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Daneel Olivaw 3 - The Robots of Dawn, Page 3

Isaac Asimov


  “That might be granted, ma'am.”

  “I do not share your optimism, Mr. Baley.”

  “I have spoken to Spacers who—”

  “I know you have,” said Demachek. “My superior is Albert Minnim, who, two years ago, sent you to Solaria.” She permitted herself a small curve of the lips. “An actor portrayed him in a bit role on that hyperwave drama, one that resembled him closely, as I recall. He was not pleased, as I also recall.”

  Baley changed the subject. “I asked Undersecretary Minnim—”

  “He has been promoted, you know.”

  Baley thoroughly understood the importance of grades in classification. “His new title, ma'am?”

  “Vice-Secretary.”

  “Thank you. I asked Vice-Secretary Minnim to request permission for me to visit Aurora to deal with this subject.”

  “When?”

  “Not very long after my return from Solaria. I have renewed the request twice since.”

  “But have not received a favorable reply?”

  “No, ma'am.”

  “Are you surprised?”

  “I am disappointed, ma'am.”

  “No point in that.” She leaned back a trifle in the chair. “Our relationship with the Spacer worlds is very touchy. You may feel that your two feats of detection have eased the situation—and so they have. That awful hyperwave drama has also helped. Trie total easing, however, has been this much”—she placed her thumb and forefinger close together—“out of this much,” and she spread her hands far apart.

  “Under those circumstances,” she went on, “we could scarcely take the risk of sending you to Aurora, the leading Spacer world, and having you perhaps do something that could create interstellar tension.”

  Baley's eyes met hers. “I have been on Solaria and have done no harm On the contrary—”

  “Yes, I know, but you were there at Spacer request, which is parsecs distant from being there at our request. You cannot fail to see that.”

  Baley was silent.

  She made a soft snorting sound of nonsurprise and said, “The situation has grown worse since your requests were placed with—and very correctly ignored by—the Vice-Secretary. It has grown particularly worse in the last month.”

  “Is that the reason for this conference, ma'am?”

  “Do you grow impatient, sir?” She addressed him sardonically in the to-a-superior intonation. “Do you direct me to come to the point?”

  “No, ma'am.”

  “Certainly you do. And why not? I grow tedious. Let me approach the point by asking if you know Dr. Han Fastolfe.”

  Baley said carefully, “I met him once, nearly three years ago, in what was then Spacetown.”

  “You liked him, I believe.”

  “He was friendly—for a Spacer.”

  She made another soft snorting sound. “I imagine so. Are you aware that he has been an important political power on Aurora over the last two years?”

  “I had heard he was in the government from a—a partner I once had.”

  “From R. Daneel Olivaw, your Spacer robot friend?”

  “My ex-partner, ma'am.”

  “On the occasion when you solved a small problem concerning two mathematicians on board a Spacer ship?”

  Baley nodded. “Yes, ma'am.”

  “We keep informed, you see. Dr. Han Fastolfe has been, more or less, the guiding light of the Auroran government for two years, an important figure in their World Legislature, and he is even spoken of as a possible future Chairman. —The Chairman, you understand, is the closest thing to a chief executive that the Aurorans have.”

  Baley said, “Yes, ma'am,” and wondered when she would get to the very delicate matter of which the Commissioner had spoken.

  Demachek seemed in no hurry. She said, “Fastolfe is a—moderate. That's what he calls himself. He feels Aurora—and the Spacer worlds generally—have gone too far in their direction, as you, perhaps, feel that we on Earth have gone too far in ours. He wishes to step backward to less robotry, to a more rapid turnover of generations, and to alliance and friendship with Earth. Naturally, we support him—but very quietly. If we were too demonstrative in our affection, that might well be the kiss of death for him.”

  Baley said, “I believe he would support Earth's exploration and settlement of other worlds.”

  “I believe so, too. I am of the opinion he said as much to you.”

  “Yes, ma'am, when we met.”

