Chapter 1
If a man walks in dressed
like a hick and acting as if he owned the place, he's a spaceman.
It
is a logical necessity. His profession makes him feel like boss of all
creation; when he sets foot dirtside he is slumming among the peasants. As for
his sartorial inelegance, a man who is in uniform nine tenths of the time and
is more used to deep space than to civilization can hardly be expected to know
how to dress properly. He is a sucker for the alleged tailors who swarm around
every spaceport peddling "ground outfits."
I
could see that this big-boned fellow had been dressed by Omar the
Tentmaker-padded shoulders that were too big to start with, shorts cut so that
they crawled up his hairy thighs as he sat down, a ruffled chemise that might
have looked well on a cow.
But
I kept my opinion to myself and bought him a drink with my last half-Imperial,
considering it an investment, spacemen being the way they are about money.
"Hot jets!" I said as we touched glasses. He gave me a quick glance.
That was my initial mistake
in dealing with Dak Broadbent. Instead of answering, "Clear space!"
or, "Safe grounding!" as he should have, he looked me over and said
softly, "A nice sentiment, but to the wrong man. I've never been
out."
That was another good place to keep my mouth
shut. Spacemen did not often come to the bar of Casa Ma?; it was not their
Sort of hotel and it's miles from the port. When one shows up in ground
clothes, seeks a dark corner of the bar, and objects to being called a
spaceman, that's his business. I had picked that spot myself so that I could
see without being seen-I owed a little money here and there at the time,
nothing important but embarrassing. I should have assumed that he had his
reasons, too, and respected them.
But my vocal cords lived
their own life, wild and free. "Don't give me that, shipmate," I
replied. "If you're a ground hog, I'm Mayor of Tycho City. I'll wager
you've done more drinking on Mars," I added, noticing the cautious way he
lifted his glass, a dead giveaway of low-gravity habits, "than you've ever
done on Earth."
"Keep your voice down!" he cut in
without moving his lips. "What makes you sure that I am a voyageur? You
don't know me."
"Sorry," I said. "You can be
anything you like. But I've got eyes. You gave yourself away the minute you
walked in."
He said something under his
breath. "How?"
"Don't let it worry you. I doubt if
anyone else noticed. But I see things other people don't see." I handed
him my card, a little smugly perhaps. There is only one Lorenzo Smythe, the
One-Man Stock Company. Yes, I'm "The Great Lorenzo"-stereo, canned
opera, legit-"Pantomimist and Mimicry Artist Extraordinary."
He
read my card and dropped it into a sleeve pocket-which annoyed me; those cards
had cost me money-genuine imitation hand engraving. "I see your
point," he said quietly, "but what was wrong with the way I
behaved?"
"I'll show you," I said. "I'll
walk to the door like a ground hog and come back the way you walk. Watch."
I did so, making the trip back in a slightly exaggerated version of his walk to
allow for his
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untrained eye-feet sliding softly along the floor as if it were
deck plates, weight carried forward and balanced from the hips, hands a trifle
forward and clear of the body, ready to grasp.
There are a dozen other details which can't be
set down in words; the point is you have to be a spaceman when you do it, with
a spaceman's alert body and unconscious balance-you have to live it. A city man
blunders along on smooth floors all his life, steady floors with Earth-normal
gravity, and will trip over a cigarette paper, like as not. Not so a spaceman.
"See what I
mean?" I asked, slipping back into my seat.
"I'm afraid I
do," he admitted suurly. "Did I walk like that?"
"Yes."
"Hmmm... Maybe I
should take lessons from you."
"You could do
worse," I admitted.
He sat there looking me
over, then started to speak-changed his mind and wiggled a finger at the
bartender to refill our glasses. When the drinks came, he paid for them, drank
his, and slid out of his seat all in one smooth motion. "Wait for
me," he said quietly.
With a drink he had bought
sitting in front of me I could not refuse. Nor did I want to; he interested me.
I liked him, even on ten minutes' acquaintance; he was the sort of big
ugly-handsome galoot that women go for and men take orders from.
He threaded his way
gracefully through the room and passed a table of four Martians near the door.
I didn't like Martians. I did not fancy having a thing that looks like a tree
trunk topped off by a sun helmet claiming the privileges of a man. I did not like
the way they grew pseudo limbs; it reminded me of snakes crawling out of their
holes. I did not like the fact that they could look all directions at once
without turning their heads-if they had had heads, which of course they don't.
And I could not stand their smell!
Nobody could accuse me of
race prejudice. I didn't care what a man's color, race, or religion was. But
men were men, whereas Martians were things. They weren't even animals to my way
of thinking. I'd rather have had a wart hog around me any day. Permitting them
in restaurants and bars used by men struck me as outrageous. But there was the
Treaty, of course, so what could I do?
These four had not been
there when I came in, or I would have whiffed them. For that matter, they
certainly could not have been there a few moments earlier when I had walked to
the door and back. Now there they were, standing on their pedestals around a
table, pretending to be people. I had not even heard the air conditioning speed
up.
The free drink in front of
me did not attract me; I simply wanted my host to come back so that I could
leave politely. It suddenly occurred to me that he had glanced over that way
just before he had left so hastily and I wondered if the Martians had anything
to do with it. I looked over at them, trying to see if they were paying
attention to our table-but how could you tell what a Martian was looking at or
what it was thinking? That was another thing I didn't like about them.
I sat there for several
minutes fiddling with my drink and wondering what had happened to my spaceman
friend. I had hoped that his hospitality might extend to dinner and, if we
became sufficiently simpatico, possibly even to a small temporary loan. My
other prospects were-I admit it!-slender. The last two times I had tried to
call my agent his autosecretary had simply recorded the message, and unless I
deposited coins in the door, my room would not open to me that night . . . That
was how low my fortunes had ebbed: reduced to sleeping in a coin-operated
cubicle.
In
the midst of my melancholy ponderings a waiter touched me on the elbow.
"Call for you, sir."
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"Eh? Very well,
friend, will you fetch an instrument to the table?"
"Sorry, sir, but I
can't transfer it. Booth 12 in the lobby."
"Oh. Thank you," I answered, making
it as warm as possible since I was unable to tip him. I swung wide around the
Martians as I went Out.
I
soon saw why the call had not been brought to the table; No. 12 was a
maximum-security booth, sight, sound, and scramble. The tank showed no image
and did not clear even after the door locked behind me. It remained milky until
I sat down and placed my face within pickup, then the opalescent clouds melted
away and I found myself looking at my spaceman friend.
"Sorry to walk out on you," he said
quickly, "but I was in a hurry. I want you to come at once to Room 2106 of
the Eisenhower."
He
offered no explanation. The Eisenhower is just as unlikely a hotel for spacemen
as Casa Ma?. I could smell trouble. You don't pick up a stranger in a bar
and then insist that he come to a hotel room-well, not one of the same sex, at
least.
"Why?" I asked.
The spaceman got that look
peculiar to men who are used to being obeyed without question; I studied it
with professional interest-it's not the same as anger; it is more like a
thundercloud just before a storm. Then he got himself in hand and answered
quietly, "Lorenzo, there is no time to explain. Are you open to a
job?"
"Do you mean a
professional engagement?" I answered slowly. For a horrid instant I
suspected that he was offering me . . . Well, you know-a job. Thus far I had
kept my professional pride intact, despite the slings and arrows of outrageous
fortune.
"Oh, professional, of
course!" he answered quickly. "This requires the best actor we can
get."
I
did not let my relief show in my face. It was true that J was ready for any
professional work-I would gladly have played the balcony in Romeo and
Juliet-but it does not do to be eager. "What is the nature of the
engagement?" I asked. "My calendar is rather full."
He
brushed it aside. "I can't explain over the phone. Perhaps you don't know
it, but any scrambler circuit can be unscrambled- with the proper equipment.
Shag over here fast!"
He
was eager; therefore I could afford not to be eager. "Now really," I
protested, "what do you think I am? A bellman? Or an untried juvenile
anxious for the privilege of carrying a spear? I am Lorenzo!" I threw up
my chin and looked offended. "What is your offer?"
"Uh. . . Damn it, I
can't go into it over the phone. How much do you get?"
"Eh? You are asking my
professional salary?"
"Yes, yes!"
"For a single
appearance? Or by the week? Or an option contract?"
"Never mind. What do
you get by the day?"
"My minimum fee for a one-evening date is
one hundred Imperials." This was simple truth. Oh, I have been coerced at
times into paying some scandalous kickbacks, but the voucher never read less
than my proper fee. A man has his standards. I'd rather starve.
"Very well," he
answered quickly, "one hundred Imperials in cash, laid in your hand the
minute you show up here. But hurry!"
"Eh?" I realized
with sudden dismay that I could as easily have said two hundred, or even two
fifty. "But I have not agreed to accept the engagement."
"Never mind that! We'll talk it over when
you get here. The hundred is yours even if you turn us
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down. If you accept-well, call
it bonus, over and above your salary. Now will you sign off and get over
here?"
I bowed. "Certainly,
sir. Have patience."
Fortunately the Eisenhower
is not too far from the Casa, for I did not even have a minimum for tube fare.
However, although the art of strolling is almost lost, I savor it-and it gave
me time to collect my thoughts. I was no fool; I was aware that when another
man is too anxious to force money on one, it is time to examine the cards, for
there is almost certainly something illegal, or dangerous, or both, involved in
the matter. I was not unduly fussy about legality qua legality; I agreed with
the Bard that the Law is often an idiot. But in the main I had stayed on the
right side of the Street.
But
presently I realized that I had insufficient facts, so I put it out of my mind,
threw my cape over my right shoulder, and strode along, enjoying the mild
autumn weather and the rich and varied odors of the metropolis. On arrival I
decided to forego the main entrance and took a bounce tube from the sub?asement
to the twenty-first floor, I having at the time a vague feeling that this was
not the place to let my public recognize me. My voyageur friend let me in.
"You took long enough," he snapped.
"Indeed?" I let
it go at that and looked around me. It was an expensive suite, as I had
expected, but it was littered and there were at least a dozen used glasses and
as many coffee cups scattered here and there; it took no skill to see that I
was merely the latest of many visitors. Sprawled on a couch, scowling at me,
was another man, whom I tabbed tentatively as a spaceman. I glanced inquiringly
but no introduction was offered.
"Well, you're here, at
least. Let's get down to business."
"Surely. Which brings
to mind," I added, "there was mention of a bonus, or retainer."
"Oh, yes." He
turned to the man on the couch. "Jock, pay him."
"For what?"
"Pay him!"
I
now knew which one was boss-although, as I was to learn, there was usually
little doubt when Dak Broadbent was in a room. The other fellow stood up
quickly, still scowling, and counted Out to me a fifty and five tens. I tucked
it away casually without checking it and said, "I am at your disposal,
gentlemen."
The
big man chewed his lip. "First, I want your solemn oath not even to talk
in your sleep about this job."
"If my simple word is
not good, is my oath better?" I glanced at the smaller man, slouched again
on the couch. "I don't believe we have met. I am Lorenzo."
He
glanced at me, looked away. My barroom acquaintance said hastily, "Names
don't matter in this."
"No? Before my revered father died he
made me promise him three things: first, never to mix whisky with anything but
water; second, always to ignore anonymous letters; and lastly, never to talk
with a stranger who refuses to give his name. Good day, sirs." I turned
toward the door, their hundred Imperials warm in my pocket.
"Hold it!" I paused. He went on,
"You are perfectly right. My name is-" "Skipper!"
"Stow it, Jock. I'm Dak Broadbent; that's
Jacques Dubois glaring at us. We're both voyageurs-master pilots, all classes,
any acceleration."
I
bowed. "Lorenzo Smythe," I said modestly, "jongleur and
artist-care of The Lambs Club." I made
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a mental note to pay my dues. "Good.
Jock, try smiling for a change. Lorenzo, you agree to keep our business
secret?" "Under the rose. This is a discussion between
gentlemen." "Whether you take the job or not?" "Whether we
reach agreement or not. I am human, but, short of illegal methods of
questioning,
your confidences are sale with me."
"I am well aware of what neodexocaine will do to a man's forebrain,
Lorenzo. We don't expect the
impossible." "Dak," Dubois
said urgently, "this is a mistake. We should at least--" "Shut
up, Jock. I want no hypnotists around at this point. Lorenzo, we want you to do
an
impersonation job. It
has to be so perfect that no one-I mean no one-will ever know it took place.
Can
you do that sort of a job?" I
frowned. "The first question is not 'Can I?' but 'Will I?' What are the
circumstances?" "Uh, we'll go into details later. Roughly, it is the
ordinary doubling job for a well-known public
figure. The difference is that the impersonation will have to be
so perfect as to fool people who know him well and must see him close up. It
won't be just reviewing a parade from a grandstand, or pinning medals on girl
scouts." He looked at me shrewdly. "It will take a real artist."
"No," I said at
once.
"Huh? You don't know
anything about the job yet. If your conscience is bothering you, let me assure
you that you will not be working against the interests of the man you will
impersonate-nor against anyone's legitimate interests. This is a job that
really needs to be done."
"No."
"Well, for Pete's sake, why? You
don't even know how much we will pay."
"Pay is no object," I said
firmly. "I am an actor, not a double."
"I don't understand you. There are
lots of actors picking up spare money making public appearances
for celebrities."
"I regard them as prostitutes, not
colleagues. Let me make myself clear. Does an author respect a ghost writer?
Would you respect a painter who allowed another man to sign his work-for money?
Possibly the spirit of the artist is foreign to you, sir, yet perhaps I may put
it in terms germane to your own profession. Would you, simply for money, be
content to pilot a ship while some other man, not possessing your high art,
wore the uniform, received the credit, was publicly acclaimed as the Master?
Would you?"
Dubois snorted. "How
much money?"
Broadbent frowned at him. "I think
I understand your objection."
"To the artist, sir, kudos comes
first. Money is merely the mundane means whereby he is enabled to
create his art." "Hmm. . . All
right, so you won't do it just for money. Would you do it for other reasons? If
you felt
that it had to be done and you were the
only one who could do it successfully?" "I concede the possibility; I
cannot imagine the circumstances." "You won't have to imagine them;
we'll explain them to you." Dubois jumped up off the couch. "Now see
here, Dak, you can't--" "Cut it, Jock! He has to know." "He
doesn't have to know now-and here. And you haven't any right to jeopardize
everybody else by
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telling him. You don't know a
thing about him."
"It's a calculated
risk." Broadbent turned back to me.
Dubois grabbed his arm,
swung him around. "Calculated risk be damned! Dak, I've strung along with
you in the past~-but this time before I'll let you shoot off your face, well,
one or the other of us isn't going to be in any shape to talk."
Broadbent looked startled, then grinned coldly
down at Dubois. "Think you're up to it, Jock old son?"
Dubois glared up at him,
did not flinch. Broadbent was a head taller and outweighed him by twenty kilos.
I found myself for the first time liking Dubois; I am always touched by the
gallant audacity of a kitten, the fighting heart of a bantam cock, or the
willingness of a little mart to die in his tracks rather than knuckle
under...And, while I did not expect Broadbent to kill him, I did think that I
was about to see Dubois used as a dust rag.
I
had no thought of interfering. Every man is entitled to elect the time and
manner of his own destruction.
I could see tension grow.
Then suddenly l3roadbent laughed and clapped Dubois on the shoulder. "Good
for you, Jock!" He turned to me and said quietly, "Will you excuse us
a few moments? My friend and I must make heap big smoke."
The
suite was equipped with a hush corner, enclosing the autograph and the phone.
Broadbent took Dubois by the arm and led him over there; they stood and talked
urgently.
Sometimes such facilities
in public places like hotels are not all that they might be; the sound waves
fail to cancel out completely. But the Eisenhower is a luxury house and in this
case, at least, the equipment worked perfectly; I could see their lips move but
I could hear no sound.
But I could indeed see
their lips move. Broadbent's face was toward me and Dubois I could glimpse in a
wall mirror. When I was performing in my famous mentalist act, I found out why
my father had beaten my tail until I learned the silent language of lips-in my
mentalist act I always performed in a brightly lighted hail and made use of
spectacles which-but never mind; I could read lips.
Dubois was saying:
"Dak, you bloody, stupid, unprintable, illegal and highly improbable obscenity,
do you want us both to wind up counting rocks on Titan? This conceited
pipsqueak will spill his guts."
I
almost missed Broadbent's answer. Conceited indeed! Aside from a cold
appreciation of my own genius I felt that I was a modest man.
Broadbent: ". . . doesn't matter if the
game is crooked when it's the only game in town. Jock, there is nobody else we
can use."
Dubois: "All right, then get Doc Scortia
over here, hypnotize him, and shoot him the happy juice. But don't tell him the
score- not until he's conditioned, not while we are still on dirt."
Broadbent: "Uh,
Scortia himself told me that we could not depend on hypno and drugs, not for
the performance we need. We've got to have his co-operation, his intelligent
co-operation."
Dubois snorted. "What intelligence? Look
at him. Ever see a rooster strutting through a barnyard? Sure, he's the right
size and shape and his skull looks a good bit like the Chief-but there is
nothing behind it. He'll lose his nerve, blow his top, and give the whole thing
away. He can't play the part-he's just a ham actor!"
If
the immortal Caruso had been charged with singing off key, he could not have
been more affronted than I. But I trust I justified my claim to the mantle of
Burbage and Booth at that moment; I
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went on buffing my nails and ignored it-merely noting that I would
someday make friend Dubois both laugh and cry within the span of twenty
seconds. I waited a few moments more, then stood up and approached the hush
corner. When they saw that I intended to enter it, they both shut up. I said
quietly, "Never mind, gentlemen, I have changed my mind."
Dubois looked relieved.
"You don't want the job."
"I mean that I accept the engagement. You
need not make explanations. I have been assured by friend Broadbent that the
work is such as not to trouble my conscience-and I trust him. He has assured
rue that he needs an actor. But the business affairs of the producer are not my
concern. I accept."
Dubois looked angry, but shut up. I expected
Broadbent to look pleased and relieved; instead he looked worried. "All
right," he agreed, "let's get on with it. Lorenzo, I don't know
exactly how long we will need you. No more than a few days, I'm certain-and you
will be on display only an hour or so once or twice in that time."
"That does not matter
as long as I have time to study the role- the impersonation. But approximately
how many days will you need me? I should notify my agent."
"Oh no! Don't do
that."
"Well-how long? As
much as a week?"
"It will be less than
that-or we're sunk."
"Never mind. Will a
hundred Imperials a day suit you?"
I hesitated, recalling how
easily he had met my minimum just to interview me-and decided this was a time
to be gracious. I waved it aside. "Let's not speak of such things. No
doubt you will present me with an honorarium consonant with the worth of my
performance."
"All right, all
right." Broadbent turned away impatiently. "Jock, call the field.
Then call Langston and tell him we're starting Plan Mardi Gras. Synchronize
with him. Lorenzo . . ." He motioned for me to follow and strode into the
bath. He opened a small case and demanded, "Can you do anything with this
junk?"
"Junk" it was-the
sort of overpriced and unprofessional makeup kit that is sold over the counter
to stage-struck youngsters. I stared at it with mild disgust. "Do I
understand, sir, that you expect me to start an impersonation now? Without time
for study?"
"Huh? No, no, no! I want you to change
your face-on the outside chance that someone might recognize you as we leave
here.
That's possible, isn't
it?"
I
answered stiffly that being recognized in public was a burden that all
celebrities were forced to carry. I did not add that it was certain that
countless people would recognize The Great Lorenzo in any public place.
"Okay. So change your
phiz so it's not yours." He left abruptly.
I
sighed and looked over the child's toys he had handed me, no doubt thinking
they were the working tools of my profession- grease paints suitable for
clowns, reeking spirit gum, crepe hair which seemed to have been raveled from
Aunt Maggie's parlor carpet. Not an ounce of Silicoflesh, no electric brushes,
no modern amenities of any sort. But a true artist can do wonders with a burnt
match, or oddments such as one might find in a kitchen- and his own genius. I
arranged the lights and let myself fall into creative reverie.
There are several ways to keep a well-known
face from being recognized. The simplest is
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misdirection. Place a man in uniform and his face is not likely to
be noticed-do you recall the lace of the last policeman you encountered? Could
you identify him if you saw him next in mufti? On the same principle is the
attentiongoing special feature. Equip a man with an enormous nose, disfigured
perhaps with acne rosacea; the vulgar will stare in fascination at the nose
itself, the polite will turn away-but neither will see the face.
I decided against this
primitive maneuver because I judged that my employer wished me not to be
noticed at all rather than remembered for an odd feature without being
recognized. This is much more difficult; anyone can be conspicuous but it takes
real skill not to be noticed. I needed a face as commonplace, as impossible to
remember as the true face of the immortal Alec Guinness. Unfortunately my
aristocratic features are entirely too distinguished, too handsome-a
regrettable handicap for a character actor. As my father used to say,
"Larry, you are too damned pretty! If you don't get off your lazy duff and
learn the business, you are going to spend fifteen years as a juvenile, under
the mistaken impression that you are an actor-then wind up selling candy in the
lobby. 'Stupid' and 'pretty' are the two worst vices in show business-and
you're both."
Then he would take off his belt and stimulate
my brain. Father was a practical psychologist and believed that warming the
glutei maximi with a strap drew excess blood away from a boy's brain. While the
theory may have been shaky, the results justified the method; by the time I was
fifteen I could stand on my head on a slack wire and quote page after page of
Shakespeare and Shaw-or steal a scene simply by lighting a cigarette.
I
was deep in the mood of creation when Broadbent stuck his face in. "Good
grief!" he snapped. "Haven't you done anything yet?"
I
stared coldly. "I assumed that you wanted my best creative work-which
cannot be hurried. Would you expect a cordon bleu to compound a new sauce on
the back of a galloping horse?"
"Horses be damned!" He glanced at
his watch finger. "You have six more minutes. If you can't do anything in
that length of time, we'll just have to take our chances."
Well! Of course I prefer to
have plenty of time-but I had understudied my father in his quick-change
creation, The Assassination of Hu?y Long, fifteen parts in seven minutes-and
had once played it in nine seconds less time than he did. "Stay where you
are!" I snapped back at him. "I'll be with you at once." I then
put on "Benny Grey," the colorless handy man who does the murders in
The House with No Doors-two quick strokes to put dispirited lines into my
cheeks from nose to mouth corners, a mere suggestion of bags under my eyes, and
Factor's #5 sallow over all, taking not more than twenty seconds for
everything-I could have done it in my sleep; House ran on boards for ninety-two
performances before they recorded it.
Then I faced Broadbent and
he gasped. "Good God! I don't believe it."
I stayed in "Benny
Grey" and did not smile acknowledgment. What l3roadbent could not realize
was that the grease paint really was not necessary. It makes it easier, of
course, but I had used a touch of it primarily because he expected it; being
one of the yokels, he naturally assumed that make-up consisted of paint and
powder.
He
continued to stare at me. "Look here," he said in a hushed voice,
"could you do something like that for me? In a hurry?"
I
was about to say no when I realized that it presented an interesting
professional challenge, I had been tempted to say that if my father had started
in on him at five he might be ready now to sell cotton candy at a punkin'
doin's, but I thought better of it. "You simply want to be sure that you
will not be
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recognized?" I asked.
"Yes, yes! Can you
paint me up, or give me a false nose, or something?"
I
shook my head. "No matter what we did with make-up, it would simply make
you look like a child dressed up for Trick or Treat. You can't act and you can
never learn, at your age. We won't touch your face."
"Huh? But with this
beak on me-"
"Attend me. Anything I could do to that
lordly nose would just call attention to it, I assure you. Would it suffice if
an acquaintance looked at you and said, 'Say, that big fellow reminds me of Dak
Broadbent. It's not Dak, of course, but looks a little like him.' Eh?"
"Huh? I suppose so. As long as he was
sure it wasn't me. I'm supposed to be on. . . Well, I'm not supposed to be on
Earth just now."
"He'll be quite sure it is not you,
because we'll change your walk. That's the most distinctive thing about you. If
your walk is wrong, it cannot possibly be you-so it must be some other big
boned, broad-shouldered man who looks a bit like you."
"Okay, show me how to
walk."
"No, you could never
learn it. I'll force you to walk the way I want you to."
"How?"
'We'll put a handful of pebbles or the
equivalent in the toes of your boots. That will force you back on your heels
and make you stand up straight. It will be impossible for you to sneak along in
that catfooted spaceman's crouch. Mmrn 11 slap some tape across your shoulder
blades to remind you to keep your shoulders back, too. That will do it."
"You think they wont
recognize me just because I'll walk differently?"
"Certain. An acquaintance won't know why
he is sure it is not you, but the very fact that the conviction is subconscious
and unanalyzed will put it beyond reach of doubt. Oh, I'll do a little
something to your face, just to make you feel easier-but it isn't necessary."
We went back into the
living room of the suite. I was still being "Benny Grey" of course;
once I put on a role it takes a conscious effort of will to go back to being
myself. Dubois was busy at the phone; he looked up, saw me, and his jaw
dropped. He hurried out of the hush locus and demanded, "Who's he? And
where's that actor fellow?" After his first glance at me, he had looked
away and not bothered to look back-"Benny Grey" is such a tired,
negligible little guy that there is no point in looking at him.
"What actor fellow?" I answered in
Benny's flat, colorless tones. It brought Dubois' eyes back to me. Re looked at
me, started to look away, his eyes snapped back, then he looked at my clothes.
Broadbent guffawed and clapped him on the shoulder.
"And you said he
couldn't act!" He added sharply, "Did you get them all, Jock?"
"Yes." Dubois
looked back at me, looked perplexed, and looked away.
"Okay. We've got to be out of here in
four minutes. Let's see how fast you can get me fixed up, Lorenzo."
Dak had one boot off, his
blouse off, and his chemise pulled up so that I could tape his shoulders when
the light over the door came on and the buzzer sounded. He froze. "Jock?
We expecting anybody?"
"Probably Langston. He
said he was going to try to get over here before we left." Dubois started
for the door.
"It might not be him. It might be--"
1 did not get to hear Broadbent say who he thought it might be as Dubois
dilated the door. Framed in the doorway, looking like a nightmare toadstool,
was a Martian.
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For
an agony-stretched second I could see nothing but the Martian. I did not see
the human standing behind him, nor did I notice the life wand tile Martian
cradled in his pseudo limb.
Then the Martian flowed
inside, the man with him stepped in behind him, and the door relaxed. The
Martian squeaked, "Good afternoon, gentlemen. Going somewhere?"
I
was frozen, dazed, by acute xenophobia. Dak was handicapped by disarranged
clothing. But little Jock Dubois acted with a simple heroism that made him my
beloved brother even as he died . . . He flung himself at that life wand. Right
at it-he made no attempt to evade it.
He
must have been dead, a hole burned through his belly you could poke a fist
through, before he hit the floor. But he hung on and the pseudo limb stretched
like taffy-then snapped, broken off a few inches from the monster's neck, and
poor Jock still had the life wand cradled in his dead arms.
The
human who had followed that stinking, reeking thing into the room had to step
to one side before he could get in a shot- and he made a mistake. He should
have shot Dak first, then me. Instead he wasted his first one on Jock and he
never got a second one, as Dak shot him neatly in the face. I had not even
known Dak was armed.
Deprived of his weapon, the Martian did not
attempt to escape. Dak bounced to his feet, slid up to him, and said, "Ah,
Rrringriil. I see you."
"1 see you, Captain
Dak Broadhent," the Martian squeaked, then added, "you will tell my
nest?"
"I will tell your
nest, Rrringriil."
"I thank you, Captain
Dak Broadbent."
Dak
reached out a long bony finger and poked it into the eye nearest him, shoving
it on home until his knuckles were jammed against the brain case. He pulled it
out and his finger was slimed with green ichor. The creature's pseudo limbs
crawled back into its trunk in reflex spasm but the dead thing continued to
stand firm on its base. Dak hurried into the bath; 1 heard him washing his
hands. I stayed where I was, almost as frozen by shock as the late Rrringriil.
Dak came out, wiping his
hands on his shirt, and said, "We'll have to clean this up. There isn't
much time." He could have been speaking of a spilled drink.
I tried to make clear in
one jumbled sentence that I wanted no part of it, that we ought to call the
cops, that I wanted to get away from there before the cops came, that he knew
what he could do with his crazy impersonation job, and that I planned to sprout
wings and fly out the window, flak brushed it all aside. "Don't jitter,
Lorenzo. We're on minus minutes now. Help me get the bodies into the
bathroom."
"Huh? Good God, man!
Let's just lock up and run for it. Maybe they will never connect us with
it."
"Probably they wouldn't," he agreed,
"since neither one of us is supposed to be here. But they would be able to
see that Rrringriil had killed Jock-and we can't have that. Not now we
can't."
"Huh?"
"We can't afford a
news story about a Martian killing a human. So shut up and help me."
I shut up and helped him.
It steadied me to recall that "Benny Grey" had been the worst of
sadistic psychopaths, who had enjoyed dismembering his victims. I let
"Benny Grey" drag the two human bodies into the bath while Dak took
the life wand and sliced Rrringriil into pieces small enough to handle. He was
careful to make the first cut below the brain case so the job was not messy,
but I could not help him with it-it seemed to me that a dead Martian stank even
worse than a live one.
The
oubliette was concealed in a panel in the bath just beyond the bidet; if it had
not been marked with the usual radiation trefoil it would have been hard to
find. After we had shoved the chunks of Rrringriil down it (I managed to get my
spunk up enough to help), Dak tackled the messier problem of
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butchering and
draining the human corpses, using the wand and, of course, working in the bath
tub.
It
is amazing how much blood a man holds. We kept the water running the whole
time; nevertheless, it was bad. But when Dak had to tackle the remains of poor
little Jock, he just wasn't up to it. His eyes flooded with tears, blinding
him, so I elbowed him aside before he sliced off his own fingers and let
"Benny Grey" take over.
When I had finished and there was nothing left
to show that there had ever been two other men and a monster in the suite, I
sluiced out the tub carefully and stood up. Dak was in the doorway, looking as
calm as ever. "I've made sure the floor is tidy," he announced.
"I suppose a criminologist with proper equipment could reconstruct it-but
we are counting on no one ever suspecting. So let's get out of here. We've got
to gain almost twelve minutes somehow. Come on!"
I was beyond asking where
or why. "All right. Let's fix your boots."
He
shook his head. "It would slow me up. Right now speed is more essential
than not being recognized."
"I am in your hands." I followed him
to the door; he stopped and said, "There may be others around. If so,
shoot first-there's nothing else you can do." He had the life wand in his
hand, with his cloak drawn over it.
"Martians?"
"Or men. Or
both."
"Dak? Was Rrringriil
one of those four at the Ma? bar?"
"Certainly. Why do you think I went
around Robinson's barn to get you out of there and over here? They either
tailed you, as we did, or they tailed me. Didn't you recognize him?"
"Heavens, no! Those
monsters all look alike to me."
"And they say we all
look alike. The four were Rrringriil, his conjugate-brother Rrringlath, and two
others from his nest, of divergent lines. But shut up. If you see a Martian, shoot.
You have the other gun?"
"Uh, yes. Look, Dak, I
don't know what this is all about. But as long as those beasts are against you,
I'm with you. I despise Martians."
He
looked shocked. "You don't know what you are saying. We're not fighting
Martians; those four are renegades."
"Huh?"
"There are lots of good Martians-almost
all of them. Shucks, even Rrringriil wasn't a bad sort in most ways-I've had
many a fine chess game with him."
"What? In that case,
I'm--"
"Stow it. You're in too deep to back out.
Now quick-march, straight to the bounce tube. I'll cover our rear."
I shut up. I was in much
too deep-that was unarguable.
