Player Piano (Utopia 14)

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by Курт Воннегут


  There was the clattering of the switch in the loudspeaker again. "Young braves at the Meadows for the first step forward," said a pontifical voice, not that of the usual drover.

  "Raise your right hands," said the Indian. "Repeat after me the Oath of the Spirit of the Meadows. I solemnly swear by the voice in the pines -"

  "By the voice in the pines," said the neophytes.

  "By the lapping of the great blue water, by the whir of the eagle wing -"

  The Old Man's plane had skated across the water to the shore on the other side of the island and was roaring its engines as it inched up a ramp onto land.

  "By the growl of the summer thunder," said the Indian.

  "By the growl of the summer thunder."

  "I will uphold the Spirit of the Meadows," said the Indian. "I will obey the wise commands of my chiefs, for the good of the people. I will work and fight fearlessly, tirelessly for a better world. I will never say the job is done. I will uphold the honor of my profession and what I represent at all times. I will seek out enemies of the people, enemies of a better world for all children, relentlessly."

  "Relentlessly!" said someone in the crowd near Paul, passionately. He turned to see that Luke Lubbock, again swept into the mainstream of pomp and circumstance, held his hand high and swore to everything that came along. In Luke's left hand was a fire extinguisher, apparently for use in case the blaze spread.

  When the oath was done, the Indian looked and saw it was good. "The Spirit of the Meadows is pleased," he said. "The Meadows belong to these stout-hearted braves, and it shall be a proud, happy place as it was, lo, these many moons ago."

  A smoke bomb concealed before him screened him for a startling instant, and he was gone.

  "The saloon is open," said the loudspeaker. "The saloon is open, and will be open until midnight."

  Paul found himself walking beside the pleasant youngster he'd met at lunch, Doctor Edmund Harrison of the Ithaca Works. Shepherd and Berringer were right behind, flattering the life out of Kroner.

  "Well, how'd you like it, Ed?" said Paul.

  Harrison looked at him searchingly, started to smile, and seemed to think it inadvisable. "Very well done," he said carefully. "Very professional."

  "Jesus Christ," Berringer was saying, "I mean, Christ, boy, that was a show. You know, it's entertainment, and still you learn something, too. Christ! When you do both, that's art, boy. Christ, and that wasn't cheap to put on, either, I'll bet."

  Ed Harrison of Ithaca stopped and picked up a bit of stone from the side of the path. "I'll be damned," he said. "An arrowhead!"

  "A nice one, too," said Paul, admiring the relic.

  "So there really were Indians on this island," said Harrison.

  "For chrissakes, you crazy bastard," said Berringer. "You deaf, dumb, and blind? Whaddya think they been trying to tell you for the past half-hour?"

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  THE meeting of Doctors Paul Proteus, Anthony Kroner, Lou MacCleary, Executive Manager of National Industrial Security, and Francis Eldgrin Gelhorne, National Industrial, Commercial, Communications, Foodstuffs, and Resources Director, was to take place at the Meadows in the so-called Council House. The Council House was a frame building, away from the rest, that had been built in the old, wilder days as a lazaretto for surly drunks. Drinking at the Meadows had become more careful since the war - more mature, Kroner said - so the pesthouse fell into disuse and was finally converted into a meeting place for top-policy brass.

  All save Doctor Gelhorne were now seated around a long meeting table, looking thoughtfully at the empty chair Gelhorne would be filling any minute. It was a time for silence. The mixing, the making of new contacts, the packing up of troubles in old kit bags went on noisily across the island, in the saloon. Here in the Council House there was no joy, only the summer-cottage aroma of mildew and incipient dry rot, and a grave awareness on the part of each of the three men that the world was their apple.

  The shouts and songs that floated over the greensward from the saloon, Paul noted, had a piping quality. There wasn't the inimitable hoarseness of an honest-to-God drunk in the lot. It was unthinkable that there was a man in the saloon without a glass in his hand, but it was also unlikely that many men would have their glasses filled more than twice. They didn't drink at the Meadows now the way they used to in the old days when Finnerty and Shepherd and Paul had joined the organization. It used to be that they'd come up to the Meadows to relax and really tie one on as a relief from the terribly hard work of war production. Now the point seemed to be to pretend drunkenness, but to stay sober and discard only those inhibitions and motor skills one could safely do without.

