Despite the perils and problems of our times, we should be glad that we are living in this age. Every civilization is like a surf rider, carried forward on the crest of a wave. The wave bearing us has scarcely started its run; those who thought it was already slackening spoke centuries too soon. We are poised now, in the precarious but exhilarating balance that is the essence of real living, the antithesis of mere existence. Behind us lie the reefs we have already passed; beneath us the great wave, as yet barely flecked with foam, humps its back from the sea… And ahead…? We cannot tell; we are too far out to see the unknown land. It is enough to ride the wave.
When he was once again alone, Julian moved about the apartment, checking it out in more detail. So far as he could see, there was no reason in the world why he couldn’t be comfortable here. It was smaller than the apartment he had maintained in the United Nations Plaza building in New York, or even the Paris place on the Left Bank, but he wasn’t going to need servants here; Edith had explained that the apartments were entirely automated. He was going to have to check that one out. How the hell could you automate sweeping, dusting, washing windows; above all, how could you automate making a bed? Not that he couldn’t make his own bed, of course.
It was too early in the day, but he decided he could use a drink. He went back into the living room, to the small auto-bar which stood in one corner. He stared down at it. Although he had been in the Leete home for some time now, he had never used the auto-bar in their apartment; someone else had always gotten the drinks.
Well, it couldn’t be too complicated. There was a numbered dial and also a button, below a speaker. Experimentally, he pressed the button. He hadn’t the vaguest idea how to dial. Probably, somewhere around here, there was a pamphlet listing drinks, and all you had to do was dial what you wanted.
Instead, he cleared his throat and said, “I’d like a martini, with a twist of lemon peel rather than an olive.”
A slightly mechanical voice answered, “We are sorry, Mr. West, but that beverage is not on our list.”
He was genuinely surprised. “A martini not on your list?”
“No, Mr. West. However, if you will give us the formula it shall be placed in the building’s data banks.”
“All right. You take four, no make that five parts of gin and put it in a shaker with one part dry vermouth and lots of ice. You stir it briskly until it is very cold, but not too long so that too much of the ice melts. You pour it into a pre-chilled, thin-shelled cocktail glass and then twist a peel of lemon over it and drop the peel into the drink.”
“Thank you, Mr. West. The formula is now on file.”
He stood back half a step and scowled at the auto-bar. Now what?
It couldn’t have been two minutes before the top of the bar sank down to rise up again with a highly chilled, champagne-size glass. He was somewhat taken aback. He should have told them just what he meant by a part; that is, about a third of an ounce. There were at least five ounces of gin in this oversized, so-called cocktail glass. Well, he could straighten that out with them later. He took the drink and went over to the easy chair that was placed before the room’s TV screen.
He got out the screen’s directory and looked up the General News. Then he dialed it.
If he understood correctly, General News was the equivalent of the front page in the papers of his own day. Front page and possibly second and third.
The material began flashing before him, but it was Interlingua, and he was incapable of understanding more than one word out of three. He dialed for Information and asked it he could have the General News in English.
No problem, except that he couldn’t follow it even in English. It was too technical, except for a few items on entertainment and social matters. In disgust, he dialed again and, with a slight rasp in his voice, asked for the news in English for younger people—between the ages of eight and ten.
The voice said, “Of course, Mr. West.”
“What do you mean, of course?’” he snarled.
“Yes, sir,” the voice said unemotionally, as always.
How the hell did you argue with a computer? He settled back in the chair and took an irritated pull at his martini. Even the computers in this building knew that he had the educational level of a ten-year-old—maybe less.
For he found his work cut out for him trying to follow along even on that level.
The news was considerably different than it had been a third of a century ago. For one, there was no crime news. He was to find out later that this came under the heading of Medical News, and there was precious little of it. There was no financial news, either, which was one of the first items he used to look up in the Times and the Wall Street Journal.
There was a good deal of scientific and technological news, practically all of it entirely beyond him.
“Good God, this is for eight-year-olds?” he muttered, pulling at his overgrown martini again.
