Second
Foundation
Isaac
Asimov
PROLOGUE
The First Galactic Empire had endured for tens of thousands
of years. It had included all the planets of the Galaxy in a centralized rule,
sometimes tyrannical, sometimes benevolent, always orderly. Human beings had
forgotten that any other form of existence could be.
All except Hari Seldon.
Hari Seldon was the last great scientist of the First
Empire. It was he who brought the science of psycho-history to its full
development. Psycho-history was the quintessence of sociology, it was the
science of human behavior reduced to mathematical equations.
The individual human being is unpredictable, but the
reactions of human mobs, Seldon found, could be treated statistically. The
larger the mob, the greater the accuracy that could be achieved. And the size
of the human masses that Seldon worked with was no less than the population of
the Galaxy which in his time was numbered in the quintillions.
It was Seldon, then, who foresaw, against all common sense
and popular belief, that the brilliant Empire which seemed so strong was in a
state of irremediable decay and decline. He foresaw (or he solved his equations
and interpreted its symbols, which amounts to the same thing) that left to
itself, the Galaxy would pass through a thirty thousand year period of misery
and anarchy before a unified government would rise once more.
He set about to remedy the situation, to bring about a state
of affairs that would restore peace and civilization in a single thousand of
years. Carefully, he set up two colonies of scientists that he called
“Foundations.” With deliberate intention, he set them up “at opposite ends of
the Galaxy.” One Foundation was set up in the full daylight of publicity. The
existence of the other, the Second Foundation, was drowned in silence.
In Foundation (Gnome, 1951) and Foundation and Empire
(Gnome, 1952) are told the first three centuries of the history of the First
Foundation. It began as a small community of Encyclopedists lost in the
emptiness of the outer periphery of the Galaxy. Periodically, it faced a crisis
in which the variables of human intercourse, of the social and economic
currents of the time constricted about it. Its freedom to move lay along only
one certain line and when it moved in that direction, a new horizon of
development opened before it. All had been planned by Hari Seldon, long dead
now.
The First Foundation, with its superior science, took over
the barbarized planets that surrounded it. It faced the anarchic Warlords that
broke away from the dying Empire and beat them. It faced the remnant of the
Empire itself under its last strong Emperor and its last strong General and
beat it.
Then it faced something which Hari Seldon could not foresee,
the overwhelming power of a single human being, a Mutant. The creature known as
the Mule was born with the ability to mold men's emotions and to shape their
minds. His bitterest opponents were made into his devoted servants. Armies
could not, would not fight him. Before him, the First Foundation fell and
Seldon's schemes lay partly in ruins.
There was left the mysterious Second Foundation, the goal of
all searches. The Mule must find it to make his conquest of the Galaxy
complete. The faithful of what was left of the First Foundation must find it
for quite another reason. But where was it? That no one knew.
This, then, is the story of the search for the Second
Foundation!
PART I
SEARCH BY THE MULE
1
Two Men and the Mule
THE MULE It was after the fall of the First Foundation that
the constructive aspects of the Mule's regime took shape. After the definite
break-up at the first Galactic Empire, it was he who first presented history
with a unified volume at space truly imperial in scope. The earlier commercial
empire at the fallen Foundation had been diverse and loosely knit, despite the
impalpable backing at the predictions of psycho-history. It was not to be
compared with the tightly controlled ‘Union of Worlds’ under the Mule,
comprising as it did, one-tenth the volume of the Galaxy and one-fifteenth of
its population. Particularly during the era of the so-called Search....
ENCYCLOPEDIA GALACTICA*
There is much more that the Encyclopedia has to say on the
subject of the Mule and his Empire but almost all of it is not germane to the
issue at immediate hand, and most of it is considerably too dry for our purposes
in any case. Mainly, the article concerns itself at this point with the
economic conditions that led to the rise of the “First Citizen of the
Union”—the Mule's official title—and with the economic consequences thereof.
If, at any time, the writer of the article is mildly
astonished at the colossal haste with which the Mule rose from nothing to vast
dominion in five years, he conceals it. If he is further surprised at the
sudden cessation of expansion in favor of a five-year consolidation of
territory, he hides the fact.
We therefore abandon the Encyclopedia and continue on our
own path for our own purposes and take up the history of the Great
Interregnum—between the First and Second Galactic Empires—at the end of that
five years of consolidation.
Politically, the Union is quiet. Economically, it is
prosperous. Few would care to exchange the peace of the Mule's steady grip for
the chaos that had preceded, On the worlds that five years previously had known
the Foundation, there might be a nostalgic regret, but no more. The
Foundation's leaders were dead, where useless; and Converted, where useful.
And of the Converted, the most useful was Han Pritcher, now
lieutenant general.
In the days of the Foundation, Han Pritcher had been a
captain and a member of the underground Democratic Opposition. When the
Foundation fell to the Mule without a fight, Pritcher fought the Mule. Until,
that is, he was Converted.
The Conversion was not the ordinary one brought on by the
power of superior reason. Han Pritcher know that well enough. He had been
changed because the Mule was a mutant with mental powers quite capable of
adjusting the conditions of ordinary humans to suit himself. But that satisfied
him completely. That was as it should be. The very contentment with the
Conversion was a prime symptom of it, but Han Pritcher was no longer even
curious about the matter.
And now that he was returning from his fifth major
expedition into the boundlessness of the Galaxy outside the Union, it was with
something approaching artless joy that the veteran spaceman and Intelligence
agent considered his approaching audience with the “First Citizen.” His hard
face, gouged out of a dark, grainless wood that did not seem to be capable of
smiling without cracking, didn't show it—but the outward indications were
unnecessary. The Mule could see the emotions within, down to the smallest, much
as an ordinary man could see the twitch of an eyebrow.
Pritcher left his air car at the old vice-regal hangars and
entered the palace grounds on foot as was required. He walked one mile along
the arrowed highway—which was empty and silent. Pritcher knew that over the
square miles of Palace grounds, there was not one guard, not one soldier, not
one armed man.
The Mule had need of no protection.
The Mule was his own best, all-powerful protector.
Pritcher's footsteps beat softly in his own cars, as the
palace reared its gleaming, incredibly light and incredibly strong metallic
walls before him in the daring, overblown,
___________________
* All quotations from the Encyclopedia Galactica here
reproduced are taken from the 116th Edition published in 1020 F. E. by the
Encyclopedia Galactica Publishing Co., Terminus, with permission of the
publishers.
near-hectic arches that characterized the architecture of
the Late Empire. It brooded strongly over the empty grounds, over the crowded
city on the horizon.
Within the palace was that one man—by himself—on whose
inhuman mental attributes depended the new aristocracy, and the whole structure
of the Union.
The huge, smooth door swung massively open at the general's
approach, and he entered. He stepped on to the wide, sweeping ramp that moved
upward under him. He rose swiftly in the noiseless elevator. He stood before
the small plain door of the Mule's own room in the highest glitter of the
palace spires.
It opened—
Bail Channis was young, and Bail Channis was Unconverted. That
is, in plainer language, his emotional make-up had been unadjusted by the Mule.
It remained exactly as it had been formed by the original shape of its heredity
and the subsequent modifications of his environment. And that satisfied him,
too.
At not quite thirty, he was in marvelously good odor in the
capital. He was handsome and quick-witted—therefore successful in society. He
was intelligent and self-possessed—therefore successful with the Mule. And he
was thoroughly pleased at both successes.
And now, for the first time, the Mule had summoned him to
personal audience.
His legs carried him down the long, glittering highway that
led tautly to the sponge-aluminum spires that had been once the residence of
the viceroy of Kalgan, who ruled under the old emperors; and that had been
later the residence of the independent Princes of Kalgan, who ruled in their
own name; and that was now the residence of the First Citizen of the Union, who
ruled over an empire of his own.
Channis hummed softly to himself. He did not doubt what this
was all about. The Second Foundation, naturally! That all-embracing bogey, the
mere consideration of which had thrown the Mule back from his policy of
limitless expansion into static caution. The official term was—”consolidation.”
Now there were rumors—you couldn't stop rumors. The Mule was
to begin the offensive once more. The Mule had discovered the whereabouts of
the Second Foundation, and would attack The Mule had come to an agreement with
the Second Foundation and divided the Galaxy. The Mule had decided the Second
Foundation did not exist and would take over all the Galaxy.
No use listing all the varieties one heard in the anterooms.
It was not even the first time such rumors had circulated. But now they seemed
to have more body in them, and all the free, expansive Souls Who thrived on
war, military adventure, and political chaos and withered in times of stability
and stagnant peace were joyful.
Bail Channis was one of these. He did not fear the
mysterious Second Foundation. For that matter, he did not fear the Mule, and
boasted of it. Some, perhaps, who disapproved of one at once so young and so
well-off, waited darkly for the reckoning with the gay ladies’ man who employed
his wit openly at the expense of the Mule's physical appearance and sequestered
life. None dared join him and few dared laugh, but when nothing happened to
him, his reputation rose accordingly.
Channis was improvising words to the tune he was humming. Nonsense
words with the recurrent refrain: “Second Foundation threatens the Nation and
all of Creation.”
He was at the palace.
The huge, smooth door swung massively open at his approach
and he entered. He stepped on to the wide, sweeping ramp that moved upward
under him. He rose swiftly in the noiseless elevator. He stood before the small
plain door of the Mule's own room in the highest glitter of the palace spires.
It opened—
The man who had no name other than the Mule, and no title
other than First Citizen looked out through the one-way transparency of the
wall to the light and lofty city on the horizon.
In the darkening twilight, the stars were emerging, and not
one but owed allegiance to him.
He smiled with fleeting bitterness at the thought. The
allegiance they owed was to a personality few had ever seen.
He was not a man to look at, the Mule—not a man to look at
without derision. Not more than one hundred and twenty pounds was stretched out
into his five-foot-eight length. His limbs were bony stalks that jutted out of
his scrawniness in graceless angularity. And his thin face was nearly drowned
out in the prominence of a fleshy beak that thrust three inches outward.
Only his eyes played false with the general farce that was
the Mule. In their softness—a strange softness for the Galaxy's greatest
conqueror—sadness was never entirely subdued.
In the city was to be found all the gaiety of a luxurious
capital on a luxurious world. He might have established his capital on the
Foundation, the strongest of his now-conquered enemies, but it was far out on
the very rim of the Galaxy. Kalgan, more centrally located, with a long
tradition as aristocracy's playground, suited him better—strategically.
But in its traditional gaiety, enhanced by unheard-of
prosperity, he found no peace.
They feared him and obeyed him and, perhaps, even respected
him—from a goodly distance. But who could look at him without contempt? Only
those he had Converted. And of what value was their artificial loyalty? It
lacked flavor. He might have adopted titles, and enforced ritual and invented
elaborations, but even that would have changed nothing. Better—or at least, no
worse—to be simply the First Citizen—and to hide himself.
There was a sudden surge of rebellion within him—strong and
brutal. Not a portion of the Galaxy must be denied him, For five years he had
remained silent and buried here on Kalgan because of the eternal, misty,
space-ridden menace of the unseen, unheard, unknown Second Foundation. He was
thirty-two. Not old—but he felt old. His body, whatever its mutant mental
powers, was physically weak.
Every star! Every star he could see—and every star he
couldnt see. It must all be his!
Revenge on all. On a humanity of which he wasn't a part. On
a Galaxy in which he didn't fit.
The cool, overhead warning light flickered. He could follow
the progress of the man who had entered the palace, and simultaneously, as
though his mutant sense had been enhanced and sensitized in the lonely
twilight, he felt the wash of emotional content touch the fibers of his brain.
He recognized the identity without an effort. It was
Pritcher.
Captain Pritcher of the one-time Foundation. The Captain
Pritcher who had been ignored and passed over by the bureaucrats of that
decaying government. The Captain Pritcher whose job as petty spy he had wiped
out and whom he had lifted from its slime. The Captain Pritcher whom he had
made first colonel and then general; whose scope of activity he had made
Galaxywide.
The now-General Pritcher who was, iron rebel though he
began, completely loyal. And yet with all that, not loyal because of benefits
gained, not loyal out of gratitude, not loyal as a fair return—but loyal only
through the artifice of Conversion.
The Mule was conscious of that strong unalterable surface
layer of loyalty and love that colored every swirl and eddy of the emotionality
of Han Pritcher—the layer he had himself implanted five years before. Far
underneath there were the original traces of stubborn individuality, impatience
of rule, idealism—but even he, himself, could scarcely detect them any longer.
The door behind him opened, and he turned. The transparency
of the wall faded to opacity, and the purple evening light gave way to the
whitely blazing glow of atomic power.
Han Pritcher took the seat indicated. There was neither
bowing, nor kneeling nor the use of honorifics in private audiences with the
Mule. The Mule was merely “First Citizen.” He was addressed as “sir.” You sat in
his presence, and you could turn your back on him if it so happened that you
did.
To Han Pritcher this was all evidence of the sure and
confident power of the man. He was warmly satisfied with it.
The Mule said: “Your final report reached me yesterday. I
can't deny that I find it somewhat depressing, Pritcher.”
The general's eyebrows closed upon each other: “Yes, I
imagine so—but I don't see to what other conclusions I could have come. There
just isn't any Second Foundation, sir.”
Arid the Mule considered and then slowly shook his head, as
he had done many a time before: “There's the evidence of Ebling Mis. There is
always the evidence of Ebling Mis.”
It was not a new story. Pritcher said without qualification:
“Mis may have been the greatest psychologist of the Foundation, but he was a
baby compared to Hari Seldon. At the time he was investigating Seldon's works,
he was under the artificial stimulation of your own brain control. You may have
pushed him too far. He might have been wrong. Sir, he must have been wrong.”
The Mule sighed, his lugubrious face thrust forward on its
thin stalk of a neck. “If only he had lived another minute. He was on the point
of telling me where the Second Foundation was. He knew, I'm telling you. I need
not have retreated. I need not have waited and waited. So much time lost. Five
years gone for nothing.”
Pritcher could not have been censorious over the weak
longing of his ruler; his controlled mental make-up forbade that. He was
disturbed instead; vaguely uneasy. He said: “But what alternative explanation
can there possibly be, sir? Five times I've gone out. You yourself have plotted
the routes. And I've left no asteroid unturned. It was three hundred years ago
that Hari Seldon of the old Empire supposedly established two Foundations to
act as nuclei of a new Empire to replace the dying old one. One hundred years
after Seldon, the First Foundation—the one we know so well—was known through
all the Periphery. One hundred fifty years after Seldon—at the time of the last
battle with the old Empire—it was known throughout the Galaxy. And now it's
three hundred years—and where should this mysterious Second be? In no eddy of
the Galactic stream has it been heard of.”
“Ebling Mis said it kept itself secret. Only secrecy can
turn its weakness to strength.”
“Secrecy as deep as this is past possibility without
nonexistence as well.”
The Mule looked up, large eyes sharp and wary. “No. It does
exist.” A bony finger pointed sharply. “There is going to be a slight change in
tactics.”
Pritcher frowned. “You plan to leave yourself? I would
scarcely advise it.”
“No, of course not. You will have to go out once again—one
last time. But with another in joint command.”
There was a silence, and Pritcher's voice was hard, “Who,
Sir?”
“There's a young man here in Kalgan. Bail Channis.”
“I've never heard of him, Sir.”
“No, I imagine not. But he's got an agile mind, he's
ambitious—and he's not Converted.”
Pritcher's long jaw trembled for a bare instant, “I fail to
see the advantage in that.”
“There is one, Pritcher. You're a resourceful and
experienced man. You have given me good service. But you are Converted. Your
motivation is simply an enforced and helpless loyalty to myself. When you lost
your native motivations, you lost something, some subtle drive, that I cannot
possibly replace.”
“I don't feel that, Sir,” said Pritcher grimly. “I recall
myself quite well as I was in the days when I was an enemy of yours. I feel
none the inferior.”
“Naturally not,” and the Mule's mouth twitched into a smile.
“Your judgment in this matter is scarcely objective. This Channis, now, is
ambitious—for himself. He is completely trustworthy—out of no loyalty but to
himself. He knows that it is on my coattails that he rides and he would do
anything to increase my power that the ride might be long and far and that the
destination might be glorious. If he goes with you, there is just that added
push behind his seeking—that push for himself. ‘
“Then,” said Pritcher. still insistent, “why not remove my
own Conversion, if you think that will improve me. I can scarcely be
mistrusted, now.”
“That never, Pritcher. While you are within arm's reach, or
blaster reach, of myself, you will remain firmly held in Conversion. If I were
to release you this minute, I would be dead the next.”
The general's nostrils flared. “I am hurt that you should
think so.”
“I don't mean to hurt you, but it is impossible for you to
realize what your feelings would be if free to form themselves along the lines
of your natural motivation. The human mind resents control. The ordinary human
hypnotist cannot hypnotize a person against his will for that reason. I can,
because I'm not a hypnotist, and, believe me, Pritcher, the resentment that you
cannot show and do not even know you possess is something I wouldn't want to
face.”
Pritcher's head bowed. Futility wrenched him and left him
gray and haggard inside. He said with an effort, “But how can you trust this
man. I mean, completely—as you can trust me in my Conversion.”
“Well, I suppose I can't entirely. That is why you must go
with him. You see, Pritcher,” and the Mule buried himself in the large armchair
against the soft back of which he looked like an angularly animated toothpick,
“if he should stumble on the Second Foundation—if it should occur to him that
an arrangement with them might be more profitable than with me—You understand?”
A profoundly satisfied light blazed in Pritcher's eyes. “That
is better, Sir.”
“Exactly. But remember, he must have a free rein as far as
possible.”
“Certainly.”
“And... uh... Pritcher. The young man is handsome, pleasant
and extremely charming. Don't let him fool you. He's a dangerous and
unscrupulous character. Don't get in his way unless you're prepared to meet him
properly. That's all.”
The Mule was alone again. He let the lights die and the wall
before him kicked to transparency again. The sky was purple now, and the city
was a smudge of light on the horizon.
What was it all for? And if he were the master of all there
was—what then? Would it really stop men like Pritcher. from being straight and
tall, self-confident, strong? Would Bail Channis lose his looks? Would he
himself be other than he was?
He cursed his doubts. What was he really after?
The cool, overhead warning light flickered. He could follow
the progress of the man who had entered the palace and, almost against his
will, he felt the soft wash of emotional content touch the fibers of his brain.
He recognized the identity without an effort. It was
Channis. Here the Mule saw no uniformity, but the primitive diversity of a
strong mind, untouched and unmolded except by the manifold disorganizations of
the Universe. It writhed in floods and waves. There was caution on the surface,
a thin, smoothing effect, but with touches of cynical ribaldry in the hidden
eddies of it. And underneath there was the strong flow of self-interest and
self-love, with a gush of cruel humor here and there, and a deep, still pool of
ambition underlying all.
The Mule felt that he could reach out and dam the current,
wrench the pool from its basin and turn it in another course, dry up one flow
and begin another. But what of it? If he could bend Channis’ curly head in the
profoundest adoration, would that change his own grotesquerie that made him
shun the day and love the night, that made him a recluse inside an empire that
was unconditionally big?
The door behind him opened, and he turned. The transparency
of the wall faded to opacity, and the darkness gave way to the whitely blazing
artifice of atomic power.
Bail Channis sat down lightly and said: “This is a
not-quite-unexpected honor, sir.”
The Mule rubbed his proboscis with all four fingers at once
and sounded a bit irritable in his response. “Why so, young man?”
“A hunch, I suppose. Unless I want to admit that I've been
listening to rumors.”
“Rumors? Which one of the several dozen varieties are you
referring to?”
“Those that say a renewal of the Galactic Offensive is being
planned. It is a hope with me that such is true and that I might play an
appropriate part.”
“Then you think there is a Second Foundation?”
“Why not? It would make things so much more interesting.”
“And you find interest in it as well?”
“Certainly. In the very mystery of it! What better subject
could you find for conjecture? The newspaper supplements are full of nothing
else lately—which is probably significant. The Cosmos had one of its feature
writers compose a weirdie about a world consisting of beings of pure mind—the
Second Foundation, you see—who had developed mental force to energies large
enough to compete with any known to physical science. Spaceships could be
blasted light-years away, planets could be turned out of their orbits—”
“Interesting. Yes. But do you have any notions on the
subject? Do you subscribe to this mind-power notion?'
“Galaxy, no! Do you think creatures like that would stay on
their own planet? No, sir. I think the Second Foundation remains hidden because
it is weaker than we think.”
“In that case, I can explain myself very easily. How would
you like to head an expedition to locate the Second Foundation?”
For a moment Channis seemed caught up by the sudden rush of
events at just a little greater speed than he was prepared for. His tongue had
apparently skidded to a halt in a lengthening silence.
The Mule said dryly: “Well?”
Channis corrugated his forehead. “Certainly. But where am I
to go? Have you any information available?”
“General Pritcher will be with you—”
“Then I'm not to head it?”
“Judge for yourself when I'm done. Listen, you're not of the
Foundation. You're a native of Kalgan, aren't you? Yes. Well, then, your
knowledge of the Seldon plan may be vague. When the first Galactic Empire was
falling, Hari Seldon and a group of psychohistorians, analyzing the future
course of history by mathematical tools no longer available in these degenerate
times, set up two Foundations, one at each end of the Galaxy, in such a way
that the economic and sociological forces that were slowly evolving, would make
them serve as foci for the Second Empire. Hari Seldon planned on a thousand
years to accomplish that—and it would have taken thirty thousand without the
Foundations. But he couldn't count on me. I am a mutant and I am unpredictable
by psychohistory which can only deal with the average reactions of numbers. Do
you understand?”
“Perfectly, sir. But how does that involve me?'
“You'll understand shortly. I intend to unite the Galaxy
now—and reach Seldon's thousand-year goal in three hundred. One Foundation—the
world of physical scientists—is still flourishing, under me. Under the
prosperity and order of the Union, the atomic weapons they have developed are
capable of dealing with anything in the Galaxy—except perhaps the Second
Foundation. So I must know more about it. General Pritcher is of the definite
opinion that it does not exist at all. I know otherwise.”
Channis said delicately: “How do you know, sir?”
And the Mule's words were suddenly liquid indignation:
“Because minds under my control have been interfered with. Delicately! Subtly!
But not so subtly that I couldn't notice. And these interferences are increasing,
and hitting valuable men at important times. Do you wonder now that a certain
discretion has kept me motionless these years?
“That is your importance. General Pritcher is the best man
left me, so he is no longer safe. Of course, he does not know that. But you are
Unconverted and therefore not instantly detectable as a Mule's man. You may
fool the Second Foundation longer than one of my own men would—perhaps just
sufficiently longer. Do you understand?”
“Um-m-m. Yes. But pardon me, sir, if I question you. How are
these men of yours disturbed, so that I might detect change in General
Pritcher, in case any occurs. Are they Unconverted again? Do they become
disloyal?”
“No. I told you it was subtle. It's more disturbing than
that, because its harder to detect and sometimes I have to wait before acting,
uncertain whether a key man is being normally erratic or has been tampered
with. Their loyalty is left intact, but initiative and ingenuity are rubbed
out. I'm left with a perfectly normal person, apparently, but one completely
useless. In the last year, six have been so treated. Six of my best.” A corner
of his mouth lifted. “They're in charge of training bases now—and my most
earnest wishes go with them that no emergencies come up for them to decide
upon.”
“Suppose, sir... suppose it were not the Second Foundation. What
if it were another, such as yourself—another mutant?”
“The planning is too careful, too long range. A single man
would be in a greater hurry. No, it is a world, and you are to be my weapon
against it.”
Channis’ eyes shone as he said: “I'm delighted at the
chance.”
But the Mule caught the sudden emotional upwelling. He said:
“Yes, apparently it occurs to you, that you will perform a unique service,
worthy of a unique reward—perhaps even that of being my successor. Quite so.
But there are unique punishments, too, you know. My emotional gymnastics are
not confined to the creation of loyalty alone.”
And the little smile on his thin lips was grim, as Channis
leaped out of his seat in horror.
For just an instant, just one, flashing instant, Channis had
felt the pang of an overwhelming grief close over him. It had slammed down with
a physical pain that had blackened his mind unbearably, and then lifted. Now
nothing was left but the strong wash of anger.
The Mule said: “Anger won't help... yes, you're covering it
up now, aren't you? But I can see it. So just remember—that sort of business
can be made more intense and kept up. I've killed men by emotional control, and
there's no death crueler.”
He paused: “That's all!”
The Mule was alone again. He let the lights die and the wall
before him kicked to transparency again. The sky was black, and the rising body
of the Galactic Lens was spreading its bespanglement across the velvet depths
of space.
All that haze of nebula was a mass of stars so numerous that
they melted one into the other and left nothing but a cloud of light.
And all to be his—
And now but one last arrangement to make, and he could
sleep.
FIRST INTERLUDE
The Executive Council of the Second Foundation was in
session. To us they are merely voices. Neither the exact scene of the meeting
nor the identity of those present are essential at the point.
Nor, strictly speaking, can we even consider an exact
reproduction of any part of the session—unless we wish to sacrifice completely
even the minimum comprehensibility we have a right to expect.
We deal here with psychologists—and not merely
psychologists. Let us say, rather, scientists with a psychological orientation.
That is, men whose fundamental conception of scientific philosophy is pointed
in an entirely different direction from all of the orientations we know. The
“psychology” of scientists brought up among the axioms deduced from the
observational habits of physical science has only the vaguest relationship to
PSYCHOLOGY.
Which is about as far as I can go in explaining color to a
blind man—with myself as blind as the audience.
The point being made is that the minds assembled understood
thoroughly the workings of each other, not only by general theory but by the
specific application over a long period of these theories to particular
individuals. Speech as known to us was unnecessary. A fragment of a sentence
amounted almost to long-winded redundancy. A gesture, a grunt, the curve of a
facial line—even a significantly timed pause yielded informational juice.
The liberty is taken, therefore, of freely translating a
small portion of the conference into the extremely specific word-combinations
necessary to minds oriented from childhood to a physical science philosophy,
even at the risk of losing the more delicate nuances.
There was one “voice” predominant, and that belonged to the
individual known simply as the First Speaker.
He said: “It is apparently quite definite now as to what
stopped the Mule in his first mad rush. I can't say that the matter reflects
credit upon... well, upon the organization of the situation. Apparently, he
almost located us, by means of the artificially heightened brain-energy of what
they call a ‘psychologist’ on the First Foundation. This psychologist was
killed just before he could communicate his discovery to the Mule. The events
leading to that killing were completely fortuitous for all calculations below
Phase Three. Suppose you take over.”
It was the Fifth Speaker who was indicated by an inflection
of the voice. He said, in grim nuances: “It is certain that the situation was
mishandled. We are, of course, highly vulnerable under mass attack,
particularly an attack led by such a mental phenomenon as the Mule. Shortly
after he first achieved Galactic eminence with the conquest of the First
Foundation, half a year after to be exact, he was on Trantor. Within another
half year he would have been here and the odds would have been stupendously
against us—96. 3 plus or minus 0. 05% to be exact. We have spent considerable
time analyzing the forces that stopped him. We know, of course, what was
driving him on so in the first place. The internal ramifications of his
physical deformity and mental uniqueness are obvious to all of us. However, it
was only through penetration to Phase Three that we could determine—after the
fact—tbe possibility of his anomalous action in the presence of another human
being who had an honest affection for him.
“And since such an anomalous action would depend upon the
presence of such another human being at the appropriate time, to that extent
the whole affair was fortuitous. Our agents are certain that it was a girl that
killed the Mule's psychologist—a girl for whom the Mule felt trust out of
sentiment, and whom he, therefore, did not control mentally—simply because she
liked him.
“Since that event—and for those who want the details, a
mathematical treatment of the subject has been drawn up for the Central
Library—which warned us, we have held the Mule off by unorthodox methods with
which we daily risk SeIdon's entire scheme of history. That is all.”
The First Speaker paused an instant to allow the individuals
assembled to absorb the full implications. He said: “The situation is then
highly unstable. With Seldon's original scheme bent to the fracture point—and I
must emphasize that we have blundered badly in this whole matter, in our
horrible lack of foresight—we are faced with an irreversible breakdown of the
Plan. Time is passing us by. I think there is only one solution left us—and
even that is risky.
“We must allow the Mule to find us—in a sense.”
Another pause, in which he gathered the reactions, then: “I
repeat—in a sense!”
2
Two Men without the Mule
The ship was in near-readiness. Nothing lacked, but the destination.
The Mule had suggested a return to Trantor—the world that was the bulk of an
incomparable Galactic metropolis of the hugest Empire mankind had ever
known—the dead world that had been capital of all the stars.
Pritcher disapproved. It was an old path—sucked dry.
He found Bail Channis in the ship's navigation room. The
young man's curly hair was just sufficiently disheveled to allow a single curl
to droop over the forehead—as if it had been carefully placed there—and even
teeth showed in a smile that matched it. Vaguely, the stiff officer felt
himself harden against the other.
Channis’ excitement was evident, “Pritcher, it's too far a
coincidence.”
The general said coldly: “I'm not aware of the subject of
conversation.”
“OhWell, then drag up a chair, old man, and let's get into
it. I've been going over your notes. I find them excellent.”
“How... pleasant that you do.”
“But I'm wondering if you've come to the conclusions I have.
Have you ever tried analyzing the problem deductively? I mean, it's all very
well to comb the stars at random, and to have done all you did in five
expeditions is quite a bit of star-hopping. That's obvious. But have you
calculated how long it would take to go through every known world at this rate?”
“Yes. Several times,” Pritcher felt no urge to meet the
young man halfway, but there was the importance of filching the other's
mind—the other's uncontrolled, and hence, unpredictable, mind.
“Well, then, suppose we're analytical about it and try to
decide just what we're looking for?”
“The Second Foundation,” said Pritcher, grimly.
“A Foundation of psychologists,” corrected Channis, “who are
is weak in physical science as the First Foundation was weak in psychology. Well,
you're from the First Foundation, which I'm not. The implications are probably
obvious to you. We must find a world which rules by virtue of mental skills,
and yet which is very backwards scientifically.”
“Is that necessarily so?” questioned Pritcher, quietly. “Our
own ‘Union of Worlds’ isn't backwards scientifically, even though our ruler
owes his strength to his mental powers.”
“Because he has the skills of the First Foundation to draw
upon,” came the slightly impatient answer, “and that is the only such reservoir
of knowledge in the Galaxy. The Second Foundation must live among the dry
crumbs of the broken Galactic Empire. There are no pickings there.”
“So then you postulate mental power sufficient to establish
their rule over a group of worlds and physical helplessness as well?”
“Comparative physical helplessness. Against the decadent
neighboring areas, they are competent to defend themselves. Against the
resurgent forces of the Mule, with his background of a mature atomic economy,
they cannot stand. Else, why is their location so well-hidden, both at the
start by the founder, Hari Seldon, and now by themselves. Your own First
Foundation made no secret of its existence and did not have it made for them,
when they were an undefended single city on a lonely planet three hundred years
ago.”
The smooth lines of Pritcher's dark face twitched
sardonically. ‘And now that you've finished your deep analysis, would you like
a list of all the kingdoms, republics, planet states and dictatorships of one
sort or another in that political wilderness out there that correspond to your
description and to several factors besides?”
“All this has been considered then?” Channis lost none of
his brashness.
“You won't find it here, naturally, but we have a completely
worked out guide to the political units of the Opposing Periphery. Really, did
you suppose the Mule would work entirely hit-and-miss?”
“Well, then” and the young man's voice rose in a burst of
energy, “what of the Oligarchy of Tazenda?”
Pritcher touched his ear thoughtfully, “Tazenda? Oh, I think
I know it. They're not in the Periphery, are they? It seems to me they're fully
a third of the way towards the center of the Galaxy.”
“Yes. What of that?”
“The records we have place the Second Foundation at the
other end of the Galaxy. Space knows it's the only thing we have to go on. Why
talk of Tazenda anyway? Its angular deviation from the First Foundation radian
is only about one hundred ten to one hundred twenty degrees anyway. Nowhere
near one hundred eighty.”
“There's another point in the records. The Second Foundation
was established at ‘Star's End. ’”
“No such region in the Galaxy has ever been located.”
“Because it was a local name, suppressed later for greater
secrecy. Or maybe one invented for the purpose by Seldon and his group. Yet
there's some relationship between ‘Star's End’ and ‘Tazenda,’ don't you think?”
“A vague similarity in sound? Insufficient.”
'Have you ever been there?”
“No.”
“Yet it is mentioned in your records.”
“Where? Oh, yes, but that was merely to take on food and
water. There was certainly nothing remarkable about the world.”
“Did you land at the ruling planet? The center of
government?”
“I couldn't possibly say.”
Channis brooded about it under the other's cold gaze. Then,
“Would you look at the Lens with me for a moment?”
“Certainly.”
The Lens was perhaps the newest feature of the interstellar
cruisers of the day. Actually, it was a complicated calculating machine which
could throw on a screen a reproduction of the night sky as seen from any given
point of the Galaxy.
Channis adjusted the co-ordinate points and the wall lights
of the pilot room were extinguished. In the dim red light at the control board
of the Lens, Channis’ face glowed ruddily. Pritcher sat in the pilot seat, long
legs crossed, face lost in the gloom.
Slowly, as the induction period passed, the points of light
brightened on the screen. And then they were thick and bright with the
generously populated star-groupings of the Galaxy's center.
“This,” explained Channis, “is the winter night-sky as seen
from Trantor. That is the important point that, as far as I know, has been
neglected so far in your search. All intelligent orientation must start from
Trantor as zero point. Trantor was the capital of the Galactic Empire. Even
more so scientifically and culturally, than politically. And, therefore, the
significance of any descriptive name should stem, nine times out of ten, from a
Trantorian orientation. You'll remember in this connection that, although
Seldon was from Helicon, towards the Periphery, his group worked on Trantor
itself.”
“What is it you're trying to show me?” Pritcher's level
voice plunged icily into the gathering enthusiasm of the other.
“The map will explain it. Do you see the dark nebula?” The
shadow of his arm fell upon the screen, which took on the bespanglement of the
Galaxy. The pointing finger ended on a tiny patch of black that seemed a hole
in the speckled fabric of light. “The stellagraphical records call it Pelot's
Nebula. Watch it. I'm going to expand the image.”
Pritcher had watched the phenomenon of Lens Image expansion
before but he still caught his breath. It was like being at the visiplate of a
spaceship storming through a horribly crowded Galaxy without entering
hyperspace. The stars diverged towards them from a common center, flared
outwards and tumbled off the edge of the screen. Single points became double,
then globular. Hazy patches dissolved into myriad points. And always that
illusion of motion.
Channis spoke through it all, “You'll notice that we are
moving along the direct line from Trantor to Pelot's Nebula, so that in effect
we are still looking at a stellar orientation equivalent to that of Trantor. There
is probably a slight error because of the gravitic deviation of light that I
haven't the math to calculate for, but I'm sure it can't be significant.”
The darkness was spreading over the screen. As the rate of
magnification slowed, the stars slipped off the four ends of the screen in a
regretful leave-taking. At the rims of the growing nebula, the brilliant
universe of stars shone abruptly in token for that light which was merely
hidden behind the swirling unradiating atom fragments of sodium and calcium
that filled cubic parsecs of space.
And Channis pointed again, “This has been called ‘The Mouth’
by the inhabitants of that region of space. And that is significant because it
is only from the Trantorian orientation that it looks like a mouth.” What he
indicated was a rift in the body of the Nebula, shaped like a ragged, grinning
mouth in profile, outlined by the glazing glory of the starlight with which it
was filled.
“Follow The Mouth. ’” said Channis. “Follow ‘The Mouth’
towards the gullet as it narrows down to a thin, splintering line of light.
Again the screen expanded a trifle, until the Nebula
stretched away from “The Mouth” to block off all the screen but that narrow
trickle and Channis’ finger silently followed it down, to where it straggled to
a halt, and then, as his finger continued moving onward, to a spot where one
single star sparked lonesomely; and there his finger halted, for beyond that
was blackness, unrelieved.
“'Star's End,’” said the young man, simply. “The fabric of
the Nebula is thin there and the light of that one star finds its way through
in just that one direction—to shine on Trantor.”
“You're tying to tell me that—” the voice of the Mule's
general died in suspicion.
“I'm not trying. That is Tazenda—Star's End.”
The lights went on. The Lens flicked off. Pritcher reached
Channis in three long strides, “What made you think of this?”
And Channis leaned back in his chair with a queerly puzzled
expression on his face. “It was accidental. I'd like to take intellectual
credit for this, but it was only accidental. In any case, however it happens,
it fits. According to our references, Tazenda is an oligarchy. It rules
twenty-seven inhabited planets. It is not advanced scientifically. And most of
all, it is an obscure world that has adhered to a strict neutrality in the
local politics of that stellar region, and is not expansionist. I think we
ought to see it.”
“Have you informed the Mule of this?”
“No. Nor shall we. We're in space now, about to make the
first hop.”
Pritcher, in sudden horror, sprang to the visiplate. Cold
space met his eyes when he adjusted it. He gazed fixedly at the view, then
turned. Automatically, his hand reached for the hard, comfortable curve of the
butt of his blaster.
“By whose order?”
“By my order, general”it was the first time Channis had ever
used the other's title -“while I was engaging you here. You probably felt no
acceleration, because it came at the moment I was expanding the field of the
Lens and you undoubtedly imagined it to be an illusion of the apparent star
motion.”
“Why? Just what are you doing? What was the point of your
nonsense about Tazenda, then?”
“That was no nonsense. I was completely serious. We're going
there. We left today because we were scheduled to leave three days from now. General,
you don't believe there is a Second Foundation, and I do. You are merely
following the Mule's orders without faith; I recognize a serious danger. The
Second Foundation has now had five years to prepare. How they've prepared, I
don't know, but what if they have agents on Kalgan. If I carry about in my mind
the knowledge of the whereabouts of the Second Foundation, they may discover
that. My life might be no longer safe, and I have a great affection for my
life. Even on a thin and remote possibility such as that, I would rather play
safe. So no one knows of Tazenda but you, and you found out only after we were
out in space. And even so, there is the question of the crew.” Channis was
smiling again, ironically, in obviously complete control of the situation.
Pritcher's hand fell away from his blaster, and for a moment
a vague discomfort pierced him. What kept him from action? What deadened him?
There was a time when he was a rebellious and unpromoted captain of the First
Foundation's commercial empire, when it would have been himself rather than
Channis who would have taken prompt and daring action such as that. Was the
Mule right? Was his controlled mind so concerned with obedience as to lose
initiative? He felt a thickening despondency drive him down into a strange
lassitude.
He said, “Well done! However, you will consult me in the
future before making decisions of this nature.”
The flickering signal caught his attention.
“That's the engine room,” said Channis, casually. “They
warmed up on five minutes’ notice and I asked them to let me know if there was
any trouble. Want to hold the fort?”
Pritcher nodded mutely, and cogitated in the sudden
loneliness on the evils of approaching fifty. The visiplate was sparsely
starred. The main body of the Galaxy misted one end. What if he were free of
the Mule's influence—
But he recoiled in horror at the thought.
Chief Engineer Huxlani looked sharply at the young,
ununiformed man who carried himself with the assurance of a Fleet officer and
seemed to be in a position of authority. Huxlani, as a regular Fleet man from
the days his chin had dripped milk, generally confused authority with specific
insignia.
But the Mule had appointed this man, and the Mule was, of
course, the last word. The only word for that matter. Not even subconsciously
did he question that. Emotional control went deep.
He handed Channis the little oval object without a word.
Channis hefted it, and smiled engagingly.
“You're a Foundation man, aren't you, chief?”
“Yes, sir. I served in the Foundation Fleet eighteen years
before the First Citizen took over.”
“Foundation training in engineering?”
“Qualified Technician, First Class—Central School on
Anacreon.”
“Good enough. And you found this on the communication
circuit, where I asked you to look?”
“Yes, Sir.”
“Does it belong there?”
“No, Sir.”
“Then what is it?”
“A hypertracer, sir.”
“That's not enough. I'm not a Foundation man. What is it?”
“It's a device to allow the ship to be traced through
hyperspace.”
“In other words we can be followed anywhere.”
“Yes, Sir.”
“All right. It's a recent invention, isn't it? It was
developed by one of the Research Institutes set up by the First Citizen, wasn't
it?”
“I believe so, Sir.”
“And its workings are a government secret. Right?”
“I, believe so, Sir.”
“Yet here it is. Intriguing.”
Channis tossed the hypertracer methodically from hand to
hand for a few seconds. Then, sharply, he held it out, “Take it, then, and put
it back exactly where you found it and exactly how you found it. Understand?
And then forget this incident. Entirely!”
The chief choked down his near-automatic salute, turned
sharply and left.
The ship bounded through the Galaxy, its path a wide-spaced
dotted line through the stars. The dots, referred to, were the scant stretches
of ten to sixty light-seconds spent in normal space and between them stretched
the hundred-and-up light-year gaps that represented the “hops” through
hyperspace.
Bail Channis sat at the control panel of the Lens and felt
again the involuntary surge of near-worship at the contemplation of it.
He was not a Foundation man and the interplay of forces at
the twist of a knob or the breaking of a contact was not second nature to him.
Not that the Lens ought quite to bore even a Foundation man.
Within its unbelievably compact body were enough electronic circuits to
pinpoint accurately a hundred million separate stars in exact relationship to
each other. And as if that were not a feat in itself, it was further capable of
translating any given portion of the Galactic Field along any of the three
spatial axes or to rotate any portion of the Field about a center.
It was because of that, that the Lens had performed a
near-revolution in interstellar travel. In the younger days of interstellar
travel, the calculation of each “hop” through hyperspace meant any amount of
work from a day to a week—and the larger portion of such work was the more or
less precise calculation of “Ship's Position” on the Galactic scale of
reference. Essentially that meant the accurate observation of at least three
widely-spaced stars, the position of which, with reference to the arbitrary
Galactic triple-zero, were known.
And it is the word “known,” that is the catch. To any who
know the star field well from one certain reference point, stars are as
individual as people. Jump ten parsecs, however, and not even your own sun is
recognizable. It may not even be visible.
The answer was, of course, spectroscopic analysis. For
centuries, the main object of interstellar engineering was the analysis of the
“light signature” of more and more stars in greater and greater detail. With
this, and the growing precision of the “hop” itself, standard routes of travel
through the Galaxy were adopted and interstellar travel became less of an art
and more of a science.
And yet, even under the Foundation with improved calculating
machines and a new method of mechanically scanning the star field for a known
“light signature,” it sometimes took days to locate three stars and then
calculate position in regions not previously familiar to the pilot.
It was the Lens that changed all that. For one thing it
required only a single known star. For another, even a space tyro such as
Channis could operate it.
The nearest sizable star at the moment was Vincetori,
according to “hop” calculations, and on the visiplate now, a bright star was
centered. Channis hoped that it was Vincetori.
The field screen of the Lens was thrown directly next that
of the visiplate and with careful fingers, Channis punched out the co-ordinates
of Vincetori. He closed a relay, and the star field sprang to bright view. In
it, too, a bright star was centered, but otherwise there seemed no
relationship. He adjusted the Lens along the Z-Axis and expanded the Field to
where the photometer showed both centered stars to be of equal brightness.
Channis looked for a second star, sizably bright, on the
visiplate and found one on the field screen to correspond. Slowly, he rotated
the screen to similar angular deflection. He twisted his mouth and rejected the
result with a grimace. Again he rotated and another bright star was brought
into position, and a third. And then he grinned. That did it. Perhaps a
specialist with trained relationship perception might have clicked first try,
but he'd settle for three.
That was the adjustment. In the final step, the two fields
overlapped and merged into a sea of not-quite-rightness. Most of the stars were
close doubles. But the fine adjustment did not take long. The double stars
melted together, one field remained, and the “Ship's Position” could now be
read directly off the dials. The entire procedure had taken less than half an
hour.
