The House Dutiful
William Tenn
TO—TO be . . . an unformable,
lonely thought groped blindly for a potential fact . . . need, a need . . . it
was—something . . . it was—needed . . . it was needed? Consciousness!
A living creature came with the pride
of ownership, the triggering wistfulness for it. Unlike its first darling,
this creature had notions that were bizarre and primitive, conceptually agonizing.
Painful, painful, painful they were to organize into. But it had purpose
again—and, more, it had desire—
Thoughtlessly, lovingly, the immense
thing began to flow to the fixed-upon place, twitching awkward experimental
shapes upwards as it went.
The back-country Canadian road was obscure
even for the biting concentration of the deluxe 1958 caterpillar runabout,
Metal treads apologized shrilly as they
hit a rock that was too large and too smugly imbedded in the mud. The bright
yellow car canted steeply to the right and came down level again with a murky
splash.
"And I was so happy in the
dairy," Esther Sakarian moaned in histrionic
recollection as she dug her unpainted, thoroughly trimmed fingernails into the
lavender upholstery of the front seat. "I had my own quiet little lab, my
neatly labeled samples of milk and cheese from the day's production; at night I
could walk home on cement sidewalks or drop into a dry, air-conditioned
restaurant or movie. But Philadelphia wasn't good enough for me! No, I had to .
. ."
"Bad storm last night—smooth riding,
usually," Paul Marquis muttered on her left. He grimaced
his glasses back into correct nose position and concentrated on the difficult
ocular task of separating possible road from possible marsh.
"I had to come up to the Great Bear
Lake where every prospector sneezes and all the men are vile. Adventure I
wanted—hah ! Well, here I am, using up the last of my
girlhood as a water-purification expert for a bunch of near-sighted nuclear
physicists desperately hopeful that they look like characters in a Northwest
romance!"
Marquis sloughed the runabout around a
dwarfed red spruce that grew belligerently in the middle of the damp highway. "Should be there in a minute or two, Es. Forty of the sweetest acres that anybody ever talked the Canadian
government into selling. And a little bumpy hill just off the road
that's a natural foundation for the Cape Cod cottage Caroline's always talking
about."
The bacteriologist prodded his shoulder
tenderly. "Talking about it in Boston and building it in northern Canada—a
little different, don't you think? You haven't married the gal yet."
"You don't know Caroline,"
Marquis told her confidently. "Besides, we'll be only forty miles from
Little Fermi—and the town will grow. The lode we're working on seems to be
about ten times as rich as the Eldorado mine over at
Port Radium. If it holds up, we'll build a uranium pile that will be a power
plant for the entire western hemisphere. Business will get interested,
real-estate values will boom . . ."
"So it's a good investment, too? Now
don't pout, but I have a dim belief that you bought the swamp-happy acreage to
give yourself a reason for this gaudy monstrosity you ordered when everyone else
got a 'copter. Why is it that physical scientists on both of the outermost
frontiers—the star-classifiers and the electron-prodders—have to be the roaringest romantics and mystics of them all? Like your
opinion that a lifetime spent behind Beacon Street cotton wool can produce the
peculiar combination of frantic housemaid and lambent inspiration that you
want in a wife."
"Now you sound like that pill-roller
Connor Kuntz when I beat his classic Capablancan
chess with an inspirational heresy. There's a nineteenth-century
mechanist with whom you could be happy; all he wants is a mate of good
disposition and fair heredity who will be absorbed in her work and let him do
his bone-setting in peace. I don't want a mate—I want a marriage. No servant
any employment agency ever . . ."
"Dr. Kuntz is a mass of greasy
rationalizations. And I wasn't proposing to you by indirection. You're had,
lad."
"—ever sent out," he went on
doggedly, "could handle the menial essentials of domestic living with the
affection and grace of a wife, a good wife. The best machines made stop this
side of habit, and, even if they didn't, you can't get omnipresent, understanding
love from a machine. Not that I'm marrying Caroline just to get someone who'll
kiss me while she's preparing dinners I like . . ."
"Of course not !
It's comfortable, though, to know you'll get it just the same. Which you
wouldn't if you married, say—oh, say a female bacteriologist who had work of
her own to do and would be as tired as you at the end of the day. All this,
mind you, even if you'd confided to the female bacteriologist that you found
her an ideal person with whom to discuss lab kinks and personal aspirations. Up
with the double standard; but, this time, keep it intellectual!"
The excessively thin young man slapped the
car to a stop and turned with his mouth open for a blast. Esther Sakarian was one of those tidy, docile-appearing women whose
remarks generated a surprising amount of frictional heat in men.
