Short Fiction Poul Anderson (reading a book .TXT) đ
- Author: Poul Anderson
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Arch sat without moving.
âAfter taxes,â said Gilmer.
âHow about thisâ âcapacitite, I call it?â
âNaturally, development and marketing would be in the hands of the company, or of several companies,â said Gilmer. âYou wouldnât want to waste your time on account books. Youâd get proper payment for the assignment, of courseâ ââ
Elizabeth entered, looking stunning. Gilmer rose with elaborate courtesy, and the discussion veered to trivialities for awhile.
Then the girl lit a cigarette and watched them through a haze of smoke. âYour time is valuable, Mr. Gilmer,â she said abruptly. âWhy donât you make an offer and weâll talk about that?â
âOh, no hurry, Mrs. Arch. I was hoping you would be my guests tonightâ ââ
âNo, thanks. With all due regard for you, I donât want to be put under a moral obligation before business is discussed.â
Gilmer chuckled amiably and repeated the idea he had broached.
âI like Westfield,â said Elizabeth. âI donât like New York. It isnât fit for human consumption.â
âOh, I quite agree,â said Gilmer. âOnce a year I have to break looseâ âcabin up in Maine, hunting, fishing, back to Natureâ âyou really must come up sometime soon. Your objection can be answered easily enough. We could set up a laboratory for you here, if you really insist. You see, weâre prepared to be very generous.â
Arch shook his head. âNo,â he said harshly. âNo, thanks. I like being independent.â
Gilmer raised his brows. âI understand that. But after all, the only difference would beâ ââ
Arch grinned. He was enjoying himself now. On a dark day some years ago, he had tried to raise a bank loan and had failed for lack of collateral and credit rating and his refusal to subject any friend to cosigning. Ever since, he had indulged daydreams about having finance come crawling to him. The reality was intoxicating.
âNo,â he repeated. âThatâs all I want to say about it, too. The income from capacitite will be quite enough for us. If you want to discuss a license to manufacture, go ahead.â
âHrm! As you wish.â Gilmer smoothed the coldness out of his voice. âMaybe youâll change your mind later. If so, feel free to call on me anytime. Now, for an assignment of rights, I think a sum of fifty thousand dollars could be arrangedâ ââ
Elizabeth drooped lids over startlingly blue eyes. âAs an initial payment, perhaps,â she said gently. âBut think what a royalty of, say, ten cents a pound would add up to even in a year.â
âOh, yes, that would be negotiated too,â said Gilmer. âHowever, you realize manufacture could not start immediately, and would in any case be on a smaller scale than you perhaps think.â
âEh?â Arch sat bolt upright. âWhat do you mean? Why, this stuff is going to revolutionize not only electronics, but all powerâ âdammit, everything!â
âDr. Arch,â said Gilmer regretfully, âyou must not have considered the matter of capital investment. Do you know how many billions of dollars are sunk in generators, dams, lines, motorsâ ââ
âGasoline,â said Elizabeth. âWeâve thought of that angle too.â
âWe canât throw all that in the discard!â went on Gilmer earnestly. He seemed more human, all at once. âIt may take twenty years to recover the investment in, say, a local transmission network. The company would go broke overnight if that investment were suddenly made valueless. Millions of people would be thrown out of work. Millions more would lose their savings in stocks and bondsâ ââ
âI always said stocks were a mugâs game,â interrupted Arch. âIf the two or three shares owned by the widow and orphan youâre leading up to go blooey, it wonât break her. For years, now, Iâve had ads dinning the wonders of the present economic system into my ears. One of its main features, Iâm told, is progress. All right, hereâs a chance to leap a hundred years ahead. Letâs see you take it.â
Gilmerâs pink cheeks reddened. âIâm afraid you still donât understand,â he replied. âWe have a responsibility. The world is watching us. Just imagine what those British Socialists would say ifâ ââ
âIf youâre against socialism,â said Elizabeth with a laugh, âwhy not start at home? Public schools and federal highways, for instance. I fail to see where personal liberty is necessarily tied to any particular method of distribution.â
Gilmer seemed, for a moment, to lose his temper. âThis is no place for radicals,â he said thickly. âWeâve all got to have faith and put our shoulders to the wheel. Weâ ââ He paused, swallowed, and smiled rather stiffly. âExcuse me. I didnât mean to get worked up. There are a lot of stories about wonderful new inventions which the greedy corporations have bought up and hidden away. They simply are not true. All Iâm after is a gradual introduction of this material.â
âI know those wonderful inventions are pure rumor,â said Arch. âBut I also know that just about everything I buy is made to wear out so Iâll have to buy some more. Itâs cheaper, yes, but Iâd rather pay twice as much to start with and have my purchase last ten times as long. Why canât I buy a decent kitchen knife? Thereâs not one that keeps its edge. My wife finally made eyes at the butcher and got one of his old knives; it lasts.
âA big thing like capacitite represents a chance to change our whole philosophy into something more rational. Thatâs what Iâm afterâ ânot just money. There neednât be any unemployment. Capacitite makes increased production possible, so why notâ âwell, why not drop the work day to four hours for the same wages? Then you can employ twice as many people.â
âIt is not your or my place to make carping criticisms,â retorted Gilmer. âFundamental changes arenât as easy as you think. Dr. Arch, Iâm sorry to say that unless youâll agree to proper terms, none of the companies I represent will be interested in your material.â
âAll right,â snapped Arch. âI can make it myself. Make it by the ton if I like, and sell it for a dollar a pound.â
âYou may find yourself undersold.â
âMy patentâ ââ
âIt hasnât gone through yet.
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