The Creature from Cleveland Depths by Fritz Leiber (motivational books to read txt) đ
- Author: Fritz Leiber
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âI see. And whatâs the Pooh-Bah for?â
Fay smiled. âCut. My password for activating the setter, so it wonât respond to chance numerals it overhears.â
âBut why Pooh-Bah?â
Fay grinned. âCut. And you a writer. Itâs a literary reference, Gussy. Pooh-Bah (cut!) was Lord High Everything Else in The Mikado. He had a little list and nothing on it would ever be missed.â
âOh, yeah,â Gusterson remembered, glowering. âAs I recall it, all that went on that list was the names of people who were slated to have their heads chopped off by Ko-Ko. Better watch your step, Shorty. It may be a back-handed omen. Maybe all those workers youâre puttinâ ticklers on to pump them full of adrenaline so theyâll overwork without noticinâ it will revolt and come out some day choppinâ for your head.â
âSpare me the Marxist mythology,â Fay protested. âGussy, youâve got a completely wrong slant on Tickler. Itâs true that most of our mass sales so far, bar government and army, have been to large companies purchasing for their employeesââ
âAh-ha!â
ââbut thatâs because thereâs nothing like a tickler for teaching a new man his job. It tells him from instant to instant what he must doâwhile heâs already on the job and without disturbing other workers. Magnetizing a wire with a job pattern is the easiest thing going. And youâd be astonished what the subliminals do for employee morale. Itâs this way, Gussy: most people are too improvident and unimaginative to see in advance the advantages of ticklers. They buy one because the company strongly suggests it and payment is on easy installments withheld from salary. They find a tickler makes the work day go easier. The little fellow perched on your shoulder is a friend exuding comfort and good advice. The first thing heâs set to say is âTake it easy, pal.â
âWithin a week theyâre wearing their tickler 24 hours a dayâand buying a tickler for the wife, so sheâll remember to comb her hair and smile real pretty and cook favorite dishes.â
âI get it, Fay,â Gusterson cut in. âThe tickler is the newest fad for increasing worker efficiency. Once, I read somewheres, it was salt tablets. They had salt-tablet dispensers everywhere, even in air-conditioned offices where there wasnât a moist armpit twice a year and the gals sweat only champagne. A decade later people wondered what all those dusty white pills were for. Sometimes they were mistook for tranquilizers. Itâll be the same way with ticklers. Somebodyâll open a musty closet and see jumbled heaps of these gripping-hand silvery gadgets gathering dust curls andââ
âThey will not!â Fay protested vehemently. âTicklers are not a fadâtheyâre history-changers, theyâre Free-World revolutionary! Why, before Micro Systems put a single one on the market, weâd made it a rule that every Micro employee had to wear one! If thatâs not having supreme confidence in a productââ
âEvery employee except the top executives, of course,â Gusterson interrupted jeeringly. âAnd thatâs not demoting you, Fay. As the R & D chief most closely involved, youâd naturally have to show special enthusiasm.â
âBut youâre wrong there, Gussy,â Fay crowed. âMan for man, our top executives have been more enthusiastic about their personal ticklers than any other class of worker in the whole outfit.â
Gusterson slumped and shook his head. âIf thatâs the case,â he said darkly, âmaybe mankind deserves the tickler.â
âIâll say it does!â Fay agreed loudly without thinking. Then, âOh, can the carping, Gussy. Ticklerâs a great invention. Donât deprecate it just because you had something to do with its genesis. Youâre going to have to get in the swim and wear one.â
âMaybe Iâd rather drown horribly.â
âCan the gloom-talk too! Gussy, I said it before and I say it again, youâre just scared of this new thing. Why, youâve even got the drapes pulled so you wonât have to look at the tickler factory.â
âYes, I am scared,â Gusterson said. âReally sca ⊠AWP!â
Fay whirled around. Daisy was standing in the bedroom doorway, wearing the short silver sheath. This time there was no mask, but her bobbed hair was glitteringly silvered, while her legs, arms, hands, neck, faceâevery bit of her exposed skinâwas painted with beautifully even vertical green stripes.