"Look here, Es," he began
loudly, "social development and the relatively new integrity of the
individual to one side, people still consist of men and women. Women—with the
exception of maladjusted .. ."
"Hey, there!" Esther was staring over his shoulder with her
nostrils flaring respectfully. "You've done quite a job
! It doesn't look a bit prefabricated, Paul. But it must have been
expensive getting priorities for those sections on the Diesel snow trains. And
you banged it together in one week by yourself? Quite a job
!"
"I would appreciate it if you stopped
raving and told me . . ."
"Your house—your Cape Cod cottage!
It's perfect."
"My what?" Paul Marquis' head spun around like a good servo-mechanism.
Esther slid the right-hand door back into
its slot and stepped delicately onto the mud. "I'll bet you have it
half-furnished, too. And full of the crazy domestic gimmicks you're always
working out. Downy old duck, aren't you? 'Come on, Es, I want to ask your
advice on where to stick a house on that land I bought !'
So go on and smirk: don't worry, I won't have the gall to say I knew it all the
time."
Marquis watched the progress of her
feminized blue jeans up the bush-infested hill toward the green and white
cottage with anything but a smirk. His tongue rolled out of his mouth and
slapped moisture on his working lips—moisture which seemed to be used up as
fast as it was applied. His eyes, after a couple of wistful attempts at running
broad jumps from their sockets, settled down into an earnest conference with
each other. Occasionally he said, "Whul?" ; at other times, he said, "Nipe!"
At no time did he smirk.
Finally, he swung madly over the side,
slipped headlong into the mud, picked himself up and
clambered on, dripping great brown chunks of Canadian soil as he thudded up the
slope.
Esther nodded at him as he approached, her hand truculent on the long, old-fashioned
doorknob. "What's the sense of locking doors in this wilderness? If anyone
were going to burglarize, they could smash a window quite easily and help themselves
while you were away. Well, don't stand there looking philosophical—make with
the key, make with the key!"
"The—the key." Dazed, he took a small key chain out of his pocket,
looked at it for a moment, then shoved it back
violently. He ran a hand through a tangle of blond hair and leaned against the
door. It opened.
The bacteriologist trotted past him as he
clawed at the post to retain his balance. "Never could get the hang of
those prehistoric gadgets. Photoelectric cells will be good enough for my
children, and they're good enough for me. Oh, Paul! Don't tell me your sense
for the fitness of things extends no further than atomic nuclei. Look at that
furniture!"
"Furniture?" he asked very
weakly. Slowly, he opened eyes which had been tightly closed while he leaned
against the door. He took in the roomful of chairs and tables done in the
sprouting-from-one-center-leg style which was currently popular.
"Furniture!" he sighed and carefully dosed his eyes again.
Esther Sakarian
shook her round head with assurance. "1958 Single-Support just doesn't go
in a Cape Cod cottage. Believe me, Paul, your poetic soul may want to placate
your scientific mind by giving it superfunctional
surroundings, but you can't do it in this kind of a house. Furthermore, just by
looking at that retouched picture of Caroline you have pasted to your Geiger
counter, I know she wouldn't approve. You'll have to get rid of at least . .
."
He had come up to her side and stood
plucking the sleeve of her bright plaid shirt. "Esther," he muttered,
"my dear, sweet, talkative, analytical, self-confident Esther—please sit down and shut up!"
She dropped into a roundly curved seat,
staring at him from angled eyebrows. "You have a point to make?"
1"I have a point to make !" Paul told her emphatically. He waved wildly at
the modern furniture which seemed to be talking slang in the pleasant, leisurely
room. "All this, the house, the furniture, the accessories, was not only
not built nor sent here by me, but—but wasn't here a week ago when I came out with
the man from the land office and bought the property. It shouldn't be
here!"
"Nonsense! It couldn't just . . ." She broke off.
He nodded. "It did just. But that
only makes me feel crazy. What makes me positively impatient for a jacket laced
tastefully up the back is the furniture. It's the kind of furniture I thought
of whenever Caroline talked about building this cottage. But the point is this:
I knew she wanted to stuff it full of New England antique, and—since I feel a
woman's place is in the home —I never argued the point. I never mentioned
buying Single-Support to her; I've never mentioned the idea to anyone. And
every chair and table in this room is exactly what I thought it should be—privately!"
