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Asimov’s Future History Volume 14

Page 47

by Isaac Asimov

Raych waved a hand in lordly fashion. “That’s all right. Ya didn’t hurt. Listen. You’re strong for a lady. Ya lifted me up like I was nothin’.”

  “I was annoyed, Raych. I have to be concerned about Master Seldon.”

  “Ya sort of his bodyguard?” Raych looked at Seldon inquiringly. “Ya got a lady for a bodyguard?”

  “I can’t help it,” said Seldom smiling wryly. “She insists. And she certainly knows her job.”

  Dors said, “Think again, Raych. Are you sure you won’t have a bath? A nice warm bath.”

  Raych said, “I got no chance. Ya think that lady is gonna let me in the house again?”

  Dors looked up and saw Casilia Tisalver outside the front door of the apartment complex, staring first at the Outworld woman and then at the slum-bred boy. It would have been impossible to tell in which case her expression was angrier.

  Raych said, “Well, so long, Mister and Missus. I don’t know if she’ll let either of ya in the house.” He placed his hands in his pocket and swaggered off in a fine affectation of carefree indifference.

  Seldon said, “Good evening, Mistress Tisalver. It’s rather late, isn’t it?”

  “It’s very late,” she replied. “There was a near riot today outside this very complex because of that newsman you pushed the street vermin at.”

  “We didn’t push anyone on anyone,” said Dors.

  “I was there,” said Mistress Tisalver intransigently. “I saw it.”

  She stepped aside to let them enter, but delayed long enough to make her reluctance quite plain.

  “She acts as though that was the last straw,” said Dors as she and Seldon made their way up to their rooms.

  “So? What can she do about it?” asked Seldon.

  “I wonder,” said Dors.

  Officers

  RAYCH-... ACCORDING TO HARI SELDON, THE ORIGINAL MEETING WITH RAYCH WAS ENTIRELY ACCIDENTAL. HE WAS SIMPLY A GUTTER URCHIN FROM WHOM SELDON HAD ASKED DIRECTIONS. BUT HIS LIFE, FROM THAT MOMENT ON, CONTINUED TO BE INTERTWINED WITH THAT OF THE GREAT MATHEMATICIAN UNTIL.

  ENCYCLOPEDIA GALACTICA

  77.

  The next morning, dressed from the waist down, having washed and shaved, Seldon knocked on the door that led to Dors’s adjoining room and said in a moderate voice, “Open the door, Dors.”

  She did. The short reddish-gold curls of her hair were still wet and she too was dressed only from the waist down.

  Seldon stepped back in embarrassed alarm. Dors looked down at the swell of her breasts indifferently and wrapped a towel around her head. “What is it?” she asked.

  Seldon said, looking off to his right, “I was going to ask you about Wye.”

  Dors said very naturally, “About why in connection with what? And for goodness sake, don’t make me talk to your ear. Surely, you’re not a virgin.”

  Seldon said in a hurt tone, “I was merely trying to be polite. If you don’t mind, I certainly don’t. And it’s not why about what. I’m asking about the Wye Sector.”

  “Why do you want to know? Or, if you prefer: Why Wye?”

  “Look, Dors, I’m serious. Every once in a while, the Wye Sector is mentioned-the Mayor of Wye, actually. Hummin mentioned him, you did, Davan did. I don’t know anything about either the sector or the Mayor.”

  “I’m not a native Trantorian either, Hari. I know very little, but you’re welcome to what I do know. Wye is near the south pole quite large, very populous–”

  “Very populous at the south pole?”

  “We’re not on Helicon, Hari. Or on Cinna either. This is Trantor. Everything is underground and underground at the poles or underground at the equator is pretty much the same. Of course, I imagine they keep their day-night arrangements rather extreme–long days in their summer, long nights in their winter-almost as it would be on the surface. The extremes are just affectation; they’re proud of being polar.”

  “But Upperside they must be cold, indeed.”

  “Oh yes. The Wye Upperside is snow and ice, but it doesn’t lie as thickly there as you might think. If it did, it might crush the dome, but it doesn’t and that is the basic reason for Wye’s power.”

