Unwise Child by Randall Garrett (early reader chapter books .TXT) đ
- Author: Randall Garrett
Book online «Unwise Child by Randall Garrett (early reader chapter books .TXT) đ». Author Randall Garrett
The security man looked at his wrist watch. âHeâs down in the cafeteria now, sir. Itâs coffee time, and Doc Fitzhugh is as regular as a satellite orbit.â
âIâm glad you didnât say âclockwork,ââ Mike told him. âIâve had enough dealings with machines today. Where is this coffee haven?â
The ensign gave directions for reaching the cafeteria, and Mike pushed open the door marked entrance. He had to [70] pass through another inner door guarded by another pair of SP men who checked his ID card again, then he had to ramble through hallways that went off at queer angles to each other, but he finally found the cafeteria.
He nabbed the first passer-by and asked him to point out Dr. Fitzhugh. The passer-by was obliging; he indicated a smallish, elderly man who was sitting by himself at one of the tables.
Mike made his way through the tray-carrying hordes that were milling about, and finally ended up at the table where the smallish man was sitting.
âDr. Fitzhugh?â Mike offered his hand. âIâm Commander Gabriel. Minister Wallingford appointed me Engineering Officer of the Branchell.â
Dr. Fitzhugh shook Mikeâs hand with apparent pleasure. âOh yes. Sit down, Commander. What can I do for you?â
Mike had already peeled off his electroparka. He hung it over the back of a chair and said: âMind if I grab a cup of coffee, Doctor? Iâve just come from topside, and I think the cold has made its way clean to my bones.â He paused. âWould you like another cup?â
Dr. Fitzhugh looked at his watch. âI have time for one more, thanks.â
By the time Mike had returned with the cups, he had recalled where he had heard the name Fitzhugh before.
âIt just occurred to me,â he said as he sat down. âYou must be Dr. Morris Fitzhugh.â
Fitzhugh nodded. âThatâs right.â He wore a perpetually worried look, which made his face look more wrinkled than his fifty years of age would normally have accounted for. Mike was privately of the opinion that if Fitzhugh ever [71] really tried to look worried, his ears would meet over the bridge of his long nose.
âIâve read a couple of your articles in the Journal,â Mike explained, âbut I didnât connect the name until I saw you. I recognized you from your picture.â
Fitzhugh smiled, which merely served to wrinkle his face even more.
Mike the Angel spent the next several minutes feeling the man out, then he went on to explain what had happened with Snookums out in the foyer, which launched Dr. Fitzhugh into an explanation.
âHe didnât want help, of course; he was merely conducting an experiment. There are many areas of knowledge in which he is as naĂŻve as a child.â
Mike nodded. âIt figures. At first I thought he was just a remote-control tool, but I finally saw that he was a real, honest-to-goodness robot. Who gave him the idea to make such an experiment as that?â
âNo one at all,â said Dr. Fitzhugh. âHeâs built to make up his own experiments.â
Mike the Angelâs classic face regarded the wrinkled one of Dr. Fitzhugh. âHis own experiments? But a robotââ
Fitzhugh held up a bony hand, gesturing for attention and silence. He got it from Mike.
âSnookums,â he said, âis no ordinary robot, Commander.â
Mike waited for more. When none came, he said: âSo I gather.â He sipped at his black coffee. âThat machine I saw is actually a remote-control tool, isnât it? Snookumsâ actual brain is in Cargo Hold One of the William Branchell.â
âThatâs right.â Dr. Fitzhugh began reaching into various pockets about his person. He extracted a tobacco pouch, a [72] briar pipe, and a jet-flame lighter. Then he began speaking as he went through the pipe smokerâs ritual of filling, tamping, and lighting.
âSnookums,â he began, âis a self-activating, problem-seeking computer with input and output sensory and action mechanisms analogous to those of a human being.â He pushed more tobacco into the bowl of his pipe with a bony forefinger. âHeâs as close to being a living creature as anything Man has yet devised.â
âWhat about the synthecells theyâre making at Boston Med?â Mike asked, looking innocent.
