the burgeoning Imperial independence.
I often wonder
what they did to Agis-was he exiled to some remote Outer World or assassinated
like Cleon?
The boy-child who
sits on the throne today is the perfect puppet Emperor. He obeys every word
Linge Chen whispers in his ear and fancies himself a budding statesman. The
Palace and trappings of Imperial life are but toys to him in some vast
fantastical game.
What will I do
now? With Gaal finally gone to join the Terminus group, I am utterly alone. I
hear from Wanda occasionally. The work at Star's End continues on course; in
the past decade she and Stettin have added dozens of mentalics to their number.
They increasingly grow in power. It was the Star's End contingent-my secret
Foundation-who pushed Linge Chen into sending the Encyclopedists to Terminus.
I miss Wanda. It
has been many years since I've seen her, sat with her quietly, holding her
hand. When Wanda left, even though I had asked her to go, I thought I would die
of heartbreak. That was, perhaps, the most difficult decision I ever had to
make and, although I never told her, I almost decided against it. But for the
Foundation to succeed, it was necessary for Wanda and Stettin to go to Star's
End. Psychohistory decreed it, so perhaps it wasn't really my decision, after
all.
I still come here
every day, to my office in the Psychohistory Building. I remember when this
structure was filled with people, day and night. Sometimes I feel as if it's
filled with voices, those of my long-departed family, students, colleagues-but
the offices are empty and silent. The hallways echo with the whirr of my
wheelchair motor.
I suppose I
should vacate the building, return it to the University to allocate to another
department. But somehow it's hard to let go of this place. There are so many
memories...
All I have now is
this, my Prime Radiant. This is the means by which psychohistory can be
computed, through which every equation in my Plan may be analyzed, all here in
this amazing, small black cube. As I sit here, this deceptively simple-looking
tool in the palm of my hand, I wish I could show it to R. Daneel Olivaw...
But I am alone, and
need only to close a contact for the office lights to dim. As I settle back in
my wheelchair, the Prime Radiant activates, its equations spreading around me
in three-dimensional splendor. To the untrained eye, this multicolored swirl
would be merely a jumble of shapes and numbers, but for me-and Yugo, Wanda,
Gaal-this is psychohistory, come to life.
What I see before
me, around me, is the future of humanity. Thirty thousand years of potential
chaos, compressed into a single millennium...
That patch, glowing
more strongly day by day, is the Terminus equation. And there-skewed beyond
repair-are the Trantor figures. But I can see... yes, softly beaming, a steady
light of hope... Star's End!
This-this-was my
life's work. My past-humanity's future. Foundation. So beautiful, so alive. And
nothing can...
Dors!
SELDON, HARI-...
found dead, slumped over his desk in his office at Streeling University in
12,069 G. E. (1 F. E.). Apparently Seldon had been working up to his last
moments on psychohistorical equations; his activated Prime Radiant was
discovered clutched in his hand....
According to
Seldon's instructions, the instrument was shipped to his colleague Gaal Dornick
who had recently emigrated to Terminus....
Seldon's body was
jettisoned into space, also in accordance with instructions he'd left. The
official memorial service on Trantor was simple, though well attended. It is
worth noting that Seldon's old friend former First Minister Eto Demerzel
attended the event. Demerzel had not been seen since his mysterious
disappearance immediately following the Joranumite Conspiracy during the reign
of Emperor Cleon I. Attempts by the Commission of Public Safety to locate
Demerzel in the days following the Seldon memorial proved to be
unsuccessful....
Wanda Seldon,
Hari Seldon's granddaughter, did not attend the ceremony. It was rumored that
she was grief-stricken and had refused all public appearances. To this day, her
whereabouts from then on remain unknown....
It has been said
that Hari Seldon left this life as he lived it, for he died with the future he
created unfolding all around him....
ENCYCLOPEDIA
GALACTICA