There was a great deal of sports; but there had been changes. There was no longer such a thing as boxing, although there was wrestling, and no karate or judo. There was seemingly no bullfighting, or auto racing, or any other sport that might involve someone getting hurt. There wasn’t even football. The remnants of the Roman arena had disappeared from the sports scene, and viewers of spectacle sports evidently no longer got their kicks from the fact that they might witness a serious injury, or even death. Nobody got hurt in the sports of this era.
There was a great deal of entertainment news. Some of it was on a new order for him. For instance, it would seem that one of the current entertainment fads involved composing poems—on your feet. That is, a contestant would be given, cold, a subject, and within only a few minutes, he was expected to deliver his poem. The judges would give him both the subject and a verse form—a sonnet, or more intricate French form such as a rondeau—and he would have to compose in that form and on that subject. There was no possible manner in which he could prepare himself beforehand. In such a contest, Julian decided, he would have considered that he’d done well if he were able to come up with anything: Cold Beer Sold Here.
It would seem that in this age, intellectual exercises were all the thing. He wondered if they still played charades. Back in the fifties, he had rather prided himself on his own abilities. If the game had become extinct, he would reintroduce charades.
He gave up on the General News and tried, in the way of an experiment, Music. In his day he had been exposed to classical music beyond the point of desire, but it was a social must. These people now seemed to live for it. A musical great was the equivalent in status of a billionaire in his own time.
Ballet followed Music. There seemed to be a ballet revival that would have given Nijinsky and Pavlova back seats. He had always liked ballet. He wondered if they ever did the old classics, such as Swan Lake.
But Scientific News was half of all news, and he was lost. Even in English on the ten-year-old level, he hadn’t the vaguest idea of what he was reading. He abruptly flicked off the set, picked up his glass and finished off his martini. He slumped back in this chair, thoroughly frustrated. He didn’t know enough in this day even to know where to begin.
He flicked the screen back on, for something had occurred to him.
He dialed information and said, “I want a resumé, in English, on an eight- to ten-year level, on the outstanding scientific breakthroughs that have taken place since the year 1970 Old Calendar.”
“Yes, Mr. West. That will take two or three minutes to compile. Did you wish an extensive report or a brief?”
He suspected that an extensive report would take him the better part of the rest of the week to wade through. “Just a brief.”
Two or three minutes. It was the first time the Internationa] Data Banks hadn’t come back with something he wanted immediately. Probably it was the first time the request had ever been made. He shrugged and settled back in his chair.
While he waited, he thought back over his conversation with Edith and Sean O’Callahan. He hadn’t really told them anything about combat. Not really. It wasn’t something easy to tell about; you almost had to witness it to understand. Oh, some of the really good writers had been able to tell it true. Wasn’t that the way Hemingway had said it, tell it true ? Something like that. But the Old Man had been there, and more than once. Papa Hemingway had been one of the few men Julian West had ever met who actually seemed to like war.
Johnny Reston came back to him now. Sergeant John Reston. They had been a team for some six months down in the Mekong Delta area. They had worked out a system, based on that of pursuit pilots. Johnny acted as the equivalent of a wing man for Julian; that is, he remained to the right and a few yards behind him when they went into action. Julian was the point man and directed his fire at the enemy. Johnny spent full time covering him, ignoring offensive action of his own, unless it involved protecting his buddy. It had worked pretty well until the day when they were wading waist deep in water, wading desperately for dry land and cover, that an exploding mortar shell hit Johnny almost dead center. A great deal of blood and gore that had been Sergeant John Reston was flung over Julian. After he had gotten to land, he had vomited his guts out.
Yes, he could have told Sean and Edith about that. But could he have told it true, as Papa had demanded? Probably not; he could never have brought home to them the reality of the thing, the nauseating horror. As he recalled, it had only been a week later that he stepped on the land mine and nearly had his leg blown off. Two months in hospital and, when he had recovered, he had two weeks’ R R in Bangkok where he picked up the only case of venereal disease he had ever experienced.
