Authors: The Cyberiad [v1.0] [htm]
And with great ire did he have at it, hewing with might and main
until there were no end of little beasts underfoot, but suddenly they
all backed off, went into a huddle, and there stood the beast again,
good as new and stifling a yawn.
"H'm," thought the King.
"Apparently it has the same kind of stabilization mechanism
that—what was his name again?—Pumpington—that
Pumpington tried to use. Yes, I dealt with him myself for that
idiotic trick… Well, we'll just wheel out the antimatter
artillery…"
He picked one with a six-foot bore,
lined it up and loaded it himself, took aim, pulled the string and
sent a perfectly silent and weirdly shimmering shell straight at the
beast, to blow it to smithereens once and for all. But nothing
happened—that is, nothing much. The beast only crouched a
little lower, put out its left hand, long and hairy, and gave the
King the finger.
"Bring out our biggest!"
roared the King, pretending not to notice. And several hundred
peasants pulled up a veritable giant of a cannon, all of
eighty-gauge, which the King aimed and was just about to fire—when
all at once the beast leaped. The King lifted his sword to defend
himself, but then there was no more beast. Those who saw what
happened next said later that they were sure they had taken leave of
their senses, for as the beast flew through the air, it underwent a
lightning transformation, the grayish hulk divided up into three men
in uniform, three policemen, who, still aloft, were already preparing
to do their duty. The first policeman, a sergeant, got out the
handcuffs, maneuvering his legs to keep upright; the second held
on to his plumed shako with one hand, so it wouldn't blow off, and
with the other pulled out a warrant from his breast pocket; the
third, apparently a rookie, assumed a horizontal position beneath the
feet of the first two, to cushion their fall—after which,
however, he jumped up and carefully dusted off his uniform. Meanwhile
the first policeman had handcuffed the dumbfounded King and the
second slapped the sword from his hand. Feebly protesting, the
suspect was then summarily trotted off the field. The entire
hunting procession stood rooted to the spot for a minute or two, then
gave a yell and followed in hot pursuit. The snorting cybersteeds had
practically caught up with the abductors, and swords and sabers were
unsheathed and raised to strike, but the third policeman bent over,
depressed his bellybutton and immediately the arms grew into two
shafts, the legs coiled up, sprouting spokes, and began to turn,
while the back formed the seat of a green racing gig to accommodate
the other two policemen, who were vigorously plying the now-harnessed
King with a whip, to make him run faster. The King obliged and broke
into a mad gallop, waving his arms frantically to ward off the blows
that descended upon his royal head; but now the huntsmen were gaining
again, so the policemen jumped on the King's back and one slipped
down between the shafts, huffed and puffed and turned into a spinning
top
7
a dancing whirlwind, which gave wings to the little
gig and whisked it away over hill and dale till it disappeared
altogether in a cloud of dust. The King's retinue split up and began
a desperate search with Geiger counters and bloodhounds, and a
special detachment came running up with shovels and flamethrowers and
left no bone unburned in all the neighboring cemeteries—an
obvious error, occasioned most likely by the trembling hand that
hastily telegraphed the order from the observation balloon that had
monitored the hunt. Several police divisions rushed here and there,
searched the grounds, every bush, every weed, and both x-rays and
laboratory samples were diligently taken of everything imaginable.
The King's charger was ordered to appear before a special board of
inquiry appointed by the Prosecutor General. A unit of paratroopers
with vacuum cleaners and sieves was dropped on the royal game
preserve to sift through every last particle of dust. Finally,
the order was issued that anyone resembling a policeman was to be
detained and held without bail, which naturally created
difficulties—one half of the police force, as it turned out,
had arrested the other, and vice versa. At dusk the huntsmen and
soldiers returned to the village dazed and bedraggled with the woeful
tidings that neither hide nor hair of the King's person was anywhere
to be found.
By torchlight and in the dead of
night, the chained constructors were taken before the Great
Chancellor and Keeper of the Royal Seal, who addressed them in the
following way:
"Whereas ye have falsely
conspired and perversely plotted against the Crown and Life of Our
Beloved Sovereign and Most Noble Ruler Krool and therewith dared to
raise a treacherous hand and vilely devise his demise, not to
mention impersonating an officer, a great aggravation of your
crimes, so shall ye be quartered without quarter, impaled and
pilloried, disemboweled, buried alive, crucified and burnt at the
stake, after which your ashes shall be sent into orbit as a warning
and perpetual reminder to all would-be regicides, amen."
"Can't you wait a bit?"
asked Trurl. "You see, we were expecting a letter…"
"A letter, thou most scurrilous
and scurvy knave?!"
Just then the guards made way for the
Postmaster General himself—indeed, how could they bar that
dignitary's entrance with their poleaxes? The Postmaster
approached in full regalia, his medals jingling impressively, pulled
a letter from a sapphire satchel and handed it to the Chancellor,
saying, "Mannequin though I be, I come from His Majesty,"
whereupon he disintegrated into a fine powder. The Chancellor could
scarcely believe his eyes, but quickly recognized the King's signet
impressed there on the purple sealing wax; he opened the letter
and read that His Majesty was forced to negotiate with the enemy, for
the constructors had employed means algorithmic and algebraic to make
him captive, and now they would list their demands, all of which
the Great Chancellor had better meet, if he wished ever to get his
Mighty Sovereign back in one piece. Signed: "Krool herewith
affixes his hand and seal, held prisoner in a cave of unknown
location by one pseudoconstabulary beast in three uniforms
personified."
