Daneel Olivaw 4 - Robots and Empire

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by Isaac Asimov


  "How long will all those little things take?"

  "It could be months. Who knows?"

  "And what do I do meanwhile?"

  "You could see our world, broaden your horizons."

  "But your world is not exactly the playground of the Galaxy."

  "Too true, but we'll try to keep you interested." He looked at his watch. "One more warning, madam. Do not refer to your age."

  "What cause would I have to do that?"

  "It might show up in some casual reference. You'll be expected to say a few words and you might say, for instance, 'In all my more than twenty-three decades of life, I have never been so glad to see anyone as I am to see the people of Baleyworld.' If you're tempted to say anything like that initial clause, resist it."

  "I will. I have no intention of indulging in hyperbole in any case. —But, as a matter of idle curiosity, why not?"

  "Simply because it is better for them not to know your age."

  "But they do know my age, don't they? They know I was your Ancestor's friend and they know how long ago he lived. Or are they under the impression"—she looked at him narrowly—"that I'm a distant descendant of the Gladia?"

  "No, no, they know who you are and how old you are, but they know it only with their heads"—he tapped his forehead—"and few people have working heads, as you may have noticed."

  "Yes, I have. Even on Aurora."

  "That's good. I wouldn't want the Settlers to be special in this respect. Well, then, you have the appearance of"—he paused judiciously—"Forty, maybe forty-five, and they'll accept you as that in their guts, which is where the average person's real thinking mechanism is located. If you don't rub it in about your real age."

  "Does it really make a difference?"

  "Does it? Look, the average Settler really doesn't want robots. He has no liking for robots, no desire for robots. There we are satisfied to differ from the Spacers. Long life is different. Forty decades is considerably more than ten."

  "Few of us actually reach the forty-decade mark."

  "And few of us actually reach the ten-decade mark. We teach the advantage of short life—quality versus quantity, evolutionary speed, ever-changing world—but nothing really makes people happy about living ten decades when they imagine they could live forty, so past a point the propaganda produces a backlash and it's best to keep quiet about it. They don't often see Spacers, as you can imagine, and so they don't have occasion to grind their teeth over the fact that Spacers look young and vigorous even when they are twice as old as the oldest Settler who ever lived. They'll see that in you and if they think about it, it will unsettle them.

  Gladia said bitterly, "Would you like to have me make a speech and tell them exactly what forty decades means? Shall I tell them for how many years one outlives the spring time of hope, to say nothing of friends and acquaintances. Shall I tell them of the meaninglessness of children and family; of the endless comings and goings of one husband after another, of the misty blurring of the informal matings between and alongside; of the coming of the time when you've seen all you want to see, and heard all you want to hear, and find it impossible to think a new thought, of how you forget what excitement and discovery are all about, and learn each year how much more intense boredom can become?"

  "Baleypeople wouldn't believe that. I don't think I do. Is that the way all Spacers feel or are you making it up?"

  "I only know for certain how I myself feel, but I've watched others dim as they aged; I've watched their dispositions sour, and their ambitions narrow, and their indifferences broaden."

  D.G.'s lips pressed together and he looked somber. "Is the suicide rate high among Spacers? I've never heard that it is."

  "It's virtually zero."

  "But that doesn't fit what you're saying."

  "Consider! We're surrounded by robots who are dedicated to keeping us alive. There's no way we can kill ourselves when our sharp-eyed and active robots are forever about us. I doubt that any of us would even think of trying. I wouldn't dream of it myself, if only because I can't bear the thought of what it would mean to all my household robots and, even more so, to Daneel and Giskard."

  "They're not really alive, you know. They don't have feelings."

  Gladia shook her head. "You say that only because you've never lived with them. —In any case, I think you overestimate the longing for prolonged life among your people. You know my age, you look at my appearance, yet it doesn't bother you."

  "Because I'm convinced that the Spacer worlds must dwindle and die, that it is the Settler worlds that are the hope of humanity's future, and that it is our short-lived characteristic that ensures it. Listening to what you've just said, assuming it is all true, makes me the more certain."

  "Don't be too sure. You may develop your own insuperable problems—if you haven't already."

  "That is undoubtedly possible, my lady, but for now I must leave you. The ship is coasting in for a landing and I must stare intelligently at the computer that controls it or no one will believe that I am the captain."

  He left and she remained in gloomy abstraction for a while, her fingers plucking at the plastic that enclosed the coverall.

  She had come to a sense of equilibrium on Aurora, a way of allowing life to pass quietly. Meal by meal, day by day, season by season, it had been passing and the quiet had insulated her, almost, from the tedious waiting for the only adventure that remained, the final one of death.

  And now she had been to Solaria and had awakened the memories of a childhood that had long passed on a world that had long passed, so that the quiet had been shattered—perhaps forever—and so that she now lay uncovered and bare to the horror of continuing life.

  What could substitute for the vanished quiet?

  She caught Giskard's dimly glowing eyes upon her and she said, "Help me on with this, Giskard."

  32.

  It was cold. The sky was gray with clouds and the air glittered with a very light snowfall. Patches of powdery snow were swirling in the fresh breeze and off beyond the landing field Gladia could see distant heaps of snow.

