"Wilson, F Paul - The Man With the Anteater - ss" - читать интересную книгу автора (Wilson F. Paul)the man with the anteater F. PAUL WILSON Anyone who keeps a pet anteater in
a stringently limited society is obviously a crackpot. But some crackpots have
highly methodical cracks in their pots . . . Illustrated by Kelly Freas
No discussion of galactic
business, of course, would be complete without mention of Interstellar Business
Advisers. Armed with the tried and true maxims of a free-market economy and a
number of new and daring precepts for the conduct of business on an
interstellar scale, IBA played an important part in shaping the course of trade
in the galaxy. The company was founded by one
Joseph Finch, a man whose figure has taken on an almost mythical air in the
annals of galactic trade. The most farfetched stories concern the period before
the founding of IBA, when Finch was still a resident of Earth— excerpt from "Galactic
Business: A History", by Emmerz Fent On a steamy summer morning, Joe
and Andy, the anteater, stepped out into their backyard and surveyed their
domain. Thirty-eight, slight of frame and a bit on the homely side, Joe Finch
didn't exactly cut an heroic figure. But he was looked up to as a hero by many
nonetheless. And there were, of course, many who thought of him as a stupid,
eccentric, thick-headed, bull-headed reactionary. But they seemed to be in the
minority. You see, in a world that functions
with the smoothness of a well-oiled machine, the man who insists on deciding
when to shift his own gears becomes a hero of sorts. A man with few friends,
who had yet to meet his wife, whose sister and brother-in-law, unable to cope
with Earth any longer, were living as splinter colonists on a planet called
Dasein II somewhere out in nowhere, Finch was a loner. And in a highly
collectivized, planned and patented society, loners, if they can avoid being
swallowed whole and digested, become heroes. Finch was mentally running through
his plan to manipulate Arthur Gordon, Chief Administrator of Earth. Gordon was
either a social idealist or a power-monger—the two are not always easily
distinguishable—and Finch knew from certain sources that Gordon was planning to
manipulate him. The thing to do was to make Gordon show his hand before
he was completely ready and the strike going on at the Finch House plant right
now could be the perfect lever. "Stay here, Andy," he
told his pet. "And if you get hungry, help yourself." Andy scanned
the dry, virtually grassless yard and trotted off in the direction of a
promising mound with his huge, furry tail held straight out behind him and his
agile tongue seemingly licking his snout in anticipation. "Don't overdo it or you'll
have to go back on synthe-meat and formic acid," Finch warned. Andy
glanced over his shoulder and stuck out his tongue. Finch went out front, started up
an old transporter with the words Finch House printed on the sides and
back, and drove off toward Pete Farnham's machine shop. As the last of the new equipment
was being loaded, Farnham turned to Finch, "You sure you want to go
through with this, Joe?" "Look, Pete," Finch
said, wiping his forehead on his sleeve, "you designed this stuff so I'd
be able to increase my output by about another half without increasing my
overhead or labor costs." Farnham looked annoyed. "I'm
not talking about that. I'm talking about the union ... it's on strike,
remember? They're very unhappy about losing their overtime." "If the union had its
way," Finch growled, "I'd still be using Gutenberg presses." "But it's against the law to
cross a picket line! Why don't you just wait it out as usual or maybe bribe the
union president? All hell's going to break loose if you go through with
this." Finch locked the back of the
transporter with a solid click. "That might be just what I'm after.
Besides, this is as good a time as any to challenge a rotten law. Gordon's been
pushing things a bit too . . ." His voice trailed off as he saw Farnham
climbing into the cab. "Where do you think you're going?" "With you, of course,"
Farnham replied and hefted a length of pipe. "I spent a lot of time
designing that equipment and the only way it'll ever get to prove itself is if
you get to use it. Now let's get moving." . . . the pickets/a truck in
their midst /hey! /stop 'em! /get them! / Hold 'em/don't let 'em through/ stop
'em!/ Stomp 'em! /but chain and bricks and barricades and bodies give way/a
face looms/flail at it./Someone fires a shot /rniss! /The police arrive/made it!
/The pickets are being held outside and the police will deal with you later . .
. Joe Finch watched the roiling
crowds from atop the Earth Building. "You just can't figure people,
Andy," he told the pet he had insisted on bringing with him. "They
clamor for a law to be passed and then celebrate a man who breaks it." "I believe you're
oversimplifying the situation, Joe," said a voice behind him. Finch turned
to see Arthur Gordon: big, graying, about sixty, the man on whose
"invitation" he had come to the Earth Building. It was their first
meeting and the Chief Administrator of Earth got things off on the wrong foot
by calling him "Joe;" Finch believed first names were for personal
friends only. "Oh, how's that, Arthur?"
he replied, noting the C.A.'s wince. "Well, I mean ... it seems
you've become a symbol to them—" (My, what a phony smile you
have, Arthur Gordon, Finch observed privately.) ". . . a symbol of
Individuality—" (I'll bet he uses a capital
"I" when he spells that word.) "And Individuality is
something each of them feels he has lost." (Whose fault is that?) "I imagine that some of them,
deep in their hearts, actually hate you for maintaining a quality they've
lost." (I can think of a few union
roughnecks who won't have to go that deep.) "As a matter of fact—" "Get to the point!"
