Eric
Reinhart
examined
the
vidsender
box
carefully,
turning
it
around
and
around. “Then
he
did
escape
from
the
blast,” Dixon
admitted
reluctantly. “He
must
have
leaped
from
the
cart
just
before
the
concussion.” Reinhart nodded. “He escaped.
He
got
away
from
you—twice.”
He
pushed
the
vidsender
box
away
and
leaned
abruptly
toward
the
man
standing uneasily
in
front
of
his
desk. “What’s
your
name
again?” “Elliot.
Richard
Elliot.” “And
your
son’s name?” “Steven.” “It
was
last
night
this
happened?” “About
eight
o’clock.” “Go on.” “Worked?” “You see,
it
never
was
anything
more
than
a toy.
With
a
range
of
a
few
city
blocks.
So
the
kids
could
call
back
and
forth
from
their
rooms.
Like
a
sort
of
portable
vidscreen. Commissioner, I tried
out
the
vidsender,
pushing
the
call
button
and
speaking
into
the
microphone. I—I got a
ship
of
the
line. A battleship,
operating
beyond
Proxima Centaurus—over
eight
light
years
away.
As
far
out
as
the
actual
vidsenders operate.
Then
I
called
Security.
Right
away.” “How
big
are
the
regular vidsenders?” Dixon supplied
the
information. “As
big
as
a twenty-ton safe.” “That’s
what
I thought.” Reinhart
waved
his
hand
impatiently. “All right, Elliot.
Thanks
for
turning
the
information
over
to
us. That’s all.”
Security
police
led Elliot outside
the
office. Reinhart
and
Dixon
looked
at
each
other. “This
is
bad,” Reinhart said harshly. “He has
some
ability,
some
kind
of
mechanical ability. Genius, perhaps,
to
do
a
thing
like
this.
Look
at
the
period
he
came from, Dixon.
The
early
part
of
the
twentieth
century.
Before
the
wars
began.
That
was
a
unique
period.
There
was
a
certain
vitality, a
certain
ability.
It
was
a
period
of
incredible
growth
and
discovery. Edison. Pasteur. Burbank.
The
Wright
brothers.
Inventions
and
machines.
People
had
an
uncanny
ability
with
machines. A
kind
of
intuition
about
machines—which
we
don’t have.” “You mean—” “I
mean
a
person
like
this
coming
into
our
own
time
is
bad
in
itself,
war
or
no
war. He’s
too
different. He’s oriented
along
different
lines.
He
has
abilities
we
lack.
This
fixing
skill
of
his.
It
throws
us
off,
out
of
kilter.
And
with
the
war…. “Now I’m
beginning
to
understand
why
the
SRB
machines
couldn’t factor him. It’s
impossible
for
us
to
understand
this
kind
of
person. Winslow says
he
asked
for
work,
any
kind
of
work.
The
man
said
he
could
do
anything,
fix
anything.
Do
you
understand
what
that
means?” “No,” Dixon said. “What
does
it
mean?” “Can
any
of
us
fix
anything? No.
None
of
us
can
do
that. We’re specialized.
Each
of
us
has
his
own
line,
his
own
work. I
understand
my work,
you
understand
yours.
The
tendency
in
evolution
is
toward
greater
and
greater
specialization. Man’s
society
is
an
ecology
that
forces
adaptation
to
it.
Continual
complexity
makes
it
impossible
for
any
of
us
to
know
anything
outside
our
own
personal
field—I can’t
follow
the
work
of
the
man
sitting
at
the
next
desk
over
from
me.
Too
much
knowledge
has
piled
up
in
each
field.
And
there’s
too
many
fields. “And
the
other
problem?” “The
other
problem
is
that
this
man,
this
variable man, has
escaped
into
the
Albertine
Mountain
range.
Now
we’ll
have
one
hell
of
a time
finding
him. He’s clever—in a
strange
kind
of
way.
Like
some
sort
of
animal. He’s going
to
be
hard
to
catch.” Reinhart sent Dixon out.
After
a
moment
he
gathered
up
the
handful
of
reports
on
his
desk
and
carried
them
up
to
the
SRB room.
