The Creature from Cleveland Depths by Fritz Leiber (motivational books to read txt) đ
- Author: Fritz Leiber
Book online «The Creature from Cleveland Depths by Fritz Leiber (motivational books to read txt) đ». Author Fritz Leiber
âSo you wonât stand out,â he explained. Another swift survey. âYouâll do. Come on, Gussy. I got lots to brief you on.â Three rapid paces and then Gustersonâs feet would have gone out from under him except that Fay gave him a mighty shove. The small man sprang onto the slidewalk after him and then they were skimming effortlessly side by side.
Gusterson felt frightened and twice as hunchbacked as the slidestanders around himâmorally as well as physically.
Nevertheless he countered bravely, âI got things to brief you on. I got six pages of cautions on tiââ
âShh!â Fay stopped him. âLetâs use my hushbox.â
He drew out his pancake phone and stretched it so that it covered both their lower faces, like a double yashmak. Gusterson, his neck pushing into the ribbed bulge of the shoulder cape so he could be cheek to cheek with Fay, felt horribly conspicuous, but then he noticed that none of the slidestanders were paying them the least attention. The reason for their abstraction occurred to him. They were listening to their ticklers! He shuddered.
âI got six pages of caution on ticklers,â he repeated into the hot, moist quiet of the pancake phone. âI typed âem so I wouldnât forget âem in the heat of polemicking. I want you to read every word. Fay, Iâve had it on my mind ever since I started wondering whether it was you or your tickler made you duck out of our place last time you were there. I want you toââ
âHa-ha! All in good time.â In the pancake phone Fayâs laugh was brassy. âBut Iâm glad youâve decided to lend a hand, Gussy. This thing is moving faaaasst. Nationwise, adult underground ticklerization is 90 per cent complete.â
âI donât believe that,â Gusterson protested while glaring at the hunchbacks around them. The slidewalk was gliding down a low glow-ceiling tunnel lined with doors and advertisements. Rapt-eyed people were pirouetting on and off. âA thing just canât develop that fast, Fay. Itâs against nature.â
âHa, but weâre not in nature, weâre in culture. The progress of an industrial scientific culture is geometric. It goes n-times as many jumps as it takes. More than geometricâexponential. Confidentially, Microâs Math chief tells me weâre currently on a fourth-power progress curve trending into a fifth.â
âYou mean weâre goinâ so fast we got to watch out we donât bump ourselves in the rear when we come around again?â Gusterson asked, scanning the tunnel ahead for curves. âOr just shoot straight up to infinity?â
âExactly! Of course most of the last power and a half is due to Tickler itself. Gussy, the ticklerâs already eliminated absenteeism, alcoholism and aboulia in numerous urban areasâand thatâs just one letter of the alphabet! If Tickler doesnât turn us into a nation of photo-memory constant-creative-flow geniuses in six months, Iâll come live topside.â
âYou mean because a lot of people are standing around glassy-eyed listening to something mumbling in their ear that itâs a good thing?â
âGussy, you donât know progress when you see it. Tickler is the greatest invention since language. Bar none, itâs the greatest instrument ever devised for integrating a man into all phases of his environment. Under the present routine a newly purchased tickler first goes to government and civilian defense for primary patterning, then to the purchaserâs employer, then to his doctor-psycher, then to his local bunker captain, then to him. Everything thatâs needful for a manâs welfare gets on the spools. Efficiency cubed! Incidentally, Russiaâs got the tickler now. Our dip-satellites have photographed it. Itâs like ours except the Commies wear it on the left shoulder ⊠but theyâre two weeks behind us developmentwise and theyâll never close the gap!â
Gusterson reared up out of the pancake phone to take a deep breath. A sulky-lipped sylph-figured girl two feet from him twitchedâmedium cootch, he judgedâthen fumbled in her belt-bag for a pill and popped it in her mouth.
