Complete Fiction (Jerry eBooks)
Page 32
Once more, the clerk stood in the doorway.
“This file seems to be satisfactory,” he was told. “You may bring in the correspondence now.”
The correspondence was no heavier than usual. Morely flipped through the routine matter, occasionally selecting a report or letter and abstracting data. Tomorrow, he could check performance by referring to these. At last, he turned to the separate pile of directives, production and man-hour reports, and other papers which demanded more attention than the routine paper.
He worked through the stack of paper, occasionally calling upon his clerk for file data, sometimes making a communicator call. At last, he pushed away the last remaining report and leaned back. He spun his chair about, activated the large entertainment screen, and spent some time watching a playlet. At the end of the play, he glanced at his watch, then turned back to his desk. He leaned forward to touch a button on his communicator.
As the viewsphere lit, he flicked on the two-way video, then spoke.
“Get me Sector Leader Bond.” He snapped the communicator off almost before the operator could acknowledge, then spun about, switching his entertainment screen to ground surface scan. A scene built up, showing a view from his estate in the hills.
There were some buildings on the surface—mostly homes of upper grade citizens, who preferred the open air, and could afford to have a surface estate in addition to their quarters in the groups. These homes, for the most part, were located in wooded areas, where their owners could find suitable fishing and hunting.
Most of the traces of damage done by the bombings of the Nineties were gone from about the estate areas by now, and the few which remained were being eliminated. Morely increased the magnification, to watch a few animals at a waterhole. He could do a little hunting in a few weeks. Take a nice leave. He drew a deep breath.
Those years after the end of the last war had been hectic, what with new organizational directives, the few sporadic revolts, the integration of homecoming fighters, and the final, tight set-up. But it had all been worth it. Everything was running smoothly now.
The second- and third-class citizens had learned to accept their status, and some few of them had even found they liked it. At least, now they had far more security. There was subsistence in plenty for all producers, thanks to the war-born advances in technology, and to the highly organized social framework. To be sure, a few still felt uneasy in the underground quarters, but the necessity for protection from bombing in another war had been made clear, and they’d just have to get used to conditions. And, there were a very few who, unable to get or hold employment, existed somehow in the spartan discomfort of the subsistence quarters.
For most, however, there was minor luxury, and a plenitude of necessities. And there was considerable freedom of action and choice as well as full living comfort for the full citizens, who had proved themselves to be completely trustworthy, and who were deemed fit to hold key positions.
The communicator beeped softly, and he glanced at the sphere. It showed the face of Harold Bond, leader of the fourteenth sector. The district leader snapped on his scanner.
“Report to me here in my office at eighteen hours, Bond.”
“Yes, sir.”
“And you might be sure your people are all in quarters this evening.”
Bond nodded. “They will be, sir.”
“That’s all.” Morely flicked the disconnect switch.
He got up, strode around the office, then consulted his watch. There would be time for a cup of coffee before Bond arrived. Time for a cup of coffee, and time for the employees in Sector Fourteen to scurry about, getting their quarters in shape for an inspection. They would have no way of knowing which quarters were to be checked, and all would be put in order.
He smiled. It was a good way, he thought, to insure that there would be no sloppiness in the homes of his people. And it certainly saved a lot of inspection time and a lot of direct contact.
He went out of the office, and walked slowly down to the snack bar, where he took his time over coffee, looking critically at the neat counter and about the room as he drank.
The counter girls busied themselves cleaning up imaginary spots on the plastic counter and on their equipment, casting occasional, apprehensive glances at him. Finally, he set his cup down, looked at the clock over the counter, and walked out.
Bond was waiting in the office. Morely examined the younger man, carefully appraising his appearance. The sector leader, he saw, was properly attired. The neat uniform looked as if freshly taken from the tailor shop. The man stepped forward alertly, to halt at the correct distance before his superior.
“Good evening, sir. My heli is on the roof.”
“Very good.” Morely nodded shortly and took his notebook from his pocket. “We’ll go to Building Seven Twenty-three.”
He turned and walked toward the self-service elevator. Bond hurried a little to open the door for him.
Bond eased the helicopter neatly through the entry slot and on down into one of the empty visitor spaces in the landing area at Block 1022. The two men walked across the areaway to an entrance.
As they went up the short flight of stairs into the hall, Morely took careful notice of the building. The mosaic tile of the stairs and floor gleamed from a recent scrubbing. The plastic and metal handrails were spotless. He looked briefly at his subordinate, then motioned toward the door at their right.
“This one,” he ordered.
Bond touched the call button and they waited.
From inside the apartment, there was a slight rustle of motion, then the door opened and a man stood before them. For an instant, he looked startled, then he straightened.
“Paul Graham, sir,” he announced. “Apartment 7A is ready for inspection.” He stepped back.
Morely looked him over critically, saw nothing that warranted criticism, and went inside, followed by Bond.
