Arkady and Boris Strugatsky. Roadside Picnic

“A little better?” he muttered. “Coming round, stalker?”

“Stick to your wiping, why don’t you. You know, one guy rubbed until he got a genie. Ended up on easy street.”

“Who was that?” Ernest asked suspiciously.

“It was another bartender here. Before your time.”

“What happened?”

“Nothing. Why do you think the Visitation happened. It was all his rubbing. Who do you think the Visitors were?”

“You’re a bum,” Ernie said with approval.

He went to the kitchen and came back with a plate of grilled hot dogs. He put the plate in front of me, moved the catsup over toward me, and went back to his glasses. Ernest knows his stuff. His trained eye recognizes a stalker returned from the Zone with swag and he knows what a stalker needs after a visit to the Zone. Good old Ernie. A humanitarian.

I finished the hot dogs, lit a cigarette, and started calculating how much Ernie must make on us. I’m not sure of the prices the loot goes for in Europe, but I’d heard that an empty can get almost 2,500, and Ernie only gives us 400ˇ Batteries there cost at least too and we’re lucky if we can get to from him. Of course, shipping the loot to Europe must cost plenty. Grease this palm and that one…. and the stationmaster must be on his payroll too. When you think about it, Ernest really doesn’t make that much, maybe fifteen or twenty percent, no more. And if he gets caught, it’s ten years at hard labor.

Here my honorable meditations were interrupted by some polite type. I hadn’t even heard him walk in. He announced himself next to my elbow, asking permission to sit down.

“Don’t mention it. Please do.”

He was a skinny little guy with a sharp nose and a bow tie. His face looked familiar, but I couldn’t place him. He climbed up on the stool next to me and said to Ernest.

“Bourbon, please!” And then turned to me. “Excuse me, but don’t I know you? You work in the International Institute, don’t you?”

“Yes. And you?”

He speedily whipped out his business card and set it in front of me.

“Aloysius Macnaught, Agent Plenipotentiary of the Emigration Bureau.”

Well, of course, I knew him. He bugs people to leave the city. As it is, there’s hardly half the population left in Harmont, yet he has to clear the place of us completely. I pushed away his card with my fingernail.

“No thanks. I’m not interested. My dream is to die in my home-I town.”

“But why?” he jumped in quickly. “Forgive my indiscretion, but what’s keeping you here?”

“What do you mean? Fond memories of childhood. My first kiss in the municipal park. Mommy and daddy. My first time drunk, right here in this bar. The police station so dear to my heart….” I took a heavily used handkerchief from my pocket and dabbed my eyes.

“No, I can’t leave for any amount!”

He laughed, took a tiny sip of bourbon, and spoke in a thoughtful way.

“I just can’t understand you Harmonites. Life is tough in the city. There’s military control. Few amenities. The Zone right next to you —it’s like sitting on a volcano. An epidemic could break out any day. Or something worse. I can understand the old people. It’s hard for them to leave. But you, how old are you? Twenty-two, twenty-three? Can’t you understand that the bureau is a charitable organization, we don’t profit by this in any way. We just want people to leave this hellhole and get back into the mainstream of life. We underwrite the move, find you work. For young people like you, we pay for an education. No, I just don’t understand!”

“Do you mean nobody wants to leave?”

“Not nobody. Some are leaving, particularly the ones with families. But the young folk and the old people—what do you people want in this place? It’s a hick town, a hole.”

I let him have it.

“Mr. Aloysius Macnaught! You’re absolutely right. Our little town is a hole. It always has been and still is. But now it is a hole into the future. We’re going to dump so much through this hole into your lousy world that everything will change in it. Life will be different. It’ll be fair. Everyone will have everything that he needs. Some hole, huh? Knowledge comes through this hole. And when we have the knowledge, we’ll make everyone rich, and we’ll fly to the stars, and go anywhere we want. That’s the kind of hole we have here.”

I broke off here, because I noticed Ernest watching me in amazement. I felt uncomfortable. I don’t usually like using other people’s words, even when I agree with them. Besides, it was coming out kind of funny. When Kirill speaks, you listen and forget to close your mouth. And even though I seem to be saying the same things, it doesn’t come out the same. Maybe it’s because Kirill never slipped Ernest any loot under the counter….

Ernie snapped to attention and hurriedly poured me six fingers of booze at once, as if to bring me back to my senses. The sharp-nosed Mr. Macnaught took another sip of his bourbon.

“Yes, of course. Eternal batteries, the blue panacea. But do you really believe things will be the way you described them?”

“It’s none of your business what I really believe. I was speaking for the city. As for myself, what do you have in Europe that I haven’t seen? I know about your boredom. You knock yourself out all day, and watch TV all night.”

“It doesn’t necessarily have to be Europe.”

“It’s all the same, except that it’s cold in Antarctica.”

The amazing part was that I believed it in my guts as I said it to him. Our Zone, the bitch, the killer, was a hundred times dearer to me at that second than all of their Europes and Africas. And I wasn’t drunk yet, I had just pictured for a minute how I would drag myself home in a herd of cretins just like myself, how I would be pushed and squeezed in the subway, and how I was sick and tired of everything.

“And what about you?” he asked Ernest.

“I have a business,” he replied self-importantly. “I’m no punk. I’ve invested all my money in this business. The base commander himself comes in once in a while, a general, you understand? Why should I leave here?”

Mr. Aloysius Macnaught tried to make some point, quoting a lot of figures. But I wasn’t listening. I took a good long gulp, pulled out a lot of change from my pocket, got off the stool and pumped the jukebox. There’s a song on there: “Don’t Come Back If You’re Not Sure.” It has a good effect on me after a trip to the Zone. The jukebox was howling and rocking. I had taken my glass into the corner where I was hoping to even old scores with the one-armed bandit. And time flew like a bird. I was putting in my last nickel when Richard Noonan and Gutalin crashed into the hospitable arms of the bar. Gutalin was blotto, rolling his eyes and looking for a place to rest his fist. Richard Noonan was tenderly holding him by the elbow and distracting him with jokes. A pretty pair! Gutalin is a huge black ape with knuckles down to his knees, and Dick is a small round pink creature that all but glows.

“Hey!” shouted Dick. “There’s Red! Come over and join us!”

“R-r-right!” roared Gutalin. “There are only two real men in this whole city—Red and me! All the rest are pigs or Satan’s children. Red, you also serve the devil, but you’re still human.”

I came over with my glass. Gutalin peeled off my jacket and seated me at the table.

“Sit down, Red! Sit down, Satan’s servant. I like you. Let’s have a cry over the sins of mankind. A good long bitter wail.”

“Let’s wail,” I said. “Let’s drink the tears of sin.”

“For the day is nigh,” Gutalin announced. “For the white steed is saddled and his rider has put his foot in the stirrup. And the prayers of those who have sold themselves to Satan are in vain. Only those who have renounced him will be saved. You, children of man who were seduced by the devil, who play with the devil’s toys, who dig up Satan’s treasures—I say unto you: you are blind! Awake, you bastards, before it’s too late! Trample the devil’s trinkets!” He stopped, as though he had forgotten what came next. “Can I get a drink here?” he suddenly asked in a different voice. “You know, Red, I’ve been canned again. Said I was an agitator. I keep explaining to them: Awake, blind ones, you’re falling into the pit and taking others with you! They just laughed. So I punched the shop leader in the nose and split. They’ll arrest me now. And for what?” Dick came over and put the bottle on the table.

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