Unwise Child by Randall Garrett (early reader chapter books .TXT) đ
- Author: Randall Garrett
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[185] The other men, sniffing and coughing, agreed in attitude if not in voice.
It wasnât really as bad as they pretended; indeed, the odor of ammonia was hardly noticeable. But it made a good griping point.
The inner door opened at last, and the men straggled through.
âGânight, Chief,â said Mike the Angel.
âNight, sir,â said Multhaus. âSee you in the morning.â
âYeah. Night.â Mike trudged toward the companionway that led toward the wardroom. If Keku or Jeffers happened to be there, heâd have a quick round of ĆŹma ni tĆ. Jeffers called the game âdouble solitaire for three people,â and Keku said it meant âhorsesâ two heads,â but Mike had simply found it as a new game to play before bedtime.
He looked forward to it.
But he had something else to do first.
Instead of hanging up his suit in the locker provided, he had bunched it under his armâexcept for the helmetâand now he headed toward maintenance.
He met Ensign Vaneski just coming out, and gave him a broad smile. âMister Vaneski, I got troubles.â
Vaneski smiled back worriedly. âYes, sir. I guess we all do. What is it, sir?â
Mike gestured at the bundle under his arm. âI abraded the sleeve of my suit while I was working today. I wish youâd take a look at it. Iâm afraid itâll need a patch.â
For a moment, Vaneski looked as though heâd suddenly developed a headache.
âI know youâre supposed to be off duty now,â Mike said soothingly, âbut I donât want to get myself killed wearing a leaky suit tomorrow. Iâll help you work on it ifââ
[186] Vaneski grinned quickly. âOh no, sir. Thatâll be all right. Iâll give it a test, anyway, to check leaks. If it needs repair, it shouldnât take too long. Bring it in, and weâll take a look at it.â
They went back into the Maintenance Section, and Vaneski spread the suit out on the worktable. There was an obvious rough spot on the right sleeve. âLooks bad,â said Vaneski. âIâll run a test right away.â
âOkay,â said Mike. âIâll leave it to you. Can I pick it up in the morning?â
âI think so. If it needs a patch, weâll have to test the patch, of course, but we should be able to finish it pretty quickly.â He shrugged. âIf we canât, sir, youâll just have to wait. Unless you want us to start altering a suit to your measurements.â
âWhich would take longer?â
âAltering a suit.â
âOkay. Just patch this one, then. What can I do?â
âIâll get it out as fast as possible, sir,â said Vaneski with a smile.
âFine. Iâll see you later, then.â Mike, like Cleopatra, was not prone to argue. He left maintenance and headed toward the wardroom for a game of ĆŹma ni tĆ. But when he met Leda Crannon going up the stairway, all thoughts of card games flitted from his mind with the careless nonchalance of a summer butterfly.
âHullo,â he said, pulling himself up a little straighter. He was tired, but not that tired.
Her smile brushed the cobwebs from his mind. But a second look told him that there was worry behind the smile.
âHi, Mike,â she said softly. âYou look beat.â
[187] âI am,â admitted Mike. âTo a frazzle. Have I told you that I love you?â
âOnce, I think. Maybe twice.â Her eyes seemed to light up somewhere from far back in her head. âBut enough of this mad passion,â she said. âI want an invitation to have a drinkâa stiff one.â
âIâll steal Jeffersâ bottle,â Mike offered. âWhatâs the trouble?â
Her smile faded, and her eyes became grave. âIâm scared, Mike; I want to talk to you.â
âCome along, then,â Mike said.
Mike the Angel poured two healthy slugs of Pete Jeffersâ brandy into a pair of glasses, added ice and water, and handed one to Leda Crannon with a flourish. And all the time, he kept up a steady line of gentle patter.
âIt may interest you to know,â he said chattily, âthat the learned Mister Treadmore has been furnishing me with the most fascinating information.â He lifted up his own glass and looked into its amber depths.
They were in his stateroom, and this time the door was closedâat her insistence. She had explained that she didnât want to be overheard, even by passing crew members.
He swizzled the ice around in his glass, still holding it up to the light. âIndeed,â he rambled on, âTreadmore babbled for Heaven knows how long on the relative occurrence of parahydrogen and orthohydrogen on Eisberg.â He took his eyes from the glass and looked down at the girl who was seated demurely on the edge of his bunk. Her smile was encouraging.
âHe saidâand I quoteââMikeâs voice assumed a gloomy, but stilted toneâânormal hydrogen gas consists of diatomic [188] molecules. The nuclear, or proton, spin of these atomsâahâthat is, of the two atoms that compose the moleculeâmay be oriented in the same direction or in opposite directions.â
He held a finger in the air as if to make a deep philosophical point. âIf,â he said pontifically, âthey are oriented in the same direction, we refer to the substance as orthohydrogen. If they are oriented in opposite directions, it is parahydrogen. The ortho molecules rotate with odd rotational quantum numbers, while the para molecules rotate with even quantum numbers.
âSince conversion does not normally occur between the two states, normal hydrogen may be consideredââ
Leda Crannon, snickering, waved her hand in the air. âPlease!â she interrupted. âHe canât be that bad! You make him sound like a dirge player at a Hindu funeral. What did he tell you? What did you find out?â
âHah!â said Mike. âWhat did I find out?â His hand moved in an airy circle as he inscribed a flowing cipher with a graceful Delsarte wave. âNothing. In the first place, I already knew it, and in the second, it wasnât practical information. Thereâs a slight difference in diffusion between the two forms, but itâs nothing to rave about.â His expression became suddenly serious. âI hope your information is a bit more revealing.â
She glanced at her glass, nodded, and drained it. Mike had extracted a promise from her that she would drink one drink before she talked. He could see that she was a trifle tense, and he thought the liquor would relax her somewhat. Now he was ready to listen.