We
hit the sub-basement and went at once to the express tubes. A two-passenger
capsule was just emptying; Dak shoved me in so quickly that I did not see him
set the control combiiiation. But I was hardly surprised when the pressure let
up from my chest and I saw the sign blinking JEFFERSON SKYPORT-ALL OUT.
Nor
did I care what station it was as long as it was as far as possible from Hotel
Eisenhower. The few minutes we had been crammed in the vactube had been long
enough for me to devise a plan-sketchy, tentative, and subject to change
without notice, as the fine print always says, but a plan. It could
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be stated in two
words: Get lost!
Only that morning I would
have found the plan very difficult to execute; in our culture a man with no
money at all is baby-helpless. But with a hundred slugs in my pocket I could go
far and fast. I felt no obligation to Dak Broadbent. For reasons of his own-not
my reasons!-he had almost got me killed, then had crowded me into covering up a
crime, made rue a fugitive from justice. But we had evaded the police,
temporarily at least, and now, simply by shaking off Broadbent, I could forget
the whole thing, shelve it as a bad dream. It seemed most unlikely that I could
be connected with the affair even if it were discovered-fortunately a gentleman
always wears gloves, and I had had mine off only to put on makeup and later
during that ghastly house cleaning.
Aside from the warm burst
of adolescent heroics I had felt when I thought Dak was fighting Martians I had
no interest in his schemes-and even that sympathy had shut off when I found
that he liked Martians in general. His impersonation job I would not now touch
with the proverbial eleven-foot pole. To hell with Broadbent! All I wanted out
of life was money enough to keep body and soul together and a chance to
practice my art; cops-androbbers nonsense did not interest me-poor theater at
best.
Jefferson Port seemed handmade to carry out my
scheme. Crowded and confused, with express tubes spiderwebbing from it, in it,
if Dak took his eyes off me for half a second I would be halfway to Omaha. I
would lie low a few weeks, then get in touch with my agent and find out if any
inquiries had been made about me.
Dak
saw to it that we climbed out of the capsule together, else I would have
slammed it shut and gone elsewhere at once. I pretended not to notice and stuck
close as a puppy to him as we went up the belt to the main hall just under the
surface, coming out between the Pan-Am desk and American Skylines. Dak straight
across the waiting-room floor toward Diana, Ltd., and I surmised that he was
going to buy tickets for the Moon shuttle- how he planned to get me aboard
without passport or vaccination certificate I could not guess but I knew that
be was resourceful. I decided that I would fade into the furniture while he bad
his wallet out; when a man counts money there are at least a few seconds when
his eyes and attention are fully occupied.
But
we went right on past the Diana desk and through an archway marked Private
Berths. The passageway beyond was not crowded and the walls were blank; I
realized with dismay that I had let slip my best chance, back there in the busy
main hail. I held back. "Dak? Are we making a jump?"
"Of course."
"Dak, you're crazy.
I've got no papers, I don't even have a tourist card for the Moon."
"You won't need
them."
"Huh? They'll stop me
at 'Emigration.' Then a big, beefy cop will start asking questions."
A
hand about the size of a cat closed on my upper arm. "Let's not waste
time. Why should you go through 'Emigration,' when officially you aren't
leaving? And why should I, when officially I never arrived? Quick-march, old
son."
I
am well muscled and not small, but I felt as if a traffic robot were pulling me
out of a danger zone. I saw a sign reading MEN and I made a desperate attempt
to break it up. "Dak, half a minute, please. Got to see a man about the
plumbing."
He grinned at me. "Oh,
yes? You went just before we left the hotel." He did not slow up or let go
of me.
"Kidney trouble-"
"Lorenzo old son, I smell a case of cold
feet. Tell you what I'll do. See that cop up ahead?" At the
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end of the corridor, in the private berths station, a defender of
the peace was resting his big feet by leaning over a counter. "I find I
have a sudden attack of conscience. I feel a need to confess-about how you
killed a visiting Martian and two local citizens-about how you held a gun on me
and forced me to help you dispose of the bodies. About--"
"You're crazy!"
"Almost out of my mind
with anguish and remorse, shipmate."
"But-you've got
nothing on me."
"So? I think my story
will sound more convincing than yours. I know what it is all about and you
don't. I know all about you and you know nothing about me. For example he
mentioned a couple of details in my past that I would have sworn were buried
and forgotten. All right, so I did have a couple of routines useful for stag
shows that are not for the family trade-a man has to eat. But that matter about
Bebe; that was hardly fair, for I certainly had not known that she was
underage. As for that hotel bill, while it is true that bilking an
"innkeeper" in Miami Beach carries much the same punishment as armed
robbery elsewhere, it is a very provincial attitude-I would have paid if I had
had the money. As for that unfortunate incident in Seattle-well, what I am
trying to say is that Dak did know an amazing amount about my background but he
had the wrong slant on most of it. Still.
"So," he continued, "let's walk
right up to yon gendarme and make a clean breast of it. I'll lay you seven to
two as to which one of us is out on bail first."
So
we marched up to the cop and on past him. He was talking to a female clerk back
of the railing and neither one of them looked up. Dak took out two tickets
reading, GATE PASS- MAINTENANCE PERMIT-Berth K-l27, and stuck them into the
monitor. The machine scanned them, a transparency directed us to take an
tipper-level car, code King 127; the gate let us through and locked behind us
as a recorded voice said, "Watch your step, please, and heed radiation
warnings. The Terminal Company is not responsible for accidents beyond the
gate."
Dak
punched an entirely different code in the little car; it wheeled around, picked
a track, and we took off out under the field. It did not matter to me. I was
beyond caring.
When we stepped out of the little car it went
back where it came from. In front of me was a ladder disappearing into the
steel ceiling above. Dak nudged me. "Up you go." There was a scuttle
hole at the top and on it a sign: RADIATION HAZARD-Optimax 13 Seconds. The
figures had been chalked in. I stopped. I have no special interest in offspring
but I am no fool. Dak grinned and said, "Got your lead britches on? Open
it, go through at once and straight up the ladder into the ship. If you don't
stop to scratch, you'll make it with at least three seconds to spare."
I believe I made it with
five seconds to spare. I was out in the sunlight for about ten feet, then I was
inside a long tube in the ship. I used about every third rung.
The rocket ship was
apparently small. At least the control room was quite cramped; I never got a
look at the outside. The only other spaceships I had ever been in were the Moon
shuttles Evangeline and her sister ship the Gabriel, that being the year in
which I had incautiously accepted a lunar engagement on a co-op basis-our
impresario had had a notion that a juggling, tightrope, and acrobatic routine
would go well in the one-sixth gee of the Moon, which was correct as far as it
went, but he had not allowed rehearsal time for us to get used to low gravity.
I had to take advantage of the Distressed Travelers Act to get back and I had
lost my wardrobe.
There were two men in the control room; one
was lying in one of three acceleration couches fiddling with dials, the other
was making obscure motions with a screw driver. The one in the couch
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glanced at me, said
nothing. The other one turned, looked worried, then said past me, "What
happened to Jock?"
Dak
almost levitated out of the hatch behind me. "No time!" he snapped.
"Have you compensated for his mass?"
"Red, is she taped?
Tower?"
The man in the couch
answered lazily, "I've been recomputing every two minutes. You're clear
with the tower. Minus forty-, uh, seven seconds."
"Out of that bunk!
Scram! I'm going to catch that tick!"
Red
moved lazily out of the couch as Dak got in. The other man shoved me into the
copilot's couch and strapped a safety belt across my chest. He turned and
dropped down the escape tube. Red followed him, then stopped with his head and
shoulders out. "Tickets, please!" he said cheerfully.
"Oh, cripes!" Dak loosened a safety
belt, reached for a pocket, got out the two field passes we bad used to sneak
aboard, and shoved them at him.
"Thanks," Red
answered. "See you in church. Hot jets, and so forth." He disappeared
with leisurely swiftness; I heard the air lock close and my eardrums popped.
Dak did not answer his farewell; his eyes were busy on the computer dials and
he made some minor adjustment.
"Twenty-one seconds," he said to me.
"There'll be no rundown. Be sure your arms are inside and that you are
relaxed. The first step is going to be a honey."
I did as I was told, then
waited for hours in that curtain-going-up tension. Finally I said,
"Dak?"
"Shut up!"
"Just one thing: where
are we going?"
"Mars." I saw his thumb jab at a red
button and I blacked out.
Chapter 2
What is so funny about a man being dropsick?
Those dolts with cast-iron stomachs always laugh-I'll bet they would laugh if
Grandma broke both legs.
I
was spacesick, of course, as soon as the rocket ship quit blasting and went
into free fall. I came out of it fairly quickly as my stomach was practically
empty-I'd eaten nothing since breakfast- and was simply wanly miserable the
remaining eternity of that awful trip. It took us an hour and forty-three
minutes to make rendezvous, which is roughly equal to a thousand years in
purgatory to a ground hog like myself.
I'll say this for Dak, though: he did not
laugh. Dak was a professional and he treated my normal reaction with the
impersonal good manners of a ifight nurse-not like those flat-headed,
loudvoiced jackasses you'll find on the passenger list of a Moon shuttle. If I
had my way, those healthy self ?anickers would be spaced in mid-orbit and
allowed to laugh themselves to death in vacuum.
Despite the turmoil in my mind and the
thousand questions I wanted to ask we had almost made rendezvous with a
torchship, which was in parking orbit around Earth, before I could stir up
interest in anything. I suspect that if one were to inform a victim of
spacesickness that he was to be shot at sunrise his own answer would be,
"Yes? Would you hand me that sack, please?"
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But I finally recovered to
the point where instead of wanting very badly to die the scale had tipped so
that I had a flickering, halfhearted interest in continuing to live. Dak was
busy most of the time at the ship's communicator, apparently talking on a very
tight beam for his hands constantly nursed the directional control like a
gunner laying a gun under difficulties. I could not hear what he said, or even
read his lips, as he had his face pushed into the nimble box. I assumed that he
was talking to the long-jump ship we were to meet.
But
when he pushed the communicator aside and lit a cigarette I repressed the
stomach retch that the mere sight of tobacco smoke had inspired and said,
"Dak, isn't it about time you told me the score?"
"Plenty of time for
that on our way to Mars."
"Huh? Damn your arrogant ways," I
protested feebly. "I don't want to go to Mars. I would never have
considered your crazy offer if 1 had known it was on Mars."
"Suit yourself. You
don't have to go."
"Eh?"
"The air lock is right
behind you. Get out and walk. Mind you close the door."
I did not answer the
ridiculous suggestion. He went on, "But if you can't breathe space the
easiest thing to do is to go to Mars- and I'll see that you get back. The Can
Do-that's this bucket-is about to rendezvous with the Go For Broke, which is a
high-gee torchship. About seventeen seconds and a gnat's wink after we make
contact the Go For Broke will torch for Mars-for we've got to be there by
Wednesday."
I
answered with the petulant stubbornness of a sick man. "I'm not going to
Mars. I'm going to stay right in this ship. Somebody has to take it back and
land it on Earth. You can't fool me."
"True," Broadbent agreed. "But
you won't be in it. The three blokes who are supposed to be in this
ship-according to the records back at Jefferson Field-are in the Go For Broke
right now. This is a three-man ship, as you've noticed. I'm afraid you will
find them stuffy about giving up a place to you. And besides, how would you get
back through 'Immigration'?"
"I don't care! I'd be
back on ground."
"And in jail, charged
with everything from illegal entry to mopery and dopery in the spaceways. At
the very least they would be sure that you were smuggling and they would take
you to some quiet back room and run a needle in past your eyeball and find out
just what you were up to. They would know what questions to ask and you
wouldn't be able to keep from answering. But you wouldn't be able to implicate
me, for good old Dak Broadhent hasn't been back to Earth in quite a spell and
has unimpeachable witnesses to prove it."
I thought about it sickly,
both from fear and the continuing effects of spacesickness. "So you would
tip off the police? You dirty, slimy--" I broke off for lack of an
adequately insulting noun.
"Oh no! Look, old son, I might twist your
arm a bit and let you think that I would cry copper-but I never would. But
Rrringriil's conjugate-brother Rrringlath certainly knows that old 'Grill' went
in that door and failed to come out. He will tip off the noises.
Conjugate-brother is a relationship so close that we will never understand it,
since we don't reproduce by fission."
I
didn't care whether Martians reproduced like rabbits or the stork brought them
in a little black bag. The way he told it I could never go back to Earth, and I
said so. He shook his head. "Not at all. Leave it to me and we will slide
you back in as neatly as we slid you out. Eventually you will walk off that
field or some other field with a gate pass which shows that you are a mechanic
who has been making some last-minute adjustment-and you'll have greasy
coveralls and a tool kit to back it up. Surely
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an actor of your skill can play
the part of a mechanic for a few minutes?"
"Eh? Why, certainly!
But-"
"There you are! You
stick with ol' Doc Dak; he'll take care of you. We shuffled eight guild
brothers in this current caper to get me on Earth and both of us off; we can do
it again. But you would not stand a chance without voyageurs to help you."
He grinned. "Every voyageur is a free trader at heart. The art of
smuggling being what it is, we are all of us always ready to help out one
another in a little innocent deception of the port guards. But a person outside
the lodge does not ordinarily get such co-operation."
I tried to steady my
stomach and think about it. "Dak, is this a smuggling deal? Because-"
"Oh no! Except that we
are smuggling you."
"I was going to say
that I don't regard smuggling as a crime."
"Who does? Except
those who make money off the rest of us by limiting trade. But this is a
straight impersonation job, Lorenzo, and you are the man for it. It wasn't an
accident that I ran across you in the bar; there had been a tail on you for two
days. As soon as I hit dirt I went where you were." He frowned. "I
wish I could be sure our honorable antagonists had been following me, and not
you."
"Why?"
"If they were
following me they were trying to find out what I was after-which is okay, as
the lines were already drawn; we knew we were mutual enemies. But if they were
following you, then they knew what I was after-an actor who could play the
role."
"But how could they
know that? Unless you told them?"
"Lorenzo, this thing is big, much bigger
than you imagine. I don't see it all myself-and the less you know about it
until you must, the better off you are. But I can tell you this: a set of
personal characteristics was fed into the big computer at the System Census
Bureau at The Hague and the machine compared them with the personal
characteristics of every male professional actor alive. It was done as
discreetly as possible but somebody might have guessed-and talked. The
specifications amounted to identification both of the principal and the actor
who could double for him, since the job had to be perfect."
"Oh. And the machine
told you that I was the man for it?"
"Yes. You-and one
other."
This was another good place
for me to keep my mouth shut. But I could not have done so if my life had
depended on it-which in a way it did. I just had to know who the other actor
was who was considered competent to play a role which called for my unique
talents. "This other one? Who is he?"
Dak
looked me over; I could see him hesitate. "Mmm-fellow by the name of Orson
Trowbridge. Know him?"
"That ham!" For a
moment I was so furious that I forgot my nausea.
"So? I hear that he is
a very good actor."
I simply could not help
being indignant at the idea that anyone should even think about that oaf
Trowbridge for a role for which I was being considered. "That arm-waver!
That word-mouther!" I stopped, realizing that it was more dignified to
ignore such colleagues-if the word fits. But that popinjay was so conceited
that- well, if the role called for him to kiss a lady's hand, Trowbridge would
fake it by kissing his own thumb instead. A narcissist, a poseur, a double
fake-how could such a man live a role?
Yet such is the injustice
of fortune that his sawings and rantings had paid him well while real artists
went hungry.
"Dak, I simply cannot see why you
considered him for it."
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"Well, we didn't want
him; he is tied up with some long-term contract that would make his absence
conspicuous and awkward. It was lucky for us that you were-uh, 'at liberty.' As
soon as you agreed to the job I had Jock send word to call off the team that
was trying to arrange a deal with Trowbridge."
"I should think
so!"
"But-see here,
Lorenzo, I'm going to lay it on the line. While you were busy whooping your
cookies after Brennschluss I called the Go For Broke and told them to pass the
word down to get busy on Trowbridge again." "What?"
"You asked for it, shipmate. See here, a
man in my racket contracts to herd a heap to Ganymede, that means he will pilot
that pot to Ganymede or die trying. He doesn't get fainthearted and try to
welsh while the ship is being loaded. You told me you would take this job-no
'ifs' or 'ands' or 'buts'-you took the job. A few minutes later there is a
fracas; you lose your nerve. Later you try to run out on me at the field. Only
ten minutes ago you were screaming to be taken back dirtside. Maybe you are a
better actor than Trowbridge. I wouldn't know. But I know we need a man who can
be depended on not to lose his nerve when the time comes. I understand that
Trowbridge is that sort of bloke. So if we can get him, we'll use him instead,
pay you off and tell you nothing and ship you back. Understand?"
Too well I understood. Dak
did not use the word-I doubt if he would have understood it-but he was telling
me that I was not a trouper. The bitter part about it was that he was
justified. I could not be angry; I could only be ashamed. I had been an idiot
to accept the contract without knowing more about it-but I had agreed to play
the role, without conditions or escape clauses. Now I was trying to back out,
like a rank amateur with stage fright.
"The show must go
on" is the oldest tenet of show business. Perhaps it has no philosophical
verity, but the things men live by are rarely subject to logical proof. My
father had believed it-I had seen him play two acts with a burst appendix and
then take his bows before he had let them rush him to a hospital. I could see
his face now, looking at me with the contempt of a trouper for a so-called
actor who would let an audience down.
"Dak," I said
humbly, "I am very sorry. I was wrong."
He looked at me sharply.
"You'll do the job?"
"Yes." I meant it sincerely. Then I
suddenly remembered a factor which could make the part as impossible for me as
the role of Snow White in The Seven Dwarfs. "That is-well, I want to.
But--"
"But what?" he
said scornfully. "More of your damned temperament?"
"No, no! But you said we were going to
Mars. Dak, am I going to be expected to do this impersonation with Martians
around me?"
"Eh? Of course. How
else on Mars?"
"Uh ... But, Dak, I can't stand Martians!
They give me the heebie jeebies. I wouldn't want to-I would try not to-but I
might fall right out of the characterization."
"Oh. If that is all
that is worrying you, forget it."
"Huh? But I can't
forget it. I can't help it. I-"
"I said, 'Forget it.' Old son, we knew
you were a peasant in such matters-we know all about you. Lorenzo, your fear of
Martians is as childish and irrational as a fear of spiders or snakes. But we
had anticipated it and it will be taken care of. So forget it."
"Well-all right." I was not much
reassured, but he had flicked me where it hurt. "Peasant"-why,
"peasants" were the audience! So I shut up.
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Dak
pulled the communicator to him, did not bother to silence his message with the
rumble box: "Dandelion to Tumbleweed- cancel Plan Inkblot. We will
complete Mardi Gras."
"Dak?" I said as
he signed off.
"Later," he answered. "I'm
about to match orbits. The contact may be a little rough, as I am not going to
waste time worrying about chuck holes. So pipe down and hang on."
And
it was rough. By the time we were in the torchship I was glad to be comfortably
back in free fall again; surge nausea is even worse than everyday dropsickness.
But we did not stay in free fall more than five minutes; the three men who were
to go back in the Can Do were crowding into the transfer lock even as Dak and I
floated into the torchship. The next few moments were extremely confused. I
suppose I am a ground hog at heart for I disorient very easily when I can't
tell the floor from the ceiling. Someone called out, "Where is he?"
Dak replied, "Here)" The same voice replied, "Him?" as if
he could not believe his eyes.
"Yes, yes!" Dak answered. "He's
got make-up on. Never mind, it's all right. Help me get him into the cider
press."
A
hand grabbed my arm, towed me along a narrow passage and into a compartment.
Against one bulkhead and flat to it were two bunks, or "cider presses,"
the bathtub-shaped, hydraulic, pressure-distribution tanks used for high
acceleration in torchships. I had never seen one before but we had used quite
convincing mock-ups in the space opus The Earth Raiders.
There was a stenciled sign
on the bulkhead behind the bunks: WARRING!!! Do Not Take More than Three
Gravities without a Gee Suit. By Order of-- I rotated slowly out of range of
vision before I could finish reading it and someone shoved me into one cider
press. Dak and the other men were hurriedly strapping me against it when a horn
somewhere near by broke into a horrid hooting. It continued for several
seconds, then a voice replaced it: "Red warning! Two gravities! Three
minutes! Red warning! Two gravities! Three minutes!" Then the hooting
started again.
Through the racket I heard
Dak ask urgently, "Is the projector all set? The tapes ready?"
"Sure, sure!''
"Got the hypo?"
Dak squirmed around in the air and said to me, "Look, shipmate, we're
going to give you a shot. It's all right. Part of it is Nullgrav, the rest is a
stimulant-for you are going to have to stay awake and study your lines. It will
make your eyeballs feel hot at first and it may make you itch, but it won't
hurt you."
"Wait, Dak, I-"
"No time! I've got to smoke this scrap
heap!" He twisted and was out the door before I could protest. The second
man pushed up my left sleeve, held an injection gun against the skin, and I had
received the dose before I knew it. Then he was gone. The hooting gave way to:
"Red waning! Two gravities! Two minutes!"
I
tried to look around but the drug made me even more confused. My eyeballs did
feel hot and my teeth as well and I began to feel an almost intolerable itching
along my spine-but the safety straps kept me from reaching the tortured
area-and perhaps kept me from breaking an arm at acceleration. The hooting
stopped again and this time Dak's self-confident baritone boomed out,
"Last red warning! Two gravities! One minute! Knock off those pinochle
games and spread your fat carcasses-we're goin' to smoke!" The hooting was
replaced this time by a recording of Arkezian's Ad Astra, opus 61 in C major. It
was the controversial London Symphony version with the 14-cycle
"scare" notes buried in the timpani.
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Battered, bewildered,
and doped as I was, they seemed to have no effect on me-you can't wet a river.
A
mermaid came in the door. No scaly tail, surely, but a mermaid is what she
looked like. When my eyes refocused I saw that it was a very likely looking and
adequately mammalian young woman in singlet and shorts, swimming along head
first in a way that made clear that free fall was no novelty to her. She
glanced at me without smiling, placed herself against the other cider press,
and took hold of the hand grips-she did not bother with safety belts. The music
hit the rolling finale and I felt myself grow very heavy.
Two
gravities is not bad, not when you are floating in a liquid bed. The skin over
the top of the cider press pushed up around me, supporting me inch by inch; I
simply felt heavy and found it hard to breathe. You hear these stories about
pilots torching at ten gravities and ruining themselves and I have no doubt
that they are true-but two gravities, taken in the cider press, simply makes
one feel languid, unable to move.
It
was some time before I realized that the horn in the ceiling was speaking to
me. "Lorenzo! How are you doing, shipmate?"
"All right." The
effort made me gasp. "How long do we have to put up with this?"
"About two days."
I
must have moaned, for Dak laughed at me. "Quit bellyaching, chum! My first
trip to Mars took thirty-seven weeks, every minute of it free fall in an
elliptical orbit. You're taking the luxury route, at a mere double gee for a
couple of days-with a one-gee rest at turnover, I might add. We ought to charge
you for it."
I started to tell him what
I thought of his humor in scathing green-room idiom, then recalled that there
was a lady present. My father had taught me that a woman will forgive any
action, up to and including assault with violence, but is easily insulted by
language; the lovelier half of our race is symbol-oriented-very strange, in
view of their extreme practicality. In any case, I have never let a taboo word
pass my lips when it might offend the ears of a lady since the time 1 last
received the back of my father's hard hand full on my mouth. . . Father could
have given Professor Pavlov pointers in reflex conditioning.
But Dak was speaking again.
"Penny! You there, honey chile?"
"Yes, Captain,"
the young woman with me answered.
"Okay, start him on
his homework. I'll be down when I have this firetrap settled in its
groove."
"Very well,
Captain." She turned her head toward me and said in a soft, husky,
contralto voice, "Dr. Capek wants you simply to relax and look at movies for
several hours. I am here to answer questions as necessary."
I sighed. "Thank
goodness someone is at last going to answer questions!"
She did not answer, but
raised an ann with some difficulty and passed it over a switch. The lights in
the compartment died out and a sound and stereo image built up in front of my
eyes. I recognized the central figure-just as any of the billions of citizens
of the Empire would have recognized him-and I realized at last how thoroughly
and mercilessly Dak Broadbent had tricked me.
It was Bonforte.
The
Bonforte, I mean-the Right Honorable John Joseph Bonforte, former Supreme
Minister, leader of the loyal opposition, and head of the Expansionist
coalition-the most loved (and the most hated!) man in the entire Solar System.
My
astonished mind made a standing broad jump and arrived at what seemed a logical
certainty. Bonforte had lived through at least three assassination attempts-or
so the news reports would have us
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believe. At least two of his escapes had seemed almost miraculous.
Suppose they were not miraculous? Suppose they had all been successful-but dear
old Uncle Joe Bonforte had always been somewhere else at the time?
You
could use up a lot of actors that way.
Chapter 3
I had never meddled in
politics. My father had warned against it. "Stay out of it, Larry,"
he had told me solemnly. "The publicity you get that way is bad publicity.
The peasants don't like it." I had never voted-not even after the
amendment of '98 made it easy for the floating population (which includes, of
course, most members of the profession) to exercise franchise.
However, insofar as I had
political leanings of any sort, they certainly did not lean toward Bonforte. I
considered him a dangerous man and very possibly a traitor to the human race.
The idea of standing up and getting killed in his place was-how shall I put
it?-distasteful to me. But-what a role!
I had once played the lead
in L'Aiglon and I had played Caesar in the only two plays about him worthy of
the name. But to play such a role in life-well, it is enough to make one
understand how a man could go to the guillotine in another man's place-just for
the chance to play, even for a few moments, the ultimately exacting role, in
order to create the supreme, the perfect, work of art.
I wondered who my
colleagues had been who had been unable to resist that temptation on those
earlier occasions. They had been artists, that was certain-though their very
anonymity was the only tribute to the success of their characterizations. I
tried to remember just when the earlier attempts on Bonforte's life had taken
place and which colleagues who might have been capable of the role had died or
dropped out of sight at those times. But it was useless. Not only was I not too
sure of the details of current political history but also actors simply fade
out of view with depressing frequency; it is a chancy profession even for the
best of us.
I found that I had been
studying closely the characterization.
I realized I could play it.
Hell, I could play it with one foot in a bucket and a smell of smoke backstage.
To begin with, there was no problem of physique; Bonforte and I could have
swapped clothes without a wrinkle. These childish conspirators who had
shanghaied me had vastly overrated the importance of physical resemblance,
since it means nothing if not backed up by art-and need not be at all close if
the actor is competent. But I admit that it does help and their silly game with
the computer machine had resulted (quite by accident!) in selecting a true
artist, as well as one who was in measurements and bony structure the twin of
the politician. His profile was much like mine; even his hands were long,
narrow, and aristocratic like mine-and hands are harder than faces.
That limp, supposedly the result of one of the
attempts on his life-nothing to it! After watching him for a few minutes I knew
that I could get up from that bed (at one gravity, that is) and walk in
precisely the same way and never have to think about it. The way he had of
scratching his collarbone and then brushing his chin, the almost imperceptible
tic which preceded each of his sentences-such things were no trouble; they
soaked into my subconscious like water into sand.
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To
be sure, he was fifteen or twenty years older than I was, but it is easier to
play a role older than oneself than one younger. In any case, age to an actor
is simply a matter of inner attitude; it has nothing to do with the steady
march of catabolism.
I could have played him on
boards, or read a speech in his place, within twenty minutes. But this part, as
I understood it, would be more than such an interpretation; Dak had hinted that
I would have to convince people who knew hlin well, perhaps in intimate
circumstances. This is surpassingly more difficult. Does he take sugar in his
coffee? If so, how much? Which hand does he use to strike a cigarette and with
what gesture? I got the answer to that one and planted it deep in my mind even
as I phrased the question; the simulacrum in front of me struck a cigarette in
a fashion that convinced me that he had used matches and the oldfashioned sort
of gasper for years before he had gone along with the march of so-called
progress.
Worst of all, a man is not a single
complexity; he is a different complexity to every person who knows him-which
means that, to be successful, an impersonation must change for each
"audience" -for each acquaintance of the man being impersonated. This
is not merely difficult; it is statistically impossible. Such little things
could trip one up. What shared experiences does your principal have with
acquaintance John Jones? With a hundred, or a thousand, John Joneses? How could
an impersonator possibly know?
Acting per Se, like all art, is a process of
abstracting, of retaining only significant detail. But in impersonation any
detail can be significant. In time, something as silly as not crunching celery
could let the cat out of the bag.
Then I recalled with glum conviction that my
performance probably need be convincing only long enough for a marksman to draw
a bead on me.
But
I was still studying the man I was to replace (what else could I do?) when the
door opened and I heard Dak in his proper person call out, "Anybody
home?" The lights came on, the threedimensional vision faded, and I felt as
if I had been wrenched from a dream. I turned my head; the young woman called
Penny was struggling to lift her head from the other hydraulic bed and Dak was
standing braced in the doorway.
I
looked at him and said wonderingly, "How do you manage to stand up?"
Part of my mind, the professional part that works independentiy, was noting how
he stood and filing it in a new drawer marked: "How a Man Stands under Two
Gravities."
He grinned at me.
"Nothing to it. I wear arch supports."
"Hmmmph!"
"You can stand up, if you want to.
Ordinarily we discourage passengers from getting out of the boost tanks when we
are torching at anything over one and a half gees-too much chance that some
idiot wifi fall over his own feet and break a leg. But I once saw a really
tough weight-lifter type climb out of the press and walk at five gravities-but
he was never good for much afterwards. But two gees is okay-about like carrying
another man piggyback." He glanced at the young lady. "Giving him the
straight word, Penny?"
"He hasn't asked
anything yet."
"So? Lorenzo, I
thought you were the lad who wanted all the answers."
I
shrugged. "I cannot now see that it matters, since it is evident that I
will not live long enough to appreciate them."
"Eh? What soured your milk, old
son?"
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"Captain
Broadbent," I said bitterly, "I am inhibited in expressing myself by
the presence of a lady; therefore I cannot adequately discuss your ancestry,
personal habits, morals, and destination. Let it stand that I knew what you had
tricked me into as soon as I became aware of the identity of the man I am to
impersonate. I will content myself with one question only: who is about to
attempt to assassinate Bonforte? Even a clay pigeon should be entitled to know
who is shooting at him."
For the first time I saw
Dak register surprise. Then he laughed so hard that the acceleration seemed
to be too much for him; he slid to the
deck and braced his back against a bulkhead, still laughing. "I don't see
anything funny about it," I said angrily. He stopped and wiped his eyes.
"Lorrie old son, did you honestly think that I had set you up as a
sitting duck?" "It's obvious."
I told him my deductions about the earlier assassination attempts. He had the
sense not to laugh again. "I see. You thought it was a job about like food
taster for a
Middle Ages king.
Well, we'll have to try to straighten you out; I don't suppose it helps your
acting to think that you are about to be burned down where you stand. Look,
I've been with the Chief for six years. During that time I know he has never
used a double . . . Nevertheless, I was present on two occasions when attempts
were made on his life- one of those times I shot the hatchet man. Penny, you've
been with the Chief longer than that. Has he ever used a double before?"
She looked at me coldly.
"Never. The very idea that the Chief would let anybody expose himself to
danger in his place is-well, I ought to slap your face; that's what I ought to
do!"
"Take it easy, Penny," Dak said
mildly. "You've both got jobs to do and you are going to have to work with
him. Besides, his wrong guess isn't too silly, not from the outside. By the way,
Lorenzo, this is Penelope Russell. She is the Chief's personal secretary, which
makes her your number-one coach."
"I am honored to meet
you, mademoiselle."
"I wish I could say the same!"