âHell, the ticklerâs not even efficient yet about little things,â Gusterson blatted, diving back into the privacy-yashmak he was sharing with Fay. âWhynât that girlâs doctor have the Moodmaster component of her tickler inject her with medicine?â
âHer doctor probably wants her to have the discipline of pill-takingâor the exercise,â Fay answered glibly. âLook sharp now. Hereâs where we fork. Iâm taking you through Microâs postern.â
A ribbon of slidewalk split itself from the main band and angled off into a short alley. Gusterson hardly felt the constant-speed juncture as they crossed it. Then the secondary ribbon speeded up, carrying them at about 30 feet a second toward the blank concrete wall in which the alley ended. Gusterson prepared to jump, but Fay grabbed him with one hand and with the other held up toward the wall a badge and a button. When they were about ten feet away the wall whipped aside, then whipped shut behind them so fast that Gusterson wondered momentarily if he still had his heels and the seat of his pants.
Fay, tucking away his badge and pancake phone, dropped the button in Gustersonâs vest pocket. âUse it when you leave,â he said casually. âThat is, if you leave.â
Gusterson, who was trying to read the Do and Donât posters papering the walls they were passing, started to probe that last sinister supposition, but just then the ribbon slowed, a swinging door opened and closed behind them and they found themselves in a luxuriously furnished thinking box measuring at least eight feet by five.
âHey, this is something,â Gusterson said appreciatively to show he wasnât an utter yokel. Then, drawing on research heâd done for period novels, âWhy, itâs as big as a Pullman car compartment, or a first mateâs cabin in the War of 1812. You really must rate.â
Fay nodded, smiled wanly and sat down with a sigh on a compact overstuffed swivel chair. He let his arms dangle and his head sink into his puffed shoulder cape. Gusterson stared at him. It was the first time he could ever recall the little man showing fatigue.
âTickler currently does have one serious drawback,â Fay volunteered. âIt weighs 28 pounds. You feel it when youâve been on your feet a couple of hours. No question weâre going to give the next model that antigravity feature you mentioned for pursuit grenades. Weâd have had it in this model except there were so many other things to be incorporated.â He sighed again. âWhy, the scanning and decision-making elements alone tripled the mass.â
âHey,â Gusterson protested, thinking especially of the sulky-lipped girl, âdo you mean to tell me all those other people were toting two stone?â
Fay shook his head heavily. âThey were all wearing Mark 3 or 4. Iâm wearing Mark 6,â he said, as one might say, âIâm carrying the genuine Cross, not one of the balsa ones.â
But then his face brightened a little and he went on. âOf course the new improved features make it more than worth it ⊠and you hardly feel it at all at night when youâre lying down ⊠and if you remember to talcum under it twice a day, no sores develop ⊠at least not very big onesâŠ.â
Backing away involuntarily, Gusterson felt something prod his right shoulderblade. Ripping open his coat, he convulsively plunged his hand under it and tore out Fayâs belt-bag ⊠and then set it down very gently on the top of a shallow cabinet and relaxed with the sigh of one who has escaped a great, if symbolic, danger. Then he remembered something Fay had mentioned. He straightened again.
âHey, you said itâs got scanning and decision-making elements. That means your tickler thinks, even by your fancy standards. And if it thinks, itâs conscious.â
âGussy,â Fay said wearily, frowning, âall sorts of things nowadays have S&DM elements. Mail sorters, missiles, robot medics, high-style mannequins, just to name some of the Ms. They âthink,â to use that archaic word, but itâs neither here nor there. And theyâre certainly not conscious.â
âYour tickler thinks,â Gusterson repeated stubbornly, âjust like I warned you it would. It sits on your shoulder, ridinâ you like you was a pony or a starved St. Bernard, and now it thinks.â
âSuppose it does?â Fay yawned. âWhat of it?â He gave a rapid sinuous one-sided shrug that made it look for a moment as if his left arm had three elbows. It stuck in Gustersonâs mind, for he had never seen Fay use such a gesture and he wondered where heâd picked it up. Maybe imitating a double-jointed Micro Finance chief? Fay yawned again and said, âPlease, Gussy, donât disturb me for a minute or so.â His eyes half closed.
Gusterson studied Fayâs sunken-cheeked face and the great puff of his shoulder cape.