The
SRB
room
was
closed up, sealed
off
by
a ring
of
armed
Security
police. Standing angrily
before
the
ring
of
police
was
Peter Sherikov,
his
beard
waggling
angrily,
his
immense
hands
on
his
hips. “What’s going on?” Sherikov demanded. “Why can’t I
go
in
and
peep
at
the
odds?” “Sorry.” Reinhart cleared
the
police
aside. “Come
inside
with
me. I’ll explain.”
The
doors
opened
for
them
and
they
entered.
Behind
them
the
doors
shut
and
the
ring
of
police
formed
outside. “What
brings
you
away
from
your
lab?” Reinhart asked. Sherikov shrugged. “Several things. I wanted
to
see
you. I
called
you
on
the
vidphone
and
they
said
you
weren’t available. I
thought
maybe
something
had happened. What’s up?” “I’ll
tell
you
in
a
few
minutes.” Reinhart
called
Kaplan over. “Here
are
some
new
items. Feed
them
in
right
away. I
want
to
see
if
the
machines
can
total them.” “Certainly, Commissioner.” Kaplan
took
the
message
plates
and
placed
them
on
an
intake belt.
The
machines
hummed
into
life. “We’ll
know
soon,” Reinhart said,
half
aloud. Sherikov
shot
him
a
keen
glance. “We’ll
know
what?
Let
me
in
on
it. What’s
taking
place?” “We’re
in
trouble.
For
twenty-four
hours
the
machines
haven’t
given
any
reading
at
all.
Nothing
but
a blank. A total blank.” “The odds exist,
but
the
machines
aren’t
able
to
calculate
them.” “Why not?” “Because a variable factor has been introduced. A factor
which
the
machines
can’t handle.
They
can’t
make
any
predictions
from
it.” Sherikov
pulled
moodily
at
his
black
beard. “I
would
be
interested
in
knowing
what
sort
of
factor
the
machines
can’t handle. I
thought
they
could
take
in
all
data
pertaining
to
contemporary reality.” “They can.
This
factor has
nothing
to
do
with
contemporary reality. That’s
the
trouble. Histo-research
in
bringing
its
time
bubble
back
from
the
past got overzealous
and
cut
the
circuit
too
quickly.
The
bubble
came
back
loaded—with a
man
from
the
twentieth
century. A
man
from
the
past.” “I see. A
man
from
two
centuries
ago.”
The
big
Pole frowned. “And
with
a radically
different
Weltanschauung.
No
connection
with
our
present
society.
Not
integrated
along
our
lines
at
all.
Therefore
the
SRB
machines
are
perplexed.” Reinhart grinned. “Perplexed? I
suppose
so.
In
any
case,
they
can’t
do
anything
with
the
data
about
this
man.
The
variable man.
No
statistics
at
all
have
been thrown up—no
predictions
have
been made.
And
it
knocks
everything
else
out
of
phase. We’re dependent
on
the
constant
showing
of
these
odds.
The
whole
war
effort
is
geared
around
them.” “The horse-shoe nail.
Remember
the
old
poem? ‘For
want
of
a
nail
the
shoe
was
lost.
For
want
of
the
shoe
the
horse
was
lost.
For
want
of
the
horse
the
rider
was
lost.
For
want—’” “Exactly. A single factor coming
along
like
this,
one
single individual,
can
throw everything off.
It
doesn’t
seem
possible
that
one
person
could
knock
an
entire
society
out
of
balance—but apparently
it
is.” “What
are
you
doing
about
this
man?” “The
Security
police
are
organized
in
a
mass
search
for
him.” “Results?” “He
escaped
into
the
Albertine
Mountain
Range
last
night. It’ll
be
hard
to
find him.
We
must
expect
him
to
be
loose
for
another
forty-eight hours. It’ll
take
that
long
for
us
to
arrange
the
annihilation
of
the
range
area.
Perhaps
a trifle longer.
And
meanwhile—” “Ready, Commissioner,” Kaplan interrupted. “The
new
totals.”