"Stow it, Penny, or I'll spank your
round fanny-at two gravities. Lorenzo, I concede that doubling
for John Joseph
Bonforte isn't as safe as tiding in a wheel chair-shucks, as we both know,
several attempts have been made to close out his life insurance. But that is
not what we are afraid of this time. Matter of fact, this time, for political
reasons you will presently understand, the laddies we are up against won't dare
to try to kill the Chief-or to kill you when you are doubling for the Chief.
They are playing rough -as you know!-and they would kill me, or even Penny, for
the slightest advantage. They would kill you right now, if they could get at
you. But when you make this public appearance as the Chief you'll be safe; the
circumstances will be such that they can't afford to kill."
He studied my face.
"Well?"
I shook my head. "I don't follow
you."
"No, but you will. It is a
complicated matter, involving Martian ways of looking at things. Take it
for granted; you'll
know all about it before we get there."
I still did not like it.
Thus far Dak had told me no outright lies that I knew of-but he could lie
effectively by not telling all that he knew, as I had learned the bitter way. I
said, "See here, I have no reason to trust you, or to trust this young
lady-if you will pardon mc, miss. But while I haven't any liking for Mr.
Bonforte, he does have the reputation for being painfully, even offensively,
honest. When do I get to talk to him? As soon as we reach Mars?"
Dak's ugly, cheerful face was suddenly
shadowed with sadness. "I'm afraid not. Didn't Penny tell
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you?"
"Tell me what?"
"Old son, that's why
we've got to have a double for the Chief. They've kidnapped him!"
My
head ached, possibly from the double weight, or perhaps from too many shocks.
"Now you know," Dak went on. "You know why Jock Dubois didn't
want to trust you with it until after we raised ground. It is the biggest news
story since the first landing on the Moon, and we are sitting on it, doing our
damnedest to keep it from ever being known. We hope to use you until we can
find him and get him back. Matter of fact, you have already started your
impersonation. This ship is not really the Go For Broke; it is the Chief's
private yacht and traveling office, the Tom Paine. The Go For Broke is riding a
parking orbit around Mars, with its transponder giving out the recognition
signal of this ship-a fact known only to its captain and comm officer-while the
Tommie tucks up her skirts and rushes to Earth to pick up a substitute for the
Chief. Do you begin to scan it, old son?"
I
admit that I did not. "Yes, but-see here, Captain, if Mr. Bonforte's
political enemies have kidnapped him, why keep it secret? I should expect you to
shout it from the housetops."
"On Earth we would. At New Batavia we
would. On Venus we would. But here we are dealing with Mars. Do you know the
legend of Kkkahgral the Younger?"
"Eh? I'm afraid I
don't."
"You must study it; it
will give you insight into what makes a Martian tick. Briefly, this boy Kkkah
was to appear at a certain time and place, thousands of years ago, for a very
high honor-like being knighted. Through no fault of his own (the way we would
look at it) he failed to make it on time. Obviously the only thing to do was to
kill him-by Martian standards. But because of his youth and his distinguished
record some of the radicals present argued that he should be allowed to go back
and start over. But Kkkahgral would have none of it. He insisted on his right
to prosecute the case himself, won it, and was executed. Which makes him the
very embodiment, the patron saint, of propriety on Mars."
"That's crazy!"
"Is it? We aren't
Martians. They are a very old race and they have worked out a system of debts
and obligations to cover every possible situation-the greatest formalists
conceivable. Compared with them, the ancient Japanese, with their girl and
gimu, were outright anarchists. Martians don't have 'right' and 'wrong'-instead
they have propriety and impropriety, squared, cubed, and loaded with gee juice.
But where it bears on this problem is that the Chief was about to be adopted
into the nest of Kkkahgral the Younger himself. Do you scan me now?"
I
still did not. To my mind this Kkkah character was one of the more loathsome
items from Le Grand Guignol. Broadbent went on, "It's simple enough. The
Chief is probably the greatest practical student of Martian customs and
psychology. He has been working up to this for years. Comes local noon on
Wednesday at Lacus Soli, the ceremony of adoption takes place. If the Chief is
there and goes through his paces properly, everything is sweet. If he is not
there-and it makes no difference at all why he is not there-his name is mud on
Mars, in every nest from pole to pole- and the greatest interplanetary and
interracial political coup ever attempted falls flat on its face. Worse than
that, it will backfire. My guess is that the very least that will happen is for
Mars to withdraw even from its present loose association with the Empire. Much
more likely there will be reprisals and human beings will be killed-maybe every
human on Mars. Then the extremists in the Humanity Party would have theft way
and Mars would be brought into the Empire by force-but only after every Martian
was dead. And all set off
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just by Bonforte failing to show up for the adoption
ceremony. . . Martians take these things very seriously."
Dak left as suddenly as he
had appeared and Penelope Russell turned on the picture projector again. It
occurred to me fretfully that I should have asked him what was to keep our
enemies from simply killing me, if all that was needed to upset the political
applecart was to keep Bonforte (in his proper person, or through his double)
from attending some barbaric Martian ceremony. But I had forgotten to
ask-perhaps I was subconsciously afraid of being answered.
But shortly I was again
studying Bonforte, watching his movements and gestures, feeling his
expressions, subvocalizing the tones of his voice, while floating in that
detached, warm reverie of artistic effort. Already I was "wearing his
head."
I
was panicked out of it when the images shifted to one in which Bonforte was
surrounded by Martians, touched by their pseudo limbs. I had been so deep
inside the picture that I could actually feel them myself-and the stink was
unbearable. I made a strangled noise and clawed at it. "Shut it oft!"
The
lights came up and the picture disappeared. Miss Russell was looking at me.
"What in the world is the matter with you?"
I
tried to get my breath and stop trembling. "Miss Russell-I am very
sorry-but please-don't turn that on again. I can't stand Martians."
She
looked at me as if she could not believe what she saw but despised it anyhow.
"I told them," she said slowly and scornfully, "that this
ridiculous scheme would not work."
"I am very sorry. I
cannot help it."
She
did not answer but climbed heavily out of the cider press. She did not walk as
easily at two gravities as Dak did, but she managed. She left without another
word, closing the door as she went.
She
did not return. Instead the door was opened by a man who appeared to be
inhabiting a giant kiddie stroller. "Howdy there, young fellow!" he
boomed out. He was sixtyish, a bit too heavy, and bland; I did not have to see
his diploma to be aware that his was a "bedside" manner.
"How do you do,
sir?"
"Well enough. Better at lower
acceleration." He glanced down at the contrivance he was strapped into.
"How do you like my corset-on-wheels? Not stylish, perhaps, but it takes
some of the strain off my heart. By the way, just to keep the record straight,
I'm Dr. Capek, Mr. Bonforte's personal therapist. I know who you are. Now
what's this we hear about you and Martians?"
I tried to explain it
clearly and unemotionally.
Dr.
Capek nodded. "Captain Broadbent should have told me. I would have changed
the order of your indoctrination program. The captain is a competent young
fellow in his way but his muscles run ahead of his brain on occasion . . . He
is so perfectly normal an extrovert that he frightens me. But no harm done. Mr.
Smythe, 1 want your permission to hypnotize you. You have my word as a
physician that it will be used only to help you in this matter and that I will
in no wise tamper with your personal integration." He pulled out an
old-fashioned pocket watch of the sort that is almost a badge of his profession
and took my pulse.
I answered, "You have
my permission readily, sir-but it won't do any good. I can't go under." I
had learned hypnotic techniques myself during the time I was showing my
mentalist act, but my teachers had never had any luck hypnotizing me. A touch
of hypnotism is very useful to such an act, especially if the local police
aren't too fussy about the laws the medical association has hampered us with.
"So? Well, we'll just have to do the best
we can, then. Suppose you relax, get comfortable, and we'll
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talk about your
problem." He still kept the watch in his hand, fiddling with it and
twisting the chain, after he had stopped taking my pulse. I started to mention
it, since it was catching the reading light just over my head, but decided that
it was probably a nervous habit of which he was not aware and really too
trivial a matter to call to the attention of a stranger.
"I'm relaxed," I
assured him. "Ask me anything you wish. Or free association, if you
prefer."
"Just let yourself float," he said
softly. "Two gravities makes you feel heavy, doesn't it? I usually just
sleep through it myself. It pulls the blood out of the brain, makes one sleepy.
They are beginning to boost the drive again. We'll all have to sleep . . .
We'll be heavy . . . We'll have to sleep. .
I
started to tell him that he had better put his watch away-or it would spin
right out of his hand. Instead I fell asleep.
When I woke up, the other acceleration bunk
was occupied by Dr. Capek. "Howdy, bub," he greeted me. "I got
tired of that confounded perambulator and decided to stretch out here and
distribute the strain."
"Uh, are we back on
two gravities again?"
"Eh? Oh yes! We're on two
gravities."
"I'm sorry I blacked out. How long
was I asleep?"
"Oh, not very long. How do you
feel?"
"Fine. Wonderfully rested, in
fact."
"It frequently has that effect.
Heavy boost, I mean. Feel like seeing some more pictures?"
"Why, certainly, if you say so,
Doctor."
"Okay." He reached up and
again the room went dark.
I was braced for the notion that he was
going to show me more pictures of Martians; I made up my
mind not to panic. After all, I had found it necessary
on many occasions to pretend that they were not present; surely motion pictures
of them should not affect me-I had simply been surprised earlier. They were
indeed stereos of Martians, both with and without Mr. Bonforte. I found it
possible to
study them with detached mind, without
terror or disgust. Suddenly I realized that I was enjoying looking at them! I
let out some exclamation and Capek stopped the film. "Trouble?"
"Doctor-you hypnotized me!" "You told me to." "But I
can't be hypnotized." "Sorry to hear it." "Uh-so you
managed it. I'm not too dense to see that." I added, "Suppose we try
those pictures
again. I can't really
believe it."
He
switched them on and I watched and wondered. Martians were not disgusting, if
one looked at them without prejudice; they weren't even ugly. In fact, they
possessed the same quaint grace as a Chinese pagoda. True, they were not human
in form, but neither is a bird of paradise-and birds of paradise are the
loveliest things alive.
I
began to realize, too, that their pseudo limbs could be very expressive; their
awkward gestures showed some of the bumbling friendliness of puppies. I knew
now that I had looked at Martians all my life through the dark glasses of hate
and fear.
Of
course, I mused, theft stench would still take getting used to, but-and then I
suddenly realized
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that I was smelling them, the
unmistakable odor-and I didn't mind it a bit! In fact, I liked it.
"Doctor!" I
said urgently. "This
machine has a 'smellie' attachment-doesn't it?"
"Eh? I believe not.
No, I'm sure it hasn't-too much parasitic weight for a yacht."
"But it must. I can
smell them very plainly."
"Oh, yes." He looked slightly
shamefaced. "Bub, I did one thing to you that I hope will cause you no
inconvenience."
"Sir?"
"While we were digging
around inside your skull it became evident that a lot of your neurotic
orientation about Martians was triggered by their body odor. I didn't have time
to do a deep job so I had to offset it. I asked Penny-that's the youngster who
was in here before-for a loan of some of the perfume she uses. I'm afraid that
from here on out, bub, Martians are going to smell like a Parisian house of joy
to you. If I had had time I would have used some homelier pleasant odor, like
ripe strawberries or hotcakes and syrup. But I had to improvise."
I
sniffed. Yes, it did smell like a heavy and expensive perfume- and yet, damn
it, it was unmistakably the reek of Martians. "I like it.''
"You can't help liking
it."
"But you must have
spilled the whole bottle in here. The place is drenched with it."
"Huh? Not at all. I merely waved the
stopper under your nose a half hour ago, then gave the bottle back to Penny and
she went away with it." He sniffed. "The odor is gone now. 'Jungle
Lust,' it said on the bottle. Seemed to have a lot of musk in it. I accused
Penny of trying to make the crew space-happy and she just laughed at me."
He reached up and switched off the stereopix. "We've had enough of those
for now. I want to get you onto something more useful."
When the pictures faded out, the fragrance
faded with them, just as it does with smellie equipment. I was forced to admit
to myself that it was all in the head. But, as an actor, I was intellectually
aware of that truth anyhow.
When Penny came back in a
few minutes later, she had a fragrance exactly like a Martian.
I
loved it.
Chapter 4
My education continued in
that room (Mr. Bonforte's guest room, it was) until turnover. I had no sleep,
other than under hypnosis, and did not seem to need any. Either Doc Capek or
Penny stuck with me and helped me the whole time. Fortunately my man was as
thoroughly photographed and recorded as perhaps any man in history and I had,
as well, the close co-operation of his intimates. There was endless material;
the problem was to see how much I could assimilate, both awake and under
hypnosis.
I
don't know at what point I quit disliking Bonforte. Capek assured me-and I
believe him-that he did not implant a hypnotic suggestion on this point; I had
not asked for it and I am quite certain that Capek was meticulous about the
ethical responsibilities of a physician and hypnotherapist. But I suppose that
it was an inevitable concomitant of the role-I rather think I would learn to
like Jack the Ripper if I studied for the part. Look at it this way: to learn a
role truly, you must for a time become that character. And a man either likes
himself, or he
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commits suicide, one way or
another.
"To understand all is
to forgive all"-and I was beginning to understand Bonforte.
At
turnover we got that one-gravity rest that Dak had promised. We never were in
free fall, not for an instant; instead of putting out the torch, which I gather
they hate to do while under way, the ship described what Dak called a 1
SO-degree skew turn. It leaves the ship on boost the whole time and is done
rather qulckly, but it has an oddly disturbing effect on the sense of balance.
The effect has a name something like Coriolanus. Coriolis?
All I know about spaceships
is that the ones that operate from the surface of a planet are true rockets but
the voyageurs call them "teakettles" because of the steam jet of
water or hydrogen they boost with. They aren't considered real atomic-power
ships even though the jet is heated by an atomic pile. The long-jump ships such
as the Tom Paine, torchships that is, are (so they tell me) the real thing,
making use of F equals MC squared, or is it M equals EC squared? You know-the
thing Einstein invented.
Dak did his best to explain
it all to me, and no doubt it is very interesting to those who care for such
things. But I can't imagine why a gentleman should bother with such. It seems
to me that every time those scientific laddies get busy with their slide rules
life becomes more complicated. What was wrong with things the way they were?
During the two hours we
were on one gravity I was moved up to Bonforte's cabin. I started wearing his
clothes and his face and everyone was careful to cail me "Mr.
Bonforte" or "Chief" or (in the case of Dr. Capek)
"Joseph," the idea being, of course, to help me build the part.
Everyone but Penny, that
is. . . She simply would not call me "Mr. Bonforte." She did her best
to help but she could not bring herself to that. It was clear as scripture that
she was a secretary who silently and hopelessly loved her boss, and she
resented me with a deep, illogical, but naturai bitterness. It made it hard for
both of us, especially as I was finding her most attractive. No man can do his
best work with a woman constantly around him who despises him. But I could not
dislike her in return; I felt deeply sorry for her-even though I was decidedly
irked.
We were on a
tryout-in-the-sticks basis now, as not everyone in the Tom Paine knew that I
was not Bonforte. I did not know exactly which ones knew of the substitution,
but I was allowed to relax and ask questions only in the presence of Dak,
Penny, and Dr. Capek. I was fairiy sure that Bonforte's chief clerk, Mr.
Washington, knew but never let on; he was a spare, elderly mulatto with the
tight-lipped mask of a saint. There were two others who certhinly knew, but
they were not in the Tom Paine; they were standing by and covering up from the
Go For Broke, handling press releases and routine dispatches-Bill Corpsman, who
was Bonforte's front man with the news services, and Roger Clifton. I don't
know quite how to describe Clifton's job. Political deputy? He had been
Minister without Portfolio, you may remember, when Bonforte was Supreme Minister,
but that says nothing. Let's put it symbolically: Bonforte handed out policy
and Clifton handed out patronage.
This small group had to know; if any others
knew it was not considered necessary to tell me. To be sure, the other members
of Bonforte's staff and all the crew of the Tom Paine knew that something odd
was going on; they did not necessarily know what it was. A good many people had
seen me enter the ship-but as "Benny Grey." By the time they saw me
again I was already "Bonforte."
Someone had had the foresight to obtain real
make-up equipment, but I used aimost none. At close range make-up can be seen;
even Silicoflesh cannot be given the exact texture of skin. I contented myself
with darkening my natural complexion a couple of shades with Semiperm and
wearing his face,
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from inside. I did have to sacrifice quite a lot of hair and Dr.
Capek inhibited the roots. I did not mind; an actor can always wear
hair-pieces-and I was sure that this job was certain to pay me a fee that would
let me retire for life, if 1 wished.
On the other hand, I was
sometimes queasily aware that "life" might not be too long-there are
those old saws about the man who knew too much and the one about dead men and
tales. But truthfully I was beginning to trust these people. They were all darn
nice people-which told me as much about Bonforte as I had learned by listening
to his speeches and seeing his pix. A political figure is not a single man, so
I was learning, but a compatible team. If Bonforte himself had not been a
decent sort he would not have had these people around him.
The Martian language gave
me my greatest worry. Like most actors, I had picked up enough Martian,
Venerian, Outer Jovian, etc., to be able to fake in front of a camera or on
stage. But those roiled or fluttered consonants are very difficult. Human vocal
cords are not as versatile as a Martian's tympanus, I believe, and, in any
case, the semi-phonetic spelling out of those sounds in Roman letters, for
example "kkk" or "jjj" or "rrr," have no more to
do with the true sounds than the gin "Gnu" has to do with the inhaled
click with which a Bantu pronounces "Gnu." "Jjj," for
instance, closely resembles a Bronx cheer.
Fortunately Bonforte had no great talent for
other languages- and I am a professional; my ears really hear, I can imitate
any sound, from a buzz saw striking a nail in a chunk of firewood to a setting
hen disturbed on her nest. It was necessary only to acquire Martian as poorly
as Bonforte spoke it. He had worked hard to overcome his lack of talent, and
every word and phrase of Martian that he knew had been sight-sound recorded so
that he could study his mistakes.
So
I studied his mistakes, with the projector moved into his office and Penny at
my elbow to sort out the spools for me and answer questions.
Human languages fall into four groups:
inflecting ones as in Anglo-American, positional as in Chinese, agglutinative
as in Old Turkish, polysynthetic (sentence units) as in Eskimo-to which, of
course, we now add alien structures as wildly odd and as nearly impossible for
the human brain as non-repetitive or emergent Venetian. Luckily Martian is
analogous to human speech forms. Basic Martian, the trade language, is
positional and involves only simple concrete ideas-like the greeting: "I
see you." High Martian is polysynthetic and very stylized, with an
expression for every nuance of their complex system of rewards and punishments,
obligations and debts. It had been almost too much for Bonforte; Penny told me
that he could read those arrays of dots they use for writing quite easily but
of the spoken form of High Martian he could say only a few hundred sentences.
Brother, how I studied those few he had
mastered!
The strain on Penny was
even greater than it was on me. Both she and Dak spoke some Martian but the
chore of coaching me fell on her as Dak had to spend most of his time in the
control room; Jock's death had left him shorthanded. We dropped from two
gravities to one for the last few million miles of the approach, during which
time he never came below at all. I spent it learning the ritual I would have to
know for the adoption ceremony, with Penny's help.
I
had just completed running through the speech in which 1 was to accept
membership in the Kkkah nest-a speech not unlike that, in spirit, with which an
orthodox Jewish boy assumes the responsibilities of manhood, but as fixed, as
invariable, as Hamlet's soliloquy. I had read it, complete with Bonforte's
misprofluflciations and facial tic; I finished and asked, "How was
that?"
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"That was quite
good," she answered seriously.
"Thanks, Curly Top." It was a phrase
I had lifted from the language-practice spools in Bonforte's files; it was what
Bonforte called her when he was feeling mellow-and it was perfectly in
character. "Don't you dare call me that?'
It looked at her in honest
amazement and answered, still in character, "Why, Penny my child!"
"Don't you call me
that, either! You fake! You phony! You- actor!" She jumped up, ran as far
as she could-which was only to the door-and stood there, faced away from me,
her face buried in her hands and her shoulders shaking with sobs.
I
made a tremendous effort and lifted myself out of the character_pulled in my
belly, let my own face come up, answered in my own voice. "Miss
Russell!"
She
stopped crying, whirled around, looked at me, and her jaw dropped. I added,
still in my normal self, "Come back here and sit down."
I
thought she was going to refuse, then she seemed to think better of it, came
slowly back and sat down, her hands in her lap but with her face that of a
little girl who is "saving up more spit."
I
let her sit for a moment, then said quietly, "Yes, Miss Russell, I am an
actor. Is that a reason for you to insult me?"
She simply looked stubborn.
"As an actor, I am here to do an actor's
job. You know why. You know, too, that I was tricked into taking it-it is not a
job I would have accepted with my eyes open, even in my wildest moments. I hate
having to do it considerably more than you hate having me do it-for despite
Captain Broadbent'S cheerful assurances I am not at all sure that I will come
out of it with my skin intact-and I'm actually fond of my skin; it's the only
one I have. I believe, too, that I know why you find it hard to accept me. But
is that any reason for you to make my job harder than it has to be?"
She mumbled. I
said sharply, "Speak up!"
"It's
dishonest. It's indecent!"
I
sighed. "It certainly is. More than that, it is impossible without the
wholehearted support of the other members of the cast. So let's call Captain
Broadbent down here and tell him. Let's call it off."
She jerked her face up and
said, "Oh no! We can't do that."
"Why can't we? A far
better thing to drop it now than to present it and have it flop. 1 can't give a
performance under these conditions. Let's admit it."
"But...but...We've got to! It's necessary." "Why is it
necessary, Miss Russell? Political reasons? I have not the slightest interest
in politics-and I doubt if you have any really deep interest. So why must we do
it?"
"Because-because
he--" She stopped, unable to go on, strangled by sobs.
I got up, went over, and
put a hand on her shoulder. "I know. Because if we don't, something that
he has spent years building up will fall to pieces. Because he can't do it
himself and his friends are trying to cover up and do it for him. Because his
friends are loyal to him. Because you are loyal to him. Nevertheless, it hurts
you to see someone else in the place that is rightfully his. Besides that, you
are half out of your mind with grief and worry about him. Aren't you?"
"Yes." I could
barely hear it.
I
took hold of her chin and tilted her face up. "I know why you find it so
hard to have me here, in his place. You love him. But I'm doing the best job
for him I know how. Confound it, woman! Do you have to make my job six times
harder by treating me like dirt?"
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She
looked shocked. For a moment I thought she was going to slap me. Then she said
brokenly, "I am sorry. I am very sorry. I won't let it happen again."
I let go her chin and said
briskly, "Then let's get back to work."
She did not move. "Can
you forgive me?"
"Huh? There's nothing to forgive, Penny.
You were acting up because you love him and you were worried. Now let's get to
work. I've got to be letter-perfect-and it's only hours away." I dropped
at once back into the role.
She
picked up a spool and started the projector again. I watched him through it
once, then did the acceptance speech with the sound cut out but stereo on,
matching my voice-Mr voice, I mean-to the moving image. She watched me, looking
from the image back to my face with a dazed look on her own. We finished and I
switched it off myself. "How was that?"
"That was
perfect!"
I smiled his smile.
"Thanks, Curly Top."
"Not at all-'Mr.
Bonforte.'"
Two
hours later we made rendezvous with the Go For Broke.
Dak brought Roger Clifton
and Bill Corpsman to my cabin as soon as the Go For Broke had transferred them.
I knew them from pictures. I stood up and said, "Hello, Rog. Glad to see
you, Bill." My voice was warm but casual; on the level at which these
people operated, a hasty trip to Earth and back was simply a few days'
separation and nothing more. I limped over and offered my hand. The ship was at
the moment under low boost as it adjusted to a much tighter orbit than the Go
For Broke had been riding in.
Clifton threw me a quick glance, then played
up. He took his cigar out of his mouth, shook hands, and said quietly,
"Glad to see you back, Chief." He was a small man, bald-headed and
middle-aged, and looked like a lawyer and a good poker player.
"Anything special
while I was away?"
"No. Just routine. I
gave Penny the file."
"Good." I turned
to Bill Corpsman, again offered my hand.
He
did not take it. Instead he put his fists on his hips, looked up at me, and
whistled. "Amazing! I really do believe we stand a chance of getting away
with it." He looked me up and down, then said, "Turn around, Smythe.
Move around. I want to see you walk."
I found that I was actually
feeling the annoyance that Bonforte would have felt at such uncalled-for
impertinence, and, of course, it showed in my face. Dak touched Corpsman's
sleeve and said quickly, "Knock it off, Bill. You remember what we
agreed?"
"Chicken tracks!"
Corpsman answered. "This room is soundproof. I just want to make sure he
is up to it. Smythe, how's your Martian? Can you spiel it?"
I
answered with a single squeaking polysyllabic in High Martian, a sentence
meaning roughly, "Proper conduct demands that one of us leave!"-but
it means far more than that, as it is a challenge which usually ends in
someone's nest being notified of a demise.
I
don't think Corpsman understood it, for he grinned and answered, "I've got
to hand it to you, Smythe. That's good."
But
Dak understood it. He took Corpsman by the arm and said, "Bill, I told you
to knock it off. You're in my ship and that's an order. We play it straight
from here on-every second."
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Clifton added, "Pay attention to him,
Bill. You know we agreed that was the way to do it. Otherwise somebody might
slip."
Corpsman glanced at him,
then shrugged. "All right, all right. I was just checking up-after all,
this was my idea." He gave me a one-sided smile and said, "Howdy,
Mister Bonforte. Glad to see you back."
There was a shade too much emphasis on
"Mister" but I answered, "Good to be back, Bill. Anything
special I need to know before we go down?"
"I guess not. Press conference at Goddard
City after the ceremonies." I could see him watching me to see how I would
take it.
I nodded. "Very
well."
Dak said hastily,
"Say, Rog, how about that? Is it necessary? Did you authorize it?"
"I was going to
add," Corpsman went on, turning to Clifton, "before the Skipper here
got the jitters, that I can take it myself and tell the boys that the Chief has
dry laryngitis from the ceremonies-or we can limit it to written questions
submitted ahead of time and I'll get the answers written out for him while the
ceremonies are going on. Seeing that he looks and sounds so good close up, I
would say to risk it. How about it, Mister-'Bonforte'? Think you can swing
it?"
"I see no problem
involved in it, Bill." I was thinking that if I managed to get by the
Martians without a slip I would undertake to ad-lib double talk to a bunch of
human reporters as long as they wanted to listen. I had good command of
Bonforte's speaking style by now and at least a rough notion of his policies
and attitudes-and I need not be specific.
But Clifton looked worried.
Before he could speak the ship's horn brayed out, "Captain is requested to
come to the control room. Minus four minutes."
Dak
said quickly, "You all will have to settle it. I've got to put this sled
in its slot-I've got nobody up there but young Epstein." He dashed for the
door.
Corpsman called out, "Hey, Skip! I wanted
to tell you-" He was out the door and following Dak without waiting to say
goodby.
Roger Clifton closed the door Corpsman had
left open, came back, and said slowly, "Do you want to risk this press
conference?"
"That is up to you. I
want to do the lob."
"Mnim ... Then I'm inclined to risk it-if
we use the written questions method. But I'll check Bill's answers myself
before you have to give them."
"Very well." I added, "If you
can find a way to let me have them ten minutes or so ahead of time, there
shouldn't be any difficulty. I'm a very quick study."
He
inspected me. "I quite believe it-Chief. All right, I'll have Penny slip
the answers to you right after the ceremonies. Then you can excuse yourself to
go to the men's room and just stay there until you are sure of them."
"That should
work."
"I think so. Uh, I must say I feel
considerably better now that I've seen you. Is there anything I can do for
you?"
"I think not, Rog.
Yes, there is, too. Any word about-him?"
"Eh? Well, yes and no.
He's still in Goddard City; we're sure of that. He hasn't been taken off Mars,
or even out in the country. We blocked them on that, if that was their
intention."
"Eh? Goddard City is
not a big place, is it? Not more than a hundred thousand? What's the
hitch?"
"The hitch is that we don't dare admit
that you-I mean that he
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-is missing. Once we
have this adoption thing wrapped up, we can put you out of sight, then announce
the kidnaping as if it had lust taken place-and make them take the city apart
rivet by rivet. The city authorities are all Humanity Party appointees, but
they will have to co-operate-after the ceremony. It will be the most
wholehearted co-operation you ever saw, for they will be deadly anxious to
produce him before the whole Kkkahgral nest swarms over them and tears the city
down around theft ears."
"Oh. I'm still
learning about Martian psychology and customs."
"Aren't we all?"
"Rog? Mmm... What
leads you to think that he is still alive? Wouldn't theft purpose be better
served-and with less risk-just by killing him?" I was thinking queasily
how simple it had turned out to be to get rid of a body, if a man was ruthless
enough.
"I see what you mean. But that, too, is
tied up with Martian notions about 'propriety.'" (He used the Martian
word.) "Death is the one acceptable excuse for not carrying out an
obligation. If he were simply killed, they would adopt him into the nest after
his death-and then the whole nest and probably every nest on Mars would set out
to avenge him. They would not mind in the least if the whole human race were to
die or be killed-but to kill this one human being to keep him from being
adopted, that's another kettle of fish entirely. Matter of obligation and
propriety-in some ways a Martian's response to a situation is so automatic as
to remind one of instinct. It is not, of course, since they are incredibly
intelligent. But they do the damnedest things." He frowned and added,
"Sometimes I wish I had never left Sussex."
The
warning hooter broke up the discussion by forcing us to hurry to our bunks. Dak
had cut it fine on purpose; the shuttle rocket from Goddard City was waiting
for us when we settled into free fall. All five of us went down, which just
filled the passenger couches-again a matter of planning, for the Resident
Commissioner had expressed the intention of coming up to meet me and had been
dissuaded only by Dak's message to him that our party would require all the
space.
I tried to get a better
look at the Martian surface as we went down, as I had had only one glimpse of
it, from the control room of the Tom Paine-since I was supposed to have been
there many times I could not show the normal curiosity of a tourist. I did not
get much of a look; the shuttle pilot did not turn us so that we could see
until he leveled off for his glide approach and I was busy then putting on my
oxygen mask.
That pesky Mars-type mask
almost finished us; I had never had a chance to practice with it-Dak did not
think of it and I had not realized it would be a problem; I had worn both
spacesuit and aqua lung on other occasions and I thought this would be about
the same. It was not. The model Bonforte favored was a mouthfree type, a
Mitsubushi "Sweet Winds" which pressurizes directly at the nostrils-a
nose clamp, nostril plugs, tubes up each nostril which then run back under each
ear to the supercharger on the back of your neck. I concede that it is a fine
device, once you get used to it, since you can talk, eat, drink, etc., while
wearing it. But I would rather have a dentist put both hands in my mouth.
The
real difficulty is that you have to exercise conscious control on the muscles
that close the back of your mouth, or you hiss like a teakettle, since the dun
thing operates on a pressure difference. Fortunately the pilot equalized to
Mars-surface pressure once we all had our masks on, which gave me twenty
minutes or so to get used to it. But for a few moments I thought the jig was
up, just over a silly piece of gadgetry. But I reminded myself that I had worn
the thing hundreds of times before and that I was as used to it as I was to my
toothbrush. Presently I believed it.
Dak
had been able to avoid having the Resident Commissiooer chit-chat with me for
an hour on the
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way down but it had not been possible to miss him entirely; he met
the shuttle at the skyfield. The close timing did keep me from having to cope
with other humans, since I had to go at once into the Martian city. It made
sense, but it seemed strange that I would be safer among Martians than among my
own kind.
It
seemed even stranger to be on Mars.
Chapter 5
Mr.