Esther had been listening to him with an
expanding frown. Now she started an uneasy giggle, and cut it off before it
began to throb. "Paul, I know you're too neurotic to be insane, and I'm
willing to admit my leg isn't pretty enough for you to pull. But this—this—
Look, the house may have been dropped by a passing plane; or possibly Charles
Fort had the right idea. What you're trying to tell me about the furniture, though .. . It makes for belly butterflies
!"
"Mine have electric fans on their
wings," he assured her. "When I first saw this place, I had to look
twice at the sun to make sure it hadn't turned green. When I opened the door, I
knew I was color-blind. Let's amble into the kitchen. If there's a certain
refrigerator-sink-stove combination .. ."
There was. Paul Marquis gripped the sleek
enamel and whistled "The Pilgrim's Chorus" through his teeth.
"I will a-ask you to c-consider this
f-fact," he said at last, shakenly. "This
particular rig is one which I worked out on the back of an envelope from
Caroline at three-fifteen yesterday when the big dredge got kinked up and I had
nothing else to do. Prior to that time, all I knew was that I wanted something
slightly different in the way of an all-in-one kitchen unit. This is what I
drew."
Esther patted the sides of her face as if
she were trying to slap herself back into sanity ever so gently. "Yes, I
know."
"You do?"
"You may not remember, Mr. Marquis,
but you showed me the drawing in the mess hall at supper. Since it was too
fantastically expensive to be considered seriously, I suggested shaping the
refrigerator like a sphere so that it would fit into the curve of the stove.
You chucked out your lower lip and agreed. The refrigerator is shaped like a
sphere and fits into the curve of the stove."
Paul opened a cupboard and pulled out a
rainbow-splashed tumbler. "I'm going to get a drink, even if it's
water!"
He held the tumbler under the projecting
faucet and reached for a button marked "cold." Before his questing
finger pressed it, however, a stream of ice-cold fluid spurted out of the
faucet, filled the glass and stopped without a trickle.
The physicist exhaled at the completely
dry bottom surface of the sink. He tightened his fingers convulsively on the
tumbler and poured its contents down his throat. A moment passed, while his
head was thrown back; then Esther, who had been leaning against the smooth
wall, saw him began to gag. She reached his side just as the coughs died away
and the tears started to leak out of his eyes.
"Whoo-oof!"
he exclaimed. "That was whisky—the finest Scotch ever to pass these tired
old lips. Just as it started to pour, I thought to myself: 'What you need, friend, is a good swift slug of Scotch.' And Esther—that's
what that water was! Talk about miracles !"
"I don't like this," the
brown-haired woman decided positively. She pulled a small glass vial from a
breast pocket. "Whisky, water or whatever it is—I'm going to get a sample
and analyze it. You've no idea how many varieties of algae I've seen in the
water up here. I think the presence of radioactive ore . . . Hullo. It doesn't
work."
With thumb and forefinger, she pressed the
hot and cold water buttons until the flesh under her fingernails turned white.
The faucet remained impassively dry.
Paul came over and bent his head under the
metal arm. He straightened and smiled impishly. "Pour, water!" he commanded.
Again water spat from the faucet, this time describing a curve to where Esther Sakarian had moved the vial to permit her companion to
examine the plumbing. When the vial was full, the water stopped.
"Yup !"
Paul grinned at the gasping bacteriologist. "Those buttons, the
drain—they're only for display. This house does exactly what's required of
it—but only when I require it ! I have a robot house
here, Es, and it's mine, all mine!"
She dosed the vial and replaced it in her
pocket. "I think it's a little more than that. Let's get out of here,
Paul. Outside of the obvious impossibility of this whole business, there are a
couple of things that don't check. I'd like to have Connor Kuntz up here to go
over the place. Besides, we'd better get started if we're to make Little Fermi
before the sun goes down."
"You don't tell Kuntz about
this," Paul warned her as they moved toward the already opening door.
"I don't want him fussing up my robot house with his sterile erudition and
intellectual cliches."
Esther shrugged. "I won't, if you
insist. But Doc Kuntz might give you a line on exactly what you have here. Hit
him with the extraordinary and he'll bring five thousand years of scientific banalties to bear on it for dissection purposes. Tell me,
do you notice any other change in your land since you were here last?"
The physicist stood just outside the door
and swept his eyes over the tangle of bush that seasoned the glinting patches
of swamp and outcropped rock. Sick orange from the
beginning sunset colored the land weirdly, making the desolate
subarctic plains look like the backdrop to a dying
age. A young, cold wind sprang up and hurried at them, delighting in its own
vigor.
"Well, over there for example. A patch of green grass extending for about a quarter mile.
