Little Fuzzy by H. Beam Piper (little readers .TXT) đ
- Author: H. Beam Piper
- Performer: 0809562820
Book online «Little Fuzzy by H. Beam Piper (little readers .TXT) đ». Author H. Beam Piper
He forced more patience into his voice. âLeonard, please try to realize that the Terran Federation government doesnât give one shrill soprano hoot on Nifflheim whether itâs fair or not, or whose fault what is. The Federation governmentâs been repenting that charter they gave the Company ever since they found out what theyâd chartered away. Why, this planet is a better world than Terra ever was, even before the Atomic Wars. Now, if they have a chance to get it back, with improvements, you think they wonât take it? And what will stop them? If those creatures over on Beta Continent are sapient beings, our charter isnât worth the parchment itâs engrossed on, and thatâs an end of it.â He was silent for a moment. âYou heard that tape Rainsford transmitted to Jimenez. Did either he or Holloway actually claim, in so many words, that these things really are sapient beings?â
âWell, no; not in so many words. Holloway consistently alluded to them as people, but heâs just an ignorant old prospector. Rainsford wouldnât come out and commit himself one way or another, but he left the door wide open for anybody else to.â
âAccepting their account, could these Fuzzies be sapient?â
âAccepting the account, yes,â Kellogg said, in distress. âThey could be.â
They probably were, if Leonard Kellogg couldnât wish the evidence out of existence.
âThen theyâll look sapient to these people of yours who went over to Beta this morning, and theyâll treat it purely as a scientific question and never consider the legal aspects. Leonard, youâll have to take charge of the investigation, before they make any reports everybodyâll be sorry for.â
Kellogg didnât seem to like that. It would mean having to exercise authority and getting tough with people, and he hated anything like that. He nodded very reluctantly.
âYes. I suppose I will. Let me think about it for a moment, Victor.â
One thing about Leonard; you handed him something he couldnât delegate or dodge and heâd go to work on it. Maybe not cheerfully, but conscientiously.
âIâll take Ernst Mallin along,â he said at length. âThis man Rainsford has no grounding whatever in any of the psychosciences. He may be able to impose on Ruth Ortheris, but not on Ernst Mallin. Not after Iâve talked to Mallin first.â He thought some more. âWeâll have to get these Fuzzies away from this man Holloway. Then weâll issue a report of discovery, being careful to give full credit to both Rainsford and Hollowayâweâll even accept the designation theyâve coined for themâbut weâll make it very clear that while highly intelligent, the Fuzzies are not a race of sapient beings. If Rainsford persists in making any such claim, we will brand it as a deliberate hoax.â
âDo you think heâs gotten any report off to the Institute of Xeno-Sciences yet?â
Kellogg shook his head. âI think he wants to trick some of our people into supporting his sapience claims; at least, corroborating his and Hollowayâs alleged observations. Thatâs why Iâll have to get over to Beta as soon as possible.â
By now, Kellogg had managed to convince himself that going over to Beta had been his idea all along. Probably also convincing himself that Rainsfordâs report was nothing but a pack of lies. Well, if he could work better that way, that was his business.
âHe will, before long, if he isnât stopped. And a year from now, thereâll be a small army of investigators here from Terra. By that time, you should have both Rainsford and Holloway thoroughly discredited. Leonard, you get those Fuzzies away from Holloway and Iâll personally guarantee they wonât be available for investigation by then. Fuzzies,â he said reflectively. âFur-bearing animals, I take it?â
âHolloway spoke, on the tape, of their soft and silky fur.â
âGood. Emphasize that in your report. As soon as itâs published, the Company will offer two thousand sols apiece for Fuzzy pelts. By the time Rainsfordâs report brings anybody here from Terra, we may have them all trapped out.â
Kellogg began to look worried.
âBut, Victor, thatâs genocide!â
âNonsense! Genocide is defined as the extermination of a race of sapient beings. These are fur-bearing animals. Itâs up to you and Ernst Mallin to prove that.â
The Fuzzies, playing on the lawn in front of the camp, froze into immobility, their faces turned to the west. Then they all ran to the bench by the kitchen door and scrambled up onto it.
âNow what?â Jack Holloway wondered.
âThey hear the airboat,â Rainsford told him. âThatâs the way they acted yesterday when you were coming in with your machine.â He looked at the picnic table they had been spreading under the featherleaf trees. âEverything ready?â
âEverything but lunch; that wonât be cooked for an hour yet. I see them now.â
âYou have better eyes than I do, Jack. Oh, I see it. I hope the kids put on a good show for them,â he said anxiously.
Heâd been jittery ever since he arrived, shortly after breakfast. It wasnât that these people from Mallorysport were so important themselves; Ben had a bigger name in scientific circles than any of this Company crowd. He was just excited about the Fuzzies.
The airboat grew from a barely visible speck, and came spiraling down to land in the clearing. When it was grounded and off contragravity, they started across the grass toward it, and the Fuzzies all jumped down from the bench and ran along with them.
The three visitors climbed down. Ruth Ortheris wore slacks and a sweater, but the slacks were bloused over a pair of ankle boots. Gerd van Riebeek had evidently done a lot of field work: his boots were stout, and he wore old, faded khakis and a serviceable-looking sidearm that showed he knew what to expect up here in the Piedmont. Juan Jimenez was in the same sports casuals in which he had appeared on screen last evening. All of them carried photographic equipment. They shook hands all around and exchanged greetings, and then the Fuzzies began clamoring to be noticed. Finally all of them, Fuzzies and other people, drifted over to the table under the trees.