Channis found Han Pritcher in his private quarters. The
general was quite apparently preparing for bed. He looked up.
“News?”
“Not particularly. We'll be at Tazenda in another hop.”
“I know.”
“I don't want to bother you if you're turning in, but have
you looked through the film we picked up in Cil?”
Han Pritcher cast a disparaging look at the article in
question, where it lay in its black case upon his low bookshelf, “Yes.”
“And what do you think?”
“I think that if there was ever any science to History, it
has been quite lost in this region of the Galaxy.”
Channis grinned broadly, “I know what you mean. Rather
barren, isn't it?”
“Not if you enjoy personal chronicles of rulers. Probably
unreachable, I should say, in both directions. Where history concerns mainly
personalities, the drawings become either black or white according to the
interests of the writer. I find it all remarkably useless.”
“But there is talk about Tazenda. That's the point I tried
to make when I gave you the film. It's the only one I could find that even mentioned
them.”
“All right. They have good rulers and bad. They've conquered
a few planets, won some battles, lost a few. There is nothing distinctive about
them. I don't think much of your theory, Channis.”
“But you've missed a few points. Didn't you notice that they
never formed coalitions? They always remained completely outside the politics
of this corner of the star swarm. As you say, they conquered a few planets, but
then they stopped—and that without any startling defeat of consequence. It's
just as if they spread out enough to protect themselves, but not enough to
attract attention.”
“Very well,” came the unemotional response. “I have no
objection to landing. At the worst—a little lost time.”
“Oh, no. At the worst—complete defeat. If it is the Second
Foundation. Remember it would be a world of space-knows-how-many Mules.”
“What do you plan to do?”
“Land on some minor subject planet. Find out as much as we
can about Tazenda first, then improvise from that.”
“All right. No objection. If you don't mind now, I would
like the light out.”
Channis left with a wave of his hand.
And in the darkness of a tiny room in an island of driving
metal lost in the vastness of space, General Han Pritcher remained awake,
following the thoughts that led him through such fantastic reaches.
If everything he had so painfully decided were true—and how
all the facts were beginning to fit—then Tazenda was the Second Foundation. There
was no way out. But how? How?
Could it be Tazenda? An ordinary world? One without
distinction? A slum lost amid the wreckage of an Empire? A splinter among the
fragments? He remembered, as from a distance, the Mule's shriveled face and his
thin voice as he used to speak of the old Foundation psychologist, Ebling Mis,
the one man who had—maybe—learned the secret of the Second Foundation.
Pritcher recalled the tension of the Mule's words: “It was
as if astonishment had overwhelmed Mis. It was as though something about the
Second Foundation had surpassed all his expectations, had driven in a direction
completely different from what he might have assumed. If I could only have read
his thoughts rather than his emotions. Yet the emotions were plain—and above
everything else was this vast surprise.”
Surprise was the keynote. Something supremely astonishing! And
now came this boy, this grinning youngster, glibly joyful about Tazenda and its
undistinguished subnormality. And he had to be right. He had to. Otherwise,
nothing made sense.
Pritcher's last conscious thought had a touch of grimness. That
hypertracer along the Etheric tube was still there. He had checked it one hour
back, with Channis well out of the way.
SECOND INTERLUDE
It was a casual meeting in the anteroom of the Council
Chamber—just a few moments before passing into the Chamber to take up the
business of the day—and the few thoughts flashed back and forth quickly.
“So the Mule is on his way.”
“That's what I hear, too. Risky! Mighty risky!”
“Not if affairs adhere to the functions set up.”
“The Mule is not an ordinary man—and it is difficult to
manipulate his chosen instruments without detection by him. The controlled
minds are difficult to touch. They say he's caught on to a few cases.”
“Yes, I don't see how that can be avoided.”
“Uncontrolled minds are easier. But so few are in positions
of authority under him—”
They entered the Chamber. Others of the Second Foundation
followed them.
3
Two Men and a Peasant
Rossem is one of those marginal worlds usually neglected in
Galactic history and scarcely ever obtruding itself upon the notice of men of
the myriad happier planets.
In the latter days of the Galactic Empire, a few political
prisoners had inhabited its wastes, while an observatory and a small Naval
garrison served to keep it from complete desertion. Later, in the evil days of
strife, even before the time of Hari Seldon, the weaker sort of men, tired of
the periodic decades of insecurity and danger; weary of sacked planets and a
ghostly succession of ephemeral emperors making their way to the Purple for a
few wicked, fruitless years—these men fled the populated centers and sought
shelter in the barren nooks of the Galaxy.
Along the chilly wastes of Rossem, villages huddled. Its sun
was a small ruddy niggard that clutched its dribble of heat to itself, while
snow beat thinly down for nine months of the year. The tough native grain lay
dormant in the soil those snow-filled months, then grew and ripened in almost
panic speed, when the sun's reluctant radiation brought the temperature to
nearly fifty.
Small, goatlike animals cropped the grasslands, kicking the
thin snow aside with tiny, tri-hooved feet.
The men of Rossem had, thus, their bread and their milk—and
when they could spare an animal—even their meat. The darkly ominous forests
that gnarled their way over half of the equatorial region of the planet
supplied a tough, fine-grained wood for housing. This wood, together with
certain furs and minerals, was even worth exporting, and the ships of the
Empire came at times and brought in exchange farm machinery, atomic heaters,
even televisor sets. The last was not really incongruous, for the long winter
imposed a lonely hibernation upon the peasant.
Imperial history flowed past the peasants of Rossem. The
trading ships might bring news in impatient spurts; occasionally new fugitives
would arrive—at one time, a relatively large group arrived in a body and
remained—and these usually had news of the Galaxy.
It was then that the Rossemites learned of sweeping battles
and decimated populations or of tyrannical emperors and rebellious viceroys. And
they would sigh and shake their heads, and draw their fur collars closer about
their bearded faces as they sat about the village square in the weak sun and
philosophized on the evil of men.
Then after a while, no trading ships arrived at all, and
life grew harder. Supplies of foreign, soft food, of tobacco, of machinery
stopped. Vague word from scraps gathered on the televisor brought increasingly
disturbing news. And finally it spread that Trantor had been sacked. The great
capital world of all the Galaxy, the splendid, storied, unapproachable and
incomparable home of the emperors had been despoiled and ruined and brought to
utter destruction.
It was something inconceivable, and to many of the peasants
of Rossem, scratching away at their fields, it might well seem that the end of
the Galaxy was at hand.
And then one day not unlike other days a ship arrived again.
The old men of each village nodded wisely and lifted their old eyelids to
whisper that thus it had been in their father's time—but it wasn't, quite.
This ship was not an Imperial ship. The glowing
Spaceship-and-Sun of the Empire was missing from its prow. It was a stubby
affair made of scraps of older ships—and the men within called themselves
soldiers of Tazenda.
The peasants were confused. They had not heard of Tazenda,
but they greeted the soldiers nevertheless in the traditional fashion of
hospitality. The newcomers inquired closely as to the nature of the planet, the
number of its inhabitants, the number of its cities—a word mistaken by the
peasants to mean “villages” to the confusion of all concerned—its type of
economy and so on.
Other ships came and proclamations were issued all over the
world that Tazenda was now the ruling world, that tax-collecting stations would
be established girdling the equator—the inhabited region—that percentages of
grain and furs according to certain numerical formulae would be collected
annually.
The Rossemites had blinked solemnly, uncertain of the word
“taxes.” When collection time came, many had paid, or had stood by in confusion
while the uniformed, other-wordlings loaded the harvested corn and the pelts on
to the broad ground-cars.
Here and there indignant peasants banded together and
brought out ancient hunting weapons—but of this nothing ever came. Grumblingly
they had disbanded when the men of Tazenda came and with dismay watched their
hard struggle for existence become harder.
But a new equilibrium was reached. The Tazendian governor
lived dourly in the village of Gentri, from which all Rossemites were barred. He
and the officials under him were dim otherworld beings that rarely impinged on
the Rossemite ken. The tax-farmers, Rossemites in the employ of Tazenda, came
periodically, but they were creatures of custom now—and the peasant had learned
how to hide his grain and drive his cattle into the forest, and refrain from
having his hut appear too ostentatiously prosperous. Then with a dull,
uncomprehending expression he would greet all sharp questioning as to his
assets by merely pointing at what they could see.
Even that grew less, and taxes decreased, almost as If
Tazenda wearied of extorting pennies from such a world.
Trading sprang up and perhaps Tazenda found that more
profitable. The men of Rossem no longer received in exchange the polished
creations of the Empire, but even Tazendian machines and Tazendian food was
better than the native stuff. And there were clothes for the women of other
than gray home-spun, which was a very important thing.
So once again, Galactic history glided past peacefully
enough, and the peasants scrabbIed life out of the hard soil.
Narovi blew into his beard as he stepped out of his cottage.
The first snows were sifting across the hard ground and the
sky was a dull, overcast pink. He squinted carefully upward and decided that no
real storm was in sight. He could travel to Gentri without much trouble and get
rid of his surplus grain in return for enough canned foods to last the winter.
He roared back through the door, which he opened a crack for
the purpose: “Has the car been fed its fuel, yunker?”
A voice shouted from within, and then Narovi's oldest son,
his short, red beard not yet completely outgrown its boyish sparseness, joined
him.
“The car,” he said, sullenly, “is fueled and rides well, but
for the bad condition of the axles. For that I am of no blame. I have told you
it needs expert repairs.”
The old man stepped back and surveyed his son through
lowering eyebrows, then thrust his hairy chin outward: “And is the fault mine? Where
and in what manner may I achieve expert repairs? Has the harvest then been
anything but scanty for five years? Have my herds escaped the pest? Have the
pelts climbed of themselves—”
“Narovi!” The well-known voice from within stopped him in
mid-word. He grumbled, “Well, well—and now your mother must insert herself into
the affairs of a father and his son. Bring out the car, and see to it that the
storage trailers are securely attached.”
He pounded his gloved hands together, and looked upward
again. The dimly-ruddy clouds were gathering and the gray sky that showed in
the rifts bore no warmth. The sun was hidden.
He was at the point of looking away, when his dropping eyes
caught and his finger almost automatically rose on high while his mouth fell
open in a shout, in complete disregard of the cold air.
“Wife,” he called vigorously, “Old woman—come here.”
An indignant head appeared at a window. The woman's eyes
followed his finger, gaped. With a cry, she dashed down the wooden stairs,
snatching up an old wrap and a square of linen as she went. She emerged with
the linen wrapped insecurely over her head and ears, and the wrap dangling from
her shoulders.
She snuffled: “It is a ship from outer space.”
And Narovi remarked impatiently: “And what else could it be?
We have visitors, old woman, visitors!”
The ship was sinking slowly to a landing on the bare frozen
field in the northern portions of Narovi's farm.
“But what shall we do?” gasped the woman. “Can we offer
these people hospitality? Is the dirt floor of our hovel to be theirs and the
pickings of last week's hoecake?”
“Shall they then go to our neighbors?” Narovi purpled past
the crimson induced by the cold and his arms in their sleek fur covering lunged
out and seized the woman's brawny shoulders.
“Wife of my soul,” he purred, “you will take the two chairs
from our room downstairs; you will see that a fat youngling is slaughtered and
roasted with tubers; you will bake a fresh hoecake. I go now to greet these men
of power from outer space... and... and—” He paused, placed his great cap awry,
and scratched hesitantly. “Yes, I shall bring my jug of brewed grain as well. Hearty
drink is pleasant.”
The woman's mouth had flapped idly during this speech. Nothing
came out. And when that stage passed, it was only a discordant screech that
issued.
Narovi lifted a finger, “Old woman, what was it the village
Elders said a se'nnight since? Eh? Stir your memory. The Elders went from farm
to farm—themselves! Imagine the importance of it!—to ask us that should any ships
from outer space land, they were to be informed immediately on the orders of
the governor.
“And now shall I not seize the opportunity to win into the
good graces of those in power? Regard that ship. Have you ever seen its like?
These men from the outer worlds are rich, great. The governor himself sends
such urgent messages concerning them that the Elders walk from farm to farm in
the cooling weather. Perhaps the message is sent throughout all Rossem that
these men are greatly desired by the Lords of Tazenda—and it is on my farm that
they are landing.”
He fairly hopped for anxiety, “The proper hospitality
now—the mention of my name to the governor—and what may not be ours?”
His wife was suddenly aware of the cold biting through her
thin house-clothing. She leaped towards the door, shouting over her shoulders,
“Leave then quickly.”
But she was speaking to a man who was even then racing
towards the segment of the horizon against which the ship sank.
Neither the cold of the world, nor its bleak, empty spaces worried
General Han Pritcher. Nor the poverty of their surroundings, nor the perspiring
peasant himself.
What did bother him was the question of the wisdom of their
tactics? He and Channis were alone here.
The ship, left in space, could take care of itself in
ordinary circumstances, but still, he felt unsafe. It was Channis, of course,
who was responsible for this move. He looked across at the young man and caught
him winking cheerfully at the gap in the furred partition, in which a woman's
peeping eyes and gaping mouth momentarily appeared.
Channis, at least, seemed completely at ease. That fact
Pritcher savored with a vinegary satisfaction. His game had not much longer to
proceed exactly as he wished it. Yet, meanwhile their wrist ultrawave
sender-receivers were their only connection with the ship.
And then the peasant host smiled enormously and bobbed his
head several times and said in a voice oily with respect, “Noble Lords, I crave
leave to tell you that my eldest son—a good, worthy lad whom my poverty prevents
from educating as his wisdom deserves—has informed me that the Elders will
arrive soon. I trust your stay here has been as pleasant as my humble means—for
I am poverty-stricken, though a hard-working, honest, and humble farmer, as
anyone here will tell you—could afford.”
“Elders?” said Channis, lightly. “The chief men of the
region here?”
“So they are, Noble Lords, and honest, worthy men all of
them, for our entire village is known throughout Rossem as a just and righteous
spot—though living is hard and the returns of the fields and forests meager. Perhaps
you will mention to the Elders, Noble Lords, of my respect and honor for
travelers and it may happen that they will request a new motor wagon for our
household as the old one can scarcely creep and upon the remnant of it depends
our livelihood.”
He looked humbly eager and Han Pritcher nodded with thee
properly aloof condescension required of the role of “Noble, Lords” bestowed
upon them.
“A report of your hospitality shall reach the ears of your
Elders.”
Pritcher seized the next moments of isolation to speak to
the apparently half-sleeping Channis.
“I am not particularly fond of this meeting of the Elders,”
he said. “Have you any thoughts on the subject?”
Channis seemed surprised. “No. What worries you?”
“It seems we have better things to do than to become
conspicuous here. ‘
Channis spoke hastily, in a low monotoned voice: “It may be
necessary to risk becoming conspicuous in our next moves. We won't find the
type of men we want, Pritcher, by simply reaching out a hand into a dark bag
and groping. Men who rule by tricks of the mind need not necessarily be men in
obvious power. In the first place, the psychologists of the Second Foundation
are probably a very small minority of the total population, just as on your own
First Foundation, the technicians and scientists formed a minority. The
ordinary inhabitants are probably just that—very ordinary. The psychologists
may even be well hidden, and the men in the apparently ruling position, may
honestly think they are the true masters. Our solution to that problem may be
found here on this frozen lump of a planet.”
“I don't follow that at all.”
“Why, see here, it's obvious enough. Tazenda is probably a
huge world of millions or hundreds of millions. How could we identify the
psychologists among them and be able to report truly to the Mule that we have
located the Second Foundation? But here, on this tiny peasant world and subject
planet, an the Tazendian rulers, our host informs us, are concentrated in their
chief village of Gentri. There may be only a few hundred of them there,
Pritcher, and among them must be one or more of the men of the Second
Foundation. We will go there eventually, but let us see the Elders first—it's a
logical step on the way.”
They drew apart easily, as their black-bearded host tumbled
into the room again, obviously agitated.
“Noble Lords, the Elders are arriving. I crave leave to beg
you once more to mention a word, perhaps, on my behalf—” He almost bent double
in a paroxysm of fawning.
“We shall certainly remember you,” said Channis. “Are these
your Elders?”
They apparently were. There were three.
One approached. He bowed with a dignified respect and said:
“We are honored. Transportation has been provided, Respected sirs, and we hope
for the pleasure of your company at our Meeting Hall.”
THIRD INTERLUDE
The First Speaker gazed wistfully at the night sky. Wispy
clouds scudded across the faint stargleams. Space looked actively hostile. It
was cold and awful at best but now it contained that strange creature, the
Mule, and the very content seemed to darken and thicken it into ominous threat.
The meeting was over. It had not been long. There had been
the doubts and questionings inspired by the difficult mathematical problem of
dealing with a mental mutant of uncertain makeup. All the extreme permutations
had had to be considered.
Were they even yet certain? Somewhere in this region of
space—within reaching distance as Galactic spaces go—was the Mule. What would
he do?
It was easy enough to handle his men. They reacted—and were
reacting—according to plan.
But what of the Mule himself?
4
Two Men and the Elders
The Elders of this particular region of Rossem were not
exactly what one might have expected. They were not a mere extrapolation of the
peasantry; older, more authoritative, less friendly.
Not at all.
The dignity that had marked them at first meeting had grown
in impression till it had reached the mark of being their predominant
characteristic.
They sat about their oval table like so many grave and
slow-moving thinkers. Most were a trifle past their physical prime, though the
few who possessed beards wore them short and neatly arranged. Still, enough
appeared younger than forty to make it quite obvious that “Elders” was a term
of respect rather than entirely a literal description of age.
The two from outer space were at the head of the table and
in the solemn silence that accompanied a rather frugal meal that seemed
ceremonious rather than nourishing, absorbed the new, contrasting atmosphere.
After the meal and after one or two respectful remarks—too
short and simple to be called speeches—had been made by those of the Elders
apparently held most in esteem, an informality forced itself upon the assembly.
It was as if the dignity of greeting foreign personages had
finally given way to the amiable rustic qualities of curiosity and
friendliness.
They crowded around the two strangers and the flood of
questions came.
They asked if it were difficult to handle a spaceship, how
many men were required for the job, if better motors could be made for their
ground-cars, if it was true that it rarely snowed on other worlds as was said
to be the case with Tazenda, how many people lived on their world, if it was as
large as Tazenda, if it was far away, how their clothes were woven and what
gave them the metallic shimmer, why they did not wear furs, if they shaved
every day, what sort of stone that was in Pritcher's ring—The list stretched
out.
And almost always the questions were addressed to Pritcher
as though, as the elder, they automatically invested him with the greater authority.
Pritcher found himself forced to answer at greater and greater length. It was
like an immersion in a crowd of children. Their questions were those of utter
and disarming wonder. Their eagerness to know was completely irresistible and
would not be denied.
Pritcher explained that spaceships were not difficult to
handle and that crews varied with the size, from one to many, that the motors
of their ground-cars were unknown in detail to him but could doubtless be
improved, that the climates of worlds varied almost infinitely, that many
hundreds of millions lived on his world but that it was far smaller and more
insignificant than the great empire of Tazenda, that their clothes were woven
of silicone plastics in which metallic luster was artificially produced by
proper orientation of the surface molecules, and that they could be
artificially heated so that furs were unnecessary, that they shaved every day,
that the stone in his ring was an amethyst. The list stretched out. He found
himself thawing to these naive provincials against his will.
And always as he answered there was a rapid chatter among
the Elders, as though they debated the information gained. It was difficult to
follow these inner discussions of theirs for they lapsed into their own
accented version of the universal Galactic language that, through long
separation from the currents of living speech, had become archaic.
Almost, one might say, their curt comments among themselves
hovered on the edge of understanding, but just managed to elude the clutching
tendrils of comprehension.
Until finally Channis interrupted to say, “Good sirs, you
must answer us for a while, for we are strangers and would be very much
interested to know all we can of Tazenda.”
And what happened then was that a great silence fell and
each of the hitherto voluble Elders grew silent. Their hands, which had been
moving in such rapid and delicate accompaniment to their words as though to
give them greater scope and varied shades of meaning, fell suddenly limp. They
stared furtively at one another, apparently quite willing each to let the other
have all the floor.
Pritcher interposed quickly, “My companion asks this in
friendliness, for the fame of Tazenda fills the Galaxy and we, of course, shall
inform the governor of the loyalty and love of the Elders of Rossem.”
No sigh of relief was heard but faces brightened. An Elder
stroked his beard with thumb and forefinger, straightening its slight curl with
a gentle pressure, and said: “We are faithful servants of the Lords of
Tazenda.”
Pritcher's annoyance at Channis’ bald question subsided. It
was apparent, at least, that the age that he had felt creeping over him of late
had not yet deprived him of his own capacity for making smooth the blunders of
others.
He continued: “We do not know, in our far part of the
universe, much of the past history of the Lords of Tazenda. We presume they
have ruled benevolently here for a long time.”
The same Elder who spoke before, answered. In a soft,
automatic way he had become spokesman. He said: “Not the grandfather of the
oldest can recall a time in which the Lords were absent.”
“It has been a time of peace?”
“It has been a time of peace!” He hesitated. “The governor
is a strong and powerful Lord who would not hesitate to punish traitors. None
of us are traitors, of course.”
“He has punished some in the past, I imagine, as they
deserve.”
Again hesitation, “None here have ever been traitors, or our
fathers or our fathers’ fathers. But on other worlds, there have been such, and
death followed for them quickly. It is not good to think of for we are humble
men who are poor farmers and not concerned with matters of politics.”
The anxiety in his voice, the universal concern in the eyes
of all of them was obvious.
Pritcher said smoothly: “Could you inform us as to how we
can arrange an audience with your governor.”
And instantly an element of sudden bewilderment entered the
situation.
For after a long moment, the elder said: “Why, did you not
know? The governor will be here tomorrow. He has expected you. It has been a
great honor for us. We... we hope earnestly that you will report to him
satisfactorily as to our loyalty to him.”
Pritcher's smile scarcely twitched. “Expected us?”
The Elder looked wonderingly from one to the other. “Why...
it is now a week since we have been waiting for you.”
Their quarters were undoubtedly luxurious for the world. Pritcher
had lived in worse. Channis showed nothing but indifference to externals.
But there was an element of tension between them of a
different nature than hitherto. Pritcher, felt the time approaching for a
definite decision and yet there was still the desirability of additional
waiting. To see the governor first would be to increase the gamble to dangerous
dimensions and yet to win that gamble might multi-double the winnings. He felt
a surge of anger at the slight crease between Channis’ eyebrows, the delicate
uncertainty with which the young man's lower lip presented itself to an upper
tooth. He detested the useless play-acting and yearned for an end to it.
He said: “We seem to be anticipated.”
'Yes,” said Channis, simply.
“Just that? You have no contribution of greater pith to
make. We come here and find that the governor expects us. Presumably we shall
find from the governor that Tazenda itself expects us. Of what value then is
our entire mission?”
Channis looked up, without endeavoring to conceal the weary
note in his voice: “To expect us is one thing; to know who we are and what we
came for, is another.”
“Do you expect to conceal these things from men of the
Second Foundation?”
“Perhaps. Why not? Are you ready to throw your hand in? Suppose
our ship was detected in space. Is it unusual for a realm to maintain frontier
observation posts? Even if we were ordinary strangers, we would be of
interest.”
“Sufficient interest for a governor to come to us rather
than the reverse?'
Channis shrugged: “We'll have to meet that problem later. Let
us see what this governor is like.”
Pritcher bared his teeth in a bloodless kind of scowl. The
situation was becoming ridiculous.
Channis proceeded with an artificial animation: “At least we
know one thing. Tazenda is the Second Foundation or a million shreds of
evidence are unanimously pointing the wrong way. How do you interpret the
obvious terror in which these natives hold Tazenda? I see no signs of political
domination. Their groups of Elders apparently meet freely and without
interference of any sort. The taxation they speak of doesn't seem at all
extensive to me or efficiently carried through. The natives speak much of
poverty but seem sturdy and well-fed. The houses are uncouth and their villages
rude, but are obviously adequate for the purpose.
“In fact, the world fascinates me. I have never seen a more
forbidding one, yet I am convinced there is no suffering among the population
and that their uncomplicated lives manage to contain a well-balanced happiness
lacking in the sophisticated populations of the advanced centers.”
“Are you an admirer of peasant virtues, then?”
“The stars
forbid.” Channis seemed amused at the idea. “I merely point out the
significance of all this. Apparently, Tazenda is an efficient
administrator—efficient in a sense far different from the efficiency of the old
Empire or of the First Foundation, or even of our own Union. All these have
brought mechanical efficiency to their subjects at the cost of more intangible
values. Tazenda brings happiness and sufficiency. Don't you see that the whole
orientation of their domination is different? It is not physical, but
psychological.”
“Really?”
Pritcher, allowed himself irony. “And the terror with which the Elders spoke of
the punishment of treason by these kind hearted psychologist administrators?
How does that suit your thesis?”
“Were they the
objects of the punishment? They speak of punishment only of others. It is as if
knowledge of punishment has been so well implanted in them that punishment
itself need never be used. The proper mental attitudes are so inserted into
their minds that I am certain that not a Tazendian soldier exists on the
planet. Don't you see all this?”
“I'll see
perhaps,” said Pritcher, coldly, “when I see the governor. And what, by the
way, if our mentalities are handled?”
Channis replied
with brutal contempt: “You should be accustomed to that.”
Pritcher whitened
perceptibly, and, with an effort, turned away. They spoke to one another no
more that day.
It was in the
silent windlessness of the frigid night, as he listened to the soft, sleeping
motions of the other, that Pritcher silently adjusted his wrist-transmitter to
the ultrawave region for which Channis’ was unadjustable and, with noiseless
touches of his fingernail, contacted the ship.
The answer came
in little periods of noiseless vibration that barely lifted themselves above
the sensory threshold.
Twice Pritcher
asked: “Any communications at all yet?”
Twice the answer
came: “None. We wait always.”
He got out of
bed. It was cold in the room and he pulled the furry blanket around him as he
sat in the chair and stared out at the crowding stars so different in the
brightness and complexity of their arrangement from the even fog of the
Galactic Lens that dominated the night sky of his native Periphery.
Somewhere there
between the stars was the answer to the complications that overwhelmed him, and
he felt the yearning for that solution to arrive and end things.
For a moment he
wondered again if the Mule were right—if Conversion had robbed him of the firm
sharp edge of self-reliance. Or was it simply age and the fluctuations of these
last years?
He didn't really
care.
He was tired.
The governor of
Rossem arrived with minor ostentation. His only companion was the uniformed man
at the controls of the ground-car.
The ground-car
itself was of lush design but to Pritcher it appeared inefficient. It turned
clumsily; more than once it apparently balked at what might have been a
too-rapid change of gears. It was obvious at once from its design that it ran
on chemical, and not on atomic, fuel.
The Tazendian
governor stepped softly on to the thin layer of snow and advanced between two
lines of respectful Elders. He did not look at them but entered quickly. They
followed after him.
From the quarters
assigned to them, the two men of the Mule's Union watched. He—the governor—was
thickset, rather stocky, short, unimpressive.
But what of that?
Pritcher cursed
himself for a failure of nerve. His face, to be sure, remained icily calm.
There was no humiliation before Channis—but he knew very well that his blood
pressure had heightened and his throat had become dry.
It was not a case
of physical fear. He was not one of those dull-witted, unimaginative men of
nerveless meat who were too stupid ever to be afraid—but physical fear he could
account for and discount.
But this was
different. It was the other fear.
He glanced
quickly at Channis. The young man glanced idly at the nails of one hand and
poked leisurely at some trifling unevenness.
Something inside
Pritcher became vastly indignant. What had Channis to fear of mental handling?
Pritcher caught a
mental breath and tried to think back. How had he been before the Mule had
Converted him from the die-hard Democrat that he was. It was hard to remember.
He could not place himself mentally. He could not break the clinging wires that
bound him emotionally to the Mule. Intellectually, he could remember that he
had once tried to assassinate the Mule but not for all the straining he could
endure, could he remember his emotions at the time. That might be the self-defense
of his own mind, however, for at the intuitive thought of what those emotions
might have been—not realizing the details, but merely comprehending the drift
of it—his stomach grew queasy.
What if the
governor tampered with his mind?
What if the insubstantial
mental tendrils of a Second Foundationer insinuated itself down the emotional
crevices of his makeup and pulled them apart and rejoined them?
There had been no
sensation the first time. There had been no pain, no mental jar—not even a
feeling of discontinuity. He had always loved the Mule. If there had ever been
a time long before—as long before as five short years—when he had thought he
hadn't loved him, that he had hated him—that was just a horrid illusion. The
thought of that illusion embarrassed him.
But there had
been no pain.
Would meeting the
governor duplicate that? Would all that had gone before—all his service for the
Mule—all his life's orientation—join the hazy, other-life dream that held the
word, Democracy. The Mule also a dream, and only to Tazenda, his loyalty—
Sharply, he
turned away.
There was that
strong desire to retch.
And then Channis’
voice clashed on his ear, “I think this is it, general.”
Pritcher turned
again. An Elder had opened the door silently and stood with a dignified and
calm respect upon the threshold.
He said, “His
Excellency, Governor of Rossem, in the name of the Lords of Tazenda, is pleased
to present his permission for an audience and request your appearance before
him.”
“Sure thing,” and
Channis tightened his belt with a jerk and adjusted a Rossemian hood over his
head.
Pritcher's jaw
set. This was the beginning of the real gamble.
The governor of
Rossem was not of formidable appearance. For one thing, he was bareheaded, and
his thinning hair, light brown, tending to gray, lent him mildness. His bony
eye-ridges lowered at them, and his eyes, set in a fine network of surrounding
wrinkles, seemed calculating, but his fresh-cropped chin was soft and small
and, by the universal convention of followers of the pseudoscience of reading
character by facial bony structure, seemed “weak.”
Pritcher, avoided
the eyes and watched the chin. He didn't know whether that would be
effective—if anything would be.
The governor's
voice was high-pitched, indifferent: “Welcome to Tazenda. We greet you in
peace. You have eaten?”
His hand—long
fingers, gnarled veins—waved almost regally at the U-shaped table.
They bowed and
sat down. The governor sat at the outer side of the base of the U, they on the
inner; along both arms sat the double row of silent Elders.
The governor
spoke in short, abrupt sentences—praising the food as Tazendian
importations—and it had indeed a quality different if, somehow, not so much
better, than the rougher food of the Elders—disparaging Rossemian weather,
referring with an attempt at casualness to the intricacies of space travel.
Channis talked
little. Pritcher not at all.
Then it was over.
The small, stewed fruits were finished; the napkins used and discarded, and the
governor leaned back.
His small eyes
sparkled.
“I have inquired
as to your ship. Naturally, I would like to see that it receives due care and
overhaul. I am told its whereabouts are unknown.”
“True.” Channis
replied lightly. “We have left it in space. It is a large ship, suitable for
long journeys in sometimes hostile regions, and we felt that landing it here
might give rise to doubts as to our peaceful intentions. We preferred to land
alone, unarmed.”
“A friendly act,”
commented the governor, without conviction. “A large ship, you say?”
“Not a vessel of
war, excellency.”
“Ha, hum. Where
is it you come from?”
“A small world of
the Santanni sector, your excellency. It may be you are not aware of its
existence for it lacks importance. We are interested in establishing trade
relationships.”
“Trade, eh? And
what have you to sell?'
“Machines of all
sorts, excellency. In return, food, wood, ores
“Ha, hum.” The
governor seemed doubtful. “I know little these matters. Perhaps mutual profit
may be arranged. Perhaps, after I have examined your credentials at length—for
much information will be required by my government before matters may proceed,
you understand—and after I have looked over your ship, it would be advisable
for you to proceed to Tazenda.”
There was no
answer to that, and the governor's attitude iced perceptibly.
“It is necessary
that I see your ship, however.”
Channis said
distantly: “The ship, unfortunately, is undergoing repairs at the moment. If
your excellency would not object giving us forty-eight hours, it will be at
your service.”
“I am not
accustomed to waiting.”
For the first
time, Pritcher met the glare of the other, eye to eye, and his breath exploded
softly inside him. For a moment, he had the sensation of drowning, but then his
eyes tore away.
Channis did not
waver. He said: “The ship cannot be landed for forty-eight hours, excellency.
We are here and unarmed. Can you doubt our honest intentions?”
There was a long
silence, and then the governor said gruffly, “Tell me of the world from which
you come.”
That was all. It
passed with that. There was no more unpleasantness. The governor, having
fulfilled his official duty, apparently lost interest and the audience died a
dull death.
And when it was
all over, Pritcher found himself back in their quarters and took stock of
himself.
Carefully—holding
his breath—he “felt” his emotions. Certainly he seemed no different to himself,
but would he feel any difference? Had he felt different after the Mule's
Conversion? Had not everything seemed natural? As it should have been?
He experimented.
With cold
purpose, he shouted inside the silent caverns of his mind, and the shout was,
“The Second Foundation must be discovered and destroyed.”
And the emotion
that accompanied it was honest hate. There was not as much as a hesitation
involved in it.
And then it was
in his mind to substitute the word “Mule” for the phrase “Second Foundation”
and his breath caught at the mere emotion and his tongue clogged.
So far, good.
But had he been
handled otherwise—more subtly? Had tiny changes been made? Changes that he
couldn't detect because their very existence warped his judgment.
There was no way
to tell.
But he still felt
absolute loyalty to the Mule! If that were unchanged, nothing else really
mattered.
He turned his
mind to action again. Channis was busy at his end of the room. Pritcher's
thumbnail idled at his wrist communicator.
And then at the
response that came he felt a wave of relief surge over him and leave him weak.
The quiet muscles
of his face did not betray him, but inside he was shouting with joy—and when
Channis turned to face him, he knew that the farce was about over.
FOURTH INTERLUDE
The two Speakers
passed each other on the road and one stopped the other.
“I have word from
the First Speaker.”
There was a
half-apprehensive flicker in the other's eyes. “Intersection point?”
“Yes! May we live
to see the dawn!”
5
One Man and the
Mule
There was no sign
in any of Channis’ actions that he was aware of any subtle change in the
attitude of Pritcher, and in their relations to each other. He leaned back on
the hard wooden bench and spread-eagled his feet out in front of him.
“What did you
make of the governor?”
Pritcher shrugged:
“Nothing at all. He certainly seemed no mental genius to me. A very poor
specimen of the Second Foundation, if that's what he was supposed to be.”
“I don't think he
was, you know. I'm not sure what to make of it. Suppose you were a Second
Foundationer,” Channis grew thoughtful, “what would you do? Suppose you had an
idea of our purpose here. How would you handle us?”
“Conversion, of
course.”
“Like the Mule?”
Channis looked up, sharply. “Would we know if they had converted us? I
wonderAnd what if they were simply psychologists, but very clever ones.”
“In that case,
I'd have us killed rather quickly.”
“And our ship?
No.” Channis wagged a forefinger. “We're playing a bluff, Pritcher, old man. It
can only be a bluff. Even if they have emotional control down pat, we—you and
I—are only fronts. It's the Mule they must fight, and they're being just as
careful of us as we are of them. I'm assuming that they know who we are.”
Pritcher, stared
coldly: “What do you intend doing?”
“Wait.” The word
was bitten off. “Let them come to us. They're worried, maybe about the ship,
but probably about the Mule. They bluffed with the governor. It didn't work. We
stayed pat. The next person they'll send will be a Second Foundationer, and
he'll propose a deal of some sort.”
“And then?”
“And then we make
the deal.”
“I don't think
so.”
“Because you
think it will double-cross the Mule? It won't.”
“No, the Mule
could handle your double-crosses, any you could invent. But I still don't think
so.”
“Because you
think then we couldn't double-cross the Foundationers?”
“Perhaps not. But
that's not the reason.”
Channis let his
glance drop to what the other held in his fist, and said grimly: “You mean
that's the reason.”
Pritcher cradled
his blaster, “That's right. You are under arrest.”
“Why?”
“For treason to
the First Citizen of the Union.”
Channis’ lips
hardened upon one another: “What's going on?”
“Treason! As I
said. And correction of the matter, on my part.”
“Your proof? Or
evidence, assumptions, daydreams? Are you mad?”
“No. Are you? Do
you think the Mule sends out unweaned youngsters on ridiculous swashbuckling
missions for nothing? It was queer to me at the time. But I wasted time in
doubting myself. Why should he send you? Because you smile and dress well?
Because you're twenty-eight.”
“Perhaps because
I can be trusted. Or aren't you in the market for logical reasons?”
“Or perhaps
because you can't be trusted. Which is logical enough, as it turns out.”
“Are we matching
paradoxes, or is this all a word game to see who can say the least in the most
words?”
And the blaster
advanced, with Pritcher after it. He stood erect before the younger man: “Stand
up!”
Channis did so,
in no particular hurry, and felt the muzzle of the blaster touch his belt with
no shrinking of the stomach muscles.
Pritcher said:
“What the Mule wanted was to find the Second Foundation. He had failed and I
had failed, and the secret that neither of us can find is a well-hidden one. So
there was one outstanding possibility left—and that was to find a seeker who
ready knew the hiding-place.”
“Is that I?”
“Apparently it
was. I didn't know then, of course, but though my mind must be slowing, it
still points in the right direction. How easily we found Star's End! How
miraculously you examined the correct Field Region of the Lens from among an
infinite number of possibilties! And having done so, how nicely we observe just
the correct point for observation! You clumsy fool! Did you so underestimate me
that no combination of impossible fortuties struck you as being too much for me
to swallow?”
“You mean I've
been too successful?”
“Too successful
by half for any loyal man.”
“Because the
standards of success you set me were so low?”
And the blaster
prodded, though in the face that confront Channis only the cold glitter of the
eyes betrayed the growing anger: “Because you are in the pay of the Second
Foundation.”
“Pay?”infinite
contempt. “Prove that.”
“Or under the
mental influence.”
“Without the
Mule's knowledge? Ridiculous.”
“With the Mule's
knowledge. Exactly my point, my you dullard. With the Mule's knowledge. Do you
suppose else that you would be given a ship to play with? You led us to the
Second Foundation as you were supposed to do.”
“I thresh a
kernel of something or other out of this immensity of chaff. May I ask why I'm
supposed to be doing all this? If were a traitor, why should I lead you to the
Second Foundation? Why not hither and yon through the Galaxy, skipping gaily,
finding no more than you ever did?'
“For the sake of
the ship. And because the men of the Second Foundation quite obviously need
atomic warfare for self-defense.”
'You'll have to
do better than that. One ship won't mean thing to them, and if they think
they'll learn science from it a build atomic power plants next year, they are
very, very simple Second Foundationers, indeed. On the order of simplicity as
yourself, I should say.”
“You will have
the opportunity to explain that to the Mule.”
“We're going back
to Kalgan?”
“On the contrary.
We're staying here. And the Mule will join us in fifteen minutes—more or less.
Do you think he hasn't followed us, my sharp-witted, nimble-minded lump of
self-admiration? You have played the decoy well in reverse. You may not have
led our victims to us, but you have certainly led us to our victims.”
“May I sit down,”
said Channis, “and explain something to you in picture drawings? Please.”
“You will remain
standing.”
At that, I can
say it as well standing. You think the Mule followed us because of the
hypertracer on the communication circuit?”
The blaster might
have wavered. Channis wouldn't have sworn to it. He said: “You don't look
surprised. But I don't waste time doubting that you feel surprised. Yes, I knew
about it. And now, having shown you that I knew of something you didn't think I
did, I'll tell you something you don't know, that I know you don't.”
“You allow
yourself too many preliminaries, Channis. I should think your sense of
invention was more smoothly greased.
“There's on
invention to this. There have been traitors, of course, or enemy agents, if you
prefer that term. But the Mule knew of that in a rather curious way. It seems,
you see, that some of his Converted men had been tampered with.”
The blaster did
waver that time. Unmistakably.
“I emphasize
that, Pritcher. It was why he needed me. I was an Unconverted man. Didn't he
emphasize to you that he needed an Unconverted? Whether he gave you the real
reason or not?”
“Try something
else, Channis. If I were against the Mule, I'd know it.” Quietly, rapidly,
Pritcher was feeling his mind. It felt the same. It felt the same. Obviously
the man was lying.
“You mean you
feel loyal to the Mule. Perhaps. Loyalty wasn't tampered with. Too easily
detectable, the Mule said. But how do you feel mentally? Sluggish? Since you
started this trip, have you always felt normal? Or have you felt strange
sometimes, as though you weren't quite yourself? What are you trying to do, bore
a hole through me without touching the trigger?”
Pritcher withdrew
his blaster half an inch, “What are you trying to say?”
“I say that
you've been tampered with. You've been handled. You didn't see the Mule install
that hypertracer. You didn't see anyone do it. You just found it there, and
assumed it was the Mule, and ever since you've been assuming he was following
us. Sure, the wrist receiver you're wearing contacts the ship on a wave length
mine isn't good for. Do you think I didn't know that?” He was speaking quickly
now, angrily. His cloak of indifference had dissolved into savagery. “But it's
not the Mule that's coming toward us from out there. It's not the Mule.”
“Who, if not?”
“Well, who do you
suppose? I found that hypertracer, the day we left. But I didn't think it was
the Mule. He had no reason for indirection at that point. Don't you see the
nonsense of it? If I were a traitor and he knew that, I could be Converted as
easily as you were, and he would have the secret of the location of the Second Foundation
out of my mind without sending me half across the Galaxy. Can you keep a secret
from the Mule? And if I didn't know, then I couldn't lead him to it. So why
send me in either case?
“Obviously, that
hypertracer must have been put there by an agent of the Second Foundation.
That's who's coming towards us now. And would you have been fooled if your
precious mind hadn't been tampered with? What kind of normality have you that
you imagine immense folly to be wisdom? Me bring a ship to the Second Foundation?
What would they do with a ship?
“It's you they
want, Pritcher. You know more about the Union than anyone but the Mule, and
you're not dangerous to them while he is. That's why they put the direction of
search into my mind. Of course, it was completely impossible for me to find
Tazenda by random searchings of the Lens. I knew that. But I knew there was the
Second Foundation after us, and I knew they engineered it. Why not play their
game? It was a battle of bluffs. They wanted us and I wanted their location—and
space take the one that couldn't outbluff the other.
“But it's we that
will lose as long as you hold that blaster on me. And it obviously isn't your
idea. It's theirs. Give me the blaster, Pritcher. I know it seems wrong to you,
but it isn't your mind speaking, it's the Second Foundation within you. Give me
the blaster, Pritcher, and we'll face what's coming now, together.”
Pritcher, faced a
growing confusion in horror. Plausibility! Could he be so wrong? Why this
eternal doubt of himself? Why wasn't he sure? What made Channis sound so
plausible?
Plausibility!
Or was it his own
tortured mind fighting the invasion of the alien.
Was he split in
two?
Hazily, he saw
Channis standing before him, hand outstretched—and suddenly, he knew he was
going to give him the blaster.
And as the
muscles of his arm were on the point of contracting in the proper manner to do
so, the door opened, not hastily, behind him—and he turned.
There are perhaps
men in the Galaxy who can be confused for one another even by men at their
peaceful leisure. Correspondingly, there may be conditions of mind when even
unlikely pairs may be mis-recognized. But the Mule rises above any combination
of the two factors.
Not all
Pritcher's agony of mind prevented the instantaneous mental flood of cool vigor
that engulfed him.
Physically, the
Mule could not dominate any situation. Nor did he dominate this one.
He was rather a
ridiculous figure in his layers of clothing that thickened him past his
normality without allowing him to reach normal dimensions even so. His face was
muffled and the usually dominant beak covered what was left in a cold-red
prominence.
Probably as a
vision of rescue, no greater incongruity could exist.
He said: “Keep
your blaster, Pritcher.”