âI did it as a surprise for Gusterson,â she explained to Fay. âHe says he likes me this way. The green glopâs supposed to be smudgeproof.â
Gusterson did not comment. His face had a rapt expression. âIâll tell you why your ticklerâs so popular, Fay,â he said softly. âItâs not because it backstops the memory or because it boosts the ego with subliminals. Itâs because it takes the hook out of a guy, it takes over the job of withstanding the pressure of living. See, Fay, here are all these little guys in this subterranean rat race with atomic-death squares and chromium-plated reward squares and enough money if you pass Go almost to get to Go againâand a million million rules of the game to keep in mind. Well, hereâs this one little guy and every morning he wakes up thereâs all these things heâs got to keep in mind to do or heâll lose his turn three times in a row and maybe a terrible black rook in iron armorâll loom up and bang him off the chessboard. But now, look, now heâs got his tickler and he tells his sweet silver tickler all these things and the ticklerâs got to remember them. Of course heâll have to do them eventually but meanwhile the pressureâs off him, the hookâs out of his short hairs. Heâs shifted the responsibilityâŠ.â
âWell, whatâs so bad about that?â Fay broke in loudly. âWhatâs wrong with taking the pressure off little guys? Why shouldnât Tickler be a super-ego surrogate? Microâs Motivations chief noticed that positive feature straight off and scored it three pluses. Besides, itâs nothing but a gaudy way of saying that Tickler backstops the memory. Seriously, Gussy, whatâs so bad about it?â
âI donât know,â Gusterson said slowly, his eyes still far away. âI just know it feels bad to me.â He crinkled his big forehead. âWell for one thing,â he said, âit means that a manâs taking orders from something else. Heâs got a kind of master. Heâs sinking back into a slave psychology.â
âHeâs only taking orders from himself,â Fay countered disgustedly. âTicklerâs just a mech reminder, a notebook, in essence no more than the back of an old envelope. Itâs no master.â
âAre you absolutely sure of that?â Gusterson asked quietly.
âWhy, Gussy, you big oafââ Fay began heatedly. Suddenly his features quirked and he twitched. ââScuse me, folks,â he said rapidly, heading for the door, âbut my tickler told me I gotta go.â
âHey Fay, donât you mean you told your tickler to tell you when it was time to go?â Gusterson called after him.
Fay looked back in the doorway. He wet his lips, his eyes moved from side to side. âIâm not quite sure,â he said in an odd strained voice and darted out.
Gusterson stared for some seconds at the pattern of emptiness Fay had left. Then he shivered. Then he shrugged. âI must be slipping,â he muttered. âI never even suggested something for him to invent.â Then he looked around at Daisy, who was still standing poker-faced in her doorway.
âHey, you look like something out of the Arabian Nights,â he told her. âAre you supposed to be anything special? How far do those stripes go, anyway?â
âYou could probably find out,â she told him coolly. âAll you have to do is kill me a dragon or two first.â
He studied her. âMy God,â he said reverently, âI really have all the fun in life. What do I do to deserve this?â
âYouâve got a big gun,â she told him, âand you go out in the world with it and hold up big companies and take yards and yards of money away from them in rolls like ribbon and bring it all home to me.â
âDonât say that about the gun again,â he said. âDonât whisper it, donât even think it. Iâve got one, dammitâthirty-eight caliber, yetâand I donât want some psionic monitor with two-way clairaudience they havenât told me about catching the whisper and coming to take the gun away from us. Itâs one of the few individuality symbols weâve got left.â
Suddenly Daisy whirled away from the door, spun three times so that her silvered hair stood out like a metal coolie hat, and sank to a curtsey in the middle of the room.
âIâve just thought of what I am,â she announced, fluttering her eyelashes at him. âIâm a sweet silver tickler with green stripes.â
VNext day Daisy cashed the Micro check for ten hundred silver smackers, which she hid in a broken radionic coffee urn. Gusterson sold his insanity novel and started a new one about a mad medic with a hiccupy hysterical chuckle, who gimmicked Moodmasters to turn mental patients into nymphomaniacs, mass murderers and compulsive saints. But this time he couldnât get Fay out of his mind, or the last chilling words the nervous little man had spoken.
For that matter, he couldnât blank the underground out of his mind as effectively as usually. He had the feeling that a new kind of mole was loose in the burrows and that the ground at the foot of their skyscraper might start humping up any minute.
Toward the end of one afternoon he tucked a half dozen newly typed sheets in his pocket, shrouded his typer, went to the hatrack and took down his prize: a minerâs hard-top cap with electric headlamp.
âGoinâ below, Capân,â he shouted toward the kitchen.
