The Variable Man by Philip K. Dick (most interesting books to read txt) đ
- Author: Philip K. Dick
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âElliot. Richard Elliot.â
âAnd your sonâs name?â
âSteven.â
âIt was last night this happened?â
âAbout eight oâclock.â
âGo on.â
âSteven came into the house. He acted queerly. He was carrying his inter-system vidsender.â Elliot pointed at the box on Reinhartâs desk. âThat. He was nervous and excited. I asked what was wrong. For awhile he couldnât tell me. He was quite upset. Then he showed me the vidsender.â Elliot took a deep, shaky breath. âI could see right away it was different. You see Iâm an electrical engineer. I had opened it once before, to put in a new battery. I had a fairly good idea how it should look.â Elliot hesitated. âCommissioner, it had been changed. A lot of the wiring was different. Moved around. Relays connected differently. Some parts were missing. New parts had been jury rigged out of old. Then I discovered the thing that made me call Security. The vidsenderâit really worked.â
âWorked?â
âYou see, it never was anything more than a toy. With a range of a few city blocks. So the kids could call back and forth from their rooms. Like a sort of portable vidscreen. Commissioner, I tried out the vidsender, pushing the call button and speaking into the microphone. IâI got a ship of the line. A battleship, operating beyond Proxima Centaurusâover eight light years away. As far out as the actual vidsenders operate. Then I called Security. Right away.â
For a time Reinhart was silent. Finally he tapped the box lying on the desk. âYou got a ship of the lineâwith this?â
âThatâs right.â
âHow big are the regular vidsenders?â
Dixon supplied the information. âAs big as a twenty-ton safe.â
âThatâs what I thought.â Reinhart waved his hand impatiently. âAll right, Elliot. Thanks for turning the information over to us. Thatâs all.â
Security police led Elliot outside the office.
Reinhart and Dixon looked at each other. âThis is bad,â Reinhart said harshly. âHe has some ability, some kind of mechanical ability. Genius, perhaps, to do a thing like this. Look at the period he came from, Dixon. The early part of the twentieth century. Before the wars began. That was a unique period. There was a certain vitality, a certain ability. It was a period of incredible growth and discovery. Edison. Pasteur. Burbank. The Wright brothers. Inventions and machines. People had an uncanny ability with machines. A kind of intuition about machinesâwhich we donât have.â
âYou meanââ
âI mean a person like this coming into our own time is bad in itself, war or no war. Heâs too different. Heâs oriented along different lines. He has abilities we lack. This fixing skill of his. It throws us off, out of kilter. And with the warâŠ.
âNow Iâm beginning to understand why the SRB machines couldnât factor him. Itâs impossible for us to understand this kind of person. Winslow says he asked for work, any kind of work. The man said he could do anything, fix anything. Do you understand what that means?â
âNo,â Dixon said. âWhat does it mean?â
âCan any of us fix anything? No. None of us can do that. Weâre specialized. Each of us has his own line, his own work. I understand my work, you understand yours. The tendency in evolution is toward greater and greater specialization. Manâs society is an ecology that forces adaptation to it. Continual complexity makes it impossible for any of us to know anything outside our own personal fieldâI canât follow the work of the man sitting at the next desk over from me. Too much knowledge has piled up in each field. And thereâs too many fields.
âThis man is different. He can fix anything, do anything. He doesnât work with knowledge, with scienceâthe classified accumulation of facts. He knows nothing. Itâs not in his head, a form of learning. He works by intuitionâhis power is in his hands, not his head. Jack-of-all-trades. His hands! Like a painter, an artist. In his handsâand he cuts across our lives like a knife-blade.â
âAnd the other problem?â
âThe other problem is that this man, this variable man, has escaped into the Albertine Mountain range. Now weâll have one hell of a time finding him. Heâs cleverâin a strange kind of way. Like some sort of animal. Heâs going to be hard to catch.â
Reinhart sent Dixon out. After a moment he gathered up the handful of reports on his desk and carried them up to the SRB room. The SRB room was closed up, sealed off by a ring of armed Security police. Standing angrily before the ring of police was Peter Sherikov, his beard waggling angrily, his immense hands on his hips.