  There were crowds of people gathered here and there, held off by barriers from approaching too closely. They were all wearing coveralls of different types and colors and they all seemed to balloon outward, turning humanity into a crowd of shapeless objects with eyes. Some were wearing visors that glittered transparently over their faces.

  Gladia pressed her mittened hand to her face. Except for her nose, she felt warm enough. The coverall did more than insulate; it seemed to exude warmth of its own.

  She looked behind her. Daneel and Giskard were within reach, each in a coverall.

  She had protested that at first. "They don't need coveralls. They're not sensitive to cold."

  "I'm sure they're not," D.G. had said, "but you say you won't go anywhere without them and we can't very well have Daneel sitting there exposed to the cold. It would seem against nature. Nor do we wish to arouse hostility by making it too clear you have robots."

  "They must know I've got robots with me and Giskard's face will give him away—even in a coverall."

  "They might know," said D.G., "but the chances are they won't think about it if they're not forced to—so let's not force it.

  Now D.G. was, motioning her into a ground-car that had a transparent roof and sides. "They'll want to see you as we travel, my lady," he said, smiling.

  Gladia seated herself at one side and D.G. followed on the other. "I'm co-hero," he said.

  "Do you value that?"

  "Oh, yes. It means a bonus for my crew and a possible promotion for me. I don't scorn that."

  Daneel and Giskard entered, too, and sat down in seats that faced the two human beings. Daneel faced Gladia; Giskard faced D.G.

  There was a ground-car before them, without transparency, and a line of about a dozen behind them. There was the sound of cheering and a forest of arm-waving from the assembled crowd. D.G. smiled and lifted an arm in response and motioned to Gladia
to do the same. She waved in a perfunctory manner. It was warm inside the car and her nose had lost its numbness.

  She said, "There's a rather unpleasant glitter to these windows. Can that be removed?"

  "Undoubtedly, but it won't be," said D.G. "That's as unobtrusive a force field as we can set up. Those are enthusiastic people out there and they've been searched, but someone may have managed to conceal a weapon and we don't want you hurt."

  "You mean someone might try to kill me?"

  (Daneel's eyes were calmly scanning the crowd to one side of the car; Giskard's scanned the other side.)

  "Very unlikely, my lady, but you're a Spacer and Settlers don't like Spacers. A few might hate them with such a surpassing hatred as to see only the Spacerness in you. —But don't worry. Even if someone were to try—which is, as I say, unlikely—they won't succeed."

  The line of cars began to move, all together and very smoothly.

  Gladia half-rose in astonishment. There was no one in front of the partition that closed them off. "Who's driving?" she asked.

  "The cars are thoroughly computerized," said D.G. "I take it that Spacer cars are not?"

  "We have robots to drive them."

  D.G. continued waving and Gladia followed his lead automatically. "We don't," he said.

  "But a computer is essentially the same as a robot."

  "A computer is not humanoid and it does not obtrude itself on one's notice. Whatever the technological similarities might be, they are worlds apart psychologically."

  Gladia watched the countryside and found it oppressively barren. Even allowing for winter, there was something desolate in the scattering of leafless bushes and in the sparsely distributed trees, whose stunted and dispirited appearance emphasized the death that seemed to grip everything.

  D.G., noting her depression and correlating it with her darting glances here and there, said, "It doesn't look like much now, my lady. In the summer, though, it's not bad. There are grassy plains, orchards, grain fields—"

  "Forests?"

  "Not wilderness forests. We're still a growing world. It's still being molded. We've only had a little over a century and a half, really. The first step was to cultivate home plots for the initial Settlers, using imported seed. Then we placed fish and invertebrates of all kinds in the ocean, doing our best to establish a self-supporting ecology. That is a fairly easy procedure—if the ocean chemistry is suitable. If it isn't, then the planet is not habitable without extensive chemical modification and that has never been tried in actuality, though there are all sorts of plans for such procedures. —Finally, we try to make the land flourish, which is always difficult, always slow."

  "Have all the Settler worlds followed that path?"

  "Are following. None are really finished. Baleyworld is the oldest and we're not finished. Given another couple of centuries, the Settler worlds will be rich and full of life land as well as sea—though by that time there will by many still-newer worlds that will be working their way through various preliminary stages. I'm sure the Spacer worlds went through the same procedure."

  "Many centuries ago—and less strenuously, I think. We had robots to help."

  "We'll manage," said D.G. briefly.

  "And what about the native life—the plants and animals that evolved on this world before human beings arrived?"

  D.G. shrugged. "Insignificant. Small, feeble things. The scientists are of course, interested, so the indigenous life still exists in special aquaria, botanical gardens, zoos. There are out-of-the-way bodies of water and considerable stretches of land area that have not yet been converted. Some indigenous life still lives out there in the wild."

  "But these stretches of wilderness will eventually all be converted."

  "We hope so.

  "Don't you feel that the planet really belongs to these insignificant, small, feeble things?"

  "No. I'm not that sentimental. The planet and the whole Universe belongs to intelligence. The Spacers agree with that. Where is the indigenous life of Solaria? Or of Aurora?"