âBe back for second dog watch,â Daisy replied. âRemember what I told you about lassoing me some art-conscious girl neighbors.â
âOnly if I meet a piebald one with a taste for Scotchâor maybe a pearl gray biped jaguar with violet spots,â Gusterson told her, clapping on the cap with a We-Who-Are-About-To-Die gesture.
Halfway across the park to the escalator bunker Gustersonâs heart began to tick. He resolutely switched on his headlamp.
As heâd known it would, the hatch robot whirred an extra and higher-pitched ten seconds when it came to his topside address, but it ultimately dilated the hatch for him, first handing him a claim check for his ID card.
Gustersonâs heart was ticking like a sledgehammer by now. He hopped clumsily onto the escalator, clutched the moving guard rail to either side, then shut his eyes as the steps went over the edge and became what felt like vertical. An instant later he forced his eyes open, unclipped a hand from the rail and touched the second switch beside his headlamp, which instantly began to blink whitely, as if he were a civilian plane flying into a nest of military jobs.
With a further effort he kept his eyes open and flinchingly surveyed the scene around him. After zigging through a bombproof half-furlong of roof, he was dropping into a large twilit cave. The blue-black ceiling twinkled with stars. The walls were pierced at floor level by a dozen archways with busy niche stores and glowing advertisements crowded between them. From the archways some three dozen slidewalks curved out, tangenting off each other in a bewildering multiple cloverleaf. The slidewalks were packed with people, traveling motionless like purposeful statues or pivoting with practiced grace from one slidewalk to another, like a thousand toreros doing veronicas.
The slidewalks were moving faster than he recalled from his last venture underground and at the same time the whole pedestrian concourse was quieter than he remembered. It was as if the five thousand or so moles in view were all listeningâfor what? But there was something else that had changed about themâa change that he couldnât for a moment define, or unconsciously didnât want to. Clothing style? No ⊠My God, they werenât all wearing identical monster masks? No ⊠Hair color?⊠WellâŠ.
He was studying them so intently that he forgot his escalator was landing. He came off it with a heel-jarring stumble and bumped into a knot of four men on the tiny triangular hold-still. These four at least sported a new style-wrinkle: ribbed gray shoulder-capes that made them look as if their heads were poking up out of the center of bulgy umbrellas or giant mushrooms.
One of them grabbed hold of Gusterson and saved him from staggering onto a slidewalk that might have carried him to Toledo.
âGussy, you dog, you must have esped I wanted to see you,â Fay cried, patting him on the elbows. âMeet Davidson and Kester and Hazen, colleagues of mine. Weâre all Micro-men.â Fayâs companions were staring strangely at Gustersonâs blinking headlamp. Fay explained rapidly, âMr. Gusterson is an insanity novelist. You know, I-D.â
âInner-directed spells id,â Gusterson said absently, still staring at the interweaving crowd beyond them, trying to figure out what made them different from last trip. âCreativity fuel. Cranky. Explodes through the parietal fissure if you look at it cross-eyed.â
âHa-ha,â Fay laughed. âWell, boys, Iâve found my man. Howâs the new novel perking, Gussy?â
âGot my climax, I think,â Gusterson mumbled, still peering puzzledly around Fay at the slidestanders. âMoodmasterâs going to come alive. Ever occur to you that âmoodâ is âdoomâ spelled backwards? And thenâŠ.â He let his voice trail off as he realized that Kester and Davidson and Hazen had made their farewells and were sliding into the distance. He reminded himself wryly that nobody ever wants to hear an author talkâheâs much too good a listener to be wasted that way. Letâs see, was it that everybody in the crowd had the same facial expressionâŠ? Or showed symptoms of the same diseaseâŠ?
âI was coming to visit you, but now you can pay me a call,â Fay was saying. âThere are two matters I want toââ
Gusterson stiffened. âMy God, theyâre all hunchbacked!â he yelled.
âShh! Of course they are,â Fay whispered reprovingly. âTheyâre all wearing their ticklers. But you donât need to be insulting about it.â
âIâm gettinâ out oâ here.â Gusterson turned to flee as if from five thousand Richard the Thirds.
âOh no youâre not,â Fay amended, drawing him back with one hand. Somehow, underground, the little man seemed to carry more weight. âYouâre having cocktails in my thinking box. Besides, climbing a down escaladder will give you a heart attack.â
In his home habitat Gusterson was about as easy to handle as a rogue rhinoceros, but away from itâand especially if undergroundâhe became more like
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