We the Underpeople

Home > Other > We the Underpeople > Page 47
We the Underpeople Page 47

by Cordwainer Smith


  Then, with a thrill which sent gooseflesh all over his neck, back and arms, he realized that the Catmaster had not moved his lips in the slightest, had not pushed air through his throat, had not disturbed the air with the pressure of noise. The Catmaster had spieked to Rod, and Rod had hiered him.

  Thinking very carefully and very clearly, but closing his lips and making no sound whatever, Rod thought,

  "Worthy and gracious Catmaster, I thank you for the ancient treasure of the old Earth stamp. I thank you even more for the hiering-spieking device which I am now testing. Will you please extend your right hand to shake hands with me, if you can actually hier me now?"

  The Catmaster stepped forward and extended his hand.

  Man and underman, they faced each other with a kindness and gratitude which was so poignant as to be very close to grief.

  Neither of them wept. Neither.

  They shook hands without speaking or spieking.

  Everybody's Fond Of Money

  While Rod McBan was going through his private ordeal at the Department Store of Hearts' Desires, other people continued to be concerned with him and his fate.

  A Crime of Public Opinion

  A middle-aged woman, with a dress which did not suit her, sat uninvited at the table of Paul, a real man once acquainted with C'mell.

  Paul paid no attention to her. Eccentricities were multiplying among people these days. Being middle-aged was a matter of taste, and many human beings, after the Rediscovery of Man, found that if they let themselves become imperfect, it was a more comfortable way to live than the old way—the old way consisting of aging minds dwelling in bodies condemned to the perpetual perfection of youth.

  "I had flu," said the woman. "Have you ever had flu?"

  "No," said Paul, not very much interested.

  "Are you reading a newspaper?" She looked at his newspaper, which had everything except news in it.

  Paul, with the paper in front of him, admitted that he was reading it.

  "Do you like coffee?" said the woman, looking at Paul's cup of fresh coffee in front of him.

  "Why would I order it if I didn't?" said Paul brusquely, wondering how the woman had ever managed to find so unattractive a material for her dress. It was yellow sunflowers on an off-red background.

  The woman was baffled, but only for a moment.

  "I'm wearing a girdle," she said. "They just came on sale last week. They're very, very ancient, and very authentic. Now that people can be fat if they want to, girdles are the rage. They have spats for men, too. Have you bought your spats yet?"

  "No," said Paul flatly, wondering if he should leave his coffee and newspaper.

  "What are you going to do about that man?"

  "What man?" said Paul, politely and wearily.

  "The man who's bought the Earth."

  "Did he?" said Paul.

  "Of course," said the woman. "Now he has more power than the Instrumentality. He could do anything he wants. He can give us anything we want. If he wanted to, he could give me a thousand-year trip around the universe."

  "Are you an official?" said Paul sharply.

  "No," said the woman, taken a little aback.

  "Then how do you know these things?"

  "Everybody knows them. Everybody." She spoke firmly and pursed her mouth at the end of the sentence.

  "What are you going to do about this man? Rob him? Seduce him?" Paul was sardonic. He had had an unhappy love affair which he still remembered, a climb to the Abba-dingo over Alpha Ralpha Boulevard which he would never repeat, and very little patience with fools who had never dared and never suffered anything.

  The woman flushed with anger. "We're all going to his hostel at twelve today. We're going to shout and shout until he comes out. Then we're going to form a line and make him listen to what each one of us wants."

  Paul spoke sharply: "Who organized this?"

  "I don't know. Somebody."

  Paul spoke solemnly. "You're a human being. You have been trained. What is the Twelfth Rule?"

  The woman turned a little pale but she chanted, as if by rote: "'Any man or woman who finds that he or she forms and shares an unauthorized opinion with a large number of other people shall report immediately for therapy to the nearest subchief.' But that doesn't mean me . . . ?"

  "You'll be dead or scrubbed by tonight, madam. Now go away and let me read my paper."

  The woman glared at him, between anger and tears. Gradually fear came over her features. "Do you really think what I was saying is unlawful?"

  "Completely," said Paul.

  She put her pudgy hands over her face and sobbed. "Sir, sir, can you—can you please help me find a subchief? I'm afraid I do need help. But I've dreamed so much, I've hoped so much. A man from the stars. But you're right, sir. I don't want to die or get blanked out. Sir, please help me!"

  Moved by both impatience and compassion, Paul left his paper and his coffee. The robot waiter hurried up to remind him that he had not paid. Paul walked over to the sidewalk where there were two barrels full of money for people who wished to play the games of ancient civilization. He selected the biggest bill he could see, gave it to the waiter, waited for his change, gave the waiter a tip, received thanks, and threw the change, which was all coins, into the barrel full of metal money. The woman had waited for him patiently, her blotched face sad.