The
SRB
machines
had finished factoring
the
new
data. Reinhart
and
Sherikov hurried
to
take
their
places
before
the
view windows. Sherikov gasped. 99-2.
In
favor
of
Terra. “That’s wonderful!
Now
we—”
The
odds vanished.
New
odds
took
their
places. 97-4.
In
favor
of
Centaurus. Sherikov groaned
in
astonished
dismay. “Wait,” Reinhart said
to
him. “I don’t
think
they’ll last.”
The
odds vanished. A
rapid
series
of
odds
shot
across
the
screen, a
violent
stream
of
numbers,
changing
almost
instantly.
At
last
the
machines
became silent.
Nothing
showed.
No
odds.
No
totals
at
all.
The
view
windows
were
blank. “You see?” Reinhart murmured. “The
same
damn
thing!” Sherikov pondered. “Reinhart, you’re
too
Anglo-Saxon,
too
impulsive.
Be
more
Slavic.
This
man
will
be
captured
and
destroyed
within
two
days.
You
said
so
yourself. Meanwhile, we’re
all
working
night
and
day
on
the
war
effort.
The
warfleet
is
waiting
near
Proxima,
taking
up
positions
for
the
attack
on
the
Centaurans.
All
our
war
plants
are
going
full
blast.
By
the
time
the
attack
date
comes
we’ll
have
a full-sized
invasion
army
ready
to
take
off
for
the
long
trip
to
the
Centauran colonies.
The
whole
Terran
population
has been mobilized.
The
eight
supply
planets
are
pouring
in
material.
All
this
is
going
on
day
and
night,
even
without
odds showing.
Long
before
the
attack
comes
this
man
will
certainly
be
dead,
and
the
machines
will
be
able
to
show
odds again.” Reinhart considered. “But
it
worries me, a
man
like
that
out
in
the
open. Loose. A
man
who
can’t
be
predicted.
It
goes
against science. We’ve been
making
statistical
reports
on
society
for
two
centuries.
We
have
immense
files
of
data.
The
machines
are
able
to
predict
what
each
person
and
group
will
do
at
a
given
time,
in
a
given
situation.
But
this
man
is
beyond
all
prediction. He’s a variable. It’s
contrary
to
science.” “The
indeterminate
particle.” “What’s that?” “The
particle
that
moves
in
such
a
way
that
we
can’t
predict
what
position
it
will
occupy
at
a
given
second. Random.
The
random
particle.” Sherikov laughed sarcastically. “Don’t worry
about
it, Commissioner.
The
man
will
be
captured
and
things
will
return
to
their
natural
state. You’ll
be
able
to
predict
people
again,
like
laboratory
rats
in
a maze.
By
the
way—why
is
this
room
guarded?” “Margaret Duffe,
for
example?” Reinhart
nodded
reluctantly. “They’re
too
timid,
these
parliamentarians.
If
they
discover
we
have
no
SRB odds they’ll
want
to
shut
down
the
war
planning
and
go
back
to
waiting.” “Too
slow
for
you, Commissioner? Laws, debates,
council
meetings, discussions…. Saves a
lot
of
time
if
one
man
has
all
the
power.
One
man
to
tell
people
what
to
do,
think
for
them, lead
them
around.” Reinhart
eyed
the
big
Pole critically. “That reminds me.
How
is
Icarus
coming?
Have
you
continued
to
make
progress
on
the
control turret?” A scowl
crossed
Sherikov’s
broad
features. “The control turret?”
He
waved
his
big
hand
vaguely. “I
would
say
it’s coming
along
all
right. We’ll
catch
up
in
time.” Instantly Reinhart became alert. “Catch up?
You
mean
you’re
still
behind?” “Somewhat. A little.
But
we’ll
catch
up.” Sherikov
retreated
toward
the
door. “Let’s
go
down
to
the
cafeteria
and
have
a
cup
of
coffee.
You
worry
too
much, Commissioner.
Take
things
more
in
your
stride.” “I
suppose
you’re right.”
The
two
men walked
out
into
the
hall. “I’m
on
edge.