Finch finally interrupted. "Why did you 'invite' me here rather than have
me arrested for breaking the picket law?" Gordon's fixed smile was replaced
by one of a more genuine nature. "O.K., Mr. Finch, I will be more
to the point, although what I've been saying isn't far from it. Let's go into
my office." It was not until Finch was seated
across the desk from him in the Chief Administrator's spacious main office that
Gordon began to speak. "Mr. Finch, the reason I did
not have you arrested is very simple: you are the only man on this planet who
can be described as a hero." "I think you've got the wrong
definition of a hero in mind, Mr. C.A. I'm not a hero . . . I've never done an
heroic thing in my life. I may stand out in a crowd, but otherwise I think
you're overestimating me." Gordon frowned. "I don't
think I overestimate you at all. The public is hungry for an idol and you,
unwilling as you may be, are the prime candidate. In fact your unwillingness to
cooperate with the idol-seekers only increases your popularity. To them you're
the last of a rare species. Just look at you! You wander around with an antbear
at your heels, you're making a pile of money in an industry that should have
been extinct shortly after the development of telestories, you had a
shyster lawyer wheedle a private home for you so you could raise ants for that
ridiculous pet of yours and now you've taken to busting picket lines!" "Nobody keeps me out of my
own business!" Finch stated flatly and finally. "I wonder about that,"
Gordon mused. "This is hardly the first strike at your plant . . . you've
bargained with the union before, why did you choose to defy it this time?
Planning to challenge the Picket Law?" "Would it do me any good to
try?" Finch replied in a noncommittal tone. "Maybe. I never liked the law
. . . didn't like it when it was passed and I like it even less at the
moment." Finch cracked his knuckles.
"The Picket Law is a natural consequence of legalizing the picket line.
You see, a picket line makes it possible to kidney-punch anyone trying to enter
the building currently 'under siege' and sooner or later you don't cross a
picket line if you know what's good for you. Then, with typical political
logic, crossing a picket line was declared illegal 'in order to prevent
violence during strikes.' " Gordon snorted. "I've heard
all this before, Mr. Finch. And I didn't ask you here to reprimand your
extralegal activities nor to discuss the Picket Law with you. Instead of having
you arrested, I'd rather make a deal." "I had a feeling you'd find
some use for me." The C.A. ignored the remark.
"Look, Finch, here's the situation: we've become an incredibly complex
society here on Earth; the average man feels like a cog, feels a loss of worth.
Oh, I know it sounds very trite but unfortunately it's very true. We've been
warned about this for centuries but it's something that's almost impossible to
prevent, even when you can see it coming. "You, however, have somehow
overcome it all. You've bucked convention, legal restrictions ... even
technology! You've become a symbol of the Individuality people instinctively
feel they've lost and want desperately to regain. And I've found a way to give
it to them!" Finch smirked. "How?
Pills?" Gordon was not in a light mood.
"No, the plan's a little more complicated than that. It's a daring plan
and will frighten people at first; they'll want the end but they'll balk at the
means. Unless—" "Unless what?" "Unless someone they admire not
only endorses it but actively promotes it." Finch shook his head as if to
clear it. "Wait a minute. Let's just go back a bit. You're building up to
the means and I don't even know what the end really is supposed to be."
Gordon strode to a bookshelf and pulled out a huge volume. "Ever hear of
Gregor Black?" he asked as he laid the book on the desk." "Some sort of
technosociologist, wasn't he?" Finch replied. "But I believe his
disciples are calling him `Noah' Black now." "Right. His theory was that both
the individual and society are best served when the individual is doing the job
for which he is best suited . . . the old 'right man for the right job' maxim.
He figured that not only would you achieve maximum productivity but you'd also
allow the individual the personal satisfaction and sense of fulfillment that
comes from doing what he can do best." "Where is he now?" Finch
asked. Gordon had opened the volume and
was flipping through the pages. "Oh, somewhere in the Ninth Quadrant, I
believe." Finch snapped his fingers.
"That's right! His group was outlawed so they decided to apply for a
'splinter colony.' " "Ninety years ago,"
Gordon confirmed, "they took up the government's offer to any large enough
group that wanted to settle an Earth-class planet and got free, one-way
transportation to the prospective utopia of their choice. Since they were
registered as a splinter colony, the planet was then declared off limits to all
government traffic and Black and company could do whatever they wanted with it."
"I'd love to know who dreamed
up the splinter colony idea," Finch said with a smile and a shake of the
head. "It's probably one of the few deals in history in which everybody
gets what he wants: the government not only colonizes world after world, but it
gets rid of all the local dissidents to boot. And the dissidents get their own
world on which to live the way they wish." Gordon was not listening, however.