  Demachek steepled her hands and put the tips of her fingers to her chin. “Do you think he represents public opinion on the Spacer worlds?”

  “I don't know, ma'am.”

  “I'm afraid he does not. Those who are with him are lukewarm. Those who are against him are an ardent legion. It is only his political skills and his personal warmth that have kept him as close to the seats of power as he is. His greatest weakness, of course, is his sympathy for Earth. That is constantly used against him and it influences many who would share his views in every other respect. If you were sent to Aurora, any mistake you made would help strengthen anti-Earth feeling and would therefore weaken him, possibly fatally. Earth simply cannot take the risk.”

  Baley muttered, “I see.”

  “Fastolfe is willing to take the risk. It was he who arranged to have you sent to Solaria at a time when his political power was barely beginning and when he was very vulnerable. But then, he has only his personal power to lose, whereas we must be concerned with the welfare of over eight billion Earthpeople. That is what makes the present political situation almost unbearably delicate.”

  She paused and, finally, Baley was forced to ask the question. “What is the situation that you are referring to, ma'am?”

  “It seems,” said Demachek, “that Fastolfe has become implicated in a serious and unprecedented scandal. If he is clumsy, the chances are that he will undergo political destruction in a matter of weeks. If he is superhu-manly clever, perhaps he will hold out for some months. A little sooner, a little later, he could be destroyed as a political force on Aurora—and that would be a real disaster for Earth, you see.”

  “May I ask what he is accused of? Corruption? Treason?”

  “Nothing that small. His personal integrity is, in any case, unquestioned even by his enemies.”

  “A crime of passion, then? Murder?”

  “Not quite murder.”

  “I don't understand, ma'am.”

  “There are human beings on Aurora, Mr. Baley. And there are robots, too, most of them something like ours, not very much more advanced in most cases. However, there are a few humaniform robots, robots so humaniform that they can be taken for human.”

  Baley nodded. “I know that very well.”

  “I suppose that destroying a humaniform robot is not exactly murder in the strict sense of the word.”

  Baley leaned forward, eyes widening. He shouted, “Jehoshaphat, woman! Stop playing games. Are you telling me that Dr. Fastolfe has killed R. Daneel?”

  Roth leaped to his feet and seemed about to advance on Baley, but Undersecretary Demachek waved him back. She seemed unruffled.

  She said, “Under the circumstances, I excuse your disrespect, Baley. No, R. Daneel has not been killed. He is not the only humaniform robot on Aurora. Another such robot, not R. Daneel, has been killed, if you wish to use the term loosely. To be more precise, its mind has been totally destroyed; it was placed into permanent and irreversible roblock.”

  Baley said, “And they say that Dr. Fastolfe did it?”

  “His enemies are saying so. The extremists, who wish only Spacers to spread through the Galaxy and who wish Earthpeople to vanish from the Universe, are saying so. If these extremists can maneuver another election within the next few weeks, they will surely gain total control of the government, with incalculable results.”

  “Why is this roblock so important politically? I don't understand.”

  “I am not myself certain,” said Demachek. “I do not pretend to understand Auror
an politics. I gather that the humaniforms were in some way involved with the extremist plans and that the destruction has infuriated them.” She wrinkled her nose. “I find their politics very confusing and I will only mislead you if I try to interpret it.”

  Baley labored to control himself under the Undersecretary's level stare. He said in a low voice, “Why am I here?”

  “Because of Fastolfe. Once before you went out into space in order to solve a murder and succeeded. Fastolfe wants you to try again. You are to go to Aurora and discover who was responsible for the roblock. He feels that to be his only chance of turning back the extremists.”

  “I am not a roboticist. I know nothing about Aurora—”

  “You knew nothing about Solaria, either, yet you managed. The point is, Baley, we are as eager to find out what really happened as Fastolfe is. We don't want him destroyed. If he is, Earth will be subject to a kind of hostility from these Spacer extremists that will probably be greater than anything we have yet experienced. We don't want that to happen.”

