Authors: The Cyberiad [v1.0] [htm]
can hear inside are its programs whirring, one more frightening than
the next. It approaches—how it hisses, how it spits! It even
scares itself a little—but
that
just sits there.
The scarechrome tries once more, this time on a different frequency,
but by now it just doesn't have its heart in it.
The Steelypips see that something else
is needed. They say: "Let's take a higher caliber, hydraulic,
differential-exponential, plastic, stochastic, and with plenty of
muscle. It won't cower if it has nuclear power."
So they sent it off,
universal, reversible, double-barreled, feedback on every track, all
systems go heigh-ho, and inside one mechanic and one mechanist, and
that's not all because just to be on the safe side they stuck a
scarechrome on top. It arrived, so well-oiled you could hear a pin
drop—it winds up for the swing and counts down: four quarters,
three quarters, two quarters, one quarter, no quarter! Ka-boom!
what a blow! See the mushroom grow! The mushroom with the radioactive
glow! And the oil bubbles, the gears chatter, the mechanic and the
mechanist peer out the hatch: can you imagine, not even a scratch.
The Steelypips held a council of war
and then built a mechanism which in turn built a metamechanism which
in turn built such a megalomechanism that the closest stars had to
step back. And in the middle of it was a machine with cogs and wheels
and in the middle of that a servospook, because they really meant
business now.
The megalomechanism gathered up all
its strength and let go! Thunder, rumbling, clatter, a mushroom so
huge you'd need an ocean to make soup out of it, the clenching of
teeth, darkness, so much darkness you can't even tell what's what.
The Steelypips look—nothing, not a thing, just all their
mechanisms lying around like so much scrap metal and without a sign
of life.
Now they rolled up their sleeves.
"After all," they say, "we are mechanics and
mechanists, all mechanically minded, and we have a machine, a dream
of a machine, with springs and gears and perfect in every respect, so
how can this nasty thing just sit there and not budge?"
This time they make nothing less than
an enormous cyberivy-bushwhacker: it'll creep up casually, as if
minding its own business, glance over its shoulder, grow a little
bolder, send out a root or two, grow up from behind, taking its time,
and then when it closes in, that'll be the end of that. And truly,
everything happened exactly as predicted, except, when it was over,
that wasn't exactly the end of that, not at all.
They fell into despair, and they
didn't even know what to think because this had never happened to
them before, so they mobilized and analyzed, made nets and glues,
lariats and screws, traps and contraptions to make it drown, break it
down, make it fall, or maybe wall it up—they try this way and
that and the other, but one is as poor as another. They turn
everything upside-down, but nothing helps. They're about ready to
give up hope when suddenly they see—someone's coming: he's
on horseback, but no, horses don't have wheels—it must be a
bicycle, but wait, bicycles don't have prows, so maybe it's a rocket,
but rockets don't have saddles. What he's riding no one can tell, but
who's in the saddle we all know well: it's Trurl himself, the
constructor, out on a spree, or maybe on one of his famous sallies,
serene and smiling, coming closer, flying by—but even from a
distance you'd know that this wasn't just anybody.
He lowers, he hovers, so they tell him
the whole story: "We are the Steelypips, we have a machine, a
dream of a machine, with springs and gears and perfect in every
respect, we saved up all our atoms, put them all together ourselves,
we hadn't a care, no spats in our vats, no rules, no schools,until
something flew up, landed, sat down and won't budge."
"Did you try scaring it off?"
Trurl asks with a kindly smile.
"We tried a scarechrome and a
servospook and a megalomechanism, all hydraulic and high caliber,
spouting mesons like caissons, pi-and mu-and neutrinos too, protons
and photons, but nothing worked."
"No machine, you say?"
"No sir, no machine." .
"H'm, interesting. And what
exactly is it?"
"That we don't know. It appeared,
flew here, what it is nobody knows, except that it's hideous and no
matter from which angle you look at it, it's even more hideous. It
flew up, landed, so heavy you can't imagine, and just sits there. But
it's an awful nuisance, all the same."
"Well, I really don't have much
time," says Trurl. "The most I can do is stay here for a
while, in an advisory capacity. Is that agreeable with you?"
It certainly is and the Steelypips
immediately ask what he wants them to bring—photons, screws,
hammers, artillery, or how about some dynamite, or TNT? And
would our guest like coffee or tea? From a vending machine, of
course.
"Coffee's fine," agrees
Trurl, "not for me, but for the business at hand. As for the
rest of it, I don't think so. You see, if neither scarechrome, nor
servospook, nor cyberivy-bushwhacker will do the job, then other
methods are indicated: archaic and archival, legalistic hence
sadistic. I've yet to see the remittance due and payable in full
fail."