  When he offered her his arm, in the old-French manner, she took it. They walked a hundred meters, more or less, to a public visiphone. She half-cried, half-mumbled as she walked along beside him, with her uncomfortable, ancient spiked-heel feminine shoes:

  "I used to have four hundred years. I used to be slim and beautiful. I liked to make love and I didn't think very much about things, because I wasn't very bright. I had had a lot of husbands. Then this change came along, and I felt useless, and I decided to be what I felt like—fat, and sloppy, and middle-aged, and bored. And I have succeeded too much, just the way two of my husbands said. And that man from the stars, he has all power. He can change things."

  Paul did not answer her, except to nod sympathetically.

  At the visiphone he stood until a robot appeared. "A subchief," he said. "Any subchief."

  The image blurred and the face of a very young man appeared. He stared earnestly and intently while Paul recited his number, grade, neo-national assignment, quarters number and business. He had to state the business twice, "Criminal public opinion."

  The subchief snapped, not unpleasantly, "Come on in, then, and we'll fix you up."

  Paul was so annoyed at the idea that he would be suspected of criminal public opinion, "any opinion shared with a large number of other people, other than material released and approved by the Instrumentality and the Earth Government," that he began to spiek his protest into the machine.

  "Vocalize, man and citizen! These machines don't carry telepathy."

  When Paul got through explaining, the youngster in uniform looked at him critically but pleasantly, saying,

  "Citizen, you've forgotten something yourself."

  "Me?" gasped Paul. "I've done nothing. This woman just sat down beside me and—"

  "Citizen," said the subchief, "what is the last half of the Fifth Rule for All Men?"

  Paul thought a moment and then answered, "The services of every person shall be available, without delay and without charge, to any other true human being who encounters danger or distress." Then his own eyes widened and he said, "You want me to do this myself?"

  "What do you think?" said the subchief.

  "I can," said Paul.

  "Of course," said the subchief. "You are normal. You remember the braingrips."

  Paul nodded.

  The subchief waved at him and the image faded from the screen.

  The woman had seen it all. She, too, was prepared. When Paul lifted his hands for the traditional hypnotic gestures, she locked her eyes upon his hands. She made the responses as they were needed. When he had brainscrubbed her right there in the open stree
t, she shambled off down the walkway, not knowing why tears poured down her cheeks. She did not remember Paul at all.

  For a moment of crazy whimsy, Paul thought of going across the city and having a look at the wonderful man from the stars. He stared around absently, thinking. His eye caught the high thread of Alpha Ralpha Boulevard, soaring unsupported across the heavens from faraway ground to the mid-height of Earthport: he remembered himself and his own personal troubles. He went back to his newspaper and a fresh cup of coffee, helping himself to money from the barrel, this time, before he entered the restaurant.

  On a Yacht Off Meeya Meefla

  Ruth yawned as she sat up and looked at the ocean. She had done her best with the rich young man.

  The false Rod McBan, actually a reconstructed Eleanor, said to her:

  "This is right nice."

  Ruth smiled languidly and seductively. She did not know why Eleanor laughed out loud.

  The Lord William Not-from-here came up from below the deck. He carried two silver mugs in his hands. They were frosted.

  "I am glad," said he unctuously, "that you young people are happy. These are mint juleps, a very ancient drink indeed."

  He watched as Eleanor sipped hers and then smiled.

  He smiled too. "You like it?"

  Eleanor smiled right back at him. "Beats washing dishes, it does!" said "Rod McBan" enigmatically.

  The Lord William began to think that the rich young man was odd indeed.

  Antechamber of the Bell and Bank

  The Lord Crudelta commanded, "Send Jestocost here!" The Lord Jestocost was already entering the room. "What's happened on that case of the young man?"

  "Nothing, Sir and Senior."

  "Tush. Bosh. Nonsense. Rot." The old man snorted. "Nothing is something that doesn't happen at all. He has to be somewhere."

  "The original is with the Catmaster, at the Department Store."

  "Is that safe?" said the Lord Crudelta. "He might get to be too smart for us to manage. You're working some scheme again, Jestocost."

  "Nothing but what I told you, Sir and Senior."

  The old man frowned. "That's right. You did tell me. Proceed. But the others?"

  "Who?"

  "The decoys?"

  The Lord Jestocost laughed aloud. "Our colleague, the Lord William, has almost betrothed his daughter to Mister McBan's workman, who is temporarily a 'Rod McBan' herself. All parties are having fun with no harm done. The robots, the eight survivors, are going around Earthport city. They are enjoying themselves as much as robots ever do. Crowds are gathering and asking for miracles. Pretty harmless."

  "And the Earth economy? Is it getting out of balance?"

  "I've set the computers to work," said the Lord Jestocost, "finding every tax penalty that we ever imposed on anybody. We're several megacredits ahead."

