Michael Swanwick's Periodic Table of Science Fiction

28

Ni

Nickel

58.69

What This Country Needs?

"?is a good five-cent cigar!" Secretary of the Treasury Babbinger slammed

a hand down on his desk. "Would somebody please tell me what idiot came

up with that?"

"It was Thomas Marshall, sir," an unwary aide said.

"What?"

"Thomas Riley Marshall, 1854 to1927, vice president under Woodrow Wilson

from 1913 through 1921, renowned for his wit, though for little else."

"Thank you," Babbinger said with heavy irony. "Thank you for that history

lesson, young master Stewart. Our entire economy is about to collapse,

and you're lecturing me about Woodrow Wilson's witty vice president!"

"To be fair, sir," another aide said, "I don't see what damage the new

personal nanofactories are going to do. They'll bring prices down?that's

a good thing! I dumped my old suit in my 'factory last night, and now

I've got a genuine Armani for a five dollar licensing fee."

"That," said Babbinger, "is exactly the problem. We have an economic

system here that is based on scarcity and want. If everybody's going to

have all the fine foods and rare wines and good clothes they want for the

price of rags and gruel, then who's going to empty our spittoons and

clean our toilets? Who's going to do the scut-work?"

"Perhaps we should all do our own scut-work, sir," young master Stewart

said.

Babbinger glared at his aide. "I'm going to pretend you didn't say that."

He patted his jacket pockets. "Damn! I left my cigar case at home."

"Here, sir. Have one of mine."

Babbinger accepted the cigar, sniffed it. "Cuban. My own brand." Anger

flared in him. "By God, you've been stealing my cigars. You're fired!"

The young man didn't turn a hair. "That's fine by me, sir. I've got a

couple hundred bucks saved up, and that's enough to last me for years.

I've been thinking about a career change anyway. I suspect a lot of

people have been thinking of career changes lately."

He paused at the door. "You can keep the cigar. It only cost me a nickel."

© 2002 by Michael Swanwick and SCIFI.COM.