Fitzhughâs contour-map face wrinkled up even more. âI should have said âliving intelligence,ââ he corrected himself. âHeâs a true robot, in the old original sense of the word; an artificial entity that displays almost every function of a living, intelligent creature. And, at the same time, he has the accuracy and speed that is normal to a cryotron computer.â
Mike the Angel said nothing while Fitzhugh fired up his lighter and directed the jet of flame into the bowl and puffed up great clouds of smoke which obscured his face.
While the roboticist puffed, Mike let his gaze wander idly over the other people in the cafeteria. He was wondering how much longer he could talk to Fitzhugh before Captain Quill beganâ
And then he saw the redhead.
There is never much point in describing a really beautiful girl. Each man has his own ideas of what it takes for a girl to be âprettyâ or âfascinatingâ or âlovelyâ or almost any other adjective that can be applied to the noun âgirl.â But âbeautifulâ is a cultural concept, at least as far as females are concerned, and there is no point in describing a cultural [73] concept. Itâs one of those things that everybody knows, and descriptions merely become repetitious and monotonous.
This particular example filled, in every respect, the definition of âbeautifulâ according to the culture of the white Americo-European subclass of the human race as of anno Domini 2087. The elements and proportions and symmetry fit almost perfectly into the ideal mold. It is only necessary to fill in some of the minor details which are allowed to vary without distorting the ideal.
She had red hair and blue eyes and was wearing a green zipsuit.
And she was coming toward the table where Mike and Dr. Fitzhugh were sitting.
â... such a tremendous number of elements,â Dr. Fitzhugh was saying, âthat it was possibleâand necessaryâto introduce a certain randomity within the circuit choices themselvesâ Ah! Hello, Leda, my dear!â
Mike and Fitzhugh rose from their seats.
âLeda, this is Commander Gabriel, the Engineering Officer of the Brainchild,â said Fitzhugh. âCommander, Miss Leda Crannon, our psychologist.â
Mike had been allowing his eyes to wander over the girl, inspecting her ankles, her hair, and all vital points of interest between. But when he heard the name âCrannon,â his eyes snapped up to meet hers.
He hadnât recognized the girl without her parka and wouldnât have known her name if the SP ensign hadnât mentioned it. Obviously, she didnât recognize Mike at all, but there was a troubled look in her blue eyes.
She gave him a puzzled smile. âHavenât we met, Commander?â
[74] Mike grinned. âHey! Thatâs supposed to be my line, isnât it?â
She flashed him a warm smile, then her eyes widened ever so slightly. âYour voice! Youâre the man on the foyer! The one....â
â... the one whom you called copper on,â finished Mike agreeably. âBut please donât apologize; youâve more than made up for it.â
Her smile remained. She evidently liked what she saw. âHow was I to know who you were?â
âIt might have been written on my pocket handkerchief,â said Mike the Angel, âbut Space Service officers donât carry pocket handkerchiefs.â
âWhat?â The puzzled look had returned.
âNeâ mind,â said Mike. âSit down, wonât you?â
âOh, I canât, thanks. I came to get Fitz; a meeting of the Research Board has been called, and afterward we have to give a lecture or something to the officers of the Brainchild.â
âYou mean the Branchell?â
Her smile became an impish grin. âYou call it what you want. To us, itâs the Brainchild.â
Dr. Fitzhugh said: âWill you excuse us, Commander? Weâll be seeing you at the briefing later.â
Mike nodded. âIâd better get on my way, too. Iâll see you.â
But he stood there as Leda Crannon and Dr. Fitzhugh walked away. The girl looked just as divine retreating as she had advancing.
[75]
9Captain Sir Henry (Black Bart) Quill was seated in an old-fashioned, formyl-covered, overstuffed chair, chewing angrily at the end of an unlighted cigar. His bald head gleamed like a pink billiard ball, almost matching the shining glory of his golden insignia against his scarlet tunic.
Mike the Angel had finally found his way through the maze of underground passageways to the door marked wardroom 9 and had pushed it open gingerly, halfway hoping that he wouldnât be seen coming in late but not really believing it would happen.