  She turned to her mirror, removed the towel from her head, and threw the dry-net over her hair, which, in a matter of five seconds, gave it a pleasant sheen. She said, “You have no idea how glad I am not to be wearing a skincap, “as she put on the upper portion of her clothing.

  “What has the ice layer to do with Wye’s power?”

  “Think about it. Forty billion people use a great deal of power and every calorie of it eventually degenerates into heat and has to be gotten rid of. It’s piped to the poles, particularly to the south pole, which is the more developed of the two, and is discharged into space. It metes most of the ice in the process and I’m sure that accounts for Trantor’s clouds and rains, no matter how much the meteorology boggins insist that things are more complicated than that.”

  “Does Wye make use of the power before discharging it?”

  “They may, for all I know. I haven’t the slightest idea, by the way, as to the technology involved in discharging the heat, but I’m talking about political power. If Dahl were to stop producing usable energy, that would certainly. inconvenience Trantor, but there are other sectors that produce energy and can up their production and, of course, there is stored energy in one form or another. Eventually, Dahl would have to be dealt with, but there would be time. Wye, on the other hand-’

  “Yes?”

  “Well, Wye gets rid of at least 90 percent of all the heat developed on Trantor and there is no substitute. If Wye were to shut down its heat emission, the temperature would start going up all over Trantor.”

  “In Wye too.”

  “Ate, but since Wye is at the south pole, it can arrange an influx of cold air. It wouldn’t do much good, but Wye would last longer than the rest of Trantor. The point is, then, that Wye is a very touchy problem for the Emperor and the Mayor of Wye is–or at least can be-extremely powerful.”

  “And what kind of a person is the present Mayor of Wye?”

  “That I don’t know. What I’ve occasionally heard would make it seem that he is very old and pretty much a recluse, but hard as a hypership hull and still cleverly maneuvering for power.”

  “Why, I wonder? If he’s that old, he couldn’t hold the power for long.”

  “Who knows, Hari? A lifelong obsession, I suppose. Or else it’s the game... the maneuvering for power, without any real longing for the power itself. Probably if he had the power and took over Demerzel’s place or even the Imperial throne itself, he would feel disappointed because the game would be over. Of nurse he might, if he was still alive, begin the subsequent game of keeping power, which might be just as difficult and just as satisfying.”

  Seldon shook his head. “It strikes me that no one could possibly want to be Emperor.”

  “No sane person would, I free, but the ‘Imperial wish, ‘as it is frequently called, is like a disease that, when caught, drives out sanity. And the closer you get to high office, the more likely you are to catch the disease. With each ensuing promotion–”

  “The disease grows still more acute. Yes, I can see that. But it also seems to me that Trantor is so huge a world, so interlocking in its needs and so conflicting in its ambitions, that it makes up the major part of the inability of the Emperor to rule. Why doesn’t he just leave Trantor and establish himself on some simpler world?”

  Dors laughed. “You wouldn’t ask that if you knew your history. Trantor is the Empire through thousands of years of custom. An Emperor who is not at the Imperial Palace is not the Emperor. He is a place, even more than a person.”

  Seldon sank into silence, his face rigid, and after a while Dors asked, What’s the matter, Hari?”

  “I’m thinking, “he said in a muffled voice. “Ever since you told me that hand-on-thigh story, I’ve had fugitive thoughts that-Now your remark about the Emperor being a place rather than a person seems to have struck a
chord.”

  “What kind of chord?”

  Seldon shook his head. “I’m still thinking. I may be all wrong.” His glance at Dors sharpened, his eyes coming into focus. “In any case, we ought to go down and have breakfast. We’re late and I don’t think Mistress Tisalver is in a good enough humor to have it brought in for us.”

  “You optimist,” said Dors. “My own feeling is that she’s not in a good enough humor to want us to stay-breakfast or not. She wants us out of here.”

  “That may be, but we’re paying her.”

  “Yes, but I suspect she hates us enough by now to scorn our credits.”

  “Perhaps her husband will feel a bit more affectionate concerning the rent.”