Commissioner Boothroyd was a Humanity Party appointee, of course, as were all
of his staff except for civil service technical employees. But Dak had told me
that it was at least sixty-forty that Boothroyd had not had a finger in the
plot; Dak considered him honest but stupid. For that matter, neither Dak nor
Rog Clifton believed that Supreme Minister Quiroga was in it; they attributed
the thing to the clandestine terrorist group inside the Humanity Party who
called themselves the "Actionists"-and they attributed them to some
highiy respectable big-money boys who stood to profit heavily.
Myself, I would not have
known an Actionist from an auctioneer.
But
the minute we landed something popped up that made me wonder whether friend
Boothroyd was as honest and stupid as Dak thought he was. It was a minor thing
but one of those little things that can punch holes in an impersonation. Since
I was a Very Important Visitor the Commissioner met me; since I held no public
office other than membership in the Grand Assembly and was traveling privately
no official honors were offered. He was alone save for his aide-and a little
girl about fifteen.
I knew him from photographs
and I knew quite a bit about him; Rog and Penny had briefed me carefully. I
shook hands, asked about his sinusitis, thanked him for the pleasant time I had
had on my last visit, and spoke with his aide in that warm man-to-man fashion
that Bonforte was so good at. Then I turned to the young lady. I knew Boothroyd
had children and that one of them was about this age and sex; I did not
know-perhaps Rog and Penny did not know-whether or not I had ever met her.
Boothroyd himself saved me. "You haven't
met my daughter Deirdre, I believe. She insisted on coming along."
Nothing in the pictures I had studied had
shown Bonforte dealing with young girls-so I simply had to be Bonforte-a
widower in his middle fifties who had no children of his own, no nieces, and
probably little experience with teen-age girls-but with lots of experience in
meeting strangers of every sort. So I treated her as if she were twice her real
age; I did not quite kiss her band. She blushed and looked pleased.
Boothroyd looked indulgent
and said, "Well, ask him, my dear. You may not have another chance."
She
blushed deeper and said, "Sir, could I have your autograph? The girls in
my school collect them. I have Mr. Quiroga's
I ought to have
yours." She produced a little book which she had been holding behind her.
I felt like a copter driver
asked for his license-which is home in his other pants. I had studied hard but
I had not expected to have to forge Bonforte's signature. Damn it, you can't do
everything in two and a half days!
But
it was simply impossible for Bonforte to refuse such a request-and I was
Bonforte. I smiled jovially and said, "You have Mr. Quiroga's
already?"
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"Yes, sir."
"Just his autograph?"
"Yes. Er, he put 'Best Wishes' on
it."
I winked at Boothroyd. "Just 'Best
Wishes,' eh? To young lathes I never make it less than 'Love.'
Tell you what I'm going to do-" I
took the little book from her, glanced through the pages. "Chief,"
Dak said urgently, "we are short on minutes." "Compose
yourself," I said without looking up. "The entire Martian nation can
wait, if necessary,
on a young lady."
I banded the book to Penny. "Will you note the size of this book? And then
remind me
to send a photograph suitable for pasting
in it-and properly autographed, of course." "Yes, Mr. Bonforte."
"Will that suit you, Miss Deirdre?"
"Gee!" "Good. Thanks for
asking me. We can leave now, Captain. Mr. Commissioner, is that our car?"
"Yes, Mr. Bonforte." He shook his head wryly. "I'm afraid you
have converted a member of my
own family to your Expansionist heresies. Hardly
sporting, eh? Sitting ducks, and so forth?" "That should teach you
not to expose her to bad company-eh, Miss Deirdre?" I shook hands again.
"Thanks for meeting us, Mr.
Commissioner. I am afraid we had better hurry thong now." "Yes,
certainly. Pleasure." "Thanks, Mr. Bonforte!" "Thank you,
my dear." I turned away slowly, so as not to appear jerky or nervous in
stereo. There were photographers
around, still, news
pickup, stereo, and so forth, as well as many reporters. Bill was keeping the
reporters away from us; as we turned to go he waved and said, "See you
later, Chief," and turned back to talk to one of them. Rog, Dak, and Penny
followed me into the car. There was the usual skyfield crowd, not as numerous
as at any earthport, but numerous. I was not worried about them as long as
Boothroyd accepted the impersonation-though there were certainly some present
who knew that I was not Bonforte.
But
I refused to let those individuals worry me, either. They could cause us no
trouble without incriminating themselves.
The
car was a Rolls Outlander, pressurized, but I left my oxygen mask on because
the others did. I took the right-hand seat, Rog sat beside me, and Penny beside
him, while Dak wound his long legs around one of the folding seats. The driver
glanced back through the partition and started up.
Rog said quietly, "I
was worried there for a moment."
"Nothing to worry about. Now let's
all be quiet, please. I want to review my speech."
Actually I wanted to gawk at the Martian
scene; I knew the speech perfectly. The driver took us
along the north edge
of the field, past many towns. I read signs for Verwijs Trading Company, Diana
Outlines, Ltd., Three Planets, and I. G. Farbenindustrie. There were almost as
many Martians as humans in sight. We ground hogs get the impression that
Martians are slow as snails- and they are, on our comparatively heavy planet.
On their own world they skim along on their bases like a stone sliding over
water.
To
the right, south of us past the fiat field, the Great Canal dipped into the
too-close horizon, showing no shore line beyond. Straight ahead of us was the
Nest of Kkkah, a fairy city. I was staring at it, my heart lifting at its
fragile beauty, when Dak moved suddenly. We were well past the traffic around
the towns but there was one car ahead, coming toward us; I had
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seen it without
noticing it. But Dak must have been edgily ready for trouble; when the other
car was quite close, he suddenly slammed down the partition separating us from
the driver, swarmed over the man's neck, and grabbed the wheel. We slewed to
the nght, barely missing the other car, slewed again to the left and barely
stayed on the road It was a near thing, for we were past the field now and here
the highway edged the canal.
I had not been much use to
Dak a couple of days earlier in the Eisenhower, but 1 had been unarmed and not
expecting trouble, This day 1 was still unarmed, not so much as a poisoned
fang, but 1 comported myself a little better. Oak was more than busy trying to
drive the car while leaning over from the back seat. The driver, caught off
balance at first, now tried to wrestle him away from the wheel.
I lunged forward, got my
left arm around the drivers neck, and shoved my right thumb into his ribs. Move
and you've had it!" The voice belonged to the hero--villain in The
Second-Story Gentleman; the line of dialogue was his too.
My prisoner became very
quiet.
Dak said urgently,
"Rog, what are they doing?"
Clifton looked back and
answered, "They're turning around."
Oak answered, "Okay.
Chief, keep your gun on that character while I climb over." He was doing
so even as he spoke, an awkward matter in view of his long legs and the crowded
car- He settled into the seat and said happily, "1 doubt if anything on
wheels can catch a Rolls on a straightaway." He jerked on the damper and
the big car shot forward. "How am I doing, Rog?"
"They're just turned
around."
"All right. What do we
do with this item? Dump him out?"
My victim squirmed and
said, "I didn't do anything!" 1 jabbed my thumb harder and he
quieted.
"Oh, not a thing," Dak agreed,
keeping his eyes on the road. All you did was try to cause a little crash-just
enough to make Mr. Bonforte late for his appointment If I had not noticed that
you were slowing down to make it easy on yourself, you might have got away with
it. No guts, eh?" He took a slight curve with the tires screaming and the
gyro fighting to keep us upright. "What's the situation, Rog?"
"They've given
up."
"So." Dak did not
slacken speed; we must have been doing well over three hundred kilometers.
"I wonder if they would try to bomb us with one of their own boys aboard?
How about it, bub? Would they write you off as expendable?"
"I don't know what
you're talking about! You're going to be in trouble over this!"
"Really? The word of four respectable
people against your jailbird record? Or aren't you a transportee? Anyhow, Mr.
Bonforte prefers to have me drive him-so naturally you were glad to do a favor
for Mr. Bonforte." We hit something about as big as a worm cast on that
glassy road and my prisoner and I almost went through the roof.
"'Mr. Bonforte!'"
My victim made it a swear word.
Dak
was silent for several seconds. At last he said, "I don't think we ought
to dump this one, Chief. I think we ought to let you off, then take him to a
quiet place. I think he might talk if we urged him."
The driver tried to get
away. I tightened the pressure on his neck and jabbed him again with my thumb
knuckle. A knuckle may not feel too much like the muzzle of a heater-but who
wants to find out? He relaxed and said sullenly, "You don't dare give me
the needle."
"Heavens, no!" Dak answered in
shocked tones. "That would be illegal. Penny girl, got a bobby
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pin?"
"Why, certainly,
Dak." She sounded puzzled and I was. She did not sound frightened, though,
and I certainly was.
"Good. Bub, did you
ever have a bobby pin shoved up under your fingernails? They say it will even
break a hypnotic command not to talk. Works directly on the subconscious or
something. Only trouble is that the patient makes the most unpleasant noises.
So we are going to take you out in the dunes where you won't disturb anybody
but sand scorpions. After you have talked-now here comes the nice part! After
you talk we are going to turn you loose, not do anything, just let you walk
back into town. But-listen carefully now!-if you are real nice and
co-operative, you get a prize. We'll let you have your mask for the walk."
Dak stopped talking; for a
moment there was no sound but the keening of the thin Martian air past the
roof. A human being can walk possibly two hundred yards on Mars without an
oxygen mask, if he is in good condition. I believe I read of a case where a man
walked almost half a mile before he died. I glanced at the trip meter and saw
that we were about twenty-three kilometers from Goddard City.
The prisoner said slowly,
"Honest, I don't know anything about it. I was just paid to crash the
car."
"We'll try to
stimulate your memory." The gates of the Martian city were just ahead of
us; Dak started slowing the car. "Here's where you get out, Chief. Rog,
better take your gun and relieve the Chief of our guest."
"Right, Dak." Rog moved up by me,
jabbed the man in the ribs-again with a bare knuckle. I moved out of the way.
Dak braked the car to a halt, stopping right in front of the gates.
"Four minutes to
spare," he said happily. "This is a nice car. I wish I owned it. Rog,
ease up a touch and give me room."
Clifton did so, Dak chopped the driver
expertly on the side of his neck with the edge of his hand; the man went limp.
"That will keep him quiet while you get clear. Can't have any unseemly
disturbance under the eyes of the nest. Let's check time."
We
did so. I was about three and a half minutes ahead of the deadline. "You
are to go in exactly on time, you understand? Not ahead, not behind, but on the
dot."
"That's right,"
Clifton and I answered in chorus.
"Thirty seconds to walk up the ramp,
maybe. What do you want to do with the three minutes you have left?"
I sighed. "Just get my
nerve back."
"Your nerve is all
right. You didn't miss a trick back there. Cheer up, old son. Two hours from
now you can head for home, with your pay burning holes in your pocket We're on
the last lap."
"1 hope so. It's been
quite a strain. Uh, Dak?"
"Yes?"
"Come here a second." I got out of
the car, motioned him to come with me a short distance away. "What happens
if I make a mistake-in there?"
"Eh?" Dak looked surprised, then
laughed a little too heartily. "You won't make a mistake. Penny tells me
you've got it down Jo-block perfect."
"Yes, but suppose I
slip?"
"You won't slip. I know how you feel; I
felt the same way on my first solo grounding. But when it started, I was so
busy doing it I didn't have time to do it wrong."
Clifton called out, his voice thin in thin
air, "Dak! Are you watching the time?"
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"Gobs of time. Over a
minute."
"Mr. Bonforte!"
It was Penny's voice. I turned and went back to the car. She got out and put
out her hand. "Good luck, Mr. Bonforte."
"Thanks, Penny."
Rog shook hands and Dak
clapped me on the shoulder. "Minus thirty-five seconds. Better
start."
I nodded and started up the
ramp. It must have been within a second or two of the exact, appointed time
when I reached the top, for the mighty gates rolled back as I came to them. I
took a deep breath and cursed that damned air mask.
Then I took my stage.
It doesn't make any
difference how many times you do it, that first walk on as the curtain goes up
on the first night of any run is a breath-catcher and a heart-stopper. Sure,
you know your sides. Sure, you've asked the manager to count the house. Sure, you've
done it all before. No matter-when you first walk out there and know that all
those eyes are on you, waiting for you to speak, waiting for you to do
something-maybe even waiting for you to go up on your lines, brother, you feel
it. This is why they have prompters.
I
looked out and saw my audience and I wanted to run. I had stage fright for the
first time in thirty years.
The siblings of the nest
were spread out before me as far as I could see. There was an open lane in
front of me, with thousands on each side, set close together as asparagus. I
knew that the first thing I must do was slow-march down the center of that
lane, clear to the far end, to the ramp leading down into the inner nest.
I could not move.
I
said to myself, "Look, boy, you're John Joseph Bonforte. You've been here
dozens of times before. These people are your friends. You're here because you
want to be here-and because they want you here. So march down that aisle. Tum
turn te turn! 'Here comes the bride!"
I began to feel like Bonforte
again. I was Uncle Joe Bonforte, determined to do this thing perfectly-for the
honor and welfare of my own people and my own planet-and for my Mends the
Martians. I took a deep breath and one step.
That deep breath saved me;
it brought me that heavenly fragrance. Thousands on thousands of Martians
packed close together-it smelled to me as if somebody had dropped and broken a
whole case of Jungle Lust. The conviction that I smelled it was so strong that
I involuntarily glanced back to see if Penny had followed me in. I could feel
her handclasp warm in my palm.
I started limping down that
aisle, trying to make it about the speed a Martian moves on his own planet. The
crowd closed in behind me. Occasionally kids would get away from their elders
and skitter out in front of me. By "kids" I mean post-fission
Martians, half the mass and not much over half the height of an adult. They are
never out of the nest and we are inclined to forget that there can be little
Martians. It takes almost five years, after fission, for a Martian to regain
his full size, have his brain fully restored, and get all of his memory back.
During this transition he is an idiot studying to be a moron. The gene
rearrangement and subsequent regeneration incident to conjugation and fission
put him out of the running for a long time. One of Bonforte's spools was a
lecture on the subject, accompanied by some not very good amateur stereo.
The
kids, being cheerful idiots, are exempt from propriety and all that that
implies. But they are greatly loved.
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Two
of the kids, of the same and smallest size and looking just alike to me,
skittered out and stopped dead in front of me, just like a foolish puppy in
traffic. Either I stopped or I ran them down.
So
I stopped. They moved even closer, blocking my way completely, and started
sprouting pseudo limbs while chittering at each other. I could not understand
them at all. Quickly they were plucking at my clothes and snaking their
patty-paws into my sleeve pockets.
The
crowd was so tight that I could hardly go around them. I was stretched between
two needs. In the first place they were so darn cute that I wanted to see if I
didn't have a sweet tucked away somewhere for them-but in a still firster place
was the knowledge that the adoption ceremony was timed like a ballet. If I
didn't get on down that street, I was going to commit the classic sin against
propriety made famous by Kkkahgral the Younger himself.
But the kids were not about
to get out of my way. One of them had found my watch.
I
sighed and was almost overpowered by the perfume. Then I made a bet with
myself. I bet that baby-kissing was a Galactic Universal and that it took
precedence even over Martian propriety. I got on one knee, making myself about
the height they were, and fondled them for a few moments, patting them and
running my hands down their scales.
Then I stood up and said carefully, "That
is all now. I must go," which used up a large fraction of my stock of
Basic Martian.
The
kids clung to me but I moved them carefully and gently aside and went on down
the double line, hurrying to make up for the time I had lost. No life wand
burned a hole in my back. I risked a hope that my violation of propriety had
not yet reached the capital offense level. I reached the ramp leading down into
the inner nest and started on down.
* * * * I. * * * * * * * *
That line of asterisks represents the
adoption ceremony. Why? Because it is limited to members of the Kkkah nest. It
is a family matter.
Put
it this way: A Mormon may have very close gentile friends-but does that
friendship get a gentile inside the Temple at Salt Lake City? It never has and
it never will. Martians visit very freely back and forth between theft
nests-but a Martian enters the inner nest only of his own family. Even his
conjugate-spouses are not thus privileged. I have no more right to tell the
details of the adoption ceremony than a lodge brother has to be specific about
ritual outside the lodge.
Oh,
the rough outlines do not matter, since they are the same for any nest, just as
my part was the same for any candidate. My sponsor-Bonforte's oldest Martian
friend, Kkkahnreash-met me at the door and threatened me with a wand. I
demanded that he kill me at once were I guilty of any breach. To tell the
truth, I did not recognize him, even though I had studied a picture of him. But
it had to be him because ritual required it.
Having thus made clear that
I stood four-square for Motherhood, the Home, Civic Virtue, and never missing
Sunday school, I was permitted to enter. 'Rrreash conducted me around all the
stations, I was questioned and I responded. Every word, every gesture, was as
stylized as a classical Chinese play, else I would not have stood a chance.
Most of the time I did not know what they were saying and half of the time I
did not understand my own replies; I simply knew my cues and the responses. It
was not made easier by the low light level the Martians prefer; I was groping
around like a mole.
I
played once with Hawk Mantell, shortly before he died, after he was stone-deaf.
There was a
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trouper! He could not
even use a hearing device because the eighth nerve was dead. Part of the time
he could cue by llps but that is not always possible. He directed the production
himself and he timed it perfectly. I have seen him deliver a line, walk
away-then whirl around and snap out a retort to a line that he had never heard,
precisely on the timing.
This was like that. I knew
my part and I played it. If they blew it, that was their lookout.
But
it did not help my morale that there were never less than half a dozen wands
leveled at me the whole time. I kept telling myself that they wouldn't burn me
down for a slip. After all, I was just a poor stupid human being and at the
very least they would give me a passing mark for effort. But I didn't believe
it.
After what seemed like days-but was not, since
the whole ceremony times exactly one ninth of Mars' rotation-after an endless
time, we ate. I don't know what and perhaps it is just as well. It did not
poison me.
After that the elders made their speeches, I
made my acceptance speech in answer, and they gave me my name and my wand. I
was a Martian.
I did not know how to use
the wand and my name sounded like a leaky faucet, but from that instant on it
was my legal name on Mars and I was legally a blood member of the most
aristocratic family on the planet-exactly fifty-two hours after a ground hog
down on his luck had spent his last half-Imperial buying a drink for a stranger
in the bar of Casa Ma?.
I guess this proves that
one should never pick up strangers.
I
got out as quickly as possible. Dak had made up a speech for me in which I
claimed proper necessity for leaving at once and they let me go. I was nervous
as a man upstairs in a sorority house because there was no longer ritual to
guide me. I mean to say even casual social behavior was still hedged around
with airtight and risky custom and I did not know the moves. So I recited my
excuse and headed out. 'Rrreash and another elder went with me and I chanced
playing with another pair of the kids when we were outside-or maybe the same
pair. Once I reached the gates the two elders said good-by in squeaky English
and let me go out alone; the gates closed behind me and I reswallowed my heart.
The
Rolls was waiting where they had let me out; I hurried down, a door opened, and
I was surprised to see that Penny was in it alone. But not displeased. I called
out, "Hi, Curly Top! I made it!"
"I knew you
would."
I
gave a mock sword salute with my wand and said, "Just call me
Kkkahjjjerrr"-spraying the front rows with the second syllable.
"Be careful with that
thing!" she said nervously.
I slid in beside her on the
front seat and asked, "Do you know how to use one of these things?"
The reaction was setting in and I felt exhausted but gay; I wanted three quick
drinks and a thick steak, then to wait up for the critics' reviews.
"No. But do be
careful."
"I think all you have
to do is to press it here," which I did, and there was a neat two-inch
hole in the windshield and the car wasn't pressurized any longer.
Penny gasped. I said,
"Gee, I'm sorry. I'll put it away until Dak can coach me."
She
gulped. "It's all right. Just be careful where you point it." She
started wheeling the car and I found that Dak was not the only one with a heavy
hand on the damper.
Wind was whistling in through the hole I had
made. I said, "What's the rush? I need some time to study my lines for the
press conference. Did you bring them? And where are the others?" I had
forgotten
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completely the driver we had
grabbed; I had not thought about him from the time the gates of the nest
opened.
"No. They couldn't
come."
"Penny, what's the matter? What's
happened?" I was wondering if I could possibly take a press conference
without coaching. Perhaps I could tell them a little about the adoption; I
wouldn't have to fake that. "It's Mr. Bonforte-they've found him."
Chapter 6
I
had not noticed until then that she had not once called me "Mr.
Bonforte." She could not, of course, for I was no longer he; I was again
Lorrie Smythe, that actor chap they had hired to stand in for him.
I sat back and sighed, and
let myself relax. "So it's over at last-and we got away with it." I
felt a great burden lift off me; I had not known how heavy it was until I put
it down. Even my "lame" leg stopped aching. I reached over and patted
Penny's hand on the wheel and said in my own voice, "I'm glad it's over.
But I'm going to miss having you around, pal. You're a trouper. But even the
best run ends and the company breaks up. I hope I'll see you again
sometime."
"I hope so too."
"I suppose Dak has arranged some
shenanigan to keep me under cover and sneak me back into the Tom Paine?"
"I don't know." Her voice sounded
odd and I gave her a quick glance and saw that she was crying. My heart gave a
skip. Penny crying? Over us separating? I could not believe it and yet I wanted
to. One might think that, between my handsome features and cultivated manners,
women would find me irresistible, but it is a deplorable fact that all too many
of them have found me easy to resist. Penny had seemed to find it no effort at
all.
"Penny," I said
hastily, "why all the tears, hon? You'll wreck this car."
"I can't help
it."
"Well-put me in it. What's wrong? You
told me they had got him back; you didn't tell me anything else." I had a
sudden horrid but logical suspicion. "He was alive-wasn't he?"
"Yes-he's alive-but,
oh, they've hurt him!" She started to sob and I had to grab the wheel.
She straightened up
quickly. "Sorry."
"Want me to
drive?"
"I'll be all right.
Besides, you don't know how-I mean you aren't supposed to know how to
drive."
"Huh? Don't be silly.
I do know how and it no longer matters that-" I broke off, suddenly
realizing that it might still matter. If they had roughed up Bonforte so that
it showed, then he could not appear in public in that shape-at least not only
fifteen minutes after being adopted into the Kkkah nest. Maybe I would have to
take that press conference and depart publicly, while Bonforte would be the one
they would sneak aboard. Well, all right-hardly more than a curtain call.
"Penny, do Dak and Rog want me to stay in character for a bit? Do I play
to the reporters? Or don't I?"
"I don't know. There wasn't time."
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We
were already approaching the stretch of godowns by the field, and the giant
bubble domes of Goddard City were in sight. "Penny, slow this car down and
talk sense. I've got to have my cues."
The driver had talked-I
neglected to ask whether or not the bobby-pin treatment had been used. He had
then been turned loose to walk back but had not been deprived of his mask; the
others had barreled back to Goddard City, with Dak at the wheel. I felt lucky
to have been left behind; voyageurs should not be allowed to drive anything but
spaceships.
They went to the address the driver had given
them, in Old Town under the original bubble. I gathered that it was the sort of
jungle every port has had since the Phoenicians sailed through the shoulder of
Africa, a place of released transportees, prostitutes, monkey-pushers, rangees,
and other dregs-a neighborhood where policemen travel only in pairs.
The information they had
squeezed out of the driver had been correct but a few minutes out of date. The
room had housed the prisoner, certainly, for there was a bed in it which seemed
to have been occupied continuously for at least a week, a pot of coffee was
still hot-and wrapped in a towel on a shelf was an old- fashioned removable
denture which Clifton identified as belonging to Bonforte. But Bonforte himself
was missing and so were his captors.
They had left there with the intention of
carrying out the original plan, that of claiming that the kidnapping had taken
place immediately after the adoption and putting pressure on Boothroyd by
threatening to appeal to the Nest of Kkkah. But they had found Bonforte, had
simply run across him in the street before they left Old Town-a poor old stumblebum
with a week's beard, dirty and dazed. The men had not recognized him, but Penny
had known him and made them stop.
She
broke into sobs again as she told me this part and we almost ran down a truck
train snaking up to one of the loading
A
reasonable reconstruction seemed to be that the laddies in the second car-the
one that was to crash us-had reported back, whereupon the faceless leaders of
our opponents had decided that the kidnaping no longer served their purposes.
Despite the arguments I had heard about it, I was surprised that they had not
simply killed him; it was not until later that I understood that what they had
done was subtler, more suited to their purposes, and much crueler than mere
killing.
"Where is he
now?" I asked.
"Dak took him to the
voyageurs' hostel in Dome 3."
"Is that where we are
headed?"
"I don't know. Rog just said to go pick
you up, then they disappeared in the service door of the hostel. Uh, no, I
don't think we dare go there. I don't know what to do."
"Penny, stop the
car."
"Huh?"
"Surely this car has a
phone. We won't stir another inch until we find out-or figure out-what we
should do. But I am certain of one thing: I should stay in character until Dak
or Rog decides that I should fade out. Somebody has to talk to the newsmen.
Somebody has to make a public departure for the Tom Paine. You're sure that Mr.
Bonforte can't be spruced up so that he can do it?"
"What? Oh, he couldn't
possibly. You didn't see him."
"So I didn't. I'll take your word for it.
All right, Penny, I'm 'Mr. Bonforte' again and you're my secretary. We'd better
get with
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"Yes-Mr.
Bonforte."
"Now try to get
Captain Broadbent on the phone, will you, please?" We couldn't find a
phone list in the car and she had to go through "Information," but at
last she was tuned with the clubhouse of the voyageurs. I could hear both
sides. "Pilots' Club, Mrs. Kelly speaking."
Penny covered the
microphone. "Do I give my name?"
"Play it straight. We've nothing to
hide."
"This is Mr. Bonforte's
secretary," she said gravely. "Is his pilot there? Captain
Broadbent."
"I know him, dear." There was
a shout: "Hey! Any of you smokers see where Dak went?" After a
pause she went on, "He's gone to his
room. I'm buzzing him." Shortly Penny said, "Skipper? The Chief wants
to talk to you," and handed me the phone. "This is the Chief,
Dak." "Oh. Where are you-sir?" "Still in the car. Penny
picked me up. Dak, press conference, I believe. Where is it?" He
hesitated. "I'm glad you called in, sir. There's been a-slight change in
the situation." "So Penny told me. I'm just as well pleased; I'm
rather tired. Dak, I've decided not to stay dirtside
tonight; my gimp leg
has been bothering me and I'm looking forward to a real rest in free
fall." I hated
free fall but Bonforte did not. "Will
you or Rog make my apologies to the Commissioner, and so forth?"
"We'll take care of everything, sir." "Good. How soon can you
arrange a shuttle for me?" "The Pixie is still standing by for you,
sir. If you will go to Gate 3, I'll phone and have a field car
pick you up." "Very good.
Out." "Out, sir." I handed the phone to Penny to put back in its
clamp. "Curly Top, I don't know whether that phone
frequency is monitored
or not-or whether possibly the whole car is bugged. If either is the case, they
may have learned two things-where Dak is and through that where he is, and
second, what I am about to do next. Does that suggest anything to your
mind?"
She looked
thoughtful, then took out her secretary's notebook, wrote in it: Let's get rid
of the car. I nodded, then took the book from her and wrote in it: How far away
is Gate 3? She answered: Walking distance.
Silently we climbed out and
left. She had pulled into some executive's parking space outside one of the
warehouses when she had parked the car; no doubt in time it would be returned
where it belonged-and such minutiae no longer mattered.
We had gone about fifty
yards, when I stopped. Something was the matter. Not the day, certainly. It was
almost balmy, with the sun burning brightly in clear, purple Martian sky. The
traffic, wheel and foot, seemed to pay no attention to us, or at least such attention
was for the pretty young woman with me rather than directed at me. Yet I felt
uneasy.
"What is it, Chief?"
"Eh? That is what it is!"
"Sir?"
"I'm not being the 'Chief.' It
isn't in character to go dodging off like this. Back we go, Penny."
She did not argue, but followed me back
to the car. This time I climbed into the back seat, sat there
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looking dignified, and let her chauffeur me to Gate 3.
It
was not the gate we had come in. I think Dak had chosen it because it ran less
to passengers and more to freight. Penny paid no attention to signs and ran the
big Rolls right up to the gate. A terminal policeman tried to stop her; she
simply said coldly, "Mr. Bonforte's ear. And will you please send word to
the Commissioner's office to call for it here?"
He
looked baffled, glanced into the rear compartment, seemed to recognize me,
saluted, and let us stay. I answered with a friendly wave and he opened the
door for me. "The lieutenant is very particular about keeping the space
back of the fence clear, Mr. Bonforte," he apologized, "but I guess
it's all right."
"You can have the car
moved at once," I said. "My secretary and I are leaving. Is my field
car here?"
"I'll find out at the gate, sir." He
left. It was just the amount of audience I wanted, enough to tie it down solid
that "Mr. Bonforte" had arrived by official car and had left for his
space yacht. I tucked my life wand under my arm like Napoleon's baton and
limped after him, with Penny tagging along. The cop spoke to the gatemaster,
then hurried back to us, smiling. "Field car is waiting, sir."
"Thanks indeed."
I was congratulating myself on the perfection of the timing.
"Uh. . ." The cop looked flustered
and added hurriedly, in a low voice, "I'm an Expansionist, too, sir. Good
job you did today." He glanced at the life wand with a touch of awe.
I
knew exactly how Bonforte should look in this routine. "Why, thank you. I
hope you have lots of children. We need to work up a solid majority."
He guffawed more than it
was worth. "That's a good one! Uh, mind if I repeat it?"
"Not at all." We had moved on and I
started through the gate. The gatemaster touched my arm. "Er ... Your
passport, Mr. Bonforte."
I trust I did not let my
expression change. "The passports, Penny."
She looked frostily at the
official. "Captain Broadbent takes care of all clearances."
He
looked at me and looked away. "I suppose it's all right. But I'm supposed
to check them and take down the serial numbers."
"Yes, of course. Well, I suppose I must
ask Captain Broadbent to run out to the field. Has my shuttle been assigned a
take-off time? Perhaps you had better arrange with the tower to 'hold.'"
But
Penny appeared to be cattily angry. "Mr. Bonforte, this is ridiculous!
We've never had this red tape before-certainly not on Mars."
The cop said hastily,
"Of course it's all right, Hans. After all, this is Mr. Bonforte."
"Sure, but--"
I interrupted with a happy
smile. "There's a simpler way out. If you-what is your name, sir?"
"Hasiwanter. Hans
Haslwanter," he answered reluctantly.
"Mr. Haslwanter, if you will call Mr.
Commissioner Boothroyd, I'll speak to him and we can save my pilot a trip out
to the field- and save me an hour or more of time."
"Uh, I wouldn't like
to do that, sir. I could call the port captain's office?" he suggested
hopefully.
"Just get me Mr. Boothroyd's number. 1
will call him." This time I put a touch of frost into my voice, the
attitude of the busy and important man who wishes to be democratic but has had
all the pushing around and hampering by underlings that he intends to put up
with.
That did it. He said hastily, "I'm sure
it's all right, Mr. Banforte. It's just-well, regulations, you know."
"Yes, I know. Thank you." I started
to push on through.
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"Hold it, Mr.
Bonforte! Look this way."
I
glanced around. That i-dotting and 1-crossing civil servant had held us up just
long enough to let the press catch up with us. One man had dropped to his knee
and was pointing a stereobox at me; he looked up and said, "Hold the wand
where we can see it." Several others with various types of equipment were
gathering around us; one had climbed up on the roof of the Rolls. Someone else
was shoving a microphone at me and another had a directional mike aimed like a
gun.
I
was as angry as a leading woman with her name in small type but I remembered
who I was supposed to be. I smiled and moved slowly. Bonforte had a good grasp
of the fact that motion appears faster in pictures; I could afford to do it
properly.
"Mr. Bonforte, why did
you cancel the press conference?"
"Mr. Bonforte, it is asserted that you
intend to demand that the Grand Assembly grant full Empire citizenship to
Martians; will you comment?"