Pointing to the book on his desk, he said, "Here's the reason Black's
group was outlawed: the Assessor." "I remember the name,"
Finch remarked. "Gregor Black's miracle machine." "Don't be too light with the
Assessor . . . nor with old Gregor. He designed quite a machine. With the
Assessor screening a population you wouldn't have, say, a potential physicist
or chemist doing menial labor because his talents and abilities were never
discovered and never developed. Nor would you have incompetents in important
positions because of 'connections.' It's too bad the Assessor jumbled the minds
of a few of his followers during testing . . . that's why its use was
outlawed." "Jumbled, hell!" Finch
snorted. "It turned a few of his faithful followers into vegetables!"
"Well, you've got to remember
that `electrohypnosis'—which was the term for mind-probing in those days—was
still in the experimental stages. Its use was integral to the Assessor but its
control had not yet been perfected. Thus, the tragic accidents." Finch yawned. "Just as well .
. . never would have worked anyway." Gordon smiled and leaned over his
desk. "Oh, but it has!" he exclaimed softly. "You mean you've heard from
Black's splinter colony? I wouldn't put too much faith in . . ." "No, no," the C.A. interrupted, "it has worked right here on Earth!" "Where?" "The Rigrod Peninsula." "So that's what all the
secrecy's been about out there," mused Finch. Gordon was enthused now: "We
started a colony out there twenty-six years ago using a thousand deserted
children„ each about a year old. Each was 'assessed' once a year for the first
twenty years and education was modified and directed for each in accordance
with the Assessor's findings; we were thus able to give them twenty years of
education in roughly fifteen. Six years ago they were all given the option of
either going into their assigned fields or returning to the mainland." He paused dramatically. "All
stayed." Finch affected a surprised
expression. He had a few contacts in the government and knew all about the
Rigrod experiment. "And the advances in
technology, the arts, the life sciences, business and hundreds of other fields
in these past six years have been incredible!" "I can see how it would
work," Finch said, "but why tell me about it?" "Because it's going to take a
massive selling job to get the public to accept it and my advisers think that
endorsements by popular personalities would be the best technique. You, Joe
Finch, are going to help convince the public that the Assessor is the greatest
thing ever to come along." "Oh, really? Not without a
little more than a spiel from you, I'm afraid." Gordon sobered. "What do you
mean?" "I mean I want to see Rigrod
and see exactly what it's like. If this Assessor can do all you say it can,
then I'll back you on it. But I want to see for myself." "I'm afraid not," the C.A. frowned. "We've allowed free access of outside information into Rigrod but all
outsiders have been barred. We can make no exceptions." "Better make one this
time." "Need I remind you, Mr.
Finch, that your situation in regard to the law at the moment is quite precarious?"
"I endorse nothing sight
unseen," Finch stated. He was gambling now, gambling that the Finch
endorsement was important enough to the C.A. to make him back down. "And
besides, you've said nothing about my legal situation after I endorse
the Assessor . . . how will I stand then?" As they say: if you're going to
bluff, don't do it halfheartedly. Gordon studied Finch with narrowed
eyes and nodded slowly. "All right. All right, damnit! I'll publicly
denounce the Picket Law and have the charges dropped after we go to
Rigrod." "Well, Andy," Finch
said, scratching his pet's snout, "looks like we're going on a trip soon .
. . and at government expense, no less." The Rigrod Peninsula had been
turned into a minor city, a tiny nation of a thousand. Order and symmetry ruled
its design and new structures of unique conceptualization were on the rise. The
inhabitants came out in force to meet Joe Finch. They were only physically
isolated here and the figure of the crusty individualist with his ever-present
ant-bear companion was immediately recognized. He wandered through the crowd of
residents commenting on this and that, answering questions and shaking
proffered hands. He was impressed. These people were friendly, articulate and
every one a specialist in his or her field. But there was a subtle undercurrent
here, an undercurrent he had been sure he would find. After the tour, Gordon and Finch
retired to the C.A.'s Rigrod offices. Finch was skimming through a manuscript
he had found on the desk. It was called "Interstellar Business: A
Theory," by Peter J. Paxton. "This Paxton is good,"
he told the beaming Gordon. "His logistical concepts will revolutionize
interstellar trade. Does he need a publisher?" "Sorry, Joe," Gordon
laughed, "but Rigrod is setting up its own publishing house—and it will be
a telestories format." He was needling Finch and enjoying it. Changing the subject, he asked,
"Well, now that you've seen our little project, what do you think of
it?" Now the touchy part: to stall for
time. "I don't know. There's something about this setup that bothers
me." "What could bother you about
it? It's the perfect society! Utopia!" "The whole idea of utopia
makes me more than a little nervous," Finch replied. "Can you give me
a week or two to think on it?" "I'll
give you a week, Finch. That should give you plenty of time to assimilate what
you've seen here today. But remember, those charges still stand." "Yes,
I'm aware of that. But don't you think the endorsement would hold more weight
if it wasn't so obviously apparent that we had made a deal?" "You
have a point," the C.A. admitted and paused, thinking. "Why don't we
try this: I'll get the charges dropped if you give me a tentative
affirmation." "O.K.,
Mr. Gordon. It's a deal." And
the Chief Administrator of Earth made good his promise the very next day. When
Gordon and two other men burst into the Finch backyard, they found that he was
not alone. Andy was there and so was a young, fair-haired man in his
mid-twenties. Gordon instantly recognized him. "Paxton!
