"John T. Phillifent - Owe Me" - читать интересную книгу автора (Phillifent John T)JOHN T. PHILLIFENT
Owe Me Large corporate structures, like all large bureaucratic structures, mold the lives of the men and women who work in them. Novels like The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit and nonfiction works such as The Organization Man discuss the problems of routine, conformity, and drabness that pervade the modern business organization. The seemingly heartless removal of employees after decades of service and the lack of security for white-collar workers of all types is one aspect of this problem, as is the "gold watch and a thank you" treatment of those who make it to retirement, men and women who (in many cases) look back on a career devoid of meaning. "Owe Me" is a story of one of the important stock characters in science fiction-the deviant-the individual who refuses to accept the system as it is and who struggles to change it. Mr. Smith is a man with enormous creative talents who simply will not play the game. There is a strong tendency for large bureaucratic structures to "reward'' the people who work in them by promoting them from positions where their creative abilities are being utilized to administrative positions for which they are not suited or qualified (the Peter Principle) or in which they are unhappy. The term "desk jockey" is understood in many different cultures-and for many the Desk is a prison. This story also explores a question addressed in this book by Isaac Asimov: how can you put a price on creativity? Smith's answer is that salaries, royalties, and status are never enough. Conway Morriss sagged back in his managerial chair and contemplated the forthcoming interview with considerable distaste. A glance at the digital wall clock showed him 10.14.50. He promised himself a clear fifteen minutes out of a very full morning to finding out why, at least. A discreet chime interrupted his train of thought, heralded his secretary's voice. "Mr. Smith is here, Mr. Morriss." Morriss scowled. "Very well, Hilda, send him in, and no more incalls until I say. The door murmured open, clicked shut again. Smith came across the tread-deadening carpet to halt and stand, casually erect in front of the desk, meeting the manager's irritated stare with a calmness that hinted of underlying amusement and curiosity. For a long moment there was nothing said, Morriss taking the opportunity to study Smith all over again. A tall man, lean and loose-jointed, almost gangling, yet with an aura of self-confidence that went well with his rakehell hairstyle, eagle-beak nose, and cool gray eyes retreating into shadow under a cliff like brow. It was a face full of character, yet the man was little better than a janitor, a night watchman, even if the post was over dignified with the title of security guard. An important post all the same. Morriss Micro-Modules had plenty of stuff to tempt a certain type of -intruder. - "You wanted to see me, Mr. Morriss?" Smith sounded idly curious. "I wouldn't say I want to see you, Smith." Morriss shook his head. "I have little choice, seeing that 1, personally, hired you in the first place. I'm not in the habit of passing the buck, but I tell you frankly I am not looking forward to this, nor to what I shall have to do immediately afterward." He saw Smith's inquiring look, and jabbed at the folder on his desk. "I have your personnel file here, naturally, and heading it is a letter, a personal letter to me from Harvey Bander, recommending you. Harvey's a good friend of mine, as well as being in a similar line of business. So again I have little choice. Either that letter is an arrant forgery, or you somehow managed to fool Harvey into trusting you. Now that you've been caught I have to ring and tell him. Warn him. But before I do that I have to deal with you. The truth. Sit down." Smith looked for a chair, adjusted it, sat, and the submerged curiosity was plainer on his face now. "I reckon you will ring Harvey Bander when we're through here, Mr. Morriss, just to set your mind at rest, but you won't surprise him at all. He knows me pretty well." "Does he know you're a common thief ? At least? Or possibly something a lot worse, an industrial snoop?" Morriss meant to keep his voice controlled but the mere thought of an outsider prowling through his files and records made his blood pressure and voice rise. In the gadgetry business fortunes can be made and lost on exclusive know-how. Smith smiled now, not unkindly. "We can wash out 'thief,' at least," he suggested mildly. "The records don't show anything missing that I took. As for the other thing, that could be harder to disprove, but maybe we'll get to it. Just what did Stoltz report to you anyway?" "How did you know it was Stoltz?" Morriss felt belated caution. Smith didn't even begin to look Re a guilty man caught out. "Not that it matters," he resumed, "since you've as good as admitted . . . What the devil are you doing?" Smith had risen to his feet smoothly and was holding a small something he had taken from a hip pocket, aiming it slowly around the office. "Just making sure we're not bugged," he said, and Morriss snorted. "This interview is not being recorded, believe me." "I do. There's one mike in your left-hand drawer, one in the intercom, one in the terminal console, and one over there in that wall unit, but they're all inert right