âSay, Fay,â he asked in a soft voice after about five minutes, âare you meditating?â
âWhy, no,â Fay responded, starting up and then stifling another yawn. âJust resting a bit. I seem to get more tired these days, somehow. Youâll have to excuse me, Gussy. But what made you think of meditation?â
âOh, I just got to wonderinâ in that direction,â Gusterson said. âYou see, when you first started to develop Tickler, it occurred to me that there was one thing about it that might be real good even if you did give it S&DM elements. Itâs this: having a mech secretary to take charge of his obligations and routine in the real world might allow a man to slide into the other world, the world of thoughts and feelings and intuitions, and sort of ooze around in there and accomplish things. Know any of the people using Tickler that way, hey?â
âOf course not,â Fay denied with a bright incredulous laugh. âWhoâd want to loaf around in an imaginary world and take a chance of missing out on what his ticklerâs doing?âI mean, on what his tickler has in store for himâwhat heâs told his tickler to have in store for him.â
Ignoring Gustersonâs shiver, Fay straightened up and seemed to brisken himself. âHa, that little slump did me good. A tickler makes you rest, you knowâitâs one of the great things about it. Pooh-Bahâs kinder to me than I ever was to myself.â He buttoned open a tiny refrigerator and took out two waxed cardboard cubes and handed one to Gusterson. âMartini? Hope you donât mind drinking from the carton. Cheers. Now, Gussy old pal, there are two matters I want to take up with youââ
âHold it,â Gusterson said with something of his old authority. âThereâs something I got to get off my mind first.â He pulled the typed pages out of his inside pocket and straightened them. âI told you about these,â he said. âI want you to read them before you do anything else. Here.â
Fay looked toward the pages and nodded, but did not take them yet. He lifted his hands to his throat and unhooked the clasp of his cape, then hesitated.
âYou wear that thing to hide the hump your tickler makes?â Gusterson filled in. âYou got better taste than those other moles.â
âNot to hide it, exactly,â Fay protested, âbut just so the others wonât be jealous. I wouldnât feel comfortable parading a free-scanning decision-capable Mark 6 tickler in front of people who canât buy itâuntil it goes on open sale at twenty-two fifteen tonight. Lot of shelterfolk wonât be sleeping tonight. Theyâll be queued up to trade in their old tickler for a Mark 6 almost as good as Pooh-Bah.â
He started to jerk his hands apart, hesitated again with an oddly apprehensive look at the big man, then whirled off the cape.
VIGusterson sucked in such a big gasp that he hiccuped. The right shoulder of Fayâs jacket and shirt had been cut away. Thrusting up through the neatly hemmed hole was a silvery gray hump with a one-eyed turret atop it and two multi-jointed metal arms ending in little claws.
It looked like the top half of a pseudo-science robotâa squat evil child robot, Gusterson told himself, which had lost its legs in a railway accidentâand it seemed to him that a red fleck was moving around imperceptibly in the huge single eye.
âIâll take that memo now,â Fay said coolly, reaching out his hand. He caught the rustling sheets as they slipped from Gustersonâs fingers, evened them up very precisely by tapping them on his knee ⊠and then handed them over his shoulder to his tickler, which clicked its claws around either margin and then began rather swiftly to lift the top sheet past its single eye at a distance of about six inches.
âThe first matter I want to take up with you, Gussy,â Fay began, paying no attention whatsoever to the little scene on his shoulder, ââor warn you about, ratherâis the imminent ticklerization of schoolchildren, geriatrics, convicts and topsiders. At three zero zero tomorrow ticklers become mandatory for all adult shelterfolk. The mop-up operations wonât be long in comingâin fact, these days we find that the square root of the estimated time of a new development is generally the best time estimate. Gussy, I strongly advise you to start wearing a tickler now. And Daisy and your moppets. If you heed my advice, your kids will have the jump on your class. Transition and conditioning are easy, since Tickler itself sees to it.â
Pooh-Bah leafed the first page to the back of the packet and began lifting the second past his eyeâa little more swiftly than the first.
âIâve got a Mark 6 tickler all warmed up for you,â Fay pressed, âand a shoulder cape. You wonât feel one bit conspicuous.â He noticed the direction of Gustersonâs gaze and remarked, âFascinating mechanism, isnât it? Of course 28 pounds are a bit oppressive, but then you have to remember itâs only a way-station to free-floating Mark 7 or 8.â
Pooh-Bah finished page two and began to race through page three.
âBut I wanted you to read it,â Gusterson said bemusedly, staring.
âPooh-Bah will do a better job than I could,â Fay assured him. âGet the gist without losing the chaff.â
âBut dammit, itâs all about him,â Gusterson said a little more strongly. âHe wonât be objective about
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