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Anarchy in action : an excellent model of an anarchist or free society – abelard | |||
First published June 1951, Astounding Science Fiction, vol. XLVII, no.4 |
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sci-fi short story at abelard.org: |
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Index: chapter 1 chapter 2 chapter 3 chapter 4 chapter 5 chapter 6 end notes Chapter 1[The ambassador] went silent as the ship closed in and the planet’s day-side face rapidly expanded. Then followed the usual circling and photographing. A lot of villages and small towns were to be seen, also cultivated areas of large extent. It was obvious that this planet—while by no means fully exploited—was in the hands of colonists who were energetic and numerically strong. Relieved that life was full, abundant and apparently free from alien disease. Grayder brought the ship down onto the first hard-standing he saw. Its enormous mass landed feather-like on a long, low hump amid well-tended fields. Again all the ports became filled with faces as everyone had a look at the new world. The midway airlock opened, the gangway went down. As before, exit was made in strict order of precedence starting with the Ambassador and finishing with Sergeant Major Bidworthy. Grouping near the bottom of the gangway they spent the first few moments absorbing sunshine and fresh air. His Excellency scuffled the thick turf under his feet, plucked a blade of it grunting as he stooped. He was so constructed that the effort came close to an athletic feat and gave him a crick in the belly. ‘Earth-type grass. See that, Captain? Is it just a coincidence or did they bring seed with them?’ ‘Could be either. Several grassy worlds are known. And almost all colonists went away loaded with seeds.’ ‘It’s another touch of home, anyway. I think I’m going to like this place.’ The Ambassador gazed into the distance, doing it with pride of ownership. ‘Looks like there’s someone working over there. He’s using a little motor-cultivator with a pair of fat wheels. They can’t be very backward, it seems. ‘H’m-m-m !’ He rubbed a couple of chins. ‘Bring him here. We’ll have a talk and find out where it’s best to make a start.’‘Very well.’ Captain Grayder turned to Colonel Shelton. ‘His Excellency wishes to speak to that farmer.’ He pointed to the faraway figure. ‘That farmer,’said Shelton to Major Hame. ‘His Excellency wants him at once.’ ‘Bring that farmer here,’ Hame ordered Lieutenant Deacon. ‘Quickly.’ ‘Go get that farmer,’ Deacon told Sergeant Major Bid-worthy.
‘And hurry—His Excellency is waiting.’ Bidworthy sought around for a lesser rank, remembered that they were all inside, cleaning ship and not smoking, by his order. He, it seemed, was elected. Tramping across four fields and coming within hailing distance of his objective, he performed a precise military halt, released a barracks square bellow of, ‘Hi, you!’ and waved urgently. The farmer stopped his steady trudging behind the tiny cultivator, wiped his forehead, glanced casually around. His indifferent manner suggested that the mountainous bulk of the ship was a mirage such as are five a penny around these parts. Bidworthy waved again, making it an authoritative summons. Now suddenly aware of the sergeant major’s existence, the farmer calmly waved back, resumed his work. Bidworthy employed a brief but pungent expletive which—when its flames had died out—meant, ‘Dear me!’ and marched fifty paces nearer. He could now see that the other was bushy-browed, leather-faced, tall and lean. ‘Hi!’ he bawled. Stopping the cultivator again, the farmer leaned on one of of its shafts and idly picked his teeth. Smitten by the ingenious thought that perhaps during the last few centuries the old Terran language had been abandoned in favour of some other lingo, Bidworthy approached to within normal talking distance and asked, ‘Can you understand me?’Can any person understand another?’ inquired the farmer with clear diction. Bidworthy found himself afflicted with a moment of confusion. Recovering, he informed hurriedly, ‘His Excellency the Earth Ambassador wishes to speak with you at once.’ ‘Is that so?’ The other eyed him speculatively, had another pick at his teeth. ‘And what makes him excellent?’ ‘He is a person of considerable importance,’ said Bidworthy, unable to decide whether the other was trying to be funny at this expense or alternatively was what is known as a character. A lot of these long-isolated pioneering types liked to think of themselves as characters. ‘Of considerable importance,’ echoed the farmer, narrowing his eyes at the horizon. He appeared to be trying to grasp a completely alien concept. After a while, he inquired, ‘What will happen to your home world when this person dies?’ ‘Nothing,’ Bidworthy admitted. ‘It will roll on as before?’ ‘Yes.’ ‘Round and round the sun?’ ‘Of course.’ ‘Then,’ declared the farmer flatly, ‘if his existence or nonexistence makes no difference he cannot be important.’ with that, his little engine went chuff-chuff and the cultivator rolled forward. Digging his nails into the palms of his hands, Bidworthy spent half a minute gathering oxygen before he said in hoarse tones, ‘Are you going to speak to the Ambassador or not?’ ‘Not.’ ‘I cannot return without at least a message for His Excellency.’ ‘Indeed?’ The other was incredulous. ‘What is to stop you?’ Then, noticing the alarming increase in Bidworthy’s colour, he added with compassion, ‘Oh, well. you may tell him that I said’—he paused while he thought it over—‘God bless you and good-bye.’ Sergeant Major Bidworthy was a powerful man who weighed more than two hundred pounds, had roamed the cosmos for twenty-five years and feared nothing. He had never been known to permit the shiver of one hair—but he was trembling all over by the time he got back to the base of the gangway.