now. That's all right. It's the nonofficial ones, that you might not know about, that I'm looking for." Smith completed a careful full revolution, shrugged, and nodded. "It's all right. Nothing here." Morriss snorted again. "What are you trying to pull? A gadget that small that could sweep a room this size that easily . . . is strictly from TV fantasy. You have your nerve, trying that kind of bluff on me, of all people." "No bluff. This works. I made it myself." Smith sat again. "We can get to that later. Tell me about Stoltz's report." the other way around, shuffled a sheet of paper where he could glance at it for reference. "No need to quote the exact words. In essence, it was Stoltz's shift after yours. He made his rounds conscientiously. He found doors open, drawers open, files open, terminal readouts left switched on . . . where they had no business to be. In places where he isn't allowed to be himself. Nor any security guard. Except in an emergency. And none was registered. So he made report to that effect. It had to be you, or some confederate you let in. Snooping into things and places where only myself and three other people have any rightful access! " "That's fair," Smith admitted. "Of course, he wouldn't know if anything had been taken." "Right. I won't know until Ratcliffe has' finished checking. But don't get any notion that will let you off the hook!" "Did Lem Stoltz offer any reason why I would be so dim as to leave things that way for him . . . or anyone else . . . to find?" "Not his place. But he did suggest that perhaps you were smart enough to be able to open all those off-limit restrictions, only you didn't know how to shut them up again." "It's a thought. He's a good man, Stoltz. One of the few who checks everything he's supposed to, not Re some who do a once around quick and forget it. You'd do well to keep him on." "Now see here!" Morriss felt it was time he got back on top again. "Are you suggesting this was all a deliberate plan of yours?" "Just that. It's been reported, and here I am, in disgrace. Weren't you just a little bit surprised that I checked in this morning all normal? To fit your picture I should have been a hundred miles away by now. Incidentally I can open, and shut, any door, drawer, lock, cabinet, or storeroom in this establishment, Mr. Morriss. In fact I have been doing just that every night shift in the three months I've been here." "My God!" Morriss felt sweat start on his face. "And you think you can con me into believing that you're not into industrial espionage! You must take me for a full-marks fool!" "Maybe I do, in a way. I take you for an honest man anyway, and that can come close to the same thing, sometimes. " "Why don't I pick up this phone," Morriss growled, "and call the law right now, and have you put away?" "Couple of reasons. One, you don't want that kind of publicity. Two, you'd have a job thinking up a charge that would stick. Let me give you a third, a better one. " Smith rose again, approached the desk. Morriss peered up at him in sudden apprehension. The man had a wild, corsair look about him, almost piratical. He had produced yet another something from a pocket. "This--he held it between finger and thumb of his left hand--is quite a toy. Starting here--he indicated the plain end--is a nine volt cell, the kind you supply for those wrist radios you market. Next to it is a chip, the sixty -four-circuit assembly . . . it's the Mark IX module that turned out to have undesirable characteristics and was scrapped, remember? And then a YIG crystal cluster, another one that came out wrong in the melt, the Y4C multiplier . . . " "They were all consigned to scrap. Weren't they?" "Not yet. You have two thousand of those in a store bin. And be glad of that. There's a few more bits and pieces, all odds or rejects, and then we get to this." He indicated the other end now. "Remember that experimental laser-kit you got the contract for? Schools and hobbyists and instructional classes? Remember, too, that somebody set up the wrong figures and pulled off a thousand quartz rods that were too damned fine to be any good for anything? Well now . . . there's a bit more to it than that, naturally, but the point is, everything here is from your own stock bins and more than half of it is reject or scrap." "Our reject rate is no higher than . . . " Morriss tried, but Smith wasn't listening to him. He changed hands, felt in another pocket. "Recognize that?" he asked. Morriss took the slim slab of metal, some three inches by two, mirror-finish one side, rough cast the other, scratched his memory, found the reference. "That's a base plate, one we use for our microportable TV." "Right. It's vanadium steel, one-eighth of an inch thick, and a swine to cut, but you have to have it, as the only substantial bit in the whole assembly. Holds everything else together. Now . . ." Smith reached for a couple of financial reports, gray-backed volumes that were identical save for the monthly imprint. He arranged them parallel with an inch gap separating them, laid the metal plate to bridge the gap. A third volume on top reduced the gap still more. He made a careful adjustment to a knurled collar around the waist of the thing in his hand, then brought the thin quartz rod close to one edge of the metal, using the third volume as a guideline for his hand. |
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