The screen lit up before him and he began to scan the developments in science since the time Doctor Herbert Pillsbury had put him into stasis.
SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL BREAKTHROUGHS SINCE 1970—NOT NECESSARILY IN ORDER OF DISCOVERY
1. Applications of masers and lasers for sensing, communication, measuring, heating, cutting, power transmission, mining and illumination, and other purposes.
Well, the Leetes had already told him a bit about that, although he still didn’t understand what in the hell a laser was. He vaguely remembered reading somewhere that it was a very narrow beam of light, and had the potential to be made into a death ray.
2. Very high-temperature and high-strength structural materials. New and improved fabrics such as fibers, papers, and plastics and new materials for appliances and equipment such as alloys, glasses, ceramics, intermetallics, and cermets.
3. New sources of power for fixed installations such as magnetohydrodynamic, thermoelectric, thermoionic and radioactivity, and new sources of power for transportation including improved storage batteries, fuel cells, propulsion by electric-magnetic fields and jet engines.
All right, that was to be expected. He had missed a couple of the words. What were cermets, and what was magnetohydrodynamic? He supposed he should order a dictionary from the ultra-market down in the basement. Right now that would slow him up too much, however, looking up every word he didn’t understand.
4. Worldwide use of high-altitude cameras in satellites for weather control, mapping, geological investigations, prospecting, and land use.
5. New methods of water transport, including automated cargo ships, hovercraft, submarine carriers pulled by surface tugs, and developments in container ships. Ground Effect Machines, eliminating the need to load and unload cargo at sea ports.
Nothing startling there, either. All of it had been germinating in his own time. But the next one set him back.
6. Advances in cyborg techniques such as substitutes or mechanical aids for limbs, senses, or organs.
Dr. Leete had told him that they no longer transplanted organs. Did he, Julian West, have an artificial heart in his chest?
7. New techniques and institutions for education, including chemical methods for improving learning and memory, and home education via video and computerized programmed learning.
He knew about that, too—and that it largely applied only to youth.
8. New and improved materials and equipment for buildings including variable transmission glass, heating and cooling by thermoelectric effect, and phosphorescent and electroluminescent lighting.
9. Widespread use of cryogenics.
He hadn’t any idea as to cryogenics and could only guess at electroluminescent lighting.
10. Recoverable boosters for space launching, direct broadcasts from satellites to home receivers, permanent lunar bases, manned satellites and planetary bases, and the beginnings of planetary engineering.
Most of that had been in the cards when he went into hibernation, although he didn’t know what they meant by planetary engineering.
11. High-capacity, worldwide, regional, and local communication through satellites, light pipes and lasers, and video TV communications, including tape material from data banks and rapid transmission offacsimilies including news, library material, instantaneous mail delivery, and other printouts.
12. Large scale desalinization through use of nuclear fusion and solar power, allowing for reforestation of such areas as the Sahara.
13. Widespread use of computers for intellectual assistance, including translation, teaching, literature search, medical diagnosis, traffic control, computation, design analysis, and other functions.
14. Transceivers for personal communication on a worldwide basis.
15. Stimulated, planned, and programmed dreams.
That last one set him back again. He was going to have to ask the doctor about that.
16. Extensive genetic control regarding humans, animals, and plants.
He refused to think about that for the time.
17. Artificial growth of new limbs and organs, either in situ or for later transplantation.
Another one to ask the doctor about.
18. Indefinite suspended animation.
He was on home ground with that one. Indefinite? He had been under for more than thirty years, hadn’t he? Now, he supposed, new developments had occurred.
19. Major rejuvenation and significant extention of life span and vigor.
That was something! He wondered to what extent. Somebody—Edith, he thought—had already told him that man was no longer tied to his traditional three score years and ten.
20. Automated highways and moving sidewalks for local transportation.
21. Substantial progress toward anti-gravity.
22. Lifetime immunization against practically all diseases.
23. Understanding of cetacean languages.
That would mean communication with… well, porpoises, whales, and dolphins, wouldn’t it?