  The line of cars, which had been progressing tortuously from the spaceport, now came to a flat, paved area on which several low, domed buildings were evident.

  "Capital Plaza," said D.G. in a low voice. "This is the official heartbeat of the planet. Government offices are located here, the Planetary Congress meets here, the Executive Mansion is found here, and so on."

  "I'm sorry, D.G., but this is not very impressive. These are small and uninteresting buildings."

  D.G. smiled. "You see only an occasional top, my lady. The buildings themselves are located underground—all interconnected. It's a single complex, really, and is still growing. It's a self-contained city, you know. It, along with the surrounding residential areas, makes up Baleytown."

  "Do you plan to have everything underground eventually? The whole city? The whole world?"

  "Most of us look forward, to an underground world, yes."

  "They have underground Cities on Earth, I understand."

  "Indeed they do, my lady. The so-called Caves of Steel."

  "You imitate that here, then?"

  "It's not simple imitation. We add our own ideas and we're coming to a halt, my lady, and any moment we'll be asked to step out. I'd cling to the coverall openings if I were you. The whistling wind on the Plaza in winter is legendary."

  Gladia did so, fumbling rather as she tried to put the edges of the openings together. "It's not simple imitation, you say."

  "No. We design our underground with the weather in mind. Since our weather is, on the whole, harsher than Earth's, some modification in architecture is required. Properly built, almost no energy is required to keep the complex warm in winter and cool in summer. In a way, indeed, we keep warm in winter, in part, with the stored warmth of the previous summer and cool in summer with the coolness of the previous winter."

  "What about ventilation?"

  "That uses up some of the savings, but not all. It works, my lady, and someday we will match Earth's structures. That, of course, is the ultimate ambition—to make Baleyworld a reflection of Earth."

  "I never knew that Earth was so admirable as to make imitation desirable," said Gladia lightly.

  D.G. turned his eyes on her sharply. "Make no jokes of that sort, my lady, while you are with Settlers—not even with me. Earth is no joking matter."

  Gladia said, "I'm sorry, D.G. I meant no disrespect."

  "You didn't know. But now you know. Come, let's get out."

  The side door of the car slid open noiselessly and D.G. turned in his seat and stepped out. He then held out one hand to help Gladia and said, "You'll be addressing the Planetary Congress, you know, and every government official who can squeeze in will do so."

  Gladia, who had stretched out her hand to seize D.G.'s and who already felt—painfully—the cold wind on her face, shrank back suddenly. "I must make an address? I hadn't been told that."

  D.G. looked surprised. "I rather thought you would take something of the sort for granted."

  "Well, I didn't. And I can't make an address. I've never done such a thing."

  "You must. It's nothing terrible. It's just a matter of saying a few words after some long and boring speeches of welcome."

  "But what can I possibly say?"

  "Nothing fancy, I assure you. Just peace and love and blah. —Give them half a minute's worth. I'll scrawl out something for you if you wish."

  And Gladia stepped out of the car and her robots followed her. Her mind was in a whirl.

  9. THE SPEECH

  33.

  As they walked into the building, they removed their coveralls and handed them to attendants. Daneel and Giskard removed theirs, too, and the attendants cast sharp glances at the latter, approaching him gingerly.

  Gladia adjusted her nose plugs nervously. She had never before been in the presence of large crowds of short-lived human beings—short-lived in part, she knew (or had always been told), because they carried in their bodies chronic inf
ections and hordes of parasites.

  She whispered, "Will I get back my own coverall?"

  "You will wear no one else's," said D.G. "They will be kept safe and radiation-sterilized."

  Gladia looked about cautiously. Somehow she felt that even optical contact might be dangerous.

  "Who are those people?" She indicated several people who wore brightly colored clothing and were obviously armed.

  "Security guards, madam," said D.G.

  "Even here? In a government building?"

  "Absolutely, And when we're on the platform, there will be a force-field curtain dividing us from the audience."

  "Don't you trust your own legislature?"

  D.G. half-smiled. "Not entirely. This is a raw world still and we go our own ways. We haven't had all the edges knocked off and we don't have robots watching over us. Then, too, we've got militant minority parties; we've got our war hawks."

  "What are war hawks?"

  Most of the Baleyworlders, had their coveralls removed now and were helping themselves to drinks. There was a buzz of conversation in the air and many people stared at Gladia, but no one came over to speak to her. Indeed, it was clear to Gladia that there was a circle of avoidance about her.

  D.G. noticed her glance from side to side and interpreted it correctly. "They've been told," he said, "that you would appreciate a little elbow room. I think they understand your fear of infection."

  "They don't find it insulting, I hope."

  "They may, but you've got something that is clearly a robot with you and most Baleyworlders, don't want that kind of infection. The war hawks, particularly."

  "You haven't told me what they are."

  "I will if there's time. You and I and others on the platform will have to move in a little while. —Most Settlers think that, in time, the Galaxy will be theirs, that the Spacers cannot and will not compete successfully in the race for expansion. We also know it will take time. We won't see it. Our children probably won't. It may take a thousand years, for all we know. The war hawks don't want to wait. They want it settled now."

  "They want war?"

 

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