"Mr. Bonforte, how
soon are you going to force a vote of confidence in the present
government?"
I
held up my hand with the wand in it and grinned. "One at a time, please!
Now what was that first question?"
They all answered at once, of course; by the
time they had sorted out precedence I had managed to waste several moments
without having to answer anything. Bill Corpsman came charging up at that
point. "Have a heart, boys. The Chief has had a hard day. I gave you all
you need."
I held out a palm at him.
"I can spare a minute or two, Bill. Gentiemen, I'm just about to leave but
I'll try to cover the essentials of what you have asked. So far as I know the
present government does not plan any reassessment of the relation of Mars to
the Empire. Since I am not in office my own opinions are hardly pertinent. I
suggest that you ask Mr. Quiroga. On the question of how soon the opposition
will force a vote of confidence all I can say is that we won't do it unless we
are sure we can win it-and you know as much about that as I do."
Someone said, "That
doesn't say much, does it?"
"It was not intended
to say much," I retorted, softening it with a grin. "Ask me questions
I can legitimately answer and I will. Ask me those loaded
'Have-you-quit-beating-your-wife?' sort and I have answers to match." I
hesitated, realizing that Bonforte had a reputation for bluntness and honesty,
especially with the press. "But I am not trying to stall you. You all know
why I am here today. Let me say this about it-and you can quote me if you
wish." I reached back into my mind and hauled up an appropriate bit from
the speeches of Bonforte I had studied. "The real meaning of what happened
today is not that of an honor to one man. This"-I gestured with the
Martian wand-."is proof that two great races can reach out across the gap
of strangeness with understanding. Our own race is spreading out to the stars.
We shall find-we are finding-that we are vastly outnumbered. If we are to
succeed in our expansion to the stars, we must deal honestly, humbly, with open
hearts. I have heard it said that our Martian neighbors would overrun Earth if
given the chance. This is nonsense; Earth is not suited to Martians. Let us
protect our own-but let us not be seduced by fear and hatred into foolish acts.
The stars will never be won by little minds; we must be big as space
itself."
The
reporter cocked an eyebrow. "Mr. Bonforte, seems to me I heard you make
that speech last February."
"You will hear it next February. Also
January, March, and all the other months. Truth cannot be too often
repeated." I glanced back at the gatemaster and added, "I'm sorry but
I'll have to go now-or I'll miss the tick." I turned and went through the
gate, with Penny after me.
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We
climbed into the little lead-armored field ear and the door sighed shut. The
car was automatized, so I did not have to play up for a driver; I threw myself
down and relaxed. "Whew!"
"I thought you did
beautifully," Penny said seriously.
"I had a bad moment
when he spotted the speech I was cribbing."
"You got away with it.
It was an inspiration. You-you sounded just like him."
"Was there anybody
there I should have called by name?"
"Not really. One or
two maybe, but they wouldn't expect it when you were so rushed."
"I was caught in a squeeze. That fiddlin'
gatemaster and his passports. Penny, I should think that you would carry them
rather than Dak."
"Dak doesn't carry them. We all carry our
own." She reached into her bag, pulled out a little book. "I had
mine-but I did not dare admit it."
"Eh?"
"He had his on him
when they got him. We haven't dared ask for a replacement-not at this
time."
I was suddenly very weary.
Having no instructions from
Dak or Rog, I stayed in character during the shuttle trip up and on entering
the Tom Paine. It wasn't difficult; I simply went straight to the owner's cabin
and spent long, miserable hours in free fall, biting my nails and wondering
what was happening down on the surface. With the aid of antinausea pills I
finally managed to float off into fitful sleep-which was a mistake, for I had a
series of no-pants nightmares, with reporters pointing at me and cops touching
me on the shoulder and Martians aiming their wands at me. They all knew I was
phony and were simply arguing over who had the privilege of taking me apart and
putting me down the oubliette.
I
was awakened by the hooting of the acceleration alarm. Dak's vibrant baritone
was booming, "First and last red warning! One third gee! One minute!"
I hastily pulled myself over to my bunk and held on. I felt lots better when it
hit; one third gravity is not much, about the same as Mars' surface I think,
but it is enough to steady the stomach and make the floor a real floor.
About five minutes later Dak knocked and let
himself in as I was going to the door. "Howdy, Chief."
"Hello, Dak. I'm
certainly glad to see you back."
"Not as glad as I am
to be back," he said wearily. He eyed my bunk. "Mind if I spread out
there?"
"Help yourself."
He did so and sighed.
"Cripes, am I pooped! I could sleep for a week. . . I think I wifi."
"Let's both of us. Uh
... You got him aboard?"
"Yes. What a
gymkhana!"
"I suppose so. Still, it must be easier
to do a job like that in a small, informal port like this than it was to pull
the stunts you rigged at Jeff erson."
"Huh? No, it's much
harder here."
"Eh?"
"Obviously. Here everybody knows
everybody-and people will talk." Dak smiled wryly. "We brought him
aboard as a case of frozen canal shrimp. Had to pay export duty, too."
"Dak, how is he?"
"Well . . ." Dak frowned. "Doc
Capek says that he will make a complete recovery-that it is just a matter of
time." He added explosively, "If I could lay my hands on those rats!
It would make you break down and bawl to see what they did to him-and yet we
have to let them get away with it cold-for his
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sake."
Dak
was fairly close to bawling himself. I said gently, "I gathered from Penny
that they had roughed him up quite a lot. How badly is he hurt?"
"Huh? You must have misunderstood Penny.
Aside from being filthy-dirty and needing a shave he was not hurt physically at
all."
I
looked stupid. "I thought they beat him up. Something about like working
him over with a baseball bat."
"I would rather they had! Who cares about
a few broken bones? No, no, it was what they did to his brain."
"Oh . . ." I felt
ill. "Brainwash?"
"Yes. Yes and no. They
couldn't have been trying to make him talk because he didn't have any secrets
that were of any possible political importance. He always operated out in the
open and everybody knows it. They must have been using it simply to keep him
under control, keep him from trying to escape."
He
went on, "Doc says that he thinks they must have been using the minimum
daily dose, just enough to keep him docile, until just before they turned him
loose. Then they shot him with a load that would turn an elephant into a
gibbering idiot. The front lobes of his brain must be soaked like a bath
sponge."
I felt so ill that I was
glad I had not eaten. I had once read up on the subject; I hate it so much that
it fascinates me. To my mind there is something immoral and degrading in an
absolute cosmic sense in tampering with a man's personality. Murder is a clean
crime in comparison, a mere peccadillo. "Brainwash" is a term that
comes down to us from the Communist movement of the Late Dark Ages; it was
first applied to breaking a man's will and altering his personality by physical
indignities and subtle torture. But that might take months; later they found a
"better" way, one which would turn a man into a babbling slave in
seconds-simply inject any one of several cocaine derivatives into his frontal
brain lobes.
The ifithy practice had
first been developed for a legitimate purpose, to quiet disturbed patients and
make them accessible to psychotherapy. As such, it was a humane advance, for it
was used instead of lobotomy-"lobotomy" is a term almost as obsolete
as "chastity girdle" but it means stirring a man's brain with a knife
in such a fashion as to destroy his personality without killing him. Yes, they
really used to do that-just as they used to beat them to "drive the devils
out."
The Communists developed
the new brainwash-by-drugs to an efficient technique, then when there were no
more Communists, the Bands of Brothers polished it up still further until they
could dose a man so lightly that he was simply receptive to leadership-. or
load him until he was a mindless mass of protoplasm-all in the sweet name of
brotherhood. After all, you can't have "brotherhood" if a man is
stubborn enough to want to keep his own secrets, can you? And what better way
is there to be sure that he is not holding out on you than to poke a needle
past his eyeball and slip a shot of babble juice into his brain? "You
can't make an omelet without breaking eggs." The sophistries of
villains-bah!
Of course, it has been
illegal for a long, long time now, except for therapy, with the express consent
of a court. But criminals use it and cops are sometimes not lily white, for it
does make a prisoner talk and it does not leave any marks at all. The victim
can even be told to forget that it has been done.
I
knew most of this at the time Dak told me what had been done to Bonforte and
the rest I cribbed out of the ship's Encyclopedia Batavia. See the article on
"Psychic Integration" and the one on "Torture."
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I shook my head and tried
to put the nightmares out of my mind. "But he's going to recover?"
"Doc says that the
drug does not alter the brain structure; it just paralyzes it. He says that
eventually the blood stream picks up and carries away all of the dope; it
reaches the kidneys and passes out of the body. But it takes time." Dak
looked up at me. "Chief?"
"Eh? About time to
knock off that 'Chief' stuff, isn't it? He's back."
"That's what I wanted to talk to you
about. Would it be too much trouble to you to keep up the impersonation just a
little while longer?"
"But why? There's
nobody here but just us chickens."
"That's not quite
true. Lorenzo, we've managed to keep this secret awfully tight. There's me,
there's you." He ticked it off on his fingers. "There's Doc and Rog
and Bill. And Penny, of course. There's a man by the name of Langston back
Earthside whom you've never met. I think Jimmie Washington suspects but he wouldn't
tell his own mother the right time of day. We don't know how many took part in
the kidnaping, but not many, you can be sure. In any case, they don't dare
talk-and the joke of it is they no longer could prove that he had ever been
missing even if they wanted to. But my point is this: here in the Tommie we've
got all the crew and all the idlers not in on it. Old son, how about staying
with it and letting yourself be seen each day by crewmen and by Jimmie
Washington's girl and such-while he gets well? Huh?"
"Mmm. . . I don't see
why not. How long will it be?"
"Just the trip back.
We'll take it slow, at an easy boost. You'll enjoy it."
"Okay. Dak, don't figure this into my
fee. I'm doing this piece of it just because I hate brainwashing."
Dak
bounced up and clapped me on the shoulder. "You're my kind of people,
Lorenzo. Don't worry about your fee; you'll be taken care of." His manner
changed. "Very well, Chief. See you in the morning, sir."
But
one thing leads to another. The boost we had started on Dak's return was a mere
shift of orbits, to one farther out where there would be little chance of a
news service sending up a shuttle for a follow-up story. I woke up in free
fall, took a pill, and managed to eat breakfast. Penny showed up shortly thereafter.
"Good morning, Mr. Bonforte."
"Good morning,
Penny." I inclined my head in the direction of the guest room. "Any
news?"
"No, sir. About the same. Captain's
compliments and would it be too much trouble for you to come to his
cabin?"
"Not at all." Penny followed me in.
Dak was there, with his heels hooked to his chair to stay in place; Rog and
Bill were strapped to the couch.
Dak looked around and sald,
"Thanks for coming in, Chief. We need some help."
"Good morning. What is
it?"
Clifton answered my greeting with his usual
dignified deference and called me Chief; Corpsman nodded. Dak went on, "To
clean this up in style you should make one more appearance."
"Eh? I thought-"
"Just a second. The networks were led to
expect a major speech from you today, commenting on yesterday's event. I
thought Rog intended to cancel it, but Bill has the speech worked up. Question
is, will you deliver it?"
The
trouble with adopting a cat is that they always have kittens. "Where?
Goddard City?"
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"Oh no. Right in your
cabin. We beam it to Phobos; they can it for Mars and also put it on the high
circuit for New Batavia, where the Earth nets will pick it up and where it will
be relayed for Venus, Ganymede, et cetera. Inside of four hours it will be all
over the system but you'll never have to stir out of your cabin." There is
something very tempting about a grand network. I had never been on one but once
and that time my act got clipped down to the point where my face showed for
only twenty-seven seconds. But to have one all to myself- Dak thought I was
reluctant and added, "It won't be a strain, as we are equipped to can it
right here in the Tommie. Then we can project it first and clip out anything if
necessary." "Well-all right. You have the script, Bill?"
"Yes." "Let me check it." "What do you mean? You'll
have it in plenty of time." "Isn't that it in your hand?"
"Well, yes." "Then let me read it."
Corpsman looked annoyed.
"You'll have it an hour before we record. These things go better if they
sound spontaneous." "Sounding
spontaneous is a matter of careful preparation, Bill. It's my trade. I
know." "You did all right at the skyfield yesterday without
rehearsal. This is just more of the same old
hoke: I want you to do
it the same way."
Bonforte's personality was coming through
stronger the longer Corpsman stalled; I think Clifton could see that I was
about to cloud up and storm, for he said, "Oh, for Pete's sake, Bill! Hand
him the speech."
Corpsman snorted and threw the sheets at me.
In free fall they sailed but the air spread them wide. Penny gathered them
together, sorted them, and gave them to me. I thanked her, said nothing more,
and started to read.
I skimmed through it in a
fraction of the time it would take to deliver it. Finally I finished and
looked up. "Well?" said Rog.
"About five minutes of this concerns the adoption. The rest is an argument
for the policies of the
Expansionist Party. Pretty much the same
as I've heard in the speeches you've had me study." "Yes,"
agreed Clifton. "The adoption is the hook we hang the rest on. As you
know, we expect to
force a vote of confidence before
long." "I understand. You can't miss this chance to beat the drum.
Well, it's all right, but--" "But what? What's worrying you?"
"Well-characterization. In several places the wording should be changed.
It's not the way he would
express it."
Corpsman exploded with a word unnecessary in
the presence of a lady; I gave him a cold glance. "Now see here,
Smythe," he went on, "who knows how Bonforte would say it? You? Or
the man who has been writing his speeches the past four years?"
I
tried to keep my temper; he had a point "It is nevertheless the
case," I answered, "that a line which looks okay in print may not
dellver well. Mr. Bonforte is a great orator, I have already learned. He
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belongs with Webster, Churchill, and Demosthenes-a rolling
grandeur expressed in simple words. Now take this word 'intransigent,' which
you have used twice. I might say that, but I have a weakness for polysyllables;
I like to exhibit my literary erudition. But Mr. Bonforte would stay 'stubborn'
or 'mulish' or 'pigheaded.' The reason he would is, naturally, that they convey
emotion much more effectively."
"You see that you make
the delivery effective! I'll worry about the words."
"You don't understand,
Bill. I don't care whether the speech is politically effective or not; my job
is to carry out a characterization. I can't do that if I put into the mouth of
the character words that he would never use; it would sound as forced and phony
as a goat spouting Greek. But if I read the speech in words he would use, it
will automatically be effective. He's a great orator."
"Listen, Smythe,
you're not hired to write speeches. You're hired to-"
"Hold it, Bill!"
Dak cut in. "And a little less of that 'Smythe' stuff, too. Well, Rog? How
about it?"
Clifton said, "As I
understand it, Chief, your only objection is to some of the phrasing?"
"Well, yes. I'd suggest cutting out that
personal attack on Mr. Quiroga, too, and the insinuation about his financial
backers. It doesn't sound like real Bonforte to me."
He
looked sheepish. "That's a bit I put in myself. But you may be right. He
always gives a man the benefit of the doubt." He remained silent for a
moment. "You make the changes you think you have to. We'll can it and look
at the playback. We can always clip it-or even cancel completely 'due to
technical difficulties.'" He smiled grimly. "That's what we'll do,
Bill."
"Damn it, this is a
ridiculous example of-"
"That's how it is
going to be, Bill."
Corpsman left the room very suddenly. Clifton
sighed. "Bill always has hated the notion that anybody but Mr. B. could
give him instructions. But he's an able man. Uh, Chief, how soon can you be
ready to record? We patch in at sixteen hundred."
"I don't know. I'll be
ready in time."
Penny followed me back into
my office. When she closed the door I said, "I won't need you for the next
hour or so, Penny child. But you might ask Doc for more of those pills. I may
need them."
"Yes, sir." She
floated with her back to the door. "Chief?"
"Yes, Penny?"
"I just wanted to say
don't believe what Bill said about writing his speeches!"
"I didn't. I've heard
his speeches-and I've read this."
"Oh, Bill does submit drafts, lots of
times. So does Rog. I've even done it myself. He-he will use ideas from
anywhere if he thinks they are good. But when he delivers a speech, it is his,
every word of it."
"I believe you. I wish
he had written this one ahead of time."
"You just do your
best!"
I did. I started out simply
substituting synonyms, putting in the gutty Germanic words in place of the
"intestinal" Latin jawbreakers. Then I got excited and red in the
face and tore it to pieces. It's a lot of fun for an actor to mess around with
lines; he doesn't get the chance very often.
I
used no one but Penny for my audience and made sure from Dak that I was not
being tapped elsewhere in the ship-though I suspect that the big-boned galoot
cheated on me and listened in himself. I had Penny in tears in the first three
minutes; by the time I finished (twenty-eight and a half minutes, just time for
station announcements), she was limp. I took no liberties with the straight
Expansionist doctrine, as proclaimed by its official prophet, the Right
Honorable John Joseph Bonforte; I simply
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reconstructed his message and his
delivery, largely out of phrases from other speeches. Here's an odd thing-I
believed every word of it while I was talking. But, brother, I made a speech!
Afterwards we all listened
to the playback, complete with full stereo of myself. Jimmie Washington was
present, which kept Bill Corpsman quiet. When it was over I said, "How
about it, Rog? Do we need to clip anything?"
He took his cigar out of his mouth and said,
"No. If you want my advice, Chief, I'd say to let it go as it is."
Corpsman left the room again-but Mr. Washington came over with tears leaking
out of his eyes-
tears are a nuisance in free fall; there's
nowhere for them to go. "Mr. Bonforte, that was beauti/ui."
"Thanks, Jimmie." Penny could not talk at all. I turned in after
that; a top-notch performance leaves me fagged. I slept for more than eight
hours,
then was awakened by
the hooter. I had strapped myself to my bunk-I hate to float around while
sleeping in free fall-so I did not have to move. But I had not known that we
were getting under way so I called the control room between first and second
warning. "Captain Broadbent?"
"Just a moment,
sir," I heard Epstein answer.
Then Dak's voice came over. "Yes,
Chief? We are getting under way on schedule-pursuant to your
orders." "Eh? Oh yes,
certainly." "I believe Mr. Clifton is on his way to your cabin."
"Very well, Captain." I lay back and waited. Immediately after we
started to boost at one gee Rog Clifton came in; he had a worried look on his
face I could not interpret- equal parts of
triumph, worry, and confusion. "What is it, Rog?" "Chief!
They've jumped the gun on us! The Quiroga government has resigned!"
Chapter 7
I was still
logy with sleep; I shook my head to try to clear it. "What are you in such
a spin about,
Rog? That's what you were trying to
accomplish, wasn't it?" "Well, yes, of course. But-" He stopped.
"But what? I don't get it. Here you chaps have been working and scheming
for years to bring about
this very thing. Now
you've won-and you look like a bride who isn't sure she wants to go through
with it.
Why? The no-good-nicks are out and now
God's chillun get their innings. No?" "Uh-you haven't been in
politics much." "You know I haven't. I got trimmed when I ran for
patrol leader in my scout troop. That cured me." "Well, you see,
timing is everything." "So my father always told me. Look here, Rog,
do I gather that if you had your druthers you'd
druther Quiroga was still in office? You
said he had 'jumped the gun." "Let me explain. What we really wanted
was to move a vote of confidence and win it, and thereby
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force a general
election on them-but at our own time, when we estimated that we could win the
election."
"Oh. And you don't figure you can win
now? You think Quiroga will go back into office for another five years-or at
least the Humanity Party will?"
Clifton looked thoughtful.
"No, I think our chances are pretty good to win the election."
"Eh? Maybe I'm not
awake yet. Don't you want to win?"
"Of course. But don't
you see what this resignation has done to us?"
"I guess I
don't."
"Well, the government in power can order
a general election at any time up to the constitutional limitation of five
years. Ordinarily they will go to the people when the time seems most favorable
to them. But they don't resign between the announcement and the election unless
forced to. You follow me?"
I realized that the event
did seem odd, little attention as I paid to politics. "I believe so."
"But in this case
Quiroga's government scheduled a general election, then resigned in a body,
leaving the Empire without a government. Therefore the sovereign must call on
someone else to form a 'caretaker' government to serve until the election. By
the letter of the law he can ask any member of the Grand Assembly, but as a
matter of strict constitutional precedent he has no choice. When a government
resigns in a body-not just reshuffling portfolios but quits as a whole-then the
sovereign must call on the leader of the opposition to form the 'caretaker'
government. It's indispensable to our system; it keeps resigning from being
just a gesture. Many other methods have been tried in the past; under some of
them governments were changed as often as underwear. But our present system
insures responsible government."
I
was so busy trying to see the implications that I almost missed his next
remark. "So, naturally, the Emperor has summoned Mr. Bonforte to New
Batavia."
"Eh? New Batavia? Welll" I was
thinking that I had never seen the Imperial capital. The one time I had been on
the Moon the vicissitudes of my profession had left me without time or money
for the side trip. "Then that is why we got under way? Well, I certainly
don't mind. I suppose you can always find a way to send me home if the Tommie
doesn't go back to Earth soon."
"What? Good heavens, don't worry about that
now. When the time comes, Captain Broadbent can find any number of ways to
deliver you home."
"Sorry. I forget that you have more
important matters on your mind, Rog. Sure, I'm anxious to get home now that the
job is done. But a few days, or even a month, on Luna would not matter. I have
nothing pressing me. But thanks for taking time to tell me the news." I
searched his face. "Rog, you look worried as hell."
"Don't you see? The
Emperor has sent for Mr. Bonforte. The Emperor, man! And Mr. Bonforte is in no
shape to appear at an audience. They have risked a gambit-and perhaps trapped
us in a checkmate!"
"Eh? Now wait a
minute. Slow up. I see what you are driving at -but, look, friend, we aren't at
New Batavia. We're a hundred million miles away, or two hundred million, or
whatever it is. Doc Capek will have him wrung out and ready to speak his piece
by then. Won't he?"
"Well-we hope
so."
"But you aren't
sure?"
"We can't be sure. Capek says that there
is little clinical data on such massive doses. It depends on the individual's
body chemistry and on the exact drug used."
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I suddenly remembered a
time when an understudy had slipped me a powerful purgative just before a
performance. (But I went on anyhow, which proves the superiority of mind over
matter- then I got him fired.) "Rog-they gave him that last, unnecessarily
big dose not just out of simple sadism-but to set up this situation!"
"I think so. So does
Capek."
"Hey! In that case it would mean that
Quiroga himself is the man behind the kidnapping-and that we've had a gangster
running the Empire!"
Rog
shook his head. "Not necessarily. Not even probably. But it would indeed
mean that the same forces who control the Actionists also control the machinery
of the Humanity Party. But you will never pin anything on them; they are
unreachable, ultrarespectable. Nevertheless, they could send word to Quiroga
that the time had come to roll over and play dead-and have him do it. Almost
certainly," he added, "without giving him a hint of the real reason
why the moment was timely."
"Criminy! Do you mean to tell me that the
top man in the Empire would fold up and quit, just like that? Because somebody
behind the scenes ordered him to?"
"I'm afraid that is
just what I do think."
I shook my head.
"Politics is a dirty game!"
"No," Clifton
answered insistently. "There is no such thing as a dirty game. But you
sometimes run into dirty players."
"I don't see the
difference."
"There is a world of difference. Quiroga
is a third-rater and a stooge-in my opinion, a stooge for villains. But there
is nothing third-rate about John Joseph Bonforte and he has never, ever been a
stooge for anyone. As a follower, he believed in the cause; as the leader, he
has led from conviction!"
"I stand corrected," I said humbly.
"Well, what do we do? Have Dak drag his feet so that the Tommie does not
reach New Batavia until he is back in shape to do the job?"
"We can't stall. We don't have to boost
at more than one gravity; nobody would expect a man Bonforte's age to place
unnecessary strain on his heart. But we can't delay. When the Emperor sends for
you, you come."
"Then what?"
Rog looked at me without
answering. I began to get edgy. "Hey, Rog, don't go getting any wild
notions! This hasn't anything to do with me. I'm through, except for a few
casual appearances around the ship. Dirty or not, politics is not my game-just
pay me off and ship me home and I'll guarantee never even to register to vote!"
"You probably wouldn't
have to do anything. Dr. Capek will almost certainly have him in shape for it.
But it isn't as if it were anything hard-not like that adoption ceremony-just
an audience with the Emperor and--"
"The Emperor!" I almost screamed.
Like most Americans, I did not understand royalty, did not really approve of
the institution in my heart-and had a sneaking, unadmitted awe of kings. After
all, we Americans came in by the back door. When we swapped associate status
under treaty for the advantages of a full voice in the affairs of the Empire,
it was explicitly agreed that our local institutions, our own constitution, and
so forth, would not be affected-and tacitly agreed that no member of the royal
family would ever visit America. Maybe that is a bad thing. Maybe if we were
used to royalty we would not be so impressed by them. In any case, it is
notorious that "democratic" American women are more quiveringly
anxious to be presented at court than is anybody else.
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"Now take it
easy," Rog answered. "You probably won't have to do it at all. We
just want to be prepared. What I was trying to tell you is that a 'caretaker'
government is no problem. It passes no laws, changes no policies. I'll take
care of all the work. All you will have to do-if you have to do anything-is
make the formal appearance before King Wilem-and possibly show up at a
controlled press conference or two, depending on how long it is before he is
well again. What you have already done is much harder-and you will be paid
whether we need you or not."
"Damn it, pay has nothing to do with it!
It's-well, in the words of a famous character in theatrical history, 'Include
me out.'"
Before Rog could answer, Bill Corpsman came
bursting into my cabin without knocking, looked at us, and said sharply to
Clifton, "Have you told him?"
"Yes," agreed
Clifton. "He's turned down the job."
"Huh? Nonsense!"
"It's not nonsense," I answered,
"and by the way, Bill, that door you just came through has a nice spot on
it to knock. In the profession the custom is to knock and shout, 'Are you
decent?' I wish you would remember it."
"Oh, dirty sheets!
We're in a hurry. What's this guff about your refusing?"
"It's not guff. This
is not the job I signed up for."
"Garbage! Maybe you are too stupid to
realize it, Smythe, but you are in too deep to prattle about backing out. It
wouldn't be healthy."
I
went to him and grabbed his arm. "Are you threatening me? If you are,
let's go outside and talk it over."
He
shook my hand off. "In a spaceship? You really are simple, aren't you? But
haven't you got it through your thick head that you caused this mess
yourself?"
"What do you
mean?"
"He means," Clifton answered,
"that he is convinced that the fall of the Quiroga government was the
direct result of the speech you made earlier today. It is even possible that he
is right. But it is beside the point. Bill, try to be reasonably polite, will
you? We get nowhere by bickering."
I
was so surprised by the suggestion that I had caused Quiroga to resign that I
forgot all about my desire to loosen Corpsman's teeth. Were they serious? Sure,
it was one dilly of a fine speech, but was such a result possible?
Well, if it was, it was certainly
fast service.
I
said wonderingly, "Bill, do I understand that you are complaining that the
speech I made was too effective to suit you?"
"Huh? Hell, no! It was
a lousy speech."
"So? You can't have it both ways. You're
saying that a lousy speech went over so big that it scared the Humanity Party
right out of office. Is that what you meant?"
Corpsman looked annoyed, started to answer,
and caught sight of Clifton suppressing a grin. He scowled, again started to
reply- finally shrugged and said, "All right, buster, you proved your
point; the speech could not have had anything to do with the fall of the
Quiroga government. Nevertheless, we've got work to do. So what's this about
you not being willing to carry your share of the load?"
I
looked at him and managed to keep my temper-Bonforte's influence again; playing
the part of a calm-tempered character tends to make one calm inside.
"Bill, again you cannot have it two ways. You have made it emphatically
clear that you consider me just a hired hand. Therefore I have no obligation
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beyond my job, which is finished. You
can't hire me for another job unless it suits me. It doesn't." He started
to speak but I cut in. "That's all. Now get out. You're not welcome
here." He looked astounded. "Who the hell do you think you are to
give orders around here?" "Nobody. Nobody at all, as you have pointed
out. But this is my private room, assigned to me by
the Captain. So now
get out or be thrown out. I don't like your manners."
Clifton added quietly,
"Clear out, Bill. Regardless of anything else, it is his private cabin at
the present time. So you had better leave." Rog hesitated, then added,
"I think we both might as well leave; we don't seem to be getting
anywhere. If you will excuse us -Chief?"
"Certainly."
I sat and thought about it
for several minutes. I was sorry that I had let Corpsman provoke me even into
such a mild exchange; it lacked dignity. But I reviewed it in my mind and
assured myself that my personal differences with Corpsman had not affected my
decision; my mind had been made up before he appeared.
A sharp knock came at the
door. I called out, "Who is it?"
"Captain Broadbent."
"Come in, Dak."
He did so, sat down, and for some
minutes seemed interested only in pulling hangnails. Finally he
looked up and said, "Would it change
your mind if I slapped the blighter in the brig?" "Eh? Do you have a
brig in the ship?" "No. But it would not be hard to jury-rig
one." I looked at him sharply, trying to figure what went on inside that
bony head. "Would you actually
put Bill in the brig
if I asked for it?"
He
looked up, cocked a brow, and grinned wryly. "No. A man doesn't get to be
a captain operating on any such basis as that. I would not take that sort of
order even from him." He inclined his head toward the room Bonforte was
in. "Certain decisions a man must make himself."
"That's right."
"Mmm-I hear you've made one of that
sort."
"That's right."
"So. I've come to have a lot of
respect for you, old son. First met you, I figured you for a
clotheshorse and a facemaker, with nothing
inside. I was wrong." "Thank you." "So I won't plead with
you. Just tell me: is it worth our time to discuss the factors? Have you given
it plenty of thought?" "My mind
is made up, Dak. This isn't my pidgin." "Well, perhaps you're right.
I'm sorry. I guess we'll just have to hope he pulls out of it in time." He
stood up. "By the way, Penny would
like to see you, if you aren't going to turn in again this minute." I
laughed without pleasure. "Just 'by the way,' eh? Is this the proper
sequence? Isn't it Dr. Capek's turn to try to twist my arm?" "He
skipped his turn; he's busy with Mr. B. He sent you a message, though."
"He said you could go to hell.
Embroidered it a bit, but that was the gist."
"He did? Well, tell him I'll save
him a seat by the fire."
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"Can Penny come
in?"
"Oh, sure! But you can
tell her that she is wasting her time; the answer is still 'No.'"
So
I changed my mind. Confound it, why should an argument seem so much more
logical when underlined with a whiff of Jungle Lust? Not that Penny used unfair
means, she did not even shed tears-not that I laid a finger on her-but I found
myself conceding points, and presently there were no more points to concede.
There is no getting around it, Penny is the world-saver type and her sincerity
is contagious.
The boning I did on the
trip out to Mars was as nothing to the hard study I put in on the trip to New
Batavia. I already had the basic character; now it was necessary to fill in the
background, prepare myself to be Bonforte under almost any circumstances. While
it was the royal audience I was aiming at, once we were at New Batavia I might
have to meet any of hundreds or thousands of people. Rog planned to give me a
defense in depth of the sort that is routine for any public figure if he is to
get work done; nevertheless, I would have to see people-a public figure is a
public figure, no way to get around that.
The
tightrope act I was going to have to attempt was made possible only by
Bonforte's Farleyfile, perhaps the best one ever compiled. Farley was a
political manager of the twentieth century, of Eisenhower I believe, and the
method he invented for handling the personal relations of politics was as
revolutionary as the German invention of staff command was to warfare. Yet I
had never heard of the device until Penny showed me Bonforte's.
It was nothing but a file
about people. However, the art of politics is "nothing but" people.
This file contained all, or almost all, of the thousands upon thousands of
people Bonforte had met in the course of his long public life; each dossier
consisted of what he knew about that person from Bon forte's own personal
contact. Anything at all, no matter how trivial-in fact, trivia were always the
first entries: names and nicknames of wives, children, and pets, hobbies,
tastes in food or drink, prejudices, eccentricities. Following this would be
listed date and place and comments for every occasion on which Boriforte had
talked to that particular man.