There then arose a great clamor,
everyone shouting and asking what it all meant and what were the
demands, to which Trurl said only, "Our chains, if you please."
A blacksmith was summoned to unfetter
them, after which Trurl said:
"We are hungry and dirty, we need
a bath, a shave, massage, refreshment, nothing but the best,
plenty of pomp and a water ballet with fireworks for dessert!"
The court, of course, was hopping mad,
but had to comply in every particular. Only at dawn did the
constructors return from their villa, each elegantly pomaded, arrayed
and reclining in a sedan chair borne by footmen (their former
informers); they then, deigning to grant an audience, sat down
and presented their demands—not off the top of their heads,
mind you, but from a little notebook they had prepared for the
occasion and hidden behind a curtain in their room. The following
articles were read:
First, A ship of the finest make and
model available shall be furnished to carry the constructors home.
2nd, The said ship shall be laden with
various cargo as here specified: diamonds—four bushels, gold
coin—forty bushels, platinum, palladium and whatever other
ready valuables they happen to think of—eight bushels of
each, also whatever mementos and tokens from the Royal Apartments the
signatories of this instrument may deem appropriate.
3rd, Until such time as the said ship
shall be in readiness for takeoff, every nut and bolt in place, fully
loaded and delivered up to the constructors complete with red
carpet, an eighty-piece send-off band and children's chorus, an
abundance of honors, decorations and awards, and a wildly
cheering crowd—until then, no King.
4th, That a formal expression of
undying gratitude shall be stamped upon a gold medallion and
addressed to Their Most Sublime and Radiant Constructors Trurl and
Klapaucius, Delight and Terror of the Universe, and moreover it shall
contain a full account of their victory and be duly signed and
notarized by every high and low official in the land, then set in the
richly embellished barrel of the King's favorite cannon, which Lord
Protozor, Master of the Royal Hunt, shall himself and wholly unaided
carry on board—no other Protozor but the one who lured Their
Most Sublime and Radiant Constructors to this planet, thinking to
work their painful and ignominious death thereby.
5th, That the aforesaid Protozor shall
accompany them on their return journey as insurance against any sort
of double-dealing, pursuit, and the like. On board he shall occupy a
cage three by three by four feet and shall receive a daily allowance
of humble pie with a filling made of that very same sawdust which
Their Most Sublime and Radiant Constructors saw fit to order in
the process of indulging the King's foolishness and which was
subsequently taken to police headquarters by unmarked balloon.
6th and lastly, The King need not
crave forgiveness of Their Most Sublime and Radiant Constructors on
bended knee, since he is much too beneath them to deserve notice.
In Witness Whereof, the parties have
hereunto set their hands and seals this day and year,
etc.
and so on.
By: Trurl and Klapaucius, Constructors, and the Great Chancellor, the
Great Chamberlain, the Great Chief of Secret Police, the Seneschal,
Squadron Leader and Royal Balloonmaster.
All the ministers and dignitaries
turned blue, but what could they do? They had no choice, so a ship
was immediately ordered. But then the constructors unexpectedly
showed up after a leisurely breakfast, to supervise the work, and
nothing suited them: this material, for instance, was no good, and
that engineer was an absolute idiot, and they had to have a revolving
magic lantern in the main hall, one with four pneumatic widgets and a
calibrated cuckoo clock on top —and if the natives here didn't
know what a widget was, so much the worse for them, considering that
the King was no doubt most impatient for his release and would (when
he could) deal harshly with anyone who dared to delay it. This remark
occasioned a general numbness, a great weakness about the knees, and
much trembling, but the work continued apace. Finally the ship was
ready and the royal stevedores began to stow the cargo in the
hold, diamonds, sacks of pearls, so much gold it kept spilling out
the hatch. Meanwhile the police were secretly running all about the
countryside, turning everything upside down, much to the
amusement of Trurl and Klapaucius, who didn't mind explaining to
a fearful but fascinated audience how it all happened, how they had
discarded one idea after another until they hit upon an altogether
different kind of beast. Not knowing where or how to place the
controls—that is, the brain —so that they would be safe,
the constructors had simply made everything brain, enabling the beast
to think with its leg, or tail, or jaws (equipped with wisdom teeth
only). But that was just the beginning. The real problem had two
aspects, algorithmic and psychoanalytic. First they had to determine
what would check the King, catch him flatfooted, so to speak. To this
end, they created by nonlinear transmutation a police subset
within the beast, since everyone knows that resisting or interfering
with an officer who is making an arrest
lege artis
is a
cosmic offense and utterly unthinkable. So much for the psychology of
it—except that the Postmaster General was utilized here on
similar grounds: an official of lower rank might not have made it
past the guards, the letter then would not have been delivered, and
the constructors would have very literally lost their heads.
Moreover, the Postmaster mannequin had been given means to bribe the
guards, should that have proved necessary. Every eventuality had been
anticipated and provided for. Now as far as the algorithms went: they
had only to find the proper domain of beasts, closed, bounded and
bonded, with plenty of laws both associative and distributive in
operation, throw in a constable constant or two, some graphs of
graft, squadratic equations and crime waves—and the thing took
over from there, once activated by the expedient of writing a
document-program (behind the curtain with the bells) in castor oil
ink, rendering it thereby sufficiently hard to swallow to serve as a
red-tape generator. We might add here that later on the constructors
had an article published in a prominent scientific journal under
the title of "Recursive β—Metafunctions in the