  Paul supposed there would be a couple of men who wouldn't realize what was going on, who would earnestly try to get as drunk as everyone else seemed. They would be frightfully alone and lost when the party broke up. And there would be one or two lonely drunks with nothing to lose anyway, men who had fallen into disfavor one way or another, who knew they had received their last invitation. And what the hell, the liquor was free. De mortuis nil nisi bonum.

  There was a voice on the porch of the Council House. Doctor Gelhorne was on the other side of the door, pausing a moment for some last word with the world outside. "Look at those youngsters over there," Paul heard the Old Man say, "and tell me God isn't in his heaven."

  As the doorknob turned, Paul continued to contemplate trivia, to atomize the fixtures and conventions of the only way of life he'd ever known, an easy, comfortable life, with simple answers for every doubt. That he was quitting that life, that now was perhaps the time he would do it - the grand idea over-shadowing all the little ones - rarely occupied his consciousness. It showed itself mainly in a sensation of being disembodied, or now and then of standing in a chilling wind. Maybe the right time to quit would come now, or a few months from now. There was no need to hurry, no need at all.

  The door opened.

  The three waiting men stood.

  In came Doctor Francis Eldgrin Gelhorne, National Industrial, Commercial, Communications, Foodstuffs, and Resources Director. His spherical bulk was enclosed in a double-breasted, dark-blue suit. His single concession to the Meadows' tradition of informality was an unbuttoned collar and the sliding of his necktie knot a fraction of an inch below where it should have been. Though he was seventy, his hair was as thick and black as a twenty-year-old Mexican's. His fatness was turned into something impressive rather than comical by his perpetual I-smell-excrement expression.

  He seemed to be the end of a race, as, Paul reflected, so many leaders seemed to be. It was hard to believe that when Gelhorne was gone there would ever be another man as wonderfully old, shrewd, and unafraid as he.

  He cleared his throat. "We're here because somebody wants to kill us, wreck the plants, and take over the country. That plain enough for you?"

  Everyone nodded.

  "The Ghost Shirt Society," said Doctor Lou MacCleary, Executive Manager of National Industrial Security.

  "The Ghost Shirt Society," said Director Gelhorne acidly. "Give a name to something, and you think you've got it. But you haven't got it. All you've got's the name. That's why we're here. All we've got is the name."

  "Yessir," said Lou. "The Ghost Shirt Society. And we think the headquarters is in Ilium."

  "We think," said Doctor Gelhorne. "We don't know anything."

  "Yessir," said Lou.

  Gelhorne fidgeted for a moment and looked about the room. His eyes fell on Paul. "How are you, Doctor Proteus?"

  "Fine, thank you, sir."

  "Uh-huh. Good. That's good." He turned to Lou MacCleary. "Let's see that report of yours that tells everything we don't know about the Ghost Shirt Society."

  MacCleary gave him a thick typewritten manuscript.

  Gelhorne, his lips moving, leafed through it, frowning. No one spoke or smiled or looked at anyone else.

  Paul considered the notion of Doctor Gelhorne's being the last of a race, and decided it was true. He
had got to the top through a disorderly route that the personnel machines would never tolerate. Had machines been watching things when Gelhorne started his climb to the top, his classification card would have come flying out of the card files like an old Wheaties box top.

  He had no college degree of any kind, other than bouquets of honorary doctorates that had come to him in his late fifties and sixties.

  He'd had nothing to do with industry, in fact, until he was thirty. Before that, he'd pulled a mail-order taxidermy business out of bankruptcy, sold his interest in it, and bought a trailer truck. He'd built his fleet to five trucks when he received a hot market tip, sold his business, invested the proceeds, and tripled his wealth. With this bonanza, he'd bought the largest, yet failing, ice­cream plant in Indianapolis, and put the business in the black inside of a year by building ice­cream routes servicing Indianapolis manufacturing plants during the lunch hour. In another year, he had his trucks carrying sandwiches and coffee along with ice cream. In another year, he was running plant cafeterias all over town, and the ice-cream business had become a minor division of Gelhorne Enterprises.

