SubSpace Vol 1 – Subspace Explorers – E.E. Doc Smith

immutable facts of life.”

“Okay, this is lots more fun than being old would be, anyway. What’ll we try next, Paula?”

“I’d like to go back up into the Fourth Nume and really explore it-turn it inside out-that is,

if there’s nothing more important at the moment?” Paula quirked an eyebrow at Deston.

There was not. Goodbyes were said, and promises were made to meet soon and often,

and the Destons ‘ported themselves away.

Maynard called a special meeting of the Board to order and said, “Since you all know

what the Tellurian situation is, politically and otherwise, I won’t go into it. It seems to

some of us, however, that this recent disaster may not be a disaster at all; that, if we

play our cards properly, we may be able to secure much better results than if our

blockade of Tellus had succeeded.

“With all threat of nuclear warfare removed, WestHem’s so-called defense spending will

stop; in fact, much of it has already stopped. Ordinarily, this would not he a blessing,

since business would slump into a rapidly accelerating downward spiral. A bad

recession, or even a severe panic, would follow. Any such result could be avoided, of

course, if WestHem’s government would cut taxes in the full amount of defense spending;

hut has any one of you an imagination sufficiently elastic to encompass the idea of that

government giving up half its income and firing that many hundreds of thousands of

political hangers-on?”

There was a burst of scornful laughter.

“Mine isn’t, either. As you know, defense stocks are already plummeting. They are

dropping the limit every day. Due to public panic, they will continue to drop to a point

below-in some cases to a point much below the actual value of the properties. I propose

that we start buying before that point is reached. Not enough to support the market, of

course; just enough to control it at whatever rate of decline the specialists will compute

as being certain to result in our gaining control.

“Having gained control of the largest-excuse me, I’m getting ahead of myself. I assure

you that this program is financially feasible. I am authorized to say that in addition to

GalBank, whose statements you all get, Deston and Deston, Warner Oil, Interstellar, and

Galactic Metals will all put their treasuries behind this project.” There was a burst of

applause.

“Since we are very large holders of these stocks already, there is no doubt that we can

obtain control. We will then re-hire all the personnel who have been laid off and convert

to the production of luxury goods, preferably of the more expensive and less durable

types. We will finance the purchase of these goods ourselves . . .”

This time, they clapped and whistled and stamped their feet.

. . . and put on a massive advertising campaign for such basic spending as

modernization, new housing, and so on. All of this, however, will be secondary to our

main purpose. None of you have realized as yet that this is the first chance we have ever

had of forming a political party and actually electing a government of WestHem that will

govern it……

There was a storm of applause that lasted for five minutes. Then Maynard went on:

“The Board seems to be in favor of such action. Mr. Stevens Spehn, who has clone a

great deal of work on the political aspects of this idea, will now take the floor.”

Chapter 17

PUNSUNBY’S WORLD

Many parsecs distant from the remotest outpost of civilization there was a planet known

to its inhabitants only as The World. The World and everything pertaining to it, including

the People and the Sun and the Moons and the little night-lights in the sky, had been

created by The Company on Compday, January First in the Year One; and this day-also

a Compday, of course-was the two hundred twenty sixth anniversary of that date: Jan. 1,

226. There was no celebration or ceremony-in fact, there were no words in the language

to express any such concept-but, since it was Compday, all Operators worked only half

a shift.

In the Beginning the Company had decreed that there were to be three hundred eighty

four days (plus an extra Compday, to be announced by the Highest Agent, once every

few years) in each year. Each year had twelve months; each month four weeks; each

week eight days Compday, Sonday, Monday, Tonday, Wonday, Thurday, Furday, and

Surday. All Operators were to work exactly half of each of those days except Compday,

upon which they were to work only a quarter; the other quarter was to be devoted to

being happy and to thinking pleasant thoughts of the Company, of its goodness in

furnishing them all with happiness and with life and its comforts.

No other World had ever been created or ever would be, nor any other People. The

Company and The World comprised the Cosmic All.

The World had not changed and it never would change; The Company had so decreed.

Not to the People directly, of course; the Company was an immaterial, omniscient,

omnipotent entity that, except in the matter of punishment, dealt with People only through

Company Agents. These Agents were not People, but were supermen and superwomen

far above People; so far above People that the lowest-caste Company Agents had qual-

ities that not even the highest-caste People could understand.

Upon very rare occasions the Company, whose symbol was A A A A A A A, appeared in

a form of flesh to the Highest Agent, the Comptroller General of The World, whose

symbol was A A A A A A B; and, emitting the pure mercury-vapor Light of the Company

and in the sight and the hearing of the highest-caste Company Agents, uttered sacred

Company Orders.

Company Agents of various high castes transmitted these Orders to the Managers, who

told the Assistant Managers, who told the Chiefs, who told the Assistant Chiefs, who told

the Heads, who told the Assistant Heads, who told the Foremen, who told the Shift

Bosses, who told the lower-caste People who were the Operators what to do and saw

to it that they did it.

At the time of the World’s creation The Company had issued a three-fold Prime Directive;

which was immutable and eternal: ALL PEOPLE MUST: 1) Be happy. 2) Produce more

and more People. 3) Produce more and more Goods.

If a Person obeyed these three injunctions all his life, his immaterial Aura-the thing that

made him alive, not dead, and that made him different from all other Persons-when he

became dead was absorbed into the Company and he would be happy forever.

On the other hand, there were a few who did not follow the Prime Directive literally and

exactly. These were the mals-the malcontents, the maladjusts, the malefactors-the

thinkers, the questioners, the unbelievers -the unhappy for any cause. They were blasted

out of existence by the Company itself and that was the end of them, auras and all.

And that was fair enough. Every Person was born into a caste. He grew up in that caste.

He was trained to do what his ancestors had done and what his descendants would do.

He had children in that caste, all of whom became of it. He lived his whole life in that

caste and died in it. That was, is, and ever shall be the way of life, and that is precisely

the way it should be: for in pure order, and only in pure order, lies security; and in

security, and only in security, lies happiness; and happiness is the First Consideration of

the Prime Directive. Mals of all kinds are threats to order, to security, and to happiness;

therefore all mals must die. So it was, is, and ever shall be. Selah. It is written.

Following the Prime Directive was easy enough; for most people, in fact, easier than not

following it. Since happiness was simply the state of not being unhappy, and there was

nothing in the normal life to be unhappy about, happiness was the norm.

Producing People, too, was a normal part of life. Furthermore, since the Company

punished pre-family sexual experience with Company wrath just a few volts short of

death, the family state brought a new and different kind of happiness. Every female

Person’s job assignment was to produce, between the ages of eighteen and thirty, ten

children, and then to keep on running her family unless and until she was transferred to

some other job. Since every nubile girl wanted a man of her own, and since children were

a source of happiness on their own account, not one woman in a thousand had to be

brainwashed at all to really like the job of running a family.

And as for producing Goods-why not? That was what People were created for, and that

was all that men were good for-except, of course, for fathering children. Also, there was

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