When available, a photo was included. There
might or might not be "below-the-line" data, i.e. information which
had been researched rather than learned directly by Bonforte. It depended on
the political importance of the person. In some cases the
"below-the-line" part was a formal biography running to thousands of
words.
Both Penny and Bonforte himself carried
minicorders powered by theft body heat. If Bonforte was alone he would dictate into
his own when opportunity offered-in rest rooms, while riding, etc.; if Penny
went along she would take it down in hers, which was disguised to look like a
wrist watch. Penny could not possibly do the transcribing and microfilming; two
of Jimmie Washington's girls did little else.
When Penny showed me the
Farleyfile, showed me the very bulk of it-and it was bulky, even at ten
thousand words or more to the spool-and then told me that this represented
personal information about Mr. Bonforte's acquaintances, I scroaned (which is a
scream and groan done together, with intense feeling). "God's mercy,
child! I tried to tell you this job could not be done. How could anyone
memorize all that?"
"Why, you can't, of
course."
"You just said that
this was what he remembered about his friends and acquaintances."
"Not quite. I said that this is what he
wanted to remember. But since he can't, not possibly, this is how he does it.
Don't worry; you don't have to memorize anything. I just want you to know that
it is
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available. It is my job to see that he has at least a minute or
two to study the appropriate Farleyfile before anybody gets in to see him. If
the need turns up, I can protect you with the same service."
I looked at the typical
file she had projected on the desk reader. A Mr. Saunders of Pretoria, South
Africa, I believe it was. He had a bulldog named Snuffles Bullyboy, several
assorted uninteresting offspring, and he liked a twist of lime in his whisky
and splash. "Penny, do you mean to tell me that Mr. B. pretends to
remember minutiae like that? It strikes me as rather phony."
Instead of getting angry at the slur on her
idol Penny nodded soberly. "I thought so once. But you don't look at it
correctly, Chief. Do you ever write down the telephone number of a
friend?"
"Eh? Of course."
"Is it dishonest? Do you apologize to
your friend for caring so little about him that you can't simply remember his
number?"
"Eh? All right, I give
up. You've sold me."
"These are things he
would like to remember if his memory were perfect. Since it isn't, it is no
more phony to do it this way than it is to use a tickler file in order not to
forget a friend's birthday-that's what it is: a giant tickler file, to cover
anything. But there is more to it. Did you ever meet a really important
person?"
I
tried to think. Penny did not mean the greats of the theatrical profession; she
hardly knew they existed. "I once met President Warfield. I was a kid of
ten or eleven."
"Do you remember the
details?"
"Why, certainly. He said, 'How did you
break that arm, son?' and I said, 'Riding a bicycle, sir,' and he said, 'Did the
same thing myself, only it was a collarbone.'"
"Do you think he would
remember it if he were still alive?"
"Why, no."
"He might-he may have
had you Farleyfiled. This Farleyfile includes boys of that age, because boys
grow up and become men. The point is that top-level men like President Warfield
meet many more people than they can remember. Each one of that faceless throng
remembers his own meeting with the famous man and remembers it in detail. But
the supremely important person in anyone's life is himself-and a politician
must never forget that. So it is polite and friendly and warmhearted for the
politician to have a way to be able to remember about other people the sort of
little things that they are likely to remember about him. It is also essential-in
politics."
I
had Penny display the Farleyfile on King Willem. It was rather short, which
dismayed me at first, until I concluded that it meant that Bonforte did not
know the Emperor well and had met him only on a few official occasions-Bonforte's
first service as Supreme Minister had been before old Emperor Frederick's
death. There was no biography below the line, but just a notation, "See
House of Orange." I didn't-there simply wasn't time to plow through a few
million words of Empire and pre-Empire history and, anyhow, I got
fair-to-excellent marks in history when I was in school. All I wanted to know
about the Emperor was what Bonforte knew about him that other people did not.
It occurred to me that the
Farleyfile must include everybody in the ship since they were (a) people
(b) whom Bonforte had
met. I asked Penny for them. She seemed a little surprised.
Soon I was the one surprised. The Torn Paine
had in her six Grand Assemblymen. Rog Clifton and Mr. Bonforte, of course- but
the first item in Dak's file read: "Broadbent, Darius K., the Honorable,
0. A. for League of Free Travelers, Upper Division." It also mentioned
that he held a Ph.D. in physics, had
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been reserve champion
with the pistol in the Imperial Matches nine years earlier, and had published
thee volumes of verse under the nom de plume of "Acey Wheelwright." I
resolved never again to take a man at merely his face value.
There was a notation in Bonforte's sloppy
handwriting: "Almost irresistible to women-and vice versa!"
Penny and Dr. Capek were also members of the
great parliament. Even Jimmie Washington was a member, for a "safe"
district, I realized later-he represented the Lapps, including all the reindeer
and Santa Claus, no doubt. He was also ordained in the First Bible Truth Church
of the Holy Spirit, which I had never heard of, but which accounted for his
tight-lipped deacon look.
I especially enjoyed
reading about Penny-the Honorable Miss Penelope Taliaferro Russell. She was an
M.A. in government administration from Georgetown and a B.A. from Wellesley,
which somehow did not surprise me. She represented districtless university women,
another "safe" constituency (I learned) since they are about five to
one Expansionist Party members.
On down below were her glove size, her other
measurements, her preferences in colors (I could teach her something about
dressing), her preference in scent (Jungle Lust, of course), and many other
details, most of them innocuous enough. But there was "comment":
"Neurotically honest-arithmetic
unreliable-prides herself on her sense of humor, of which she has none-watches
her diet but is gluttonous about candied cherries-little-mother-of-all-living
complex-unable to resist reading the printed word in any form."
Underneath was another of Bonforte's
handwritten addenda: "Ah, Curly Top! Snooping again, I see."
As I turned them back to
her I asked Penny if she had read her own Farleyfile. She told me snippily to
mind my own business! Then turned red and apologized.
Most of my time was taken
up with study but I did take time to review and revise carefully the physical
resemblance, checking the Semiperm shading by colorimeter, doing an extremely
careful job on the wrinkles, adding two moles, and setting the whole job with
electric brush. It was going to mean a skin peel before I could get my own face
back but that was a small price to pay for a make-up job that could not be
damaged, could not be smeared even with acetone, and was proof against such
hazards as napkins. I even added the scar on the "game" leg, using a
photograph Capek had kept in Bonforte's health history. If Bonforte had had
wife or mistress, she would have had difficulty in telling the impostor from
the real thing simply on physical appearance. It was a lot of trouble but it
left my mind free to worry about the really difficult part of the
impersonation.
But
the all-out effort during the trip was to steep myself in what Bonforte thought
and believed, in short the policies of the Expansionist Party. In a manner of
speaking, he himself was the Expansionist Party, not merely its most prominent
leader but its political philosopher and greatest statesman. Expansionism had
hardly been more than a "Manifest Destiny" movement when the party
was founded, a rabble coalition of groups who had one thing in common: the
belief that the frontiers in the sky were the mast important issue in the
emerging future of the human race. Bonforte had given the party a rationale and
an ethic, the theme that freedom and equal rights must run with the Imperial
banner; he kept harping on the notion that the human race must never again make
the mistakes that the white subrace had made in Africa and Asia.
But
I was confused by the fact-I was awfully unsophisticated in such matters-that
the early history of the Expansionist Party sounded remarkably like the present
Humanity Party. I was not aware that
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political parties often change as much in growing up as people do.
I had known vaguely that the Humanity Party had started as a splinter of the
Expansionist movement but I had never thought about it. Actually it was
inevitable; as the political parties which did not have their eyes on the sky
dwindled away under the imperatives of history and ceased to elect candidates,
the one party which had been on the right track was bound to split into two
factions.
But
I am running ahead; my political education did not proceed so logically. At
first I simply soaked myself in Bonforte's public utterances. True, I had done
that on the trip out, but then I was studying how he spoke; now I was studying
what he said.
Bonforte was an orator in
the grand tradition but he could be vitriolic in debate, e.g; a speech he made
in New Paris during the ruckus over the treaty with the Martian nests, the
Concord of Tycho. It was this treaty which had knocked him out of office
before; he had pushed it through but the strain on the coalition had lost him
the next vote of confidence. Nevertheless, Quiroga had not dared denounce the
treaty. I listened to this speech with special interest since I had not liked
the treaty myself; the idea that Martians must be granted the same privileges
on Earth that humans enjoyed on Mars had been abhorrent to me-until I visited
the Kkkah nest.
"My opponent,"
Bonforte had said with a rasp in his voice, "would have you believe that
the motto of the so-called Humanity Party, 'Government of human beings, by
human beings, and for human beings,' is no more than an updating of the
immortal words of Lincoln. But while the voice is the voice of Abraham, the
hand is the hand of the Ku Klux Klan. The true meaning of that innocent-seeming
motto is 'Government of all races everywhere, by human beings alone, for the
profit of a privileged few.'
"But, my opponent protests, we have a
God-given mandate to spread enlightenment through the stan, dispensing our own
brand of Civilization to the savages. This is the Uncle Remus school of
sociology-the good dahides singin' spirituals and Ole Massa lubbin' every one
of dem! It is a beautiful picture but the frame is too small; it fails to show
the whip, the slave block-and the counting house!"
I found myself becoming, if
not an Expansionist, then at least a Bonfortite. I am not sure that I was
convinced by the logic of his words-indeed, I am not sure that they were
logical. But I was in a receptive frame of mind. I wanted to understand what he
said so thoroughly that I could rephrase it and say it in his place, if need
be.
Nevertheless, here was a man who knew what he
wanted and (much rarer!) why he wanted it. I could not help but be impressed,
and it forced me to examine my own beliefs. What did I live by?
My
profession, surely! I had been brought up in it, I liked it, I had a deep
though unlogical conviction that art was worth the effort-and, besides, it was
the only way I knew to make a living. But what else?
I
have never been impressed by the formal schools of ethics. I had sampled
them-public libraries are a ready source of recreation for an actor short of
cash-but I had found them as poor in vitamins as a mother-in-law's kiss. Given
time and plenty of paper, a philosopher can prove anything.
I had the same contempt for
the moral instruction handed to mast children. Much of it is prattle and the
parts they really seem to mean are dedicated to the sacred proposition that a
"good" child is one who does not disturb mother's nap and a
"good" man is one who achieves a muscular bank account without
getting caught. No, thanks!
But even a dog has rules of
conduct. What were mine? How did I behave-or, at least, how did I like to think
I behaved?
"The show must go on." I had always
believed that and lived by it. But why must the show go on?-
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seeing that some shows are pretty terrible. Well, because you
agreed to do it, because there is an audience out there; they have paid and
each one of them is entitled to the best you can give. You owe it to them. You
owe it also to stagehands and manager and producer and other members of the
company-and to those who taught you your trade, and to others stretching back
in history to open-air theaters and stone seats and even to storytellers
squatting in a market place. Noblesse oblige.
I decided that the notion
could be generalized into any occupation. "Value for value." Building
"on the square and on the level." The Hippocratic oath. Don't let the
team down. Honest work for honest pay. Such things did not have to be proved;
they were an essential part of life-true throughout eternity, true in the
farthest reaches of the Galaxy.
I
suddenly got a glimpse of what Bonforte was driving at. If there were ethical
basics that transcended time and place, then they were true both for Martians
and for men. They were true on any planet around any star-and if the human race
did not behave accordingly they weren't ever going to win to the stars because
some better race would slap them down for double-dealing.
The
price of expansion was virtue. "Never give a sucker an even break"
was too narrow a philosophy to fit the broad reaches of space.
But
Bonforte was not preaching sweetness and light. "I am not a pacifist.
Pacifism is a shifty doctrine under which a man accepts the benefits of the
social group without being willing to pay-and claims a halo for his dishonesty.
Mr. Speaker, life belongs to those who do not fear to lose it. This bill must
pass!" And with that he had got up and crossed the aisle in support of a
military appropriation his own party had refused in caucus.
Or
again: "Take sides! Always take sides! You will sometimes be wrong-but the
man who refuses to take sides must always be wrong! Heaven save us from
poltroons who fear to make a choice. Let us stand up and be counted."
(This last was in a closed caucus but Penny had caught it on her minicorder and
Bonforte had saved it-Bonforte had a sense of history; he was a record keeper.
If he had not been, I would not have had much to work with.)
I
decided that Bonforte was my kind of man. Or at least the kind I liked to think
I was. His was a persona I was proud to wear.
So
far as I can remember I did not sleep on that trip after I promised Penny that
I would take the royal audience if Bonforte could not be made ready. I intended
to sleep-there is no point in taking your stage with your eyes bagging like
hound's ears-but I got interested in what I was studying and there was a
plentiful supply of pepper pills in Bonforte's desk. It is amazing how much
ground you can cover working a twenty-four-hour day, free from interruptions
and with all the help you could ask for.
But
shortly before we were due at New Batavia, Dr. Capek came in and said,
"Bare your left forearm."
"Why?" I asked.
"Because when you go before the Emperor
we don't want you falling flat on your face with fatigue. This will make you
sleep until we ground. Then I'll give you an antidote."
"Eh? I take it that
you don't think he will be ready?"
Capek did not answer, but gave me the shot. I
tried to finish listening to the speech I was running but I must have been
asleep in seconds. The next thing I knew Dak was saying deferentially,
"Wake up, sir. Please wake up. We're grounded at Lippershey Field."
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Chapter 8
Our
Moon being an airless planet, a torchship can land on it. But the Tom Paine,
being a torchship, was really intended to stay in space and be serviced only at
space stations in orbit; she had to be landed in a cradle. I wish I had been
awake to see it, for they say that catching an egg on a plate is easy by
comparison. Dak was one of the half dozen pilots who could do it.
But
I did not even get to see the Tommie in her cradle; all I saw was the inside of
the passenger bellows they fastened to her air lock and the passenger tube to
New Batavia-those tubes are so fast that, under the low gravity of the Moon,
you are again in free fall at the middle of the trip.
We went first to the
apartments assigned to the leader of the loyal opposition, Bonforte's official
residence until (and if) he went back into power after the coming election. The
magnificence of them made me wonder what the Supreme Minister's residence was
like. I suppose that New Batavia is odds-on the most palatial capital city in
all history; it is a shame that it can hardly be seen from outdoors-but that
minor shortcoming is more than offset by the fact that it is the only city in
the Solar System that is actually impervious to fusion bombs. Or perhaps I
should say "effectively impervious" since there are some surface
structures which could be destroyed. Bonforte's apartments included an upper
living room in the side of a cliff, which looked out through a bubble balcony
at the stars and Mother Earth herself-but his sleeping room and offices were a
thousand feet of solid rock below, by private lift.
I had no time to explore
the apartments; they dressed me for the audience. Bonforte had no valet even
dirtside, but Rog insisted on "helping" me (he was a hindrance) while
going over lastminute details. The dress was ancient formal court dress,
shapeless tubular trousers, a silly jacket with a claw-hammer tail, both in
black, and a chemise consisting of a stiff white breastplate, a
"winged" collar, and a white bow tie. Bonforte's chemise was all in
one piece, because (I suppose) he did not use a dresser; correctly it should be
assembled piece by piece and the bow tie should be tied poorly enough to show
that it has been tied by hand-but it is too much to expect a man to understand
both politics and period costuming.
It
is an ugly costume, but it did make a fine background for the Order of
Wilhelmina stretched in colorful diagonal across my chest. I looked at myself
in a long glass and was pleased with the effect; the one color accent against
the dead black and white was good showmanship. The traditional dress might be
ugly but it did have dignity, something like the cool stateliness of a ma?e
d'h?. I decided that I looked the part to wait on the pleasure of a
sovereign.
Rog
Clifton gave me the scroll which was supposed to list the names of my
nominations for the ministries and he tucked into an inner pocket of my costume
a copy of the typed list thereof-the original had gone forward by hand of
Jimmie Washington to the Emperor's State Secretary as soon as we had grounded.
Theoretically the purpose of the audience was for the Emperor to inform me that
it was his pleasure for me to form a government and for me to submit humbly my
suggestions; my nominations were supposed to be secret until the sovereign
graciously approved.
Actually the choices were all made; Rog and
Bill had spent most of the trip lining up the Cabinet and making sure the
nominees would serve, using state-scramble for the radio messages. I had
studied the Farleyflies on each nomination and each alternate. But the list
really was secret in the sense that the news services would not receive it until
after the Imperial audience.
I
took the scroll and picked up my life wand. Rog looked horrified. "Good
Lord, man, you can't carry that thing into the presence of the Emperor!"
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"Why not?"
"Huh? It's a weapon."
"It's a ceremonial weapon. Rog,
every duke and every pipsqueak baronet will be wearing his dress
sword. So I wear
this."
He shook his head.
"They have to. Don't you understand the ancient legal theory behind it?
Their dress swords symbolize the duty they owe their liege lord to support and
defend him by force of arms, in their own persons. But you are a commoner;
tradi-. tionally you come before him unarmed."
"No, Rog. Oh, I'll do
what you tell me to, but you are missing a wonderful chance to catch a tide at
its flood. This is good theater, this is
right." "I'm afraid I don't follow you." "Well, look, will
the word get back to Mars if I carry this wand today? Inside the nests, I
mean?" "Eh? I suppose so. Yes." "Of course. I would guess
that every nest has stereo receivers; I certainly noticed plenty of them in
Kkkah nest. They follow the Empire news as
carefully as we do. Don't they?" "Yes. At least the elders do."
"II I carry the wand, they'll know it; if I fail to carry it, they will
know it. It matters to them; it is
tied up with propriety. No adult Martian would appear outside his
nest without his life wand, or inside on ceremonial occasions. Martians have
appeared before the Emperor in the past; they carried their wands, didn't they?
I'd bet my life on it."
"Yes, but you-"
"You forget that 1 am a
Martian."
Rog's face suddenly blanked out. I went
on, "I am not only 'John Joseph Bonforte'; I am
Kkkahjjjerrr of Kkkah
nest. If I fail to carry that wand, I commit a great impropriety-and frankly I
do not know what would happen when the word got back; I don't know enough about
Martian customs. Now turn it around and look at it the other way. When I walk
down that aisle carrying this wand, I am a Martian citizen about to be named
His Imperial Majesty's first minister. How will that affect the nests?"
"I guess I had not
thought it through," he answered slowly.
"Nor would I have done so, had I not had
to decide whether or not to carry the wand. But don't you suppose Mr. B.
thought it through-before he ever let himself be invited to be adopted? Rog,
we've got a tiger by the tail; the only thing to do is to swarm aboard and ride
it. We can't let go."
Dak
arrived at that point, confirmed my opinion, seemed surprised that Clifton had
expected anything else. "Sure, we're setting a new precedent, Rog-but
we're going to set a lot of new ones before we are through." But when he
saw how I was carrying the wand he let out a scream. "Cripes, man! Are you
trying to kill somebody? Or just carve a hole in the wall?"
"I wasn't pressing the
stud."
"Thank God for small favors! You
don't even have the safety on." He took it from me very gingerly
and said, "You twist this ring-and
shove this in that slot-then it's just a stick. Whew!" "Oh.
Sorry." They delivered me to the robing room of the Palace and turned me
over to King Willem's equerry,
Colonel Pateel, a bland-faced Hindu with perfect manners and the
dazzling dress uniform of the Imperial space forces. His bow to me must have
been calculated on a slide rule; it suggested that I was about to be Supreme
Minister but was not quite there yet, that I was his senior but nevertheless a
civilian-then subtract five degrees for the fact that he wore the Emperor's
aiguillette on his right shoulder.
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He
glanced at the wand and said smoothly, "That's a Martian wand, is it not,
sir? Interesting. I suppose you will want to leave it here-it will be
safe."
I said, "I'm carrying
it."
"Sir?" His
eyebrows shot up and he waited for me to correct my obvious mistake.
I
reached into Bonforte's favorite clich?and picked one he used to reprove
bumptiousness. "Son, suppose you tend to your knitting and I tend to
mine."
His
face lost all expression. "Very well, sir. If you will come this
way?"
We paused at the entrance
to the throne room. Far away, on the raised dais, the throne was empty. On both
sides the entire length of the great cavern the nobles and royalty of the court
were standing and waiting. I suppose Pateel passed along some sign, for the
Imperial Anthem welled out and we all held still for it, Pateel in robotlike
attention, myself in a tired stoop suitable to a middleaged and overworked roan
who must do this thing because he must, and all the court like show-window
pieces. I hope we never dispense with the pageantry of a court entirely; all those
noble dress extras and spear carriers make a beautiful sight.
In the last few bars he
came in from behind and took his throne -Willem, Prince of Orange, Duke of
Nassau, Grand Duke of Luxembourg, Knight Commander of the Holy Roman Empire,
Admiral General of the Imperial Forces, Adviser to the Martian Nests, Protector
of the Poor, and, by the Grace of God, King of the Lowlands and Emperor of the
Planets and the Spaces Between.
I
could not see his face, but the symbolism produced in me a sudden warm surge of
empathy. I no longer felt hostile to the notion of royalty.
As
King Willem sat down the anthem ended; he nodded acknowledgment of the salute
and a wave of slight relaxation rippled down the courtiers. Pateel withdrew
and, with my wand tucked under my arm, I started my long march, limping a
little in spite of the low gravity. It felt remarkably like the progress to the
Inner Nest of Kkkah, except that I was not frightened; I was simply warm and
tingling. The Empire medley followed me down, the music sliding from "King
Christian" to "Marseillaise" to "The StarSpangled
Banner" and all the others.
At
the first balk line I stopped and bowed, then again at the second, then at last
a deep bow at the third, just before the steps. I did not kneel; nobles must kneel
but commoners share sovereignty with the Sovereign. One sees this point
incorrectly staged some- times in stereo and theater, and Rog had made sure
that I knew what to do.
"A ye,
Imperator!" Had I been a Dutchman I would have said "Rex" as
well, but I was an American. We swapped schoolboy Latin back and forth by rote,
he inquiring what I wanted, I reminding him that he had summoned me, etc. He
shifted into Anglo-American, with a slight "down-East" accent.
"You served our father
well. it is now our thought that you might serve us. How say you?"
"My sovereign's wish
is my will, Majesty."
"Approach us."
Perhaps I made too good a thing of it but the
steps up the dais are high and my leg actually was hurting-and a psychosomatic
pain is as bad as any other. I almost stumbled-and Willem was up out of his
throne like a shot and steadied my arm. I heard a gasp go around the hall. He
smiled at me and said sotto voce, "Take it easy, old friend. Wet make this
short."
He
helped me to the stool before the throne and made me sit down an awkward moment
sooner
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than he himself was again seated. Then he held out his hand for
the scroll and I passed it over. He unrolled it and pretended to study the
blank page.
There was chamber music now
and the court made a display of enjoying themselves, ladies laughing, noble
gentlemen uttering gallantries, fans gesturing. No one moved very far from his
place, no one held still. Little page boys, looking like Michelangelo's
cherubim, moved among them offering trays of sweets. One knelt to Willem and he
helped himself without taking his eyes off the nonexistent list. The child then
offered the tray to me and I took one, not knowing whether it was proper or
not. It was one of those wonderful, matchless chocolates made only in Holland.
I found that I knew a
number of the court faces from pictures. Most of the unemployed royalty of
Earth were there, concealed under their secondary titles of duke or count. Some
said that Willem kept them on as pensioners to brighten his court; some said he
wanted to keep an eye on them and keep them out of politics and other mischief.
Perhaps it was a little of both. There were the nonroyal nobility of a dozen
nations present, too; some of them actually worked for a living.
I found myself trying to
pick out the Habsburg lips and the Windsor nose.
At
last Willem put down the scroll. The music and the conversation ceased
instantly. In dead silence he said, "It is a gallant company you have
proposed. We are minded to confirm it."
"You are most
gracious, Majesty."
"We will ponder and inform you." He
leaned forward and said quietly to me alone, "Don't try to back down those
damned steps. Just stand up. I am going to leave at once."
I whispered back, "Oh.
Thank you, Sire."
He
stood up, whereupon I got hastily to my feet, and he was gone in a swirl of
robes. I turned around and noticed some startled looks. But the music started
up at once and I was let to walk out while the noble and regal extras again
made polite conversation.
Pateel was at my elbow as
soon as I was through the far archway. "This way, sir, if you
please."
The pageantry was over; now
came the real audience.
He took me through a small
door, down an empty corridor, through another small door, and into a quite
ordinary office. The only thing regal about it was a carved wall plaque, the
coat of arms of the House of Orange, with its deathless motto, "I
Maintain!" There was a big, fiat desk, littered with papers. In the middle
of it, held down by a pair of metal-plated baby shoes, was the original of the
typed list in my pocket. In a copper frame there was a family group picture of
the late Empress and the kids. A somewhat battered couch was against one wall
and beyond it was a small bar. There were a couple of armchairs as well as the
swivel chair at the desk. The other furnishings might have suited the office of
a busy and not fussy family physician.
Pateel left me alone there,
closing the door behind him. I did not have time to consider whether or not it
was proper for me to sit down, as the Emperor came quickly in through a door
opposite. "Howdy, Joseph," he called out. "Be with you in a
moment." He strode through the room, followed closely by two servants who
were undressing him as he walked, and went out a third door. He was back again
almost at once, zipping up a suit of coveralls as he came in. "You took
the short route; I had to come long way around. I'm going to insist that the
palace engineer cut another tunnel through from the back of the throne room,
dammed if I'm not. I have to come around three sides of a square-either that or
parade through semi-public corridors dressed like a circus horse." He
added meditatively, "I never wear anything but underwear under those silly
robes."
I
said, "I doubt if they are as uncomfortable as this monkey jacket I am
wearing, Sire."
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He
shrugged. "Oh well, we each have to put up with the inconveniences of our
jobs. Didn't you get yourself a drink?" He picked up the list of
nominations for cabinet ministers. "Do so, and pour me one."
"What will you have,
Sire?"
"Eh?" He looked
up and glanced sharply at me. "My usual. Scotch on ice, of course."
I
said nothing and poured them, adding water to my own. I had had a sudden chill;
if Bonforte knew that the Emperor always took scotch over bare cubes it should
have been in his Farleyfile. It was not.
But Willem accepted the
drink without comment, murmured, "Hot jets!" and went on looking at
the list. Presently he looked up and said, "How about these lads,
Joseph?"
"Sire? It is a skeleton cabinet, of
course." We had doubled up on portfolios where possible and Bonforte would
hold Defense and Treasury as well as first. In three cases we had given
temporary appointments to the career deputy ministers-Research, Population
Management, and Exterior. The men who would hold the posts in the permanent
government were all needed for campaigning.
"Yes, yes, it's your
second team. Mmm . . . How about this man Braun?"
I was considerably
surprised. It had been my understanding that Willem would okay the list without
comment, but that he might want to chat about other things. I had not been
afraid of chatting; a man can get a reputation as a sparkling conversationalist
simply by letting the other man do all the talking.
Lothar Braun was what was
known as a "rising young statesman." What I knew about him came from
his Farleyfile and from Rog and Bill. He had come up since Bonforte had been
turned out of office and so had never had any cabinet post, but had served as
caucus sergeant at arms and junior whip. Bill insisted that Bonforte had
planned to boost him rapidly and that he should try his wings in the caretaker
government; he proposed him for Minister of External Communications.
Rog
Clifton had seemed undecided; he had first put down the name of Angel Jesus de
la Tone y Perez, the career subminister. But Bill had pointed out that if Braun
flopped, now was a good time to find it out and no harm done. Clifton had given
in.
"Braun?" I
answered. "He's a coming young man. Very brilliant."
Willem made no comment, but looked on down the
list. I tried to remember exactly what Bonforte had said about Braun in the
Farleyffle. Brilliant . . . hardworking . . . analytical mind. Had he said
anything against him? No-well, perhaps-"a shade too affable." That
does not condemn a man. But Bonforte had said nothing at all about such
affirmative virtues as loyalty and honesty. Which might mean nothing, as the
Farleyfile was not a series of character studies; it was a data file.
The Emperor put the list
aside. "Joseph, are you planning to bring the Martian nests into the
Empire at once?"
"Eh? Certainly not
before the election, Sire."
"Come now, you know I was talking about
after the election. And have you forgotten how to say 'Willem'? 'Sire' from a
man six years older than I am, under these circumstances, is silly."
"Very well,
Willem."
"We both know I am not
supposed to notice politics. But we know also that the assumption is silly.
Joseph, you have spent your off years creating a situation in which the nests
would wish to come wholly into the Empire." He pointed a thumb at my wand.
"I believe you have done it. Now if you win this election you should be
able to get the Grand Assembly to grant me permission to proclaim it.
Well?"
I
thought about it. "Willem," I said slowly, "you know that is
exactly what we have planned to do. You must have some reason for bringing the
subject up."
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He swizzled his glass and
stared at me, managing to look like a New England groceryman about to tell off
one of the summer people. "Are you asking my advice? The constitution
requires you to advise me, not the other way around."
"I welcome your
advice, Wilem. I do not promise to follow it."
He laughed. "You
damned seldom promise anything. Very well, let's assume that you win the
election and go back into office -but with a majority so small that you might
have difficulty in voting the nests into full citizenship. In such case I would
not advise you to make it a vote of confidence. If you lose, take your licking
and stay in office; stick the full term."
"Why, Willem?"
"Because you and I are
patient men. See that?" He pointed at the plaque of his house. "'I
Maintain!' It's not a flashy rule but it is not a king's business to be flashy;
his business is to conserve, to hang on, to roll with the punch. Now,
constitutionally speaking, it should not matter to me whether you stay in
office or not. But it does matter to me whether or not the Empire holds
together. I think that if you miss on the Martian issue immediately after the
election, you can afford to wait-for your other policies are going to prove
very popular. You'll pick up votes in by-elections and eventually you'll come
around and tell me I can add 'Emperor of Mars' to the list. So don't
hurry."
"I will think about
it," I said carefully.
"Do that. Now how
about the transportee system?"
"We're abolishing it immediately after
the election and suspending it at once." I could answer that one firmly;
Bonforte hated it.
"They'll attack you on
it."
"So they will. Let
them. We'll pick up votes."
"Glad to hear that you still have the
strength of your convictions, Joseph. I never liked having the banner of Orange
on a convict ship. Free trade?"
"After the election,
yes."
"What are you going to
use for revenue?"
"It is our contention
that trade and production will expand so rapidly that other revenues will make
up for the loss of the customs."
"And suppose it ain't
so?"
I
had not been given a second-string answer on that one-and economics was largely
a mystery to me. I grinned. "Willem, I'll have to have notice on that
question. But the whole program of the Expansionist Party is founded on the
notion that free trade, free travel, common citizenship, common currency, and a
minimum of Imperial laws and restrictions are good not only for the citizens of
the Empire but for the Empire itself. If we need the money, we'll find it-but
not by chopping the Empire up into tiny bailiwicks." All but the first
sentence was pure Bonforte, only slightly adapted.
"Save your campaign speeches," he
grunted. "I simply asked." He picked up the list again. "You're
quite sure this line-up is the way you want it?"
I
reached for the list and he handed it to me. Damnation, it was clear that the
Emperor was telling me as emphatically as the constitution would let him that,
in his opinion, Braun was a wrong 'un. But, hell's best anthracite, I had no
business changing the list Bill and Rog had made up.
On
the other hand, it was not Bon forte's list; it was merely what they thought
Bonforte would do if he were compos mentis.
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I wished suddenly that I
could take time out and ask Penny what she thought of Braun.
Then I reached for a pen
from Willem's desk, scratched out "Braun," and printed in "de la
Torre"-in block letters; I still could not risk Bonforte's handwriting.
The Emperor merely said, "It looks like a good team to me. Good luck,
Joseph. You'll need it."