This
variable man. I can’t
get
him
out
of
my mind.” “Has
he
done
anything
yet?” “Nothing important. Rewired a child’s toy. A
toy
vidsender.” “Oh?” Sherikov
showed
interest. “What
do
you
mean?
What
did
he
do?” “I’ll
show
you.” Reinhart led Sherikov
down
the
hall
to
his
office.
They
entered
and
Reinhart
locked
the
door.
He
handed
Sherikov
the
toy
and
roughed
in
what
Cole
had done. A
strange
look
crossed
Sherikov’s face.
He
found
the
studs
on
the
box
and
depressed them.
The
box
opened.
The
big
Pole sat
down
at
the
desk
and
began
to
study
the
interior
of
the
box. “You’re
sure
it
was
the
man
from
the
past
who
rewired this?” “Of course.
On
the
spot.
The
boy
damaged
it
playing.
The
variable
man
came
along
and
the
boy
asked
him
to
fix
it.
He
fixed it,
all
right.” “Incredible.” Sherikov’s
eyes
were
only
an
inch
from
the
wiring. “Such tiny relays.
How
could
he—” “What?” “Nothing.” Sherikov got
abruptly
to
his
feet, closing
the
box
carefully. “Can I
take
this
along?
To
my lab? I’d
like
to
analyze
it
more
fully.” “Of course.
But
why?” Sherikov
nodded
absently. “Of course,”
he
murmured. A preoccupied
expression
still
remained
on
his
broad
features. “I
understand
perfectly.”
Thomas
Cole
crouched
over
the
fire
he
had built,
warming
his
hands.
It
was
almost
morning.
The
sky
was
turning
violet
gray.
The
mountain
air
was
crisp
and
chill.
Cole
shivered
and
pulled
himself
closer
to
the
fire.
Cole
was
deep
in
thought,
meditating
over
his
situation.
He
had been
in
the
mountains
two
nights
and
a day.
The
first
night
had been
the
worst. Stumbling
and
falling,
making
his
way
uncertainly
up
the
steep
slopes,
through
the
tangled brush
and
undergrowth—
But
when
the
sun
came
up
he
was
safe,
deep
in
the
mountains,
between
two
great
peaks.
And
by
the
time
the
sun
had
set
again
he
had fixed
himself
up
a shelter
and
a
means
of
making
a fire.
Now
he
had a
neat
little
box
trap,
operated
by
a
plaited
grass
rope
and
pit, a
notched
stake.
One
rabbit
already
hung
by
his
hind
legs
and
the
trap
was
waiting
for
another.
The
sky
turned
from
violet
gray
to
a
deep
cold gray, a
metallic
color.
The
mountains
were
silent
and
empty.
Far
off
some
place
a
bird
sang,
its
voice
echoing
across
the
vast
slopes
and
ravines.
Other
birds
began
to
sing.
Off
to
his
right
something
crashed
through
the
brush,
an
animal
pushing
its
way
along.
But
he
was
not
thinking
that
far
ahead.
Cole
stood
by
the
fire, staring
up
at
the
sky,
his
hands
on
his
hips.
He
squinted, suddenly tense.
Something
was
moving.
Something
in
the
sky,
drifting
slowly
through
the
grayness. A
black
dot.
He
stamped
out
the
fire
quickly.
What
was
it?
He
strained, trying
to
see. A bird? A
second
dot
joined
the
first.
Two
dots.
Then
three. Four. Five. A
fleet
of
them,
moving
rapidly
across
the
early
morning
sky.
Toward
the
mountains.
Toward
him.
Cole
hurried
away
from
the
fire.
He
snatched
up
the
rabbit
and
carried
it
along
with
him,
into
the
tangled shelter
he
had built.
He
was
invisible,
inside
the
shelter.
No
one
could
find him.
But
if
they
had
seen
the
fire—
He
crouched
in
the
shelter,
watching
the
dots
grow larger.
They
were
planes,
all
right.
Black
wingless planes, coming closer
each
moment.
Now
he
could
hear
them, a faint
dull
buzz, increasing
until
the
ground shook
under
him.