I remember thinking how much like a newly mowed lawn it looked, and how out of
place it was in the middle of all this marsh. Over there,
where you now see that stretch of absolutely blank brown soil. Of
course, it could have withered and died in a week. Winter's coming on."
"Hm-m-m."
She stepped back and looked up at the green roof of the cottage which
harmonized so unostentatiously with the green shutters and door and the sturdy
white of the walls. "Do you think. . ."
Paul leaped away from the door and stood
rubbing his shoulder. He giggled awkwardly. "Seemed as if the post
reached over and began rubbing against me. Didn't frighten me
exactly—just sort of startling."
He smiled. "I'd say this robot
whatever-it-is likes me. Almost a mechanical caress."
Esther nodded,
her lips set, but said nothing until they were in the car again. "You
know, Paul," she whispered as they got under way, "I have the
intriguing thought that this house of yours isn't a robot at all. I think it's
thoroughly alive."
He widened his eyes at her. Then he pushed
his glasses hard against his forehead and chuckled. "Well, that's what
they say, Es: It takes a heap of livin' to make a
house a home!"
They rode on silently in the seeping
darkness, trying to develop reasons and causes, but finding nothing worthy of
reasonable discussion. It was only when they clattered onto the corduroy
outskirts of Little Fermi that Paul stated abruptly: "I'm going to get
some beans and coffee and spend the night in my living house. Breckinbridge won't need me until that shipment of cadmium
rods comes in from Edmonton; that means I can spend tonight and all day
tomorrow finding out just what I've got."
His companion started to object, then tossed her head. "I can't stop you. But be
careful, or poor Caroline may have to marry a young buck from the Harvard Law
School."
"Don't worry," he boasted.
"I'm pretty sure I can make that house jump through hoops if I ask it. And
maybe, if I get bored, I'll ask it!"
He looked up Breckinbridge
in the clapboard barracks and got a day's leave of absence from him. Then there
was a discussion with the cooks who were rapidly persuaded to part with
miscellaneous packaged foodstuffs. A hurriedly composed telegram to one
Caroline Hart of Boston, Massachusetts, and he was thumping his way bark to the
house behind headlights that were willing to split the darkness but were
carefully noncommittal about the road.
It wasn't till Paul saw the house
clutching the top of the hill that he realized how easily he would have
accepted the fact of its disappearance.
Parking the runabout on the slope so that
its lights illumined the way to the top, he pushed the side back and prepared
to get out.
The door of the house opened. A dark
carpet spilled out and humped down the hill to his feet. Regular, sharp
protuberances along its length made it a perfect staircase. A definite rosy
glow exuded from the protuberances, lighting his way.
"That's really rolling out the
welcome mat," Paul commented as he locked the ignition in the car and
started up.
He couldn't help jumping a bit when,
passing through the vestibule, the walls bulged out slightly and touched him
gently on either side. But there was such an impression of friendliness in the
gesture and they moved back in place so swiftly, that there was no logical
reason for nervousness.
The dining room table seemed to reach up
slightly to receive the gear he dropped upon it. He patted it and headed for
the kitchen.
Water still changed into whisky at his
unspoken whim; as he desired, it also changed into onion soup, tomato juice and
Napoleon brandy. The refrigerator, he found, was full of everything he might
want, from five or six raw tenderloins to a large bottle of heavy cream
complete with the brand name he usually asked far when shopping by himself.
The sight of the food made him hungry; he
had missed supper. A steak suffocating under heaps of onions, surrounded by
beans and washed down with plenty of hot coffee would be interesting. He
started for the dining room to collect his gear.
His haversack still rested on the near
side of the table. On the far side . . . On the far side, there reposed a
platter containing a thick steak which supported a huge mound of onions and
held an encircling brown mass of beans at edible bay. Gleaming silverware lay
between the platter and a veritable vase of coffee.
Paul found himself giggling hysterically
and shook fear-wisps out of his head. Everything was obviously channeled for
his comfort. Might as well pull up a chair and start eating. He looked around
for one, in time to see a chair come gliding across the floor; it poked him
delicately behind the knees and he sat down. The chair continued to the
appointed position at the table
It was while he was spooning away the last
of the melon he had imagined into existence for dessert—it had been exuded,
complete with dish, from the table top—that he noticed the lighting fixtures
were also mere decorative devices. Light came from the walls—or the ceiling—or
the floor; it was omnipresent in the house at just the right intensity—and that
was all.
The dirty dishes and used silverware
vanished into the table when he had finished, like sugar dissolving into hot
solution.