He was right. Black Bart was staring directly at the door when it slid open. Mike shrugged inwardly and stepped boldly into the room, flicking a glance over the faces of the other officers present.
âWell, well, well, Mister Gabriel,â said Black Bart. The voice was oily, but the oil was oil of vitriol. âYou not only come late, but you come incognito. Where is your uniform?â
There was a muffled snicker from one of the junior officers, but it wasnât muffled enough. Before Mike the Angel could answer, Captain Quillâs head jerked around.
[76] âThat will do, Mister Vaneski!â he barked. âBoot ensigns donât snicker when their superiorsâand their bettersâare being reprimanded! I only use sarcasm on officers I respect. Until an officer earns my sarcasm, he gets nothing but blasting when he goofs off. Understand?â
The last word was addressed to the whole group.
Ensign Vaneski colored, and his youthful face became masklike. âYes, sir. Sorry, sir.â
Quill didnât even bother to answer; he looked back at Mike the Angel, who was still standing at attention. Quillâs voice resumed its caustic saccharinity. âBut donât let that go to your head, Mister Gabriel. I repeat: Where is your pretty red spacemanâs suit?â
âIf the Captain will recall,â said Mike, âI had only twenty-four hoursâ notice. I couldnât get a new wardrobe in that time. Itâll be in on the next rocket.â
Captain Quill was silent for a moment, then he simply said, âVery well,â thus dismissing the whole subject. He waved Mike the Angel to a seat. Mike sat.
âWeâll dispense with the formal introductions,â said Quill. âCommander Gabriel is our Engineering Officer. The rest of these boys all know each other, Commander; you and I are the only ones who donât come from Chilblains Base. You know Commander Jeffers, of course.â
Mike nodded and grinned at Peter Jeffers, a lean, bony character who had a tendency to collapse into chairs as though he had come unhinged. Jeffers grinned and winked back.
âThis is Lieutenant Commander von Liegnitz, Navigation Officer; Lieutenant Keku, Supply; Lieutenant Mellon, Medical Officer; and Ensign Vaneski, Maintenance. You can all shake hands with each other later; right now, letâs [77] get on with business.â He frowned, overshadowing his eyes with those great, bushy brows. âWhat was I saying just before Commander Gabriel came in?â
Pete Jeffers shifted slightly in his seat. âYou were sayinâ, suh, that thisâs the stupidest damâ assignment anybody evah got. Or words to that effect.â Jeffers had been born in Georgia and had moved to the south of England at the age of ten. Consequently, his accent was far from standard.
âI think, Mister Jeffers,â said Quill, âthat I phrased it a bit more delicately, but that was the essence of it.
âThe Brainchild, as she has been nicknamed, has been built at great expense for the purpose of making a single trip. We are to take her, and her cargo, to a destination known only to myself and von Liegnitz. We will be followed there by another Service ship, which will bring us back as passengers.â He allowed himself a half-smile. âAt least weâll get to loaf around on the way back.â
The others grinned.
âThe Brainchild will be left there and, presumably, dismantled.â
He took the unlighted cigar out of his mouth, looked at it, and absently reached in his pocket for a lighter. The deeply tanned young man who had been introduced as Lieutenant Keku had just lighted a cigarette, so he proffered his own flame to the captain. Quill puffed his cigar alight absently and went on.
âIt isnât going to be easy. We wonât have a chance to give the ship a shakedown cruise because once we take off we might as well keep goingâwhich we will.
âYou all know what the cargo isâCargo Hold One contains the greatest single robotic brain ever built. Our job [78] is to make sure it gets to our destination in perfect condition.â
âQuestion, sir,â said Mike the Angel.
Without moving his head, Captain Quill lifted one huge eyebrow and glanced in Mikeâs direction. âYes?â
âWhy didnât C.C. of E. build the brain on whatever planet weâre going to in the first place?â
âWeâre supposed to be told that in the briefing over at the C.C. of E. labs inââhe glanced at his watchââhalf an hour. But I think we can all get a little advance information. Most of you men have been around here long enough to have some idea of whatâs going on, but I understand that Mister Vaneski knows somewhat more about robotics
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