The Lighter Side By Keith Laumer

“Oh, no!” Chester slid down in his chair, gripping his head with both hands.

“Please let me reassure you, Mr. Chester,” the voice said soothingly, “I handled the affair most discreetly; I merely manipulated the stock market—”

Chester groaned. “When they’re through hanging me, they’ll burn me in effigy.”

“I compute the probability of your being held culpable for these irregularities to be on the order of—.0004357:1. In any event, ritual acts carried out after your demise ought logically to be of little concern to—”

“You may be a fourth-level intellect, but you’re no psychologist!”

“On the contrary,” the machine said a trifle primly. “So-called psychology has been no more than a body of observations in search of a science. I have organized the data into a coherent discipline.”

“What use did you make of the stolen money?”

“Adequate orders were placed for the newly designed components, which occupied less than one per cent of the volume of the original-type units. I arranged for their delivery and installation at an accelerated rate. In a short time the existing space was fully utilized, as you will see in the view I am now displaying.”

Case and Chester studied what appeared to be an aerial X-ray view on the wall screen. The Chester estate was shown diagrammatically.

“The area now shaded in red shows the extent of the original caverns,” said the voice. A spidery pattern showed the dark rectangles of the house. “I summoned work crews and extended the excavations as you see in green.”

“How the devil did you manage it?” Chester groaned. “Who would take orders from a machine?”

“The companies I deal with see merely a letter, placing an order and enclosing a check. They cash the check and fill the order. What could be simpler?”

“Me,” muttered Chester. “For sitting here listening when I could be making a head start for the Matto Grosso.”

On the wall a pattern of green had spread out in all directions, branching from the original red.

“You’ve undermined half the county!” Chester said. “Haven’t you heard of property rights?”

“You mean you’ve filled all that space with sub-sub-miniaturized memory storage banks?” Case asked.

“Not entirely; I’ve kept excavation work moving ahead of deliveries.”

“How did you manage the licenses for all this digging operation?”

“Fortunately, modern society runs almost entirely on paper. Since I have access to paper sources and printing facilities through my publication contacts, the matter was easily arranged. Modest bribes to county boards, state legislators, the State Supreme Court . . . ”

“What does a Supreme Court justice go for these days?” Case inquired interestedly.

“Five hundred dollars per decision,” the voice said. “Legislators are even more reasonable; fifty dollars will work wonders. County boards can be swayed by a mere pittance. Sheriffs react best to gifts of alcoholic beverages.”

“Ooowkkk!” said Chester.

“Maybe you had better think about a trip, Chester,” Case said. “Outer Mongolia.”

“Please take no precipitate action, Mr. Chester,” the voice went on. “I have acted throughout in the best interests of your relative’s plan, and in accordance with his ethical standards as deduced by me from his business records.”

“Let’s leave Great-grandfather’s ethical standards out of this. Dare I ask what else you’ve done?”

“At present, Mr. Chester, pending your further instructions, I am merely continuing to charge my datom-retention cells at the maximum possible rate. I have, of necessity, resorted to increasingly elaborate methods of fact-gathering. It was apparent to me that the pace at which human science is abstracting and categorizing physical observations is far too slow. I have therefore applied myself to direct recording. For example, I monitor worldwide atmospheric conditions through instruments of my design, built and installed at likely points at my direction. In addition, I find my archaeological and paleontological unit one of my most effective aids. I have scanned the lithosphere to a depth of ten miles, in increments of one inch. You’d be astonished at some of the things I’ve seen deep in the rock.”

“Like what?” Case asked.