She handed him her empty, and while he refilled it, she said: âItâs about Snookums again.â
[189] Mike gave her her glass, grabbed the nearby chair, turned it around, sat down, and regarded her over its back.
âIâve lived with him so long,â she said after a minute. âSo long. It almost seems as though Iâve grown up with him. Eight years. Iâve been a mother to him, and a big sister at the same timeâand maybe a maiden aunt. Heâs been a career and a family all rolled in together.â She still watched her writhing hands, not raising her eyes to Mikeâs.
âAndâand, I suppose, a husband, too,â she continued. âThat is, heâs sort of the stand-in for aâwell, a somebody to teachâto correctâto reform. I guess every woman wants toâto remake the man she meetsâthe man she wants.â
And then her eyes were suddenly on his. âBut I donât. Not any more. Iâve had enough of it.â Then she looked back down at her hands.
Mike the Angel neither accepted nor rejected the statement. He merely waited.
âHe was mine,â she said after a little while. âHe was mine to mold, to teach, to form. The othersâthe roboticists, the neucleonicists, the sub-electronicists, all of themâwere his instructors. All they did was give him facts. It was I who gave him a personality.
âI made him. Not his body, not his brain, but his mind.
âI made him.
âI knew him.
âAnd IâIââ
Still staring at her hands, she clasped them together suddenly and squeezed.
âAnd I loved him,â she finished.
She looked up at Mike then. âCan you see that?â she asked tensely. âCan you understand?â
âYes,â said Mike the Angel quietly. âYes, I can understand [190] that. Under the same circumstances, I might have done the same thing.â He paused. âAnd now?â
She lowered her head again and began massaging her forehead with the finger tips of both hands, concealing her face with her palms.
âAnd now,â she said dully, âI know heâs a machine. Snookums isnât a he any moreâheâs an it. He has no personality of his own, he only has what I fed into him. Even his voice is mine. Heâs not even a psychic mirror, because he doesnât reflect my personality, but a puppet imitation of it, distorted and warped by the thousands upon thousands of cold facts and mathematical relationships and logical postulates. And none of these added anything to him, as a personality. How could they? He never had a personalityâonly a set of behavior patterns that I drilled into him over a period of eight years.â
She dropped her hands into her lap and tilted her head back, looking at the blank white shimmer of the glow plates.
âAnd now, suddenly, I see him for what he isâfor what it is. A machine.
âIt was never anything but a machine. It is still a machine. It will never be anything else.
âPersonality is something that no machine can ever have. Idiosyncrasies, yes. No two machines are identical. But any personality that an individual sees in a machine has been projected there by the individual himself; it exists only in the human mind.
âA machine can only do what it is built to do, and teaching a robot is only a building process.â She gave a short, hard laugh. âI couldnât even build a monster, like Dr. Frankenstein did, unless I purposely built it to turn on me. And in [191] that case I would have done nothing more than the suicide who turns a gun on himself.â
Her head tilted forward again, and her eyes sought those of Mike the Angel. A rather lopsided grin came over her face.
âI guess Iâm disenchanted, huh, Mike?â she asked.
Mike grinned back, but his lips were firm. âI think so, yes. And I think youâre glad of it.â His grin changed to a smile.
âRemember,â he asked, âthe story of the Sleeping Beauty? Did you want to stay asleep all your life?â
âGod forbid and thank you for the compliment, sir,â she said, managing a smile of her own. âAnd are you the Prince Charming who woke me up?â
âPrince Charming, I may be,â said Mike the Angel carefully, âbut Iâm not the one who woke you up. You did that yourself.â
Her smile became more natural. âThanks, Mike. I really think I might have seen it, sooner or later. But, without you, I doubt....â She hesitated. âI doubt that Iâd want to wake up.â
âYou said you were scared,â Mike said. âWhat are you scared of?â
âIâm scared to death of that damned machine.â
And on the heels of fear there follows hate.
Mike quoted to himselfâhe didnât say it aloud.
âThe only reason anyone would have to fear Snookums,â he said, âwould be that he was uncontrollable. Is he?â
âNot yet. Not completely. But Iâm afraid that knowing [192] that heâs been filled with Catholic theology isnât going to help us much.â
âWhy not?â
âBecause he has it so inextricably bound up with the Three Laws of Robotics that we canât nullify one without nullifying the other. Heâs convinced that the laws were promulgated by God Himself.â
âHoly St. Isaac,â Mike said softly. âIâm surprised he hasnât carried it to its logical conclusion and asked for baptism.â
She smiled and shook her head. âIâm afraid your logic isnât as rigorous as Snookumsâ logic. Only angels and human beings have free will; Snookums is neither, therefore he does not have free will. Whatever he does, therefore, must be according to the will of God. Therefore Snookums cannot sin. Therefore, for him, baptism is both unnecessary and undesirable.â
âWhy âundesirableâ?â Mike asked.
âSince he is free from sinâeither original or actualâhe is therefore filled with the plenitude of Godâs grace. The purpose of a sacrament is to give grace to the recipient; it follows that it would be useless to give the Sacrament to Snookums. To perform a sacrament or to receive it when one knows that it will be useless is sacrilege. And sacrilege is undesirable.â
âBrother! But I still donât see how that makes him dangerous.â
âThe operation of the First Law,â Leda said. âFor a man to sin involves endangering his immortal soul. Snookums, therefore, must prevent men from sinning. But sin includes thoughtâintention. Snookums is trying to figure that one [193] out now; if he ever does, heâs going to be a thought policeman, and a strict one.â
âYou mean heâs working on telepathy?â
She laughed humorlessly. âNo. But heâs trying to dope out a system whereby he can tell what a man is going to do a few seconds before he does itâmuscular and nervous preparation, that sort of
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