Before he went up to bed, he decided to
look in at the library. Surely, he had originally imagined a library? He
decided he couldn't be certain, and thought one up next to the living room.
All the books he had ever enjoyed were in
the warm little space. He spent a contented hour browsing from Aiken to Einstein,
until he hit the beautifully bound Britannica. The first volume of the
Encyclopedia he opened made him understand the limitations of his
establishment.
The articles he had read completely were complete, those he had read in part showed only the sections
he had touched. For the rest, there was a curious blur of not-quite print which
puzzled him until he realized that this was just the picture the eyes retained
while the pages of a book were flipped before it.
He climbed the narrow stairs to bed.
Yawningly tired, he noted vaguely that the
bed was just the width he had always wanted. As fast as he dropped his clothes
to the bedside chair, they were shaken off and pushed along a writhing strip of
floor to the corner closet where he imagined they were hung neatly.
He lay down finally, repressing a shudder
as the sheets curled up and over him of their own accord. Just before he fell
asleep, he remembered he'd spent the largest parts of the past three nights
playing chess and was likely to oversleep. He'd intended to rise early and
examine his delightfully subservient property in detail, but since he hadn't
thought to bring an alarm clock ...
Did that matter?
He raised himself on one elbow, the sheet
still hugging his chest. "Listen, you," he told the opposite wall
sternly. "Wake me exactly eight hours from now. And do
it pleasantly, understand?"
Wakefulness came with a sense of horror
that somehow merely nibbled at his mind. He lay still, wondering what had
prodded him so.
"Paul,
darling, please wake up. Paul, darling, please wake up. Paul, darling, please . . ."
Caroline's voice !
He leaped out of bed and looked around crazily. What was Caroline doing here?
The telegram he'd sent asking her to come up and look at their new house had
probably not arrived until breakfast. Even a plane ...
Then he remembered. Of course! He patted
the bed. "Nice job. Couldn't have done better
myself." The headboard curled against his hand and the walls
vibrated with a humming noise that was astonishingly like a baritone purr.
The shower, he decided, must have been one
of those brilliant yearning concepts he had once entertained for a second or
two and then forgotten. It was merely a matter of stepping into a roomy cubicle
dotted with multitudes of tiny holes and being sprayed with warm lather which
stopped the moment he was soaped up and was succeeded by plain water at the same
temperature. As the lather washed away, needle jets of air dried him
completely.
He stepped out of the shower to find his
clothes hung outside, excellently pressed and smelling faintly of laundry. He
was surprised at the laundry odor, although he liked it; but then again that's
why there was an odor—because he liked it!
It was going to be an unusually fine day,
he noted, after suggesting to the bathroom window that it open; unfortunate
that he hadn't brought any light clothes with him. Then, as his eyes glanced
regretfully downwards, he observed he, was now wearing a sports shirt and
summer slacks.
Evidently his own
soiled clothes had been absorbed into the economy of the house and duplicates
provided which had the pleasantly adaptive facilities of their source.
The hearts-of-palm breakfast he had worked
out while strolling downstairs was ready for him in the dining room. The copy
of Jane Austen's Emma he'd been rereading recently at mealtime lay beside it
open to the correct place.
He sighed happily. "All I need now is
a little Mozart played softly." So, a little Mozart ...
Connor Kuntz's helicopter lazed down out
of the mild sky at four o'clock that afternoon. Paul thought the house into a
Bunk Johnson trumpet solo and sauntered out to greet his guests. Esther Sakarian was out of the plane first. She wore a severe
black dress that made her look unusually feminine in contrast to her customary
clothes. "Sorry about bringing Doc Kuntz, Paul. But for all I knew you
might need a medic after a night in this place. And I don't have a 'copter of
my own. He offered to give me a lift."
"Perfectly all right," he told
her magnanimously. "I'm ready to discuss the house with Kuntz or any other
biologist."
She held up a yellow sheet. "For you. Just came."
He read the telegram, winced and bit into
his lower teeth with his uppers.
"Anything
important?" Esther inquired,
temporarily looking away from a pink cloud which seemed to have been
fascinating her.
"Oh." He crumpled the sheet and
bounced it gloomily on his open palm. "Caroline. Says she's surprised to
discover I intended to make my permanent home up here. Says
if I'm serious about it, I'd better reconsider our engagement."
Esther pursed her lips. "Well, it is
a nice long haul from Boston. And allowing that your house isn't quite a dead issue
. . ."