âWhatâs going on?â Sherikov demanded. âWhy canât I go in and peep at the odds?â
âSorry.â Reinhart cleared the police aside. âCome inside with me. Iâll explain.â The doors opened for them and they entered. Behind them the doors shut and the ring of police formed outside. âWhat brings you away from your lab?â Reinhart asked.
Sherikov shrugged. âSeveral things. I wanted to see you. I called you on the vidphone and they said you werenât available. I thought maybe something had happened. Whatâs up?â
âIâll tell you in a few minutes.â Reinhart called Kaplan over. âHere are some new items. Feed them in right away. I want to see if the machines can total them.â
âCertainly, Commissioner.â Kaplan took the message plates and placed them on an intake belt. The machines hummed into life.
âWeâll know soon,â Reinhart said, half aloud.
Sherikov shot him a keen glance. âWeâll know what? Let me in on it. Whatâs taking place?â
âWeâre in trouble. For twenty-four hours the machines havenât given any reading at all. Nothing but a blank. A total blank.â
Sherikovâs features registered disbelief. âBut that isnât possible. Some odds exist at all times.â
âThe odds exist, but the machines arenât able to calculate them.â
âWhy not?â
âBecause a variable factor has been introduced. A factor which the machines canât handle. They canât make any predictions from it.â
âCanât they reject it?â Sherikov said slyly. âCanât they justâjust ignore it?â
âNo. It exists, as real data. Therefore it affects the balance of the material, the sum total of all other available data. To reject it would be to give a false reading. The machines canât reject any data thatâs known to be true.â
Sherikov pulled moodily at his black beard. âI would be interested in knowing what sort of factor the machines canât handle. I thought they could take in all data pertaining to contemporary reality.â
âThey can. This factor has nothing to do with contemporary reality. Thatâs the trouble. Histo-research in bringing its time bubble back from the past got overzealous and cut the circuit too quickly. The bubble came back loadedâwith a man from the twentieth century. A man from the past.â
âI see. A man from two centuries ago.â The big Pole frowned. âAnd with a radically different Weltanschauung. No connection with our present society. Not integrated along our lines at all. Therefore the SRB machines are perplexed.â
Reinhart grinned. âPerplexed? I suppose so. In any case, they canât do anything with the data about this man. The variable man. No statistics at all have been thrown upâno predictions have been made. And it knocks everything else out of phase. Weâre dependent on the constant showing of these odds. The whole war effort is geared around them.â
âThe horse-shoe nail. Remember the old poem? âFor want of a nail the shoe was lost. For want of the shoe the horse was lost. For want of the horse the rider was lost. For wantâââ
âExactly. A single factor coming along like this, one single individual, can throw everything off. It doesnât seem possible that one person could knock an entire society out of balanceâbut apparently it is.â
âWhat are you doing about this man?â
âThe Security police are organized in a mass search for him.â
âResults?â
âHe escaped into the Albertine Mountain Range last night. Itâll be hard to find him. We must expect him to be loose for another forty-eight hours. Itâll take that long for us to arrange the annihilation of the range area. Perhaps a trifle longer. And meanwhileââ
âReady, Commissioner,â Kaplan interrupted. âThe new totals.â
The SRB machines had finished factoring the new data. Reinhart and Sherikov hurried to take their places before the view windows.
For a moment nothing happened. Then odds were put up, locking in place.
Sherikov gasped. 99-2. In favor of Terra. âThatâs wonderful! Now weââ
The odds vanished. New odds took their places. 97-4. In favor of Centaurus. Sherikov groaned in astonished dismay. âWait,â Reinhart said to him. âI donât think theyâll last.â
The odds vanished. A rapid series of odds shot across the screen, a violent stream of numbers, changing almost instantly. At last the machines became silent.
Nothing showed. No odds. No totals at all. The view windows were blank.