Cursorily, the district leader let his gaze wander about the apartment. The kitchen at his left, he saw, was in perfect order, everything being in place and obviously clean. He went to the range and motioned with his head.
“Pull the drip pan,” he ordered.
Graham came forward and pulled a flat sheet from the range, then opened an access door at the front of the stove.
Morely peered inside, then thrust a hand in. For a moment, he groped around, then he pulled his hand out and looked at it. It was clean. He sniffed at his fingers, then turned away.
“You may replace the pan, Fellow.” He went into the living room, noting that the woman and three children were neat and in the proper attitudes of attention. One of the children was looking at him, wide-eyed. He saw that the child was clean and apparently healthy.
In addition to the usual chairs, table, and divan, there were some bookcases which formed a small alcove around a combination desk and drawing table. Morely circled the bookcases, to stand before the desk.
“What’s this?” he demanded. He turned to a bookcase, to examine the titles.
Most of the books were engineering texts and reference works. There were some standard works of philosophy and a few on psychology. None of the titles seemed to be actually objectionable.
“I—” Graham started to speak, but Morely silenced him with an upraised hand.
“Later,” he said coldly. “Bond, has this been reported to you, and have you investigated?”
Bond nodded. “Yes, sir,” he said. “Graham is a design engineer, sir, and has been granted permission to do some research in his quarters.
“He’s commercially employed, sir, and it was a routine matter. His employer says he has been keeping his production quotas, no alteration to the apartment has been made, and no community property has been defaced. I’m told that several of Graham’s designs have been of value in his plant. I didn’t think—”
“I see you didn’t. What is this man working on now?”
“A new type of communicator, sir. I don’t know all the details.”
/> “Get them, Bond. Get them all, and give me a full report on his project and its progress tomorrow. Since this work is being done during time when the man is not working for his employer, he’s using community time and the community becomes vitally interested in his results.” Morely paused, looking at the bookcase again.
“And, while we are on the subject,” he added, “get me details on those previous designs you spoke of. It’s quite possible the community has not been getting royalty payments to which it’s entitled.” He picked out a book, flipping over its pages for a moment, then replaced it and looked searchingly at Bond.
“And get me a full inventory of this man’s books and any equipment he may have.” He turned on Graham.
“Do you have purchase authorization and receipts for all of this?”
“Yes, sir.” Graham motioned toward the desk.
“Very well. I shan’t bother with that now. An investigating team can check that.”
Morely took a final glance at the half-finished schematic on the drawing board, then circled the bookcases again, to come out into the main room.
“We’ll inspect the rest of your quarters.”
At last, Morely left the quarters area, followed by Bond. As they reached the helicopter, Morely turned, one hand on the door.
“Laxity, Bond, is something I don’t tolerate. You should know that. Possibly this man, Graham, is doing nothing illegal, or even irregular. Possibly, he is not wasting community time, but I have very serious doubts. I’ll venture to say the community has a financial interest in several of his recent designs, and I mean to find out which ones and how much. And it’s certainly an unusual situation. The man’s a leadman, you know, and could spend his time more profitably in checking on the people he’s responsible for.” He slid into the seat.
“I’ll concede,” he continued, “that employees are to be allowed a certain amount of recreation of their own choosing. They may have light reading in their quarters, and they may even work on small projects—with permission, of course. But this man seems to have gone much farther than that. He has a small electronics factory of his own, as well as a rather extensive library. He’s obviously spending a lot of time at his activities, and that time must come out of his community performance. This certainly is not routine, and I can’t condone your failure to make a report on it.”
“But, I—”
Morely held up a hand sternly. “Let’s not have a string of excuses,” he said. “Give me a full report on the man’s possessions, his history, and the progress of whatever work he’s doing in that private factory of his. Get the details on his previous designs, too. And bring your report in to me in the morning, personally. I shall want to determine whether to make this new device a community project, or whether to allow it to be offered to his employer on a community royalty agreement. And I shall require details on his older designs for Fiscal to examine into. Research, you should know, is a community function, not something to be done in any set of quarters. I shall want to talk to you further when I’ve gone over this matter.
“Now, get me back to the district offices. I want to get home, and you’ve work to do tonight.”
The report was a long one. Morely smiled to himself as he thought of the time it must have taken Bond to assemble the data and to make up his final draft. Possibly in the future, that young man would be a little less inclined to assume too much authority, or to be too soft in his dealings with the employee classes. The spring in his swivel chair twanged musically as the district leader leaned back to read.
First, there was an inventory of Graham’s effects. It was a lengthy list, followed by a certification by a security inspector that all of the equipment inventoried was covered by authorizations and receipts held by Graham, and that none of the books and equipment were of improper nature for possession by a member of the employee classes. Morely grunted and tossed that section aside.