The
first
plane
dived.
It
dropped
like
a stone,
swelling
into
a
great
black
shape.
Cole
gasped,
sinking
down.
The
plane
roared
in
an
arc, swooping
low
over
the
ground. Suddenly bundles tumbled out,
white
bundles falling
and
scattering
like
seeds.
The
bundles
drifted
rapidly
to
the
ground.
They
landed.
They
were
men. Men
in
uniform.
Now
the
second
plane
was
diving.
It
roared
overhead,
releasing
its
load.
More
bundles tumbled out, filling
the
sky.
The
third
plane
dived,
then
the
fourth.
The
air
was
thick
with
drifting
bundles
of
white, a blanket
of
descending
weed
spores,
settling
to
earth.
On
the
ground
the
soldiers
were
forming
into
groups.
Their
shouts carried
to
Cole,
crouched
in
his
shelter.
Fear
leaped
through
him.
They
were
landing
on
all
sides
of
him.
He
was
cut
off.
The
last
two
planes
had
dropped
men
behind
him.
He
got
to
his
feet,
pushing
out
of
the
shelter.
Some
of
the
soldiers had found
the
fire,
the
ashes
and
coals.
One
dropped
down, feeling
the
coals
with
his
hand.
He
waved
to
the
others.
They
were
circling
all
around, shouting
and
gesturing.
One
of
them
began
to
set
up
some
kind
of
gun.
Others
were
unrolling coils
of
tubing,
locking
a
collection
of
strange
pipes
and
machinery
in
place. Voices. Footsteps. Men
were
behind
him, running
down
the
slope.
Cole
struggled frantically,
gasping
and
twisting, trying
to
pull
loose.
He
strained,
breaking
the
vines,
clawing
at
them
with
his
hands. A soldier
dropped
to
his
knee,
leveling
his
gun.
More
soldiers arrived,
bringing
up
their
rifles
and
aiming.
Cole
cried out.
He
closed
his
eyes,
his
body
suddenly limp.
He
waited,
his
teeth
locked
together,
sweat
dripping
down
his
neck,
into
his
shirt,
sagging
against
the
mesh
of
vines
and
branches
coiled
around
him. Silence.
Cole
opened
his
eyes
slowly.
The
soldiers had regrouped. A
huge
man
was
striding
down
the
slope
toward
them,
barking
orders
as
he
came.
Two
soldiers
stepped
into
the
brush.
One
of
them
grabbed
Cole
by
the
shoulder. “Don’t
let
go
of
him.”
The
huge
man
came over,
his
black
beard
jutting out. “Hold on.”
Cole
gasped
for
breath.
He
was
caught.
There
was
nothing
he
could
do.
More
soldiers
were
pouring
down
into
the
gulley,
surrounding
him
on
all
sides.
They
studied
him
curiously, murmuring together.
Cole
shook
his
head
wearily
and
said nothing.
The
huge
man
with
the
beard
stood directly
in
front
of
him,
his
hands
on
his
hips,
looking
him
up
and
down. “Don’t
try
to
get
away,”
the
man
said. “You can’t
get
away.
Do
you
understand?”
Cole
nodded. “All right. Good.”
The
man
waved. Soldiers
clamped
metal
bands
around
Cole’s
arms
and
wrists.
The
metal
dug
into
his
flesh,
making
him
gasp
with
pain.
More
clamps
locked
around
his
legs. “Those stay
there
until
we’re
out
of
here. A
long
way
out.” “Where—where
are
you
taking
me?” Peter Sherikov studied
the
variable
man
for
a
moment
before
he
answered. “Where? I’m
taking
you
to
my labs.
Under
the
Urals.”
He
glanced suddenly
up
at
the
sky. “We
better
hurry.
The
Security
police
will
be
starting
their
demolition
attack
in
a
few
hours.
We
want
to
be
a
long
way
from
here
when
that
begins.”
The
metal
clamps
were
removed
from
Cole’s
arms
and
legs.
He
sagged,
sinking
down
in
a heap. Sherikov
watched
him
silently.