  He'd found that many of the manufacturing firms were owned by third- or fourth-generation heirs who, by some seeming law of decay, didn't have the nerve or interest the plants' founders had had. Gelhorne, half playfully at first, had offered these heirs advice, and found them amazingly eager to surrender responsibility. He'd bought in, watched and learned, and, discovering nerve was as valuable as special knowledge, he'd become manager and part owner of a dozen small plants.

  When war became certain and the largest corporations were looking about for new manufacturing facilities, Gelhorne had delivered his prosperous community of plants to General Steel, and become an officer of that corporation. The rule-of-thumb familiarity he had with many different industries, as represented by the plants he'd taken over, had been broader than that of any executives General Steel had developed within its own organization, and Gelhorne was soon spending all his time at the side of the corporation's war-rattled president.

  There he'd come to the attention of Paul's father in Washington, and Paul's father had made Gelhorne his general executive manager when the whole economy had been made one flesh. When Paul's father died, Gelhorne had taken over.

  It could never happen again. The machines would never stand for it.

  Paul remembered a week end long ago, when he had been a tall, skinny, polite, and easily embarrassed youth, and Gelhorne had paid a call. Gelhorne had suddenly reached out and caught Paul by the arm as Paul passed his chair. "Paul, boy."

  "Yessir?"

  "Paul, your father tells me you're real smart."

  Paul had nodded uncomfortably.

  "That's good, Paul, but that isn't enough."

  "No, sir."

  "Don't be bluffed."

  "No, sir, I won't."

  "Everybody's shaking in his boots, so don't be bluffed."

  "No, sir."

  "Nobody's so damn well educated that you can't learn ninety per cent of what he knows in six weeks. The other ten per cent is decoration."

  "Yes, sir."

  "Show me a specialist, and I'll show you a man who's so scared he's dug a hole for himself to hide in."

  "Yes, sir."

  "Almost nobody's competent, Paul. It's enough to make you cry to see how bad most people are at their jobs. If you can do a half-assed job of anything, you're a one-eyed man in the kingdom of the blind."

  "Yes, sir."

  "Want to be rich, Paul?"

  "Yes, sir - I guess so. Yes, sir."

  "All right. I got rich, and I told you ninety per cent of what I know about it. The rest is decoration. All right?"

  "Yes, sir."

  Now, after many years, Paul and Doctor Francis Eldgrin Gelhorne were looking at each other over the long table in the Council House at the Meadows. They weren't close friends, and there was none of Kroner's aromatic paternalism about Gelhorne. This was business.

  "There's nothing new about the Society in this report," said Gelhorne.

  "Only the part about Finnerty," said Lou MacCleary. "It's been slow going."

  "It certainly has," said Doctor Gelhorne. "Well, Doctor Proteus and Doctor Kroner, the point is that this Ghost Shirt nonsense might turn out to be something pretty big. And Lou, here, hasn't been able to get an agent into it to find out what they're up to or who's running it."

  "This bunch is smart," said Lou. "They're being pretty selective about who gets in."

  "But we think we know how to get a man into it," said Gelhorne. "We think they'd be very tempted by a discontented manager and engineer. We think they've already recruited at least one."

  "Finnerty," said Kroner heavily. "He finally registered with the police, incidentally."

  "Oh?" said MacCleary. "What did he say he was doing with his time?"

  "Says he's getting out Braille editions of pornography."

  "He's being pretty cute now," said Gelhorne, "but I think we'll fix his wagon all right. But that's a side issue. The point we're getting at, Paul, is that I think they'll take you into the Ghost Shirt Society under the right conditions."

  "Conditions, sir?"

  "If we fire you. As of now, as far as anyone outside this room knows, you're through. The rumor's already circulating at the saloon, isn't it, Lou?"

  "Yes, sir. I let it slip in front of Shepherd at dinner."

  "Good boy," said Gelhorne. "He'll be taking over Ilium, by the way."

  "Sir, about Pittsburgh -" said Kroner worriedly. "I promised Paul that he was slated for that job when he was finished with the investigation."