There was a detailed history of Graham’s activities, so far as known to Security. Morely scanned through it hurriedly. There was nothing here of an unusual nature.
Graham had been graduated from one of the large technical colleges during the early nineties. Morely noted that it was one of those schools which had been later closed as a result of one of the post-war investigations.
The subject had been employed by Consolidated Electronics as a junior engineer, and had designed several improvements for Consolidated’s products. There was a record of promotions and a few awards. He had held a few patents, which had been taken over by the Central Coördination Products Division during the post-war reorganization. He had also belonged to the now proscribed Society of Electronic Engineers, had contributed articles to that organization’s journal, and had taken an active part in some of its chapter meetings.
During the war, he had worked on radio-controlled servos, doing acceptable work. When the professional and trade societies and other organizations were outlawed, he had promptly resigned from his society, and made the required declarations. But he had been reported as privately remarking that it was “a sad thing to see the last vestiges of personal freedom removed.”
Morely pursed his lips. Not an unusual history, he decided. Of course, the man was completely ineligible for full citizenship—bad risk. He was barely qualified for second-class citizenship, his obvious ability being the only qualifying factor. Unlike many, he had no record of any effort to shirk duty, or do economic damage during the critical period. The district leader tossed the dossier aside and picked up the report on Graham’s present activities.
There were a series of complex schematics, and several machine drawings which he shuffled to the back of his report. Those could be interpreted later, if necessary. He was interested in the description of function.
The device Graham was working on was described as a communicator which operated by direct mind-to-mind transfer. Morely sat up straighter, reading the paragraph over again. Either this man was a true genius, who had discovered a new principle, or he was completely a crackpot.
“Telepathy!”
Morely snorted and went over to the descriptions of the device, reading carefully. Finally, he read the comments of a senior engineer, who cautiously admitted that the circuits involved, though highly unconventional, were not of a type to cause spurious radiation, or to interfere with normal communication in any way.
The engineer also noted that it was possible that the device might be capable of radiation effects outside of the electromagnetic spectrum, and that the power device was capable of integration into standard equipment—in fact, might be well worth adoption. He carefully declined, however, to give any definite opinion without an actual model to run tests on. And he added the comment that the first model was as yet incomplete.
Morely tossed the last sheet to his desk and leaned forward, tapping idly on the dull-finished plastic. Finally, he touched his call button and waited till the clerk came in.
“You may send Mr. Bond in now,” he directed.
He picked up the section of the report dealing with Graham’s past designs, and started scanning it. He would have the Fiscal chief go over this and set up the necessary royalty agreements with Consolidated. Some of them might generate worth-while amounts of funds.
He made no sign of recognition or awareness when Bond entered the office, but continued with his reading. At last, he pulled a notepad to him, wrote a brief indorsement to the Fiscal chief, and clipped it to the part of the report dealing with Graham’s older designs. He replaced his pen in its stand and leaned back, to stare at his junior, who stood at rigid attention.
“Yes?”
“Sector Leader Bond, sir, reporting as ordered.” Bond saluted.
Negligently, Merely returned the salute, then picked up Bond’s report.
“I have gone through this, Bond,” he announced. “Very interesting. And you thought it too unimportant to report on before?”
“I didn’t want to bother you with some idle fantasy, sir. Until the man’s experime
nts showed definite results of some sort, I—”
“And then, you hoped to spring a completed device on me? Take credit for it yourself, eh?”
“Not at all, sir. I—”
Morely raised a hand. “Never mind. I don’t need any kind of aid to read your intentions. They’re quite plain, I see. It would have been quite a credit to you, wouldn’t it?
“Look what I worked out, with a little, minor help from one of the employees in my sector.”
“But I’ve seen that line worked before, Bond, and worked smoothly. You don’t catch the Old Man napping so easily as that.” He paused.
“Of course we don’t know whether or not this device is going to be of any real use. But we do know that this man, Graham, has developed one thing which can be profitably incorporated into conventional equipment. That power source of his appears to be quite practical, and we’ll adopt it. Offer it to the man’s employer, subject to community royalty. And see if you can get Graham a little time off work in compensation. Then, keep a close watch on his work on the rest of his device. He’ll probably use his time off to work on it—at least, he’ll be a lot better off if he does.
“I want frequent reports on his progress—daily reports, if any significant developments occur. And I want a model of that device as soon as it’s developed and has had preliminary tests. If it works, it might be valuable for community defense.” He waved a hand.
“That’s all.”
Bond turned to go, and almost got to the door before Morely called him back.
“Oh, one more thing, Bond. Keep a closer watch on the rest of your people. If any more of them decide to do extra work of any unusual nature, I shall expect an immediate report in full. Don’t fail me again. Is that clear?”
“Yes, sir.” Bond saluted again and made his escape.
Morely watched him disappear, then turned to his communicator. “Get me Field Leader Denton,” he ordered.