  “I can't take on this responsibility, ma'am. The task is—”

  “Next to impossible. We know that, but we have no choice. Fastolfe insists—and behind him, for the moment, stands the Auroran government. If you refuse to go or if we refuse to let you go, we will have to face the Auroran fury. If you do go and are successful, we'll be saved and you will be suitably rewarded.”

  “And if I go—and fail?”

  “We will do our best to see to it that the blame will be yours and not Earth's.”

  “The skins of officialdom will be saved, in other words.”

  Demachek said, “A kinder way of putting it is that you will be thrown to the wolves in the hope that Earth will not suffer too badly. One man is not a bad price to pay for our planet.”

  “It seems to me that, since I am sure to fail, I might as well not go.”

  “You know better than that,” said Demachek softly. “Aurora has asked for you and you cannot refuse. —And why should you want to refuse? You've been trying to go to Aurora for two years and you've been bitter over your failure to get our permission.”

  “I've wanted to go in peace to arrange for help in the settlement of other worlds, not to—”

  “You might still try to get their help for your dream of settling other worlds, Baley. After all, suppose you do succeed. It's possible, after all. In that case, Fastolfe will be much beholden to you and he may do far more for you than he ever would have otherwise. And we ourselves will be sufficiently grateful to you to help. Isn't that worth a risk, even a large one? However small your chances of success are if you go, those chances are zero if you do not go. Think of that, Baley, but please—not too long.”

  Baley's lips tightened and, finally, realizing there was no alternative, he said, “How much time do I have to—”

  And Demachek said calmly, “Come. Haven't I been explaining that we have no choice—and no time, either? You leave,” she looked at the timeband on her wrist, “in just under six hours.”

  5

  The spaceport was at the eastern outskirts of the City in an all-but-deserted Sector that was, strictly speaking, Outside. This was palliated by the fact that the ticket offices and the waiting rooms were actually in the City and that the approach to the ship itself was by vehicle through a covered path. By tradition, all takeoffs were at night, so that a pall of darkness further deadened the effect of Outside.

  The spaceport was not very busy, considering the populous character of Earth. Earthmen very rarely left the planet and the traffic consisted entirely of commercial activity organized by robots and Spacers.

  Elijah Baley, waiting for the ship to be ready for boarding, felt already cut off from Earth.

  Bentley sat with him and there was a glum silence between the two. Finally, Ben said, “I didn't think Mom would want to come.”

  Baley nodded. “I didn't think so, either. I remember how she was when I went to Solaria. This is no different.”

  “Did you manage to calm her down?”

  “I did what I could, Ben. She thinks I'm bound to be in a space crash or that the Spacers will kill me once I'm on Aurora.”

  “You got back from Solaria.”

  “That just makes her the less eager to risk me a second time. She assumes the luck will run out. However, she'll manage. —You rally round, Ben. Spend some time with her and, whatever you do, don't talk about heading out to settle a new planet. That's what really bothers her, you know. She feels you'll be leaving her one of these years. She knows she won't be able to go and so she'll never see you again.”

  “She may not,” said Ben. “That's the way it might work out.”

  “You can face that easily, maybe, but she can't, so just don't discuss it while I'm gone. Ail right?”

  “All right. —-1 think she's a little upset about Gladia.”

  Baley looked up sharply. “Have you been—”

  “I haven't said a word. But she saw that hyperwave thing, too, you know, and she knows Gladia's on Aurora.”

  “What of it? It's a big planet. Do you think Gladia Dehnarre will be waiting at the spaceport for me? —Je-hoshaphat, Ben, doesn't your mother know that hyperwave axle grease was nine-tenths fiction?”

  Ben changed the subject with a tangible effort. “It seems funny—you sitting here with no luggage of any kind.”

  “I'm sitting here with too much. I've got the clothes I'm wearing, don't I? They'll get rid of those as soon as I'm on board. Off they go—to be chemically treated, then dumped into space. After that, they'll give me a totally new wardrobe, after I have been personally fumigated and cleaned and polished, inside and out. I've been through that once before.”