  "That's right. In the meanwhile, Garth will run the works there." Gelhorne stood briskly. "All right, Paul? Everything clear? You're to get off the island tonight and back to Ilium." He smiled. "It's really a break for you, Paul. It gives you a chance to clear up your record."

  "Record, sir?" Things were happening so quickly now that Paul could only seize upon a word and repeat it as a question in order to keep in the conversation.

  "That business of letting Finnerty go through the plant unescorted, and the pistol affair."

  "The pistol affair," said Paul. "Can I tell my wife?"

  "I'm afraid not," said Lou. "The plan is that nobody outside this room is to know."

  "It'll be hard, I know," said Gelhorne sympathetically. "But just now I'm remembering a young boy who told me he didn't want to be an engineer when he grew up, he wanted to be a soldier. You know who that boy was, Paul?"

  "Me?" said Paul bleakly.

  "You. Well, now you're in the front lines, and we're proud of you."

  "Your father would be proud of you, Paul," said Kroner.

  "I guess he would. He really would be, wouldn't he," said Paul. Gratefully he was welcoming the blind, invigorating heat of anger. "Sir, Doctor Gelhorne, may I say one more thing before you leave?"

  Kroner was holding the door open for the Old Man. "All right, by all means."

  "I quit."

  Gelhorne, Kroner, and MacCleary laughed. "Wonderful," said the Old Man. "That's the spirit. Keep that up, and you'll fool the hell out of them."

  "I mean it! I'm sick of the whole childish, stupid, blind operation."

  "Attaboy," said Kroner, smiling encouragingly.

  "Give us two minutes to get to the saloon before you leave," said MacCleary. "Wouldn't do for us to be seen together now. And don't worry about packing. Your stuff is being packed right now, and it'll be down at the dock in time for the last boat."

  He shut the door behind himself, Gelhorne, and Kroner.

  Paul sank heavily back into his chair. "I quit, I quit, I quit," he said. "Do you hear me? I quit!"

  "What a night," he heard Lou say on the porch.

  "God smiles on the Meadows," said Doctor Gelhorne.

  "Look!" said Kroner.

  "The moon?" said Lou. "It is beautiful." "The moon, yes - but look at the Oak."

  "Oh - and the man," said Doctor Gelhorne. "What do yo
u know about that!" "A man, standing there alone with the Oak, with God and the Oak," said Kroner. "Is the photographer around?" said Lou. "Too late - he's going away now," said Kroner. "Who was he?" said Doctor Gelhorne. "We'll never know," said Lou.

  "I don't want to know," said Kroner. "I want to remember this scene and think of him as a little bit of all of us." "You're talking poetry," said the Old Man. "That's good, that's good." Paul, alone inside, exhaled a puff of smoke with too much force, and coughed. The men on the porch whispered something. "Well, gentlemen," said Doctor Gelhorne, "shall we go?"

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  IF Doctor Paul Proteus, former manager of the Ilium Works, hadn't found reality disquieting at all points, he wouldn't have shown himself in the saloon before boarding the last boat for the Mainland. As he made his way along the gravel path toward the noise and light of the saloon, however, the field of his consciousness narrowed down to a pinprick, and filling the field was a twinkling shot-glass.

  The crowd fell silent as he entered, and then exploded into even greater excesses of happy noise. Quickly as Paul glanced about the room, he didn't catch a single man looking at him, nor, in the blurred vision of excitement, did he recognize a single face among these old friends.

  "Bourbon and water," he said to the bartender.

  "Sorry, sir."

  "Sorry about what?"

  "I can't serve you."

  "Why not?"

  "I've been told you're no longer a guest at the Meadows, sir." There was a prim satisfaction in the bartender's voice.

  A number of people observed the incident, Kroner among them, but no one made a move to change the bartender's ruling.

  It was a crude moment, and in its fetid atmosphere Paul made an ultimately crude suggestion to the bartender, and turned to leave with dignity.

  What he still had to learn was that without rank, without guest privileges, he lived on a primitive level of social justice. He wasn't prepared when the bartender vaulted the bar and spun him around.

 

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