Authors: The Cyberiad [v1.0] [htm]
sound, and technicians and assistants ran frantically back and
forth with piles of diapers.
The bombardment began a week later, at
midnight. The cannons, primed by veteran cannoneers, were aimed,
muzzles raised, straight at the white star of the Emperor's
empire, and they fired—not death-dealing, but life-giving
missiles. For Trurl had loaded the cannons with newborn babies, which
rained down upon the enemy in gooing, cooing myriads and,
growing quickly, crawled and drooled over everything; there were so
many of them, that the air shook with their ear-splitting ma-ma's,
da-da's, kee-kee's and waa's. This infant inundation lasted until the
economy began to collapse under the strain and the kingdom was faced
with the dread specter of a depression, and still out of the sky came
tots, tads, moppets and toddlers, all chubby and chuckling, their
diapers fluttering. The Emperor was forced to capitulate to King
Protuberon, who promised to call a halt to the hostilities on the
condition that his son be granted Amarandina's hand in marriage—to
which the Emperor hastily agreed. Whereupon the baby cannons
were all carefully spiked and put away, and, to be safe, Trurl
himself took apart the femfatalatron. Later, as best man, in a suit
of emeralds and holding the ceremonial baton, he played toastmaster
at the riotous wedding feast. Afterwards, he loaded his rocket with
the titles, diplomas and citations which both the King and the
Emperor had bestowed upon him, and then, sated with glory, he headed
for home.
The
Fifth Sally
Or
The Mischief
of King Balerion
Not by being cruel did Balerion, King
of Cymberia, oppress his people, but by having a good time. And
again, it wasn't feasts or all-night orgies that were dear to His
Majesty's heart, but only the most innocent games—tiddlywinks,
mumbledypeg, old maid and go fish into the wee hours of the morning,
then hopscotch, leapfrog, but more than anything he loved to
play hide-and-seek. Whenever there was an important decision to be
made, a State document to be signed, interstellar emissaries to be
received or some Commodore requesting an audience, the King
would hide, and they would have to find him, else suffer the most
dreadful punishments. So the whole court would chase up and down the
palace, check the dungeons, look under the drawbridge, comb the
towers and turrets, tap the walls, turn the throne inside out, and
quite often these searches lasted a long time, for the King was
always thinking up new places to hide. Once, a terribly important war
never got declared, and all because the King, decked in spangles and
crystal pendants, hung three days from the ceiling of the main hall
and passed for a chandelier, holding his mouth to keep from laughing
out loud at the ministers rushing about frantically below. Whoever
found the King was instantly given the title of Royal
Discoverer—there were already seven hundred and thirty-six of
those at court. But he who would gain the King's special favor had to
beguile him with some new game, one the King had never heard of.
Which was by no means easy, considering that Balerion was unusually
well-versed in the subject; he knew all the ancient games, like
jackstones or knucklebones, and all the latest games, like spin the
electron, and he often said that everything was a game, his Crown
included, and for that matter the whole wide world.
These thoughtless and frivolous words
outraged the venerable members of the King's privy council; the
prime minister in particular, My Lord Papagaster of the great
house of Pentaperihelion, was much provoked, saying the King held
nothing sacred and even dared expose his own Exalted Person to
ridicule.
Then, when the King unexpectedly
announced it was time for riddles, terror filled the hearts of
everyone. He had always had a passion for riddles; once, right in the
middle of the coronation, he confounded the Lord High Chancellor with
the question, why was antimatter like an antimacassar?
It wasn't very long before the King
realized that his courtiers weren't putting forth the proper
effort in solving the conundrums he posed. They replied in any which
way, said whatever came into their heads, and this infuriated the
King. However, as soon as he began to base all royal appointments and
promotions upon the answers to his riddles, things improved
considerably. Decorations and dismissals came thick and fast, and the
whole court, like it or not, had to play the game in earnest.
Unfortunately, many dignitaries attempted to deceive the King, who,
though basically good-natured, could simply not tolerate a cheater.
The Keeper of the Great Seal was sent into exile because he had used
a crib (concealed beneath his cuirass) in the Royal Presence; he
never would have been discovered, had not one of his old enemies, a
certain general, brought this to the King's attention. Papagaster
himself had to part with his high post, for he didn't know what was
the darkest place in outer space. In time, the King's Cabinet was
composed of the most accomplished solvers of crosswords,
acrostics and rebuses in the land, and his ministers never went
anywhere without their encyclopedias. The courtiers soon became so
proficient, that they could supply the correct answer before the King
had finished asking the question, though this was hardly surprising
when you considered that they were all avid subscribers to the
"Official Register," which, instead of a tedious list
of acts and administrative decisions, contained nothing but puzzles,
puns and parlor games.
As the years went by, however, the
King liked less and less to have to think, and gradually returned to
his first and greatest love, hide-and-seek. One day, in a
particularly playful mood, he offered a most handsome prize to
the one who could find for him the best hiding place in all the
world. The prize was to be nothing less than the Royal Diadem of the
Cymberanide Dynasty, a cluster of truly priceless jewels. No one had
laid eyes on this wonder for many centuries, for it lay locked and
coffered in the Royal Vault.
Now it so happened that Trurl and
Klapaucius chanced upon Cymberia in the course of one of their
travels. News of the King's proclamation, having quickly spread
throughout the realm, reached our constructors too; they learned
of it from the local villagers at the inn where they were spending
the night.