It figures I'd find you here! Go inside. I've something to discuss with Mr.
Finch!" The young man was quite cowed by the wrathful C.A. He looked to Finch and Finch nodded toward the door. "Do
as he says. He brought a couple of his bully-boys along so we'd better humor
him." When
Paxton had disappeared into the house, Finch turned to Gordon. "Now what
the hell is all this about?" "You're
under arrest, Finch!" Gordon roared. "What
for?" Andy raised his head and wondered who was making all this noise on
such a pleasant afternoon. "You
know very well what for, Finch ... for destroying a government project!" "You
mean the Rigrod experiment?" "Yes!
The Rigrod experiment! The whole structure of the. Assessor built
society started to break down soon after your visit. You did something out
there. I'm going to find out what it was. I don't care how popular you are,
you're going to tell me." "I'll
tell you what I did," said Finch. "I visited the place. That's all.
You were with me all the time." "You
pulled something—" Gordon began. "Damn
right I did," Finch interrupted with a snort. "I destroyed that
project willfully and with malice aforethought. And I did you a favor by doing
it. It was bound to happen sooner or later, you fool! You thought you were
creating the perfect society by basing it on human individuality, by making the
best use of individual abilities. You took care of individuality . . . fine!
But you forgot all about individualism! "It
never occurred to you that many people wouldn't be happy doing 'what they can
do best.' As a matter of fact, many people don't give a damn about what they
can do best. They're more interested in doing what they like to do, what
they want to do. There might be a musician playing at the music center
tonight who could be a brilliant physicist if he wanted to be, but he likes
music instead. In an Assessor built society, however, he'd be working with
mathematical formulae instead of chord progressions. He'd sit around envying
musicians for just so long and then he'd either rebel or go mad. When are
people like you going to learn that utopia is a fool's game?" Gordon
was in a cold rage. The project, which was to be a monument to his name, was
being torn to shreds by this man in front of him. He
spoke through clenched teeth: "But why didn't they rebel before you showed
up? The project was working perfectly until then." "You've
had no trouble on the peninsula until now," Finch explained, "because
you've been working with a biased sample. Those kids have been told all their
lives that they are pioneers, that they'll be the ones to prove that man can
have utopia. And so all the square pegs in the round holes—the equivalents of
our hypothetical musician-physicist—keep mum on the hope that their discontent
will pass . . . they don't want to destroy `man's chance at utopia' by a hasty
decision. And in keeping mum they never find out that there are others like
themselves. "Then
Joe Finch comes along. And I'm not a hero, Gordon ... I'm a crackpot, an
eccentric, a nut. I've known about Rigrod for over a decade, now, and spent
that time building up a reputation as a rugged individualist. Many times I felt
foolish but the press and the vid played right into my hands. I've been a
walking publicity stunt for the last ten years. That's why my pet is an antbear
instead of a dog—although I wouldn't trade Andy for anything now. I've been
hoping for a chance to get to Rigrod and you gave it to me. And that was all I
needed. "Allowing
someone with a reputation as a crackpot individualist to wander through the Rigrod Peninsula is like introducing a seed crystal to a super-saturated solution: all the underlying
threads of doubt and discontent start to crystallize. But don't blame me! Blame
yourself and your inane theories and ambitions! You were a fool to be taken in
by Black's theory, you were a fool to bring me to the project and you were a
fool to think that I'd have anything at all to do with such a plan!" Gordon
finally exploded. "Arrest him!" he told the two guards who had been
standing idly by. The
guards, of course, did not know anything about antbears. The antbear has been
long used in the areas to which it is indigenous as a watchdog. Its forelimbs
have monstrous claws which it uses for digging into termite hills but it can
rear up on its hind legs and use these claws for defense. And the antbear has
an uncanny ability to roar like a lion. The
two guards were quickly made aware of these facts. Andy startled them with a
roar as they made their first move toward Finch. A few swipes with his claws
and the guards were down and gashed and bleeding. Andy
stood beside Finch and huffed warily as his master scratched his snout. Finch
turned to the livid Chief Administrator. "Now
get out of here and take your friends with you." "All
right, Finch. You've won for now. But let me warn you that your life here on
Earth from now on will be hell! And don't get any ideas about getting
off-planet . . . you're staying right here!" But
Joe Finch had been far ahead of the C.A. He had already sold his house, a
printing firm had bought his machinery and all the properties of Finch House
had been picked up by a telestories outfit. A handsome bribe had
reserved two seats and one animal passage out from Earth on a moment's notice
and Joe Finch, Peter J. Paxton and Andy were well into primary warp toward
Ragna before Arthur Gordon had any idea they had left Earth. With
Finch's money and organizational experience and Paxton's business theories,
Interstellar Business Advisers was born and grew with the expanding Federation.