âYou see?â Reinhart murmured. âThe same damn thing!â
Sherikov pondered. âReinhart, youâre too Anglo-Saxon, too impulsive. Be more Slavic. This man will be captured and destroyed within two days. You said so yourself. Meanwhile, weâre all working night and day on the war effort. The warfleet is waiting near Proxima, taking up positions for the attack on the Centaurans. All our war plants are going full blast. By the time the attack date comes weâll have a full-sized invasion army ready to take off for the long trip to the Centauran colonies. The whole Terran population has been mobilized. The eight supply planets are pouring in material. All this is going on day and night, even without odds showing. Long before the attack comes this man will certainly be dead, and the machines will be able to show odds again.â
Reinhart considered. âBut it worries me, a man like that out in the open. Loose. A man who canât be predicted. It goes against science. Weâve been making statistical reports on society for two centuries. We have immense files of data. The machines are able to predict what each person and group will do at a given time, in a given situation. But this man is beyond all prediction. Heâs a variable. Itâs contrary to science.â
âThe indeterminate particle.â
âWhatâs that?â
âThe particle that moves in such a way that we canât predict what position it will occupy at a given second. Random. The random particle.â
âExactly. Itâsâitâs unnatural.â
Sherikov laughed sarcastically. âDonât worry about it, Commissioner. The man will be captured and things will return to their natural state. Youâll be able to predict people again, like laboratory rats in a maze. By the wayâwhy is this room guarded?â
âI donât want anyone to know the machines show no totals. Itâs dangerous to the war effort.â
âMargaret Duffe, for example?â
Reinhart nodded reluctantly. âTheyâre too timid, these parliamentarians. If they discover we have no SRB odds theyâll want to shut down the war planning and go back to waiting.â
âToo slow for you, Commissioner? Laws, debates, council meetings, discussionsâŠ. Saves a lot of time if one man has all the power. One man to tell people what to do, think for them, lead them around.â
Reinhart eyed the big Pole critically. âThat reminds me. How is Icarus coming? Have you continued to make progress on the control turret?â
A scowl crossed Sherikovâs broad features. âThe control turret?â He waved his big hand vaguely. âI would say itâs coming along all right. Weâll catch up in time.â
Instantly Reinhart became alert. âCatch up? You mean youâre still behind?â
âSomewhat. A little. But weâll catch up.â Sherikov retreated toward the door. âLetâs go down to the cafeteria and have a cup of coffee. You worry too much, Commissioner. Take things more in your stride.â
âI suppose youâre right.â The two men walked out into the hall. âIâm on edge. This variable man. I canât get him out of my mind.â
âHas he done anything yet?â
âNothing important. Rewired a childâs toy. A toy vidsender.â
âOh?â Sherikov showed interest. âWhat do you mean? What did he do?â
âIâll show you.â Reinhart led Sherikov down the hall to his office. They entered and Reinhart locked the door. He handed Sherikov the toy and roughed in what Cole had done. A strange look crossed Sherikovâs face. He found the studs on the box and depressed them. The box opened. The big Pole sat down at the desk and began to study the interior of the box. âYouâre sure it was the man from the past who rewired this?â
âOf course. On the spot. The boy damaged it playing. The variable man came along and the boy asked him to fix it. He fixed it, all right.â
âIncredible.â Sherikovâs eyes were only an inch from the wiring. âSuch tiny relays. How could heââ
âWhat?â
âNothing.â Sherikov got abruptly to his feet, closing the box carefully. âCan I take this along? To my lab? Iâd like to analyze it more fully.â
âOf course. But why?â
âNo special reason. Letâs go get our coffee.â Sherikov headed toward the door. âYou say you expect to capture this man in a day or so?â
âKill him, not capture him. Weâve got to eliminate him as a piece of data. Weâre assembling the attack formations right now. No slip-ups, this time. Weâre in the process of setting up a cross-bombing pattern to level the entire Albertine range. He must be destroyed, within the next forty-eight hours.â
Sherikov nodded absently. âOf course,â he murmured. A preoccupied expression still remained on his broad features. âI understand perfectly.â
Thomas Cole crouched over the fire he had built, warming his hands. It was almost morning. The sky was turning violet gray. The mountain air was crisp and chill. Cole shivered and pulled himself closer to the fire.
The heat felt good against his hands. His hands. He gazed down at them, glowing yellow-red in the firelight. The nails were black and chipped. Warts and endless calluses on each finger, and the palms. But they were good hands; the fingers were long and tapered. He respected them, although in some ways he didnât understand them.
Cole was deep in thought, meditating over his situation. He had been in the mountains two nights and a day. The first night had been the worst. Stumbling and falling, making his way uncertainly up the steep slopes, through the tangled brush and undergrowthâ
But when the sun came up he was safe, deep in the mountains, between two great peaks. And by the time the sun had set again he had fixed himself up a shelter and a means of making a fire. Now he had a neat little box trap, operated by a plaited grass rope
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