Then he turned to
Channis, who had shrugged and seated himself: “The emotional context here seems
rather confusing and considerably in conflict. What's this about someone other
than myself following you?”
Pritcher
intervened sharply: “Was a hypertracer placed upon our ship by your orders,
sir?”
The Mule turned
cool eyes upon him, “Certainly. Is it very likely that any organization in the
Galaxy other than the Union of Worlds would have access to it?'
“He said—”
“Well, he's here,
general. Indirect quotation is not necessary. Have you been saying anything,
Channis?”
“Yes. But mistakes
apparently, sir. It has been my opinion that the tracer was put there by
someone in the pay of the Second Foundation and that we had been led here for
some purpose of theirs, which I was prepared to counter. I was under the
further impression that the general was more or less in their hands.”
“You sound as if
you think so no longer.”
“I'm afraid not.
Or it would not have been you at the door.”
“Well, then, let
us thresh this out.” The Mule peeled off the outer layers of padded, and
electrically heated clothing. “Do you mind if I sit down as well? Now—we are
safe here and perfectly free of any danger of intrusion. No native of this lump
of ice will have any desire to approach this place. I assure you of that,” and
there was a grim earnestness about his insistence upon his powers.
Channis showed
his disgust. “Why privacy? Is someone going to serve tea and bring out the
dancing girls?”
“Scarcely. What
was this theory of yours, young man? A Second Foundationer was tracing you with
a device which no one but I have and—how did you say you found this place?”
“Apparently, sir,
it seems obvious, in order to account for known facts, that certain notions
have been put into my head—”
“By these same
Second Foundationers?”
“No one else, I
imagine.”
“Then it did not
occur to you that if a Second Foundationer could force, or entice, or inveigle
you into going to the Second Foundation for purposes of his own—and I assume
you imagined he used methods similar to mine, though, mind you, I can implant
only emotions, not ideas—it did not occur to you that if he could do that there
was little necessity to put a hypertracer on you.
And Channis
looked up sharply and met his sovereign's large eyes with sudden startle.
Pritcher grunted and a visible relaxation showed itself in his shoulders.
“No,” said
Channis, “that hadn't occurred to me.”
“Or that if they
were obliged to trace you, they couldn't feel capable of directing you, and
that, undirected, you could have precious little chance of finding your way
here as you did. Did that occur to you?”
“That, neither.”
“Why not? Has
your intellectual level receded to a so-much-greater-than-probable degree?”
“The only answer
is a question, sir. Are you joining General Pritcher in accusing me of being a
traitor?”
“You have a
defense in case I am?”
“Only the one I
presented to the general. If I were a traitor and knew the whereabouts of the
Second Foundation, you could Convert me and learn the knowledge directly. If
you felt it necessary to trace me, then I hadn't the knowledge beforehand and
wasn't a traitor. So I answer your paradox with another.”
“Then your
conclusion?”
“That I am not a
traitor.”
“To which I must
agree, since your argument is irrefutable.”
“Then may I ask
you why you had us secretly followed?”
“Because to all
the facts there is a third explanation. Both you and Pritcher explained some
facts in your own individual ways, but not all. I—if you can spare me the
time—will explain all. And in a rather short time, so there is little danger of
boredom. Sit down, Pritcher, and give me your blaster. There is no danger of
attack on us any longer. None from in here and none from out there. None in
fact even from the Second Foundation. Thanks to you, Channis.”
The room was lit
in the usual Rossemian fashion of electrically heated wire. A single bulb was
suspended from the ceiling and in its dim yellow glow, the three cast their
individual shadows.
The Mule said:
“Since I felt it necessary to trace Channis, it was obvious I expect to gain
something thereby. Since he went to the Second Foundation with a startling
speed and directness, we can reasonably assume that that was what I was
expecting to happen. Since I did not gain the knowledge from him directly,
something must have been preventing me. Those are the facts. Channis, of
course, knows the answer. So do I. Do you see it, Pritcher?”
And Pritcher said
doggedly: “No, sir.”
“Then I'll
explain. Only one kind of man can both know the location of the Second
Foundation and prevent me from learning it. Channis, I'm afraid you're a Second
Foundationer yourself.”
And Channis’
elbows rested on his knees as he leaned forward, and through stiff and angry lips
said: “What is your direct evidence? Deduction has proven wrong twice today.”
“There is direct
evidence, too, Channis. It was easy enough. I told you that my men had been
tampered with. The tamperer must have been, obviously, someone who was a)
Unconverted, and b) fairly close to the center of things. The field was large
but not entirely unlimited. You were too successful, Channis. People liked you
too much. You got along too well. I wondered—
“And then I
summoned you to take over this expedition and it didn't set you back. I watched
your emotions. It didn't bother you. You overplayed the confidence there,
Channis. No man of real competence could have avoided a dash of uncertainty at
a job like that. Since your mind did avoid it, it was either a foolish one or a
controlled one.
It was easy to
test the alternatives. I seized your mind at a moment of relaxation and filled
it with grief for an instant and then removed it. You were angry afterwards
with such accomplished art that I could have sworn it was a natural reaction,
but for that which went first. For when I wrenched at your emotions, for just
one instant, for one tiny instant before you could catch yourself, your mind
resisted. It was all I needed to know.
“No one could
have resisted me, even for that tiny instant, without control similar to mine.”
Channis’ voice
was low and bitter: “Well, then? Now what?”
“And now you
die—as a Second Foundationer. Quite necessary, as I believe you realize.”
And once again
Channis stared into the muzzle of a blaster. A muzzle guided this time by a
mind, not like Pritcher's capable of offhand twisting to suit himself, but by
one as mature as his own and as resistant to force as his own.
And the period of
time allotted him for a correction of events was small.
What followed
thereafter is difficult to describe by one with the normal complement of senses
and the normal incapacity for emotional control.
Essentially, this
is what Channis realized in the tiny space of time involved in the pushing of
the Mule's thumb upon the trigger contact.
The Mule's
current emotional makeup was one of a hard and polished determination, unmisted
by hesitation in the least. Had Channis been sufficiently interested afterward
to calculate the time involved from the determination to shoot to the arrival
of the disintegrating energies, he might have realized that his leeway was
about one-fifth of a second.
That was barely
time.
What the Mule
realized in that same tiny space of time was that the emotional potential of
Channis’ brain had surged suddenly upwards without his own mind feeling any
impact and that, simultaneously, a flood of pure, thrilling hatred cascaded
upon him from an unexpected direction.
It was that new
emotional element that jerked his thumb off the contact. Nothing else could
have done it, and almost together with his change of action, came complete
realization of the new situation.
It was a tableau
that endured far less than the significance adhering to it should require from
a dramatic standpoint. There was the Mule, thumb off the blaster, staring
intently upon Channis There was Channis taut, not quite daring to breathe yet.
And there was Pritcher, convulsed in his chair; every muscle at a spasmodic
breaking point; every tendon writhing in an effort to hurl forward; his face
twisted at last out of schooled woodenness into an unrecognizable death mask of
horrid hate; and his eyes only and entirely and supremely upon the Mule.
Only a word or
two passed between Channis and the Mule—only a word or two and that utterly
revealing stream of emotional consciousness that remains forever the true
interplay of understanding between such as they. For the sake of our own limits,
it is necessary to translate into words what went on, then, and thenceforward.
Channis said,
tensely: “You're between two fires, First Citizen. You can't control two minds
simultaneously, not when one of them is mine—so you have your choice. Pritcher,
is free of your Conversion now. I've snapped the bonds. He's the old Pritcher;
the one who tried to kill you once; the one who thinks you're the enemy of all
that is free and right and holy; and he's the one besides who knows that you've
debased him to helpless adulation for five years. I'm holding him back now by
suppressing his will, but if you kill me, that ends, and in considerably less
time than you could shift your blaster or even your will—he will kill you.”
The Mule quite
plainly realized that. He did not move.
Channis
continued: “If you turn to place him under control, to kill him, to do
anything, you won't ever be quick enough to turn again to stop me.”
The Mule still
did not move. Only a soft sigh of realization.
“So,” said
Channis, “throw down the blaster, and let us be on even terms again, and you
can have Pritcher back.”
“I made a
mistake,” said the Mule, finally. “It was wrong to have a third party present
when I confronted you. It introduced one variable too many. It is a mistake
that must be paid for, I suppose.”
He dropped the
blaster carelessly, and kicked it to the other end of the room. Simultaneously,
Pritcher crumpled into profound sleep.
“He'll be normal
when he awakes,” said the Mule, indifferently.
The entire
exchange from the time the Mule's thumb had begun pressing the trigger-contact
to the time he dropped the blaster had occupied just under a second and a half
of time.
But just beneath
the borders of consciousness, for a time just above the borders of detection,
Channis caught a fugitive emotional gleam in the Mule's mind. And it was still
one of sure and confident triumph.
6
One Man, the
Mule—and Another
Two men,
apparently relaxed and entirely at ease, poles apart physically—with every
nerve that served as emotional detector quivering tensely.
The Mule, for the
first time in long years, had insufficient surety of his own way. Channis knew
that, though he could protect himself for the moment, it was an effort—and that
the attack upon him was none such for his opponent. In a test of endurance,
Channis knew he would lose.
But it was deadly
to think of that. To give away to the Mule an emotional weakness would be to
hand him a weapon. There was already that glimpse of something—a winner's
something—in the Mule's mind.
To gain time—
Why did the
others delay? Was that the source of the Mule's confidence? What did his
opponent know that he didn't? The mind he watched told nothing. If only he
could read ideas. And yet—
Channis braked
his own mental whirling roughly. There was only that; to gain time—
Channis said:
“Since it is decided, and not denied by myself after our little duel over
Pritcher, that I am a Second Foundationer, suppose you tell me why I came to
Tazenda.”
“Oh, no,” and the
Mule laughed, with high-pitched confidence, “I am not Pritcher. I need make no
explanations to you. You had what you thought were reasons. Whatever they were,
your actions suited me, and so I inquire no further.”
“Yet there must
be such gaps in your conception of the story. Is Tazenda the Second Foundation
you expected to find? Pritcher spoke much of your other attempt at finding it,
and of your psychologist tool, Ebling Mis. He babbled a bit sometimes under
my... uh... slight encouragement. Think back on Ebling Mis, First Citizen.”
“Why should I?”
Confidence!
Channis felt that
confidence edge out into the open, as if with the passage of time, any anxiety
the Mule might be having was increasingly vanishing.
He said, firmly
restraining the rush of desperation: “You lack curiosity, then? Pritcher told
me of Mis’ vast surprise at something. There was his terribly drastic urging
for speed, for a rapid warning of the Second Foundation? Why? Why? Ebling Mis
died. The Second Foundation was not warned. And yet the Second Foundation
exists.”
The Mule smiled
in real pleasure, and with a sudden and surprising dash of cruelty that Channis
felt advance and suddenly withdraw: “But apparently the Second Foundation was
warned. Else how and why did one Bail Channis arrive on Kalgan to handle my men
and to assume the rather thankless task of outwitting me. The warning came too
late, that is all.”
“Then,” and
Channis allowed pity to drench outward from him, “you don't even know what the
Second Foundation is, or anything of the deeper meaning of all that has been
going on.”
To gain time!
The Mule felt the
other's pity, and his eyes narrowed with instant hostility. He rubbed his nose
in his familiar four-fingered gesture, and snapped: “Amuse yourself, then. What
of the Second Foundation?”
Channis spoke
deliberately, in words rather than in emotional symbology. He said: “From what
I have heard, it was the mystery that surrounded the Second Foundation that
most puzzled Mis. Hari Seldon founded his two units so differently. The First
Foundation was a splurge that in two centuries dazzled half the Galaxy. And the
Second was an abyss that was dark.
“You won't
understand why that was, unless you can once again feel the intellectual
atmosphere of the days of the dying Empire. It was a time of absolutes, of the
great final generalities, at least in thought. It was a sign of decaying
culture, of course, that dams had been built against the further development of
ideas. It was his revolt against these dams that made Seldon famous. It was
that one last spark of youthful creation in him that lit the Empire in a sunset
glow and dimly foreshadowed the rising sun of the Second Empire.”
“Very dramatic.
So what?”
“So he created
his Foundations according to the laws of psychohistory, but who knew better
than he that even those laws were relative. He never created a finished
product. Finished products are for decadent minds. His was an evolving
mechanism and the Second Foundation was the instrument of that evolution. We,
First Citizen of your Temporary Union of Worlds, we are the guardians of
Seldon's Plan. Only we!”
“Are you trying
to talk yourself into courage,” inquired the Mule, contemptuously, “or are you
trying to impress me? For the Second Foundation, Seldon's Plan, the Second
Empire all impresses me not the least, nor touches any spring of compassion,
sympathy, responsibility, nor any other source of emotional aid you may be
trying to tap in me. And in any case, poor fool, speak of the Second Foundation
in the past tense, for it is destroyed.”
Channis felt the
emotional potential that pressed upon his mind rise in intensity as the Mule
rose from his chair and approached. He fought back furiously, but something
crept relentlessly on within him, battering and bending his mind back—and back.
He felt the wall
behind him, and the Mule faced him, skinny arms akimbo, lips smiling terribly
beneath that mountain of nose.
The Mule said:
“Your game is through, Channis. The game of all of you-of all the men of what
used to be the Second Foundation. Used to be! Used to be!
“What were you
sitting here waiting for all this time, with your babble to Pritcher, when you
might have struck him down and taken the blaster from him without the least
effort of physical force? You were waiting for me, weren't you, waiting to
greet me in a situation that would not too arouse my suspicions.
“Too bad for you
that I needed no arousal. I knew you. I knew you well, Channis of the Second
Foundation.
“But what are you
waiting for now? You still throw words at me desperately, as though the mere
sound of your voice would freeze me to my seat. And all the while you speak,
something in your mind is waiting and waiting and is still waiting. But no one
is coming. None of those you expect—none of your allies. You are alone here,
Channis, and you will remain alone. Do you know why?
“It is because
your Second Foundation miscalculated me to the very dregs of the end. I knew
their plan early. They thought I would follow you here and be proper meat for
their cooking. You were to be a decoy indeed—a decoy for a poor, foolish weakling
mutant, so hot on the trail of Empire that he would fall blindly into an
obvious pit. But am I their prisoner?
“I wonder if it
occurred to them that I'd scarcely be here without my fleet—against the
artillery of any unit of which they are entirely and pitifully helpless? Did it
occur to them that I would not pause for discussion or wait for events?
“My ships were
launched against Tazenda twelve hours ago and they are quite, quite through
with their mission. Tazenda is laid in ruins; its centers of population are
wiped out. There was no resistance. The Second Foundation no longer exists,
Channis—and I, the queer, ugly weakling, am the ruler of the Galaxy.”
Channis could do
nothing but shake his head feebly. “NoNo—”
“YesYes—”
mimicked the Mule. “And if you are the last one alive, and you may be, that
will not be for long either.”
And then there
followed a short, pregnant pause, and Channis almost howled with the sudden
pain of that tearing penetration of the innermost tissues of his mind.
The Mule drew back
and muttered: “Not enough. You do not pass the test after all. Your despair is
pretense. Your fear is not the broad overwhelming that adheres to the
destruction of an ideal, but the puny seeping fear of personal destruction.”
And the Mule's
weak hand seized Channis by the throat in a puny grip that Channis was somehow
unable to break.
“You are my
insurance, Channis. You are my director and safeguard against any
underestimation I may make.” The Mule's eyes bore down upon him.
InsistentDemanding—
“Have I calculated
rightly, Channis? Have I outwitted your men of the Second Foundation? Tazenda
is destroyed, Channis, tremendously destroyed; so why is your despair pretense?
Where is the reality? I must have reality and truth! Talk, Channis talk. Have I
penetrated then, not deeply enough? Does the danger still exist? Talk, Channis.
Where have I done wrong?”
Channis felt the
words drag out of his mouth. They did not come willingly. He clenched his teeth
against them. He bit his tongue. He tensed every muscle of his throat.
And they came
out—gasping—pulled out by force and tearing his throat and tongue and teeth on
the way.
“Truth,” he
squeaked, “truth—”
“Yes, truth. What
is left to be done?”
“Seldon founded
Second Foundation here. Here, as I said. I told no lie. The psychologists
arrived and took control of the native population.”
“Of Tazenda?” The
Mule plunged deeply into the flooding torture of the other's emotional
upwellings—tearing at them brutally. “It is Tazenda I have destroyed. You know
what I want. Give it to me.”
“Not Tazenda. I
said Second Foundationers might not be those apparently in power; Tazenda is
the figurehead—” The words were almost unrecognizable, forming themselves
against every atom of will of the Second Foundationer, “RossemRossemRossem is
the world—”
The Mule loosed
his grip and Channis dropped into a huddle of pain and torture.
“And you thought
to fool me?” said the Mule, softly.
“You were
fooled.” It was the last dying shred of resistance in Channis.
“But not long
enough for you and yours. I am in communication with my Fleet. And after
Tazenda can come Rossem. But first—”
Channis felt the
excruciating darkness rise against him, and the automatic lift of his arm to
his tortured eyes could not ward it off. It was a darkness that throttled, and
as he felt his tom, wounded mind reeling backwards, backwards into the
everlasting black—there was that final picture of the triumphant Mule—laughing
matchstick—that long, fleshy nose quivering with laughter.
The sound faded
away. The darkness embraced him lovingly.
It ended with a
cracking sensation that was like the jagged glare of a lightning flash, and
Channis came slowly to earth while sight returned painfully in blurry transmission
through tear-drenched eyes.
His head ached
unbearably, and it was only with a stab of agony that he could bring up a hand
to it.
Obviously, he was
alive. Softly, like feathers caught up in an eddy of air that had passed, his
thoughts steadied and drifted to rest. He felt comfort suck in—from outside.
Slowly, torturedly, he bent his neck—and relief was a sharp pang.
For the door was
open; and the First Speaker stood just inside the threshold. He tried to speak,
to shout, to warn—but his tongue froze and he knew that a part of the Mule's
mighty mind still held him and clamped all speech within him.
He bent his neck
once more. The Mule was still in the room. He was angry and hot-eyed. He
laughed no longer, but his teeth were bared in a ferocious smile.
Channis felt the
First Speaker's mental influence moving gently over his mind with a healing
touch and then there was the numbing sensation as it came into contact with the
Mule's defense for an instant of struggle and withdrew.
The Mule said
gratingly, with a fury that was grotesque in his meagre body: “Then another
comes to greet me.” His agile mind reached its tendrils out of the roomoutout—
“You are alone,”
he said.
And the First
Speaker interrupted with an acquiescence: “I am thoroughly alone. It is necessary
that I be alone, since it was I who miscalculated your future five years ago.
There would be a certain satisfaction to me in correcting that matter without
aid. Unfortunately, I did not count on the strength of your Field of Emotional
Repulsion that surrounded this place. It took me long to penetrate. I
congratulate you upon the skill with which it was constructed.”
“Thank you for
nothing,” came the hostile rejoinder. “Bandy no compliments with me. Have you
come to add your brain splinter to that of yonder cracked pillar of your
realm?”
The First Speaker
smiled: “Why, the man you call Bail Channis performed his mission well, the
more so since he was not your mental equal by far. I can see, of course, that
you have mistreated him, yet it may be that we may restore him fully even yet.
He is a brave man, sir. He volunteered for this mission although we were able
to predict mathematically the huge chance of damage to his mind—a more fearful
alternative than that of mere physical crippling.”
Channis’ mind pulsed
futilely with what he wanted to say and couldn't; the warning he wished to
shout and was unable to. He could only emit that continuous stream of fearfear—
The Mule was
calm. “You know, of course, of the destruction of Tazenda.”
“I do. The
assault by your fleet was foreseen.”
Grimly: “Yes, so
I suppose. But not prevented, eh?”
“No, not
prevented.” The First Speaker's emotional symbology was plain. It was almost a
self-horror; a complete self-disgust: “And the fault is much more mine than
yours. Who could have imagined your powers five years ago. We suspected from
the start—from the moment you captured Kalgan—that you had the powers of
emotional control. That was not too surprising, First Citizen, as I can explain
to you.
“Emotional
contact such as you and I possess is not a very new development. Actually it is
implicit in the human brain. Most humans can read emotion in a primitive manner
by associating it pragmatically with facial expression, tone of voice and so
on. A good many animals possess the faculty to a higher degree; they use the
sense of smell to a good extent and the emotions involved are, of course, less
complex.
“Actually, humans
are capable of much more, but the faculty of direct emotional contact tended to
atrophy with the development of speech a million years back. It has been the
great advance of our Second Foundation that this forgotten sense has been restored
to at least some of its potentialities.
“But we are not
born with its full use. A million years of decay is a formidable obstacle, and
we must educate the sense, exercise it as we exercise our muscles. And there
you have the main difference. You were born with it.
“So much we could
calculate. We could also calculate the effect of such a sense upon a person in
a world of men who did not possess it. The seeing man in the kingdom of the
blindWe calculated the extent to which a megalomania would take control of you
and we thought we were prepared. But for two factors we were not prepared.
“The first was
the great extent of your sense. We can induce emotional contact only when in
eyeshot, which is why we are more helpless against physical weapons than you
might think. Sight plays such an enormous part. Not so with you. You are
definitely known to have had men under control, and, further, to have had
intimate emotional contact with them when out of sight and out of earshot. That
was discovered too late.
“Secondly, we did
not know of your physical shortcomings, particularly the one that seemed so
important to you, that you adopted the name of the Mule. We didn't foresee that
you were not merely a mutant, but a sterile mutant and the added psychic
distortion due to your inferiority complex passed us by. We allowed only for a
megalomania—not for an intensely psychopathic paranoia as well.
“It is myself
that bears the responsibility for having missed all that, for I was the leader
of the Second Foundation when you captured Kalgan. When you destroyed the First
Foundation, we found out—but too late—and for that fault millions have died on
Tazenda.”
“And you will
correct things now?” The Mules thin lips curled, his mind pulsing with hate:
“What will you do? Fatten me? Restore me to a masculine vigor? Take away from
my past the long childhood in an alien environment. Do you regret my
sufferings? Do you regret my unhappiness? I have no sorrow for what I did in my
necessity. Let the Galaxy Protect itself as best it can, since it stirred not a
whit for my protection when I needed it.”
Your emotions
are, of course,” said the First Speaker, “only the children of your background
and are not to be condemned—merely changed. The destruction of Tazenda was
unavoidable. The alternative would have been a much greater destruction
generally throughout the Galaxy over a period of centuries. We did our best in
our limited way. We withdrew as many men from Tazenda as we could. We
decentralized the rest of the world. Unfortunately, our measures were of
necessity far from adequate. It left many millions to die—do you not regret
that?”
“Not at all—any
more than I regret the hundred thousand that must die on Rossem in not more
than six hours.”
“On Rossem?” said
the First Speaker, quickly.
He turned to
Channis who had forced himself into a half-sitting posture, and his mind
exerted its force. Channis, felt the duel of minds strain over him, and then
there was a short snapping of the bond and the words came tumbling out of his
mouth: “Sir, I have failed completely. He forced it from me not ten minutes
before your arrival. I could not resist him and I offer no excuses. He knows
Tazenda is not the Second Foundation. He knows that Rossem is.”
And the bonds
closed down upon him again.
The First Speaker
frowned: “I see. What is it you are planning to do?”
“Do you really
wonder? Do you really find it difficult to penetrate the obvious? All this time
that you have preached to me of the nature of emotional contact—all this time
that you have been throwing words such as megalomania and paranoia at me, I
have been working. I have been in contact with my Fleet and it has its orders.
In six hours, unless I should for some reason counteract my orders, they are to
bombard all of Rossem except this lone village and an area of a hundred square
miles about it. They are to do a thorough job and are then to land here.
“You have six
hours, and in six hours, you cannot beat down my mind, nor can you save the
rest of Rossem.”
The Mule spread
his hands and laughed again while the First Speaker seemed to find difficulty
in absorbing this new state of affairs.
He said: “The
alternative?”
“Why should there
even be an alternative? I can stand to gain no more by any alternative. Is it
the lives of those on Rossem I'm to be chary of? Perhaps if you allow my ships
to land and submit, all of you—all the men on the Second Foundation—to mental
control sufficient to suit myself, I may countermand the bombardment orders. It
may be worthwhile to put so many men of high intelligence under my control. But
then again it would be a considerable effort and perhaps not worth it after
all, so I'm not particularly eager to have you agree to it. What do you say,
Second Foundationer? What weapon have you against my mind which is as strong as
yours at least and against my ships which are stronger than anything you have
ever dreamed of possessing?”
“What have I?”
repeated the First Speaker, slowly: “Why nothing—except a little grain—such a
little grain of knowledge that even yet you do not possess.”
“Speak quickly,”
laughed the Mule, “speak inventively. For squirm as you might, you won't squirm
out of this.”
“Poor mutant,”
said the First Speaker, “I have nothing to squirm out of. Ask yourself—why was
Bail Channis sent to Kalgan as a decoy—Bail Channis, who though young and brave
is almost as much your mental inferior as is this sleeping officer of yours,
this Han Pritcher. Why did not I go, or another of our leaders, who would be
more your match?”
“Perhaps,” came
the supremely confident reply, “you were not sufficiently foolish, since
perhaps none of you are my match.”
“The true reason
is more logical. You knew Channis to be a Second Foundationer. He lacked the
capacity to hide that from you. And you knew, too, that you were his superior,
so you were not afraid to play his game and follow him as he wished you to in
order to outwit him later. Had I gone to Kalgan, you would have killed me for I
would have been a real danger, or had I avoided death by concealing my
identity, I would yet have failed in persuading you to follow me into space. It
was only known inferiority that lured you on. And had you remained on Kalgan,
not all the force of the Second Foundation could have harmed you, surrounded as
you were by your men, your machines, and your mental power.”
“My mental power
is yet with me, squirmer,” said the Mule, “and my men and machines are not far
off.”
“Truly so, but
you are not on Kalgan. You are here in the Kingdom of Tazenda, logically
presented to you as the Second Foundation—very logically presented. It had to
be so presented, for you are a wise man, First Citizen, and would follow only
logic.”
“Correct, and it
was a momentary victory for your side, but there was still time for me to worm
the truth from your man, Channis, and still wisdom in me to realize that such a
truth might exist.”
“And on our side,
oh, not-quite-sufficiently-subtle one, was the realization that you might go
that one step further and so Bail Channis was prepared for you.”
“That he most
certainly was not, for I stripped his brain clean as any plucked chicken. It
quivered bare and open before me and when he said Rossem was the Second
Foundation, it was basic truth for I had ground him so flat and smooth that not
the smidgeon of a deceit could have found refuge in any microscopic crevice.”
“True enough. So
much the better for our foresight. For I have told you already that Bail
Channis was a volunteer. Do you know what sort of a volunteer? Before he left
our Foundation for Kalgan and you, he submitted to emotional surgery of a
drastic nature. Do you think it was sufficient to deceive you? Do you think
Bail Channis, mentally untouched, could possibly deceive you? No, Bail Channis
was himself deceived, of necessity and voluntarily. Down to the inmost core of
his mind, Bail Channis honestly believes that Rossem is the Second Foundation.
“And for three
years now, we of the Second Foundation have built up the appearance of that
here in the Kingdom of Tazenda, in preparation and waiting for you. And we have
succeeded, have we not? You penetrated to Tazenda, and beyond that, to
Rossem—but past that, you could not go.”
The Mule was upon
his feet: “You dare tell me that Rossem also, is not the Second Foundation?”
Channis, from the
floor, felt his bonds burst for good, under a stream of mental force on the
part of the First Speaker and strained upright. He let out one long,
incredulous cry: “You mean Rossem is not the Second Foundation?”
The memories of
life, the knowledge of his mind—everything—whirled mistily about him in
confusion.
The First Speaker
smiled: “You see, First Citizen, Channis is as upset as you are. Of course,
Rossem is not the Second Foundation. Are we madmen then, to lead you, our
greatest, most powerful, most dangerous enemy to our own world? Oh, no!
“Let your Fleet
bombard Rossem, First Citizen, if you must have it so. Let them destroy all
they can. For at most they can kill only Channis and myself—and that will leave
you in a situation improved not in the least.
“For the Second
Foundation's Expedition to Rossem which has been here for three years and has
functioned, temporarily, as Elders in this village, embarked yesterday and are
returning to Kalgan. They will evade your Fleet, of course, and they will
arrive in Kalgan at least a day before you can, which is why I tell you all
this. Unless I countermand my orders, when you return, you will find a
revolting Empire, a disintegrated realm, and only the men with you in your
Fleet here will be loyal to you. They will be hopelessly outnumbered. And
moreover, the men of the Second Foundation will be with your Home Fleet and
will see to it that you reconvert no one. Your Empire is done, mutant.”
Slowly, the Mule
bowed his head, as anger and despair cornered his mind completely, “Yes. Too
lateToo lateNow I see it.”
“Now you see it,”
agreed the First Speaker, “and now you don't.”
In the despair of
that moment, when the Mule's mind lay open, the First Speaker—ready for that
moment and pre-sure of its nature—entered quickly. It required a rather
insignificant fraction of a second to consummate the change completely.
The Mule looked
up and said: “Then I shall return to Kalgan?
“Certainly. How
do you feel?”
“Excellently
well.” His brow puckered: “Who are you?”
“Does it matter?”
“Of course not.”
He dismissed the matter, and touched Pritcher's shoulder: “Wake up, Pritcher,
we're going home.”
It was two hours
later that Bail Channis felt strong enough to walk by himself. He said: “He
won't ever remember?”
“Never. He
retains his mental powers and his Empire—but his motivations are now entirely
different. The notion of a Second Foundation is a blank to him, and he is a man
of peace. He will be a far happier man henceforward, too, for the few years of
life left him by his maladjusted physique. And then, after he is dead Seldon's
Plan will go on—somehow.”
“And it is true,”
urged Channis, “it is true that Rossem is not the Second Foundation? I could
swear—I tell you I know it is. I am not mad.”
“You are not mad,
Channis, merely, as I have said, changed. Rossem is not the Second Foundation.
Come! We, too, will return home.”
LAST INTERLUDE
Bail Channis sat in
the small white-tiled room and allowed his mind to relax. He was content to
live in the present. There were the walls and the window and the grass outside.
They had no names. They were just things. There was a bed and a chair an books
that developed themselves idly on the screen at the foot of his bed. There was
the nurse who brought him his food.
At first he had
made efforts to piece together the scraps of things he had heard. Such as those
two men talking together.
One had said:
“Complete aphasia now. It's cleaned out, and I think without damage. It will
only be necessary to return the recording of his original brain-wave makeup.”
He remembered the
sounds by rote, and for some reason they seemed peculiar sounds—as if they
meant something. But why bother.
Better to watch
the pretty changing colors on the screen at the foot of the thing he lay on.
And then someone
entered and did things to him and for a long time, he slept.
And when that had
passed, the bed was suddenly a bed and he knew he was in a hospital, and the
words he remembered made sense.
He sat up:
“What's happening?”
The First Speaker
was beside him, “You're on the Second Foundation, and you have your mind
back—your original mind.”
“Yes! Yes!”
Channis came to the realization that he was himself, and there was incredible
triumph and joy in that.
“And now tell
me,” said the First Speaker, “do you know where the Second Foundation is now?”
And the truth
came flooding down in one enormous wave and Channis did not answer. Like Ebling
Mis before him, he was conscious of only one vast, numbing surprise.
Until he finally
nodded, and said: “By the Stars of the Galaxy—now, I know.”
PART II
SEARCH BY THE
FOUNDATION
7
Arcadia
DARELL, ARKADY novelist,
born 11, 5, 362 F. E., died 1, 7, 443 F. E. Although primarily a writer of
fiction, Arkady Darell is best known for her biography of her grandmother,
Bayta Darell. Based on first-hand information, it has for centuries served as a
primary source of information concerning the Mule and his times.. .. Like
“Unkeyed Memories”, her novel “Time and Time and Over” is a stirring reflection
of the brilliant Kalganian society of the early Interregnum, based, it is said,
on a visit to Kalgan in her youth....
ENCYCLOPEDIA
GALACTICA
Arcadia Darell
declaimed firmly into the mouthpiece of her transcriber:
“The Future of
Seldon's Plan, by A. Darell” and then thought darkly that some day when she was
a great writer, she would write all her masterpieces under the pseudonym of
Arkady. Just Arkady. No last name at all.
“A. Darell” would
be just the sort of thing that she would have to put on all her themes for her
class in Composition and Rhetoric—so tasteless. All the other kids had to do
it, too, except for Olynthus Dam, because the class laughed so when he did it
the first time, And “Arcadia” was a little girls name, wished on her because
her great-grandmother had been called that; her parents just had no imagination
at all.
Now that she was
two days past fourteen, you'd think they'd recognize the simple fact of
adulthood and call her Arkady. Her lips tightened as she thought of her father
looking up from his book-viewer just long enough to say, “But if you're going
to pretend you're nineteen, Arcadia, what will you do when you're twenty-five
and all the boys think you're thirty?”
From where she
sprawled across the arms and into the hollow of her own special armchair, she
could see the mirror on her dresser. Her foot was a little in the way because
her house slipper kept twirling about her big toe, so she pulled it in and sat
up with an unnatural straightness to her neck that she felt sure, somehow,
lengthened it a full two inches into slim regality.
For a moment, she
considered her face thoughtfully—too fat. She opened her jaws half an inch
behind closed lips, and caught the resultant trace of unnatural gauntness at
every angle. She licked her lips with a quick touch of tongue and let them pout
a bit in moist softness. Then she let her eyelids droop in a weary, worldly wayOh,
golly if only her cheeks weren't that silly pink.
She tried putting
her fingers to the outer comers of her eye and tilting the lids a bit to get
that mysterious exotic languor of the women of the inner star systems, but her
hands were in the way and she couldn't see her face very well.
Then she lifted
her chin, caught herself at a half-profile, and with her eyes a little strained
from looking out the comer and her neck muscles faintly aching, she said, in a
voice one octave below its natural pitch, “Really, father, if you think it
makes a particle of difference to me what some silly old boys think you just—”
And then she
remembered that she still had the transmitter open in her hand and said,
drearily, “Oh, golly,” and shut it off.
The faintly
violet paper with the peach margin line on the left had upon it the following:
“THE FUTURE OF
SELDON'S PLAN
“Really, father,
if you think it makes a particle of difference to me what some silly old boys
think you just
“Oh, golly.”
She pulled the
sheet out of the machine with annoyance and another clicked neatly into place.
But her face
smoothed out of its vexation, nevertheless, and her wide, little mouth
stretched into a self-satisfied smile. She sniffed at the paper delicately.
just right. Just that proper touch of elegance and charm. And the penmanship
was just the last word.
The machine had
been delivered two days ago on her first adult birthday. She had said, “But
father, everybody—just everybody in the class who has the slightest pretensions
to being anybody has one. Nobody but some old drips would use hand machines—”
The salesman had
said, “There is no other model as compact on the one hand and as adaptable on
the other. It will spell and punctuate correctly according to the sense of the
sentence. Naturally, it is a great aid to education since it encourages the
user to employ careful enunciation and breathing in order to make sure of the
correct spelling, to say nothing of demanding a proper and elegant delivery for
correct punctuation.”
Even then her
father had tried to get one geared for type-print as if she were some dried-up,
old-maid teacher.
But when it was
delivered, it was the model she wanted—obtained perhaps with a little more wail
and sniffle than quite went with the adulthood of fourteen—and copy was turned
out in a charming and entirely feminine handwriting, with the most beautifully
graceful capitals anyone ever saw.
Even the phrase,
“Oh, golly.” somehow breathed glamour when the Transcriber was done with it.
But just the same
she had to get it right, so she sat up straight in her chair, placed her first
draft before her in businesslike fashion, and began again, crisply and clearly;
her abdomen flat, her chest lifted, and her breathing carefully controlled. She
intoned, with dramatic fervor:
The Future of
Seldon's Plan.
“The Foundation's
past history is, I am sure, well-known to all of us who have had the good
fortune to be educated in our planet's efficient and well-staffed school
system.
(There! That
would start things off right with Miss Erlking, that mean old hag.)
That past history
is largely the past history of the great Plan of Hari Seldon. The two are one.
But the question in the mind of most people today is whether this Plan will
continue in all its great wisdom, or whether it will be foully destroyed, or,
perhaps, has been so destroyed already.
“To understand
this, it may be best to pass quickly over some of the highlights of the Plan as
it has been revealed to humanity thus far.
(This part was
easy because she had taken Modern History the semester before.)
“In the days,
nearly four centuries ago, when the First Galactic Empire was decaying into the
paralysis that preceded final death, one man—the great Hari Seldon—foresaw the
approaching end. Through the science of psychohistory, the intrissacies of
whose mathematics has long since been forgotten,
(She paused in a
trifle of doubt. She was sure that “intricacies” was pronounced with soft c's
but the spelling didn't look right. Oh, well, the machine couldn't very well be
wrong-)
he and the men
who worked with him are able to foretell the course of the great social and
economic currents sweeping the Galaxy at the time. It was possible for them to
realize that, left to itself, the Empire would break up, and that thereafter
there would be at least thirty thousand years of anarchic chaos prior to the
establishment of a new Empire.
“It was too late
to prevent the great Fall, but it was still possible, at least, to cut short
the intermediate period of chaos. The Plan was, therefore, evolved whereby only
a single millennium would separate the Second Empire from the First. We are
completing the fourth century of that millennium, and many generations of men
have lived and died while the Plan has continued its inexorable workings.
“Hari Seldon
established two Foundations at the opposite ends of the Galaxy, in a manner and
under such circumstances as would yield the best mathematical solution for his
psychohistorical problem. In one of these, our Foundation, established here on
Terminus, there was concentrated the physical science of the Empire, and
through the possession of that science, the Foundation was able to withstand
the attacks of the barbarous kingdoms which had broken away and become
independent, out at the hinge of the Empire.
“The Foundation,
indeed, was able to conquer in its turn these short-lived kingdoms by means of
the leadership of a series of wise and heroic men like Salvor Hardin and Hober
Mallow who were able to interpret the Plan intelligently and to guide our land
through its
(She had written
“intricacies” here also, but decided not to risk it a second time.)
complications.
All our planets still revere their memories although centuries have passed.
“Eventually, the
Foundation established a commercial system which controlled a large portion of
the Siwennian and Anacreonian sectors of the Galaxy, and even defeated the
remnants of the old Empire under its last great general, Bel Riose. It seemed
that nothing could now stop the workings of Seldon's plan. Every crisis that
Seldon had planned had come at its appropriate time and had been solved, and
with each solution the Foundation had taken another giant stride toward Second
Empire and peace.
“And then,
(Her breath came
short at this point, and she hissed the word, between her teeth, but the
Transmitter simply wrote them calmly and gracefully.)
with the last
remnants of the dead First Empire gone and with only ineffectual warlords
ruling over the splinters and remnants of the decayed colossus,
(She got that
phrase out of a thriller on the video last week, but old Miss Erlking never
listened to anything but symphonies and lectures, so she'd never know.)
there came the
Mule.
“This strange man
was not allowed for in the Plan. He was a mutant, whose birth could not have
been predicted. He had strange and mysterious power of controlling and
manipulating human emotions and in this manner could bend all men to his will.
With breath-taking swiftness, he became a conqueror and Empire-builder, until,
finally, he even defeated the Foundation itself.
“Yet he never
obtained universal dominion, since in his first overpowering lunge he was
stopped by the wisdom and daring of a great woman
(Now there was
that old problem again. Father would insist that she never bring up the fact
that she was the grandchild of Bayta Darell. Everyone knew it and Bayta was
just about the greatest woman there ever was and she had stopped the Mule
singlehanded.)
in a manner the
true story of which is known in its entirety to very few.
(There! If she
had to read it to the class, that last could he said in a dark voice, and
someone would be sure to ask what the true story was, and then—well, and then
she couldn't help tell the truth if they asked her, could she? In her mind, she
was already wordlessly whizzing through a hurt and eloquent explanation to a
stern and questioning paternal parent.)
“After five years
of restricted rule, another change took place, the reasons for which are not
known, and the Mule abandoned all plans for further conquest. His last five
years were those of an enlightened despot.
“It is said by
some that the change in the Mule was brought about by the intervention of the
Second Foundation. However, no man has ever discovered the exact location of
this other Foundation, nor knows its exact function, so that theory remains
unproven.
“A whole
generation has passed since the death of the Mule. What of the future, then,
now that he has come and gone? He interrupted Seldon's Plan and seemed to have
burst it to fragments, yet as soon as he died, the Foundation rose again, like
a nova from the dead ashes of a dying star.
(She had made
that up herself.)
Once again, the
planet Terminus houses the center of a commercial federation almost as great
and as rich as before the conquest, and even more peaceful and democratic.
“Is this planned?
Is Seldon's great dream still alive, and will a Second Galactic Empire yet be
formed six hundred years from now? I, myself, believe so, because
(This was the
important part. Miss Erlking always had those large, ugly red-pencil scrawls
that went: ‘But this is only descriptive. What are your personal reactions?
Think! Express yourself! Penetrate your own soul!’ Penetrate your own soul. A
lot she knew about souls, with her lemon face that never smiled in its life-)
never at any time
has the political situation been so favorable. The old Empire is completely
dead and the period of the Mule's rule put an end to the era of warlords that
preceded him. Most of the surrounding portions of the Galaxy are civilized and
peaceful.
“Moreover the
internal health of the Foundation is better than ever before. The despotic
times of the pre-Conquest hereditary mayors have given way to the democratic
elections of early times. There are no longer dissident worlds of independent
Traders; no longer the injustices and dislocations that accompanied
accumulations of great wealth in the hands of a few.
“There is no
reason, therefore, to fear failure, unless it is true that the Second
Foundation itself presents a danger. Those who think so have no evidence to
back their claim, but merely vague fears and superstitions. I think that our
confidence in ourselves, in our nation, and in Hari Seldon's great Plan should
drive from our hearts and minds all uncertainties and
(Hm-m-m. This was
awfully corny, but something like this was expected at the end.)
so I say—”
That is as far as
“The Future of Seldon's Plan” got, at that moment, because there was the
gentlest little tap on the window, and when Arcadia shot up to a balance on one
arm of the chair, she found herself confronted by a smiling face beyond the
glass, its even symmetry of feature interestingly accentuated by the short,
vertical fine of a finger before its lips.
With the slight
pause necessary to assume an attitude of bepuzzlement, Arcadia dismounted from
the armchair, walked to the couch that fronted the wide window that held the
apparition and, kneeling upon it, stared out thoughtfully.
The smile upon the
man's face faded quickly. While the fingers of one hand tightened whitely upon
the sill, the other made a quick gesture. Arcadia obeyed calmly, and closed the
latch that moved the lower third of the window smoothly into its socket in the
wall, allowing the warm spring air to interfere with the conditioning within.
“You can't get
in,” she said, with comfortable smugness. “The windows are all screened, and
keyed only to people who belong here. If you come in, all sorts of alarms will
break loose.” A pause, then she added, “You look sort of silly balancing on
that ledge underneath the window. If you're not careful, you'll fall and break
your neck and a lot of valuable flowers.”
“In that case,”
said the man at the window, who had been thinking that very thing—with a
slightly different arrangement of adjectives“will you shut off the screen and
let me in?”
“No use in doing
that’” said Arcadia. “You're probably thinking of a different house, because
I'm not the kind of girl who lets strange men into their... her bedroom this
time of night.” Her eyes, as she said it, took on a heavy-lidded sultriness—or
an unreasonable facsimile thereof.
All traces of
humor whatever had disappeared from the young stranger's face. He muttered,
“This is Dr. Darell's house, isn't it?”
“Why should I
tell you?”