  “If he has a single word to say, Hari, the only person who would be more surprised than me to hear it would be Mistress Tisalver.-Very well, I’m ready.”

  And they moved down the stairs to the Tisalver portion of the apartment to find the lady in question waiting for them with less than breakfast–and with considerably more too.

  78.

  Casilia Tisalver stood ramrod straight with a tight smile on her round face and her dark eyes glinting. Her husband was leaning moodily against the wall. In the center of the room were two men who were standing stiffly upright, as though they had noticed the cushions on the floor but scorned them.

  Both had the dark crisp hair and the chick black mustache to be expected of Dahlites. Both were thin and both were dressed in dark clothes so nearly alike that they were surely uniforms. There was thin white piping up and over the shoulders and down the sides of the tubular trouser legs. Each had, on the right side of his chest, a rather dim Spaceship-and-Sun, the symbol of the Galactic Empire on every inhabited world of the Galaxy, with, in this case, a dark “D” in the center of the sun.

  Seldon realized immediately that these were two members of the Dahlite security forces.

  “What’s all this?” said Seldon sternly.

  One of the men stepped forward. “I am Sector Officer Lanel Russ. This is my partner, Gebore Astinwald.”

  Both presented glittering identification holo-tabs. Seldon didn’t bother looking at them. “What it is you want?”

  Russ said calmly, “Are you Hari Seldon of Helicon?”

  “I am.”

  “And are you Dors Venabili of Cinna, Mistress?”

  “I am,” said Dors.

  “I’m here to investigate a complaint that one Hari Seldon instigated a riot yesterday.”

  “I did no such thing,” said Seldon.

  “Our information is,” said Russ, looking at the screen of a small computer pad, “that you accused a newsman of being an Imperial agent, thus instigating a riot against him.”

  Dors said, “It was I who said he was an Imperial agent, Officer. I had reason to think he was. It is surely no crime to express one’s opinion. The Empire has freedom of speech.”

  “That does not cover an opinion deliberately advanced in order to instigate a riot.”

  “How can you say it was, Officer?”

  At this point, Mistress Tisalver interposed in a shrill voice, “I can say it, Officer. She saw there was a crowd present, a crowd of gutter people who were just looking for trouble. She deliberately said he was an Imperial agent when she knew nothing of the sort and she shouted it to the crowd to stir them up. It was plain that she knew what she was doing.”

  “Casilia,” said her husband pleadingly, but she cast one look at him and he said no more.

  Russ turned to Mistress Tisalver. “Did you lodge the complaint, Mistress?”

  “Yes. These two have been living here for a few days and they’ve done nothing but make trouble. They’ve invited people of low reputation into my apartment, damaging my standing with my neighbours.”

  “Is it against the law, Officer, “asked Seldon, “to invite clean, quiet citizens of Dahl into one’s room? The two rooms upstairs are our rooms. We have rented them and they are paid for. Is it a crime to speak to Dahlites in Dahl, Officer?”

  “No, it is not,” said Russ. “That is not part of the complaint. What gave you reason, Mistress Venabili, to suppose the person you so accused was, in fact, an Imperial agent?”

  Doss said, “He had a small brown mustache, from which I concluded he was not a Dahlite. I surmised he was an Imperial agent”

  “You surmised? Your associate, Master Seldon, has no mustache at all. Do you surmise he is an Imperial agent?”

  “In any case,” said Seldon hastily, “there was no riot. We asked the crowd to take no action against the supposed newsman and I’m sure they didn’t.”

  “You’re sure, Master Seldon?” said Russ. “Our information is that you left immediately after making your accusation. How could you witness what happened after you left?”

  “I couldn’t,” said Seldon, “but let me ask you-Is the man dead? Is the man hurt?”

  “The man has been interviewed. He denies he is an Imperial agent and we have no information that he is. He also claims he was handled roughly.”

  “He may well be lying in both respects,” said Seldon. “I would suggest a Psychic Probe.”

  “That cannot be done on the victim of a crime,” said Russ. “The sector government is very firm on that. It might do if you two, as the criminals in this case, each underwent a Psychic Probe. Would you like us to do that?”