That ended the audience as
such. I was anxious to get away, but you do not walk out on a king; that is one
prerogative they have retained. He wanted to show me his workshop and his new
train models. I suppose he has done more to revive that ancient hobby than
anyone else; personally I can't see it as an occupation for a grown man. But I
made polite noises about his new toy locomotive, intended for the "Royal
Scotsman."
"If I had had the
breaks," he said, getting down on his hands and knees and peering into the
innards of the toy engine, "I could have been a very fair shop
superintendent, I think-a master machinist. But the accident of birth
discriminated against me."
"Do you really think
you would have preferred it, Willem?"
"I don't know. This
job I have is not bad. The hours are easy and the pay is good-and the social
security is first-rate-barring the outside chance of revolution, and my line
has always been lucky on that score. But much of the work is tedious and could
be done as well by any second-rate actor." He glanced up at me. "I
relieve your office of a lot of tiresome cornerstone-laying and
parade-watching, you know."
"I do know and I
appreciate it."
"Once in a long time I get a chance to
give a little push in the right direction-what I think is the right direction.
Kinging is a very odd profession, Joseph. Don't ever take it up."
"I'm afraid it's a bit
late, even if I wanted to."
He made some fine
adjustment on the toy. "My real function is to keep you from going
crazy."
"Eh?"
"Of course.
Psychosis-situational is the occupational disease of heads of states. My
predecessors in the king trade, the ones who actually ruled, were almost all a
bit balmy. And take a look at your American presidents; the job used frequently
to kill them in their prime. But me, I don't have to run things; I have a
professional like yourself to do it for me. And you don't have the killing
pressure either; you, or those in your shoes, can always quit if things get too
tough-and the old Emperor-it's almost always the 'old' Emperor; we usually
mount the throne about the age other men retire-the Emperor is always there,
maintaining continuity, preserving the symbol of the state, while you
professionals work out a new deal." He blinked solemnly. "My job is
not glamorous, but it is useful."
Presently he let up on me
about his chlldish trains and we went back into his office. I thought I was
about to be dismissed. In fact, he said, "I should let you get back to
your work. You had a hard trip?"
"Not too hard. I spent
it working."
"I suppose so. By the
way, who are you?"
There is the policeman's tap on the shoulder,
the shock of the top step that is not there, there is falling out of bed, and
there is having her husband return home unexpectedly-I would take any
combination of those in preference to that simple inquiry. I aged inside to
match my appearance and more.
"Sire?"
"Come now," he said impatiently,
"surely my job carries with it some privileges. Just tell me the truth.
I've known for the past hour that you were not Joseph Bonforte-though you could
fool his own mother; you even have his mannerisms. But who are you?"
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"My name is Lawrence
Smith, Your Majesty," I said faintly.
"Brace up, man! I
could have called the guards long since, if I had been intending to. Were you
sent here to assassinate me?"
"No, Sire. I am-loyal
to Your Majesty."
"You have an odd way
of showing it. Well, pour yourself another drink, sit down, and tell me about
it."
I told him about it, every
bit. It took more than one drink, and presentiy I felt better. He looked angry
when I told him of the kidnapping, but when I told him what they had done to
Bonforte's mind his face turned dark with a Jovian rage.
At last he said quietly,
"It's just a matter of days until he is back in shape, then?"
"So Dr. Capek
says."
"Don't let him go to work until he is
fully recovered. He's a valuable man. You know that, don't you? Worth six of
you and me. So you carry on with the doubling job and let him get well. The
Empire needs him."
"Yes, Sire."
"Knock off that 'Sire.' Since you are
standing in for him, call me 'Willem,' as he does. Did you know that was how I
spotted you?"
"No, Si-no,
Willem."
"He's called me Willem for twenty years.
I thought it decidedly odd that he would quit it in private simply because he
was seeing me on state business. But I did not suspect, not really. But,
remarkable as your performance was, it set me thinking. Then when we went in to
see the trains, I knew."
"Excuse me? How?"
"You were polite, man! I've made him look
at my trains in the past-and he always got even by being as rude as possible
about what a way for a grown man to waste time. It was a little act we always
went through. We both enjoyed it."
"Oh. I didn't
know."
"How could you have known?" I was
thinking that I should have known, that damned Farleyfile should have told me .
. . It was not until later that I realized that the file had not been
defective, in view of the theory on which it was based, i.e. it was intended to
let a famous man remember details about the less famous. But that was precisely
what the Emperor was not-less famous, I mean. Of course Bonforte needed no
notes to recall personal details about Willem! Nor would he consider it proper
to set down personal matters about the sovereign in a file handled by his
clerks.
I had
muffed the obvious-not that I see how I could have avoided it, even ii I had
realized that the file would be incomplete.
But
the Emperor was still talking. "You did a magnificent job- and after
risking your life in a Martian nest I am not surprised that you were willing to
tackle me. Tell me, have I ever seen you in stereo, or anywhere?"
I
had given my legal name, of course, when the Emperor demanded it; I now rather
timidly gave my professional name. He looked at me, threw up his hands, and
guff awed. I was somewhat hurt. "Er, have you heard of me?"
"Heard of you? I'm one of your staunchest
fans." He looked at me very closely. "But you still look like Joe
Bonforte. I can't believe that you are Lorenzo."
"But I am."
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"Oh, I believe it, I
believe it. You know that skit where you are a tramp? First you try to milk a
cow-no luck. Finally you end up eating out of the cat's dish-but even the cat
pushes you away?"
I admitted it.
"I've almost worn out
my spool of that. I laugh and cry at the same time."
"That is the idea." I hesitated,
then admitted that the barnyard "Weary Willie" routine had been
copied from a very great artist of another century. "But I prefer dramatic
roles."
"Like this one?"
"Well-not exactly. For
this role, once is quite enough. I wouldn't care for a long run."
"I suppose so. Well, tell Roger Clifton-
No, don't tell Clifton anything. Lorenzo, I see nothing to be gained by ever
telling anyone about our conversation this past hour. If you tell Clifton, even
though you tell him that I said not to worry, it would just give him nerves.
And he has work to do. So we keep it tight, eh?"
"As my emperor
wishes."
"None of that, please. We'll keep it
quiet because it's best so. Sorry I can't make a sickbed visit on Uncle Joe.
Not that I could help him-although they used to think the King's Touch did
marvels. So we'll say nothing and pretend that I never twigged."
"Yes-Wilem."
"I suppose you had
better go now. I've kept you a very long time."
"Whatever you
wish."
"I'll have Pateel go back with you-or do
you know your way around? But just a moment-" He dug around in his desk,
muttering to himself. "That girl must have been straightening things
again. No-here it is." He hauled out a little book. "I probably won't
get to see you again-so would you mind giving me your autograph before you
go?"
Chapter 9
Rog
and Bill I found chewing their nails in Bonforte's upper living room. The
second I showed up Corpsman started toward me. "Where the hell have you
been?"
"With the
Emperor," I answered coldly.
"You've been gone five
or six times as long as you should have been."
I
did not bother to answer. Since the argument over the speech Corpsman and I had
gotten along together and worked together, but it was strictly a marriage of
convenience, with no love. We cooperated, but we did not really bury the
hatchet-unless it was between my shoulder blades. I had made no special effort
to conciliate him and saw no reason why I should-in my opinion his parents had
met briefly at a masquerade ball.
I
don't believe in rowing with other members of the company, but the only
behavior Corpsman would willingly accept from me was that of a servant, hat in
hand and very 'umble, sir. I would not give him that, even to keep peace. I was
a professional, retained to do a very difficult professional job, and
professional men do not use the back stairs; they are treated with respect.
So I ignored him and asked
Rog, "Where's Penny?"
"With him. So are Dak and Do; at the
moment."
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"He's here?"
"Yes." Clifton hesitated. "We
put him in what is supposed to be the wife's room of your bedroom suite. It was
the only place where we could maintain utter privacy and still give him the
care he needs. I hope you don't mind."
"Not at all."
"It won't
inconvenience you. The two bedrooms are joined, you may have noticed, only
through the dressing rooms, and we've shut off that door. It's
soundproof."
"Sounds like a good
arrangement. How is he?"
Clifton frowned. "Better, much better-on
the whole. He is lucid much of the time." He hesitated. "You can go
in and see him, if you like."
I
hesitated still longer. "How soon does Dr. Capek think he will be ready to
make public appearances?"
"It's hard to say.
Before long."
"How long? Three or four days? A short
enough time that we could cancel all appointments and just put me out of sight?
Rog, I don't know just how to make this clear but, much as I would like to call
on him and pay my respects, I don't think it is smart for me to see him at all
until after I have made my last appearance. It might well ruin my
characterization." I had made the terrible mistake of going to my father's
funeral; for years thereafter when I thought of him I saw him dead in his
coffin. Only very slowly did I regain the true image of him-the virile,
dominant man who had reared me with a firm hand and taught me my trade. I was
afraid of something like that with Bonforte; I was now impersonating a well man
at the height of his powers, the way I had seen him and heard him in the many
stereo records of him. I was very much afraid that if I saw him ill, the
recollection of it would blur and distort my performance.
"I was not
insisting," Clifton answered. "You know best. It's possible that we
can keep from having you appear in public again, but I want to keep you
standing by and ready until he is fully recovered."
I almost said that the
Emperor wanted it done that way. But I caught myself-the shock of having the
Emperor find me out had shaken me a little out of character. But the thought
reminded me of unfinished business. I took out the revised cabinet list and
handed it to Corpsman. "Here's the approved roster for the news services,
Bill. You'll see that there is one change on it-De la Torre for Braun."
"What?"
"Jesus de Ia Tone for
Lothar Braun. That's the way the Emperor wanted it."
Clifton looked astonished;
Corpsman looked both astonished and angry. "What difference does that
make? He's got no goddamn right to have opinions!"
Clifton said slowly, "Bill is fight,
Chief. As a lawyer who has specialized in constitutional law I assure you that
the sovereign's confirmation is purely nominal. You should not have let him
make any changes."
I
felt like shouting at them, and only the imposed calm personality of Bonforte
kept me from it. I had had a hard day and, despite a brilliant performance, the
inevitable disaster had overtaken me. I wanted to tell Rog that if Willem had
not been a really big man, kingly in the fine sense of the word, we would all
be in the soup-simply because I had not been adequately coached for the role.
Instead I answered sourly, "It's done and that's that."
Corpsman said, "That's what you think! I
gave out the correct list to the reporters two hours ago. Now you've got to go
back and straighten it out. Rog, you had better call the Palace right away
and-"
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I said, "Quiet!"
Corpsman shut up. I went on
in a lower key. "Rog, from a legal point of view, you may be right. I
wouldn't know. I do know that the Emperor felt free to question the appointment
of Braun. Now if either one of you wants to go to the Emperor and argue with
him, that's up to you. But I'm not going anywhere. I'm going to get out of this
anachronistic strait jacket, take my shoes off, and have a long, tall drink.
Then rm going to bed."
"Now wait, Chief," Clifton objected.
"You've got a five-minute spot on grand network to announce the new
cabinet."
"You take it. You're
first deputy in this cabinet."
He blinked. "All
right."
Corpsman said insistently,
"How about Braun? He was promised the job."
Clifton looked at him
thoughtfully. "Not in any dispatch that I saw, Bill. He was simply asked
if he was willing to serve, like all the others. Is that what you meant?"
Corpsman hesitated like an actor not quite
sure of his lines. "Of course. But it amounts to a promise."
"Not until the public
announcement is made, it doesn't."
"But the announcement
was made, I tell you. Two hours ago."
"Mmm ... Bill, I'm afraid that you will
have to call the boys in again and tell them that you made a mistake. Or I'll
call them in and tell them that through an error a preliminary list was handed
out before Mr. Bonforte had okayed it. But we've got to correct it before the
grand network announcement."
"Do you mean to tell
me you are going to let him get away with it?"
By
"him" I think Bill meant me rather than Willem, but Rog's answer
assumed the contrary. "Yes. Bill, this is no time to force a
constitutional crisis. The issue isn't worth it. So will you phrase the
retraction? Or shall I?"
Corpsman's expression reminded me of the way a
cat submits to the inevitable-"just barely." He looked grim,
shrugged, and said, "I'll do it. I want to be damned sure it is phrased
properly, so we can salvage as much as possible out of the shambles."
"Thanks, Bill,"
Rog answered mildly.
Corpsman turned to leave. I called out,
"Bill! As long as you are going to be talking to the news service I have
another announcement for them."
"Huh? What are you
after now?"
"Nothing much."
The fact was I was suddenly overcome with weariness at the role and the tensions
it created. "Just tell them that Mr. Bonforte has a cold and his physician
has ordered him to bed for a rest. I've had a bellyful."
Corpsman snorted. "I
think I'll make it 'pneumonia."
"Suit yourself."
When he had gone Rog turned to me and said,
"Don't let it get you, Chief. In this business some days are better than
others."
"Rog, I really am
going on the sick list. You can mention it on stereo tonight."
"So?"
"I'm going to take to my bed and stay
there. There is no reason at all why Bonforte can't 'have a cold' until he is
ready to get back into harness himself. Every time I make an appearance it just
increases the probability that somebody will spot something wrong- and every
time I do make an appearance that
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sorehead Corpsman finds something to yap about. An artist can't do
his best work with somebody continually snarling at him. So let's let it go at
this and ring down the curtain."
"Take it easy, Chief. I'll keep Corpsman
out of your hair from now on. Here we won't be in each other's laps the way we
were in the ship."
"No, Rog, my mind is
made up. Oh, I won't run out on you. I'll stay here until Mr. B. is able to see
people, in case some utter emergency turns up"-I was recalling uneasily
that the Emperor had told me to hang on and had assumed that I would-"but
it is actually better to keep me out of sight. At the moment we have gotten
away with it completely, haven't we? Oh, they know- somebody knows-that
Bonforte was not the man who went through the adoption ceremony-but they don't
dare raise that issue, nor could they prove it if they did. The same people may
suspect that a double was used today, but they don't know, they can't be
sure-because it is always possible that Bonforte recovered quickly enough to
carry it off today. Right?"
Clifton got an odd, half-sheepish look on his
face. "I'm afraid they are fairly sure you were a double, Chief."
"Eh?"
"We shaded the truth a
little to keep you from being nervous. Doc Capek was certain from the time he
first examined him that only a miracle could get him in shape to make the
audience today. The people who dosed him would know that too."
I
frowned. "Then you were kidding me earlier when you told me how well he
was doing? How is he, Rog? Tell me the truth."
"I was telling you the truth that time,
Chief. That's why I suggested that you see him-whereas before I was only too
glad to string along with your reluctance to see him." He added,
"Perhaps you had better see him, talk with him."
"Mmm-no." The
reasons for not seeing him still applied; if I did have to make another
appearance I did not want my subconscious playing me tricks. The role called
for a well man. "But, Rog, everything I said applies still more
emphatically on the basis of what you have just told me. If they are even
reasonably sure that a double was used today, then we don't dare risk another
appearance. They were caught by surprise today-or perhaps it was impossible to
unmask me, under the circumstances. But it will not be later. They can rig some
deadfall, some test that I can't pass- then blooey/ There goes the old ball
game." I thought about it. "I had better be 'sick' as long as
necessary. Bill was right; it had better be 'pneumonia.'"
Such is the power of
suggestion that I woke up the next morning with a stopped-up nose and a sore
throat. Dr. Capek took time to dose me and I felt almost human by suppertime;
nevertheless, he issued bulletins about "Mr. Bonforte's virus
infection." The sealed and air-conditioned cities of the Moon being what
they are, nobody was anxious to be exposed to an S-vectored ailment; no
determined effort was made to get past my chaperones. For four days I loafed
and read from Bonforte's library, both his own collected papers and his many
books . . . I discovered that both politics and economics could make engrossing
reading; those subjects had never been real to me before. The Emperor sent me
flowers from the royal greenhouse-or were they for me?
Never mind. I loafed and soaked in the luxury
of being Lorenzo, or even plain Lawrence Smith. I found that I dropped back
into character automatically if someone came in, but I can't help that. It was
not necessary; I saw no one but Penny and Capek, except for one visit from Dak.
But
even lotus-eating can pall. By the fourth day I was as tired of that room as I
had ever been of a
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producer's waiting room and I
was lonely. No one bothered with me; Capek's visits had been brisk and
professional, and Penny's
visits had been short and few. She had stopped calling me "Mr.
Bonforte."
When Dak showed up I was
delighted to see him. "Dak! What's new?"
"Not much. I've been
trying to get the Tommie overhauled with one hand while helping Rog with
political chores with the other. Getting this campaign lined up is going to
give him ulcers, three gets you eight." He sat down. "Politics!"
"Hmm - . . Dak, how did you ever get into
it? Offhand, I would figure voyageurs to be as unpolitical as actors. And you
in particular."
"They are and they
aren't. Most ways they don't give a damn whether school keeps ot not, as long
as they can keep on herding junk through the sky. But to do that you've got to
have cargo, and cargo means trade, and profitable trade means wide-open trade,
with any ship free to go anywhere, no customs nonsense and no restricted areas.
Freedom! And there you are; you're in politics. As for myself, I came here
first for a spot of lobbying for the 'continuous voyage' rule, so that goods on
the triangular trade would not pay two duties. It was Mr. B's bill, of course.
One thing led to another and here I am, skipper of his yacht the past six years
and representing my guild brothers since the last general election." He
sighed. "I hardly know how it happened myself."
"I suppose you are
anxious to get out of it. Are you going to stand for re-election?"
He stared at me. "Huh?
Brother, until you've been in politics you haven't been alive."
"But you said-"
"I know what I said. It's rough and
sometimes it's dirty and it's always hard work and tedious details. But it's
the only sport for grownups. All other games are for kids. All of 'em." He
stood up. "Gotta run."
"Oh, stick
around."
"Can't. With the Grand
Assembly convening tomorrow I've got to give Rog a hand. I shouldn't have
stopped in at all."
"It is? I didn't know." I was aware
that the G.A., the outgoing G.A. that is, had to meet one more time, to accept
the caretaker cabinet. But I had not thought about it. It was a routine matter,
as perfunctory as presenting the list to the Emperor. "Is he going to be
able to make it?"
"No. But don't you
worry about it. Rog will apologize to the house for your-I mean his-absence and
will ask for a proxy rule under no-objection procedure. Then he will read the
speech of the Supreme Minister Designate-Bill is working on it right now. Then
in his own person he will move that the government be confirmed. Second. No
debate. Pass. Adjourn sine die-and everybody rushes for home and starts
promising the voters two women in every bed and a hundred Imperials every Monday
morning. Routine." He added, "Oh yes! Some member of the Humanity
Party will move a resolution of sympathy and a basket of flowers, which will
pass in a fine hypocritical glow. They'd rather send flowers to Bonforte's
funeral." He scowled.
"It is actually as simple as that? What
would happen if the proxy rule were refused? I thought the Grand Assembly
didn't recognize proxies."
"They don't, for all ordinary procedure.
You either pair, or you show up and vote. But this is just the idler wheels
going around in parliamentary machinery. If they don't let him appear by proxy
tomorrow, then they've got to wait around until he is well before they can
adjourn sine die and get on with the serious business of hypnotizing the
voters. As it is, a mock quorum has been meeting daily and adjourning ever
since Quiroga resigned. This Assembly is as dead as Caesar's ghost, but it has
to be
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buried constitutionally."
"Yes-but suppose some
idiot did object?"
"No one will. Oh, it
could force a constitutional crisis. But it won't happen."
Neither one of us said anything for a while.
Dak made no move to leave. "Dak, would it make things easier if I showed
up and gave that speech?"
"Huh? Shucks, I
thought that was settled. You decided that it wasn't safe to risk another
appearance short of an utter save-the-baby emergency. On the whole, I agree
with you. There's the old saw about the pitcher and the well."
"Yes. But this is just a walk-through,
isn't it? Lines as fixed as a play? Would there be any chance of anyone puffing
any surprises on me that I couldn't handle?"
"Well, no. Ordinarily
you would be expected to talk to the press afterwards, but your recent illness
is an excuse. We could slide you through the security tunnel and avoid them
entirely." He smiled grimly. "Of course, there is always the chance
that some crackpot in the visitors' gallery has managed to sneak in a gun...Mr.
B. always referred to it as the 'shooting gallery' after they winged him from
it."
My
leg gave a sudden twinge. "Are you trying to scare me off?"
"You pick a funny way to encourage me.
Dak, be level with me. Do you want me to do this job tomorrow? Or don't you?"
"Of course I do! Why the devil do you
think I stopped in on a busy day? Just to chat?"
The
Speaker pro tempore banged his gavel, the chaplain gave an invocation that
carefully avoided any differences between one religion and another-and everyone
kept silent. The seats themselves were only half filled but the gallery was
packed with tourists.
We heard the ceremonial
knocking amplified over the speaker system; the Sergeant at Arms rushed the
mace to the door. Three times the Emperor demanded to be admitted, three times
he was refused. Then he prayed the privilege; it was granted by acclamation. We
stood while Willem entered and took his seat back of the Speaker's desk. He was
in uniform as Admiral General and was unattended, as was required, save by
escort of the Speaker and the Sergeant at Arms.
Then I tucked my wand under my arm and stood
up at my place at the front bench and, addressing the Speaker as if the
sovereign were not present, I delivered my speech. It was not the one Corpsman
had written; that one went down the oubliette as soon as I had read it. Bill
had made it a straight campaign speech, and it was the wrong time and place.
Mine was short, non-partisan, and cribbed
right straight out of Bonforte's collected writings, a paraphrase of the one
the time before when he formed a caretaker government. I stood foursquare for
good roads and good weather and wished that everybody would love everybody
else, just the way all us good democrats loved our sovereign and he loved us.
It was a blank-verse lyric poem of about five hundred words and if I varied
from Bonforte's earlier speech then I simply went up on my lines.
They had to quiet the
gallery.
Rog
got up and moved that the names I had mentioned in passing be confirmed-second
and no objection and the clerk cast a white ballot As I marched forward,
attended by one member of my own party and one member of the opposition, I
could see members glancing at their watches and wondering if they could still
catch the noon shuttle.
Then I was swearing allegiance to my
sovereign, under and subject to the constitutional limitations,
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swearing to defend and
continue the rights and privileges of the Grand Assembly, and to protect the
freedoms of the citizens of the Empire wherever they might be-and incidentally
to carry out the duties of His Majesty's Supreme Minister. The chaplain mixed
up the words once, but I straightened him out.
I thought I was breezing
through it as easy as a curtain speech- when I found that I was crying so hard
that I could hardly see. When I was done, Willem said quietly to me, "A
good performance, Joseph." I don't know whether he thought he was talking
to me or to his old friend-and I did not care. I did not wipe away the tears; I
just let them drip as I turned back to the Assembly. I waited for Willem to
leave, then adjourned them.
Diana, Ltd., ran four extra shuttles that
afternoon. New Batavia was deserted-that is to say there were only the court
and a million or so butchers, bakers, candlestick makers, and civil servants
left in town-and a skeleton cabinet.
Having gotten over my
"cold" and appeared publicly in the Grand Assembly Hall, it no longer
made sense to hide out. As the supposed Supreme Minister I could not, without
causing comment, never be seen; as the nominal head of a political party
entering a campaign for a general election I had to see people-some people, at
least. So I did what I had to do and got a daily report on Bonforte's progress
toward complete recovery. His progress was good, if slow; Capek reported that
it was possible, if absolutely necessary, to let him appear any time now-but he
advised against it; he had lost almost twenty pounds and his co-ordination was
poor.
Rog did everything possible
to protect both of us. Mr. Bonforte knew now that they were using a double for
him and, after a first fit of indignation, had relaxed to necessity and
approved it. Rog ran the campaign, consulting him only on matters of high
policy, and then passing on his answers to me to hand out publicly when
necessary.
But the protection given me
was almost as great; I was as hard to see as a topflight agent. My office ran
on into the mountain beyond the opposition leader's apartments (we did not move
over into the Supreme Minister's more palatial quarters; while it would have
been legal, it just "was not done" during a caretaker regime) -they
could be reached from the rear directly from the lower living room, but to get
at me from the public entrance a man had to pass about five check points-except
for the favored few who were conducted directly by Rog through a bypass tunnel
to Penny's office and from there into mine.
The setup meant that I
could study the Farleyfile on anyone before he got to see me. I could even keep
it in front of me while he was with me, for the desk had a recessed viewer the
visitor could not see, yet I could wipe it out instantly if he turned out to be
a floor pacer. The viewer had other uses; Rog could give a visitor the special
treatment, rushing him right in to see me, leave him alone with me-and stop in
Penny's office and write me a note, which would then be projected on the
viewer-such quick tips as, "Kiss him to death and promise nothing,"
or, "All he really wants is for his wile to be presented at court. Promise
him that and get rid of him," or even, "Easy on this one. It's a
'swing' district and he is smarter than he looks. Turn him over to me and I'll
dicker."
I
don't know who ran the government. The senior career men, probably. There would
be a stack of papers on my desk each morning, I would sign Bonforte's sloppy
signature to them, and Penny would take them away. I never had time to read
them. The very size of the Imperial machinery dismayed me. Once when we had to
attend a meeting outside the offices, Penny had led me on what she called a
short cut though the Archives-miles on miles of endless ifies, each one
chockablock with microfilm and all of them with moving belts scooting past them
so that a clerk would not take all day to fetch one ifie.
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But
Penny told me that she had taken me through only one wing of it. The file of
the files, she said, occupied a cavern the size of the Grand Assembly Hall. It
made me glad that government was not a career with me, but merely a passing
hobby, so to speak.
Seeing people was an
unavoidable chore, largely useless since Rog, or Bonforte through Rog, made the
decisions. My real job was to make campaign speeches. A discreet rumor had been
spread that my doctor had been afraid that my heart had been strained by the
"virus infection" and had advised me to stay in the low gravity of
the Moon throughout the campaign. I did not dare risk taking the impersonation
on a tour of Earth, much less make a trip to Venus; the Farleyfile system would
break down if I attempted to mix with crowds, not to mention the unknown
hazards of the Actionist goon squads-what I would babble with a minim dose of
neodexocaine in the forebrain none of us liked to think about, me least of all.
Quiroga was hitting all
continents on Earth, making his stereo appearances as personal appearances on
platforms in front of crowds. But it did not worry Rog Clifton. He shrugged and
said, "Let him. There are no new votes to be picked up by personal
appearances at political rallies. All it does is wear out the speaker. Those
rallies are attended only by the faithful."
I
hoped that he knew what he was talking about. The campaign was short, only six
weeks from Quiroga's resignation to the day he had set for the election before
resigning, and I was speaking almost every day, either on a grand network with
time shared precisely with the Humanity Party, or speeches canned and sent by
shuttle for later release to particular audiences. We had a set routine; a
draft would come to me, perhaps from Bill although I never saw him, and then I
would rework it. Rog would take the revised draft away; usually it would come
back approved-and once in a while there would be corrections made in Bonforte's
handwriting, now so sloppy as to be almost illegible.
I never ad-libbed at all on
those parts he corrected, though I often did on the rest-when you get rolling
there is often a better, more alive way to say a thing. I began to notice the
nature of his corrections; they were almost always eliminations of qualifiers-
make it blunter, let 'em like it or lump it!
After a while there were
fewer corrections. I was getting with it.
I
still never saw him. I felt that I could not "wear his head" if I
looked at him on his sickbed. But I was not the only one of his intimate family
who was not seeing him; Capek had chucked Penny out-for her own good. I did not
know it at the time. I did know that Penny had become irritable, absent-minded,
and moody after we reached New Batavia. She got circles under her eyes like a
raccoon-all of which I could not miss, but I attributed it to the pressure of
the campaign combined with worry about Bonforte's health. I was only partly
right. Capek spotted it and took action, put her under llght hypnosis and asked
her questions-then he flatly forbade her to see Bonforte again until I was done
and finished and shipped away.
The
poor girl was going almost out of her mind from visiting the sickroom of the
man she hopelessly loved-then going straight in to work closely with a man who
looked and talked and sounded just like him, but in good health. She was
probably beginning to hate me.
Good old Doc Capek got at the root of her
trouble, gave her helpful and soothing post-hypnotic suggestions, and kept her
out of the sickroom after that. Naturally I was not told about it at the time;
it wasn't any of my business. But Penny perked up and again was her lovable,
incredibly efficient self.
It made a lot of difference
to me. Let's admit it; at least twice I would have walked out on the whole
incredible rat race if it had not been for Penny.
There was one sort of meeting I had to attend,
that of the campaign executive committee. Since the
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Expansionist Party was
a minority party, being merely the largest fraction of a coalition of several
parties held together by the leadership and personality of John Joseph
Bonforte, I had to stand in for him and peddle soothing syrup to those prima
donnas. I was briefed for it with painstaking care, and Rog sat beside rue and
could hint the proper direction if I faltered. But it could not be delegated.
Less than two weeks before
election day we were due for a meeting at which the safe districts would be
parceled out. The organization always had thirty to forty districts which could
be used to make someone eligible for cabinet office, or to provide for a
political secretary (a person like Penny was much more valuable if he or she
was fully qualified, able to move and Speak on the floor of the Assembly, had
the right to be present at closed caucuses, and so forth), or for other party
reasons. Bonforte himself represented a "safe" district; it relieved
him from the necessity of precinct campaigning. Clifton had another. Dak would
have had one if he had needed it, but he actually commanded the support of his
guild brethren. Rog even hinted to me once that if I wanted to come back in my
proper person, I could say the word and my name would go on the next list.
Some of the spots were always saved for party
wheel horses willing to resign at a moment's notice and thereby provide the
Party with a place through a by-election if it proved necessary to qualify a
man for cabinet office, or something.
But
the whole thing had somewhat the flavor of patronage and, the coalition being
what it was, it was necessary for Bonforte to straighten out conilicting claims
and submit a list to the campaign executive committee. It was a last-minute
job, to be done just before the ballots were prepared, to allow for late
changes.
When Rog and Dak came in I
was working on a speech and had told Penny to hold off anything but five-alarm
fires. Quiroga had made a wild statement in Sydney, Australia, the night
before, of such a nature that we could expose the lie and make him squirm. I
was trying my hand at a Speech in answer, without waiting for a draft to be
handed me; I had high hopes of getting my own version approved.
When they came in I said,
"Listen to this," and read them the key paragraph. "How do you
like it?"
"That ought to nail his hide to the
door," agreed Rog. "Here's the 'safe' list, Chief. Want to look it
over? We're due there in twenty minutes."
"Oh, that damned meeting. I don't see why
I should look at the list. Anything you want to tell me about it?"
Nevertheless, I took the list and glanced down it. I knew them all from their
Farleyfiles and a few of them from contact; I knew already why each one had to
be taken care of.
Then I struck the name:
Corpsman, William 1.
I fought down what I felt
was justifiable annoyance and said quietly, "I see Bill is on the list,
Rog."
"Oh, yes. I wanted to
tell you about that. You see, Chief, as we all know, there has been a certain
amount of bad blood between you and Bill. Now I'm not blaming you; it's been
Bill's fault. But there are always two sides. What you may not have realized is
that Bill has been carrying around a tremendous inferiority feeling; it gives
him a chip on the shoulder. This will fix it up."
"So?"
"Yes. It is what he has always wanted.
You see, the rest of us all have official status, we're members of the G.A., I
mean. I'm talking about those who work closely around, uh, you. Bill feels it.
I've heard him say, after the third drink, that he was just a hired man. He's
bitter about it. You don't mind, do you? The Party can afford it and it's an
easy price to pay for elimination of friction at headquarters."
I
had myself under full control by now. "It's none of my business. Why should
I mind, if that is
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what Mi. Bonforte
wants?"
I
caught just a flicker of a glance from Dak to Clifton. I added, "That is
what Mr. B. wants? Isn't it, Rog?"
Dak said harshly,
"Tell him, Rog."