“Oh,
GalaxyGood-by—”
“If you jump off,
young man, I will personally give the alarm.” (This was intended as a refined
and sophisticated thrust of irony, since to Arcadia's enlightened eyes, the
intruder was an obviously mature thirty, at least—quite elderly, in fact.)
Quite a pause.
Then, tightly, he said, “Well, now, look here, girlie, if you don't want me to
stay, and don't want me to go, what do you want me to do?”
“You can come in,
I suppose. Dr. Darell does live here. I'll shut off the screen now.”
Warily, after a
searching look, the young man poked his hand through the window, then hunched
himself up and through it. He brushed at his knees with an angry, slapping
gesture, and lifted a reddened face at her.
“You're quite
sure that your character and reputation won't suffer when they find me here,
are you?”
“Not as much as
yours would, because just as soon as I hear footsteps outside, I'll just shout
and yell and say you forced your way in here.”
“Yes?” he replied
with heavy courtesy, “And how do you intend to explain the shut-off protective
screen?”
“Poof! That would
be easy. There wasn't any there in the first place.”
The man's eyes
were wide with chagrin. “That was a bluff? How old are you, kid?”
“I consider that
a very impertinent question, young man. And I am not accustomed to being
addressed as ‘kid. ’”
“I don't wonder.
You're probably the Mule's grandmother in disguise. Do you mind if I leave now
before you arrange a lynching party with myself as star performer?”
“You had better
not leave—because my father's expecting you.”
The man's look
became a wary one, again. An eyebrow shot up as he said, lightly, “Oh? Anyone
with your father?'
“No.”
“Anyone called on
him lately?'
“Only
tradespeople—and you.”
“Anything unusual
happen at all?”
“Only you.”
“Forget me, will
you? No, don't forget me. Tell me, how did you know your father was expecting
me?”
“Oh, that was
easy. Last week, he received a Personal Capsule, keyed to him personally, with
a self-oxidizing message, you know. He threw the capsule shell into the Trash
Disinto, and yesterday, he gave Poli—that's our maid, you see—a month's
vacation so she could visit her sister in Terminus City, and this afternoon, he
made up the bed in the spare room. So I knew he expected somebody that I wasn't
supposed to know anything about. Usually, he tells me everything.”
“Really! I'm
surprised he has to. I should think you'd know everything before he tells you.”
'I usually do.”
Then she laughed. She was beginning to feel very much at ease. The visitor was
elderly, but very distinguished-looking with curly brown hair and very blue
eyes. Maybe she could meet somebody like that again, sometimes, when she was
old herself.
“And just how,”
he asked, “did you know it was I he expected.”
“Well, who else
could it be? He was expecting somebody in so secrety a way, if you know what I
mean—and then you come gumping around trying to sneak through windows, instead
of walking through the front door, the way you would if you had any sense.” She
remembered a favorite line, and used it promptly. “Men are so stupid!”
“Pretty stuck on
yourself, aren't you, kid? I mean, Miss. You could be wrong, you know. What if
I told you that all this is a mystery to me and that as far as I know, your father
is expecting someone else, not me.”
“Oh, I don't
think so. I didn't ask you to come in, until after I saw you drop your
briefcase.”
“My what?”
“Your briefcase,
young man. I'm not blind. You didn't drop it by accident, because you looked
down first, so as to make sure it would land right. Then you must have realized
it would land just under the hedges and wouldn't be seen, so you dropped it and
didn't look down afterwards. Now since you came to the window instead of the
front door, it must mean that you were a little afraid to trust yourself in the
house before investigating the place. And after you had a little trouble with
me, you took care of your briefcase before taking care of yourself, which means
that you consider whatever your briefcase has in it to be more valuable than
your own safety, and that means that as long as you're in here and the
briefcase is out there and we know that it's out there, you're probably pretty
helpless.”
She paused for a
much-needed breath, and the man said, grittily, “Except that I think I'll choke
you just about medium dead and get out of here, with the briefcase.”
“Except, young
man, that I happen to have a baseball bat under my bed, which I can reach in
two seconds from where I'm sitting, and I'm very strong for a girl.”
Impasse. Finally,
with a strained courtesy, the “young man” said, “Shall I introduce myself,
since we're being so chummy. I'm Pelleas Anthor. And your name?”
“I'm ArcaArkady
Darell. Pleased to meet you.”
“And now Arkady,
would you be a good little girl and call your father?”
Arcadia bridled.
“I'm not a little girl. I think you're very rude—especially when you're asking
a favor.”
Pelleas Anthor
sighed. “Very well. Would you be a good, kind, dear, little old lady, just
chock full of lavender, and call your father?”
“That's not what
I meant either, but I'll call him. Only not so I'll take my eyes off you, young
man.” And she stamped on the floor.
There came the
sound of hurrying footsteps in the hall, and the door was flung open.
“Arcadia—” There
was a tiny explosion of exhaled air, and Dr. Darell said, “Who are you, sir?”
Pelleas sprang to
his feet in what was quite obviously relief. “Dr. Toran Darell? I am Pelleas
Anthor. You've received word about me, I think. At least, your daughter says
you have.”
“My daughter says
I have?” He bent a frowning glance at her which caromed harmlessly off the
wide-eyed and impenetrable web of innocence with which she met the accusation.
Dr. Darell said,
finally: “I have been expecting you. Would you mind coming down with me,
please?” And he stopped as his eye caught a flicker of motion, which Arcadia
caught simultaneously.
She scrambled
toward her Transcriber, but it was quite useless, since her father was standing
right next to it. He said, sweetly, “You've left it going all this time,
Arcadia.”
“Father,” she
squeaked, in real anguish, “it is very ungentlemanly to read another person's
private correspondence, especially when it's talking correspondence.”
“Ah,” said her
father, “but ‘talking correspondence’ with a strange man in your bedroom! As a
father, Arcadia, I must protect you against evil.”
“Oh, golly—it was
nothing like that.”
Pelleas laughed
suddenly, “Oh, but it was, Dr. Darell. The young lady was going to accuse me of
all sorts of things, and I must insist that you read it, if only to clear my
name.”
“Oh—” Arcadia
held back her tears with an effort. Her own father didn't even trust her. And
that darned TranscriberIf that silly fool hadn't come gooping at the window,
and making her forget to turn it off. And now her father would be making long,
gentle speeches about what young ladies aren't supposed to do. There just
wasn't anything they were supposed to do, it looked like, except choke and die,
maybe.
“Arcadia,” said
her father, gently, “it strikes me that a young lady—”
She knew it. She
knew it.
“-should not be
quite so impertinent to men older than she is.
“Well, what did
he want to come peeping around my window for? A young lady has a right to
privacyNow I'll have to do my whole darned composition over.”
“It's not up to
you to question his propriety in coming to your window. You should simply not
have let him in. You should have called me instantly—especially if you thought
I was expecting him.”
She said,
peevishly, “It's just as well if you didn't see him—stupid thing. Hell give the
whole thing away if he keeps on going to windows, instead of doors.”
“Arcadia, nobody
wants your opinion on matters you know nothing of.”
“I do, too. It's
the Second Foundation, that's what it is.”
There was a
silence. Even Arcadia felt a little nervous stirring in her abdomen.
Dr. Darell said,
softly, “Where have you heard this?”
“Nowheres, but
what else is there to be so secret about? And you don't have to worry that I'll
tell anyone.”
“Mr. Anthor,”
said Dr. Darell, “I must apologize for all this.”
“Oh, that's all
right,” came Anthor's rather hollow response. “It's not your fault if she's
sold herself to the forces of darkness. But do you mind if I ask her a question
before we go. Miss Arcadia—”
“What do you
want?”
“Why do you think
it is stupid to go to windows instead of to doors?”
“Because you
advertise what you're trying to hide, silly. If I have a secret, I don't put
tape over my mouth and let everyone know I have a secret. I talk just as much
as usual, only about something else. Didn't you ever read any of the sayings of
Salvor Hardin? He was our first Mayor, you know.”
“Yes, I know.”
“Well, he used to
say that only a he that wasn't ashamed of itself could possibly succeed. He
also said that nothing had to be true, but everything had to sound true. Well,
when you come in through a window, it's a lie that's ashamed of itself and it
doesn't sound true.”
“Then what would
you have done?”
“If I had wanted
to see my father on top secret business, I would have made his acquaintance
openly and seen him about all sorts of strictly legitimate things. And then
when everyone knew all about you and connected you with my father as a matter
of course, you could be as top secret as you want and nobody would ever think
of questioning it.”
Anthor looked at
the girl strangely, then at Dr. Darell. He said, “Let's go. I have a briefcase
I want to pick up in the garden. Wait! Just one last question. Arcadia, you
don't really have a baseball bat under your bed, do you?”
“No! I don't.”
“Hah. I didn't
think so.”
Dr. Darell
stopped at the door. “Arcadia,” he said, “when you rewrite your composition on
the Seldon Plan, don't be unnecessarily mysterious about your grandmother.
There is no necessity to mention that part at all.”
He and Pelleas
descended the stairs in silence. Then the visitor asked in a strained voice,
“Do you mind, sir? How old is she?”
“Fourteen, day
before yesterday.”
“Fourteen? Great
GalaxyTell me, has she ever said she expects to marry some day?”
“No, she hasn't.
Not to me.”
Well, if she ever
does, shoot him. The one she's going to marry, I mean.” He stared earnestly
into the older man's eyes. “I'm serious. Life could hold no greater horror than
living with what shell be like when she's twenty. I don't mean to offend you,
of course.”
“You don't offend
me. I think I know what you mean.”
Upstairs, the
object of their tender analyses faced the Transcriber with revolted weariness
and said, dully: “Thefutureofseldonsplan.” The Transcriber with infinite
aplomb, translated that into elegantly, complicated script capitals as:
“The Future of
Seldon's Plan.”
8
Seldon's Plan
MATHEMATICS The
synthesis of the calculus of n-variables and of n-dimensional geometry is the
basis of what Seldon once called “my little algebra of humanity”....
ENCYCLOPEDIA
GALACTICA
Consider a room!
The location of
the room is not in question at the moment. It is merely sufficient to say that
in that room, more than anywhere, the Second Foundation existed.
It was a room
which, through the centuries, had been the abode of pure science—yet it had
none of the gadgets with which, through millennia of association, science has
come to be considered equivalent. It was a science, instead, which dealt with
mathematical concepts only, in a manner similar to the speculation of ancient,
ancient races in the primitive, prehistoric days before technology had come to
be; before Man had spread beyond a single, now-unknown world.
For one thing,
there was in that room—protected by a mental science as yet unassailable by the
combined physical might of the rest of the Galaxy—the Prime Radiant, which held
in its vitals the Seldon Plan—complete.
For another,
there was a man, too, in that room—The First Speaker.
He was the
twelfth in the line of chief guardians of the Plan, and his title bore no
deeper significance than the fact that at the gatherings of the leaders of the
Second Foundation, he spoke first.
His predecessor
had beaten the Mule, but the wreckage of that gigantic struggle still littered
the path of the PlanFor twenty-five years, he, and his administration, had been
trying to force a Galaxy of stubborn and stupid human beings back to the pathIt
was a terrible task.
The First Speaker
looked up at the opening door. Even while, in the loneliness of the room, he
considered his quarter century of effort, which now so slowly and inevitably
approached its climax; even while he had been so engaged, his mind had been
considering the newcomer with a gentle expectation. A youth, a student, one of
those who might take over, eventually.
The young man
stood uncertainly at the door, so that the First Speaker had to walk to him and
lead him in, with a friendly hand upon the shoulder.
The Student
smiled shyly, and the First Speaker responded by saying, “First, I must tell
you why you are here.”
They faced each
other now, across the desk. Neither was speaking in any way that could be
recognized as such by any man in the Galaxy who was not himself a member of the
Second Foundation.
Speech,
originally, was the device whereby Man learned, imperfectly, to transmit the
thoughts and emotions of his mind. By setting up arbitrary sounds and
combinations of sounds to represent certain mental nuances, be developed a
method of communication—but one which in its clumsiness and thick-thumbed
inadequacy degenerated all the delicacy of the mind into gross and guttural
signaling.
Downdownthe
results can be followed; and all the suffering that humanity ever knew can be
traced to the one fact that no man in the history of the Galaxy, until Hari
Seldon, and very few men thereafter, could really understand one another. Every
human being lived behind an impenetrable wall of choking mist within which no
other but he existed. Occasionally there were the dim signals from deep within
the cavern in which another man was located-so that each might grope toward the
other. Yet because they did not know one another, and could not understand one
another, and dared not trust one another, and felt from infancy the terrors and
insecurity of that ultimate isolation—there was the hunted fear of man for man,
the savage rapacity of man toward man.
Feet, for tens of
thousands of years, had clogged and shuffled in the mud—and held down the minds
which, for an equal time, had been fit for the companionship of the stars.
Grimly, Man had
instinctively sought to circumvent the prison bars of ordinary speech.
Semantics, symbolic logic, psychoanalysis—they had all been devices whereby
speech could either be refined or by-passed.
Psychohistory had
been the development of mental science, the final mathematicization thereof,
rather, which had finally succeeded. Through the development of the mathematics
necessary to understand the facts of neural physiology and the electrochemistry
of the nervous system, which themselves had to be, had to be, traced down to
nuclear forces, it first became possible to truly develop psychology. And
through the generalization of psychological knowledge from the individual to
the group, sociology was also mathematicized.
The larger
groups; the billions that occupied planets; the trillions that occupied
Sectors; the quadrillions that occupied the whole Galaxy, became, not simply
human beings, but gigantic forces amenable to statistical treatment—so that to
Hari Seldon, the future became clear and inevitable, and the Plan could be set
up.
The same basic
developments of mental science that had brought about the development of the
Seldon Plan, thus made it also unnecessary for the First Speaker to use words
in addressing the Student.
Every reaction to
a stimulus, however slight, was completely indicative of all the trifling
changes, of all the flickering currents that went on in another's mind. The First
Speaker could not sense the emotional content of the Student's instinctively,
as the Mule would have been able to do—since the Mule was a mutant with powers
not ever likely to become completely comprehensible to any ordinary man, even a
Second Foundationer—rather he deduced them, as the result of intensive
training.
Since, however,
it is inherently impossible in a society based on speech to indicate truly the
method of communication of Second Foundationers among themselves, the whole
matter will be hereafter ignored. The First Speaker will be represented as
speaking in ordinary fashion, and if the translation is not always entirely
valid, it is at least the best that can be done under the circumstances.
It will be
pretended therefore, that the First Speaker did actually say, “First, I must
tell you why you are here,” instead of smiling just so and lifting a finger
exactly thus.
The First Speaker
said, “You have studied mental science hard and well for most of your life. You
have absorbed all your teachers could give you. It is time for you and a few
others like yourself to begin your apprenticeship for Speakerhood.”
Agitation from
the other side of the desk.
“No—now you must
take this phlegmatically. You had hoped you would qualify. You had feared you
would not. Actually, both hope and fear are weaknesses. You knew you would
qualify and you hesitate to admit the fact because such knowledge might stamp
you as cocksure and therefore unfit. Nonsense! The most hopelessly stupid man
is he who is not aware that he is wise. It is part of your qualification that
you knew you would qualify.”
Relaxation on the
other side of the desk.
“Exactly. Now you
feel better and your guard is down. You are fitter to concentrate and fitter to
understand. Remember, to be truly effective, it is not necessary to hold the
mind under a tight, controlling barrier which to the intelligent probe is as
informative as a naked mentality. Rather, one should cultivate an innocence, an
awareness of self, and an unself-consciousness of self which leaves one nothing
to hide. My mind is open to you. Let this be so for both of us.”
He went on. “It
is not an easy thing to be a Speaker. It is not an easy thing to be a
Psychohistorian in the first place; and not even the best Psychohistorian need
necessarily qualify to be a Speaker. There is a distinction here. A Speaker
must not only be aware of the mathematical intricacies of the Seldon Plan; he
must have a sympathy for it and for its ends. He must love the Plan; to him it
must be life and breath. More than that it must even be as a living friend.
“Do you know what
this is?”
The First
Speaker's hand hovered gently over the black, shining cube in the middle of the
desk. It was featureless.
“No, Speaker, I
do not.”
“You have heard
of the Prime Radiant?”
“This?”
-Astonishment.
“You expected
something more noble and awe-inspiring? Well, that is natural. It was created
in the days of the Empire, by men of Seldon's time. For nearly four hundred
years, it has served our needs perfectly, without requiring repairs or
adjustment. And fortunately so, since none of the Second Foundation is
qualified to handle it in any technical fashion.” He smiled gently. “Those of
the First Foundation might be able to duplicate this, but they must never know,
of course.”
He depressed a
lever on his side of the desk and the room was in darkness. But only for a
moment, since with a gradually livening flush, the two long walls of the room
glowed to life. First, a pearly white, unrelieved, then a trace of faint
darkness here and there, and finally, the fine neatly printed equations in
black, with an occasional red hairline that wavered through the darker forest
like a staggering rillet.
“Come, my boy,
step here before the wall. You will not cast a shadow. This light does not
radiate from the Radiant in an ordinary manner. To tell you the truth, I do not
know even faintly by what medium this effect is produced, but you will not cast
a shadow. I know that.”
They stood
together in the light. Each wall was thirty feet long, and ten high. The
writing was small and covered every inch.
“This is not the
whole Plan,” said the First Speaker. “To get it all upon both walls, the
individual equations would have to be reduced to microscopic size—but that is
not necessary. What you now see represents the main portions of the Plan till
now. You have learned about this, have you not?”
“Yes, Speaker, I
have.”
“Do you recognize
any portion.”
A slow silence. The
student pointed a finger and as he did so, the line of equations marched down
the wall, until the single series of functions he had thought of—one could
scarcely consider the quick, generalized gesture of the finger to have been
sufficiently precise—was at eye-level.
The First Speaker
laughed softly, “You will find the Prime Radiant to be attuned to your mind.
You may expect more surprises from the little gadget. What were you about to
say about the equation you have chosen?”
“It,” faltered
the Student, “is a Rigellian integral, using a planetary distribution of a bias
indicating the presence of two chief economic classes on the planet, or maybe a
Sector, plus an unstable emotional pattern.”
“And what does it
signify?”
“It represents
the limit of tension, since we have here”—he pointed, and again the equations
veered—”a converging series.”
“Good,” said the
First Speaker. “And tell me, what do you think of all this. A finished work of
art, is it not?”
“Definitely!”
“Wrong! It is
not.” This, with sharpness. “It is the first lesson you must unlearn. The
Seldon Plan is neither complete nor correct. Instead, it is merely the best
that could be done at the time. Over a dozen generations of men have pored over
these equations, worked at them, taken them apart to the last decimal place,
and put them together again. They've done more than that. They've watched
nearly four hundred years pass and against the predictions and equations,
they've checked reality, and they have learned.
“They have
learned more than Seldon ever knew, and if with the accumulated knowledge of
the centuries we could repeat Seldon's work, we could do a better job. Is that
perfectly clear to you?”
The Student
appeared a little shocked.
“Before you
obtain your Speakerhood,” continued the First Speaker, “you yourself will have
to make an original contribution to the Plan. It is not such great blasphemy.
Every red mark you see on the wall is the contribution of a man among us who
lived since Seldon. Why... why—” He looked upward, “There!”
The whole wall
seemed to whirl down upon him.
“This,” he said,
“is mine.” A fine red line encircled two forking arrows and included six square
feet of deductions along each path. Between the two were a series of equations
in red.
“It does not,”
said the Speaker, “seem to be much. It is at a point in the Plan which we will
not reach yet for a time as long as that which has already passed. It is at the
period of coalescence, when the Second Empire that is to be is in the grip of
rival personalities who will threaten to pull it apart if the fight is too
even, or clamp it into rigidity, if the fight is too uneven. Both possibilities
are considered here, followed, and the method of avoiding either indicated.
“Yet it is all a
matter of probabilities and a third course can exist. It is one of
comparatively low likelihood—twelve point six four percent, to be exact—but
even smaller chances have already come to pass and the Plan is only forty
percent complete. This third probability consists of a possible compromise
between two or more of the conflicting personalities being considered. This, I
showed, would first freeze the Second Empire into an unprofitable mold, and
then, eventually, inflict more damage through civil wars than would have taken
place had a compromise never been made in the first place. Fortunately, that
could be prevented, too. And that was my contribution.”
“If I may
interrupt, SpeakerHow is a change made?”
“Through the
agency of the Radiant. You will find in your own case, for instance, that your
mathematics will be checked rigorously by five different boards; and that you
will be required to defend it against a concerted and merciless attack. Two
years will then pass, and your development will be reviewed again. It has
happened more than once that a seemingly perfect piece of work has uncovered
its fallacies only after an induction period of months or years. Sometimes, the
contributor himself discovers the flaw.
“If, after two
years, another examination, not less detailed than the first, still passes it,
and—better still—if in the interim the young scientist has brought to light
additional details, subsidiary evidence, the contribution will be added to the
Plan. It was the climax of my career; it will be the climax of yours.
“The Prime
Radiant can be adjusted to your mind, and all corrections and additions can be
made through mental rapport. There will be nothing to indicate that the
correction or addition is yours. In all the history of the Plan there has been
no personalization. It is rather a creation of all of us together. Do you
understand?”
“Yes, Speaker!”
“Then, enough of
that.” A stride to the Prime Radiant, and the walls were blank again save for
the ordinary room-lighting region along the upper borders. “Sit down here at my
desk, and let me talk to you. It is enough for a Psychohistorian, as such, to
know his Biostatistics and his Neurochemical Electromathematics. Some know
nothing else and are fit only to be statistical technicians. But a Speaker must
be able to discuss the Plan without mathematics. If not the Plan itself, at
least its philosophy and its aims.
“First of all,
what is the aim of the Plan? Please tell me in your own words—and don't grope
for fine sentiment. You won't be judged on polish and suavity, I assure you.”
It was the
Student's first chance at more than a bisyllable, and he hesitated before
plunging into the expectant space cleared away for him. He said, diffidently:
“As a result of what I have learned, I believe that it is the intention of the
Plan to establish a human civilization based on an orientation entirely
different from anything that ever before existed. An orientation which,
according to the findings of Psychohistory, could never spontaneously come into
being—”
“Stop!” The First
Speaker was insistent. ‘You must not say ‘never. ’ That is a lazy slurring over
of the facts. Actually, Psychohistory predicts only probabilities. A particular
event may be infinitesimally probable, but the probability is always greater
than zero.”
“Yes, Speaker.
The orientation desired, if I may correct myself, then, is well known to
possess no significant probability of spontaneously coming to pass.”
“Better. What is
the orientation?”
“It is that of a
civilization based on mental science. In all the known history of Mankind,
advances have been made primarily in physical technology; in the capacity of
handling the inanimate world about Man. Control of self and society has been
left to chance or to the vague gropings of intuitive ethical systems based on
inspiration and emotion. As a result, no culture of greater stability than
about fifty-five percent has ever existed, and these only as the result of
great human misery.”
“And why is the
orientation we speak of a nonspontaneous one?”
“Because a large
minority of human beings are mentally equipped to take part in the advance of
physical science, and all receive the crude and visible benefits thereof. Only
an insignificant minority, however, are inherently able to lead Man through the
greater involvements of Mental Science; and the benefits derived therefrom,
while longer lasting, are more subtle and less apparent. Furthermore, since
such an orientation would lead to the development of a benevolent dictatorship
of the mentally best—virtually a higher subdivision of Man—it would be resented
and could not be stable without the application of a force which would depress
the rest of Mankind to brute level. Such a development is repugnant to us and
must be avoided.”
“What, then, is
the solution?”
“The solution is
the Seldon Plan. Conditions have been so arranged and so maintained that in a
millennium from its beginnings—six hundred years from now, a Second Galactic
Empire will have been established in which Mankind will be ready for the
leadership of Mental Science. In that same interval, the Second Foundation in
its development, will have brought forth a group of Psychologists ready to
assume leadership. Or, as I have myself often thought, the First Foundation
supplies the physical framework of a single political unit, and the Second
Foundation supplies the mental framework of a ready-made ruling class.”
“I see. Fairly
adequate. Do you think that any Second Empire, even if formed in the time set
by Seldon, would do as a fulfillment of his Plan?”
“No, Speaker, I
do not. There are several possible Second Empires that may be formed in the
period of time stretching from nine hundred to seventeen hundred years after
the inception of the Plan, but only one of these is the Second Empire.”
“And in view of
all this, why is it necessary that the existence of the Second Foundation be
hidden—above all, from the First Foundation?”
The Student
probed for a hidden meaning to the question and failed to find it. He was
troubled in his answer, “For the same reason that the details of the Plan as a
whole must be hidden from Mankind in general. The laws of Psychohistory are
statistical in nature and are rendered invalid if the actions of individual men
are not random in nature. If a sizable group of human beings learned of key
details of the Plan, their actions would be governed by that knowledge and
would no longer be random in the meaning of the axioms of Psychohistory. In
other words, they would no longer be perfectly predictable. Your pardon,
Speaker, but I feel that the answer is not satisfactory.”
“It is well that
you do. Your answer is quite incomplete. It is the Second Foundation itself
which must be hidden, not simply the Plan. The Second Empire is not yet formed.
We have still a society which would resent a ruling class of psychologists, and
which would fear its development and fight against it. Do you understand that?”
“Yes, Speaker, I
do. The point has never been stressed—”
“Don't minimize.
It has never been made—in the classroom, though you should be capable of
deducing it yourself. This and many other points we will make now and in the
near future during your apprenticeship. You will see me again in a week. By
that time, I would like to have comments from you as to a certain problem which
I now set before you. I don't want complete and rigorous mathematical
treatment. That would take a year for an expert, and not a week for you. But I
do want an indication as to trends and directions
“You have here a
fork in the Plan at a period in time of about half a century ago. The necessary
details are included. You will note that the path followed by the assumed
reality diverges from all the plotted predictions; its probability being under
one percent. You will estimate for how long the divergence may continue before
it becomes uncorrectable. Estimate also the probable end if uncorrected, and a
reasonable method of correction.”
The Student
flipped the Viewer at random and looked stonily at the passages presented on
the tiny, built-in screen.
He said: “Why
this particular problem, Speaker? It obviously has significance other than
purely academic.”
“Thank you, my
boy. You are as quick as I had expected. The problem is not supposititious.
Nearly half a century ago, the Mule burst into Galactic history and for ten
years was the largest single fact in the universe. He was unprovided for;
uncalculated for. He bent the Plan seriously, but not fatally.
“To stop him
before he did become fatal, however, we were forced to take active part against
him. We revealed our existence, and infinitely worse, a portion of our power.
The First Foundation has learned of us, and their actions are now predicated on
that knowledge. Observe in the problem presented. Here. And here.
“Naturally, you
will not speak of this to anyone.”
There was an
appalled pause, as realization seeped into the Student. He said: “Then the
Seldon Plan has failed!”
“Not yet. It
merely may have failed. The probabilities of success are still twenty-one point
four percent, as of the last assessment.”
9
The Conspirators
For Dr. Darell
and Pelleas Anthor, the evenings passed in friendly intercourse; the days in
pleasant unimportance. It might have been an ordinary visit. Dr. Darell
introduced the young man as a cousin from across space, and interest was dulled
by the cliche.
Somehow, however,
among the small talk, a name might be mentioned. There would be an easy
thoughtfulness. Dr. Darell might say, “No,” or he might say, “Yes.” A call on
the open Communi-wave issued a casual invitation, “Want you to meet my cousin.”
And Arcadia's
preparations proceeded in their own manner. In fact, her actions might be
considered the least straightforward of all.
For instance, she
induced Olynthus Dam at school to donate to her a home-built, self-contained
sound-receiver by methods which indicated a future for her that promised peril
to all males with whom she might come into contact. To avoid details, she
merely exhibited such an interest in Olynthus’ self-publicized hobby—he had a
home workshop-combined with such a well-modulated transfer of this interest to
Olynthus’ own pudgy features, that the unfortunate youth found himself: 1)
discoursing at great and animated length upon the principles of the hyperwave
motor; 2) becoming dizzyingly aware of the great, absorbed eyes that rested so
lightly upon his; and 3) forcing into her willing hands his own greatest
creation, the aforesaid sound-receiver.
Arcadia
cultivated Olynthus in diminishing degree thereafter for just long enough to
remove all suspicion that the sound-receiver had been the cause of the
friendship. For months afterwards, Olynthus felt the memory of that short
period in his life over and over again with the tendrils of his mind, until
finally, for lack of further addition, he gave up and let it slip away.
When the seventh
evening came, and five men sat in the Darell living room with food within and
tobacco without, Arcadia's desk upstairs was occupied by this quite
unrecognizable home-product of Olynthus’ ingenuity.
Five men then.
Dr. Darell, of course, with graying hair and meticulous clothing, looking
somewhat older than his forty-two years. Pelleas Author, serious and quick-eyed
at the moment looking young and unsure of himself. And the three new men: Jole
Turbor, visicastor, bulky and plump-lipped; Dr. Elvett Semic,
professor-emeritus of physics at the University, scrawny and wrinkled, his
clothes only half-filled; Homir Munn, librarian, lanky and terribly
ill-at-ease.
Dr. Darell spoke
easily, in a normal, matter-of-fact tone: “This gathering has been arranged,
gentlemen, for a trifle more than merely social reasons. You may have guessed
this. Since you have been deliberately chosen because of your backgrounds, you
may also guess the danger involved. I won't minimize it, but I will point out
that we are all condemned men, in any case.
“You will notice
that none of you have been invited with any attempt at secrecy. None of you
have been asked to come here unseen. The windows are not adjusted to
non-insight. No screen of any sort is about the room. We have only to attract
the attention of the enemy to be ruined; and the best way to attract that
attention is to assume a false and theatrical secrecy.
(Hah, thought
Arcadia, bending over the voices coming—a bit screechily—out of the little
box.)
“Do you
understand that?”
Elvett Semic
twitched his lower lip and bared his teeth in the screwup, wrinkled gesture
that preceded his every sentence. “Oh, get on with it. Tell us about the
youngster.”
Dr. Darell said,
“Pelleas Anthor is his name. He was a student of my old colleague, Kleise, who
died last year. Kleise sent me his brain-pattern to the fifth sublevel, before
he died, which pattern has been now checked against that of the man before you.
You know, of course, that a brain-pattern cannot be duplicated that far, even
by men of the Science of Psychology. If you don't know that, you'll have to
take my word for it.”
Turbor said,
purse-lipped, “We might as well make a beginning somewheres. We'll take your
word for it, especially since you're the greatest electroneurologist in the
Galaxy now that Kleise is dead. At least, that is the way I've described you in
my visicast comment, and I even believe it myself. How old are you, Anthor?”
“Twenty-nine, Mr.
Turbor.”
“Hm-m-m. And are
you an electroneurologist, too? A great one?”
“Just a student
of the science. But I work hard, and I've had the benefit of Kleise's
training.”
Munn broke in. He
had a slight stammer at periods of tension. “I... I wish you'd g... get
started. I think everyone's t... talking too much.”
Dr. Darell lifted
an eyebrow in Munn's direction. you're right, Homir. Take over, Pelleas.”
“Not for a
while,” said Pelleas Anthor, slowly, “because before we can get started—although
I appreciate Mr. Munn's sentiment—I must request brain-wave data.”
Darell frowned.
“What is this, Anthor? What brain-wave data do you refer to?”
“The patterns of
all of you. You have taken mine, Dr. Darell. I must take yours and those of the
rest of you. And I must take the measurements myself.”
Turbor said,
“There's no reason for him to trust us, Darell. The young man is within his
rights.”
“Thank you,” said
Anthor. “If you'll lead the way to your laboratory then, Dr. Darell, well
proceed. I took the liberty this morning of checking your apparatus.”
The science of
electroencephalography was at once new and old. It was old in the sense that
the knowledge of the microcurrents generated by nerve cells of living beings
belonged to that immense category of human knowledge whose origin was
completely lost It was knowledge that stretched back as far as the earliest
remnants of human history—
And yet it was
new, too. The fact of the existence of microcurrents slumbered through the tens
of thousands of years of Galactic Empire as one of those vivid and whimsical,
but quite useless, items of human knowledge. Some had attempted to form
classifications of waves into waking and sleeping, calm and excited, well and
ill—but even the broadest conceptions had had their hordes of vitiating
exceptions.
Others had tried
to show the existence of brain-wave groups, analogous to the well-known blood
groups, and to show that external environment was the defining factor. These
were the race-minded people who claimed that Man could be divided into
subspecies. But such a philosophy could make no headway against the
overwhelming ecumenical drive involved in the fact of Galactic Empire—one
political unit covering twenty million stellar systems, involving all of Man
from the central world of Trantor—now a gorgeous and impossible memory of the
great past—to the loneliest asteroid on the periphery.
And then again,
in a society given over, as that of the First Empire was, to the physical
sciences and inanimate technology, there was a vague but mighty sociological
push away from the study of the mind. It was less respectable because less
immediately useful; and it was poorly financed since it was less profitable.
After the
disintegration of the First Empire, there came the fragmentation of organized
science, back, back—past even the fundamentals of atomic power into the
chemical power of coal and oil. The one exception to this, of course, was the
First Foundation where the spark of science, revitalized and grown more intense
was maintained and fed to flame. Yet there, too, it was the physical that
ruled, and the brain, except for surgery, was neglected ground.
Hari Seldon was
the first to express what afterwards came to be accepted as truth.
“Neural
microcurrents,” he once said, “carry within them the spark of every varying
impulse and response, conscious and unconscious. The brain-waves recorded on
neatly squared paper in trembling peaks and troughs are the mirrors of the
combined thought-pulses of billions of cells. Theoretically, analysis should
reveal the thoughts and emotions of the subject, to the last and least.
Differences should be detected that are due not only to gross physical defects,
inherited or acquired, but also to shifting states of emotion, to advancing
education and experience, even to something as subtle as a change in the
subject's philosophy of life.”
But even Seldon
could approach no further than speculation.
And now for fifty
years, the men of the First Foundation had been tearing at that incredibly vast
and complicated storehouse of new knowledge. The approach, naturally, was made
through new techniques—as, for example, the use of electrodes at skull sutures by
a newly-developed means which enabled contact to be made directly with the gray
cells, without even the necessity of shaving a patch of skull. And then there
was a recording device which automatically recorded the brain-wave data as an
overall total, and as separate functions of six independent variables.
What was most
significant, perhaps, was the growing respect in which encephalography and the
encephalographer was held. Kleise, the greatest of them, sat at scientific
conventions on an equal basis with the physicist. Dr. Darell, though no longer
active in the science, was known for his brilliant advances in encephalographic
analysis almost as much as for the fact that he was the son of Bayta Darell,
the great heroine of the past generation.
And so now, Dr.
Darell sat in his own chair, with the delicate touch of the feathery electrodes
scarcely hinting at pressure upon his skull, while the vacuum-incased needles
wavered to and fro. His back was to the recorder—otherwise, as was well known,
the sight of the moving curves induced an unconscious effort to control them,
with noticeable results—but he knew that the central dial was expressing the
strongly rhythmic and little-varying Sigma curve, which was to be expected of
his own powerful and disciplined mind. It would be strengthened and purified in
the subsidiary dial dealing with the Cerebellar wave. There would be the sharp,
near-discontinuous leaps from the frontal lobe, and the subdued shakiness from
the subsurface regions with its narrow range of frequencies—
He knew his own
brain-wave pattern much as an artist might be perfectly aware of the color of
his eyes.
Pelleas Anthor
made no comment when Darell rose from the reclining chair. The young man
abstracted the seven recordings, glanced at them with the quick, all-embracing
eyes of one who knows exactly what tiny facet of near-nothingness is being
looked for.
“If you don't
mind, Dr. Semic.”
Semic's
age-yellowed face was serious. Electroencephalography was a science of his old
age of which he knew little; an upstart that he faintly resented. He knew that
he was old and that his wave-pattern would show it. The wrinkles on his face
showed it, the stoop in his walk, the shaking of his hand—but they spoke only
of his body. The brain-wave patterns might show that his mind was old, too. An
embarrassing and unwarranted invasion of a man's last protecting stronghold,
his own mind.
The electrodes
were adjusted. The process did not hurt, of course, from beginning to end.
There was just that tiny tingle, far below the threshold of sensation.
And then came
Turbor, who sat quietly and unemotionally through the fifteen minute process,
and Munn, who jerked at the first touch of the electrodes and then spent the
session rolling his eyes as though he wished he could turn them backwards and
watch through a hole in his occiput.
“And now—” said
Darell, when all was done.
“And now,” said
Anthor, apologetically, “there is one more person in the house.”
Darell, frowning,
said: “My daughter?”
'Yes. I suggested
that she stay home tonight, if you'll remember.”
“For
encephalographical analysis? What in the Galaxy for?”
“I cannot proceed
without it.”
Darell shrugged
and climbed the stairs. Arcadia, amply warned, had the sound-receiver off when
he entered; then followed him down with mild obedience. It was the first time
in her life—except for the taking of her basic mind pattern as an infant, for
identification and registration purposes—that she found herself under the
electrodes.
“May I see,” she
asked, when it was over, holding out her hand.
Dr. Darell said,
“You would not understand, Arcadia. Isn't it time for you to go to bed?”
“Yes, father,”
she said, demurely. “Good night, all.”
She ran up the
stairs and plumped into bed with a minimum of basic preparation. With Olynthus’
sound-receiver propped beside her pillow, she felt like a character out of a
book-film, and hugged every moment of it close to her chest in an ecstasy of
“Spy-stuff.”
The first words
she heard were Anthor's and they were: “The analyses, gentlemen, are all
satisfactory. The child's as well.”
Child, she
thought disgustedly, and bristled at Anthor in the darkness.
Anthor had opened
his briefcase now, and out of it, he took several dozen brain-wave records.
They were not originals. Nor had the briefcase been fitted with an ordinary
lock. Had the key been held in any hand other than his own, the contents
thereof would have silently and instantly oxidized to an indecipherable ash.
Once removed from the briefcase, the records did so anyway after half an hour.
But during their short
lifetime, Anthor spoke quickly. “I have the records here of several minor
government officials at Anacreon. This is a psychologist at Locris University;
this an industrialist at Siwenna. The rest are as you see.”
They crowded
closely. To all but Darell, they were so many quivers on parchment. To Darell,
they shouted with a million tongues.
Anthor pointed
lightly, “I call your attention, Dr. Darell, to the plateau region among the
secondary Tauian waves in the frontal lobe, which is what all these records
have in common. Would you use my Analytical Rule, sir, to check my statement?”
The Analytical
Rule might be considered a distant relation—as a skyscraper is to a shack—of
that kindergarten toy, the logarithmic Slide Rule. Darell used it with the
wristflip of long practice. He made freehand drawings of the result and, as
Anthor stated, there were featureless plateaus in frontal lobe regions where
strong swings should have been expected.
“How would you
interpret that, Dr. Darell?” asked Anthor.
“I'm not sure.
Offhand, I don't see how it's possible. Even in cases of amnesia, there is
suppression, but not removal. Drastic brain surgery, perhaps?”
“Oh, something's
been cut out,” cried Anthor, impatiently, “yes! Not in the physical sense,
however. You know, the Mule could have done just that. He could have suppressed
completely all capacity for a certain emotion or attitude of mind, and leave
nothing but just such a flatness. Or else—”
“Or else the
Second Foundation could have done it. Is that it?” asked Turbor, with a slow
smile.
There was no real
need to answer that thoroughly rhetorical question.
“What made you
suspicious, Mr. Anthor?” asked Munn.
“It wasn't I. It
was Dr. Kleise. He collected brain-wave patterns much as the Planetary Police
do, but along different lines. He specialized in intellectuals, government
officials and business leaders. You see, it's quite obvious that if the Second
Foundation is directing the historical course of the Galaxy—of us—that they
must do it subtly and in as minimal a fashion as possible. If they work through
minds, as they must, it is the minds of people with influence; culturally,
industrially, or politically. And with those he concerned himself.”
“Yes,” objected
Munn, “but is there corroboration? How do these people act—I mean the ones with
the plateau. Maybe it's all a perfectly normal phenomenon.” He looked
hopelessly at the others out of his, somehow, childlike blue eyes, but met no
encouraging return.
“I leave that to
Dr. Darell,” said Anthor. “Ask him how many times he's seen this phenomenon in
his general studies, or in reported cases in the literature over the past
generation. Then ask him the chances of it being discovered in almost one out
of every thousand cases among the categories Dr. Kleise studied.”
“I suppose that
there is no doubt,” said Darell, thoughtfully, “that these are artificial
mentalities. They have been tampered with. In a way, I have suspected this—”
“I know that, Dr.
Darell,” said Author. “I also know you once worked with Dr. Kleise. I would
like to know why you stopped.”
There wasn't
actually hostility in his question. Perhaps nothing more than caution; but, at
any rate, it resulted in a long pause. Darell looked from one to another of his
guests, then said brusquely, “Because there was no point to Kleise's battle. He
was competing with an adversary too strong for him. He was detecting what we—he
and I—knew he would detect—that we were not our own masters. And I didn't want
to know! I had my self-respect. I liked to think that our Foundation was
captain of its collective soul; that our forefathers had not quite fought and
died for nothing. I thought it would be most simple to turn my face away as
long as I was not quite sure. I didn't need my position since the Government
pension awarded to my mother's family in perpetuity would take care of my
uncomplicated needs. My home laboratory would suffice to keep boredom away, and
life would some day endThen Kleise died—”
Semic showed his
teeth and said: “This fellow Kleise; I don't know him. How did he die?”
Anthor cut in:
“He died. He thought he would. He told me half a year before that he was
getting too close—”
“Now we're too
c... close, too, aren't we?” suggested Munn, dry-mouthed, as his Adam's apple
jiggled.
“Yes,” said
Anthor, flatly, “but we were, anyway—all of us. It's why you've all been
chosen. I'm Kleise's student. Dr. Darell was his colleague. Jole Turbor has
been denouncing our blind faith in the saving hand of the Second Foundation on
the air, until the government shut him off—through the agency, I might mention,
of a powerful financier whose brain shows what Kleise used to call the Tamper
Plateau. Homir Munn has the largest home collection of Muliana—if I may use the
phrase to signify collected data concerning the Mule—in existence, and has
published some papers containing speculation on the nature and function of the
Second Foundation. Dr. Semic has contributed as much as anyone to the
mathematics of encephalographic analysis, though I don't believe he realized
that his mathematics could be so applied.”
Semic opened his
eyes wide and chuckled gaspingly, “No, young fellow. I was analyzing
intranuclear motions—the n-body problem, you know. I'm lost in
encephalography.”
“Then we know
where we stand. The government can, of course, do nothing about the matter.
Whether the mayor or anyone in his administration is aware of the seriousness
of the situation, I don't know. But this I do know—we five have nothing to lose
and stand to gain much. With every increase in our knowledge, we can widen
ourselves in safe directions. We are but a beginning, you understand.”
“How widespread,”
put in Turbor, “is this Second Foundation infiltration?”
“I don't know.
There's a flat answer. All the infiltrations we have discovered were on the
outer fringes of the nation. The capital world may yet be clean, though even
that is not certain—else I would not have tested you. You were particularly
suspicious, Dr. Darell, since you abandoned research with Kleise. Kleise never
forgave you, you know. I thought that perhaps the Second Foundation had
corrupted you, but Kleise always insisted that you were a coward. You'll
forgive me, Dr. Darell, if I explain this to make my own position clear. I,
personally, think I understand your attitude, and, if it was cowardice, I
consider it venial.”