The scene on the wall changed. “This is a tar pit at a depth of 1,227 feet under Lake Chad. In it, perfectly preserved even to the contents of the stomachs, are one hundred and forty-one reptilian cadavers, ranging in size from a nine-and-three-eights-inch ankylosaurus to a sixty-three-foot-two-inch gorgosaurus.” The scene shifted. “This is a tumulus four miles southeast of Itzenca, Peru. In it lies the desiccated body of a man in a feather robe. The mummy still wears a full white beard and an iron helmet set with the horns of a Central European wisent.” The view changed again. “In this igneous intrusion in the basaltic matrix underlying the Nganglaring Plateau in southwestern Tibet, I encountered a four-hundred-and-nine-foot-deep space hull composed of an aligned-crystal iron-titanium alloy. It has been in place for eighty-five million, two hundred and thirty thousand, eight hundred and twenty-one years, four months and five days. The figures are based on the current twenty-four-hour day, of course.”

“How did it get there?” Chester stared at the shadowy image on the wall.

“The crew were apparently surprised by a volcanic eruption. Please excuse the poor quality of the pictorial representation. I have only the natural radioactivity of the region to work with.”

“That’s quite all right,” Chester said weakly. “Case, perhaps you’d like to step out and get another bottle. I feel the need for a healing draught.”

“I’ll get two.”

The wall cleared, then formed a picture of a fuzzy, luminous sphere against a black background.

“My installations in the communications satellites have also proven to be most useful. Having access to the officially installed instruments, my modest equipment has enabled me to conduct a most rewarding study of conditions obtaining throughout the galaxies lying within ten billion light-years.”

“Hold on! Are you trying to say you were behind the satellite program?”

“Not at all. But I did arrange to have my special monitoring devices included. They broadcast directly to my memory banks.”

“But . . . but . . . ”

“The builders merely followed blueprints. Each engineer assumed that my unit was the responsibility of another department. After all, no mere organic brain can grasp the circuitry of a modern satellite in its entirety. My study has turned up a number of observations with exceedingly complex ramifications. As a case in point, I might mention the five derelict space vessels which orbit the sun. There . . . ”

“Derelict space vessels? From where?”

“Two are of intragalactic origin. They derive from planets whose designations by extension of the present star identification system are Alpha Centauri A 4, Boötes—”

“You mean . . . creatures . . . from those places have visited our solar system?”

“I have found evidence of three visits to earth itself by extraterrestrials in the past, in addition to the one already mentioned.”

“When?”

“The first was during the Silurian period, just over three hundred million years ago. The next was at the end of the Jurassic, at which time the extermination of the dinosauri was carried out by Nidian hunters. The most recent occurred a mere seven thousand, two hundred and forty-one years ago, in North Africa, at a point now flooded by the Aswan Lake.”

“Hey, what about flying saucers?” Case asked. “Anything to the stories?”

“A purely subjective phenomenon, on a par with the angels so frequently interviewed by the unlettered during the pre-atomic era.”

“Chester, this is dynamite,” Case said. “You can’t let ’em bust up this outfit. We can peddle this kind of stuff for plenty to the kind of nuts that dig around in old Indian garbage dumps.”

“Case, if this is true . . . There are questions that have puzzled science for generations. But I’m afraid we could never convince the authorities—”

“You know, I’ve always wondered about telepathy. Is there anything to it, Machine?”

“Yes, as a latent ability,” the voice replied. “However, its development is badly stunted by disuse.”

“What about life after death?”

“The question is self-contradictory. However, if by it you postulate the persistence of the individual consciousness-field after the destruction of the neural circuits which gave rise to it, this is clearly nonsense. It is analogous to the idea of the survival of a magnetic field after the removal of the magnet—or the existence of a gravitational field in the absence of mass.”

“So much for my reward in the hereafter,” Case said. “But maybe it’s lucky at that.”

“Is the universe really expanding?” Chester inquired. “There are all kinds of theories . . . ”

“It is.”

“Why?”

“The natural result of the law of Universal Levitation.”

“I’ll bet you made that one up,” said Case.

“I named it; however, the law has been in existence as long as space-time.”

“How long is that?”

“That is a meaningless question.”

“What’s this levitation? I know what gravitation is, but . . . ”

“Imagine two spheres hanging in space, connected by a cable. If the bodies rotate around a common center, a tensile stress is set up in the cable; the longer the cable, the greater the stress, assuming a constant rate of rotation.”

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