Rog said slowly, "Dak
and I whipped this up ourselves. We think it is for the best."
"Then Mr. Bonforte did
not approve it? You asked him, surely?"
"No, we didn't."
"Why not?"
"Chief, this is not
the sort of thing to bother him with. He's a tired, old, sick man. I have not
been worrying him with anything less than major policy decisions-which this
isn't. It is a district we command no matter who stands for it."
"Then why ask my
opinion about it at all?"
"Well, we felt you
should know-and know why. We think you ought to approve it."
"Me? You're asking me for a decision as
if I were Mr. Bonforte. I'm not." I tapped the desk in his nervous
gesture. "Either this decision is at his level, and you should ask him-or
it's not, and you should never have asked me."
Rog chewed his cigar, then said, "All
right, I'm not asking you." "No!"
"What do you
mean?"
"I mean 'NoV You did
ask me; therefore there is doubt in your mind. So if you expect me to present
that name to the committee- as 1/I were Bonforte-then go in and ask him."
They both sat and said
nothing. Finally Dak sighed and said, "Tell the rest, Rog. Or I
will."
I
waited. Clifton took his cigar out of his mouth and said, "Chief, Mi.
Bonforte had a stroke four days ago. He's in no shape to be disturbed."
I
held still, and recited to myself all of "the cloud-capp'd towers, the
gorgeous palaces," and so forth. When I was back in shape I said,
"How is his mind?"
"His mind seems clear enough, but he is
terribly tired. That week as a prisoner was more of an ordeal than we realized.
The stroke left him in a coma for twenty-four hours. He's out of it now, but
the left side of his face is paralyzed and his entire left side is partly out
of service."
"Uh, what does Dr.
Capek say?"
"He thinks that as the
clot clears up, you'll never be able to tell the difference. But he'll have to
take it easier than he used to. But, Chief, right now he is ill. We'll just
have to carry on through the balance of the campaign without him."
I felt a ghost of the lost
feeling I had had when my father died. I had never seen Bonforte, I had had
nothing from him but a few scrawled corrections on typescript. But I leaned on
him all the way. The fact that he was in that room next door had made the whole
thing possible.
I took a long breath, let
it out, and said, "Okay, Rog. We'll have to."
"Yes, Chief." He stood up.
"We've got to get over to that meeting. How about that?" He nodded
toward the safe-districts list.
"Oh." I tried to think. Maybe it was
possible that Bonforte would reward Bill with the privilege of calling himself
"the Honorable," just to keep him happy. He wasn't small about such
things; he did not bind the mouths of the kine who tread the grain. In one of
his essays on politics he had said, "I am not an intellectual man. If I
have any special talent, it lies in picking men of ability and letting them
work."
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"How long has Bill
been with him?" I asked suddenly.
"Eh? About four years.
A llttle over."
Bonforte evidently had liked his work.
"That's past one general election, isn't it? Why didn't he make him an
Assemblyman then?"
"Why, I don't know.
The matter never came up."
"When was Penny put
in?"
"About three years
ago. A by-election."
"There's your answer,
Rog."
"I don't follow
you."
"Bonforte could have
made Bill a Grand Assemblyman at any time. He didn't choose to. Change that
nomination to a 'resigner.' Then if Mr. Bonforte wants Bill to have it, he can
arrange a byelection for him later-when he's feeling himself."
Clifton showed no expression. He simply picked
up the list and said, "Very well, Chief."
Later that same day Bill quit. I suppose Rog had
to tell him that his arm-twisting had not worked. But when Rog told me about it
I felt sick, realizing that my stiff-necked attitude had us all in acute
danger. I told him so. He shook his head.
"But he knows it all! It was his scheme
from the start. Look at the load of dirt he can haul over to the Humanity
camp."
"Forget it, Chief. Bill may be a
louse-I've no use for a man who will quit in the middle of a campaign; you just
don't do that, ever. But he is not a rat. In his profession you don't spill a
client's secrets, even if you fall out with him."
"I hope you are
right."
"You'll see. Don't
worry about it. Just get on with the job."
As
the next few days passed I came to the conclusion that Rog knew Bill better
than I did. We heard nothing from him or about him and the campaign went ahead
as usual, getting rougher all the time, but with not a peep to show that our
giant hoax was compromised. I began to feel better and buckled down to making
the best Bonforte speeches I could manage-sometimes with Rog's help; sometimes
just with his okay. Mr. Bonforte was steadily improving again, but Capek had
him on absolute quiet.
Rog had to go to Earth
during the last week; there are types of fence-mending that simply can't be
done by remote control. After all, votes come from the precincts and the field
managers count for more than the speechmakers. But speeches still had to be
made and press conferences given; I carried on, with Dak and Penny at my
elbow-of course I was much more closely with it now; most questions I could
answer without stopping to think.
There was the usual
twice-weekly press conference in the offices the day Rog was due back. I had
been hoping that he would be back in time for it, but there was no reason I
could not take it alone. Penny walked in ahead of me, carrying her gear; I
heard her gasp.
I saw then that Bill was at
the far end of the table.
But I looked around the
room as usual and said, "Good morning, gentlemen."
"Good morning, Mr.
Minister!" most of them answered.
I added, "Good
morning, Bill. Didn't know you were here. Whom are you representing?"
They gave him dead silence to reply. Every one
of them knew that Bill had quit us-or had been
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fired. He grinned at
me, and answered, "Good morning, Mister Bon forte. I'm with the Krein
Syndicate."
I knew it was coming then;
I tried not to give him the satisfaction of letting it show. "A fine
outfit. I hope they are paying you what you are worth. Now to business- The
written questions first. You have them, Penny?"
I
went rapidly through the written questions, giving out answers I had already
had time to think over, then sat back as usual and said, "We have time to
bat it around a bit, gentlemen. Any other questions?"
There were several. I was
forced to answer "No comment" only once-an answer Bonforte preferred
to an ambiguous one. Finally I glanced at my watch and said, "That will be
all this morning, gentlemen," and started to stand up.
"Smythe!" Bill
shouted.
I kept right on getting to
my feet, did not look toward him.
"I mean you, Mr. Phony
Bonforte-Smythe!" he went on angrily, raising his voice still more.
This time I did look at him, with
astonishment-just the amount appropriate, I think, to an important official
subjected to rudeness under unlikely conditions. Bill was pointing at me and
his face was red. "You impostor! You small-time actor! You fraud!"
The London Times man on my
right said quietly, "Do you want me to call the guard, sir?"
I said, "No. He's
harmless."
Bill laughed. "So I'm
harmless, huh? You'll find out."
"I really think I
should, sir," the Times man insisted.
"No." I then said
sharply, "That's enough, Bill. You had better leave quietly."
"Don't you wish I would?" He started
spewing forth the basic story, talking rapidly. He made no mention of the
kidnaping and did not mention his own part in the hoax, but implied that he had
left us rather than be mixed up in any such swindle. The impersonation was
attributed, correctly as far as it went, to illness on the part of
Bonforte-with a strong hint that we might have doped him.
I
listened patiently. Most of the reporters simply listened at first, with that
stunned expression of outsiders exposed unwillingly to a vicious family
argument. Then some of them started scribbling or dictating into minicorders.
When he stopped I said,
"Axe you through, Bill?"
"That's enough, isn't
it?"
"More than enough. I'm
sorry, Bill. That's all, gentlemen. I must get back to work."
"Just a moment, Mr.
Minister!" someone called out. "Do you want to issue a denial?"
Someone else added, "Axe you going to sue?"
I answered the latter
question first. "No, I shan't sue. One doesn't sue a sick man."
"Sick, am I?"
shouted Bill.
"Quiet down, Bill. As for issuing a denial,
I hardly think it is called for. However, I see that some of you have been
taking notes. While I doubt if any of your publishers would run this story, if
they do, this anecdote may add something to it. Did you ever hear of the
professor who spent forty years of his life proving that the Odyssey was not
written by Homer-but by another Greek of the same name?"
It got a polite laugh. I
smiled and started to turn away again. Bill came rushing around the table and
grabbed at my arm. "You can't laugh it off!" The Times man-Mr.
Ackroyd, it was-pulled him away from me.
I
said, "Thank you, sir." Then to Corpsman I added, "What do you
want me to do, Bill? I've tried to
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avoid having you
arrested."
"Call the guards if you like, you phony!
We'll see who stays in jail longest! Wait until they take your
fingerprints!"
I
sighed and made the understatement of my life. "This is ceasing to be a
joke. Gentlemen, I think I had better put an end to this. Penny my dear, will
you please have someone send in fingerprinting equipment?" I knew I was
sunk-but, damn it, if you are caught by the Birkenhead Drill, the least you owe
yourself is to stand at attention while the ship goes down. Even a villain
should make a good exit.
Bill did not wait. He grabbed the water glass
that had been sitting in front of me; I had handled it several times. "The
hell with that! This will do."
"I've told you before, Bill, to mind your
language in the presence of ladies. But you may keep the glass."
"You're bloody well
right I'll keep it."
"Very well. Please
leave. If not, I'll be forced to summon the guard."
He
walked out. Nobody said anything. I said, "May I provide fingerprints for
any of the rest of you?"
Ackroyd said hastily,
"Oh, I'm sure we don't want them, Mr. Minister."
"Oh, by all means! If there is a story in
this, you'll want to be covered." I insisted because it was in character-and
in the second and third place, you can't be a little bit pregnant, or slightly
unmasked-and I did not want my friends present to be scooped by Bill; it was
the last thing I could do for them.
We did not have to send for
formal equipment. Penny had carbon sheets and someone had one of those lifetime
memo pads with plastic sheets; they took prints nicely. Then I said good
morning and left.
We
got as far as Penny's private office; once inside she fainted dead. I carried
her into my office, laid her on the couch, then sat down at my desk and simply
shook for several minutes.
Neither one of us was worth
much the rest of the day. We carried on as usual except that Penny brushed off
all callers, claiming excuses of some sort. I was due to make a speech that
night and thought seriously of canceling it. But I left the news turned on all
day and there was not a word about the incident of that morning. I realized
that they were checking the prints before risking it-after all, I was supposed
to be His Imperial Majesty's first minister; they would want confirmation. So I
decided to make the speech since I had already written it and the time was
schedtiled. I couldn't even consult Dak; he was away in Tycho City.
It was the best one I had
made. I put into it the same stuff a comic uses to quiet a panic in a burning
theater. After the pickup was dead I just sunk my face in my hands and wept,
while Penny patted my shoulder. We had not discussed the horrible mess at all.
Rog grounded at twenty
hundred Greenwich, about as I finished, and checked in with me as soon as he
was back. In a dull monotone I told him the whole dirty story; he listened,
chewing on a dead cigar, his face expressionless.
At the end I said almost
pleadingly, "I had to give the fingerprints, Rog. You see that, don't you?
To refuse would not have been in character."
Rog said, "Don't
worry."
"Huh?"
"I said, 'Don't worry.' When the reports
on those prints come back from the Identification Bureau at The Hague, you are
in for a small but pleasant surprise-and our ex-friend Bill is in for a much
bigger one, but not pleasant. If he has collected any of his blood money in
advance, they will probably take it
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out of his hide. I
hope they do."
I could not mistake what he
meant. "Oh! But, Rog-they won't stop there. There are a dozen other
places. Social Security Uh, lots of places."
"You think perhaps we were not thorough?
Chief, I knew this could happen, one way or another. From the moment Dak sent
word to complete Plan Mardi Gras, the necessary cover-up started. Everywhere.
But I didn't think it necessary to tell Bill." He sucked on his dead
cigar, took it out of his mouth, and looked at it. "Poor Bill."
Penny sighed softly and fainted again.
Chapter 10
Somehow we got to the final day. We did not
hear from Bill again; the passenger lists showed that he went Earthside two
days after his fiasco. If any news service ran anything I did not hear of it,
nor did Quiroga's speeches hint at it.
Mr.
Bonforte steadily improved until it was a safe bet that he could take up his
duties after the election. His paralysis continued in part but we even had that
covered: he would go on vacation right after election, a routine practice that
almost every politician indulges in. The vacation would be in the Tommie, safe
from everything. Sometime in the course of the trip I would be transferred and
smuggled back-and the Chief would have a mild stroke, brought on by the strain
of the campaign.
Rog would have to unsort
some fingerprints, but he could safely wait a year or more for that.
Election day I was happy as a puppy in a shoe
closet. The impersonation was over, although I was going to do one more short
turn. I had already canned two five-minute speeches for grand network, one
magnanimously accepting victory, the other gallantly conceding defeat; my job
was finished. When the last one was in the can, I grabbed Penny and kissed her.
She didn't even seem to mind.
The
remaining short turn was a command performance; Mr. Bonforte wanted to see
me-as him-before he let me drop it. I did not mind. Now that the strain was
over, it did not worry me to see him; playing him for his entertainment would
be like a comedy skit, except that I would do it straight. What am I saying?
Playing straight is the essence of comedy.
The
whole family would gather in the upper living room-there because Mr. Bonforte
had not seen the sky in some weeks and wanted to-and there we would listen to
the returns, and either drink to victory or drown our sorrows and swear to do
better next time. Strike me out of the last part; I had had my first and last
political campaign and I wanted no more politics. I was not even sure I wanted
to act again. Acting every minute for over six weeks adds up to about five
hundred ordinary performances. That's a long run.
They brought him up the lift in a wheel chair.
I stayed out of sight and let them arrange him on a couch before I came in; a
man is entitled not to have his weakness displayed before strangers. Besides, I
wanted to make an entrance.
I
was almost startled out of character. He looked like my f ather! Oh, it was
just a "family" resemblance; he and I looked much more alike than
either one of us looked like my father, but the
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likeness was there-and the age was right, for he looked old. I had
not guessed how much he had aged. He was thin and his hair was white.
I made an immediate mental
note that during the coming vacation in space I must help them prepare for the
transition, the resubstitution. No doubt Capek could put weight back on him; if
not, there were ways to make a man appear fleshier without obvious padding. I
would dye his hair myself. The delayed announcement of the stroke he had
suffered would cover the inevitable discrepancies. After all, he had changed
this much in only a few weeks; the need was to keep the fact from calling
attention to the impersonation.
But these practical details
were going on by themselves in a corner of my mind; my own being was welling
with emotion. ifi though he was, the man gave off a force both spiritual and
virile. I felt that warm, almost holy, shock one feels when first coming into
sight of the great statue of Abraham Lincoln. I was reminded of another statue,
too, seeing him lying there with his legs and his helpless left side covered
with a shawl: the wounded Lion of Lucerne. He had that massive strength and
dignity, even when helpless: "The guard dies, but never surrenders."
He looked up as I came in
and smiled the warm, tolerant, and friendly smile I had learned to portray, and
motioned with his good hand for me to come to him. I smiled the same smile back
and went to him. He shook hands with a grip surprisingly strong and said
warmly, "I am happy to meet you at last." His speech was slightly
blurred and I could not see the slackness on the side of his face away from me.
"I am honored and happy to meet you,
sir." I had to think about it to keep from matching the blurring of
paralysis.
He looked me up and down,
and grinned. "It looks to me as if you had already met me."
I glanced down at myself.
"I have tried, sir."
"'Tried'! You
succeeded. It is an odd thing to see one's own self."
I realized with sudden
painful empathy that he was not emotionally aware of his own appearance; my
present appearance was "his"-and any change in himself was merely
incidental to illness, temporary, not to be noticed. But he went on speaking. "Would
you mind moving around a bit for me, sir? I want to see me-you-us. I want the
audience's viewpoint for once."
So I straightened up, moved
around the room, spoke to Penny (the poor child was looking from one to the
other of us with a dazed expression), picked up a paper, scratched my
collarbone and rubbed my chin, moved his wand from under my arm to my hand and
fiddled with it.
He was watching with
delight. So I added an encore. Taking the middle of the rug, I gave the
peroration of one of his finest' speeches, not trying to do it word for word,
but interpreting it, letting it roll and thunder as he would have done-and
ending with his own exact ending: "A slave cannot be freed, save he do it
himself. Nor can you enslave a free man; the very most you can do is kill
him!"
There was that wonderful hushed silence, then
a ripple of clapping and Bonforte himself was pounding the couch with his good
hand and calling, "Bravo!"
It was the only applause I
ever got in the role. It was enough.
He
had me pull up a chair then and sit with him. I saw him glance at the wand, so
I handed it to him. "The safety is on, sir."
"I know how to use it." He looked at
it closely, then handed it back. I had thought perhaps he would keep it. Since
he did not, I decided to turn it over to Dak to deliver to him. He asked me
about myself and told me that he did not recall ever seeing me play, but that
he had seen my father's Cyrano. He was
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making a great effort
to control the errant muscles of his mouth and his speech was clear but
labored.
Then he asked me what I intended to do now. I
told him that I had no plans as yet. He nodded and said, "We'll see. There
is a place for you. There is work to be done." He made no mention of pay,
which made me proud.
The returns were beginning
to come in and he turned his attention to the stereo tank. Returns had been
coming in, of course, for forty-eight hours, since the outer worlds and the
districtless constituencies vote before Earth does, and even on Earth an
election "day" is more than thirty hours long, as the globe turns.
But now we began to get the important districts of the great land masses of
Earth. We had forged far ahead the day before in the outer returns and Rog had
had to tell me that it meant nothing; the Expansionists always carried the
outer worlds. What the billions of people still on Earth who had never been out
and never would thought about it was what mattered.
But
we needed every outer vote we could get. The Agrarian Party on Ganymede had
swept five out of six districts; they were part of our coalition, and the
Expansionist Party as such did not put up even token candidates. The situation
on Venus was more ticklish, with the Venerians split into dozens of splinter
parties divided on fine points of theology impossible for a human being to
understand. Nevertheless, we expected most of the native vote, either directly
or through caucused coalition later, and we should get practically all of the
human vote there. The Imperial restriction that the natives must select human
beings to represent them at New Batavia was a thing Bonforte was pledged to
remove; it gained us votes on Venus; we did not know yet how many votes it
would lose us on Earth.
Since the nests sent only observers to the
Assembly the only vote we worried about on Mars was the human vote. We had the
popular sentiment; they had the patronage. But with an honest count we expected
a shoo-in there.
Dak
was bending over a slide rule at Rog's side; Rog had a big sheet of paper laid
out in some complicated weighting formula of his own. A dozen or more of the
giant metal brains through the Solar System were doing the same thing that
night, but Rog preferred his own guesses. He told me once that he could walk
through a district, "sniffing" it, and come within two per cent of
its results. I think he could.
Doc
Capek was sitting back, with his hands over his paunch, as relaxed as an
angleworm. Penny was moving around, pushing straight things crooked and vice
versa and fetching us drinks. She never seemed to look directly at either me or
Mr. Bonforte.
I
had never before experienced an election-night party; they were not like any
other. There is a cozy, warm rapport of all passion spent. It really does not
matter too much how the people decide; you have done your best, you are with
your friends and comrades, and for a while there is no worry and no pressure
despite the over-all excitement, like frosting on a cake, of the incoming
returns.
I don't know when I've had
so good a lime.
Rog looked up, looked at
me, then spoke to Mr. Bonforte. "The Continent is seesaw. The Americans
are testing the water with a toe before coming in on our side; the only
question is, how deep?"
"Can you make a
projection, Rog?"
"Not yet. Oh, we have the popular vote
but in the G.A. it could swing either way by half a dozen seats." He stood
up. "I think I had better mosey out into town."
Properly speaking, I should have gone, as
"Mr. Bonforte." The Party leader should certainly appear at the main
headquarters of the Party sometime during election night. But I had never been
in headquarters, it being the sort of a buttonholing place where my
impersonation might be easily breached.
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My "illness" had excused me from it during the campaign;
tonight it was not worth the risk, so Rog would go instead, and shake hands and
grin and let the keyed-up girls who had done the hard and endless paperwork
throw their arms around him and weep. "Back in an hour."
Even our little party should have been down on
the lower level, to include all the office staff, especially Jimmie Washington.
But it would not work, not without shutting Mr. Bonforte himself out of it.
They were having their own party of course. I stood up. "Rog, I'll go down
with you and say hello to Jimmie's harem."
"Eh? You don't have
to, you know."
"It's the proper thing to do, isn't it?
And it really isn't any trouble or risk." I tuned to Mr. Bonforte.
"How about it, sir?"
"I would appreciate it
very much."
We
went down the lift and through the silent, empty private quarters and on
through my office and Penny's. Beyond her door was bedlam. A stereo receiver,
moved in for the purpose, was blasting at full gain, the floor was littered,
and everybody was drinking, or smoking, or both. Even Jimmie Washington was
holding a drink while he listened to the returns. He was not drinking it; he
neither drank nor smoked. No doubt someone had handed it to him and he had kept
it. Jimmie had a fine sense of fitness.
I
made the rounds, with Rog at my side, thanked Jimmie warmly and very sincerely,
and apologized that I was feeling tired. "I'm going up and spread the
bones, Jimmie. Make my excuses to people, will you?"
"Yes, sir. You've got
to take care of yourself, Mr. Minister."
I went back up while Rog
went on out into the public tunnels.
Penny shushed me with a finger to her lips
when I came into the upper living room. Bonforte seemed to have dropped off to
sleep and the receiver was muted down. Dak still sat in front of it, filling in
figures on the big sheet against Rog's return. Capek had not moved. He nodded
and raised his glass to me.
I
let Penny fix me a scotch and water, then stepped out into the bubble balcony.
It was night both by clock and by fact and Earth was almost full, dazzling in a
Tiffany spread of stars. I searched North America and tried to pick out the
little dot I had left only weeks earlier, and tried to get my emotions
straight.
After a while I came back in; night on Luna is
rather overpowering. Rog returned a little later and sat back down at his work
sheets without speaking. I noticed that Bonforte was awake again.
The
critical returns were coming in now and everybody kept quiet, letting Rog with
his pencil and Dak with his slide rule have peace to work. At long, long last
Rog shoved his chair back. "That's it, Chief," he said without
looking up. "We're in. Majority not less than seven seats, probably
nineteen, possibly over thirty."
After a pause Bonforte said
quietly, "You're sure?"
"Positive. Penny, try
another channel and see what we get."
I
went over and sat by Bonforte; I could not talk. He reached out and patted my
hand in a fatherly way and we both watched the receiver. The first station
Penny got said: "-doubt about it, folks; eight of the robot brains say
yes, Curiae says maybe. The Expansionist Party has won a decisive-" She
switched to another.
"-confirms his temporary post for another
five years. Mr. Quiroga cannot be reached for a statement but his general
manager in New Chicago admits that the present trend cannot be over--"
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Rog
got up and went to the phone; Penny muted the news down until nothing could be
heard. The announcer continued mouthing; he was simply saying in different
words what we already knew.
Rog
came back; Penny turned up the gain. The announcer went on for a moment, then
stopped, read something that was handed to him, and turned back with a broad
grin. "Friends and fellow citizens, I now bring you for a statement the
Supreme Minister!"
The picture changed to my
victory speech.
I sat there luxuriating in
it, with my feelings as mixed up as possible but all good, painfully good. I
had done a job on the speech and I knew it; I looked tired, sweaty, and calmly
triumphant. It sounded ad?b.
I
had just reached: "Let us go forward together, with freedom for all-"
when I heard a noise behind me.
"Mr. Bonforte!" I
said. "Doc! Doe! Come quickly!"
Mr.
Bonforte was pawing at me with his right hand and trying very urgently to tell
me something. But it was no use; his poor mouth failed him and his mighty
indomitable will could not make the weak flesh obey.
I
took him in my arms-then he went into Cheyne-Stokes breathing and quickly into
termination.
They took his body back
down in the lift, Dak and Capek together; I was no use to them. Rog came up and
patted me on the shoulder, then he went away. Penny had followed the others
down. Presently I went again out onto the balcony. I needed "fresh
air" even though it was the same machine-pumped air as the living room.
But it felt fresher.
They had killed him. His enemies had killed
him as certainly as if they had put a knife in his ribs. Despite all that we
had done, the risks we had taken, in the end they had murdered him.
"Murder most four'!
I
felt dead inside me, numb with the shock. I had seen "myself" die, I
had again seen my father die. I knew then why they so rarely manage to save one
of a pair of Siamese twins. I was empty.
I don't know how long I
stayed out there. Eventually I heard Rog's voice behind me. "Chief?"
I tuned. "Rog," I
said urgently, "don't call me that. Please!"
"Chief," he
persisted, "you know what you have to do now? Don't you?"
I
felt dizzy and his face blurred. I did not know what he was talking about-I did
not want to know what he was talking about.
"What do you mean?"
"Chief-one man
dies-but the show goes on. You can't quit now."
My head ached and my eyes
would not focus. He seemed to pull toward me and away while his voice drove on.
". - - robbed him of his chance to finish his work. So you've got to do it
f or him. You've got to make him live again!"
I shook my head and made a
great effort to pull myself together and reply. "Rog, you don't know what
you are saying. It's preposterous-ridiculous! Fm no statesman. I'm just a
bloody actor! I make faces and make people laugh. That's all I'm good
for."
To my own horror I heard
myself say it in Bonforte's voice.
Rog looked at me.
"Seems to me you've done all right so far."
I
tried to change my voice, tried to gain control of the situation. "Rog,
you're upset. When you've calmed down you will see how ridiculous this is.
You're right; the show goes on. But not that way. The
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proper thing to do-the only thing to do-is for you yourself to
move on up. The election is won; you've got your majority-now you take office
and carry out the program."
He looked at me and shook
his head sadly. "I would if I could. I admit it. But I can't. Chief, you
remember those confounded executive committee meetings? You kept them in line.
The whole coalition has been kept glued together by the personal force and
leadership of one man. If you don't follow through now, all that he lived
for-and died for-will fall apart."
I had no answering
argument; he might be right-I had seen the wheels within wheels of politics in
the past month and a half. "Rog, even if what you say is true, the
solution you offer is impossible. We've barely managed to keep up this pretense
by letting me be seen only under carefully stage-managed conditions-and we've
just missed being caught out as it is. But to make it work week after week,
month after month, even year after year, if I understand you-no, it couldn't be
done. It is impossible. I can't do it!"
"You can!" He leaned toward me and
said forcefully, "We've all talked it over and we know the hazards as well
as you do. But you'll have a chance to grow into it. Two weeks in space to
start with-hell, a month if you want it! You'll study all the time-his
journals, his boyhood diaries, his scrapbooks, you'll soak yourself in them.
And we'll all help you."
I
did not answer. He went on, "Look, Chief, you've learned that a political
personality is not onq man; it's a team-it's a team bound together by common
purposes and common beliefs. We've lost our team captain and we've got to have
another one. But the team is still there."
Capek was out on the balcony; I had not seen
him come out. I tuned to him. "Are you for this too?"
"It's your duty,"
Rog added.
Capek said slowly, "I won't go that far.
I hope you will do it. But, damnit, I won't be your conscience. I believe in
free will, frivolous as that may sound from a medical man." He turned to
Clifton. "We had better leave him alone, Rog. He knows. Now it's up to
him."
But, although they left, I was not to be alone
just yet. Dak came out. To my relief and gratitude he did not call me
"Chief."
"Hello, Dak."
"Howdy." He was
silent for a moment, smoking and looking out at the stars. Then he turned to
me. "Old son, we've been through some things together. I know you now, and
I'll back you with a gun, or money, or fists any time, and never ask why. If
you choose to drop out now, I won't have a word of blame and I won't think any the
less of you. You've done a noble best."
"Uh, thanks,
Dak."
"One more word and
I'll smoke out. Just remember this: if you decide you can't do it, the foul
scum who brainwashed him will win. In spite of everything, they win." He
went inside.
I
felt ton apart in my mind-then I gave way to sheer self-pity. It wasn't fair! I
had my own life to live. I was at the top of my powers, with my greatest
professional triumphs still ahead of me. It wasn't right to expect me to bury
myself, perhaps for years, in the anonymity of another man's role-while the
public forgot me, producers and agents forgot me-would probably believe I was
dead.
It wasn't fair. It was too
much to ask.
Presently I pulled out of it and for a time
did not think. Mother Earth was still serene and beautiful and changeless in
the sky; I wondered what the election-night, celebrations there sounded like.
Mars and Jupiter and Venus were all in sight, strung like prizes along the
zodiac. Ganymede I could not see, of
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course, nor the lonely colony
out on far Pluto.
"Worlds of Hope,"
Bonforte had called them.
But
he was dead. He was gone. They had taken away from him his birthright at its
ripe fullness. He was dead.
And they had put it up to
me to re-create him, make him live again.
Was. I up to it? Could I
possibly measure up to his noble standards? What would he want me to do? If he
were in my place- what would Bonf one do? Again and again in the campaign I had
asked myself: "What would Bonforte do?"
Someone moved behind me, I tuned and saw
Penny. I looked at her and said, "Did they send you out? Did you come to
plead with me?"
"No."
She
added nothing and did not seem to expect me to answer, nor did we look at each
other. The silence went on. At last I said, "Penny? If I try to do it-will
you help?"
She turned suddenly toward
me. "Yes. Oh yes, Chief! I'll help!'?
"Then I'll try," I said humbly.
I wrote all of the above
twenty-five years ago to try to straighten out my own confusion. I tried to
tell the truth and not spare myself because it was not meant to be read by
anyone but myself and my therapist, Dr. Capek. It is strange, after a quarter
of a century, to reread the foolish and emotional words of that young man. I
remember him, yet I have trouble realizing that I was ever he. My wife Penelope
claims that she remembers him better than I do-and that she never loved anyone
else. So time changes us.
I
find I can "remember" Bonforte's early life better than I remember my
actual life as that rather pathetic person, Lawrence Smith, or-as he liked -to
style himself-"The Great Lorenzo." Does that make me insane?
Schizophrenic, perhaps? If so, it is a necessary insanity for the role I have
had to play, for in order to let Bonforte live again, that seedy actor had to
be suppressed- completely.
Insane or not, I am aware
that he once existed and that I was he. He was never a success as an actor, not
really-though I think he was sometimes touched with the true madness. He made
his final exit still perfectly in character; I have a yellowed newspaper
clipping somewhere which states that he was "found dead" in a Jersey
City hotel room from an overdose of sleeping pills-apparently taken in a fit of
despondency, for his agent issued a statement that he had not had a part in
several months. Personally, I feel that they need not have mentioned that about
his being out of work; if not libelous, it was at least unkind. The date of the
clipping proves, incidentally, that he would not have been in New Batavia, or
anywhere else, during the campaign of '15.
I suppose I should bum it.
But
there is no one left alive today who knows the truth other than Dak and
Penelope-except the men who murdered Bonforte's body.
I
have been in and out of office three times now and perhaps this term will be my
last. I was knocked out the first time when we finally put the eetees-Venerians
and Martians and Outer Jovians -into the Grand Assembly. But the non-human
peoples are still there and I came back. The people will take a certain amount
of reform, then they want a rest. But the reforms stay. People don't really
want change, any change at all-and xenophobia is very deep-rooted. But we
progress, as we must-if we are to go out to the stars.
Again and again I have asked myself:
"What would Bonforte do?" I am not sure that my answers
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have always been right
(although I am sure that I am the best-read student in his works in the
System). But I have tried to stay in character in his role. A long time ago
someone-Voltaire?-someone said, "If Satan should ever replace God he would
find it necessary to assume the attributes of Divinity."
I have never regretted my
lost profession. In a way, I have not lost it; Willem was right. There is other
applause besides handclapping and there is always the warm glow of a good
performance. I have tried, I suppose, to create the perfect work of art.
Perhaps I have not fully succeeded-but I think my father would rate it as a
"good performance."
No,
I do not regret it, even though I was happier then-at least I slept better. But
there is solemn satisfaction in doing the best you can for eight billion
people.
Perhaps their lives have no cosmic
significance, but they have feelings. They can hurt.
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