Darell drew a
breath before replying. “I ran away! Call it what you wish. I tried to maintain
our friendship, however, yet he never wrote nor called me until the day he sent
me your brainwave data, and that was scarcely a week before he died—”
“If you don't
mind,” interrupted Homir Munn, with a flash of nervous eloquence, “I d... don't
see what you think you're doing. We're a p... poor bunch of conspirators, if
we're just going to talk and talk and t... talk. And I don't see what else we
can do, anyway. This is v... very childish. B... brain-waves and mumbo jumbo
and all that. Is there just one thing you intend to do?”
Pelleas Author's
eyes were bright, “Yes, there is. We need more information on the Second
Foundation. It's the prime necessity. The Mule spent the first five years of
his rule in just that quest for information and failed—or so we have all been
led to believe. But then he stopped looking. Why? Because he failed? Or because
he succeeded?”
“M... more talk,”
said Munn, bitterly. “How are we ever to know?”
“If you'll listen
to meThe Mule's capital was on Kalgan. Kalgan was not part of the Foundation's
commercial sphere of influence before the Mule and it is not part of it now.
Kalgan is ruled, at the moment, by the man, Stettin, unless there's another
palace revolution by tomorrow. Stettin calls himself First Citizen and
considers himself the successor of the Mule. If there is any tradition in that
world, it rests with the super-humanity and greatness of the Mule—a tradition
almost superstitious in intensity. As a result, the Mule's old palace is
maintained as a shrine. No unauthorized person may enter; nothing within has
ever been touched.”
“Well?”
“Well, why is
that so? At times like these, nothing happens without a reason. What if it is
not superstition only that makes the Mule's palace inviolate? What if the
Second Foundation has so arranged matters? In short what if the results of the
Mule's five-year search are within—”
“Oh, p...
poppycock.”
“Why not?”
demanded Anthor. “Throughout its history the Second Foundation has hidden
itself and interfered in Galactic affairs in minimal fashion only. I know that
to us it would seem more logical to destroy the Palace or, at the least, to
remove the data. But you must consider the psychology of these master
psychologists. They are Seldons; they are Mules and they work by indirection,
through the mind. They would never destroy or remove when they could achieve
their ends by creating a state of mind. Eh?”
No immediate
answer, and Anthor continued, “And you, Munn, are just the one to get the
information we need.”
“I?” It was an
astounded yell. Munn looked from one to the other rapidly, “I can't do such a
thing. I'm no man of action; no hero of any teleview. I'm a librarian. If I can
help you that way, all right, and I'll risk the Second Foundation, but I'm not
going out into space on any qu... quixotic thing like that.”
“Now, look,” said
Anthor, patiently, “Dr. Darell and I have both agreed that you're the man. It's
the only way to do it naturally. You say you're a librarian. Fine! What is your
main field of interest? Muliana! You already have the greatest collection of material
on the Mule in the Galaxy. It is natural for you to want more; more natural for
you than for anyone else. You could request entrance to the Kalgan Palace
without arousing suspicion of ulterior motives. You might be refused but you
would not be suspected. What's more, you have a one-man cruiser. You're known
to have visited foreign planets during your annual vacation. You've even been
on Kalgan before. Don't you understand that you need only act as you always
have?”
“But I can't just
say, ‘W... won't you kindly let me in to your most sacred shrine, M... Mr.
First Citizen?’”
“Why not?”
“Because, by the
Galaxy, he won't let me!”
“All right, then.
So he won't Then you'll come home and we'll think of something else.”
Munn looked about
in helpless rebellion. He felt himself being talked into something he hated. No
one offered to help him extricate himself.
So in the end two
decisions were made in Dr. Darell's house. The first was a reluctant one of
agreement on the part of Munn to take off into space as soon as his summer
vacation began.
The other was a
highly unauthorized decision on the part of a thoroughly unofficial member of
the gathering, made as she clicked off a sound-receiver and composed herself
for a belated sleep. This second decision does not concern us just yet.
10
Approaching
Crisis
A week had passed
on the Second Foundation, and the First Speaker was smiling once again upon the
Student.
“You must have
brought me interesting results, or you would not be so filled with anger.”
The Student put
his hand upon the sheaf of calculating paper he had brought with him and said,
“Are you sure that the problem is a factual one?”
“The premises are
true. I have distorted nothing.”
“Then I must
accept the results, and I do not want to.”
“Naturally. But
what have your wants to do with it? Well, tell me what disturbs you so. No, no,
put your derivations to one side. I will subject them to analysis afterward.
Meanwhile, talk to me. Let me judge your understanding.”
“Well, then,
SpeakerIt becomes very apparent that a gross overall change in the basic
psychology of the First Foundation has taken place. As long as they knew of the
existence of a Seldon Plan, without knowing any of the details thereof, they
were confident but uncertain. They knew they would succeed, but they didn't
know when or how. There was, therefore, a continuous atmosphere of tension and
strain—which was what Seldon desired. The First Foundation, in other words,
could be counted upon to work at maximum potential.”
“A doubtful
metaphor,” said the First Speaker, “but I understand you.”
“But now,
Speaker, they know of the existence of a Second Foundation in what amounts to
detail, rather merely than as an ancient and vague statement of Seldon's. They
have an inkling as to its function as the guardian of the Plan. They know that
an agency exists which watches their every step and will not let them fall. So
they abandon their purposeful stride and allow themselves to be carried upon a
litter. Another metaphor, I'm afraid.”
“Nevertheless, go
on.”
“And that very
abandonment of effort; that growing inertia; that lapse into softness and into
a decadent and hedonistic culture, means the ruin of the Plan. They must be
self-propelled.”
“Is that all?”
“No, there is
more. The majority reaction is as described. But a great probability exists for
a minority reaction. Knowledge of our guardianship and our control will rouse
among a few, not complacence, but hostility. This follows from Korillov's
Theorem—”
“Yes, yes. I know
the theorem.”
“I'm sorry,
Speaker. It is difficult to avoid mathematics. In any case, the effect is that
not only is the Foundation's effort diluted, but part of it is turned against
us, actively against us.”
“And is that
all?”
“There remains
one other factor of which the probability is moderately low—”
“Very good. What
is that?”
“While the
energies of the First Foundation were directed only to Empire; while their only
enemies were huge and outmoded hulks that remained from the shambles of the
past, they were obviously concerned only with the physical sciences. With us
forming a new, large part of their environment, a change in view may well be
imposed on them. They may try to become psychologists—”
“That change,”
said the First Speaker, coolly, “has already taken place.”
The Student's
lips compressed themselves into a pale line. “Then all is over. It is the basic
incompatibility with the Plan. Speaker, would I have known of this if I had
lived—outside?”
The First Speaker
spoke seriously, “You feel humiliated, my young man, because, thinking you
understood so much so well, you suddenly find that many very apparent things
were unknown to you. Thinking you were one of the Lords of the Galaxy; you
suddenly find that you stand near to destruction. Naturally, you will resent
the ivory tower in which you lived; the seclusion in which you were educated;
the theories on which you were reared.
“I once had that
feeling. It is normal. Yet it was necessary that in your formative years you
have no direct contact with the Galaxy, that you remain here, where all
knowledge is filtered to you, and your mind carefully sharpened. We could have
shown you this... this part-failure of the Plan earlier and spared you the
shock now, but you would not have understood the significance properly, as you
now will. Then you find no solution at all to the problem?”
The Student shook
his head and said hopelessly, “None!”
“Well, it is not
surprising. Listen to me, young man. A course of action exists and has been
followed for over a decade. It is not a usual course, but one that we have been
forced into against our will. It involves low probabilities, dangerous
assumptionsWe have even been forced to deal with individual reactions at times,
because that was the only possible way, and you know that Psychostatistics by
its very nature has no meaning when applied to less than planetary numbers.”
“Are we
succeeding?” gasped the Student.
“There's no way
of telling yet. We have kept the situation stable so far—but for the first time
in the history of the Plan, it is possible for the unexpected actions of a
single individual to destroy it. We have adjusted a minimum number of outsiders
to a needful state of mind; we have our agents—but their paths are planned.
They dare not improvise. That should be obvious to you. And I will not conceal
the worst—if we are discovered, here, on this world, it will not only be the
Plan that is destroyed, but ourselves, our physical selves. So you see, our
solution is not very good.”
“But the little
you have described does not sound like a solution at all, but like a desperate
guess.”
“No. Let us say,
an intelligent guess.”
“When is the
crisis, Speaker? When will we know whether we have succeeded or not?”
“Well within the
year, no doubt.”
The Student
considered that, then nodded his head. He shook hands with the Speaker. “Well,
it's good to know.”
He turned on his
heel and left.
The first Speaker
looked out silently as the window gained transparency. Past the giant
structures to the quite, crowding stars.
A year would pass
quickly. Would any of them, any of Seldon's heritage, be alive at its end?
11
Stowaway
It was a little
over a month before the summer could be said to have started. Started, that is,
to the extent that Homir Munn had written his final financial report of the
fiscal year, seen to it that the substitute librarian supplied by the
Government was sufficiently aware of the subtleties of the post—last year's man
had been quite unsatisfactory—and arranged to have his little cruiser the Unimara—named
after a tender and mysterious episode of twenty years past—taken out of its
winter cobwebbery.
He left Terminus
in a sullen distemper. No one was at the port to see him off. That would not
have been natural since no one ever had in the past. He knew very well that it
was important to have this trip in no way different from any he had made in the
past, yet he felt drenched in a vague resentment. He, Homir Munn, was risking
his neck in derring-doery of the most outrageous sort, and yet he left alone.
At least, so he
thought.
And it was
because he thought wrongly, that the following day was one of confusion, both
on the Unimara and in Dr. Darell's suburban home.
It hit Dr.
Darell's home first, in point of time, through the medium of Poli, the maid, whose
month's vacation was now quite a thing of the past. She flew down the stairs in
a flurry and stutter.
The good doctor
met her and she tried vainly to put emotion into words but ended by thrusting a
sheet of paper and a cubical object at him.
He took them
unwillingly and said: “What's wrong, Poli?”
“She's gone,
doctor.”
“Who's gone?”
“Arcadia!”
“What do you
mean, gone? Gone where? What are you talking about?”
And she stamped
her foot: ‘I don't know. She's gone, and there's a suitcase and some clothes
gone with her and there's that letter. Why don't you read it, instead of just
standing there? Oh, you men!”
Dr. Darell
shrugged and opened the envelope. The letter was not long, and except for the
angular signature, “Arkady,” was in the ornate and flowing handwriting of
Arcadia's transcriber.
Dear Father:
It would have
been simply too heartbreaking to say good-by to you in person. I might have
cried like a little girl and you would have been ashamed of me. So I'm writing
a letter instead to tell you how much III miss you, even while I'm having this
perfectly wonderful summer vacation with Uncle Homir. III take good care of
myself and it won't be long before I'm home again. Meanwhile, I'm leaving you
something that's all my own. You can have it now.
Your loving
daughter,
Arkady.
He read it
through several times with an expression that grew blanker each time. He said
stiffly, “Have you read this, Poli?”
Poli was
instantly on the defensive. “I certainly can't be blamed for that, doctor. The
envelope has ‘Poli’ written on the outside, and I had no way of telling there
was a letter for you on the inside. I'm no snoop, doctor, and in the years I've
been with—”
Darell held up a
placating hand, “Very well, Poli. It's not important. I just wanted to make
sure you understood what had happened.”
He was
considering rapidly. It was no use telling her to forget the matter. With
regard to the enemy, “forget” was a meaningless word; and the advice, insofar
as it made the matter more important, would have had an opposite effect.
He said instead,
“She's a queer little girl, you know. Very romantic. Ever since we arranged to
have her go off on a space trip this summer, she's been quite excited.”
“And just why has
no one told me about this space trip?”
“It was arranged
while you were away, and we forgot It's nothing more complicated than that.”
Poli's original
emotions now concentrated themselves into a single, overwhelming indignation,
“Simple, is it? The poor chick has gone off with one suitcase, without a decent
stitch of clothes to her, and alone at that. How long will she be away?”
“Now I won't have
you worrying about it, Poli. There will be plenty of clothes for her on the
ship. It's been all arranged. Will you tell Mr. Anthor, that I want to see him?
Oh, and first—is this the object that Arcadia has left for me?” He turned it
over in his hand.
Poli tossed her
head. “I'm sure I don't know. The letter was on top of it and that's every bit
I can tell you. Forget to tell me, indeed. If her mother were alive—”
Darell, waved her
away. “Please call Mr. Anthor.”
Anthor's
viewpoint on the matter differed radically from that of Arcadia's father. He
punctuated his initial remarks with clenched fists and tom hair, and from
there, passed on to bitterness.
“Great Space,
what are you waiting for? What are we both waiting for? Get the spaceport on
the viewer and have them contact the Unimara.”
“Softly, Pelleas,
she's my daughter.”
“But it's not
your Galaxy.”
“Now, wait. She's
an intelligent girl, Pelleas, and she's thought this thing out carefully. We
had better follow her thoughts while this thing is fresh. Do you know what this
thing is?”
“No. Why should
it matter what it is?'
“Because it's a
sound-receiver.”
“That thing?”
“It's homemade,
but it will work. I've tested it. Don't you see? It's her way of telling us
that she's been a party to our conversations of policy. She knows where Homir
Munn is going and why. She's decided it would be exciting to go along.”
“Oh, Great Space,”
groaned the younger man. “Another mind for the Second Foundation to pick.”
“Except that
there's no reason why the Second Foundation should, a priori, suspect a
fourteen-year-old girl of being a danger—unless we do anything to attract
attention to her, such as calling back a ship out of space for no reason other
than to take her off. Do you forget with whom we're dealing? How narrow the
margin is that separates us from discovery? How helpless we are thereafter?”
“But we can't
have everything depend on an insane child.”
She's not insane,
and we have no choice. She need not have written the letter, but she did it to
keep us from going to the police after a lost child. Her letter suggests that
we convert the entire matter into a friendly offer on the part of Munn to take
an old friend's daughter off for a short vacation. And why not? He's been my
friend for nearly twenty years. He's known her since she was three, when I
brought her back from Trantor. It's a perfectIy natural thing, and, in fact,
ought to decrease suspicion. A spy does not carry a fourteen-year-old niece
about with him.”
“So. And what
will Munn do when he finds her?”
Dr. Darell heaved
his eyebrows once. “I can't say—but I presume she'll handle him.”
But the house was
somehow very lonely at night and Dr. Darell found that the fate of the Galaxy
made remarkably little difference while his daughter's mad little life was in
danger.
The excitement on
the Unimara, if involving fewer people, was considerably more intense.
In the luggage
compartment, Arcadia found herself, in the first place, aided by experience,
and in the second, hampered by the reverse.
Thus, she met the
initial acceleration with equanimity and the more subtle nausea that
accompanied the inside-outness of the first jump through hyperspace with
stoicism. Both had been experienced on space hops before, and she was tensed
for them. She knew also that luggage compartments were included in the ship's
ventilation-system and that they could even be bathed in wall-light. This last,
however, she excluded as being too unconscionably unromantic. She remained in
the dark, as a conspirator should, breathing very softly, and listening to the
little miscellany of noises that surrounded Homir Munn.
They were
undistinguished noises, the kind made by a man alone. The shuffling of shoes,
the rustle of fabric against metal, the soughing of an upholstered chair seat
retreating under weight, the sharp click of a control unit, or the soft slap of
a palm over a photoelectric cell.
Yet, eventually,
it was the lack of experience that caught up with Arcadia. In the book films
and on the videos, the stowaway seemed to have such an infinite capacity for
obscurity. Of course, there was always the danger of dislodging something which
would fall with a crash, or of sneezing—in videos you were almost sure to
sneeze; it was an accepted matter. She knew all this, and was careful. There
was also the realization that thirst and hunger might be encountered. For this,
she was prepared with ration cans out of the pantry. But yet things remained
that the films never mentioned, and it dawned upon Arcadia with a shock that,
despite the best intentions in the world, she could stay hidden in the closet
for only a limited time.
And on a one-man
sports-cruiser, such as the Unimara, living space consisted, essentially, of a
single room, so that there wasn't even the risky possibility of sneaking out of
the compartment while Munn was engaged elsewhere.
She waited
frantically for the sounds of sleep to arise. If only she knew whether he snored.
At least she knew where the bunk was and she could recognize the rolling
protest of one when she heard it. There was a long breath and then a yawn. She
waited through a gathering silence, punctuated by the bunk's soft protest
against a changed position or a shifted leg.
The door of the
luggage compartment opened easily at the pressure of her finger, and her
craning neck—
There was a
definite human sound that broke off sharply.
Arcadia
solidified. Silence! Still silence!
She tried to poke
her eyes outside the door without moving her head and failed. The head followed
the eyes.
Homir Munn was
awake, of course—reading in bed, bathed in the soft, unspreading bed light,
staring into the darkness with wide eyes, and groping one hand stealthily under
the pillow.
Arcadia's head
moved sharply back of itself. Then, the light went out entirely and Munn's
voice said with shaky sharpness, “I've got a blaster, and I'm shooting, by the
Galaxy—”
And Arcadia
wailed, “It's only me. Don't shoot.”
Remarkable what a
fragile flower romance is. A gun with a nervous operator behind it can spoil
the whole thing.
The light was
back on—all over the ship—and Munn was sitting up in bed. The somewhat grizzled
hair on his thin chest and the sparse one-day growth on his chin lent him an
entirely fallacious appearance of disreputability.
Arcadia stepped
out, yanking at her metallene jacket which was supposed to be guaranteed
wrinkleproof.
After a wild
moment in which he almost jumped out of bed, but remembered, and instead yanked
the sheet up to his shoulders, Munn gargled, “W... wha... what—”
He was completely
incomprehensible.
Arcadia said
meekly, “Would you excuse me for a minute? I've got to wash my hands.” She knew
the geography of the vessel, and slipped away quickly. When she returned, with
her courage oozing back, Homir Munn was standing before her with a faded
bathrobe on the outside and a brilliant fury on the inside.
“What the black
holes of Space are you d... doing aboard this ship? H... how did you get on
here? What do you th... think I'm supposed to do with you? What's going on
here?”
He might have
asked questions indefinitely, but Arcadia interrupted sweetly, “I just wanted
to come along, Uncle Homir.”
“Why? I'm not
going anywhere?”
“You're going to
Kalgan for information about the Second Foundation.”
And Munn let out
a wild howl and collapsed completely. For one horrified moment, Arcadia thought
he would have hysterics or beat his head against the wall. He was still holding
the blaster and her stomach grew ice-cold as she watched it.
“Watch outTake it
easy—” was all she could think of to say.
But he struggled
back to relative normality and threw the blaster on to the bunk with a force
that should have set it off and blown a hole through the ship's hull.
“How did you get
on?” he asked slowly, as though gripping each word with his teeth very
carefully to prevent it from trembling before letting it out.
“It was easy. I
just came into the hangar with my suitcase, and said, ‘Mr. Munn's baggage!’ and
the man in charge just waved his thumb without even looking up.”
“I'll have to
take you back, you know,” said Homir, and there was a sudden wild glee within
him at the thought. By Space, this wasn't his fault.
“You can't,” said
Arcadia, calmly, “it would attract attention.”
“What?”
“You know. The
whole purpose of your going to Kalgan was because it was natural for you to go
and ask for permission to look into the Mule's records. And you've got to be so
natural that you're to attract no attention at all. If you go back with a girl
stowaway, it might even get into the tele-news reports.”
“Where did you
g... get those notions about Kalgan? These... uh... childish—” He was far too
flippant for conviction, of course, even to one who knew less than did Arcadia.
“I heard,” she
couldn't avoid pride completely, “with a sound-recorder. I know all about it—so
you've got to let me come along.”
“What about your
father?” He played a quick trump. “For all he knows, you're kidnapped... dead.”
“I left a note,”
she said, overtrumping, “and he probably knows he mustn't make a fuss, or
anything. You'll probably get a space-gram from him.”
To Munn the only
explanation was sorcery, because the receiving signal sounded wildly two
seconds after she finished.
She said: “That's
my father, I bet,” and it was.
The message
wasn't long and it was addressed to Arcadia. It said: “Thank you for your
lovely present, which I'm sure you put to good use. Have a good time.”
“You see,” she
said, “that's instructions.”
Homir grew used
to her. After a while, he was glad she was there. Eventually, he wondered how
he would have made it without her. She prattIed! She was excited! Most of all,
she was completely unconcerned. She knew the Second Foundation was the enemy,
yet it didn't bother her. She knew that on Kalgan, he was to deal with a
hostile officialdom, but she could hardly wait.
Maybe it came of
being fourteen.
At any rate, the
week-long trip now meant conversation rather than introspection. To be sure, it
wasn't a very enlightening conversation, since it concerned, almost entirely,
the girl's notions on the subject of how best to treat the Lord of Kalgan.
Amusing and nonsensical, and yet delivered with weighty deliberation.
Homir found
himself actually capable of smiling as he listened and wondered out of just
which gem of historical fiction she got her twisted notion of the great
universe.
It was the
evening before the last jump. Kalgan was a bright star in the
scarcely-twinkling emptiness of the outer reaches of the Galaxy. The ship's
telescope made it a sparkling blob of barely-perceptible diameter.
Arcadia sat
cross-legged in the good chair. She was wearing a pair of slacks and a
none-too-roomy shirt that belonged to Homir. Her own more feminine wardrobe had
been washed and ironed for the landing.
She said, “I'm
going to write historical novels, you know.” She was quite happy about the
trip. Uncle Homir didn't the least mind listening to her and it made
conversation so much more pleasant when you could talk to a really intelligent
person who was serious about what you said.
She continued:
“I've read books and books about all the great men of Foundation history. You
know, like Seldon, Hardin, Mallow, Devers and all the rest. I've even read most
of what you've written about the Mule, except that it isn't much fun to read
those parts where the Foundation loses. Wouldn't you rather read a history
where they skipped the silly, tragic parts?”
“Yes, I would,”
Munn assured her, gravely. “But it wouldn't be a fair history, would it,
Arkady? You'd never get academic respect, unless you give the whole story.”
“Oh, poof. Who
cares about academic respect?” She found him delightful. He hadn't missed
calling her Arkady for days. “My novels are going to be interesting and are
going to sell and be famous. What's the use of writing books unless you sell
them and become well-known? I don't want just some old professors to know me.
It's got to be everybody.”
Her eyes darkened
with pleasure at the thought and she wriggled into a more comfortable position.
“In fact, as soon as I can get father to let me, I'm going to visit Trantor,
so's I can get background material on the First Empire, you know. I was born on
Trantor; did you know that?”
He did, but he
said, “You were?” and put just the right amount of amazement into his voice. He
was rewarded with something between a beam and a simper.
“Uh-huh. My
grandmother... you know, Bayta Darell, you've heard of her... was on Trantor
once with my grandfather. In fact, that's where they stopped the Mule, when all
the Galaxy was at his feet; and my father and mother went there also when they
were first married. I was born there. I even lived there till mother died, only
I was just three then, and I don't remember much about it. Were you ever on
Trantor, Uncle Homir?”
“No, can't say I
was.” He leaned back against the cold bulkhead and listened idly. Kalgan was
very close, and he felt his uneasiness flooding back.
“Isn't it just
the most romantic world? My father says that under Stannel V, it had more
people than any ten worlds nowadays. He says it was just one big world of
metals—one big city—that was the capital of all the Galaxy. He's shown me
pictures that he took on Trantor. It's all in ruins now, but it's still
stupendous. I'd just love to see it again. In fact... Homir!”
“Yes?”
“Why don't we go
there, when we're finished with Kalgan?”
Some of the
fright hurtled back into his face. “What? Now don't start on that. This is
business, not pleasure. Remember that.”
“But it is
business” she squeaked. “There might be incredible amounts of information on
Trantor, don't you think so?*
“No, I don't He
scrambled to his feet “Now untangle yourself from the computer. We've got to
make the last jump, and then you turn in.” One good thing about landing,
anyway; he was about fed up with trying to sleep on an overcoat on the metal
floor.
The calculations
were not difficult. The “Space Route Handbook” was quite explicit on the
Foundation-Kalgan route. There was the momentary twitch of the timeless passage
through hyperspace and the final light-year dropped away.
The sun of Kalgan
was a sun now—large, bright, and yellow-white; invisible behind the portholes
that had automatically closed on the sun-lit side.
Kalgan was only a
night's sleep away.
12
Lord
Of all the worlds
of the Galaxy, Kalgan undoubtedly had the most unique history. That of the
planet Terminus, for instance, was that of an almost uninterrupted rise. That
of Trantor, once capital of the Galaxy, was that of an almost uninterrupted
fall. But Kalgan—
Kalgan first
gained fame as the pleasure world of the Galaxy two centuries before the birth
of Hari Seldon. It was a pleasure world in the sense that it made an
industry—and an immensely profitable one, at that—out of amusement.
And it was a
stable industry. It was the most stable industry in the Galaxy. When all the
Galaxy perished as a civilization, little by little, scarcely a feather's
weight of catastrophe fell upon Kalgan. No matter how the economy and sociology
of the neighboring sectors of the Galaxy changed, there was always an elite;
and it is always the characteristic of an elite that it possesses leisure as
the great reward of its elite-hood.
Kalgan was at the
service, therefore, successively—and successfully—of the effete and perfumed
dandies of the Imperial Court with their sparkling and libidinous ladies; of
the rough and raucous warlords who ruled in iron the worlds they had gained in
blood, with their unbridled and lascivious wenches; of the plump and luxurious
businessmen of the Foundation, with their lush and flagitious mistresses.
It was quite
undiscriminating, since they all had money. And since Kalgan serviced all and
barred none; since its commodity was in unfailing demand; since it had the
wisdom to interfere in no world's politics, to stand on no one's legitimacy, it
prospered when nothing else did, and remained fat when all grew thin.
That is, until
the Mule. Then, somehow, it fell, too, before a conqueror who was impervious to
amusement, or to anything but conquest. To him all planets were alike, even
Kalgan.
So for a decade,
Kalgan found itself in the strange role of Galactic metropolis; mistress of the
greatest Empire since the end of the Galactic Empire itself.
And then, with
the death of the Mule, as sudden as the zoom, came the drop. The Foundation
broke away. With it and after it, much of the rest of the Mule's dominions.
Fifty years later there was left only the bewildering memory of that short
space of power, like an opium dream. Kalgan never quite recovered. It could
never return to the unconcerned pleasure world it had been, for the spell of power
never quite releases its bold. It lived instead under a succession of men whom
the Foundation called the Lords of Kalgan, but who styled themselves First
Citizen of the Galaxy, in imitation of the Mule's only title, and who
maintained the fiction that they were conquerors too.
The current Lord
of Kalgan had held that position for five months. He had gained it originally
by virtue of his position at the head of the Kalganian navy, and through a
lamentable lack of caution on the part of the previous lord. Yet no one on
Kalgan was quite stupid enough to go into the question of legitimacy too long
or too closely. These things happened, and are best accepted.
Yet that sort of
survival of the fittest in addition to putting a premium on bloodiness and
evil, occasionally allowed capability to come to the fore as well. Lord Stettin
was competent enough and not easy to manage.
Not easy for his
eminence, the First Minister, who, with fine impartiality, had served the last
lord as well as the present; and who would, if he lived long enough, serve the
next as honestly.
Nor easy for the
Lady Callia, who was Stettin's more than friend, yet less than wife.
In Lord Stettin's
private apartments the three were alone that evening. The First Citizen, bulky
and glistening in the admiral's uniform that he affected, scowled from out the
unupholstered chair in which he sat as stiffly as the plastic of which it was
composed. His First Minister Lev Meirus, faced him with a far-off unconcern,
his long, nervous fingers stroking absently and rhythmically the deep line that
curved from hooked nose along gaunt and sunken cheek to the point, nearly, of
the gray-bearded chin. The Lady Callia disposed of herself gracefully on the
deeply furred covering of a foamite couch, her full lips trembling a bit in an
unheeded pout.
“Sir,” said
Meirus—it was the only title adhering to a lord who was styled only First
Citizen, “you lack a certain view of the continuity of history. Your own life,
with its tremendous revolutions, leads you to think of the course of
civilization as something equally amenable to sudden change. But it is not.”
“The Mule showed
otherwise.”
“But who can
follow in his footsteps. He was more than man, remember. And be, too, was not
entirely successful.”
“Poochie,”
whimpered the Lady Callia, suddenly, and then shrank into herself at the
furious gesture from the First Citizen.
Lord Stettin
said, harshly, “Do not interrupt, Callia. Meirus, I am tired of inaction. My
predecessor spent his life polishing the navy into a finely-turned instrument
that has not its equal in the Galaxy. And he died with the magnificent machine
lying idle. Am I to continue that? I, an Admiral of the Navy?
“How long before
the machine rusts? At present, it is a drain on the Treasury and returns
nothing. Its officers long for dominion, its men for loot. All Kalgan desires
the return of Empire and glory. Are you capable of understanding that?”
“These are but
words that you use, but I grasp your meaning. Dominion, loot, glory—pleasant
when they are obtained, but the process of obtaining them is often risky and
always unpleasant. The first fine flush may not last. And in all history, it
has never been wise to attack the Foundation. Even the Mule would have been
wiser to refrain—”
There were tears
in the Lady Callia's blue, empty eyes. Of late, Poochie scarcely saw her, and
now, when he had promised the evening to her, this horrible, thin, gray man,
who always looked through her rather than at her, had forced his way in. And
Poochie let him. She dared not say anything; was frightened even of the sob
that forced its way out.
But Stettin was
speaking now in the voice she hated, hard and Impatient. He was saying: “You're
a slave to the far past. The Foundation is greater in volume and population,
but they are loosely knit and will fall apart at a blow. What holds them
together these days is merely inertia; an inertia I am strong enough to smash.
You are hypnotized by the old days when only the Foundation had atomic power.
They were able to dodge the last hammer blows of the dying Empire and then faced
only the unbrained anarchy of the warlords who would counter the Foundation's
atomic vessels only with hulks and relics.
“But the Mule, my
dear Meirus, has changed that. He spread the knowledge, that the Foundation had
hoarded to itself, through half the Galaxy and the monopoly in science is gone
forever. We can match them.”
“And the Second
Foundation?” questioned Meirus, coolly.
“And the Second
Foundation?” repeated Stettin as coolly. “Do you know its intentions? It took
ten years to stop the Mule, if, indeed, it was the factor, which some doubt.
Are you unaware that a good many of the Foundation's psychologists and
sociologists are of the opinion that the Seldon Plan has been completely
disrupted since the days of the Mule? If the Plan has gone, then a vacuum
exists which I may fill as well as the next man.”
“Our knowledge of
these matters is not great enough to warrant the gamble.”
“Our knowledge,
perhaps, but we have a Foundation visitor on the planet. Did you know that? A
Homir Munn—who, I understand, has written articles on the Mule, and has
expressed exactly that opinion, that the Seldon Plan no longer exists.”
The First
Minister nodded, “I have heard of him, or at least of his writings. What does
he desire?”
“He asks
permission to enter the Mule's palace.”
“Indeed? It would
be wise to refuse. It is never advisable to disturb the superstitions with
which a planet is held.”
“I will consider
that—and we will speak again.”
Meirus bowed
himself out.
Lady Callia said
tearfully, “Are you angry with me, Poochie?” Stettin turned on her savagely.
“Have I not told you before never to call me by that ridiculous name in the
presence of others?”
“You used to like
it.”
“Well, I don't
any more, and it is not to happen again.”
He stared at her
darkly. It was a mystery to him that he tolerated her these days. She was a
soft, empty-headed thing, comfortable to the touch, with a pliable affection
that was a convenient facet to a hard life. Yet, even that affection was
becoming wearisome. She dreamed of marriage, of being First Lady.
Ridiculous!
She was all very
well when he had been an admiral only—but now as First Citizen and future
conqueror, he needed more. He needed heirs who could unite his future
dominions, something the Mule had never had, which was why his Empire did not
survive his strange nonhuman life. He, Stettin, needed someone of the great
historic families of the Foundation with whom he could fuse dynasties.
He wondered
testily why he did not rid himself of Callia now. It would be no trouble. She
would whine a bitHe dismissed the thought. She had her points, occasionally.
Callia was
cheering up now. The influence of Graybeard was gone and her Poochie's granite
face was softening now. She lifted herself in a single, fluid motion and melted
toward him.
“You're not going
to scold me, are you?”
“No.” He patted
her absently. “Now just sit quietly for a while, will you? I want to think.”
“About the man
from the Foundation?”
“Yes.”
“Poochie?” This
was a pause.
“What?”
“Poochie, the man
has a little girl with him, you said. Remember? Could I see her when she comes?
I never—”
“Now what do you
think I want him to bring his brat with him for? Is my audience room to be a
grammar school? Enough of your nonsense, Callia.”
“But I'll take
care of her, Poochie. You won't even have to bother with her. It's just that I
hardly ever see children, and you know how I love them.”
He looked at her
sardonically. She never tired of this approach. She loved children; i. e. his
children; i. e. his legitimate children; i. e. marriage. He laughed.
“This particular
little piece,” he said, “is a great girl of fourteen or fifteen. She's probably
as tall as you are.”
Callia looked
crushed. “Well, could I, anyway? She could tell me about the Foundation? I've
always wanted to go there, you know. My grandfather was a Foundation man. Won't
you take me there, sometime, Poochie?”
Stettin smiled at
the thought. Perhaps he would, as conqueror. The good nature that the thought
supplied him with made itself felt in his words, “I will, I will. And you can
see the girl and talk Foundation to her all you want. But not near me,
understand.”
“I won't bother
you, honestly. I'll have her in my own rooms.” She was happy again. It was not
very often these days that she was allowed to have her way. She put her arms
about his neck and after the slightest hesitation, she felt its tendons relax
and the large head come softly down upon her shoulder.
13
Lady
Arcadia felt
triumphant. How life had changed since Pelleas Anthor had stuck his silly face
up against her window—and all because she had the vision and courage to do what
needed to be done.
Here she was on
Kalgan. She had been to the great Central Theater—the largest in the Galaxy—and
seen in person some of the singing stars who were famous even in the distant
Foundation. She had shopped all on her own along the Flowered Path, fashion
center of the gayest world in Space. And she had made her own selections
because Homir just didn't know anything about it at all. The saleswomen raised
no objections at all to long, shiny dresses with those vertical sweeps that
made her look so tall—and Foundation money went a long, long way. Homir had
given her a ten-credit bill and when she changed it to Kalganian “Kalganids,”
it made a terribly thick sheaf.
She had even had
her hair redone—sort of half-short in back, with two glistening curls over each
temple. And it was treated so that it looked goldier than ever; it just shone.
But this, this
was best of all. To be sure, the Palace of Lord Stettin wasn't as grand and
lavish as the theaters, or as mysterious and historical as the old palace of
the Mule—of which, so far they had only glimpsed the lonely towers in their air
flight across the planet—but, imagine, a real Lord. She was rapt in the glory
of it.
And not only
that. She was actually face to face with his Mistress. Arcadia capitalized the
word in her mind, because she knew the role such women had played in history;
knew their glamour and power. In fact, she had often thought of being an
all-powerful and glittering creature, herself, but somehow mistresses weren't
in fashion at the Foundation just then and besides, her father probably
wouldn't let her, if it came to that.
Of course, the
Lady Callia didn't quite come up to Arcadia's notion of the part. For one
thing, she was rather plump, and didn't look at all wicked and dangerous. just
sort of faded and near-sighted. Her voice was high, too, instead of throaty,
and—
Callia said,
“Would you like more tea, child?”
“I'll have
another cup, thank you, your grace,”—or was it your highness?
Arcadia continued
with a connoisseur's condescension, “Those are lovely pearls you are wearing,
my lady.” (On the whole, “my lady” seemed best.)
“Oh? Do you think
so?” Callia seemed vaguely pleased. She removed them and let them swing milkily
to and fro. “Would you like them? You can have them, if you like.”
“Oh, myYou really
mean—” She found them in her hand, then, repelling them mournfully, she said,
“Father wouldn't like it.”
“He wouldn't like
the pearls? But they're quite nice pearls.”
“He wouldn't like
my taking them, I mean. You're not supposed to take expensive presents from
other people, he says.”
“You aren't?
But... I mean, this was a present to me from Poo... from the First Citizen. Was
that wrong, do you suppose?”
Arcadia reddened.
“I didn't mean—”
But Callia had
tired of the subject. She let the pearls slide to the ground and said, “You
were going to tell me about the Foundation. Please do so right now.”
And Arcadia was
suddenly at a loss. What does one say about a world dull to tears. To her, the
Foundation was a suburban town, a comfortable house, the annoying necessities
of education, the uninteresting eternities of a quiet life. She said,
uncertainly, “It's just like you view in the book-films, I suppose.”
“Oh, do you view
book-films? They give me such a headache when I try. But do you know I always
love video stories about your Traders—such big, savage men. It's always so
exciting. Is your friend, Mr. Munn, one of them? He doesn't seem nearly savage
enough. Most of the Traders had beards and big bass voices, and were so
domineering with women—don't you think so?”
Arcadia smiled,
glassily. “That's just part of history, my lady. I mean, when the Foundation
was Young, the Traders were the pioneers pushing back the frontiers and
bringing civilization to the rest of the Galaxy. We learned all about that in
school. But that time has passed. We don't have Traders any more; just
corporations and things.”
“Really? What a
shame. Then what does Mr. Munn do? I mean, if he's not a Trader.”
“Uncle Homir's a
librarian.”
Callia put a hand
to her lips and tittered. “You mean he takes care of book-films. Oh, my! It
seems like such a silly thing for a grown man to do.”
“He's a very good
librarian, my lady. It is an occupation that is very highly regarded at the
Foundation.” She put down the little, iridescent teacup upon the milky-metaled
table surface.
Her hostess was
all concern. “But my dear child. I'm sure I didn't mean to offend you. He must
be a very intelligent man. I could see it in his eyes as soon as I looked at
him. They were so... so intelligent. And he must be brave, too, to want to see
the Mule's palace.”
“Brave?”
Arcadia's internal awareness twitched. This was what she was waiting for.
Intrigue! Intrigue! With great indifference, she asked, staring idly at her
thumbtip: “Why must one be brave to wish to see the Mule's palace?”
“Didn't you
know?” Her eyes were round, and her voice sank. “There's a curse on it. When he
died, the Mule directed that no one ever enter it until the Empire of the
Galaxy is established. Nobody on Kalgan would dare even to enter the grounds.”
Arcadia absorbed
that. “But that's superstition—”
“Don't say that,”
Callia was distressed. “Poochie always says that. He says it's useful to say it
isn't though, in order to maintain his hold over the people. But I notice he's
never gone in himself. And neither did Thallos, who was First Citizen before
Poochie.” A thought struck her and she was all curiosity again: “But why does
Mr. Munn want to see the Palace?”
And it was here
that Arcadia's careful plan could be put into action. She knew well from the
books she had read that a ruler's mistress was the real power behind the
throne, that she was the very well-spring of influence. Therefore, if Uncle
Homir failed with Lord Stettin—and she was sure he would—she must retrieve that
failure with Lady Callia. To be sure, Lady Callia was something of a puzzle.
She didn't seem at all bright. But, well, all history proved—
She said,
“There's a reason, my lady—but will you keep it in confidence?”
“Cross my heart,”
said Callia, making the appropriate gesture on the soft, billowing whiteness of
her breast.
Arcadia's
thoughts kept a sentence ahead of her words. “Uncle Homir is a great authority
on the Mule, you know. He's written books and books about it, and he thinks
that all of Galactic history has been changed since the Mule conquered the
Foundation.”
“Oh, my.”
“He thinks the
Seldon Plan—”
Callia clapped
her hands. “I know about the Seldon Plan. The videos about the Traders were
always all about the Seldon Plan. It was supposed to arrange to have the
Foundation win all the time. Science had something to do with it, though I
could never quite see how. I always get so restless when I have to listen to
explanations. But you go right ahead, my dear. It's different when you explain.
You make everything seem so clear.”
Arcadia
continued, “Well, don't you see then that when the Foundation was defeated by
the Mule, the Seldon Plan didn't work and it hasn't worked since. So who will
form the Second Empire?”
“The Second
Empire?”
“Yes, one must be
formed some day, but how? That's the problem, you see. And there's the Second
Foundation.”
“The Second
Foundation?” She was quite completely lost.
'Yes, they're the
planners of history that are following in the footsteps of Seldon. They stopped
the Mule because he was premature, but now, they may be supporting Kalgan.”
“Why?”
“Because Kalgan
may now offer the best chance of being the nucleus for a new Empire.”
Dimly, Lady
Callia seemed to grasp that. “You mean Poochie is going to make a new Empire.”
“We can't tell
for sure. Uncle Homir thinks so, but hell have to see the Mule's records to
find out.”
“It's all very
complicated,” said Lady Callia, doubtfully.
Arcadia gave up.
She had done her best.
Lord Stettin was
in a more-or-less savage humor. The session with the milksop from the
Foundation had been quite unrewarding. It had been worse; it had been
embarrassing. To be absolute ruler of twenty-seven worlds, master of the
Galaxy's greatest military machine, owner of the universe's most vaulting
ambition—and left to argue nonsense with an antiquarian.
Damnation!
He was to violate
the customs of Kalgan, was he? To allow the Mule's palace to be ransacked so
that a fool could write another book? The cause of science! The sacredness of
knowledge! Great Galaxy! Were these catchwords to be thrown in his face in all
seriousness? Besides—and his flesh prickled slightly—there was the matter of
the curse. He didn't believe in it; no intelligent man could. But if he was
going to defy it, it would have to be for a better reason than any the fool had
advanced.
“What do you
want?” he snapped, and Lady Callia cringed visibly in the doorway.
“Are you busy?”
“Yes. I am busy.”
“But there's
nobody here, Poochie. Couldn't I even speak to you for a minute?”
“Oh, Galaxy! What
do you want? Now hurry.”
Her words
stumbled. “The little girl told me they were going into the Mule's palace. I
thought we could go with her. It must be gorgeous inside.”
“She told you
that, did she? Well, she isn't and we aren't. Now go tend your own business.
I've had about enough of you.”
“But, Poochie,
why not? Aren't you going to let them? The little girl said that you were going
to make an Empire!”
“I don't care
what she saidWhat was that?” He strode to Callia, and caught her firmly above
the elbow, so that his fingers sank deeply into the soft flesh, “What did she
tell you?”
“You're hurting
me. I can't remember what she said, if you're going to look at me like that.”
He released her,
and she stood there for a moment, rubbing vainly at the red marks. She
whimpered, “The little girl made me promise not to tell.”
“That's too bad.
Tell me! Now!”
“Well, she said
the Seldon Plan was changed and that there was another Foundation somewheres
that was arranging to have you make an Empire. That's all. She said Mr. Munn
was a very important scientist and that the Mule's palace would have proof of
all that. That's every bit of what she said. Are you angry?”
But Stettin did
not answer. He left the room, hurriedly, with Callia's cowlike eyes staring
mournfully after him. Two orders were sent out over the official seal of the
First Citizen before the hour was up. One had the effect of sending five
hundred ships of the line into space on what were officially to be termed as
“war games.” The other had the effect of throwing a single man into confusion.
Homir Munn ceased
his preparations to leave when that second order reached him. It was, of
course, official permission to enter the palace of the Mule. He read and reread
it with anything but joy.
But Arcadia was
delighted. She knew what had happened.
Or, at any rate,
she thought she did.
14
Anxiety
Poli placed the
breakfast on the table, keeping one eye on the table news-recorder which
quietly disgorged the bulletins of the day. It could be done easily enough
without loss of efficiency, this one-eye-absent business. Since all items of
food were sterilely packed in containers which served as discardable cooking
units, her duties vis-a-vis breakfast consisted of nothing more than choosing
the menu, placing the items on the table, and removing the residue thereafter.
She clacked her
tongue at what she saw and moaned softly in retrospect.
“Oh, people are
so wicked,” she said, and Darell merely hemmed in reply.