  Again silence and then Ben said, “You know, Dad—” and stopped suddenly. He tried again. “You know Dad—” and did no better.

  Baley looked at him steadily. “What are you trying to say, Ben?”

  “Dad, I feel like an awful jackass saying this, but I think I'd better. You're not the hero type. Even I never thought you were. You're a nice guy and the best father there could be, but not the hero type.”

  Baley grunted.

  “Still,” said Ben, “when you stop to think of it, it was you who got Spacetown off the map; it was you who got Aurora on our side; it was you who started this whole project of settling other worlds. Dad, you've done more for Earth than everyone in the government put together. So why aren't you appreciated more?”

  Baley said, “Because I'm not the hero type and because this stupid hyperwave drama was foisted on me. It has made an enemy of every man in the Department, it's unsettled your mother, and it's given me a reputation I can't live up to.” The light flashed on his wrist-caller and he stood up. “I've got to go now, Ben.”

  “I know. But what I want to say, Dad, is that I appreciate you. And this time when you come back, you'll get that from everybody and not just from me.”

  Baley felt himself melting. He nodded rapidly, put a hand on his son's shoulder, and muttered, “Thanks. Take care of yourself—and your mother—while I'm gone.”

  He walked away, not looking back. He had told Ben that he was going to Aurora to discuss the settlement project. If that were so, he might come back in triumph. As it was—

  He thought: I'll come back in disgrace—if I come back at all.

  2. DANEEL

  6

  It was Baley's third time on a spaceship and the passage of two years had in no way dimmed his memory of the first two times. He knew exactly what to expect.

  There would be the isolation—the fact that no one would see him or have anything to do with him, with the exception (perhaps) of a robot. There would be the constant medical treatment—the fumigation and sterilization. (No other way of putting it.) There would be the attempt to make him fit to approach the disease-conscious Spacers who thought of Earth-people as walking bags of multifarious infections.

  There would be differences, too, however. He would not, this time, be quite so afraid of the
process. Surely the feeling of loss at being out of the womb would be less dreadful.

  He would be prepared for the wider surroundings. This time, he told himself boldly (but with a small knot in his stomach, for all that), he might even be able to insist on being given a view of space.

  Would it look different from photographs of the night sky as seen from Outside? he wondered.

  He remembered his first view of a planetarium dome (safely within the City, of course). It had given him no sensation of being Outside, no discomfort at all.

  Then there were the two times—no, three—that he had been in the open at night and saw the real stars in the real dome of the sky. That had been far less impressive than the planetarium dome had been, but there had been a cool wind each time and a feeling of distance, which made it more frightening than the dome—but less frightening than daytime, for the darkness was a comforting wall about him.

  Would, then, the sight of the stars through a spaceship viewing window seem more like a planetarium or more like Earth's night sky? Or would it be a different sensation altogether?

  He concentrated on that, as though to wash out the thought of leaving Jessie, Ben, and the City.

  With nothing less than bravado, he refused the car and insisted on walking the short distance from the gate to the ship in the company of the robot who had come for him. It was just a roofed-over arcade, after all.

  The passage was slightly curved and he looked back while he could still see Ben at the other end. He lifted his hand casually, as though he were taking the Expressway to Trenton, and Ben waved both arms wildly, holding up the first two fingers of each hand outspread in the ancient symbol of victory.

  Victory? A useless gesture, Baley was certain.

  He switched to another thought that might serve to fill and occupy him. What would it be like to board a spaceship by day, with the sun shining brightly on its metal and with himself and the others who were boarding all exposed to the Outside.

  How would it feel to be entirely aware of a tiny cylindrical world, one that would detach itself from the infinitely larger world to which it was temporarily attached and that would then lose itself in an Outside infinitely larger than any Outside on Earth, until after an endless stretch of Nothingness it would find another—