  "foe money."

  "foe money, Sir."

  "You're not going to ruin him?" said Crudelta.

  "Not at all, Sir and Senior," cried the Lord Jestocost. "I am a kind man."

  The old man gave him a low dirty smile. "I've seen your kindness before, Jestocost, and I would rather have a thousand worlds for an enemy than have you be my friend! You're devious, you're dangerous, and you are tricky."

  Jestocost, much flattered by this comment, said formally, "You do an honest official a great injustice, Sir and Senior."

  The two men just smiled at each other: they knew each other well.

  Ten Kilometers Below the Surface of the Earth

  The E'telekeli stood from the lectern at which he had been praying.

  His daughter was watching him immovably from the doorway.

  He spieked to her, "What's wrong, my girl?"

  "I saw his mind, father, I saw it for just a moment as he left the Catmaster's place. He's a rich young man from the stars, he's a nice young man, he has bought Earth, but he is not the man of the Promise."

  "You expected too much, E'lamelanie," spieked her father.

  "I expected hope," she spieked to him. "Is hope a crime among us underpeople? What Joan foresaw, what the Copt promised—where are they, father? Shall we never see daylight or know freedom?"

  "True men are not free either," spieked the E'telekeli. "They too have grief, fear, birth, old age, love, death, suffering and the tools of their own ruin. Freedom is not something which is going to be given us by a wonderful man beyond the stars. Freedom is what you do, my dear, and what I do. Death is a very private affair, my daughter, and life—when you get to it—is almost as private."

  "I know, father," she spieked. "I know. I know. I know." (But she didn't.)

  "You may not know it, my darling," spieked the great bird-man, "but long before these people built cities, there were others in the Earth—the ones who came after the Ancient World fell. They went far beyond the limitations of the human form. They conquered death. They did not have sickness. They did not need love. They sought to be abstractions lying outside of time. And they died, E'lamelanie—they died terribly. Some became monsters, preying on the remnants of true men for reasons which ordinary men could not even begin to understand. Others were like oysters, wrapped up in their own sainthood. They had all forgotten that humanness is itself imperfection and corruption, that what is perfect is no longer understandable. We have the Fragments of the Word, and we are truer to the deep traditions of people than people themselves are, but we must never be foolish enough to look for perfection in this life or to count on our own powers to make us really different from what we are. You and I are animals, darling, not even real people, but people do not understand the teaching of Joan, that whatever seems human is human. It is the word which quickens, not the shape or the blood or the texture of flesh or hair or feathers. And there is that power which you and I do not name, but which we love and cherish because we need it more than do the people on the surface. Great beliefs always come out of the sewers of cities, not out of the towers of the ziggurats. Furthermore, we are discarded animals, not used ones. All of us down here are the rubbish which mankind has thrown away and has forgotten. We have a great advantage in this, because we know from the very beginning of our lives that we are worthless. And why are we worthless? Because a higher standard and a higher truth says that we are—the conventional law and the unwritten customs of mankind. But I feel love for you, my daughter, and you have love for me. We know that everything which loves has a value in itself, and that therefore this worthlessness of underpeople is wrong. We are forced to look beyond the minute and the hour to the place where no clocks work and no day dawns. There is a world outside of time, and it is to that which we appeal. I know that you have a love for the devotional life, my child, and I commend you for it, but it would be a sorry faith which waited for passing travelers or which believed that a miracle or two could set the nature of things right and whole. The people on the surface think they have gone beyond the old problems, because they do not have buildings which they call churches or temples, and they do not have professional religious men within their communities. But the higher power and the large problems still wait for all men, whether men like it or not. Today, Believing among mankind is a ridiculous hobby, tolerated by the Instrumentality because the Believers are unimportant and weak, but mankind has moments of enormous passion which will come again and in which we will share. So don't you wait for your hero beyond the stars. If you have a good devotional life within you, it is already here, waiting to be watered by your tears and ploughed up by your hard, clear thoughts. And if you don't have a devotional life, there are good lives outside.

  "Look at your brother, E'ikasus, who is now resuming his normal shape. He let me put him in animal form and send him out among the stars. He took risks without committing the impudence of enjoying risk. It is not necessary to do your duty joyfully—just to do it. Now he has homed to the old lair and I know he brings us good luck in many little things, perhaps in big things. Do you understand, my daughter?"

  She said that she did, but there was still a wil
d blank disappointed look in her eyes as she said it.

  A Police-Post on the Surface, Near Earthport

  "The robot sergeant says he can do no more without violating the rule against hurting human beings." The subchief looked at his chief, licking his chops for a chance to get out of the office and to wander among the vexations of the city. He was tired of viewscreens, computers, buttons, cards, and routines. He wanted a raw life and high adventure.

  "Which offworlder is this?"

 

‹ Prev