24. Wireless energy—
Before he could finish taking it in, his TV phone hummed. He switched off his auto-teacher screen and activated the phone. It was Edith.
“Have you forgotten that you promised to have lunch with us? Mother was to present one of her recipes.”
He said, “Sorry, Edie. I was all caught up in research. I’ll be right over.”
The Leete door opened at his approach, it too being keyed in to his face. He went on into the living room where both Edith and her mother were already at the dining room table.
Martha smiled at him. “I’ve already dialed for lunch. I hope you like Oysters Diablo.”
He took his customary place. “I’m an oyster man from way back but I don’t believe I know that dish.” He looked around. “Isn’t the doctor going to be with us? I’ve managed to accumulate some more questions about the changes that have taken place since my times.”
Mrs. Leete frowned slightly. “I can’t imagine where he is. He went out a short time ago on an errand that should have taken but a few minutes. Perhaps something came up. We can start without him.”
It was then that the living room door opened and Doctor Leete stumbled in. His clothes were rumpled and soiled, blood trickled from the side of his mouth, and one of his eyes was swollen.
The three at the table were on their feet instantly.
“Raymond!” Martha screamed.
Julian hurried to the side of the doctor. “What in the hell happened?” he asked as he led the older man to a couch.
Edith was at her father’s side, eyes wide. “Father! What on earth happened?”
Doctor Leete brought a handkerchief from his pocket and dabbed at his mouth. He was gasping for breath.
He said, as though he couldn’t believe it himself, “I… I was just mauled by three young men in the elevator.”
“Mauled!” Martha Leete was next to her husband, her hand anxiously on his arm.
Julian had gone to the auto-bar. He came back with a stiff shot of brandy. “Here,” he said. “I know you don’t ordinarily drink, but you look as though you could use this. I thought you didn’t have juvenile delinquency any more. What did they take?”
The doctor looked at him blankly. “Take? What could they take? I have nothing worth taking. We don’t have money. Nobody wears jewelry. I have nothing anybody else couldn’t get by simply dialing the ultra-markets.”
Edith said, “But… I’ve never heard of such a thing… I’ve never heard of physical violence taking place in this building.”
Julian was the only one present familiar with such matters. He asked, “What did they do?”
The doctor shook his head, as though to clear it. “They got into the elevator with me. As we ascended, one suddenly struck me with his fist in the abdomen. Then the others began to hit me. That’s all I can remember, except… one thrust his hand into my jacket pocket.”
“For what?”
The doctor shook his head again, his breath coming more naturally now. “For nothing. There was nothing there.”
Martha said in bewilderment, “But this doesn’t make sense, Raymond. You have no enemies.”
Her husband put his hand in his jacket pocket, as though to demonstrate that there was nothing in it. Then he frowned. He withdrew a slip of paper and scowled at it. When he had read it, he shook his head in confusion.
Julian took the slip from him.
When a social revolution is pending and, for whatever reason, is not accomplished, reaction is the alternative. At such a time any reform measures proposed are concealed measures of reaction—Daniel DeLeon.
He handed the note to Martha Leete. She and Edith read it, both looking bewildered.
“Who in the hell’s Daniel DeLeon?” Julian asked.
The doctor had caught his breath by now. He said, mystified, “Was, not is. He was a revolutionist about 1900. Very prominent in socialist circles a century ago.”
Julian looked at Edith. “Can’t you call the police?”
“We don’t have police, in the old sense of the word,” she said, standing. “But I’ll call University Security.”
But something strange had come over the doctor’s face. He took the note back from his wife and reread it, then looked up and shook his head. “No, don’t do that. I want to think about this.”
And now Edith had a thoughtful look too.
She turned to Julian. “Jule, I’m sorry, but would you mind? It doesn’t look as though a very pleasant lunch is in the offing.”
“There’s nothing I can do?”
It was the doctor who answered him. “No. No, Julian. I’ll be all right. We’ll see you later.”