Paul laughed and snapped the paper ball
into the air. "Not quite. But the way I feel at the moment: love me, love
my house. And, speaking of houses . . . Down, sir! Down, I say!"
The house had crept down the slope behind
him as he spoke, extruded a bay window and nuzzled his back with it. Now, at
his sharp reproach, the window was sucked abruptly into the wall. The house
sidled backwards to its place at the top of the hill and stood quivering
slightly. The trumpet solo developed extremely mournful overtones.
"Does—does it do that often?"
"Every time I move a little distance
away," he assured her. "I could stop it permanently with a direct
over-all command, but I find it sort of flattering. I also don't want to step
on a pretty warm personality. No harm in it. Hey, Connor, what do you
think?"
The doctor perspired
his plump body past them and considered the noisy structure warily. "Just
how—I confess I don't know."
"Better give it up, Connor,"
Esther advised, "or you'll rupture an analysis."
Paul slapped his back. "Come inside
and I'll explain it over a couple of glasses of beer I just got thirsty enough
to think about."
Five beers later, Dr. Connor Kuntz used
the black beads he had in place of eyes to watch his host shimmer from the uniform
of the Coldstream Guards to a sharply cut tuxedo.
"Of course I believe it. Since it is
so, it is so. You have a living house here. Now we must decide what we are to
do with it."
Paul Marquis looked up, halfway into a
white gabardine suit. The lapels, still tuxedo, hesitated; then gathered their
energies and blended into a loose summer outfit.
"What we are to do with it?"
Kuntz rose and wrapped his hands behind
his back, slapping the knuckles of one into the palm of the other. "You're
quite right about keeping the information secret from the men in the
development; a careless word and you would be undergoing swarms of dangerously
inquisitive tourists. I must get in touch with Dr. Dufayel
in Quebec; this is very much his province. Although there's a young man at
Johns Hopkins . . . How much have you learned of its basic, let us say its
personal composition?"
The young physicist's face lost its grip
on resentment. "Well, the wood feels like wood, the metal like metal, the
plastic like plastic. And when the house produces a glass-like object, it's
real glass so far as I can determine without a chemical analysis. Es, here,
took . . ."
"That's one of the reasons I decided
to bring Connor along. Biologically. and chemically, the water is safe—too safe. It's absolutely
"pure H20. What do you think of my chlorophyll-roof theory, doctor ?"
He ducked his head at her. "Possibly. Some form of solar-energy transformation in
any case. But chlorophyll would argue a botanical nature, while it has distinct
and varied means of locomotion—internal and external. Furthermore, the manipulation
of metals which do not exist in any quantities in this region suggests
subatomic reorganization of materials. Esther, we must prepare some slides from
this creature. Suppose you run out to the plane like a good girl and get my
kit. For that matter, you can prepare slides yourself, can't you? I want to
explore a bit."
"Slides?" Paul Marquis asked uncertainly as the bacteriologist
started for the open door. "It's a living thing, you know."
"Ah, we'll just take a small area
from an—a nonvital spot. Much like scraping a bit of skin off the human hand. Tell
me," the doctor requested, thumping on the table experimentally, "you
no doubt have some vague theories as to origin?"
Marquis settled himself back in a gleaming
chair. "As a matter of fact, they're a little more than that. I
remembered the ore in Pit Fourteen gave out suddenly after showing a lot of
promise. Pit Fourteen's the closest to here from Little Fermi. Adler, the
geologist in charge, commented at the time that it seemed as if Pit Fourteen
had been worked before—about six thousand years ago. Either
that or glacial scraping. But since there was little evidence of glacial
scraping in the neighborhood, and no evidence of a previous, prehistoric
pitchblende mine, he dropped the matter. I think this house is the rest of the
proof of that prehistoric mine. I also think we'll find radioactive ore all the
way from this site to the edge of Pit Fourteen."
"Comfortable
situation for you if they do," Kuntz observed, moving into the kitchen. Paul Marquis rose and followed him. "How would
this peculiar domicile enter into the situation?"
"Well, unless your archaeology still
has to grow out of its diapers, nobody on earth was interested in pitchblende
six thousand years ago. That would leave the whole wide field of extraterrestials—from a planet of our sun or one of the
other stars. This could have been a fueling station for their ships, a regularly
worked mine, or an unforeseen landing to make repairs or take on fuel."
"And the
house?"
"The house was their
dwelling----probably a makeshift, temporary job—while they worked the mine.