Her voice took on
the high-pitched rasp which she automatically assumed when about to bewail the
evil of the world. “Now why do these terrible Kalganese”—she accented the
second syIlable and gave it a long “a”—”do like that? You'd think they'd give a
body peace. But no, it's just trouble, trouble, all the time.
“Now look at that
headline: ‘Mobs Riot Before Foundation Consulate. ’ Oh, would I like to give
them a piece of my mind, if I could. That's the trouble with people; they just
don't remember. They just don't remember, Dr. Darell—got no memory at all. Look
at the last war after the Mule died—of course I was just a little girl then—and
oh, the fuss and trouble. My own uncle was killed, him being just in his
twenties and only two years married, with a baby girl. I remember him even
yet—blond hair he had, and a dimple in his chin. I have a trimensional cube of
him somewheres—
“And now his baby
girl has a son of her own in the navy and most like if anything happens—
“And we had the
bombardment patrols, and all the old men taking turns in the stratospheric
defense—I could imagine what they would have been able to do if the Kalganese
had come that far. My mother used to tell us children about the food rationing
and the prices and taxes. A body could hardly make ends meet—
“You'd think if
they had sense people would just never want to start it again; just have
nothing to do with it. And I suppose it's not people that do it, either; I
suppose even Kalganese would rather sit at home with their families and not go
fooling around in ships and getting killed. It's that awful man, Stettin. It's
a wonder people like that are let live. He kills the old man—what's his
name—Thallos, and now he's just spoiling to be boss of everything.
“And why he wants
to fight us, I don't know. He's bound to lose—like they always do. Maybe it's
all in the Plan, but sometimes I'm sure it must be a wicked plan to have so
much fighting and killing in it, though to be sure I haven't a word to say
about Hari Seldon, who I'm sure knows much more about that than I do and
perhaps I'm a fool to question him. And the other Foundation is as much to
blame. They could stop Kalgan now and make everything fine. They'll do it
anyway in the end, and you'd think they'd do it before there's any damage
done.”
Dr. Darell looked
up. “Did you say something, Poli?”
Poli's eyes
opened wide, then narrowed angrily. “Nothing, doctor, nothing at all. I haven't
got a word to say. A body could as soon choke to death as say a word in this
house. It's jump here, and jump there, but just try to say a word—” and she
went off simmering.
Her leaving made
as little impression on Darell as did her speaking.
Kalgan! Nonsense!
A merely physical enemy! Those had always been beaten!
Yet he could not
divorce himself of the current foolish crisis. Seven days earlier, the mayor
had asked him to be Administrator of Research and Development. He had promised
an answer today.
Well—
He stirred
uneasily. Why, himself! Yet could he refuse? It would seem strange, and he
dared not seem strange. After all, what did he care about Kalgan. To him there
was only one enemy. Always had been.
While his wife
had lived, he was only too glad to shirk the task; to hide. Those long, quiet
days on Trantor, with the ruins of the past about them! The silence of a
wrecked world and the forgetfulness of it all!
But she had died.
Less than five years, all told, it had been; and after that he knew that he
could live only by fighting that vague and fearful enemy that deprived him of
the dignity of manhood by controlling his destiny; that made life a miserable
struggle against a foreordained end; that made all the universe a hateful and
deadly chess game.
Call it sublimation;
he, himself did can it that—but the fight gave meaning to his life.
First to the
University of Santanni, where he had joined Dr. Kleise. It had been five years
well-spent.
And yet Kleise
was merely a gatherer of data. He could not succeed in the real task—and when
Darell had felt that as certainty, he knew it was time to leave.
Kleise may have
worked in secret, yet he had to have men working for him and with him. He had
subjects whose brains he probed. He had a University that backed him. All these
were weaknesses.
Kleise could not
understand that; and he, Darell, could not explain that. They parted enemies.
It was well; they had to. He had to leave in surrender—in case someone watched.
Where Kleise
worked with charts; Darell worked with mathematical concepts in the recesses of
his mind. Kleise worked with many; Darell with none. Kleise in a University;
Darell in the quiet of a suburban house.
And he was almost
there.
A Second
Foundationer is not human as far as his cerebrum is concerned. The cleverest
physiologist, the most subtle neurochemist might detect nothing—yet the
difference must be there.
And since the
difference was one of the mind, it was there that it must be detectable.
Given a man like
the Mule—and there was no doubt that the Second Foundationers had the Mule's
powers, whether inborn or acquired—with the power of detecting and controlling
human emotions, deduce from that the electronic circuit required, and deduce
from that the last details of the encephalograph on which it could not help but
be betrayed.
And now Kleise
had returned into his life, in the person of his ardent young pupil, Anthor.
Folly! Folly!
With his graphs and charts of people who had been tampered with. He had learned
to detect that years ago, but of what use was it. He wanted the arm; not the
tool. Yet he had to agree to join Anthor, since it was the quieter course.
Just as now he
would become Administrator of Research and Development. It was the quieter course!
And so he remained a conspiracy within a conspiracy.
The thought of
Arcadia teased him for a moment, and he shuddered away from it. Left to
himself, it would never have happened. Left to himself, no one would ever have
been endangered but himself. Left to himself—
He felt the anger
rising-against the dead Kleise, the living Anthor, all the well-meaning fools—
Well, she could
take care of herself. She was a very mature little girl.
She could take
care of herself!
It was a whisper
in his mind—
Yet could she?
At the moment,
that Dr. Darell told himself mournfully that she could, she was sitting in the
coldly austere anteroom of the Executive Offices of the First Citizen of the
Galaxy. For half an hour she had been sitting there, her eyes sliding slowly about
the walls. There had been two armed guards at the door when she had entered
with Homir Munn. They hadn't been there the other times.
She was alone,
now, yet she sensed the unfriendliness of the very furnishings of the room. And
for the first time.
Now, why should
that be?
Homir was with
Lord Stettin. Well, was that wrong?
It made her
furious. In similar situations in the book-films and the videos, the hero
foresaw the conclusion, was prepared for it when it came, and she—she just sat
there. Anything could happen. Anything! And she just sat there.
Well, back again.
Think it back. Maybe something would come.
For two weeks,
Homir had nearly lived inside the Mule's palace. He had taken her once, with
Stettin's permission. It was large and gloomily massive, shrinking from the
touch of life to lie sleeping within its ringing memories, answering the
footsteps with a hollow boom or a savage clatter. She hadn't liked it.
Better the great,
gay highways of the capital city; the theaters and spectacles of a world essentially
poorer than the Foundation, yet spending more of its wealth on display.
Homir would
return in the evening, awed—
“It's a
dream-world for me,” he would whisper. “If I could only chip the palace down
stone by stone, layer by layer of the aluminum sponge. If I could carry it back
to TerminusWhat a museum it would make.”
He seemed to have
lost that early reluctance. He was eager, instead; glowing. Arcadia knew that
by the one sure sign; he practically never stuttered throughout that period.
One time, he
said, “There are abstracts of the records of General Pritcher—”
“I know him. He
was the Foundation renegade, who combed the Galaxy for the Second Foundation,
wasn't he?”
“Not exactly a
renegade, Arkady. The Mule had Converted him.”
“Oh, it's the
same thing.”
“Galaxy, that
combing you speak of was a hopeless task. The original records of the Seldon
Convention that established both Foundations five hundred years ago, make only
one reference to the Second Foundation. They say if's located ‘at the other end
of the Galaxy at Star's End. ’ That's all the Mule and Pritcher had to go on.
They had no method of recognizing the Second Foundation even if they found it.
What madness!
“They have
records”—he was speaking to himself, but Arcadia listened eagerly—”which must
cover nearly a thousand worlds, yet the number of worlds available for study
must have been closer to a million. And we are no better off—”
Arcadia broke in
anxiously, “Shhh-h” in a tight hiss.
Homir froze, and
slowly recovered. “Let's not talk,” he mumbled.
And now Homir was
with Lord Stettin and Arcadia waited outside alone and felt the blood squeezing
out of her heart for no reason at all. That was more frightening than anything
else. That there seemed no reason.
On the other side
of the door, Homir, too, was living in a sea of gelatin. He was fighting, with
furious intensity, to keep from stuttering and, of course, could scarcely speak
two consecutive words clearly as a result.
Lord Stettin was
in full uniform, six-feet-six, large-jawed, and hard-mouthed. His balled,
arrogant fists kept a powerful time to his sentences.
“Well, you have
had two weeks, and you come to me with tales of nothing. Come, sir, tell me the
worst. Is my Navy to be cut to ribbons? Am I to fight the ghosts of the Second
Foundation as well as the men of the First?”
“I... I repeat,
my lord, I am no p... pre... predictor. I... I am at a complete... loss.”
“Or do you wish
to go back to warn your countrymen? To deep Space with your play-acting. I want
the truth or I'll have it out of you along with half your guts.”
“I'm t... telling
only the truth, and I'll have you re... remember, my l... lord, that I am a
citizen of the Foundation. Y... you cannot touch me without harvesting m...
m... more than you count on.”
The Lord of
Kalgan laughed uproariously. “A threat to frighten children. A horror with
which to beat back an idiot. Come, Mr. Munn, I have been patient with you. I
have listened to you for twenty minutes while you detailed wearisome nonsense
to me which must have cost you sleepless nights to compose. It was wasted
effort. I know you are here not merely to rake through the Mule's dead ashes
and to warm over the cinders you findyou come here for more than you have
admitted. Is that not true?”
Homir Munn could
no more have quenched the burning horror that grew in his eyes than, at that
moment, he could have breathed. Lord Stettin saw that, and clapped the
Foundation man upon his shoulder so that he and the chair he sat on reeled
under the impact.
“Good. Now let us
be frank. You are investigating the Seldon Plan. You know that it no longer
holds. You know, perhaps, that I am the inevitable winner now; I and my heirs.
Well, man, what matters it who established the Second Empire, so long as it is
established. History plays no favorites, eh? Are you afraid to tell me? You see
that I know your mission.”
Munn said
thickly, “What is it y... you w... want?”
“Your presence. I
would not wish the Plan spoiled through overconfidence. You understand more of
these things than I do; you can detect small flaws that I might miss. Come, you
will be rewarded in the end; you will have your fair glut of the loot. What can
you expect at the Foundation? To turn the tide of a perhaps inevitable defeat?
To lengthen the war? Or is it merely a patriotic desire to die for your
country?”
“I... I—” He
finally spluttered into silence. Not a word would come.
“You will stay,”
said the Lord of Kalgan, confidently. “You have no choice. Wait”—an almost
forgotten afterthought—”I have information to the effect that your niece is of the
family of Bayta Darell.”
Homir uttered a
startled: “Yes.” He could not trust himself at this point to be capable of
weaving anything but cold truth.
“It is a family
of note on the Foundation?”
Homir nodded, “To
whom they would certainly b... brook no harm.”
“Harm! Don't be a
fool, man; I am meditating the reverse. How old is she?”
“Fourteen.”
“Sol Well, not
even the Second Foundation, or Hari Seldon, himself, could stop time from
passing or girls from becoming women.”
With that, he
turned on his heel and strode to a draped door which he threw open violently.
He thundered,
“What in Space have you dragged your shivering carcass here for?”
The Lady Callia
blinked at him, and said in a small voice, “I didn't know anyone was with you.”
“Well, there is.
I'll speak to you later of this, but now I want to see your back, and quickly.”
Her footsteps
were a fading scurry in the corridor.
Stettin returned,
“She is a remnant of an interlude that has lasted too long. It will end soon.
Fourteen, you say?”
Homir stared at
him with a brand-new horror!
Arcadia started
at the noiseless opening of a door—jumping at the jangling sliver of movement
it made in the comer of her eye. The finger that crooked frantically at her met
no response for long moments, and then, as if in response to the cautions
enforced by the very sight of that white, trembling figure, she tiptoed her way
across the floor.
Their footsteps
were a taut whisper in the corridor. It was the Lady Callia, of course, who
held her hand so tightly that it hurt, and for some reason, she did not mind
following her. Of the Lady Callia, at least, she was not afraid.
Now, why was
that?
They were in a
boudoir now, all pink fluff and spun sugar. Lady Callia stood with her back
against the door.
She said, “This
was our private way to me... to my room, you know, from his office. His, you
know.” And she pointed with a thumb, as though even the thought of him were
grinding her soul to death with fear.
“It's so lucky...
it's so lucky—” Her pupils had blackened out the blue with their size.
“Can you tell
me—” began Arcadia timidly.
And Callia was in
frantic motion. “No, child, no. There is no time. Take off your clothes.
Please. Please. I'll get you more, and they won't recognize you.”
She was in the
closet, throwing useless bits of flummery in reckless heaps upon the ground,
looking madly for something a girl could wear without becoming a living
invitation to dalliance.
“Here, this will
do. It will have to. Do you have money? Here, take it all—and this.” She was
stripping her ears and fingers. “Just go home—go home to your Foundation.”
“But Homir... my
uncle.” She protested vainly through the muffling folds of the sweet-smelling
and luxurious spun-metal being forced over her head.
“He won't leave.
Poochie will hold him forever, but you mustn't stay. Oh, dear, don't you
understand?”
“No.” Arcadia
forced a standstill, “I don't understand.”
Lady Callia
squeezed her hands tightly together. “You must go back to warn your people
there will be war. Isn't that clear?” Absolute terror seemed paradoxically to
have lent a lucidity to her thoughts and words that was entirely out of
character. “Now come!”
Out another way!
Past officials who stared after them, but saw no reason to stop one whom only
the Lord of Kalgan could stop with impunity. Guards clicked heels and presented
arms when they went through doors.
Arcadia breathed
only on occasion through the years the trip seemed to take—yet from the first
crooking of the white finger to the time she stood at the outer gate, with
people and noise and traffic in the distance was only twenty-five minutes.
She looked back,
with a sudden frightened pity. “I... I... don't know why you're doing this, my
lady, but thanksWhat's going to happen to Uncle Homir?”
“I don't know,”
wailed the other. “Can't you leave? Go straight to the spaceport. Don't wait.
He may be looking for you this very minute.”
And still Arcadia
lingered. She would be leaving Homir; and, belatedly, now that she felt the
free air about her, she was suspicious. “But what do you care if he does?”
Lady Callia bit
her lower lip and muttered, “I can't explain to a little girl like you. It
would be improper. Well, you'll be growing up and I... I met Poochie when I was
sixteen. I can't have you about, you know.” There was a half-ashamed hostility
in her eyes.
The implications
froze Arcadia. She whispered: “What will he do to you when he finds out?”
And she whimpered
back: “I don't know,” and threw her arm to her head as she left at a half-run,
back along the wide way to the mansion of the Lord of Kalgan.
But for one
eternal second, Arcadia still did not move, for in that last moment before Lady
Callia left, Arcadia had seen something. Those frightened, frantic eyes had
momentarily—flashingly—lit up with a cold amusement.
A vast, inhuman amusement.
It was much to
see in such a quick flicker of a pair of eyes, but Arcadia had no doubt of what
she saw.
She was running
now—running wildly—searching madly for an unoccupied public booth at which one
could press a button for public conveyance.
She was not
running from Lord Stettin; not from him or from all the human hounds he could
place at her heels—not from all his twenty-seven worlds rolled into a single
gigantic phenomenon, hallooing at her shadow.
She was running
from a single, frail woman who had helped her escape. From a creature who had
loaded her with money and jewels; who had risked her own life to save her. From
an entity she knew, certainly and finally, to be a woman of the Second
Foundation.
An air-taxi came
to a soft clicking halt in the cradle. The wind of its coming brushed against
Arcadia's face and stirred at the hair beneath the softly-furred hood Callia
had given her.
“Where'll it be,
lady?”
She fought
desperately to low-pitch her voice to make it not that of a child. “How many
spaceports in the city?”
“Two. Which one
ya want?”
“Which is
closer?”
He stared at her:
“Kalgan Central, lady.”
“The other one,
please. I've got the money.” She had a twenty-Kalganid note in her hand. The
denomination of the note made little difference to her, but the taxi-man
grinned appreciatively.
“Anything ya say,
lady. Sky-line cabs take ya anywhere.”
She cooled her
cheek against the slightly musty upholstery. The lights of the city moved
leisurely below her.
What should she
do? What should she do?
It was in that
moment that she knew she was a stupid, stupid little girl, away from her
father, and frightened. Her eyes were full of tears, and deep down in her
throat, there was a small, soundless cry that hurt her insides.
She wasn't afraid
that Lord Stettin would catch her. Lady Callia would see to that. Lady Callia!
Old, fat, stupid, but she held on to her lord, somehow. Oh, it was clear
enough, now. Everything was clear.
That tea with
Callia at which she had been so smart. Clever little Arcadia! Something inside
Arcadia choked and hated itself. That tea had been maneuvered, and then Stettin
had probably been maneuvered so that Homir was allowed to inspect the Palace
after all. She, the foolish Callia, has wanted it so, and arranged to have
smart little Arcadia supply a foolproof excuse, one which would arouse no
suspicions in the minds of the victims, and yet involve a minimum of
interference on her part.
Then why was she
free? Homir was a prisoner, of course—
Unless—
Unless she went
back to the Foundation as a decoy—a decoy to lead others into the hands of...
of them.
So she couldn't
return to the Foundation—
“Spaceport,
lady.” The air-taxi had come to a halt. Strange! She hadn't even noticed.
What a
dream-world it was.
“Thanks,” she
pushed the bill at him without seeing anything and was stumbling out the door,
then running across the springy pavement.
Lights.
Unconcerned men and women. Large gleaming bulletin boards, with the moving
figures that followed every single spaceship that arrived and departed.
Where was she
going? She didn't care. She only knew that she wasn't going to the Foundation!
Anywhere else at all would suit.
Oh, thank Seldon,
for that forgetful moment—that last split-second when Callia wearied of her act
because she had to do only with a child and had let her amusement spring
through.
And then
something else occurred to Arcadia, something that had been stirring and moving
at the base of her brain ever since the flight began—something that forever
killed the fourteen in her.
And she knew that
she must escape.
That above all.
Though they located every conspirator on the Foundation; though they caught her
own father; she could not dared not, risk a warning. She could not risk her own
life—not in the slightest—for the entire realm of Terminus. She was the most
important person in the Galaxy. She was the only important person in the
Galaxy.
She knew that
even as she stood before the ticket-machine and wondered where to go.
Because in all
the Galaxy, she and she alone, except for they, themselves, knew the location
of the Second Foundation.
15
Through the Grid
TRANTOR By the
middle of the Interregnum, Trantor was a shadow. In the midst of the colossal
ruins, there lived a small community of farmers....
ENCYCLOPEDIA
GALACTICA
There is nothing,
never has been anything, quite like a busy spaceport on the outskirts of a
capital city of a populous planet. There are the huge machines resting mightily
in their cradles. If you choose your time properly, there is the impressive
sight of the sinking giant dropping to rest or, more hair-raising still, the
swiftening departure of a bubble of steel. All processes involved are nearly
noiseless. The motive power is the silent surge of nucleons shifting into more
compact arrangements
In terms of area,
ninety-five percent of the port has just been referred to. Square miles are
reserved for the machines, and for the men who serve them and for the
calculators that serve both.
Only five percent
of the port is given over to the floods of humanity to whom it is the way
station to all the stars of the Galaxy. It is certain that very few of the
anonymous many-headed stop to consider the technological mesh that knits the
spaceways. Perhaps some of them might itch occasionally at the thought of the
thousands of tons represented by the sinking steel that looks so small off in
the distance. One of those cyclopean cylinders could, conceivably, miss the
guiding beam and crash half a mile from its expected landing point—through the
glassite roof of the immense waiting room perhaps—so that only a thin organic
vapor and some powdered phosphates would be left behind to mark the passing of
a thousand men.
It could never
happen, however, with the safety devices in use; and only the badly neurotic
would consider the possibility for more than a moment.
Then what do they
think about? It is not just a crowd, you see. It is a crowd with a purpose.
That purpose hovers over the field and thickens the atmosphere. Lines queue up;
parents herd their children; baggage is maneuvered in precise masses—people are
going somewheres.
Consider then the
complete psychic isolation of a single unit of this terribly intent mob that
does not know where to go; yet at the same time feels more intensely than any
of the others possibly can, the necessity of going somewheres; anywhere! Or
almost anywhere!
Even lacking
telepathy or any of the crudely definite methods of mind touching mind, there
is a sufficient clash in atmosphere, in intangible mood, to suffice for
despair.
To suffice? To
overflow, and drench, and drown.
Arcadia Darell,
dressed in borrowed clothes, standing on a borrowed planet in a borrowed
situation of what seemed even to be a borrowed life, wanted earnestly the
safety of the womb. She didn't know that was what she wanted. She only knew
that the very openness of the open world was a great danger. She wanted a
closed spot somewhere—somewhere far—somewhere in an unexplored nook of the
universe—where no one would ever look.
And there she
was, age fourteen plus, weary enough for eighty plus, frightened enough for
five minus.
What stranger of
the hundreds that brushed past her—actually brushed past her, so that she could
feel their touch—was a Second Foundationer? What stranger could not help but
instantly destroy her for her guilty knowledge—her unique knowledge—of knowing
where the Second Foundation was?
And the voice
that cut in on her was a thunderclap that iced the scream in her throat into a
voiceless slash.
“Look, miss,” it
said, irritably, “are you using the ticket machine or are you just standing
there?”
It was the first
she realized that she was standing in front of a ticket machine. You put a high
denomination bill into the clipper which sank out of sight. You pressed the
button below your destination and a ticket came out together with the correct
change as determined by an electronic scanning device that never made a
mistake. It was a very ordinary thing and there is no cause for anyone to stand
before it for five minutes.
Arcadia plunged a
two-hundred credit into the clipper, and was suddenly aware of the button
labeled “Trantor.” Trantor, dead capital of the dead Empire—the planet on which
she was born. She pressed it in a dream. Nothing happened, except that the red
letters flicked on and off, reading 172. 18–172. 18–172. 18—
It was the amount
she was short. Another two-hundred credit. The ticket was spit out towards her.
It came loose when she touched it, and the change tumbled out afterward.
She seized it and
ran. She felt the man behind her pressing close, anxious for his own chance at
the machine, but she twisted out from before him and did not look behind.
Yet there was
nowhere to run. They were all her enemies.
Without quite
realizing it, she was watching the gigantic, glowing signs that puffed into the
air: Steffani, Anacreon, FermusThere was even one that ballooned, Terminus, and
she longed for it, but did not dare—
For a trifling
sum, she could have hired a notifier which could have been set for any
destination she cared and which would, when placed in her purse, make itself
heard only to her, fifteen minutes before take-off time. But such devices are
for people who are reasonably secure, however; who can pause to think of them.
And then,
attempting to look both ways simultaneously, she ran head-on into a soft
abdomen. She felt the startled outbreath and grunt, and a hand come down on her
arm. She writhed desperately but lacked breath to do more than mew a bit in the
back of her throat.
Her captor held
her firmly and waited. Slowly, he came into focus for her and she managed to
look at him. He was rather plump and rather short. His hair was white and
copious, being brushed back to give a pompadour effect that looked strangely
incongruous above a round and ruddy face that shrieked its peasant origin.
“What's the
matter?” he said finally, with a frank and twinkling curiosity. “You look
scared.”
“Sorry,” muttered
Arcadia in a frenzy. “I've got to go. Pardon me.”
But he
disregarded that entirely, and said, “Watch out, little girl. You'll drop your
ticket.” And he lifted it from her resistless white fingers and looked at it
with every evidence of satisfaction.
“I thought so,”
he said, and then bawled in bull-like tones, “Mommuh!”
A woman was
instantly at his side, somewhat more short, somewhat more round, somewhat more
ruddy. She wound a finger about a stray gray lock to shove it beneath a
well-outmoded hat.
“Pappa,” she
said, reprovingly, “why do you shout in a crowd like that? People look at you
like you were crazy. Do you think you are on the farm?”
And she smiled
sunnily at the unresponsive Arcadia, and added, “He has manners like a bear.”
Then, sharply, “Pappa, let go the little girl. What are you doing?”
But Pappa simply
waved the ticket at her. “Look,” he said, “she's going to Trantor.”
Mamma's face was
a sudden beam, “You're from Trantor? Let go her arm, I say, Pappa.” She turned
the overstuffed valise she was carrying onto its side and forced Arcadia to sit
down with a gentle but unrelenting pressure. “Sit down,” she said, “and rest
your little feet. It will be no ship yet for an hour and the benches are
crowded with sleeping loafers. You are from Trantor?”
Arcadia drew a
deep breath and gave in. Huskily, she said, “I was born there.”
And Mamma clapped
her hands gleefully, “One month we've been here and till now we met nobody from
home. This is very nice. Your parents—” she looked about vaguely.
“I'm not with my
parents,” Arcadia said, carefully.
“All alone? A little
girl like you?” Mamma was at once a blend of indignation and sympathy, “How
does that come to be?”
“Mamma,” Pappa
plucked at her sleeve, “let me tell you. There's something wrong. I think she's
frightened.” His voice, though obviously intended for a whisper was quite
plainly audible to Arcadia. “She was running—I was watching her—and not looking
where she was going. Before I could step out of the way, she bumped into me.
And you know what? I think she's in trouble.”
“So shut your
mouth, Pappa. Into you, anybody could bump.” But she joined Arcadia on the
valise, which creaked wearily under the added weight and put an arm about the
girl's trembling shoulder. “You're running away from somebody, sweetheart?
Don't be afraid to tell me. III help you.”
Arcadia looked
across at the kind gray eyes of the woman and felt her lips quivering. One part
of her brain was telling her that here were people from Trantor, with whom she
could go, who could help her remain on that planet until she could decide what
next to do, where next to go. And another part of her brain, much the louder,
was telling her in jumbled incoherence that she did not remember her mother,
that she was weary to death of fighting the universe, that she wanted only to
curl into a little hall with strong, gentle arms about her, that if her mother
had lived, she might... she might—
And for the first
time that night, she was crying; crying like a little baby, and glad of it;
clutching tightly at the old-fashioned dress and dampening a corner of it
thoroughly, while soft arms held her closely and a gentle hand stroked her
curls.
Pappa stood
helplessly looking at the pair, fumbling futilely for a handkerchief which,
when produced, was snatched from his hand. Mamma glared an admonition of
quietness at him. The crowds surged about the little group with the true
indifference of disconnected crowds everywhere. They were effectively alone.
Finally, the
weeping trickled to a halt, and Arcadia smiled weakly as she dabbed at red eyes
with the borrowed handkerchief. “Golly,” she whispered,
“Shh. Shh. Don't
talk,” said Mamma, fussily, “just sit and rest for a while. Catch your breath.
Then tell us what's wrong, and you'll see, we'll fix it up, and everything will
be all right.”
Arcadia scrabbled
what remained of her wits together. She could not tell them the truth. She
could tell nobody the truthAnd yet she was too worn to invent a useful lie.
She said,
whisperingly, “I'm better, now.”
“Good,” said
Mamma. “Now tell me why you're in trouble. You did nothing wrong? Of course,
whatever you did, well help you; but tell us the truth.”
“For a friend
from Trantor, anything,” added Pappa, expansively, “eh, Mamma?”
“Shut your mouth,
Pappa,” was the response, without rancor.
Arcadia was
groping in her purse. That, at least, was still hers, despite the rapid
clothes-changing forced upon her in Lady Callia's apartments. She found what
she was looking for and handed it to Mamma.
“These are my
papers,” she said, diffidently. It was shiny, synthetic parchment which had
been issued her by the Foundation's ambassador on the day of her arrival and
which had been countersigned by the appropriate Kalganian official. It was
large, florid, and impressive. Mamma looked at it helplessly, and passed it to
Pappa who absorbed its contents with an impressive pursing of the lips.
He said, “You're
from the Foundation?”
“Yes. But I was
born in Trantor. See it says that—”
“Ah-hah. It looks
all right to me. You're named Arcadia, eh? That's a good Trantorian name. But
where's your uncle? It says here you came in the company of Homir Munn, uncle.”
“He's been
arrested,” said Arcadia, drearily.
“Arrested!”—from
the two of them at once. “What for?” asked Mamma. “He did something?”
She shook her
head. “I don't know. We were just on a visit. Uncle Homir had business with
Lord Stettin but—” She needed no effort to act a shudder. It was there.
Pappa was
impressed. “With Lord Stettin. Mm-m-m, your uncle must be a big man.”
“I don't know
what it was all about, but Lord Stettin wanted me to stay—” She was recalling
the last words of Lady Callia, which had been acted out for her benefit. Since
Callia, as she now knew, was an expert, the story could do for a second time.
She paused, and
Mamma said interestedly, “And why you?”
“I'm not sure.
He... he wanted to have dinner with me all alone, but I said no, because I
wanted Uncle Homir along. He looked at me funny and kept holding my shoulder.”
Pappa's mouth was
a little open, but Mamma was suddenly red and angry. “How old are you,
Arcadia?”
“Fourteen and a
half, almost.”
Mamma drew a
sharp breath and said, “That such people should be let live. The dogs in the
streets are better. You're running from him, dear, is not?”
Arcadia nodded.
Mamma said,
“Pappa, go right to Information and find out exactly when the ship to Trantor
comes to berth. Hurry!”
But Pappa took
one step and stopped. Loud metallic words were booming overhead, and five
thousand pairs of eyes looked startledly upwards.
“Men and women,”
it said, with sharp force. “The airport is being searched for a dangerous
fugitive, and it is now surrounded. No one can enter and no one can leave. The
search will, however, be conducted with great speed and no ships will reach or
leave berth during the interval, so you will not miss your ship. I repeat, no
one will miss his ship. The grid will descend. None of you will move outside
your square until the grid is removed, as otherwise we will be forced to use
our neuronic whips.”
During the minute
or less in which the voice dominated the vast dome of the spaceport's waiting
room, Arcadia could not have moved if all the evil in the Galaxy had
concentrated itself into a ball and hurled itself at her.
They could mean
only her. It was not even necessary to formulate that idea as a specific
thought. But why—
Callia had
engineered her escape. And Callia was of the Second Foundation. Why, then, the
search now? Had Callia failed? Could Callia fail? Or was this part of the plan,
the intricacies of which escaped her?
For a vertiginous
moment, she wanted to jump up and shout that she gave up, that she would go
with them, that... that—
But Mamma's hand
was on her wrist. “Quick! “Quick! Well go to the lady's room before they
start.”
Arcadia did not
understand. She merely followed blindly. They oozed through the crowd, frozen
as it was into clumps, with the voice still booming through its last words.
The grid was
descending now, and Pappa, openmouthed, watched it come down. He had heard of
it and read of it, but had never actually been the object of it. It glimmered
in the air, simply a series of cross-hatched and tight radiation-beams that set
the air aglow in a harmless network of flashing light.
It always was so
arranged as to descend slowly from above in order that it might represent a
falling net with all the terrific psychological implications of entrapment.
It was at
waist-level now, ten feet between glowing lines in each direction. In his own
hundred square feet, Pappa found himself alone, yet the adjoining squares were
crowded. He felt himself conspicuously isolated but knew that to move into the
greater anonymity of a group would have meant crossing one of those glowing
lines, stirring an alarm, and bringing down the neuronic whip.
He waited.
He could make out
over the heads of the eerily quiet and waiting mob, the far-off stir that was
the line of policemen covering the vast floor area, lighted square by lighted
square.
It was a long
time before a uniform stepped into his square and carefully noted its
co-ordinates into an official notebook.
“Papers!”
Pappa handed them
over, and they were flipped through in expert fashion.
“You're Preem
Palver, native of Trantor, on Kalgan for a month, returning to Trantor. Answer,
yes or no.”
“Yes, yes.”
“What's your
business on Kalgan?”
“I'm trading
representative of our farm co-operative. I've been negotiating terms with the
Department of Agriculture on Kalgan.
“Um-m-m. Your
wife is with you? Where is she? She is mentioned in your papers.”
“Please. My wife
is in the—” He pointed.
“Hanto,” roared
the policeman. Another uniform joined him.
The first one
said, dryly, “Another dame in the can, by the Galaxy. The place must be busting
with them. Write down her name.” He indicated the entry in the papers which
gave it.
“Anyone else with
you?”
“My niece.”
“She's not
mentioned in the papers.”
“She came
separately.”
“Where is she?
Never mind, I know. Write down the niece's name, too, Hanto. What's her name?
Write down Arcadia Palver. You stay right here, Palver. We'll take care of the
women before we leave.”
Pappa waited
interminably. And then, long, long after, Mamma was marching toward him,
Arcadia's hand firmly in hers, the two policemen trailing behind her.
They entered
Pappa's square, and one said, “Is this noisy old woman your wife?”
“Yes, sir,” said
Pappa, placatingly.
“Then you'd
better tell her she's liable to get into trouble if she talks the way she does
to the First Citizen's police.” He straightened his shoulders angrily. “Is this
your niece?”
“Yes, sir.”
“I want her
papers.”
Looking straight
at her husband, Mamma slightly, but no less firmly, shook her head.
A short pause,
and Pappa said with a weak smile, “I don't think I can do that.”
“What do you mean
you can't do that?” The policeman thrust out a hard palm. “Hand it over.”
“Diplomatic
immunity,” said Pappa, softly.
“What do you
mean?”
“I said I was
trading representative of my farm co-operative. I'm accredited to the Kalganian
government as an official foreign representative and my papers prove it. I
showed them to you and now I don't want to be bothered any more.”
For a moment, the
policeman was taken aback. “I got to see your papers. It's orders.”
“You go away,”
broke in Mamma, suddenly. “When we want you, we'll send for you, you... you
bum.”
The policeman's
lips tightened. “Keep your eye on them, Hanto. I'll get the lieutenant.”
“Break a leg!”
called Mamma after him. Someone laughed, and then choked it off suddenly.
The search was
approaching its end. The crowd was growing dangerously restless. Forty-five
minutes had elapsed since the grid had started falling and that is too long for
best effects. Lieutenant Dirige threaded his way hastily, therefore, toward the
dense center of the mob.
“Is this the
girl?” he asked wearily. He looked at her and she obviously fitted the
description. All this for a child.
He said, “Her
papers, if you please?”
Pappa began, “I
have already explained—”
“I know what you
have explained, and I'm sorry,” said the lieutenant, “but I have my orders, and
I can't help them. If you care to make a protest later, you may. Meanwhile, if
necessary, I must use force.”
There was a
pause, and the lieutenant waited patiently.
Then Pappa said,
huskily, “Give me your papers, Arcadia.”
Arcadia shook her
head in panic, but Pappa nodded his head. “Don't be afraid. Give them to me.”
Helplessly she
reached out and let the documents change hands. Pappa fumbled them open and
looked carefully through them, then handed them over. The lieutenant in his
turn looked through them carefully. For a long moment, he raised his eyes to
rest them on Arcadia, and then he closed the booklet with a sharp snap.
“All in order,”
he said. “All right, men.”
He left, and in
two minutes, scarcely more, the grid was gone, and the voice above signified a
back-to-normal. The noise of the crowd, suddenly released, rose high.
Arcadia said:
“How... how—”
Pappa said,
“Sh-h. Don't say a word. Let's better go to the ship. It should be in the berth
soon.”
They were on the
ship. They had a private stateroom and a table to themselves in the dining
room. Two light-years already separated them from Kalgan, and Arcadia finally
dared to broach the subject again.
She said, “But
they were after me, Mr. Palver, and they must have had my description and all
the details. Why did he let me go?”
And Pappa smiled
broadly over his roast beef. “Well, Arcadia, child, it was easy. When you've
been dealing with agents and buyers and competing co-operatives, you learn some
of the tricks. I've had twenty years or more to learn them in. You see, child,
when the lieutenant opened your papers, he found a five hundred credit bill
inside, folded up small. Simple, no?”
“I'll pay you
backHonest, I've got lots of money.”
“Well,” Pappa's
broad face broke into an embarrassed smile, as he waved it away. “For a
country-woman—”
Arcadia desisted.
“But what if he'd taken the money and turned me in anyway. And accused me of
bribery.”
“And give up five
hundred credits? I know these people better than you do, girl.”
But Arcadia knew
that he did not know people better. Not these people. In her bed that night,
she considered carefully, and knew that no bribe would have stopped a police
lieutenant in the matter of catching her unless that had been planned. They
didn't want to catch her, yet had made every motion of doing so, nevertheless.
Why? To make sure
she left? And for Trantor? Were the obtuse and soft-hearted couple she was with
now only a pair of tools in the hands of the Second Foundation, as helpless as
she herself?
They must be!
Or were they?
It was all so
useless. How could she fight them. Whatever she did, it might only be what
those terrible omnipotents wanted her to do.
Yet she had to
outwit them. Had to. Had to! Had to!!
16
Beginning of War
For reason or
reasons unknown to members of the Galaxy at the time of the era under
discussion, Intergalactic Standard Time defines its fundamental unit, the
second, as the time in which light travels 299,776 kilometers. 86,400 seconds
are arbitrarily set equal to one Intergalactic Standard Day; and 365 of these
days to one Intergalactic Standard Year.
Why 299,776?Or
86,400?Or 365?
Tradition, says
the historian, begging the question. Because of certain and various mysterious
numerical relationships, say the mystics, cultists, numerologists,
metaphysicists. Because the original home-planet of humanity had certain
natural periods of rotation and revolution from which those relationships could
be derived, say a very few.
No one really
knew.
Nevertheless, the
date on which the Foundation cruiser, the Hober Mallow met the Kalganian
squadron, headed by the Fearless, and, upon refusing to allow a search party to
board, was blasted into smoldering wreckage was 185; 11692 G. E. That is, it
was the 185th day of the 11,692nd year of the Galactic Era which dated from the
accession of the first Emperor of the traditional Kamble dynasty. It was also
185; 419 A. S. —dating from the birth of Seldon—or 185; 348 Y. F. —dating from
the establishment of the Foundation. On Kalgan it was 185; 56 F. C. —dating
from the establishment of the First Citizenship by the Mule. In each case, of
course, for convenience, the year was so arranged as to yield the same day
number regardless of the actual day upon which the era began.
And, in addition,
to all the millions of worlds of the Galaxy, there were millions of local
times, based on the motions of their own particular heavenly neighbors.
But whichever you
choose: 185; 11692–419–348–56—or anything—it was this day which historians
later pointed to when they spoke of the start of the Stettinian war.
Yet to Dr.
Darell, it was none of these at all. It was simply and quite precisely the
thirty-second day since Arcadia had left Terminus.
What it cost
Darell to maintain stolidity through these days was not obvious to everyone.
But Elvett Semic
thought he could guess. He was an old man and fond of saying that his neuronic
sheaths had calcified to the point where his thinking processes were stiff and
unwieldy. He invited and almost welcomed the universal underestimation of his
decaying powers by being the first to laugh at them. But his eyes were none the
less seeing for being faded; his mind none the less experienced and wise, for
being no longer agile.
He merely twisted
his pinched lips and said, “Why don't you do something about it?”
The sound was a
physical jar to Darell, under which he winced. He said, gruffly, “Where were
we?”
Semic regarded
him with grave eyes. “You'd better do something about the girl.” His sparse,
yellow teeth showed in a mouth that was open in inquiry.
But Darell
replied coldly, “The question is: Can you get a Symes-Molff Resonator in the
range required?”
Well, I said I
could and you weren't listening—”
“I'm sorry,
Elvett. It's like this. What we're doing now can be more important to everyone
in the Galaxy than the question of whether Arcadia is safe. At least, to
everyone but Arcadia and myself, and I'm willing to go along with the majority.
How big would the Resonator be?”
Semic looked
doubtful, “I don't know. You can find it somewheres in the catalogues.”
“About how big. A
ton? A pound? A block long?”
“Oh, I thought
you meant exactly. It's a little jigger.” He indicated the first joint of his
thumb. “About that.”
“All right, can
you do something like this?” He sketched rapidly on the pad he held in his lap,
then passed it over to the old physicist, who peered at it doubtfully, then
chuckled.
“Y'know, the
brain gets calcified when you get as old as I am. What are you trying to do?”
Darell hesitated.
He longed desperately, at the moment, for the physical knowledge locked in the
other's brain, so that he need not put his thought into words. But the longing
was useless, and he explained.
Semic was shaking
his head. “You'd need hyper-relays. The only things that would work fast enough.
A thundering lot of them.”
“But it can be
built?”
“Well, sure.”
“Can you get all
the parts? I mean, without causing comment? In line with your general work.”
Semic lifted his
upper lip. “Can't get fifty hyper-relays? I wouldn't use that many in my whole life.”
“We're on a
defense project, now. Can't you think of something harmless that would use
them? We've got the money.”
“Hm-m-m. Maybe I
can think of something.”
“How small can
you make the whole gadget?”
“Hyper-relays can
be had micro-size... wiring... tubes—Space, you've got a few hundred circuits
there.”
“I know. How
big?”
Semic indicated
with his hands.
“Too big,” said
Darell. “I've got to swing it from my belt”
Slowly, he was
crumpling his sketch into a tight ball. When it was a hard, yellow grape, he
dropped it into the ash tray and it was gone with the tiny white flare of
molecular decomposition.
He said, “Who's
at your door?”
Semic leaned over
his desk to the little milky screen above the door signal. He said, “The young
fellow, Anthor. Someone with him, too.”
Darell scraped
his chair back. “Nothing about this, Semic, to the others yet. It's deadly
knowledge, if they find out, and two lives are enough to risk.”
Pelleas Anthor
was a pulsing vortex of activity in Semic's office, which, somehow, managed to
partake of the age of its occupant. In the slow turgor of the quiet room, the
loose, summery sleeves of Anthor's tunic seemed still a-quiver with the outer
breezes.
He said, “Dr.
Darell, Dr. Semic—Orum Dirige.”
The other man was
tall. A long straight nose that lent his thin face a saturnine appearance. Dr.
Darell held out a hand.
Anthor smiled
slightly. “Police Lieutenant Dirige,” he amplified. Then, significantly, “Of
Kalgan.”
And Darell turned
to stare with force at the young man. “Police Lieutenant Dirige of Kalgan,” he
repeated, distinctly. “And you bring him here. Why?”
“Because he was
the last man on Kalgan to see your daughter. Hold, man.”
Anthor's look of
triumph was suddenly one of concern, and he was between the two, struggling
violently with Darell. Slowly, and not gently, he forced the older man back
into the chair.
“What are you
trying to do?” Anthor brushed a lock of brown hair from his forehead, tossed a
hip lightly upon the desk, and swung a leg, thoughtfully. “I thought I was
bringing you good news.”
Darell addressed
the policeman directly, “What does he mean by calling you the last man to see
my daughter? Is my daughter dead? Please tell me without preliminary.” His face
was white with apprehension.
Lieutenant Dirige
said expressionlessly, “'Last man on Kalgan’ was the phrase. She's not on
Kalgan now. I have no knowledge past that.”
“Here,” broke in
Anthor, “let me put it straight. Sorry if I overplayed the drama a bit, Doc.
You're so inhuman about this, I forget you have feelings. In the first place,
Lieutenant Dirige is one of us. He was born on Kalgan, but his father was a
Foundation man brought to that planet in the service of the Mule. I answer for
the lieutenant's loyalty to the Foundation.
“Now I was in
touch with him the day after we stopped getting the daily report from Munn—”
“Why?” broke in
Darell, fiercely. “I thought it was quite decided that we were not to make a
move in the matter. You were risking their lives and ours.”
“Because,” was
the equally fierce retort, “I've been involved in this game for longer than
you. Because I know of certain contacts on Kalgan of which you know nothing.
Because I act from deeper knowledge, do you understand?”
“I think you're
completely mad.”
“Will you
listen?”
A pause, and
Darell's eyes dropped.
Anthor's lips
quirked into a half smile, “All right, Doc. Give me a few minutes. Tell him,
Dirige.”