The next day they repaired to the
palace to announce that they knew a hiding place unequaled by any
other. Unfortunately, so many others had come to claim the prize,
that it was next to impossible to get by the crowd at the gate. Trurl
and Klapaucius therefore returned to their lodgings and resolved to
try their luck the following day. Though they didn't leave it to luck
alone; this time the prudent constructors came prepared. To every
guard who barred the way and then to every court official who
challenged them, Trurl quietly slipped a few coins and, whenever that
didn't work, a few more, and in less than five minutes they were
standing before the throne of His Royal Highness. His Royal Highness
was of course delighted to hear that such famous wise men had come so
far for the sole purpose of imparting to him the secret of the
perfect hiding place. It took them a little time to explain the how
and the why of it to Balerion, but his mind, schooled from childhood
in the ways of tricks and puzzles, finally grasped the idea. Burning
with enthusiasm, the King jumped down from his throne, assured the
two friends of his undying gratitude, promised they would receive the
prize without fail—provided only they let him try out
their secret method at once. Klapaucius was reluctant on this point,
muttering to himself that they ought to write up a proper
contract first, with parchment, seals and tassels; but the King was
so insistent, and pleaded with such vehemence, swearing great oaths
the prize was as good as theirs, that the constructors had to give
in. Trurl opened a small box he had brought with him, took out the
necessary device and showed it to the King. This invention actually
had nothing to do with hide-and-seek, but could be applied to that
game wonderfully well. It was a portable bilateral personality
transformer, with retroreversible feedback, of course. Using it, any
two individuals could quickly and easily exchange minds. The device,
fitted onto one's head, resembled a pair of horns; when these came
into contact with the forehead of the one with whom one wished to
effect the exchange, and were lightly pressed, the device was
activated and instantaneously set up two opposing series of
antipodal impulses. Through one horn, one's own psyche flowed into
the other, and through the other, the other into one's own. Hence the
total deenergizing of the one memory and the simultaneous energizing
of the other in its place, and contrariwise. Trurl had set the
apparatus on his head for purposes of demonstration and was
explaining the procedure to the King, bringing the royal forehead
into proximity with the horns, when the King impulsively butted
against them, which triggered the mechanism and immediately
brought about a personality transfer. It all happened so quickly that
Trurl, who had never really tested the device on himself, didn't
notice. Nor did Klapaucius, standing to one side; it did strike him
rather odd that Trurl suddenly stopped in the middle of a sentence
and Balerion instantly took up where Trurl had left off
,
,
using such words as "the potentials involved with nonlinear
conversion of submnemonic quanta" and "the adiabatic flux
differential of the id." The King went on in his squeaky voice
for almost a minute before Klapaucius realized there was something
wrong. Balerion, finding himself inside the body of Trurl, was no
longer listening to the lecture, but wiggled his fingers and toes, as
if making himself more comfortable in this novel shape, which he
inspected with the greatest curiosity. Meanwhile Trurl, in a long
purple robe, was waving his arms and explaining the reversed entropy
of mutually transposed systems, until he grew aware that
something was in the way, looked down at his hand and was dumbfounded
to find himself holding a scepter. He was about to speak, but the
King burst out laughing and took to his heels. Trurl started after
him, but tripped over the royal robe and fell flat on his face. This
commotion quickly brought the royal bodyguards, who straightway threw
themselves upon Klapaucius, thinking he had attacked the Royal
Person. By the time Trurl managed to get his royal personage off the
floor and convince the guards it stood in no danger, Balerion was far
away, rollicking somewhere in Trurl's body. Trurl attempted to
give chase, but the courtiers wouldn't permit it, and when he
protested he wasn't the King at all but there had been a personality
transfer, they concluded that excessive puzzle-solving had finally
unhinged the Royal Reason and politely but firmly locked him in the
royal bedchamber, then sent for the royal physicians while he roared
and pounded on the door. Klapaucius meanwhile, thrown out of the
palace on his ear, headed back to the inn, thinking—not without
alarm—of the complications that might arise from what had just
taken place. "Undoubtedly," he thought, "had I been in
Trurl's shoes, my great presence of mind would have saved the day.
Instead of making a scene and ranting on about telepsychic transfers,
which couldn't help but create suspicions as to his sanity, I would
have taken advantage of the King's body and ordered them to seize
Trurl, namely Balerion, at once-—whereas now he's running
around free somewhere in the city—and also, I would have had
the other constructor remain at my side, in the capacity of special
adviser. But that complete idiot"—by which he meant
Trurl—"completely lost his head, and now I'll have to
bring all my tactical talents into play, else this business may end
badly…"
He tried to recall everything he knew
about the personality transformer, which was considerable. By
far the greatest danger, as he saw it, was that Balerion, heedlessly
rushing about in Trurl's body, might stumble and hit some inanimate
object with his horns. In which case Balerion's consciousness would
immediately enter that object and, since inanimate things had no
consciousness and consequently the object could offer the
transformer nothing in return, Trurl's body would fall lifeless to
the ground; as for the King, he would be trapped for all eternity
inside some stone, or lamppost, or discarded shoe. Uneasy, Klapaucius
quickened his pace, and not far from the inn he overheard some