When they went, they left it here as humans will leave deserted wood and metal
shacks when they move out of Little Fermi one day. It lay here waiting for
something—say the thought of ownership or the desire for a servitor-dwelling—to
release a telepathic trigger that would enable it to assume its function of ..."
A despairing shout from Esther tugged them
outside.
"I've just broken my second scalpel
on this chunk of iridium masquerading as fragile flesh. I have a definite
suspicion, Paul, that I won't so much as scratch it unless you give me permission.
Please tell your house it's all right for me to take a tiny chunk."
"It's—it's all right," Paul said
uncomfortably, then added, "only, try not to hurt
it too much."
Leaving the girl slicing a long, thin
strip from the western corner, they walked down the cellar steps into the
basement. Connor Kuntz stumbled around peering down at the floor for some
example of an obviously biological organ. He found only whitewashed cement.
"Assume its function of ..." he
said at last. "It's function of serving! My dear fellow, do you realize
this house has a sex?"
"Sex?" Paul moved aback, taken there by the thought.
"You mean it can have lots of little bungalows?"
"Oh, not in the
reproductive sense, not in the reproductive sense!" The plump doctor would have prodded him in the ribs if
he hadn't started hurriedly up the stairs. "It has sex in the emotional,
the psychological sense. As a woman wants to be a wife to a man, as a man
searches for a woman to whom he can be an adequate husband—just so this house
desires to be a home to a living creature who both
needs it and owns it. As such it fulfills itself and becomes capable of its one
voluntary act—the demonstration of affection, again in terms of the creature it
serves. By the by, it also seems to be that theoretically happy medium in those
disagreements on twentieth century domestic arrangements with which you and
Esther liven up the mess hall on occasion. Unostentatious
love and imaginative service."
"Does at that. If only Es didn't make a habit of plucking my
nerve-ends . . . Hum. Have you noticed how pleasant she's been today ?"
"Of course. The house has made adjustments in her personality
for your greater happiness."
"What?
Es has been changed? You're crazy, Connor!"
The doctor's thick lips flapped
delightedly. "On the contrary, my boy. I assure
you she was just as argumentative back in Little Fermi and on the way out here
as she ever was. The moment she saw you, she became most traditionally
feminine—without losing one jot of her acuity or subtlety, remember that. When
someone, like Esther Sakarian who has avoided the 'You are so right, my lord' attitude all her life acquires it
overnight, she has had help. In this case, the house."
Paul Marquis dug his knuckles at the
solid, reassuring substance of the basement wall. "Es has been changed by
the house for my possible personal convenience? I don't know if I like that. Es
should be Es, good or bad. Besides, it might take a notion to change me."
The older man looked at him with a deadly
twinkle. "I don't know how it affects personalities—high-order therapeutic
radiation on an intellectual level?—but let me ask you this, Paul, wouldn't
you like to be happy at the agreeable alteration in Miss Sakarian?
And, furthermore, wouldn't you like to think that the house couldn't affect
your own attitudes?"
"Of course." Paul shrugged his shoulders. "For that matter, I
am happy about Es getting some womanly sense in her head. And, come to think of
it, I doubt if you or anyone else could ever convince me that the house could
push mental fixations around like so much furniture. Whole thing's too
ridiculous for further discussion."
Connor Kuntz chortled and slapped his
thighs for emphasis. "Perfect! And now even you can't imagine that the
wish for such a state of mind made the house produce it in you. It learns to
serve you better all the time! Dr. Dufayel is going
to appreciate this fact of its versatility in particular."
"A point there. But I don't go for advertising my peculiar residence
and its properties--whatever they are—up and down the field of research
medicine. Is there any way I can persuade you to lay off?"
Kuntz stopped his dignified little dance
and looked up seriously. "Why, certainly! I can
think of at least two good reasons why I should never again discuss your house with
anyone but you or Esther." He seemed to consider a moment. "Rather, I
should say there are six or seven reasons for not mentioning your house's
existence to Dufayel or any other biologist. In fact
there are literally dozens and dozens of reasons."
Paul followed Conner Kuntz and Esther back
to the 'copter, promising them he'd be in for duty the next morning. "But
I'm going to spend my nights here from now on."
"Take it slow and easy," Esther
warned. "And don't brood over Caroline."
"Don't worry." He nodded at the
affectionately trembling structure. "Have to teach it a couple of things. Like not bouncing around after me when there's company. Es,
think you'd like to share it with me? You'd get as much care and affection as I
would."
She giggled. "The
three of us—going down the beautiful years together in a perfect marriage.