Dirige spoke
easily: “As far as I know, Dr. Darell, your daughter is at Trantor. At least,
she had a ticket to Trantor at the Eastern Spaceport. She was with a Trading
Representative from that planet who claimed she was his niece. Your daughter
seems to have a queer collection of relatives, doctor. That was the second
uncle she had in a period of two weeks, eh? The Trantorian even tried to bribe
me—probably thinks that's why they got away.” He smiled grimly at the thought.
“How was she?”
“Unharmed, as far
as I could see. Frightened. I don't blame her for that. The whole department
was after her. I still don't know why.”
Darell drew a
breath for what seemed the first time in several minutes. He was conscious of
the trembling of his hands and controlled them with an effort. “Then she's all
right. This Trading Representative, who was he? Go back to him. What part does
he play in it?”
“I don't know. Do
you know anything about Trantor?”
“I lived there
once.”
“It's an
agricultural world, now. Exports animal fodder and grains, mostly. High
quality! They sell them all over the Galaxy. There are a dozen or two farm
co-operatives on the planet and each has its representatives overseas. Shrewd
sons of guns, too- I knew this one's record. He'd been on Kalgan before,
usually with his wife. Perfectly honest. Perfectly harmless.”
“Um-m-m,” said
Anthor. “Arcadia was born in Trantor, wasn't she, Doc?”
Darell nodded.
“It hangs
together, you see. She wanted to go away—quickly and far—and Trantor would
suggest itself. Don't you think so?”
Darell said: “Why
not back here?”
“Perhaps she was
being pursued and felt that she had to double off in a new angle, eh?'
Dr. Darell lacked
the heart to question further. Well, then, let her be safe on Trantor, or as
safe as one could be anywhere in this dark and horrible Galaxy. He groped
toward the door, felt Anthor's light touch on his sleeve, and stopped, but did
not turn.
“Mind if I go
home with you, Doc?”
“You're welcome,”
was the automatic response.
By evening, the
exteriormost reaches of Dr. Darell's personality, the ones that made immediate
contact with other people had solidified once more. He had refused to eat his
evening meal and had, instead, with feverish insistence, returned to the
inchwise advance into the intricate mathematics of encephalographic analysis.
It was not till
nearly midnight, that he entered the living room again.
Pelleas Anthor
was still there, twiddling at the controls of the video. The footsteps behind
him caused him to glance over his shoulder.
“Hi. Aren't you
in bed yet? I've been spending hours on the video, trying to get something
other than bulletins. It seems the F. S. Hober Mallow is delayed in course and
hasn't been heard from”
“Really? What do
they suspect?”
“What do you
think? Kalganian skulduggery. There are reports that Kalganian vessels were
sighted in the general space sector in which the Hober Mallow was last heard
from?”
Darell shrugged,
and Anthor rubbed his forehead doubtfully.
“Look doc,” he
said, “why don't you go to Trantor?”
“Why should I?”
“Because “You're
no good to us here. You're not yourself. You can't be. And you could accomplish
a purpose by going to Trantor, too. The old Imperial Library with the complete
records of the Proceedings of the Seldon Commission are there—”
“No! The Library
has been picked clean and it hasn't helped anyone.”
“It helped Ebling
Mis once.”
“How do you know?
Yes, he said he found the Second Foundation, and my mother killed him five
seconds later as the only way to keep him from unwittingly revealing its
location to the Mule. But in doing so, she also, you realize, made it
impossible ever to tell whether Mis really did know the location. After all, no
one else has ever been able to deduce the truth from those records.”
“Ebling Mis, if
you'll remember, was working under the driving impetus of the Mule's mind.”
“I know that,
too, but Mis’ mind was, by that very token, in an abnormal state. Do you and I
know anything about the properties of a mind under the emotional control of
another; about its abilities and shortcomings? In any case, I will not go to
Trantor.”
Anthor frowned,
“Well, why the vehemence? I merely suggested it as—well, by Space, I don't
understand you. You look ten years older. You're obviously having a hellish
time of it. You're not doing anything of value here. If I were you, I'd go and
get the girl.”
“Exactly! It's
what I want to do, too. That's why I won't do it. Look, Anthor, and try to
understand. You're playing—we're both playing—with something completely beyond
our powers to fight. In cold blood, if you have any, you know that, whatever
you may think in your moments of quixoticism.
“For fifty years,
we've known that the Second Foundation is the real descendent and pupil of
Seldonian mathematics. What that means, and you know that, too, is that nothing
in the Galaxy happens which does not play a part in their reckoning. To us, all
life is a series of accidents, to be met with by improvisations To them, all
life is purposive and should be met by precalculation.
“But they have
their weakness. Their work is statistical and only the mass action of humanity
is truly inevitable. Now how I play a part, as an individual, in the foreseen
course of history, I don't know. Perhaps I have no definite part, since the
Plan leaves individuals to indeterminacy and free will. But I am important and
they—they, you understand—may at least have calculated my probable reaction. So
I distrust, my impulses, my desires, my probable reactions.
“I would rather
present them with an improbable reaction. I will stay here, despite the fact
that I yearn very desperately to leave. “No! Because I yearn very desperately
to leave.”
The younger man
smiled sourly. “You don't know your own mind as well as they might. Suppose
that—knowing you—they might count on what you think, merely think, is the
improbable reaction, simply by knowing in advance what your line of reasoning
would be.”
“In that case,
there is no escape. For if I follow the reasoning you have just outlined and go
to Trantor, they may have foreseen that, too. There is an endless cycle of
double-double-double-double-crosses. No matter how far I follow that cycle, I
can only either go or stay. The intricate act of luring my daughter halfway
across the Galaxy cannot be meant to make me stay where I am, since I would
most certainly have stayed if they had done nothing. It can only be to make me
move, and so I will stay.
“And besides,
Anthor, not everything bears the breath of the Second Foundation; not all
events are the results of their puppeting. They may have had nothing to do with
Arcadia's leave-taking, and she may be safe on Trantor when all the rest of us
are dead.”
“No,” said
Anthor, sharply, “now you are off the track.”
“You have an
alternative interpretation?”
“I have—if you'll
listen.”
“Oh, go ahead. I
don't lack patience.”
“Well, then—how
well do you know your own daughter?”
“How well can any
individual know any other? Obviously, my knowledge is inadequate.”
“So is mine on
that basis, perhaps even more so—but at least, I viewed her with fresh eyes.
Item one: She is a ferocious little romantic, the only child of an ivory-tower
academician, growing up in an unreal world of video and book-film adventure.
She lives in a weird self-constructed fantasy of espionage and intrigue. Item
two: She's intelligent about it; intelligent enough to outwit us, at any rate.
She planned carefully to overhear our first conference and succeeded. She
planned carefully to go to Kalgan with Munn and succeeded. Item three: She has
an unholy hero-worship of her grandmother—your mother—who defeated the Mule.
“I'm right so
far, I think? All right, then. Now, unlike you, I've received a complete report
from Lieutenant Dirige and, in addition, my sources of information on Kalgan
are rather complete, and all sources check. We know, for instance, that Homir
Munn, in conference with the Lord of Kalgan was refused admission to the Mule's
Palace, and that this refusal was suddenly abrogated after Arcadia had spoken
to Lady Callia, the First Citizen's very good friend.”
Darell
interrupted. “And how do you know all this?”
“For one thing,
Munn was interviewed by Dirige as part of the police campaign to locate
Arcadia. Naturally, we have a complete transcript of the questions and answers.
“And take Lady
Callia herself. It is rumored that she has lost Stettin's interest, but the
rumor isn't borne out by facts. She not only remains unreplaced; is not only
able to mediate the lord's refusal to Munn into an acceptance; but can even
engineer Arcadia's escape openly. Why, a dozen of the soldiers about Stettin's
executive mansion testified that they were seen together on the last evening.
Yet she remains unpunished. This despite the fact that Arcadia was searched for
with every appearance of diligence.”
“But what is your
conclusion from all this torrent of ill-connection?”
“That Arcadia's
escape was arranged.”
“As I said.”
“With this
addition. That Arcadia must have known it was arranged; that Arcadia, the
bright little girl who saw cabals everywhere, saw this one and followed your
own type of reasoning. They wanted her to return to the Foundation, and so she
went to Trantor, instead. But why Trantor?”
“Well, why?”
“Because that is
where Bayta, her idolized grandmother, escaped when she was in flight.
Consciously or unconsciously, Arcadia imitated that. I wonder, then, if Arcadia
was fleeing the same enemy.”
“The Mule?” asked
Darell with polite sarcasm.
“Of course not. I
mean, by the enemy, a mentality that she could not fight. She was running from
the Second Foundation, or such influence thereof as could be found on Kalgan.”
“What influence
is this you speak of?”
“Do you expect
Kalgan to be immune from that ubiquitous menace? We both have come to the
conclusion, somehow, that Arcadia's escape was arranged. Right? She was
searched for and found, but deliberately allowed to slip away by Dirige. By
Dirige, do you understand? But how was that? Because he was our man. But how
did they know that? Were they counting on him to be a traitor? Eh, doc?”
“Now you're
saying that they honestly meant to recapture her. Frankly, you're tiring me a
bit, Anthor. Finish your say; I want to go to bed.”
“My say is
quickly finished.” Anthor reached for a small group of photo-records in his
inner pocket. It was the familiar wigglings of the encephalograph. “Dirige's
brainwaves,” Anthor said, casually, “taken since he returned.”
It was quite
visible to Darell's naked eye, and his face was gray when he looked up. “He is
Controlled.”
“Exactly. He
allowed Arcadia to escape not because he was our man but because he was the
Second Foundation's.”
“Even after he
knew she was going to Trantor, and not to Terminus.”
Anthor shrugged.
“He had been geared to let her go. There was no way he could modify that. He
was only a tool, you see. It was just that Arcadia followed the least probable
course, and is probably safe. Or at least safe until such time as the Second
Foundation can modify the plans to take into account this changed state of
affairs—”
He paused. The
little signal light on the video set was flashing. On an independent circuit,
it signified the presence of emergency news. Darell saw it, too, and with the
mechanical movement of long habit turned on the video. They broke in upon the
middle of a sentence but before its completion, they knew that the Hober
Mallow, or the wreck thereof, had been found and that, for the first time in
nearly half a century, the Foundation was again at war.
Anthor's jaw was
set in a hard line. “All right, doc, you heard that. Kalgan has attacked; and
Kalgan is under the control of the Second Foundation. Will you follow your
daughter's lead and move to Trantor?”
“No. I will risk
it. Here.”
“Dr. Darell. You
are not as intelligent as your daughter. I wonder how far you can be trusted.”
His long level stare held Darell for a moment, and then without a word, he
left.
And Darell was
left in uncertainty and—almost—despair.
Unheeded, the
video was a medley of excited sight-sound, as it described in nervous detail
the first hour of the war between Kalgan and the Foundation.
17
War
The mayor of the
Foundation brushed futilely at the picket fence of hair that rimmed his skull.
He sighed. “The years that we have wasted; the chances we have thrown away. I
make no recriminations, Dr. Darell, but we deserve defeat.”
Darell said,
quietly, “I see no reason for lack of confidence in events, sir.”
“Lack of
confidence! Lack of confidence! By the Galaxy, Dr. Darell, on what would you
base any other attitude? Come here—”
He half-led
half-forced Darell toward the limpid ovoid cradled gracefully on its tiny
force-field support. At a touch of the mayor's hand, it glowed within—an
accurate three-dimensional model of the Galactic double-spiral.
“In yellow,” said
the mayor, excitedly, “we have that region of Space under Foundation control;
in red, that under Kalgan.”
What Darell saw
was a crimson sphere resting within a stretching yellow fist that surrounded it
on all sides but that toward the center of the Galaxy.
“Galactography,”
said the mayor, “is our greatest enemy. Our admirals make no secret of our
almost hopeless, strategic position. Observe. The enemy has inner lines of
communication. He is concentrated; can meet us on all sides with equal ease. He
can defend himself with minimum force.
“We are expanded.
The average distance between inhabited systems within the Foundation is nearly
three times that within Kalgan. To go from Santanni to Locris, for instance, is
a voyage of twenty-five hundred parsecs for us, but only eight hundred parsecs
for them, if we remain within our respective territories—”
Darell said, “I
understand all that, sir.”
“And you do not
understand that it may mean defeat.”
“There is more
than distance to war. I say we cannot lose. It is quite impossible.”
“And why do you
say that?”
“Because of my
own interpretation of the Seldon Plan.”
“Oh,” the mayor's
lips twisted, and the hands behind his back flapped one within the other, “then
you rely, too, on the mystical help of the Second Foundation.”
“No. Merely on
the help of inevitability—and of courage and persistence.”
And yet behind
his easy confidence, he wondered—
What if—
WellWhat if
Anthor were right, and Kalgan were a direct tool of the mental wizards. What if
it was their purpose to defeat and destroy the Foundation. No! It made no
sense!
And yet—
He smiled
bitterly. Always the same. Always that peering and peering through the opaque
granite which, to the enemy, was so transparent.
Nor were the
galactographic verities of the situation lost upon Stettin.
The Lord of
Kalgan stood before a twin of the Galactic model which the mayor and Darell had
inspected. Except that where the mayor frowned, Stettin smiled.
His admiral's
uniform glistered imposingly upon his massive figure. The crimson sash of the
Order of the Mule awarded him by the former First Citizen whom six months later
he had replaced somewhat forcefully, spanned his chest diagonally from right
shoulder to waist. The Silver Star with Double Comets and Swords sparkled
brilliantly upon his left shoulder.
He addressed the
six men of his general staff whose uniforms were only less grandiloquent than
his own, and his First Minister as well, thin and gray—a darkling cobweb, lost
in the brightness.
Stettin said, “I
think the decisions are clear. We can afford to wait. To them, every day of
delay will be another blow at their morale. If they attempt to defend all
portions of their realm, they will be spread thin and we can strike through in
two simultaneous thrusts here and here.” He indicated the directions on the
Galactic model—two lances of pure white shooting through the yellow fist from
the red ball it inclosed, cutting Terminus off on either side in a tight arc.
“In such a manner, we cut their fleet into three parts which can be defeated in
detail. If they concentrate, they give up two-thirds of their dominions
voluntarily and will probably risk rebellion.”
The First
Minister's thin voice alone seeped through the hush that followed. “In six
months,” he said, “the Foundation will grow six months stronger. Their
resources are greater, as we all know, their navy is numerically stronger;
their manpower is virtually inexhaustible. Perhaps a quick thrust would be
safer.”
His was easily
the least influential voice in the room. Lord Stettin smiled and made a flat
gesture with his hand. “The six months—or a year, if necessary—will cost us
nothing. The men of the Foundation cannot prepare; they are ideologically
incapable of it. It is in their very philosophy to believe that the Second
Foundation will save them. But not this time, eh?”
The men in the
room stirred uneasily.
“You lack
confidence, I believe,” said Stettin, frigidly. “Is it necessary once again to
describe the reports of our agents in Foundation territory, or to repeat the
findings of Mr. Homir Munn, the Foundation agent now in our... uh... service?
Let us adjourn, gentlemen.”
Stettin returned
to his private chambers with a fixed smile still on his face. He sometimes
wondered about this Homir Munn. A queer water-spined fellow who certainly did
not bear out his early promise. And yet he crawled with interesting information
that carried conviction with it—particularly when Callia was present.
His smile
broadened. That fat fool had her uses, after all. At least, she got more with
her wheedling out of Munn than he could, and with less trouble. Why not give
her to Munn? He frowned. Callia. She and her stupid jealousy. Space! If he
still had the Darell girlWhy hadn't he ground her skull to powder for that?
He couldn't quite
put his finger on the reason.
Maybe because she
got along with Munn. And he needed Munn. It was Munn, for instance, who had
demonstrated that, at least in the belief of the Mule, there was no Second
Foundation. His admirals needed that assurance.
He would have
liked to make the proofs public, but it was better to let the Foundation
believe in their nonexistent help. Was it actually Callia who had pointed that
out? That's right. She had said—
Oh, nonsense! She
couldn't have said anything.
And yet—
He shook his head
to clear it and passed on.
18
Ghost of a World
Trantor was a
world in dregs and rebirth. Set like a faded jewel in the midst of the
bewildering crowd of suns at the center of the Galaxy—in the heaps and clusters
of stars piled high with aimless prodigality—it alternately dreamed of past and
future.
Time had been
when the insubstantial ribbons of control had stretched out from its metal
coating to the very edges of stardom. It had been a single city, housing four
hundred billion administrators; the mightiest capital that had ever been.
Until the decay
of the Empire eventually reached it and in the Great Sack of a century ago, its
drooping powers had been bent back upon themselves and broken forever. In the
blasting ruin of death, the metal shell that circled the planet wrinkled and
crumpled into an aching mock of its own grandeur.
The survivors
tore up the metal plating and sold it to other planets for seed and cattle. The
soil was uncovered once more and the planet returned to its beginnings. In the
spreading areas of primitive agriculture, it forgot its intricate and colossal
past.
Or would have but
for the still mighty shards that heaped their massive ruins toward the sky in
bitter and dignified silence.
Arcadia watched
the metal rim of the horizon with a stirring of the heart. The village in which
the Palvers lived was but a huddle of houses to her—small and primitive. The
fields that surrounded it were golden-yellow, wheat-cIogged tracts.
But there, just
past the reaching point was the memory of the past, still glowing in unrusted
splendor, and burning with fire where the sun of Trantor caught it in gleaming
highlights. She had been there once during the months since she had arrived at
Trantor. She had climbed onto the smooth, unjointed pavement and ventured into
the silent dust-streaked structures, where the light entered through the jags
of broken walls and partitions.
It had been
solidified heartache. It had been blasphemy.
She had left,
clangingly—running until her feet pounded softly on earth once more.
And then she
could only look back longingly. She dared not disturb that mighty brooding once
more.
Somewhere on this
world, she knew, she had been born—near the old Imperial Library, which was the
veriest Trantor of Trantor. It was the sacred of the sacred; the holy of
holies! Of all the world, it alone had survived the Great Sack and for a
century it had remained complete and untouched; defiant of the universe.
There Hari Seldon
and his group had woven their unimaginable web. There Ebling Mis pierced the
secret, and sat numbed in his vast surprise, until he was killed to prevent the
secret from going further.
There at the
Imperial Library, her grandparents had lived for ten years, until the Mule
died, and they could return to the reborn Foundation.
There at the
Imperial Library, her own father returned with his bride to find the Second
Foundation once again, but failed. There, she had been born and there her
mother had died.
She would have
liked to visit the Library, but Preem Palver shook his round head. “It's
thousands of miles, Arkady, and there's so much to do here. Besides, it's not
good to bother there. You know; it's a shrine—”
But Arcadia knew
that he had no desire to visit the Library; that it was a case of the Mule's
Palace over again. There was this superstitious fear on the part of the pygmies
of the present for the relies of the giants of the past.
Yet it would have
been horrible to feel a grudge against the funny little man for that. She had
been on Trantor now for nearly three months and in all that time, he and
she—Pappa and Mamma—had been wonderful to her—
And what was her
return? Why, to involve them in the common ruin. Had she warned them that she
was marked for destruction, perhaps? No! She let them assume the deadly role of
protectors.
Her conscience
panged unbearably—yet what choice had she?
She stepped
reluctantly down the stairs to breakfast. The voices reached her.
Preem Palver had
tucked the napkin down his shirt collar with a twist of his plump neck and had
reached for his poached eggs with an uninhibited satisfaction.
“I was down in
the city yesterday, Mamma,” he said, wielding his fork and nearly drowning the
words with a capacious mouthful.
“And what is down
in the city, Pappa?” asked Mamma indifferently, sitting down, looking sharply
about the table, and rising again for the salt.
“Ah, not so good.
A ship came in from out Kalgan-way with newspapers from there. It's war there.”
“War! So! Well,
let them break their heads, if they have no more sense inside. Did your pay
check come yet? Pappa, I'm telling you again. You warn old man Cosker this
isn't the only cooperative in the world. It's bad enough they pay you what I'm
ashamed to tell my friends, but at least on time they could be!”
“Time; shmime,”
said Pappa, irritably. “Look, don't make me silly talk at breakfast, it should
choke me each bite in the throat,” and he wreaked havoc among the buttered
toast as he said it. He added, somewhat more moderately, “The fighting is
between Kalgan and the Foundation, and for two months, they've been at it.”
His hands lunged
at one another in mock-representation of a space fight.
“Um-m-m. And
what's doing?”
“Bad for the
Foundation. Well, you saw Kalgan; all soldiers. They were ready. The Foundation
was not, and so—poof!”
And suddenly,
Mamma laid down her fork and hissed, “Fool!”
“Huh?”
“Dumb-head! Your
big mouth is always moving and wagging.”
She was pointing
quickly and when Pappa looked over his shoulder, there was Arcadia, frozen in
the doorway.
She said, “The
Foundation is at war?”
Pappa looked
helplessly at Mamma, then nodded.
“And they're
losing?”
Again the nod.
Arcadia felt the
unbearable catch in her throat, and slowly approached the table. “Is it over?”
she whispered.
“Over?” repeated
Pappa, with false heartiness. “Who said it was over? In war, lots of things can
happen. And... and—”
“Sit down,
darling,” said Mamma, soothingly. “No one should talk before breakfast. You're
not in a healthy condition with no food in the stomach.”
But Arcadia
ignored her. “Are the Kalganians on Terminus?”
“No,” said Pappa,
seriously. “The news is from last week, and Terminus is still fighting. This is
honest. I'm telling the truth. And the Foundation is still strong. Do you want
me to get you the newspapers?”
“Yes!”
She read them
over what she could eat of her breakfast and her eyes blurred as she read.
Santanni and Korell were gone—without a fight. A squadron of the Foundation's
navy had been trapped in the sparsely-sunned Ifni sector and wiped out to
almost the last ship.
And now the
Foundation was back to the Four-Kingdom core—the original Realm which had been
built up under Salvor Hardin, the first mayor. But still it fought—and still
there might be a chance-and whatever happened, she must inform her father. She
must somehow reach his ear. She must!
But how? With a
war in the way.
She asked Pappa
after breakfast, “Are you going out on a new mission soon, Mr. Palver?”
Pappa was on the
large chair on the front lawn, sunning himself. A fat cigar smoldered between
his plump fingers and he looked like a beatific pug-dog.
“A mission?” he
repeated, lazily. “Who knows? It's a nice vacation and my leave isn't up. Why
talk about new missions? You're restless, Arkady?”
“Me? No, I like
it here. You're very good to me, you and Mrs. Palver.”
He waved his hand
at her, brushing away her words.
Arcadia said, “I
was thinking about the war.”
“But don't think
about it. What can you do? If it's something you can't help, why hurt yourself
over it?”
“But I was
thinking that the Foundation has lost most of its farming worlds. They're
probably rationing food there.”
Pappa looked
uncomfortable. “Don't worry. It'll be all right.”
She scarcely
listened. “I wish I could carry food to them, that's what. You know after the
Mule died, and the Foundation rebelled, Terminus was just about isolated for a
time and General Han Pritcher, who succeeded the Mule for a while was laying
siege to it. Food was running awfully low and my father says that his father
told him that they only had dry amino-acid concentrates that tasted terrible.
Why, one egg cost two hundred credits. And then they broke the siege just in
time and food ships came through from Santanni. It must have been an awful
time. Probably it's happening all over, now.”
There was a
pause, and then Arcadia said, “You know, I'll bet the Foundation would be
willing to pay smuggler's prices for food now. Double and triple and more. Gee,
if any co-operative, f'r instance, here on Trantor took over the job, they
might lose some ships, but, I'll bet they'd be war millionaires before it was
over. The Foundation Traders in the old days used to do that all the time.
There'd be a war, so they'd sell whatever was needed bad and take their
chances. Golly, they used to make as much as two million dollars out of one
trip—profit. That was just out of what they could carry on one ship, too.”
Pappa stirred.
His cigar had gone out, unnoticed. “A deal for food, huh? Hm-m-mBut the
Foundation is so far away.”
“Oh, I know. I
guess you couldn't do it from here. If you took a regular liner you probably
couldn't get closer than Massena or Smushyk, and after that you'd have to hire
a small scoutship or something to slip you through the lines.”
Pappa's hand
brushed at his hair, as he calculated.
Two weeks later,
arrangements for the mission were completed. Mamma railed for most of the
timeFirst, at the incurable obstinacy with which he courted suicide. Then, at
the incredible obstinacy with which he refused to allow her to accompany him.
Pappa said,
“Mamma, why do you act like an old lady. I can't take you. It's a man's work.
What do you think a war is? Fun? Child's play?”
“Then why do you
go? Are you a man, you old fool—with a leg and half an arm in the grave. Let
some of the young ones go—not a fat bald-head like you?”
“I'm not a
bald-head,” retorted Pappa, with dignity. “I got yet lots of hair. And why should
it not be me that gets the commission? Why, a young fellow? Listen, this could
mean millions?”
She knew that and
she subsided.
Arcadia saw him
once before he left.
She said, “Are
you going to Terminus?”
“Why not? You say
yourself they need bread and rice and potatoes. Well, I'll make a deal with
them, and they'll get it.”
“Well, then—just
one thing: If you're going to Terminus, could you... would you see my father?”
And Pappa's face
crinkled and seemed to melt into sympathy, “Oh—and I have to wait for you to
tell me. Sure, I'll see him. I'll tell him you're safe and everything's O. K.,
and when the war is over, I'll bring you back.”
“Thanks. I'll
tell you how to find him. His name is Dr. Toran Darell and he lives in
Stanmark. That's just outside Terminus City, and you can get a little commuting
plane that goes there. We're at 55 Channel Drive.”
“Wait, and I'll
write it down.”
“No, no,”
Arcadia's arm shot out. “You mustn't write anything down. You must remember—and
find him without anybody's help.”
Pappa looked
puzzled. Then he shrugged his shoulders. “All right, then. It's 55 Channel
Drive in Stanmark, outside Terminus City, and you commute there by plane. All
right?”
“One other
thing.”
“Yes?”
“Would you tell
him something from me?”
“Sure.”
“I want to whisper
it to you.”
He leaned his
plump cheek toward her, and the little whispered sound passed from one to the
other.
Pappa's eyes were
round. “That's what you want me to say? But it doesn't make sense.”
“He'll know what
you mean. Just say I sent it and that I said he would know what it means. And
you say it exactly the way I told you. No different. You won't forget it?”
“How can I forget
it? Five little words. Look—”
“No, no.” She
hopped up and down in the intensity of her feelings. “Don't repeat it. Don't ever
repeat it to anyone. Forget all about it except to my father. Promise me.”
Pappa shrugged
again. “I promise! All right!”
“All right,” she
said, mournfully, and as he passed down the drive to where the air taxi waited
to take him to the spaceport, she wondered if she had signed his death warrant.
She wondered if she would ever see him again.
She scarcely
dared to walk into the house again to face the good, kind Mamma. Maybe when it
was all over, she had better kill herself for what she had done to them.
19
End of War
QUORISTON, BATTLE
OF Fought on 9, 17, 377 F. E. between the forces of the Foundation and those of
Lord Stettin of Kalgan, it was the last battle of consequence during the
Interregnum... .
ENCYCLOPEDIA
GALACTICA
Jole Turbor, in
his new role of war correspondent, found his bulk incased in a naval uniform,
and rather liked it. He enjoyed being back on the air, and some of the fierce
helplessness of the futile fight against the Second Foundation left him in the
excitement of another sort of fight with substantial ships and ordinary men.
To be sure, the
Foundation's fight had not been remarkable for victories, but it was still
possible to be philosophic about the matter. After six months, the hard core of
the Foundation was untouched, and the hard core of the Fleet was still in
being. With the new additions since the start of the war, it was almost as
strong numerically, and stronger technically, than before the defeat at Ifni.
And meanwhile,
planetary defenses were being strengthened; the armed forces better trained;
administrative efficiency was having some of the water squeezed out of it—and
much of the Kalganian's conquering fleet was being wallowed down through the
necessity of occupying the “conquered” territory.
At the moment,
Turbor was with the Third Fleet in the outer reaches of the Anacreonian sector.
In line with his policy of making this a “little man's war,” he was
interviewing Fennel Leemor, Engineer Third Class, volunteer.
“Tell us a little
about yourself, sailor,” said Turbor.
“Ain't much to
tell,” Leemor shuffled his feet and allowed a faint, bashful smile to cover his
face, as though he could see all the millions that undoubtedly could see him at
the moment. I'm a Locrian. Got a job in an air-car factory; section head and
good pay. I'm married; got two kids, both girls. Say, I couldn't say hello to
them, could I—in case they're listening.”
“Go ahead,
sailor. The video is all yours.”
“Gosh, thanks.”
He burbled, “Hello, Milla, in case you're listening, I'm fine. Is Sunni all
right? And Tomma? I think of you all the time and maybe I'll be back on
furlough after we get back to port. I got your food parcel but I'm sending it
back. We get our regular mess, but they say the civilians are a little tight. I
guess that's all.”
“I'll look her up
next time I'm on Locris, sailor, and make sure she's not short of food. O. K.?”
The young man
smiled broadly and nodded his head. “Thank you, Mr. Turbor. I'd appreciate
that.”
“All right.
Suppose you tell us, thenYou're a volunteer, aren't you?”
“Sure am. If
anyone picks a fight with me, I don't have to wait for anyone to drag me in. I
joined up the day I heard about the Hober Mallow.”
“That's a fine
spirit. Have you seen much action? I notice “You're wearing two battle stars.”
“Ptah.” The
sailor spat. “Those weren't battles, they were chases. The Kalganians don't
fight, unless they have odds of five to one or better in their favor. Even then
they just edge in and try to cut us up ship by ship. Cousin of mine was at Ifni
and he was on a ship that got away, the old Ebling Mis. He says it was the same
there. They had their Main Fleet against just a wing division of ours, and down
to where we only had five ships left, they kept stalking instead of fighting.
We got twice as many of their ships at that fight.”
“Then you think
we're going to win the war?”
Sure bet; now
that we aren't retreating. Even if things got too bad, that's when I'd expect
the Second Foundation to step in. We still got the Seldon Plan—and they know
it, too.”
Turbor's lips
curled a bit. “You're counting on the Second Foundation, then?”
The answer came
with honest surprise. “Well, doesn't everyone?”
Junior Officer
Tippellum stepped into Turbor's room after the visicast. He shoved a cigarette
at the correspondent and knocked his cap back to a perilous balance on the
occiput.
“We picked up a
prisoner,” he said.
“Yes?”
“Little crazy
fellow. Claims to be a neutral—diplomatic immunity, no less. I don't think they
know what to do with him. His name's Palvro, Palver, something like that, and
he says he's from Trantor. Don't know what in space he's doing in a war zone.”
But Turbor had
swung to a sitting position on his bunk and the nap he had been about to take
was forgotten. He remembered quite well his last interview with Darell, the day
after war had been declared and he was shoving off.
“Preem Palver,”
he said. It was a statement.
Tippellum paused
and let the smoke trickle out the sides of his mouth. “Yeah,” he said, “how in
space did you know?”
“Never mind. Can
I see him?”
“Space, I can't
say. The old man has him in his own room for questioning. Everyone figures he's
a spy.”
“You tell the old
man that I know him, if he's who he claims he is. I'II take the
responsibility.”
Captain Dixyl on
the flagship of the Third Fleet watched unremittingly at the Grand Detector. No
ship could avoid being a source of subatomic radiation—not even if it were
lying an inert mass—and each focal point of such radiation was a little sparkle
in the three-dimensional field.
Each one of the
Foundation's ships were accounted for and no sparkle was left over, now that
the little spy who claimed to be a neutral had been picked up. For a while,
that outside ship had created a stir in the captain's quarters. The tactics
might have needed changing on short notice. As it was—
“Are you sure you
have it?” he asked.
Commander Cenn
nodded. “I will take my squadron through hyperspace: radius, 10. 00 parsecs;
theta, 268. 52 degrees; phi, 84. 15 degrees. Return to origin at 1330. Total
absence 11. 83 hours.”
“Right. Now we
are going to count on pin-point return as regards both space and time.
Understand?”
“Yes, captain.”
He looked at his wrist watch, “My ships will be ready by 0140.”
“Good,” said
Captain Dixyl.
The Kalganian
squadron was not within detector range now, but they would be soon. There was
independent information to that effect. Without Cenn's squadron the Foundation
forces would be badly outnumbered, but the captain was quite confident. Quite
confident.
Preem Palver
looked sadly about him. First at the tall, skinny admiral; then at the others,
everyone in uniform; and now at this last one, big and stout, with his collar
open and no tie—not like the rest—who said he wanted to speak to him.
Jole Turbor was
saying: “I am perfectly aware, admiral, of the serious possibilities involved
here, but I tell you that if I can be allowed to speak to him for a few minutes,
I may be able to settle the current uncertainty.”
“Is there any
reason why you can't question him before me?”
Turbor pursed his
lips and looked stubborn. “Admiral,” he said, “while I have been attached to
your ships, the Third Fleet has received an excellent press. You may station
men outside the door, if you like, and you may return in five minutes. But,
meanwhile, humor me a bit, and your public relations will not suffer. Do you
understand me?”
He did.
Then Turbor in
the isolation that followed, turned to Palver, and said, “Quickly—what is the
name of the girl you abducted.”
And Palver could
simply stare round-eyed, and shake his head.
“No nonsense,”
said Turbor. “If you do not answer, you will be a spy and spies are blasted
without trial in war time.”
“Arcadia Darell!”
gasped Palver.
“Well! All right,
then. Is she safe?”
Palver nodded.
“You had better
be sure of that, or it won't be well for you.”
“She is in good
health, perfectly safe,” said Palver, palely.
The admiral
returned, “Well?”
“The man, sir, is
not a spy. You may believe what he tells you. I vouch for him.”
“That so?” The
admiral frowned. “Then he represents an agricultural co-operative on Trantor
that wants to make a trade treaty with Terminus for the delivery of grains and
potatoes. Well, all right, but he can't leave now.”
“Why not?” asked
Palver, quickly.
“Because we're in
the middle of a battle. After it is over—assuming we're still alive—we'll take
you to Terminus.”
The Kalganian
fleet that spanned through space detected the Foundation ships from an
incredible distance and were themselves detected. Like little fireflies in each
other's Grand Detectors, they closed in across the emptiness.
And the
Foundation's admiral frowned and said, “This must be their main push. Look at the
numbers.” Then, “They won't stand up before us, though; not if Cenn's
detachment can be counted on.”
Commander Cenn
had left hours before—at the first detection of the coming enemy. There was no
way of altering the plan now. It worked or it didn't, but the admiral felt
quite comfortable. As did the officers. As did the men.
Again watch the
fireflies.
Like a deadly
ballet dance, in precise formations, they sparked.
The Foundation
fleet edged slowly backwards. Hours passed and the fleet veered slowly off, teasing
the advancing enemy slightly off course, then more so.
In the minds of
the dictators of the battle plan, there was a certain volume of space that must
be occupied by the Kalganian ships. Out from that volume crept the
Foundationers; into it slipped the Kalganians. Those that passed out again were
attacked, suddenly and fiercely. Those that stayed within were not touched.
It all depended
on the reluctance of the ships of Lord Stettin to take the initiative
themselves—on their willingness to remain where none attacked.
Captain Dixyl
stared frigidly at his wrist watch. It was 1310, “We've got twenty minutes,” he
said.
The lieutenant at
his side nodded tensely, “It looks all right so far, captain. We've got more
than ninety percent of them boxed. If we can keep them that way—”
“Yes! If—”
The Foundation
ships were drifting forward again—very slowly. Not quick enough to urge a
Kalganian retreat and just quickly enough to discourage a Kalganian advance.
They preferred to wait.
And the minutes
passed.
At 1325, the
admiral's buzzer sounded in seventy-five ships of the Foundation's line, and
they built up to a maximum acceleration towards the front-plane of the
Kalganian fleet, itself three hundred strong. Kalganian shields flared into
action, and the vast energy beams flicked out. Every one of the three hundred
concentrated in the same direction, towards their mad attackers who bore down
relentlessly, uncaringly and—
At 1330, fifty
ships under Commander Cenn appeared from nowhere, in one single bound through
hyperspace to a calculated spot at a calculated time—and were spaced in tearing
fury at the unprepared Kalganian rear.
The trap worked
perfectly.
The Kalganians
still had numbers on their side, but they were in no mood to count. Their first
effort was to escape and the formation once broken was only the more
vulnerable, as the enemy ships bumbled into one another's path.
After a while, it
took on the proportions of a rat hunt.
Of three hundred
Kalganian ships, the core and pride of their fleet, some sixty or less, many in
a state of near-hopeless disrepair, reached Kalgan once more. The Foundation
loss was eight ships out of a total of one hundred twenty-five.
Preem Palver
landed on Terminus at the height of the celebration. He found the furore
distracting, but before he left the planet, he had accomplished two things, and
received one request.
The two things
accomplished were: 1) the conclusion of an agreement whereby Palver's
co-operative was to deliver twenty shiploads of certain foodstuffs per month
for the next year at a war price, without, thanks to the recent battle, a
corresponding war risk, and 2) the transfer to Dr. Darell of Arcadia's five
short words.
For a startled
moment, Darell had stared wide-eyed at him, and then he had made his request.
It was to carry an answer back to Arcadia. Palver liked it; it was a simple
answer and made sense. It was: “Come back now. There won't be any danger.”
Lord Stettin was
in raging frustration. To watch his every weapon break in his hands; to feel
the firm fabric of his military might part like the rotten thread it suddenly
turned out to be—would have turned phlegmaticism itself into flowing lava. And
yet he was helpless, and knew it.
He hadn't really
slept well in weeks. He hadn't shaved in three days. He had canceled all
audiences. His admirals were left to themselves and none knew better than the
Lord of Kalgan that very little time and no further defeats need elapse before
he would have to contend with internal rebellion.
Lev Meirus, First
Minister, was no help. He stood there, calm and indecently old, with his thin,
nervous finger stroking, as always, the wrinkled line from nose to chin.
“Well,” shouted
Stettin at him, “contribute something. We stand here defeated, do you understand?
Defeated! And why? I don't know why. There you have it. I don't know why. Do
you know why?”
“I think so,”
said Meirus, calmly.
“Treason!” The
word came out softly, and other words followed as softly. “You've known of
treason, and you've kept quiet. You served the fool I ejected from the First
Citizenship and you think you can serve whatever foul rat replaces me. If you
have acted so, I will extract your entrails for it and burn them before your
living eyes.”
Meirus was
unmoved. “I have tried to fill you with my own doubts, not once, but many
times. I have dinned it in your ears and you have preferred the advice of
others because it stuffed your ego better. Matters have turned out not as I
feared, but even worse. If you do not care to listen now, say so, sir, and I
shall leave, and, in due course, deal with your successor, whose first act, no
doubt, will be to sign a treaty of peace.”
Stettin stared at
him red-eyed, enormous fists slowly clenching and unclenching. “Speak, you gray
slug. Speak!”
“I have told you
often, sir, that you are not the Mule. You may control ships and guns but you
cannot control the minds of your subjects. Are you aware, sir, of who it is you
are fighting? You fight the Foundation, which is never defeated—the Foundation,
which is protected by the Seldon Plan—the Foundation, which is destined to form
a new Empire.”
“There is no
Plan. No longer. Munn has said so.”
“Then Munn is
wrong. And if he were right, what then? You and I, sir, are not the people. The
men and women of Kalgan and its subject worlds believe utterly and deeply in
the Seldon Plan as do all the inhabitants of this end of the Galaxy. Nearly
four hundred years of history teach the fact that the Foundation cannot be
beaten. Neither the kingdoms nor the warlords nor the old Galactic Empire
itself could do it.”
“The Mule did
it.”
“Exactly, and he
was beyond calculation—and you are not. What is worse, the people know that you
are not. So your ships go into battle fearing defeat in some unknown way. The
insubstantial fabric of the Plan hangs over them so that they are cautious and
look before they attack and wonder a little too much. While on the other side,
that same insubstantial fabric fills the enemy with confidence, removes fear,
maintains morale in the face of early defeats. Why not? The Foundation has
always been defeated at first and has always won in the end.
“And your own
morale, sir? You stand everywhere on enemy territory. Your own dominions have
not been invaded; are still not in danger of invasion—yet you are defeated. You
don't believe in the possibility, even, of victory, because you know there is
none.
“Stoop, then, or
you will be beaten to your knees. Stoop voluntarily, and you may save a
remnant. You have depended on metal and power and they have sustained you as
far as they could. You have ignored mind and morale and they have failed you.
Now, take my advice. You have the Foundation man, Homir Munn. Release him. Send
him back to Terminus and he will carry your peace offers.”
Stettin's teeth
ground behind his pale, set lips. But what choice had he?
On the first day
of the new year, Homir Munn left Kalgan again. More than six months had passed
since he had left Terminus and in the interim, a war had raged and faded.
He had come
alone, but he left escorted. He had come a simple man of private life; he left
the unappointed but nevertheless, actual, ambassador of peace.
And what had most
changed was his early concern over the Second Foundation. He laughed at the
thought of that: and pictured in luxuriant detail the final revelation to Dr.
Darell, to that energetic, young competent, Anthor, to all of them—
He knew. He,
Homir Munn, finally knew the truth.
20
“I Know...”
The last two
months of the Stettinian war did not lag for Homir. In his unusual office as Mediator
Extraordinary, he found himself the center of interstellar affairs, a role he
could not help but find pleasing.
There were no
further major battles—a few accidental skirmishes that could scarcely count—and
the terms of the treaty were hammered out with little necessity for concessions
on the part of the Foundation. Stettin retained his office, but scarcely
anything else. His navy was dismantled; his possessions outside the home system
itself made autonomous and allowed to vote for return to previous status, full
independence or confederation within the Foundation, as they chose.
The war was
formally ended on an asteroid in Terminus’ own stellar system; site of the
Foundation's oldest naval base. Lev Meirus signed for Kalgan, and Homir was an
interested spectator.
Throughout all
that period he did not see Dr. Darell, nor any of the others. But it scarcely
mattered. His news would keep—and, as always, he smiled at the thought.
Dr. Darell
returned to Terminus some weeks after VK day, and that same evening, his house
served as the meeting place for the five men who, ten months earlier, had laid
their first plans.
They lingered
over dinner and then over wine as though hesitating to return again to the old
subject.
It was Jole
Turbor, who, peering steadily into the purple depths of the wineglass with one
eye, muttered, rather than said, “Well, Homir, you are a man of affairs now, I
see. You handled matters well.”
“I?” Munn laughed
loudly and joyously. For some reason, he had not stuttered in months. “I hadn't
a thing to do with it. It was Arcadia. By the by, Darell, how is she? She's
coming back from Trantor, I heard?”
“You heard
correctly,” said Darell, quietly. “Her ship should dock within the week.” He
looked, with veiled eyes, at the others, but there were only confused,
amorphous exclamations of pleasure. Nothing else.
Turbor said,
“Then it's over, really. Who would have predicted all this ten months ago.
Munn's been to Kalgan and back. Arcadia's been to Kalgan and Trantor and is
coming back. We've had a war and won it, by Space. They tell you that the vast
sweeps of history can be predicted, but doesn't it seem conceivable that all
that has just happened, with its absolute confusion to those of us who lived
through it, couldn't possibly have been predicted.”
“Nonsense,” said
Anthor, acidly. “What makes you so triumphant, anyway? You talk as though we
have really won a war, when actually we have won nothing but a petty brawl
which has served only to distract our minds from the real enemy.”
There was an
uncomfortable silence, in which only Homir Munn's slight smile struck a
discordant note.