Cole
sat
on
the
floor,
rubbing
his
wrists
and
legs,
saying
nothing. “What
do
you
want?” Sherikov demanded. “Food?
Are
you
hungry?” “No.” “Medicine?
Are
you
sick? Injured?” “No.” Sherikov wrinkled
his
nose. “A
bath
wouldn’t hurt
you
any. We’ll
arrange
that
later.”
He
lit
a cigar, blowing a
cloud
of
gray
smoke
around
him.
At
the
door
of
the
room
two
lab
guards
stood
with
guns
ready.
No
one
else
was
in
the
room
beside
Sherikov
and
Cole.
Thomas
Cole
sat
huddled
in
a
heap
on
the
floor,
his
head
sunk
down
against
his
chest.
He
did
not
stir.
His
bent
body
seemed
more
elongated
and
stooped
than
ever,
his
hair
tousled
and
unkempt,
his
chin
and
jowls
a rough
stubbled
gray.
His
clothes
were
dirty
and
torn
from
crawling
through
the
brush.
His
skin
was
cut
and
scratched;
open
sores
dotted
his
neck
and
cheeks
and
forehead.
He
said nothing.
His
chest
rose
and
fell.
His
faded
blue
eyes
were
almost
closed.
He
looked
quite
old, a withered, dried-up
old
man. Sherikov
waved
one
of
the
guards
over. “Have a doctor brought
up
here. I
want
this
man
checked over.
He
may
need
intravenous
injections.
He
may
not
have
had
anything
to
eat
for
awhile.”
The
guard
departed. “I don’t
want
anything
to
happen
to
you,” Sherikov said. “Before
we
go
on
I’ll
have
you
checked over.
And
deloused
at
the
same
time.”
Cole
said nothing. Sherikov laughed. “Buck up!
You
have
no
reason
to
feel bad.”
He
leaned
toward
Cole,
jabbing
an
immense
finger
at
him. “Another
two
hours
and
you’d
have
been dead,
out
there
in
the
mountains.
You
know
that?”
Cole
nodded. “You don’t
believe
me. Look.” Sherikov
leaned
over
and
snapped
on
the
vidscreen mounted
in
the
wall. “Watch, this.
The
operation
should
still
be
going on.”
The
screen
lit
up. A
scene
gained
form.
Cole
turned
toward
the
screen.
At
first
he
could
not
make
out
what
was
happening.
The
screen
showed
a
vast
foaming
cloud, a
vortex
of
motion.
From
the
speaker
came a
low
rumble, a deep-throated roar.
After
a time
the
screen
shifted,
showing
a slightly
different
view. Suddenly
Cole
stiffened.
He
was
seeing
the
destruction
of
a
whole
mountain
range.
The
picture
was
coming
from
a ship,
flying
above
what
had
once
been
the
Albertine
Mountain
Range.
Now
there
was
nothing
but
swirling
clouds
of
gray
and
columns
of
particles
and
debris, a
surging
tide
of
restless
material
gradually
sweeping
off
and
dissipating
in
all
directions.
The
Albertine
Mountains
had been disintegrated.
Nothing
remained
but
these
vast
clouds
of
debris. Below,
on
the
ground, a
ragged
plain
stretched out, swept
by
fire
and
ruin. Gaping
wounds
yawned,
immense
holes
without
bottom,
craters
side
by
side
as
far
as
the
eye
could
see.
Craters
and
debris.
Like
the
blasted,
pitted
surface
of
the
moon.
Two
hours
ago
it
had been rolling peaks
and
gulleys, brush
and
green
bushes
and
trees.
Cole
turned
away. “You see?” Sherikov snapped
the
screen
off. “You
were
down
there,
not
so
long
ago.
All
that
noise
and
smoke—all
for
you.
All
for
you, Mr. Variable
Man
from
the
past. Reinhart
arranged
that,
to
finish
you
off. I
want
you
to
understand
that. It’s
very
important
that
you
realize
that.”
Cole
said nothing. Sherikov reached
into
a drawer
of
the
table
before
him.
He
carefully
brought
out
a small
square
box
and
held
it
out
to
Cole. “You
wired
this, didn’t you?”