We won't need any servants, just you and I and the house. Maybe a cleaning
woman once or twice a week for the sake of appearances if a real-estate boom
materializes and we have neighbors."
"Oh, we'll have neighbors all
right," Paul boasted to include Connor Kuntz's suddenly whiter-than-usual
face. "We'll become very rich once the new lode is traced to part of our
property, and when Little Fermi is operating as the power city of the American
continents we'll make another fortune selling the land for suburban
development. And think of the research we'll be able to do in physics and bacteriology,
Es, with the house supplying us with any equipment we can visualize!"
"You'll be very happy," Kuntz
told them shortly. "The house will see to it that you're happy if it has
to kill you—or, rather, your egos." He turned to the bacteriologist.
"Esther, I thought you said yesterday that Paul would have to change a
good deal before you could marry him. Has he changed, or has the house changed
you?"
"Did I say that? Well, Paul hasn't
exactly . . . But the house . . ."
"And how about that odd feeling you
said the house gave you?" the doctor went on. "As
if something were disconnecting wires in your brain and resplicing
them according to a new blueprint? Don't you see that wiring blueprint
belongs to Paul and the house is installing it?"
Paul had taken the girl in his arms and
stood frowning at Kuntz. "I just don't like that idea, even if it is
vaguely possible." His face cleared. "But it's vague enough to be
impossible. Don't you think so, Es?"
She seemed to be struggling with an inner
confusion that darted and shed, sparks. "I—I don't know. Yes, I do.
Impossible isn't the word for it! Why, I never heard of anything so completely
. . . All your house wants to do is serve you. It's lovable and harmless."
"It isn't!" The physician was
dancing up and down like a partridge in a net. "Admitted, it will only
make psychological adjustments as required to resolve your serious inner
conflicts, but remember, this house is a distinctly alien form of life. If it
was ever completely controlled, the power was vested in creatures far superior
to ourselves. There's danger enough, now, when it makes you think exactly as
you want to think from moment to moment; but when it begins to feel the
looseness of your mental reins . ."
"Stow it, Connor!" Paul cut him
off. "I told you I couldn't accept that line of thought. I don't want you
to mention it again. It's plain ugly. Isn't it,
darling?"
"And
illogical." She smiled.
And Dr. Connor Kuntz was able merely to
stand and think terrifying thoughts to himself.
Behind them, the house joyfully hummed a
connubial snatch of Lohengrin.
Oh,
glorious master, who will never want to leave . . .
While the 'copter wound upwards into the
sallow sky and Esther waved at the dwindling figure below with the house
skipping gayly to his side, Kuntz asked cautiously,
"If you two intend to go on any sort of honeymoon inside that place,
you'll have to get a release from the company. That won't be easy."
She turned to him. "Why?"
"Because you signed a contract, and
the government is backing the company on the contract. No out for either of
you. Fact is, Paul may get into some trouble with his
extended vacation."
Esther pondered it for a moment.
"Yes, I see. And you know, Connor, with the house and all, I was sort of
planning to leave the company permanently and take up residence right away. I'm
pretty sure Paul feels the same way. I hope there won't be any trouble."
Then she laughed easily, and the angular
frown lines disappeared from her face. "But I don't think there will be
any trouble. I think everything will go smoothly. I just feel it."
Shocked, Connor Kuntz realized that this
unusual display of feminine intuition from Esther Sakarian
was correct. He thought:
The
house will see to it that the government voids their contracts without any
trouble, because the house wants to keep them happy. It will keep them happy,
giving them anything they want—except the means to get away from it. This
product of some gigantic imagination has two desires actually—the desire to
serve, and the desire to have a master. Having reacquired one after all these
years, it will keep him, her, them, at any cost. But making adjustments in the
world to keep them happy will be like knocking over the first in a row of
dominoes; it will have to do more and more to keep the world from interfering.
Eventually
this domestic utensil could control all humanity and make it jump at the
vagrant whims of Paul. Marquis and Esther Sakarian.
All in the name of service! It has the power to do it, probably is nothing more
itself than a collection of basic forces in temporary formful
stasis. And if it does ever control the planet—why, there will be no more
objection to it than Esther and Paul exhibit! This servile
hunk of real estate is so far above us in capability that it can run our world
and make us think we like it. And to think I'm sitting next to one of
the people whose most passing fancy could become my
unalterable command! Horrible, horrible ...
But by the time he had landed the 'copter at
Little Fermi, Connor Kuntz no longer found the idea objectionable. He thought
it quite in order that he could only do those things to which Paul and Esther
did not object. Extremely natural, in fact.