And Joe, at long last able to put aside his role of superindividualist, found a
woman who loved him—and anteaters, too—and it wasn't too long before Joe junior
came along. But that's another story. the man with the anteater F. PAUL WILSON Anyone who keeps a pet anteater in
a stringently limited society is obviously a crackpot. But some crackpots have
highly methodical cracks in their pots . . . Illustrated by Kelly Freas
No discussion of galactic
business, of course, would be complete without mention of Interstellar Business
Advisers. Armed with the tried and true maxims of a free-market economy and a
number of new and daring precepts for the conduct of business on an
interstellar scale, IBA played an important part in shaping the course of trade
in the galaxy. The company was founded by one
Joseph Finch, a man whose figure has taken on an almost mythical air in the
annals of galactic trade. The most farfetched stories concern the period before
the founding of IBA, when Finch was still a resident of Earth— excerpt from "Galactic
Business: A History", by Emmerz Fent On a steamy summer morning, Joe
and Andy, the anteater, stepped out into their backyard and surveyed their
domain. Thirty-eight, slight of frame and a bit on the homely side, Joe Finch
didn't exactly cut an heroic figure. But he was looked up to as a hero by many
nonetheless. And there were, of course, many who thought of him as a stupid,
eccentric, thick-headed, bull-headed reactionary. But they seemed to be in the
minority. You see, in a world that functions
with the smoothness of a well-oiled machine, the man who insists on deciding
when to shift his own gears becomes a hero of sorts. A man with few friends,
who had yet to meet his wife, whose sister and brother-in-law, unable to cope
with Earth any longer, were living as splinter colonists on a planet called
Dasein II somewhere out in nowhere, Finch was a loner. And in a highly
collectivized, planned and patented society, loners, if they can avoid being
swallowed whole and digested, become heroes. Finch was mentally running through
his plan to manipulate Arthur Gordon, Chief Administrator of Earth. Gordon was
either a social idealist or a power-monger—the two are not always easily
distinguishable—and Finch knew from certain sources that Gordon was planning to
manipulate him. The thing to do was to make Gordon show his hand before
he was completely ready and the strike going on at the Finch House plant right
now could be the perfect lever. "Stay here, Andy," he
told his pet. "And if you get hungry, help yourself." Andy scanned
the dry, virtually grassless yard and trotted off in the direction of a
promising mound with his huge, furry tail held straight out behind him and his
agile tongue seemingly licking his snout in anticipation. "Don't overdo it or you'll
have to go back on synthe-meat and formic acid," Finch warned. Andy
glanced over his shoulder and stuck out his tongue. Finch went out front, started up
an old transporter with the words Finch House printed on the sides and
back, and drove off toward Pete Farnham's machine shop. As the last of the new equipment
was being loaded, Farnham turned to Finch, "You sure you want to go
through with this, Joe?" "Look, Pete," Finch
said, wiping his forehead on his sleeve, "you designed this stuff so I'd
be able to increase my output by about another half without increasing my
overhead or labor costs." Farnham looked annoyed. "I'm
not talking about that. I'm talking about the union ... it's on strike,
remember? They're very unhappy about losing their overtime." "If the union had its
way," Finch growled, "I'd still be using Gutenberg presses." "But it's against the law to
cross a picket line! Why don't you just wait it out as usual or maybe bribe the
union president? All hell's going to break loose if you go through with
this." Finch locked the back of the
transporter with a solid click. "That might be just what I'm after.
Besides, this is as good a time as any to challenge a rotten law. Gordon's been
pushing things a bit too . . ." His voice trailed off as he saw Farnham
climbing into the cab. "Where do you think you're going?" "With you, of course,"
Farnham replied and hefted a length of pipe. "I spent a lot of time
designing that equipment and the only way it'll ever get to prove itself is if
you get to use it. Now let's get moving." . . . the pickets/a truck in
their midst /hey! /stop 'em! /get them! / Hold 'em/don't let 'em through/ stop
'em!/ Stomp 'em! /but chain and bricks and barricades and bodies give way/a
face looms/flail at it./Someone fires a shot /rniss! /The police arrive/made it!
/The pickets are being held outside and the police will deal with you later . .
. Joe Finch watched the roiling
crowds from atop the Earth Building. "You just can't figure people,
Andy," he told the pet he had insisted on bringing with him. "They
clamor for a law to be passed and then celebrate a man who breaks it." "I believe you're
oversimplifying the situation, Joe," said a voice behind him. Finch turned
to see Arthur Gordon: big, graying, about sixty, the man on whose
"invitation" he had come to the Earth Building. It was their first
meeting and the Chief Administrator of Earth got things off on the wrong foot
by calling him "Joe;" Finch believed first names were for personal
friends only. "Oh, how's that, Arthur?"
he replied, noting the C.A.'s wince. "Well, I mean ... it seems
you've become a symbol to them—" (My, what a phony smile you
have, Arthur Gordon, Finch observed privately.) ". . . a symbol of
Individuality—" (I'll bet he uses a capital
"I" when he spells that word.) "And Individuality is
something each of them feels he has lost." (Whose fault is that?) "I imagine that some of them,
deep in their hearts, actually hate you for maintaining a quality they've
lost." (I can think of a few union
roughnecks who won't have to go that deep.) "As a matter of fact—" "Get to the point!"