  Seldon and Dors exchanged glances for a moment, then Seldon said, “No, of course not.”

  “Of course not, “repeated Russ with just a tinge of sarcasm in his voice, “hut you’re ready enough to suggest it for someone else.”

  The other officer, Astinwald, who had so far not said a word, smiled at this.

  Russ said, “We also have information that two days ago you engaged in a knife fight in Billibotton and badly hurt a Dahlite citizen named”-he struck a button on his computer pad and studied the new page on the screen-“Elgin Marron.”

  Doss said, “Dot your information tell you how the fight started?”

  “That is irrelevant at the moment, Mistress. Do you deny that the fight took place?”

  “Of course we don’t deny the fight took place,” said Seldon hotly, “but we deny that we in any way instigated that. We were attacked. Mistress Venabili was seized by this Marron and it was clear he was attempting to rape her. What happened afterward was pure self-defense. Or does Dahl condone rape?”

  Russ said with very little intonation in his voice, “You say you were attacked? By how many?”

  “Ten men.”

  “And you alone-with a woman-defended yourself against tea men?”

  “Mistress Venabili and I defended ourselves. Yes.”

  “How is it, then, that neither of you shows any damage whatever? Are either of you cut or bruised where it doesn’t show right now?”

  “No, Officer.”

  “How is it, then, that in the fight of one-plus a woman-against ten, you are in no way hurt, but that the complainant, Elgin Marron, has been hospitalized with wounds and will require a skin transplant on his upper lip?”

  “We fought well,” said Seldon grimly.

  “Unbelievably well. What would you say if I told you that three men have testified that you and your friend attacked Marron, unprovoked?”

  “I would say that it belies belief that we should. I’m sure that Marron has a record as a brawler and knifeman. I tell you that there were ten there. Obviously, six refused to swear to a lie. Do the other three explain why they did not come to the help of their friend if they witnessed him under unprovoked attack and in danger of his life? It must be clear to you that they are lying.”

  “Do you suggest a Psychic Probe for them?”

  “Yes. And before you ask, I still refuse to consider one for us.”

  Russ said, “We have also received information that yesterday, after leaving the scene of the riot, you consulted with one Davan, a known subversive who is wanted by the security police. Is that true?”

  “You’ll have to prove that wi
thout help from us,” said Seldon. “We’re not answering any further questions.”

  Russ put away his pad. “I’m afraid I must ask you to come with us to headquarters for further interrogation.”

  “I don’t think that’s necessary, Officer,” said Seldon. “We are Outworlders who have done nothing criminal. We have tried to avoid a newsman who was annoying us unduly, we tried to protect ourselves against rape and possible murder in a part of the sector known for criminal behavior, and we’ve spoken to various Dahlites. We see nothing there to warrant our further questioning. It would come under the heading of harassment.”

  “We make these decisions,” said Russ. “Not you. Will you please come with us?”

  “No, we will not,” said Dors.

  “Watch out!” cried out Mistress Tisalver. “She’s got two knives.”

  Officer Russ sighed and said, “Thank you, Mistress, but I know she does.” He turned to Dors. “Do you know it’s a serious crime to carry a knife without a permit in this sector? Do you have a permit?”

  “No, Officer, I don’t.”

  “It was clearly with an illegal knife, then, that you assaulted Marron? Do you realize that that greatly increases the seriousness of the crime?”

  “It was no crime, Officer,” said Dors. “Understand that. Marron had a knife as well and no permit, I am certain.”

  “We have no evidence to that effect and while Marron has knife wounds, neither of you have any.”

  “Of course he had a knife, Officer. If you don’t know that every man in Billibotton and most men elsewhere in Dahl carry knives for which they probably don’t have permits, then you’re the only man in Dahl who doesn’t know. There are shops here wherever you turn that sell knives openly. Don’t you know that?”

  Russ said, “It doesn’t matter what I know or don’t know in this respect. Nor does it matter whether other people are breaking the law or how many of them do. All that matters at this moment is that Mistress Venabili is breaking the anti-knife law. I must ask you to give up those knives to me right now, Mistress, and the two of you must then accompany me to headquarters.”

 

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