Cole
took
the
box
in
his
hands
and
held
it.
For
a time
his
tired
mind
failed
to
focus.
What
did
he
have?
He
concentrated
on
it.
The
box
was
the
children’s toy.
The
inter-system vidsender,
they
had
called
it. “Yes. I fixed this.”
He
passed
it
back
to
Sherikov. “I repaired that.
It
was
broken.” Sherikov gazed
down
at
him
intently,
his
large
eyes
bright.
He
nodded,
his
black
beard
and
cigar
rising
and
falling. “Good. That’s
all
I wanted
to
know.”
He
got suddenly
to
his
feet,
pushing
his
chair back. “I
see
the
doctor’s here. He’ll
fix
you
up. Everything
you
need. Later
on
I’ll talk
to
you
again.” Unprotesting,
Cole
got
to
his
feet,
allowing
the
doctor
to
take
hold
of
his
arm
and
help
him
up.
The
Pole
gulped
down
a
hasty
meal, talking
as
he
ate.
Cole
sat silently
across
from
him,
not
eating
or
speaking.
His
old
clothing had been taken
away
and
new
clothing
given
him.
He
was
shaved
and
rubbed
down.
His
sores
and
cuts
were
healed,
his
body
and
hair
washed.
He
looked
much
healthier
and
younger, now.
But
he
was
still
stooped
and
tired,
his
blue
eyes
worn
and
faded.
He
listened
to
Sherikov’s
account
of
the
world
of
2136 AD
without
comment. “You
can
see,” Sherikov said finally,
waving
a
chicken
leg, “that
your
appearance
here
has been
very
upsetting
to
our
program.
Now
that
you
know
more
about
us
you
can
see
why
Commissioner
Reinhart
was
so
interested
in
destroying
you.”
Cole
nodded.
Cole
nodded. “More coffee?” Sherikov asked.
He
pushed
the
plastic
container
toward
Cole. “Have some.”
Cole
accepted
another
cupful. “Thank you.” “You
can
see
that
our
real
problem
is
another
thing
entirely.
The
machines
only
do
figuring
for
us
in
a
few
minutes
that
eventually
we
could
do
for
our
own
selves. They’re
our
servants, tools.
Not
some
sort
of
gods
in
a
temple
which
we
go
and
pray
to.
Not
oracles
who
can
see
into
the
future
for
us.
They
don’t
see
into
the
future.
They
only
make
statistical predictions—not prophecies. There’s a
big
difference
there,
but
Reinhart doesn’t
understand
it. Reinhart
and
his
kind
have
made
such
things
as
the
SRB
machines
into
gods.
But
I
have
no
gods.
At
least,
not
any
I
can
see.”
Cole
nodded,
sipping
his
coffee.
Cole
nodded. “But
this
is
the
experimental model,”
Cole
said. “And built
from
the
designs
of
a
man
dead
four
years—who isn’t
here
to
correct
us. We’ve
made
Icarus
with
our
own
hands,
down
here
in
the
labs.
And
he’s
giving
us
plenty
of
trouble.”
All
at
once
Sherikov got
to
his
feet. “Let’s
go
down
to
the
lab
and
look
at
him.”
They
descended
to
the
floor
below, Sherikov leading
the
way.
Cole
stopped
short
at
the
lab door. “Quite a sight,” Sherikov agreed. “We
keep
him
down
here
at
the
bottom
for
safety’s sake. He’s
well
protected.
Come
on
in.
We
have
work
to
do.”
In
the
center
of
the
lab
Icarus
rose
up,
the
gray
squat
cylinder
that
someday
would
flash
through
space
at
a
speed
of
thousands
of
times
that
of
light,
toward
the
heart
of
Proxima Centaurus,
over
four
light
years
away.
Around
the
cylinder
groups
of
men
in
uniform
were
laboring
feverishly
to
finish
the
remaining
work. “Over here.
The
turret.” Sherikov led
Cole
over
to
one
side
of
the
room. “It’s guarded. Centauran
spies
are
swarming
everywhere
on
Terra.
