Short Fiction Poul Anderson (reading a book .TXT) đ
- Author: Poul Anderson
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When the highway had taken them well into the loneliness of the desert, the car turned off it, bumped along a miserable dirt track until it had crossed a ridge, and slowed before a giant transcontinental dieselectric truck. A man emerged from its cab, waving an unhurried arm, and the car swung around to the rear of the van. There was a tailgate lowered, forming a ramp; above it, the huge double doors opened on a cavern of blackness. The car slid up the ramp, and the man outside pushed it in after them and closed the doors. Presently the truck got into motion.
âThis is really secret!â whistled Lancaster. He felt awed and helpless.
âQuite so. Security doesnât like the governmentâs right hand to know what its left is doing.â Berg smiled, a dim flash of teeth in his shadowy face. Then he was serious. âItâs necessary, Lancaster. You donât know how strong and well-organized the subversives are.â
âTheyâ ââ The physicist closed his mouth. It was trueâ âhe hadnât the faintest notion, really. He followed the news, but in a cursory fashion, without troubling to analyze the meaning of it. Damn it all, he had enough else to think about. Just as well that elections had been suspended and bade fair to continue indefinitely in abeyance. If he, a member of the intelligentsia, wasnât sufficiently acquainted with the political and military facts of life to make rational decisions, it certainly behooved the ill-educated masses to obey.
âWe might as well stretch ourselves,â said the driver. âLong way to go yet.â He climbed out and switched on an overhead light.
The interior of the van was roomy, even allowing for the car. There were bunks, a table and chairs, a small refrigerator and cookstove. The driver, a lean saturnine man who seemed to be forever chewing gum, began to prepare coffee. The other sat down, whistling tunelessly. He was young and powerfully built, but his right arm ended in a prosthetic claw. All of them were dressed in inconspicuous civilian garb.
âTake us about ten hours, maybe,â said Berg. âThe spaceshipâs way over in Colorado.â
He caught Lancasterâs blank stare, and grinned. âYes, my friend, your lab is out in space. Surprised?â
âMmmâ âyeah. Iâve never been off Earth.â
âSokay. We run at acceleration, you wonât be spacesick.â Berg drew up a chair, sat down, and tilted it back against a wall. The steady rumble of engines pulsed under his words:
âItâs interesting, really, to consider the relationship between government and military technology. The powerful, authoritarian governments have always arisen in such times as the evolution of warfare made a successful fighting machine something elaborate, expensive, and maintainable by professionals only. Like in the Roman Empire. It took years to train a legionnaire and a lot of money to equip an army and keep it in the field. So Rome became autarchic. However, it was not so expensive a proposition that a rebellious general couldnât put some troops up for a whileâ âor he could pay them with plunder. So you did get civil wars. Later, when the Empire had broken up and warfare relied largely on the individual barbarian who brought his own weapons with him, government loosened. It had toâ âany ruler who got to throwing his weight around too much would have insurrection on his hands. Then as war again became an artâ âwell, you see how it goes. There are other factors, of course, like religionâ âideology in general. But by and large, itâs worked out the way I explained it. Because there are always people willing to fight when government encroaches on what they consider their liberties, and governments are always going to try to encroach. So the balance struck depends on comparative strength. The American colonists back in 1776 relied on citizen levies and weapons were so cheap and simple that almost anyone could obtain them. Therefore government stayed loose for a long time. But nowadays, who except a government can make atomic bombs and space rockets? So we get absolute states.â
Lancaster looked around, feeling the loneliness close in on him. The driver was still clattering the coffee pot. The one-armed man was utterly blank and expressionless. And Berg sat there, smiling, pouring out those damnable cynicisms. Was it some kind of test? Were they probing his loyalty? What kind of reply was expected?
âWeâre a democratic nation and you know it,â he said. It came out more feebly than he had thought.
âOh, well, sure. This is just a state of emergency which has lasted unusually long, seventy-two years to be exact. If we hadnât lost World War III, and needed a powerful remilitarization to overthrow the Soviet worldâ âbut we did.â Berg took out a pack of cigarettes. âSmoke? I was just trying to explain to you why the subversives are so dangerous. They have to be, or they wouldnât stand any kind of chance. When you set out to upset something as big as the United States government, itâs an all or nothing proposition. Theyâve had a long time now to organize, and thereâs a huge percentage of malcontents to help them out.â
âMalcontents? Well, look, Bergâ âI mean, youâre the expert and of course you know your business, but a natural human grumble at conditions doesnât mean revolutionary sentiments. These arenât such bad times. People have work, and their needs are supplied. They arenât hankering to have the Hemispheric Wars back again.â
âThe standard revolutionary argument,â said Berg patiently, âis that the rebels arenât trying to overthrow the nation at all, but simply to restore constitutional and libertarian government. Itâs common knowledge that they have help and some subsidies from outside, but itâs contended that these are merely countries tired of a world dominated by an American dictatorship and, being small Latin-American and European states, couldnât possibly think of conquering us.
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