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Colonel Shelton arrived, walked once slowly and officiously around the outside of the coach, examined its construction and weighed up its occupants. He flinched at the striped hat whose owner leered at him through the glass. Then he came over to the disgruntled group. ‘What’s the trouble this time, Sergeant Major?’ ‘They’re as crazy as all the others, sir. They’re full of impudence and say, ‘Myob’ and couldn’t care less about His Excellency. They don’t want to come out and we can’t make them because they’re chained in their seats.’ ‘Chained?’ Shelton’s eyebrow lifted halfway toward his hair. ‘What on earth for?’ ‘I don’t know, sir. All I can tell you is that they’re fastened in like a bunch of gangsters being hauled to the pokey and—’ Shelton moved off without waiting to hear the rest. He had a look for himself, came back. ‘You may have something there, Sergeant Major. But I don’t think they are criminals.’ ‘No, sir?’ ‘No.’ He threw a significant glance towards the fat man’s colourful headgear and several other sartorial eccentricities including a ginger-haired individual’s foot-wide polka-dotted bow. ‘It’s more likely they’re a consignment of lunatics being taken to an asylum. I’ll ask the driver.’ Going to the cab, he said, ‘Do you mind telling me your destination?’ ‘Yes,’ responded the other. ‘Very well, where is it?’ ‘Look,’ said the driver, ‘are we talking the same language?’ ‘Eh? Why?’ ‘You’ve just asked me whether I mind and I said yes.’ He make a disparaging gesture. ‘I do mind.’ ‘You refuse to tell?’ ‘Your aim’s improving, Sonny.’ ‘Sonny?’ put in Bidworthy, vibrant with outrage. ‘Do you realize that you are speaking to a colonel?’ ‘What’s a colonel?’ asked the driver interestedly. ‘By hokey, if your—’ ‘Leave this to me,’ insisted Shelton, waving the furious Bidworthy down. His expression was cold as he returned attention to the driver. ‘On your way. I’m sorry you’ve been detained.’ ‘Think nothing of it,’ said the driver with exaggerated politeness. ‘I’ll do as much for you some day.’ With that enigmatic remark he let his machine roll for-ward. The patrol parted to make room. Building up its whine to the top note, the coach sped down the road and diminished into the dusty distance. ‘This planet,’ swore Bidworthy, staring purple-faced after it, ‘has more no-good bums in need of discipline than any place this side of—’ ‘Calm yourself, Sergeant Major,’ urged Shelton. ‘ I feel exactly the same way as you do—but I’m taking care of my arteries. Blowing them full of bumps like seaweed won’t solve any problems.’ ‘Maybe so, sir, but-’ ‘We’re up against something mighty peculiar here,’ Shelton went on. We’ve got to find out precisely what it is and how best to cope with. In all probability it means we’ll have to devise new tactics. So far the patrol has achieved nothing. It is wasting its time. Obviously we’ll have to concoct a more effective method of getting into touch with the powers-that-be. March the men back to the ship, Sergeant Major.’ ‘Very well, sir.’ Bidworthy saluted, swung around, clicked his heels, opened a cavernous mouth. ‘Patro-o-ol . . . right form—’ Aboard ship the resulting conference lasted well into the night and halfway through the following morning. During these argumentative hours various oddments of traffic, mostly vehicular, passed along the road. But nothing paused to view the monster spaceship, nobody approached for a friendly word with its crew. The strange inhabitants of this world seemed to be afflicted with a local form of mental blindness, unable to see a thing until it was thrust into their faces and then surveying it squint-eyed. One passer-by in mid-morning was a long, low truck whining on two dozen balls and loaded with girls wearing bright head-scarves. The girls were tunefully singing something about one little kiss before we part, dear. A number of troops loafing near the gangway came eagerly to life, waved, whistled and yoohooed. Their effort was a total waste for the singing continued without break or pause and nobody waved back. To add to the discomforture of the love-hungry, Bidworthy stuck his head out of the airlock and rasped, ‘If you monkeys are bursting with surplus energy I can find a few jobs for you to do—nice, dirty ones. ’ He seared them one at a time before he withdrew. Up near the ship’s nose the top brass sat around the chart-room’s horseshoe table and debated the situation. Most of them were content to repeat with extra emphasis what they had said the previous evening, there being no new points to bring up. ‘Are you certain,’ the Ambassador asked Grayder, ‘that this planet has not been visited since the last emigration transport dumped its final load four centuries ago?’ ‘I’m quite positive, Your Excellency. Any such visit would be on record.’ ‘Yes, if made by a Terran ship. But what about others? I feel it in my bones that at sometime or other these people have fallen foul of one or more vessels calling unofficially and have been leery of spaceships ever since. Perhaps somebody got tough with them and tried to muscle in where he wasn’t wanted. Or perhaps they’ve had to beat off a gang of pirates. Or maybe they’ve been swindled by unscrupulous traders.’ ‘Absolutely impossible, Your Excellency,’ declared Grayder, suppressing a smile. ‘Emigration was so widely scattered over so large a number of worlds that even today every one of them is under-populated, under-developed and utterly unable to build spaceships of any kind no matter how rudimentary. Some may have the technical know-how but they lack the industrial facilities, of which they need plenty.’ ‘Yes, that is what I’ve always understood.’ Grayder went on, ‘All Blieder-drive vessels are built in the system of Sol and registered as Terran ships. Complete track is kept of their movements and their whereabouts are always known. The only other spaceships in existence are eighty or ninety antiquated rocket jobs bought at scrap price by the Epsilon system for haulage work between its fourteen closely-spaced planets. An old-fashioned rocket-ship couldn’t reach this world in a hundred years.’ ‘No, of course not.’ ‘Unofficial boats capable of this long range just don’t exist,’ Grayder assured. ‘Neither do space buccaneers and for much the same reason. A Blieder-drive ship is so costly that a would-be pirate would have to be a billionaire to become a pirate.’ ‘Then,’ said the Ambassador heavily, ‘back we go to my original theory; that a lot of inbreeding has made them crazier than their colonizing ancestors.’ ‘There’s plenty to be said in favour of that idea,’ put in Shelton. ‘You should have seen the coach- load I looked over. There was a fellow like a bankrupt mortician wearing odd shoes, one brown and one a repulsive yellow. Also a moon-faced gump sporting a hat apparently made from the skin of a barber’s pole, a1l. stripy.’ With a sad attempt at wit, he finished, ‘The only thing missing was his bubble-pipe-and probably he’ll be given that when he arrives.’ ‘Arrives where?’ ‘I don’t know, Your Excellency. They refused to tell us where they were going.’ Giving him a satirical look, the Ambassador remarked, ‘ Well, that is a valuable addition to the sum total of our knowledge. Our minds are now enriched by the thought that an anonymous individual may be presented with a futile object for an indefinable purpose when he reaches his unknown destination.’ Shelton subsided wishing that he had never seen the fat man or, for that matter, the fat man’s cockeyed world. ‘Somewhere they’ve got a capital, a civic seat, a centre of government wherein function the people who hold all the strings,’ the Ambassador asserted. ‘We’ve got to find that place before we can take over and reorganize on up-to-date lines. A capital is big by the standards of its own administrative area. It is never an ordinary, nondescript place. It has obvious physical features giving it importance above the average. It should be easily visible from the air. We must make a systematic search for it—in fact that’s what we should have done in the first place. Other planets’ capital cities have been identified without trouble. What’s the hoodoo on this one?’ ‘See for yourself, Your Excellency.’ Grayder poked several photographs across the table. ‘The situation is rather similar to that on Hygeia.[1] You can see the two hemispheres quite clearly. They reveal nothing resembling a superior city. There isn’t even a town conspicuously larger than its fellows or possessing enough outstanding features to set it apart from the others.’ ‘I don’t put great faith in pictures especially when taken at high speed or great altitude. The naked eye can always see more. We’ve got four lifeboats that should be able to search this world from pole to pole. Why don’t we use them?’ ‘Because, Your Excellency, they were not designed for such a purpose.’ ‘Does that matter so long as they get results?’ Patiently, Grayder explained, ‘They were built to be launched in free space and to hit up forty thousand miles an hour. They are ordinary, old-style rocket-ships to be used only in a grave emergency.’ ‘Well, what of it?’ ‘It is not possible to make efficient ground-survey with the naked eye at any speed in excess of about four hundred miles per hour. Keep the lifeboats down to that and you’d be trying to fly them at landing-speed, muffling their tubes, balling up their motors, creating a terrible waste of fuel and inviting a crash which you’re likely to get before you’re through.’ ‘Then,’ commented the Ambassador, ‘it is high time we had Blieder-drive lifeboats for Blieder- drive ships.’ ‘I couldn’t agree more, Your Excellency. But the smallest Blieder apparatus has an Earth-mass of more than three hundred tons. That’s far too much for little boats.’ Picking up the photographs, Grayder slid them into a drawer. ‘The trouble with us is that everything we’ve got moves a heck of a lot too fast. What we really need is an ancient, propeller-driven air-plane. It could do something that we can’t-it could go slow.’ ‘You might as well yearn for a bicycle,’ scoffed the Ambassador, feeling thwarted. ‘We have a bicycle,’ Grayder informed. ‘Tenth Engineer Harrison owns one.’ ‘And he has actually brought it with him?’ ‘It goes everywhere he goes. There’s a rumour that he sleeps with it.’ ‘A spaceman toting a bicycle! ’The Ambassador blew his nose with a loud honk. ‘I take it that he is thrilled by the sense of immense velocity it gives him, an ecstatic feeling of rushing headlong through space?’ ‘I wouldn’t know, Your Excellency.’ ‘H’m! Bring this Harrison here. I’d like to see him. Perhaps we can set a crackpot to catch a crackpot.’ Going to the caller-board, Grayder spoke over the ship’s system. ‘Tenth Engineer Harrison will report to the chart-room at once.’ Within ten minutes Harrison appeared, breathless and dishevelled. He had walked fast three-quarters of a mile from the Blieder room. He was thin and woebegone, expecting trouble. His ears were large enough to cut the pedalling with the wind behind him and he wiggled them nervously as he faced the assembled officers. The Ambassador examined him with curiosity, much as a zoologist would inspect a pink giraffe. ‘Mister, I understand that you possess a bicycle.’ At once on the defensive, Harrison said, ‘There’s nothing against it in the regulations, sir, and therefore—’ ‘Damn the regulations,’ swore the Ambassador. ‘Can you ride the thing?’ ‘Of course, sir.’ ‘All right. We’re stalled in the middle of a crazy situation and we’re turning to crazy methods to get moving. Upon your ability and willingness to ride a bicycle the fate of an empire may stand or fall. Do you understand me, Mister?’ ‘I do, sir,’ said Harrison, unable to make head or tail of this. ‘So I want you to do an extremely important job for me. I want you to get out your bicycle, ride into town, find the mayor, sheriff, grand panjandrum, supreme galootie or whatever he is called, and tell him that he is officially invited to evening dinner along with any other civic dignitaries he cares to bring. That, of course, includes their wives.’ ‘Very well, sir.’ ‘Informal attire,’ added the Ambassador. Harrison jerked up one ear and drooped the other. ‘What was that, sir?’ ‘They can dress how they like.’ ‘I get it. Do I go right now, sir?’ ‘At once. Return as quickly as you can and bring me the reply.’ Saluting sloppily, Harrison went out. His Excellency found an easy-chair, reposed in it at full length, smiled with satisfaction. ‘It’s as easy as that.’ Pulling out a long cigar, he bit off its end. ‘If we can’t touch their minds we’ll appeal to their bellies.’ He cocked a knowing eye at Grayder. ‘Captain, see that there is plenty to drink. Strong stuff. Venusian cognac or something equally potent. Give them lots of hooch and an hour at a well-filled table and they’ll talk all night. We won’t be able to shut them up.’ He lit the cigar, puffed luxuriously. ‘That is the tried and trusted technique of high diplomacy—the insidious seduction of the distended gut. It always works. You’ll see!’ |
Other sci-fi short stories at abelard.org: |
1 | Hygeia: a planet full of nudist health freaks |
2 | For information on Eric Frank Russell, his life and a bibliography of
his writings Shadow Man, a site created by Narrelle Harris, is recommended. The bibliography of EFR on Narrelle Harris’ site. On this introductory page there are links to pages including those on novels, short stories and articles. |
3 | Another science-fiction story available on this site is Profession by Isaac Asimov. This is an allegorical description of the manner in which
education currently functions in our primitive western societies.
A short selection of socio-psychologically oriented science-fiction is included in recommended reading. |
email email_abelard [at] abelard.org © abelard, 2000 the address for this document is https://www.abelard.org/e-f-russell.php 25652 words |