And Anthor struck
the arm of his chair with a balled and furyfilled fist, “Yes, I refer to the
Second Foundation. There is no mention of it and, if I judge correctly, every
effort to have no thought of it. Is it because this fallacious atmosphere of
victory that palls over this world of idiots is so attractive that you feel you
must participate? Turn somersaults then, handspring your way into a wall, pound
one another's back and throw confetti out the window. Do whatever you please,
only get it out of your system—and when you are quite done and you are
yourselves again, return and let us discuss that problem which exists now
precisely as it did ten months ago when you sat here with eyes cocked over your
shoulders for fear of you knew not what. Do you really think that the
Mind-masters of the Second Foundation are less to be feared because you have
beat down a foolish wielder of spaceships.”
He paused,
red-faced and panting.
Munn said
quietly, “Will you hear me speak now, Anthor? Or do you prefer to continue your
role as ranting conspirator?”
“Have your say,
Homir,” said Darell, “but let's all of us refrain from over-picturesqueness of language.
It's a very good thing in its place, but at present, it bores me.”
Homir Munn leaned
back in his armchair and carefully refilled his glass from the decanter at his
elbow.
“I was sent to
Kalgan,” he said, “to find out what I could from the records contained in the
Mule's Palace. I spent several months doing so. I seek no credit for that
accomplishment. As I have indicated, it was Arcadia whose ingenuous
intermeddling obtained the entry for me. Nevertheless, the fact remains that to
my original knowledge of the Mule's life and times, which, I submit, was not
small, I have added the fruits of much labor among primary evidence which has
been available to no one else.
“I am, therefore,
in a unique position to estimate the true danger of the Second Foundation; much
more so than is our excitable friend here.”
“And,” grated
Anthor, “what is your estimate of that danger?”
“Why, zero.”
A short pause,
and Elvett Semic asked with an air of surprised disbelief, “You mean zero
danger?”
“Certainly.
Friends, there is no Second Foundation!”
Anthor's eyelids
closed slowly and he sat there, face pale and expressionless.
Munn continued,
aftention-centering and loving it, “And what is more, there was never one.”
“On what,” asked
Darell, “do you base this surprising conclusion?”
“I deny,” said
Munn, “that it is surprising. You all know the story of the Mule's search for
the Second Foundation. But what do you know of the intensity of that search—of
the single-mindedness of it. He had tremendous resources at his disposal and he
spared none of it. He was single-minded—and yet he failed. No Second Foundation
was found.”
“One could
scarcely expect it to be found,” pointed out Turbor, restlessly. “It had means
of protecting itself against inquiring minds.”
“Even when the
mind that is inquiring is the Mule's mutant mentality? I think not. But come,
you do not expect me to give you the gist of fifty volumes of reports in five
minutes. All of it, by the terms of the peace treaty will be part of the Seldon
Historical Museum eventually, and you will all be free to be as leisurely in
your analysis as I have been. You will find his conclusion plainly stated,
however, and that I have already expressed. There is not, and has never been,
any Second Foundation.”
Semic interposed,
“Well, what stopped the Mule, then?”
“Great Galaxy,
what do you suppose stopped him? Death did; as it will stop all of us. The
greatest superstition of the age is that the Mule was somehow stopped in an
all-conquering career by some mysterious entities superior even to himself. It
is the result of looking at everything in wrong focus.
“Certainly no one
in the Galaxy can help knowing that the Mule was a freak, physical as well as
mental. He died in his thirties because his ill-adjusted body could no longer
struggle its creaking machinery along. For several years before his death he
was an invalid. His best health was never more than an ordinary man's
feebleness. All right, then. He conquered the Galaxy and, in the ordinary
course of nature, proceeded to die. It's a wonder he proceeded as long and as
well as he did. Friends, it's down in the very clearest print. You have only to
have patience. You have only to try to look at all facts in new focus.”
Darell said,
thoughtfully, “Good, let us try that Munn. It would be an interesting attempt
and, if nothing else, would help oil our thoughts. These tampered men—the
records of which Anthor brought to us nearly a year ago, what of them? Help us
to see them in focus.”
“Easily. How old
a science is encephalographic analysis? Or, put it another way, how
well-developed is the study of neuronic pathways.”
“We are at the
beginning in this respect. Granted,” said Darell.
“Right. How
certain can we be then as to the interpretation of what I've heard Anthor and
yourself call the Tamper Plateau. You have your theories, but how certain can
you be. Certain enough to consider it a firm basis for the existence of a
mighty force for which all other evidence is negative? It's always easy to
explain the unknown by postulating a superhuman and arbitrary will.
“It's a very
human phenomenon. There have been cases all through Galactic history where
isolated planetary systems have reverted to savagery, and what have we learned
there? In every case, such savages attribute the to-them-incomprehensible
forces of Nature—storms, pestilences, droughts—to sentient beings more powerful
and more arbitrary than men.
“It is called
anthropomorphism, I believe, and in this respect, we are savages and indulge in
it. Knowing little of mental science, we blame anything we don't know on
supermen—those of the Second Foundation in this case, based on the hint thrown
us by Seldon.”
“Oh,” broke in
Anthor, “then you do remember Seldon. I thought you had forgotten. Seldon did
say there was a Second Foundation. Get that in focus.
“And are you
aware then of all Seldon's purposes. Do you know what necessities were involved
in his calculations? The Second Foundation may have been a very necessary
scarecrow, with a highly specific end in view. How did we defeat Kalgan, for
instance? What were you saying in your last series of articles, Turbor?”
Turbor stirred
his bulk. “Yes, I see what “You're driving at. I was on Kalgan towards the end,
Darell, and it was quite obvious that morale on the planet was incredibly bad.
I looked through their news-records and—well. they expected to be beaten.
Actually, they were completely unmanned by the thought that eventually the
Second Foundation would take a hand, on the side of the First, naturally.”
“Quite right,”
said Munn. “I was there all through the war. I told Stettin there was no Second
Foundation and he believed me. He felt safe. But there was no way of making the
people suddenly disbelieve what they had believed all their lives, so that the
myth eventually served a very useful purpose in Seldon's cosmic chess game.”
But Anthor's eyes
opened, quite suddenly, and fixed themselves sardonically on Munn's
countenance. “I say you lie.”
Homir turned
pale, “I don't see that I have to accept, much less answer, an accusation of
that nature.”
“I say it without
any intention of personal offense. You cannot help lying; you don't realize
that you are. But you lie just the same.”
Semic laid his withered
hand on the young man's sleeve. “Take a breath, young fella.”
Anthor shook him
off, none too gently, and said, “I'm out of patience with all of you. I haven't
seen this man more than half a dozen times in my life, yet I find the change in
him unbelievable. The rest of you have known him for years, yet pass it by. It
is enough to drive one mad. Do you call this man you've been listening to Homir
Munn? He is not the Homir Munn I knew.”
A medley of
shock; above which Munn's voice cried, “You claim me to be an impostor?”
“Perhaps not in
the ordinary sense,” shouted Anthor above the din, “but an impostor
nonetheless. Quiet, everyone! I demand to be heard.”
He frowned them
ferociously into obedience. “Do any of you remember Homir Munn as I do—the
introverted librarian who never talked without obvious embarrassment; the man
of tense and nervous voice, who stuttered out his uncertain sentences? Does
this man sound like him? He's fluent, he's confident, he's fun of theories,
and, by Space, he doesn't stutter. Is he the same person?”
Even Munn looked
confused, and Pelleas Anthor drove on. “Well, shall we test him?”
“How?” asked
Darell.
“You ask how?
There is the obvious way. You have his encephalographic record of ten months
ago, haven't you? Run one again, and compare.”
He pointed at the
frowning librarian, and said violently, “I dare him to refuse to subject
himself to analysis.”
“I don't object,”
said Munn, defiantly. “I am the man I always was.”
“Can you know?”
said Anthor with contempt. “I'll go further. I trust no one here. I want
everyone to undergo analysis. There has been a war. Munn has been on Kalgan;
Turbor has been on board ship and all over the war areas. Darell and Semic have
been absent, too—I have no idea where. Only I have remained here in seclusion
and safety, and I no longer trust any of the rest of you. And to play fair,
I'll submit to testing as well. Are we agreed then? Or do I leave now and go my
own way?”
Turbor shrugged
and said, “I have no objection.”
“I have already
said I don't,” said Munn.
Semic moved a
hand in silent assent, and Anthor waited for Darell. Finally, Darell nodded his
head.
“Take me first,”
said Anthor.
The needles
traced their delicate way across the cross-hatchings as the young neurologist
sat frozen in the reclining seat, with lidded eyes brooding heavily. From the
files, Darell removed the folder containing Anthor's old encephalographic
record. He showed them to Anthor.
“That's your own
signature, isn't it?”
“Yes, yes. It's
my record. Make the comparison.”
The scanner threw
old and new on to the screen. All six curves in each recording were there, and
in the darkness, Munn's voice sounded in harsh clarity. “Well, now, look there.
There's a change.”
“Those are the
primary waves of the frontal lobe. It doesn't mean a thing, Homir. Those
additional jags you're pointing to are just anger. It's the others that count.”
He touched a
control knob and the six pairs melted into one another and coincided. The deeper
amplitude of primaries alone introduced doubling.
“Satisfied?”
asked Anthor.
Darell nodded
curtly and took the seat himself. Semic followed him and Turbor followed him.
Silently the curves were collected; silently they were compared.
Munn was the last
to take his seat. For a moment, he hesitated, then, with a touch of desperation
in his voice, he said, “Well now, look, I'm coming in last and I'm under
tension. I expect due allowance to be made for that.”
“There will be,”
Darell assured him. “No conscious emotion of yours will affect more than the
primaries and they are not important.”
It might have
been hours, in the utter silence that followed
And then in the
darkness of the comparison, Anthor said huskily: “Sure, sure, it's only the
onset of a complex. Isn't that what he told us? No such thing as tampering;
it's all a silly anthropomorphic notion—but look at it! A coincidence I
suppose.”
“What's the
matter?” shrieked Munn.
Darell's hand was
tight on the librarian's shoulder. “Quiet, Munn—you've been handled; you've
been adjusted by them.”
Then the light
went on, and Munn was looking about him with broken eyes, making a horrible
attempt to smile.
“You can't be
serious, surely. There is a purpose to this. You're testing me.”
But Darell only
shook his head. “No, no, Homir. It's true.”
The librarian's
eyes were filled with tears, suddenly. “I don't feel any different. I can't
believe it.” With sudden conviction: “You are all in this. It's a conspiracy.”
Darell attempted
a soothing gesture, and his hand was struck aside. Munn snarled, “You're
planning to kill me. By Space, you're planning to kill me.”
With a lunge,
Anthor was upon him. There was the sharp crack of bone against bone, and Homir
was limp and flaccid with that look of fear frozen on his face.
Anthor rose
shakily, and said, “We'd better tie and gag him. Later, we can decide what to
do.” He brushed his long hair back.
Turbor said, “How
did you guess there was something wrong with him?”
Anthor turned
sardonically upon him. “It wasn't difficult. You see, I happen to know where
the Second Foundation really is.”
Successive shocks
have a decreasing effect—
It was with
actual mildness that Semic asked, “Are you sure? I mean we've just gone through
this sort of business with Munn—”
This isn't quite
the same,” returned Anthor. “Darell, the day the war started, I spoke to you
most seriously. I tried to have you leave Terminus. I would have told you then
what I will tell you now, if I had been able to trust you.”
“You mean you
have known the answer for half a year?” smiled Darell.
“I have known it
from the time I learned that Arcadia had left for Trantor.”
And Darell
started to his feet in sudden consternation. “What had Arcadia to do with it?
What are you implying?”
“Absolutely
nothing that is not plain on the face of all the events we know so well.
Arcadia goes to Kalgan and flees in terror to the very center of the Galaxy,
rather than return home. Lieutenant Dirige, our best agent on Kalgan is
tampered with. Homir Munn goes to Kalgan and he is tampered with. The Mule
conquered the Galaxy, but, queerly enough, he made Kalgan his headquarters, and
it occurs to me to wonder if he was conqueror or, perhaps, tool. At every turn,
we meet with Kalgan, Kalgan—nothing but Kalgan, the world that somehow survived
untouched all the struggles of the warlords for over a century.”
“Your conclusion,
then.”
“Is obvious,”
Anthor's eyes were intense. “The Second Foundation is on Kalgan.”
Turbor
interrupted. “I was on Kalgan, Anthor. I was there last week. If there was any
Second Foundation on it, I'm mad. Personally, I think you're mad.”
The young man
whirled on him savagely. “Then you're a fat fool. What do you expect the Second
Foundation to be? A grammar school? Do you think that Radiant Fields in tight
beams spell out ‘Second Foundation’ in green and purple along the incoming
spaceship routes? Listen to me, Turbor. Wherever they are, they form a tight
oligarchy. They must be as well hidden on the world on which they exist, as the
world itself is in the Galaxy as a whole.”
Turbor's jaw
muscles writhed. “I don't like your attitude, Anthor.”
“That certainly
disturbs me,” was the sarcastic response. “Take a look about you here on
Terminus. We're at the center—the core—the origin of the First Foundation with
all its knowledge of physical science. Well, how many of the population are
physical scientists? Can you operate an Energy Transmitting Station? What do
you know of the operation of a hyperatomic motor? Eh? The number of real
scientists on Terminus—even on Terminus—can be numbered at less than one
percent of the population.
“And what then of
the Second Foundation where secrecy must be preserved. There will still be less
of the cognoscenti, and these will be hidden even from their own world.”
“Say,” said
Semic, carefully. “We just licked Kalgan—”
“So we did. So we
did,” said Anthor, sardonically. “Oh, we celebrate that victory. The cities are
still illuminated; they are still shooting off fireworks; they are still
shouting over the televisors. But now, now, when the search is on once more for
the Second Foundation, where is the last place well look; where is the last
place anyone will look? Right!” Kalgan!
“We haven't hurt
them, you know; not really. We've destroyed some ships, killed a few thousands,
torn away their Empire, taken over some of their commercial and economic
power—but that all means nothing. I'll wager that not one member of the real
ruling class of Kalgan is in the least discomfited. On the contrary, they are
now safe from curiosity. But not from my curiosity. What do you say, Darell?”
Darell shrugged
his shoulders. “Interesting. I'm trying to fit it in with a message I received
from Arcadia a few months since.”
“Oh, a message?”
asked Anthor. “And what was it?”
“Well, I'm not
certain. Five short words. But its interesting.”
“Look,” broke in
Semic, with a worried interest, “there's something I don't understand.”
“What's that?”
Semic chose his
words carefully, his old upper lip lifting with each word as if to let them out
singly and reluctantly. “Well, now, Homir Munn was saying just a while ago that
Hari Seldon was faking when he said that he had established a Second
Foundation. Now you're saying that it's not so; that Seldon wasn't faking, eh?”
“Right, he wasn't
faking. Seldon said he had established a Second Foundation and so he had.”
“All right, then,
but he said something else, too. He said he established the two Foundations at
opposite ends of the Galaxy. Now, young man, was that a fake—because Kalgan
isn't at the opposite end of the Galaxy.”
Anthor seemed
annoyed, “That's a minor point. That part may well have been a cover up to
protect them. But after all, thinkWhat real use would it serve to have the
Mind-masters at the opposite end of the Galaxy? What is their function? To help
preserve the Plan. Who are the main card players of the Plan? We, the First
Foundation. Where can they best observe us, then, and serve their own ends? At
the opposite end of the Galaxy? Ridiculous! They're within fifty parsecs,
actually, which is much more sensible.”
“I like that
argument,” said Darell. “It makes sense. Look here, Munn's been conscious for
some time and I propose we loose him. He can't do any harm, really.”
Anthor looked
rebellious, but Homir was nodding vigorously. Five seconds later he was rubbing
his wrists just as vigorously.
“How do you
feel?” asked Darell.
“Rotten,” said
Munn, sulkily, “but never mind. There's something I want to ask this bright
young thing here. I've heard what he's had to say, and I'd just like permission
to wonder what we do next.”
There was a queer
and incongruous silence.
Munn smiled
bitterly. “Well, suppose Kalgan is the Second Foundation. Who on Kalgan are
they? How are you going to find them? How are you going to tackle them if you
find them, eh?”
“Ah,” said
Darell, “I can answer that, strangely enough. Shall I tell you what Semic and I
have been doing this past half-year? It may give you another reason, Anthor,
why I was anxious to remain on Terminus all this time.”
“In the first
place,” he went on, “I've been working on encephalographic analysis with more
purpose than any of you may suspect. Detecting Second Foundation minds is a
little more subtle than simply finding a Tamper Plateau—and I did not actually
succeed. But I came close enough.
“Do you know, any
of you, how emotional control works? It's been a popular subject with fiction
writers since the time of the Mule and much nonsense has been written, spoken,
and recorded about it. For the most part, it has been treated as something
mysterious and occult. Of course, it isn't. That the brain is the source of a
myriad, tiny electromagnetic fields, everyone knows. Every fleeting emotion
varies those fields in more or less intricate fashion, and everyone should know
that, too.
“Now it is
possible to conceive a mind which can sense these changing fields and even
resonate with them. That is, a special organ of the cerebrum can exist which
can take on whatever field-pattern it may detect. Exactly how it would do this,
I have no idea, but that doesn't matter. if I were blind, for instance, I could
still learn the significance of photons and energy quanta and it could be
reasonable to me that the absorption of a photon of such energy could create
chemical changes in some organ of the body such that its presence would be
detectable. But, of course, I would not be able, thereby, to understand color.
“Do all of you
follow?”
There was a firm
nod from Anthor; a doubtful nod from the others.
“Such a
hypothetical Mind Resonating Organ, by adjusting itself to the Fields emitted
by other minds could perform what is popularly known as ‘reading emotion’ or
even ‘reading minds,’ which is actually something even more subtle. It is but
an easy step from that to imagining a similar organ which could actually force
an adjustment on another mind. It could orient with its stronger Field the
weaker one of another mind—much as a strong magnet will orient the atomic
dipoles in a bar of steel and leave it magnetized thereafter.
“I solved the
mathematics of Second Foundationism in the sense that I evolved a function that
would predict the necessary combination of neuronic paths that would allow for
the formation of an organ such as I have just described—but, unfortunately, the
function is too complicated to solve by any of the mathematical tools at
present known. That is too bad, because it means that I can never detect a
Mind-worker by his encephalographic pattern alone.
“But I could do
something else. I could, with Semic's help, construct what I shall describe as
a Mental Static device. It is not beyond the ability of modem science to create
an energy source that will duplicate an encephalograph-type pattern of
electromagnetic field. Moreover, it can be made to shift at complete random,
creating, as far as this particular mind-sense is concerned, a sort of ‘noise’
or ‘static’ which masks other minds with which it may be in contact.
“Do you still
follow?”
Semic chuckled.
He had helped create blindly, but he had guessed, and guessed correctly. The
old man had a trick or two left—
Anthor said, “I
think I do.”
“The device,”
continued Darell, “is a fairly easy one to produce, and I had all the resources
of the Foundation under my control as it came under the heading of war
research. And now the mayor's offices and the Legislative assemblies are
surrounded with Mental Static. So are most of our key factories. So is this
building. Eventually, any place we wish can be made absolutely safe from the
Second Foundation or from any future Mule. And that's it.”
He ended quite
simply with a flat-palmed gesture of the hand.
Turbor seemed
stunned. “Then it's all over. Great Seldon, it's all over.”
“Well,” said
Darell, “not exactly.”
“How, not
exactly? Is there something more?”
“Yes, we haven't
located the Second Foundation yet!”
“What,” roared
Anthor, “are you trying to say—”
“Yes, I am.
Kalgan is not the Second Foundation.”
“How do you
know?”
“It's easy,”
grunted Darell. “You see I happen to know where the Second Foundation really
is.”
21
The Answer That
Satisfied
Turbor laughed
suddenly—laughed in huge, windy gusts that bounced ringingly off the walls and
died in gasps. He shook his head, weakly, and said, “Great Galaxy, this goes on
all night. One after another, we put up our straw men to be knocked down. We
have fun, but we don't get anywhere. Space! Maybe all planets are the Second
Foundation. Maybe they have no planet, just key men spread on all the planets.
And what does it matter, since Darell says we have the perfect defense?”
Darell smiled without
humor. “The perfect defense is not enough, Turbor. Even my Mental Static device
is only something that keeps us in the same place. We cannot remain forever
with our fists doubled, frantically staring in all directions for the unknown
enemy. We must know not only how to win, but whom to defeat. And there is a
specific world on which the enemy exists.”
“Get to the
point,” said Anthor, wearily. “What's your information?”
“Arcadia,” said
Darell, “sent me a message, and until I got it, I never saw the obvious. I
probably would never have seen the obvious. Yet it was a simple message that
went: ‘A circle has no end. ’ Do you see?”
“No,” said
Anthor, stubbornly, and he spoke, quite obviously, for the others.
“A circle has no
end,” repeated Munn, thoughtfully, and his forehead furrowed.
“Well,” said
Darell, impatiently, “it was clear to meWhat is the one absolute fact we know
about the Second Foundation, eh? I'll tell you! We know that Hari Seldon
located it at the opposite end of the Galaxy. Homir Munn theorized that Seldon
lied about the existence of the Foundation. Pelleas Anthor theorized that
Seldon had told the truth that far, but lied about the location of the
Foundation. But I tell you that Hari Seldon lied in no particular; that he told
the absolute truth.
“But, what is the
other end? The Galaxy is a flat, lens-shaped object. A cross section along the
flatness of it is a circle, and a circle had no end—as Arcadia realized. We—we,
the First Foundation—are located on Terminus at the rim of that circle. We are
at an end of the Galaxy, by definition. Now follow the rim of that circle and
find the other end. Follow it, follow it, follow it, and you will find no other
end. You will merely come back to your starting point—
“And there you
will find the Second Foundation.”
“There?” repeated
Anthor. “Do you mean here?”
“Yes, I mean
here!” cried Darell, energetically. “Why, where else could it possibly be? You
said yourself that if the Second Foundationers were the guardians of the Seldon
Plan, it was unlikely that they could be located at the so-called other end of
the Galaxy, where they would be as isolated as they could conceivably be. You
thought that fifty parsecs distance was more sensible. I tell you that that is
also too far. That no distance at all is more sensible. And where would they be
safest? Who would look for them here? Oh, it's the old principle of the most
obvious place being the least suspicious.
“Why was poor
Ebling Mis so surprised and unmanned by his discovery of the location of the
Second Foundation? There he was, looking for it desperately in order to warn it
of the coming of the Mule, only to find that the Mule had already captured both
Foundations at a stroke. And why did the Mule himself fail. in his search? Why
not? If one is searching for an unconquerable menace, one would scarcely look
among the enemies already conquered. So the Mind-masters, in their own
leisurely time, could lay their plans to stop the Mule, and succeeded in
stopping him.
“Oh, it is
maddeningly simple. For here we are with our plots and our schemes, thinking
that we are keeping our secrecy—when all the time we are in the very heart and
core of our enemy's stronghold. It's humorous.”
Anthor did not
remove the skepticism from his face, “You honestly believe this theory, Dr.
Darell?”
“I honestly
believe it.”
“Then any of our
neighbors, any man we pass in the street might be a Second Foundation superman,
with his mind watching yours and feeling the pulse of its thoughts.”
“Exactly.”
“And we have been
permitted to proceed all this time, without molestation?”
“Without
molestation? Who told you we were not molested? You, yourself, showed that Munn
has been tampered with. What makes you think that we sent him to Kalgan in the
first place entirely of our own volition—or that Arcadia overheard us and
followed him on her own volition? Hah! We have been molested without pause,
probably. And after all, why should they do more than they have? It is far more
to their benefit to mislead us, than merely to stop us.”
Anthor buried
himself in meditation and emerged therefrom with a dissatisfied expression.
“Well, then, I don't like it. Your Mental Static isn't worth a thought. We
can't stay in the house forever and as soon as we leave, we're lost, with what
we now think we know. Unless you can build a little machine for every
inhabitant in the Galaxy.”
“Yes, but we're
not quite helpless, Anthor. These men of the Second Foundation have a special
sense which we lack. It is their strength and also their weakness. For
instance, is there any weapon of attack that will be effective against a
normal, sighted man which is useless against a blind man?”
“Sure,” said
Munn, promptly. “A light in the eyes.”
“Exactly,” said
Darell. “A good, strong blinding light.”
“Well, what of
it?” asked Turbor.
“But the analogy
is clear. I have a Mind Static device. It sets up an artificial electromagnetic
pattern, which to the mind of a man of the Second Foundation would be like a
beam of light to us. But the Mind Static device is kaleidoscopic. It shifts
quickly and continuously, faster than the receiving mind can follow. All right
then, consider it a flickering light; the kind that would give you a headache,
if continued long enough. Now intensify that light or that electromagnetic
field until it is blinding—and it will become a pain, an unendurable pain. But
only to those with the proper sense; not to the unsensed.”
“Really?” said
Anthor, with the beginnings of enthusiasm. “Have you tried this?”
“On whom? Of
course, I haven't tried it. But it will work.”
“Well, where do
you have the controls for the Field that surrounds the house? Id like to see
this thing.”
“Here.” Darell
reached into his jacket pocket. It was a small thing, scarcely bulging his
pocket. He tossed the black, knob-studded cylinder to the other.
Anthor inspected
it carefully and shrugged his shoulders. “It doesn't make me any smarter to
look at it. Look Darell, what mustn't I touch? I don't want to turn off the
house defense by accident, you know.”
“You won't,” said
Darell, indifferently. “That control is locked in place.” He flicked at a
toggle switch that didn't move.
“And what's this
knob?”
“That one varies
rate of shift of pattern. Here—this one varies the intensity. It's that which
I've been referring to.”
“May I—” asked
Anthor, with his finger on the intensity knob. The others were crowding close.
“Why not?” shrugged
DarelI. “It won't affect us.”
Slowly, almost
wincingly, Anthor turned the knob, first in one direction, then in another.
Turbor was gritting his teeth, while Munn blinked his eyes rapidly. It was as
though they were keening their inadequate sensory equipment to locate this
impulse which could not affect them.
Finally, Anthor
shrugged and tossed the control box back into Darell's lap. “Well, I suppose we
can take your word for it. But it's certainly hard to imagine that anything was
happening when I turned the knob.”
“But naturally,
Pelleas Anthor,” said Darell, with a tight smile. “The one I gave you was a
dummy. You see I have another.” He tossed his jacket aside and seized a
duplicate of the control box that Anthor had been investigating, which swung
from his belt.
“You see,” said
Darell, and in one gesture turned the intensity knob to maximum.
And with an
unearthly shriek, Pelleas Anthor sank to the floor. He rolled in his agony;
whitened, gripping fingers clutching and tearing futilely at his hair.
Munn lifted his
feet hastily to prevent contact with the squirming body, and his eyes were twin
depths of horror. Semic and Turbor were a pair of plaster casts; stiff and
white.
Darell, somber,
turned the knob back once more. And Anthor twitched feebly once or twice and
lay still. He was alive, his breath racking his body.
“Lift him on to
the couch,” said Darell, grasping the young man's head. “Help me here.”
Turbor reached
for the feet. They might have been lifting a sack of flour. Then, after long
minutes, the breathing grew quieter, and Anthor's eyelids fluttered and lifted.
His face was a horrid yellow; his hair and body was soaked in perspiration, and
his voice, when he spoke, was cracked and unrecognizable.
“Don't,” he
muttered, “don't! Don't do that again! You don't knowYou don't knowOh-h-h.” It
was a long, trembling moan.
“We won't do it
again,” said Darell, “if you will tell us the truth. You are a member of the
Second Foundation?”
“Let me have some
water,” pleaded Anthor.
“Get some,
Turbor,” said Darell, “and bring the whiskey bottle.”
He repeated the
question after pouring a jigger of whiskey and two glasses of water into
Anthor. Something seemed to relax in the young man—
“Yes,” he said,
wearily. “I am a member of the Second Foundation.”
“Which,”
continued Darell, “is located on Terminus—here?”
“Yes, yes. You
are right in every particular, Dr. Darell.”
“Good! Now
explain what's been happening this past half year. Tell us!”
“I would like to
sleep,” whispered Anthor.
“Later! Speak
now!”
A tremulous sigh.
Then words, low and hurried. The others bent over him to catch the sound, “The
situation was growing dangerous. We knew that Terminus and its physical
scientists were becoming interested in brain-wave patterns and that the times
were ripe for the development of something like the Mind Static device. And
there was growing enmity toward the Second Foundation. We had to stop it
without ruining SeIdon's Plan.
“We... we tried
to control the movement. We tried to join it. It would turn suspicion and
efforts away from us. We saw to it that Kalgan declared war as a further
distraction. That's why I sent Munn to Kalgan. Stettin's supposed mistress was
one of us. She saw to it that Munn made the proper moves—”
“Callia is—”
cried Munn, but Darell waved him silent.
Anthor continued,
unaware of any interruption, “Arcadia followed. We hadn't counted on that—can't
foresee everything—so Callia maneuvered her to Trantor to prevent interference.
That's all. Except that we lost.”
“You tried to get
me to go to Trantor, didn't you?” asked Darell.
Anthor nodded,
“Had to get you out of the way. The growing triumph in your mind was clear
enough. You were solving the problems of the Mind Static device.”
“Why didn't you
put me under control?”
“Couldn't...
couldn't. Had my orders. We were working according to a Plan. If I improvised,
I would have thrown everything off. Plan only predicts probabilities... you
know that... like Seldon's Plan.” He was talking in anguished pants, and almost
incoherently. His head twisted from side to side in a restless fever. “We
worked with individuals... not groups... very low probabilities involved...
lost out. Besides... if control you... someone else invent device... no use...
had to control times... more subtle... First Speaker's own plan... don't know
all angles... except... didn't work a-a-a—” He ran down.
Darell shook him
roughly, “You can't sleep yet. How many of you are there?”
“Huh?
Whatjasay... oh... not many... be surprised fifty... don't need more.”
“All here on
Terminus?”
“Five... six out
in Space... like Callia... got to sleep.”
He stirred
himself suddenly as though to one giant effort, and his expressions gained in
clarity. It was a last attempt at self-justification, at moderating his defeat.
“Almost got you
at the end. Would have turned off defenses and seized you. Would have seen who
was master. But you gave me dummy controls... suspected me all along—”
And finally he
was asleep.
Turbor said, in
awed tones, “How long did you suspect him, Darell?”
“Ever since he
first came here,” was the quiet response. “He came from Kleise, he said. But I
knew Kleise; and I knew on what terms we parted. He was a fanatic on the
subject of the Second Foundation and I had deserted him. My own purposes were
reasonable, since I thought it best and safest to pursue my own notions by
myself. But I couldn't tell Kleise that; and he wouldn't have listened if I
had. To him, I was a coward and a traitor, perhaps even an agent of the Second
Foundation. He was an unforgiving man and from that time almost to the day of
his death he had no dealings with me. Then, suddenly, in his last few weeks of
life, he writes me—as an old friend—to greet his best and most promising pupil
as a co-worker and begin again the old investigation.
“It was out of
character. How could he possibly do such a thing without being under outside
influence, and I began to wonder if the only purpose might not be to introduce
into my confidence a real agent of the Second Foundation. Well, it was so—”
He sighed and
closed his own eyes for a moment.
Semic put in
hesitantly, “What will we do with all of them... these Second Foundation
fellas?”
“I don't know,”
said Darell, sadly. “We could exile them, I suppose. There's Zoranel, for
instance. They can be placed there and the planet saturated with Mind Static.
The sexes can be separated, or, better still, they can be sterilized—and in
fifty years, the Second Foundation will be a thing of the past. Or perhaps a
quiet death for all of them would be kinder.”
“Do you suppose,”
said Turbor, “we could learn the use of this sense of theirs. Or are they born
with it, like the Mule.”
“I don't know. I
think it is developed through long training, since there are indications from
encephalography that the potentialities of it are latent in the human mind. But
what do you want that sense for? It hasn't helped them.”
He frowned.
Though he said
nothing, his thoughts were shouting.
It had been too
easy—too easy. They had fallen, these invincibles, fallen like book-villains,
and he didn't like it.
Galaxy! When can
a man know he is not a puppet? How can a man know he is not a puppet?
Arcadia was
coming home, and his thoughts shuddered away from that which he must face in
the end.
She was home for
a week, then two, and he could not loose the tight check upon those thoughts.
How could he? She had changed from child to young woman in her absence, by some
strange alchemy. She was his link to life; his fink to a bittersweet marriage
that scarcely outlasted his honeymoon.
And then, late
one evening, he said as casually as he could, “Arcadia, what made you decide
that Terminus contained both Foundations?”
They had been to
the theater; in the best seats with private trimensional viewers for each; her
dress was new for the occasion, and she was happy.
She stared at him
for a moment, then tossed it off. “Oh, I Don't know, Father. It just came to
me.”
A layer of ice
thickened about Dr. Darell's heart.
“Think,” he said,
intensely. “This is important. What made you decide both Foundations were on
Terminus.”
She frowned
slightly. “Well, there was Lady Callia. I knew she was a Second Foundationer.
Anthor said so, too.”
“But she was on
Kalgan,” insisted Darell. “What made you decide on Terminus?”
And now Arcadia
waited for several minutes before she answered. What had made her decide? What
had made her decide?
She had the
horrible sensation of something slipping just beyond her grasp.
She said, “She
knew about things—Lady Callia did—and must have had her information from
Terminus. Doesn't that sound right, Father?
But he just shook
his head at her.
“Father,” she
cried, “I knew. The more I thought, the surer I was. It just made sense.”
There was that
lost look in her father's eyes, “It's no good, Arcadia. Its no good. Intuition
is suspicious when concerned with the Second Foundation. You see that, don't
you? It might have been intuition—and it might have been control!”
“Control! You
mean they changed me? Oh, no. No, they couldn't.” She was backing away from
him. “But didn't Anthor say I was right? He admitted it. He admitted
everything. And you've found the whole bunch right here on Trantor. Didn't you?
Didn't you?” She was breathing quickly.
“I know,
butArcadia, will you let me make an encephalographic analysis of your brain?'
She shook her
head violently, “No, no! I'm too scared.”
“Of me, Arcadia?
There's nothing to be afraid of. But we must know. You see that, don't you?”
She interrupted
him only once, after that. She clutched at his arm just before the last switch
was thrown. “What if I am different, Father? What will you have to do?”
“I won't have to
do anything, Arcadia. If you're different, well leave. Well go back to Trantor,
you and I, and... and we won't care about anything else in the Galaxy.”
Never in Darell's
life had an analysis proceeded so slowly, cost him so much, and when it was
over, Arcadia huddled down and dared not look. Then she heard him laugh and
that was information enough. She jumped up and threw herself into his opened
arms.
He was babbling
wildly as they squeezed one another, “The house is under maximum Mind Static
and your brain-waves are normal. We really have trapped them, Arcadia, and we
can go back to living.”
“Father,” she
gasped, “can we let them give us medals now?”
“How did you know
I'd asked to be left out of it?” He held her at arm's mind; you know
everything. All right, you can have your medal on a platform, with speeches.”
“And Father?”
“Yes?”
“Can you call me
Arkady from now on.”
“ButVery well,
Arkady.”
Slowly the
magnitude of the victory was soaking into him and saturating him. The
Foundation—the First Foundation—now the only Foundation—was absolute master of
the Galaxy. No further barrier stood between themselves and the Second
Empire—the final fulfillment of Seldon's Plan.
They had only to
reach for it—
Thanks to—
22
The Answer That
Was True
An unlocated room
on an unlocated world!
And a man whose
plan had worked.
The First Speaker
looked up at the Student, “Fifty men and women,” he said. “Fifty martyrs! They
knew it meant death or permanent imprisonment and they could not even be
oriented to prevent weakening—since orientation might have been detected. Yet
they did not weaken. They brought the plan through, because they loved the
greater Plan.”
“Might they have
been fewer?” asked the Student, doubtfully.
The First Speaker
slowly shook his head, “It was the lower limit. Less could not possibly have
carried conviction. In fact, pure objectivism would have demanded seventy-five
to leave margin for error. Never mind. Have you studied the course of action as
worked out by the Speakers’ Council fifteen years ago?”
“Yes, Speaker.”
“And compared it
with actual developments?”
“Yes, Speaker.”
Then, after a pause—
“I was quite
amazed, Speaker.”
“I know. There is
always amazement. If you knew how many men labored for how many months—years,
in fact—to bring about the polish of perfection, you would be less amazed. Now
tell me what happened—in words. I want your translation of the mathematics.”
“Yes, Speaker.”
The young man marshaled his thoughts. “Essentially, it was necessary for the
men of the First Foundation to be thoroughly convinced that they had located
and destroyed the Second Foundation. In that way, there would be reversion to
the intended original. To all intents, Terminus would once again know nothing
about us; include us in none of their calculations. We are hidden once more,
and safe—at the cost of fifty men.”
“And the purpose
of the Kalganian war?”
“To show the
Foundation that they could beat a physical enemy—to wipe out the damage done to
their self-esteem and self-assuredness by the Mule.”
“There you are
insufficient in your analysis. Remember, the population of Terminus regarded us
with distinct ambivalence. They hated and envied our supposed superiority; yet
they relied on us implicitly for protection. If we had been ‘destroyed’ before
the Kalganian war, it would have meant panic throughout the Foundation. They
would then never have had the courage to stand up against Stettin, when he then
attacked; and he would have. Only in the full flush of victory could the
‘destruction’ have taken place with minimum ill-effects. Even waiting a year,
thereafter, might have meant a too-great cooling off spirit for success.”
The Student
nodded. “I see. Then the course of history will proceed without deviation in
the direction indicated by the Plan.”
“Unless,” pointed
out the First Speaker, “further accidents, unforeseen and individual, occur.”
“And for that,”
said the Student, “we still exist. ExceptExceptOne facet of the present state
of affairs worries me, Speaker. The First Foundation is left with the Mind
Static device—a powerful weapon against us. That, at least, is not as it was
before.”
“A good point.
But they have no one to use it against. It has become a sterile device; just as
without the spur of our own menace against them, encephalographic analysis will
become a sterile science. Other varieties of knowledge will once again bring
more important and immediate returns. So this first generation of mental
scientists among the First Foundation will also be the last—and, in a century,
Mind Static will be a nearly forgotten item of the past.”
“Well—” The
Student was calculating mentally. “I suppose you're right.”
But what I want
you most to realize, young man, for the sake of your future in the Council is
the consideration given to the tiny intermeshings that were forced into our
plan of the last decade and a half simply because we dealt with individuals.
There was the manner in which Anthor had to create suspicion against himself in
such a way that it would mature at the right time, but that was relatively
simple.
“There was the
manner in which the atmosphere was so manipulated that to no one on Terminus
would it occur, prematurely, that Terminus itself might be the center they were
seeking. That knowledge had to be supplied to the young girl, Arcadia, who
would be heeded by no one but her own father. She had to be sent to Trantor, thereafter,
to make certain that there would be no premature contact with her father. Those
two were the two poles of a hyperatomic motor; each being inactive without the
other. And the switch had to be thrown—contact had to be made—at just the right
moment. I saw to that!
“And the final
battle had to be handled properly. The Foundation's fleet had to be soaked in
self-confidence, while the fleet of Kalgan made ready to run. I saw to that,
also!”
Said the Student,
“It seems to me, Speaker, that you... I mean, all of us... were counting on Dr.
Darell not suspecting that Arcadia was our tool. According to my check on the
calculations, there was something like a thirty percent probability that he
would so suspect. What would have happened then?”
“We had taken care
of that. What have you been taught about Tamper Plateaus? What are they?
Certainly not evidence of the introduction of an emotional bias. That can be
done without any chance of possible detection by the most refined conceivable
encephalographic analysis. A consequence of Leffert's Theorem, you know. It is
the removal, the cutting-out, of previous emotional bias, that shows. It must
show.
“And, of course,
Anthor made certain that Darell knew all about Tamper Plateaus.
“HoweverWhen can
an individual be placed under Control without showing it? Where there is no
previous emotional bias to remove. In other words, when the individual is a
new-born infant with a blank slate of a mind. Arcadia Darell was such an infant
here on Trantor fifteen years ago, when the first line was drawn into the
structure of the plan. She will never know that she has been Controlled, and
will be all the better for it, since her Control involved the development of a
precocious and intelligent personality.”
The First Speaker
laughed shortly, “In a sense, it is the irony of it all that is most amazing.
For four hundred years, so many men have been blinded by Seldon's words ‘the
other end of the Galaxy.’” They have brought their own peculiar,
physical-science thought to the problem, measuring off the other end with
protractors and rulers, ending up eventually either at a point in the periphery
one hundred eighty degrees around the rim of the Galaxy, or back at the
original point.
“Yet our very
greatest danger lay in the fact that there was a possible solution based on
physical modes of thought. The Galaxy, you know, is not simply a flat ovoid of
any sort; nor is the periphery a closed curve. Actually, it is a double spiral,
with at least eighty percent of the inhabited planets on the Main Arm. Terminus
is the extreme outer end of the spiral arm, and we are at the other—since, what
is the opposite end of a spiral? Why, the center.
“But that is
trifling. It is an accidental and irrelevant solution. The solution could have
been reached immediately, if the questioners had but remembered that Hari
Seldon was a social scientist not a physical scientist and adjusted their
thought processes accordingly. What could ‘opposite ends’ mean to a social
scientist? Opposite ends on the map? Of course not. That's the mechanical
interpretation only.
“The First
Foundation was at the periphery, where the original Empire was weakest, where
its civilizing influence was least, where its wealth and culture were most
nearly absent. And where is the social opposite end of the Galaxy? Why, at the
place where the original Empire was strongest, where its civilizing influence
was most, where its wealth and culture were most strongly present.
“Here! At the
center! At Trantor, capital of the Empire of Seldon's time.
“And it is so
inevitable. Hari Seldon left the Second Foundation behind him to maintain,
improve, and extend his work That has been known, or guessed at, for fifty
years. But where could that best be done? At Trantor, where Seldon's group had
worked, and where the data of decades had been accumulated. And it was the
purpose of the Second Foundation to protect the Plan against enemies. That,
too, was known! And where was the source of greatest danger to Terminus and the
Plan?
“Here! Here at
Trantor, where the Empire dying though it was, could, for three centuries,
still destroy the Foundation, if it could only have decided to do so.
“Then when
Trantor fell and was sacked and utterly destroyed, a short century ago, we were
naturally able to protect our headquarters, and, on all the planet, the
Imperial Library and the grounds about it remained untouched. This was
well-known to the Galaxy, but even that apparently overwhelming hint passed
them by.
“It was here at
Trantor that Ebling Mis discovered us; and here that we saw to it that he did
not survive the discovery. To do so, it was necessary to arrange to have a
normal Foundation girl defeat the tremendous mutant powers of the Mule. Surely,
such a phenomenon might have attracted suspicion to the planet on which it
happenedIt was here that we first studied the Mule and planned his ultimate
defeat. It was here that Arcadia was born and the train of events begun that
led to the great return to the Seldon Plan.
“And all those flaws in our secrecy; those gaping holes;
remained unnoticed because Seldon had spoken of ‘the other end’ in his way, and
they had interpreted it in their way.”
The First Speaker had long since stopped speaking to the
Student. It was an exposition to himself, really, as he stood before the
window, looking up at the incredible blaze of the firmament, at the huge Galaxy
that was now safe forever.
“Hari Seldon called Trantor, ‘Star's End,’” he whispered,
“and why not that bit of poetic imagery. All the universe was once guided from
this rock; all the apron strings of the stars led here. ‘All roads lead to
Trantor,’ says the old proverb, ‘and that is where all stars end. ’”
Ten months earlier, the First Speaker had viewed those same
crowding stars—nowhere as crowded as at the center of that huge cluster of
matter Man calls the Galaxy—with misgivings; but now there was a somber
satisfaction on the round and ruddy face of Preem Palver—First Speaker.