Ruth Ortheris sat down on the grass with Mamma and Baby. Immediately Baby became interested in a silver charm which she wore on a chain around her neck which tinkled fascinatingly. Then he tried to sit on her head. She spent some time gently but firmly discouraging this. Juan Jimenez was squatting between Mike and Mitzi, examining them alternately and talking into a miniature recorder phone on his breast, mostly in Latin. Gerd van Riebeek dropped himself into a folding chair and took Little Fuzzy on his lap.
âYou know, this is kind of surprising,â he said. âNot only finding something like this, after twenty-five years, but finding something as unique as this. Look, he doesnât have the least vestige of a tail, and there isnât another tailless mammal on the planet. Fact, there isnât another mammal on this planet that has the slightest kinship to him. Take ourselves; we belong to a pretty big family, about fifty-odd genera of primates. But this little fellow hasnât any relatives at all.â
âYeek?â
âAnd he couldnât care less, could he?â Van Riebeek pummeled Little Fuzzy gently. âOne thing, you have the smallest humanoid known; thatâs one record you can claim. Oh-oh, what goes on?â
Ko-Ko, who had climbed upon Rainsfordâs lap, jumped suddenly to the ground, grabbed the chopper-digger he had left beside the chair and started across the grass. Everybody got to their feet, the visitors getting cameras out. The Fuzzies seemed perplexed by all the excitement. It was only another land-prawn, wasnât it?
Ko-Ko got in front of it, poked it on the nose to stop it and then struck a dramatic pose, flourishing his weapon and bringing it down on the prawnâs neck. Then, after flopping it over, he looked at it almost in sorrow and hit it a couple of whacks with the flat. He began pulling it apart and eating it.
âI see why you call him Ko-Ko,â Ruth said, aiming her camera, âDonât the others do it that way?â
âWell, Little Fuzzy runs along beside them and pivots and gives them a quick chop. Mike and Mitzi flop theirs over first and behead them on their backs. And Mamma takes a swipe at their legs first. But beheading and breaking the undershell, they all do that.â
âUh-huh; thatâs basic,â she said. âInstinctive. The technique is either self-learned or copied. When Baby begins killing his own prawns, see if he doesnât do it the way Mamma does!â
âHey, look!â Jimenez cried. âHeâs making a lobster pick for himself!â
Through lunch, they talked exclusively about Fuzzies. The subjects of the discussion nibbled things that were given to them, and yeeked among themselves. Gerd van Riebeek suggested that they were discussing the odd habits of human-type people. Juan Jimenez looked at him, slightly disturbed, as though wondering just how seriously he meant it.
âYou know, what impressed me most in the taped account was the incident of the damnthing,â said Ruth Ortheris. âAny animal associating with man will try to attract attention if somethingâs wrong, but I never heard of one, not even a Freyan kholph or a Terran chimpanzee, that would use descriptive pantomime. Little Fuzzy was actually making a symbolic representation, by abstracting the distinguishing characteristic of the damnthing.â
âThink that stiff-arm gesture and bark might have been intended to represent a rifle?â Gerd van Riebeek asked. âHeâd seen you shooting before, hadnât he?â
âI donât think it was anything else. He was telling me, âBig nasty damnthing outside; shoot it like you did the harpy.â And if he hadnât run past me and pointed back, that damnthing would have killed me.â
Jimenez, hesitantly, said, âI know Iâm speaking from ignorance. Youâre the Fuzzy expert. But isnât it possible that youâre overanthropomorphizing? Endowing them with your own characteristics and mental traits?â
âJuan, Iâm not going to answer that right now. I donât think Iâll answer at all. You wait till youâve been around these Fuzzies a little longer, and then ask it again, only ask yourself.â
âSo you see, Ernst, thatâs the problem.â
Leonard Kellogg laid the words like a paperweight on the other words he had been saying, and waited. Ernst Mallin sat motionless, his elbows on the desk and his chin in his hands. A little pair of wrinkles, like parentheses, appeared at the corners of his mouth.
âYes. Iâm not a lawyer, of course, butâŠ.â
âItâs not a legal question. Itâs a question for a psychologist.â
That left it back with Ernst Mallin, and he knew it.
âIâd have to see them myself before I could express an opinion. You have that tape of Hollowayâs with you?â When Kellogg nodded, Mallin continued: âDid either of them make any actual, overt claim of sapience?â
He answered it as he had when Victor Grego had asked the same question, adding:
âThe account consists almost entirely of Hollowayâs uncorroborated statements concerning things to which he claims to have been the sole witness.â
âAh.â Mallin permitted himself a tight little smile. âAnd heâs not a qualified observer. Neither, for that matter, is Rainsford. Regardless of his position as a xeno-naturalist, he is a complete layman in the psychosciences. Heâs just taken this other manâs statements uncritically. As for what he claims to have observed for himself, how do we know he isnât including a lot of erroneous inferences with his descriptive statements?â
âHow do we know heâs not perpetrating a deliberate hoax?â
âBut, Leonard, thatâs a pretty serious accusation.â
âItâs happened before. That fellow who carved a Late Upland Martian inscription in that cave in Kenya, for instance. Or Hellermannâs claim to have cross-bred Terran mice with Thoran tilbras. Or the Piltdown Man, back in the first century Pre-Atomic?â
Mallin nodded. âNone of us like to think of a thing like that, but, as you say, itâs happened. You know, this man Rainsford is just the type to do something like that, too. Fundamentally an individualistic egoist; badly adjusted personality type. Say he wants to make some sensational discovery which will assure him the position in the scientific world to which he believes himself entitled. He finds this
Comments (0)