They
see
into
everything.
But
so
do
we. That’s
how
we
get
information
for
the
SRB machines.
Spies
in
both
systems.” “We don’t
want
anything
to
happen
to
this,” Sherikov said. “Everything
depends
on
it.”
He
put
out
his
hand
for
the
globe.
Half
way
to
it
his
hand
stopped, striking against
an
invisible
presence
in
the
air. Sherikov laughed. “The wall.
Shut
it
off. It’s
still
on.”
One
of
the
guards
pressed
a stud
at
his
wrist.
Around
the
globe
the
air shimmered
and
faded. “Now.” Sherikov’s
hand
closed
over
the
globe.
He
lifted
it
carefully
from
its
mount
and
brought
it
out
for
Cole
to
see. “This
is
the
control
turret
for
our
enormous
friend
here.
This
is
what
will
slow
him
down
when
he’s
inside
Centaurus.
He
slows
down
and
re-enters
this
universe.
Right
in
the
heart
of
the
star. Then—no
more
Centaurus.” Sherikov beamed. “And
no
more
Armun.”
But
Cole
was
not
listening.
He
had taken
the
globe
from
Sherikov
and
was
turning
it
over
and
over, running
his
hands
over
it,
his
face close
to
its
surface.
He
peered
down
into
its
interior,
his
face
rapt
and
intent. “You can’t
see
the
wiring.
Not
without
lenses.” Sherikov
signalled
for
a pair
of
micro-lenses
to
be
brought.
He
fitted
them
on
Cole’s nose, hooking
them
behind
his
ears. “Now
try
it.
You
can
control
the
magnification. It’s
set
for
1000X
right
now.
You
can
increase
or
decrease
it.”
Cole
gasped,
swaying
back
and
forth. Sherikov
caught
hold
of
him.
Cole
gazed
down
into
the
globe,
moving
his
head
slightly, focussing
the
glasses. “It
takes
practice.
But
you
can
do
a
lot
with
them. Permits
you
to
do
microscopic wiring.
There
are
tools
to
go
along,
you
understand.” Sherikov paused, licking
his
lip. “We can’t
get
it
done
correctly.
Only
a
few
men
can
wire
circuits
using
the
micro-lenses
and
the
little
tools. We’ve tried robots,
but
there
are
too
many
decisions
to
be
made.
Robots
can’t
make
decisions.
They
just
react.”
Cole
said nothing.
He
continued
to
gaze
into
the
interior
of
the
globe,
his
lips
tight,
his
body
taut
and
rigid.
It
made
Sherikov feel
strangely
uneasy. “You
look
like
one
of
those
old
fortune
tellers,” Sherikov said jokingly,
but
a cold shiver
crawled
up
his
spine. “Better
hand
it
back
to
me.”
He
held
out
his
hand. Slowly,
Cole
returned
the
globe.
After
a time
he
removed
the
micro-lenses,
still
deep
in
thought.
Cole
did
not
answer. Sherikov became impatient. “Well?
What
do
you
say?” “Then I
turn
you
over
to
Reinhart. Reinhart
will
kill
you
instantly.
He
thinks
you’re dead,
killed
when
the
Albertine
Range
was
annihilated.
If
he
had
any
idea
I had saved you—” “I see.” “I brought
you
down
here
for
one
thing.
If
you
wire
it
up
I’ll
have
you
sent
back
to
your
own
time continuum.
If
you
don’t—”
Cole
considered,
his
face dark
and
brooding. “What
do
you
have
to
lose? You’d
already
be
dead,
if
we
hadn’t
pulled
you
out
of
those
hills.” “Can
you
really
return
me
to
my
own
time?” “Of course!” “Reinhart won’t interfere?” Sherikov laughed. “What
can
he
do?
How
can
he
stop me? I
have
my
own
men.
You
saw
them.
They
landed
all
around
you. You’ll
be
returned.” “Yes. I
saw
your
men.” “Then
you
agree?” “I agree,”
Thomas
Cole
said. “I’ll wire
it
for
you. I’ll complete
the
control turret—within
the
next
five
days.”