Finch finally interrupted. "Why did you 'invite' me here rather than have
me arrested for breaking the picket law?" Gordon's fixed smile was replaced
by one of a more genuine nature. "O.K., Mr. Finch, I will be more
to the point, although what I've been saying isn't far from it. Let's go into
my office." It was not until Finch was seated
across the desk from him in the Chief Administrator's spacious main office that
Gordon began to speak. "Mr. Finch, the reason I did
not have you arrested is very simple: you are the only man on this planet who
can be described as a hero." "I think you've got the wrong
definition of a hero in mind, Mr. C.A. I'm not a hero . . . I've never done an
heroic thing in my life. I may stand out in a crowd, but otherwise I think
you're overestimating me." Gordon frowned. "I don't
think I overestimate you at all. The public is hungry for an idol and you,
unwilling as you may be, are the prime candidate. In fact your unwillingness to
cooperate with the idol-seekers only increases your popularity. To them you're
the last of a rare species. Just look at you! You wander around with an antbear
at your heels, you're making a pile of money in an industry that should have
been extinct shortly after the development of telestories, you had a
shyster lawyer wheedle a private home for you so you could raise ants for that
ridiculous pet of yours and now you've taken to busting picket lines!" "Nobody keeps me out of my
own business!" Finch stated flatly and finally. "I wonder about that,"
Gordon mused. "This is hardly the first strike at your plant . . . you've
bargained with the union before, why did you choose to defy it this time?
Planning to challenge the Picket Law?" "Would it do me any good to
try?" Finch replied in a noncommittal tone. "Maybe. I never liked the law
. . . didn't like it when it was passed and I like it even less at the
moment." Finch cracked his knuckles.
"The Picket Law is a natural consequence of legalizing the picket line.
You see, a picket line makes it possible to kidney-punch anyone trying to enter
the building currently 'under siege' and sooner or later you don't cross a
picket line if you know what's good for you. Then, with typical political
logic, crossing a picket line was declared illegal 'in order to prevent
violence during strikes.' " Gordon snorted. "I've heard
all this before, Mr. Finch. And I didn't ask you here to reprimand your
extralegal activities nor to discuss the Picket Law with you. Instead of having
you arrested, I'd rather make a deal." "I had a feeling you'd find
some use for me." The C.A. ignored the remark.
"Look, Finch, here's the situation: we've become an incredibly complex
society here on Earth; the average man feels like a cog, feels a loss of worth.
Oh, I know it sounds very trite but unfortunately it's very true. We've been
warned about this for centuries but it's something that's almost impossible to
prevent, even when you can see it coming. "You, however, have somehow
overcome it all. You've bucked convention, legal restrictions ... even
technology! You've become a symbol of the Individuality people instinctively
feel they've lost and want desperately to regain. And I've found a way to give
it to them!" Finch smirked. "How?
Pills?" Gordon was not in a light mood.
"No, the plan's a little more complicated than that. It's a daring plan
and will frighten people at first; they'll want the end but they'll balk at the
means. Unless—" "Unless what?" "Unless someone they admire not
only endorses it but actively promotes it." Finch shook his head as if to
clear it. "Wait a minute. Let's just go back a bit. You're building up to
the means and I don't even know what the end really is supposed to be."
Gordon strode to a bookshelf and pulled out a huge volume. "Ever hear of
Gregor Black?" he asked as he laid the book on the desk." "Some sort of
technosociologist, wasn't he?" Finch replied. "But I believe his
disciples are calling him `Noah' Black now." "Right. His theory was that both
the individual and society are best served when the individual is doing the job
for which he is best suited . . . the old 'right man for the right job' maxim.
He figured that not only would you achieve maximum productivity but you'd also
allow the individual the personal satisfaction and sense of fulfillment that
comes from doing what he can do best." "Where is he now?" Finch
asked. Gordon had opened the volume and
was flipping through the pages. "Oh, somewhere in the Ninth Quadrant, I
believe." Finch snapped his fingers.
"That's right! His group was outlawed so they decided to apply for a
'splinter colony.' " "Ninety years ago,"
Gordon confirmed, "they took up the government's offer to any large enough
group that wanted to settle an Earth-class planet and got free, one-way
transportation to the prospective utopia of their choice. Since they were
registered as a splinter colony, the planet was then declared off limits to all
government traffic and Black and company could do whatever they wanted with it."
"I'd love to know who dreamed
up the splinter colony idea," Finch said with a smile and a shake of the
head. "It's probably one of the few deals in history in which everybody
gets what he wants: the government not only colonizes world after world, but it
gets rid of all the local dissidents to boot. And the dissidents get their own
world on which to live the way they wish." Gordon was not listening, however.
Pointing to the book on his desk, he said, "Here's the reason Black's
group was outlawed: the Assessor." "I remember the name,"
Finch remarked. "Gregor Black's miracle machine." "Don't be too light with the
Assessor . . . nor with old Gregor. He designed quite a machine. With the
Assessor screening a population you wouldn't have, say, a potential physicist
or chemist doing menial labor because his talents and abilities were never
discovered and never developed. Nor would you have incompetents in important
positions because of 'connections.' It's too bad the Assessor jumbled the minds
of a few of his followers during testing . . . that's why its use was
outlawed." "Jumbled, hell!" Finch
snorted. "It turned a few of his faithful followers into vegetables!"
"Well, you've got to remember
that `electrohypnosis'—which was the term for mind-probing in those days—was
still in the experimental stages. Its use was integral to the Assessor but its
control had not yet been perfected. Thus, the tragic accidents." Finch yawned. "Just as well .
. . never would have worked anyway." Gordon smiled and leaned over his
desk. "Oh, but it has!" he exclaimed softly. "You mean you've heard from
Black's splinter colony? I wouldn't put too much faith in . . ." "No, no," the C.A. interrupted, "it has worked right here on Earth!" "Where?" "The Rigrod Peninsula." "So that's what all the
secrecy's been about out there," mused Finch. Gordon was enthused now: "We
started a colony out there twenty-six years ago using a thousand deserted
children„ each about a year old. Each was 'assessed' once a year for the first
twenty years and education was modified and directed for each in accordance
with the Assessor's findings; we were thus able to give them twenty years of
education in roughly fifteen. Six years ago they were all given the option of
either going into their assigned fields or returning to the mainland." He paused dramatically. "All
stayed." Finch affected a surprised
expression. He had a few contacts in the government and knew all about the
Rigrod experiment. "And the advances in
technology, the arts, the life sciences, business and hundreds of other fields
in these past six years have been incredible!" "I can see how it would
work," Finch said, "but why tell me about it?" "Because it's going to take a
massive selling job to get the public to accept it and my advisers think that
endorsements by popular personalities would be the best technique. You, Joe
Finch, are going to help convince the public that the Assessor is the greatest
thing ever to come along." "Oh, really? Not without a
little more than a spiel from you, I'm afraid." Gordon sobered. "What do you
mean?" "I mean I want to see Rigrod
and see exactly what it's like. If this Assessor can do all you say it can,
then I'll back you on it. But I want to see for myself." "I'm afraid not," the C.A. frowned. "We've allowed free access of outside information into Rigrod but all
outsiders have been barred. We can make no exceptions." "Better make one this
time." "Need I remind you, Mr.
Finch, that your situation in regard to the law at the moment is quite precarious?"
"I endorse nothing sight
unseen," Finch stated. He was gambling now, gambling that the Finch
endorsement was important enough to the C.A. to make him back down. "And
besides, you've said nothing about my legal situation after I endorse
the Assessor . . . how will I stand then?" As they say: if you're going to
bluff, don't do it halfheartedly. Gordon studied Finch with narrowed
eyes and nodded slowly. "All right. All right, damnit! I'll publicly
denounce the Picket Law and have the charges dropped after we go to
Rigrod." "Well, Andy," Finch
said, scratching his pet's snout, "looks like we're going on a trip soon .
. . and at government expense, no less." The Rigrod Peninsula had been
turned into a minor city, a tiny nation of a thousand. Order and symmetry ruled
its design and new structures of unique conceptualization were on the rise. The
inhabitants came out in force to meet Joe Finch. They were only physically
isolated here and the figure of the crusty individualist with his ever-present
ant-bear companion was immediately recognized. He wandered through the crowd of
residents commenting on this and that, answering questions and shaking
proffered hands. He was impressed. These people were friendly, articulate and
every one a specialist in his or her field. But there was a subtle undercurrent
here, an undercurrent he had been sure he would find. After the tour, Gordon and Finch
retired to the C.A.'s Rigrod offices. Finch was skimming through a manuscript
he had found on the desk. It was called "Interstellar Business: A
Theory," by Peter J. Paxton. "This Paxton is good,"
he told the beaming Gordon. "His logistical concepts will revolutionize
interstellar trade. Does he need a publisher?" "Sorry, Joe," Gordon
laughed, "but Rigrod is setting up its own publishing house—and it will be
a telestories format." He was needling Finch and enjoying it. Changing the subject, he asked,
"Well, now that you've seen our little project, what do you think of
it?" Now the touchy part: to stall for
time. "I don't know. There's something about this setup that bothers
me." "What could bother you about
it? It's the perfect society! Utopia!" "The whole idea of utopia
makes me more than a little nervous," Finch replied. "Can you give me
a week or two to think on it?" "I'll
give you a week, Finch. That should give you plenty of time to assimilate what
you've seen here today. But remember, those charges still stand." "Yes,
I'm aware of that. But don't you think the endorsement would hold more weight
if it wasn't so obviously apparent that we had made a deal?" "You
have a point," the C.A. admitted and paused, thinking. "Why don't we
try this: I'll get the charges dropped if you give me a tentative
affirmation." "O.K.,
Mr. Gordon. It's a deal." And
the Chief Administrator of Earth made good his promise the very next day. When
Gordon and two other men burst into the Finch backyard, they found that he was
not alone. Andy was there and so was a young, fair-haired man in his
mid-twenties. Gordon instantly recognized him. "Paxton!
It figures I'd find you here! Go inside. I've something to discuss with Mr.
Finch!" The young man was quite cowed by the wrathful C.A. He looked to Finch and Finch nodded toward the door. "Do
as he says. He brought a couple of his bully-boys along so we'd better humor
him." When
Paxton had disappeared into the house, Finch turned to Gordon. "Now what
the hell is all this about?" "You're
under arrest, Finch!" Gordon roared. "What
for?" Andy raised his head and wondered who was making all this noise on
such a pleasant afternoon. "You
know very well what for, Finch ... for destroying a government project!" "You
mean the Rigrod experiment?" "Yes!
The Rigrod experiment! The whole structure of the. Assessor built
society started to break down soon after your visit. You did something out
there. I'm going to find out what it was. I don't care how popular you are,
you're going to tell me." "I'll
tell you what I did," said Finch. "I visited the place. That's all.
You were with me all the time." "You
pulled something—" Gordon began. "Damn
right I did," Finch interrupted with a snort. "I destroyed that
project willfully and with malice aforethought. And I did you a favor by doing
it. It was bound to happen sooner or later, you fool! You thought you were
creating the perfect society by basing it on human individuality, by making the
best use of individual abilities. You took care of individuality . . . fine!
But you forgot all about individualism! "It
never occurred to you that many people wouldn't be happy doing 'what they can
do best.' As a matter of fact, many people don't give a damn about what they
can do best. They're more interested in doing what they like to do, what
they want to do. There might be a musician playing at the music center
tonight who could be a brilliant physicist if he wanted to be, but he likes
music instead. In an Assessor built society, however, he'd be working with
mathematical formulae instead of chord progressions. He'd sit around envying
musicians for just so long and then he'd either rebel or go mad. When are
people like you going to learn that utopia is a fool's game?" Gordon
was in a cold rage. The project, which was to be a monument to his name, was
being torn to shreds by this man in front of him. He
spoke through clenched teeth: "But why didn't they rebel before you showed
up? The project was working perfectly until then." "You've
had no trouble on the peninsula until now," Finch explained, "because
you've been working with a biased sample. Those kids have been told all their
lives that they are pioneers, that they'll be the ones to prove that man can
have utopia. And so all the square pegs in the round holes—the equivalents of
our hypothetical musician-physicist—keep mum on the hope that their discontent
will pass . . . they don't want to destroy `man's chance at utopia' by a hasty
decision. And in keeping mum they never find out that there are others like
themselves. "Then
Joe Finch comes along. And I'm not a hero, Gordon ... I'm a crackpot, an
eccentric, a nut. I've known about Rigrod for over a decade, now, and spent
that time building up a reputation as a rugged individualist. Many times I felt
foolish but the press and the vid played right into my hands. I've been a
walking publicity stunt for the last ten years. That's why my pet is an antbear
instead of a dog—although I wouldn't trade Andy for anything now. I've been
hoping for a chance to get to Rigrod and you gave it to me. And that was all I
needed. "Allowing
someone with a reputation as a crackpot individualist to wander through the Rigrod Peninsula is like introducing a seed crystal to a super-saturated solution: all the underlying
threads of doubt and discontent start to crystallize. But don't blame me! Blame
yourself and your inane theories and ambitions! You were a fool to be taken in
by Black's theory, you were a fool to bring me to the project and you were a
fool to think that I'd have anything at all to do with such a plan!" Gordon
finally exploded. "Arrest him!" he told the two guards who had been
standing idly by. The
guards, of course, did not know anything about antbears. The antbear has been
long used in the areas to which it is indigenous as a watchdog. Its forelimbs
have monstrous claws which it uses for digging into termite hills but it can
rear up on its hind legs and use these claws for defense. And the antbear has
an uncanny ability to roar like a lion. The
two guards were quickly made aware of these facts. Andy startled them with a
roar as they made their first move toward Finch. A few swipes with his claws
and the guards were down and gashed and bleeding. Andy
stood beside Finch and huffed warily as his master scratched his snout. Finch
turned to the livid Chief Administrator. "Now
get out of here and take your friends with you." "All
right, Finch. You've won for now. But let me warn you that your life here on
Earth from now on will be hell! And don't get any ideas about getting
off-planet . . . you're staying right here!" But
Joe Finch had been far ahead of the C.A. He had already sold his house, a
printing firm had bought his machinery and all the properties of Finch House
had been picked up by a telestories outfit. A handsome bribe had
reserved two seats and one animal passage out from Earth on a moment's notice
and Joe Finch, Peter J. Paxton and Andy were well into primary warp toward
Ragna before Arthur Gordon had any idea they had left Earth. With
Finch's money and organizational experience and Paxton's business theories,
Interstellar Business Advisers was born and grew with the expanding Federation.
And Joe, at long last able to put aside his role of superindividualist, found a
woman who loved him—and anteaters, too—and it wasn't too long before Joe junior
came along. But that's another story. |
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