"Come again?" ask the
Steelypips, but Trurl, rather than explain, continues:
"It's quite simple, really. All
you need is paper, ink, stamps and seals, sealing wax and thumbtacks,
sand to sprinkle, blotters, a teller window, a zinc teaspoon, a
saucer—the coffee we already have—and a mailman. And
something to write with—do you have that?"
"We'll get it!" And they
take off.
Trurl pulls up a chair and dictates:
"Notice is hereby given, that in re hindrance of Tenant, as
stated under Rev. Stat. c.117(e) dash 2 dash KKP4 of the CTSP Comm.
Code, in clear violation of paragraph 199, thereby constituting
a most reprehendable offense, we do declare the termination,
desummation and full cessation of all services accruing
thereunto, by authority of Ordinance 67 DPO No. 14(j) 1101
et
seq
., on this the 19th day of the 17th month of the current
year, aff'g 77 F. Supp. 301. The Tenant may appeal said action by
extraordinary procedure to the Chairman of the Board within
twenty-four hours."
Trurl attaches the seal, affixes the
stamp, has it entered in the Central Ledger, consults the Official
Register, and says:
"Now let the mailman deliver it."
The mailman takes it, they wait, they
wait, the mailman returns.
"Did you deliver it?" asks
Trurl.
"I did."
"And the return receipt?"
"Here it is, signed on this line.
And here's the appeal."
Trurl takes the appeal and, without
reading it at all, orders it returned to sender and writes diagonally
across it: "Unacceptable—Proper Forms Not Attached."
And he signs his name illegibly.
"And now," he says, "to
work!"
He sits and writes, while those who
are curious look on and, understanding nothing, ask what this is and
what it's supposed to do.
"Official business," answers
Trurl. "And things will go well, now that it's under way."
The mailman runs back and forth all
day like one possessed; Trurl notarizes, issues directives, the
typewriter chatters, and little by little an entire office takes
shape, rubber stamps and rubber bands, paper clips and paper wads,
portfolios and pigeonholes, foolscap and scrip, teaspoons, signs
that say "No Admittance," inkwells, forms on file, writing
all the while, the typewriter chattering, and everywhere you look you
see coffee stains, wastepaper, and bits of gum eraser. The Steelypips
are worried, they don't understand a thing, meanwhile Trurl uses
special delivery registered C.O.D., certified with return receipt,
or, best of all, remittance due and payable in full—he
sends out no end of dunning letters, bills of lading, notices,
injunctions, and there are already special accounts set up, no
entries at the moment but he says that's only temporary. After a
while, you can see that that is not quite so hideous, especially in
profile—it's actually gotten smaller!—yes, yes, it
is
smaller! The Steelypips ask Trurl, what now?
"No idle talk permitted on the
premises," is his answer. And he staples, stamps, inspects
vouchers, revokes licenses, dots an i, loosens his tie, asks who's
next, I'm sorry, the office is closed, come back in an hour, the
coffee is cold, the cream sour, cobwebs from ceiling to floor, an old
pair of nylons in the secretary's drawer, install four new file
cabinets over here, and there's an attempt to bribe an official,
a pile of problems and a problem with piles, a writ of execution,
incarceration for miscegenation, and appeals with seven seals.
And the typewriter chatters: "Whereas,
pursuant to the Tenant's failure to quit and surrender the demised
premises in compliance with the warrant served, habere facias
posses-sionem, by Div. of Rep. Cyb. Gt. KRS thereof, the Court of
Third Instance, in vacuo and ex nihilo, herewith orders the immediate
vacuation and vacation thereunder. The Tenant may not appeal this
ruling."
Trurl dispatches the messenger and
pockets the receipts. After which, he gets up and methodically hurls
the desks, chairs, rubber stamps, seals, pigeonholes, etc., out into
deep space. Only the vending machine remains.
"What on earth are you doing?"
cry the Steelypips in dismay, having grown accustomed to it all.
"How can you?"
"Tut-tut, my dears,” he
replies. "Better you take a look instead!"
And indeed, they look and gasp—why,
there's nothing there, it's gone, as if it had never been! And where
did it go, vanished into thin air? It beat a cowardly retreat, and
grew so small, so very small, you'd need a magnifying glass to see
it. They root around, but all they can find is one little spot,
slightly damp, something must have dripped there, but what or why
they cannot say, and that's all.
"Just as I thought," Trurl
tells them. "Basically, my dears, the whole thing was quite
simple: the moment it accepted the first dispatch and signed for it,
it was done for. I employed a special machine, the machine with a big
B;
for, as the Cosmos is the Cosmos, no one's licked it
yet!"
"All right, but why throw out the
documents and pour out the coffee?" they ask.
"So that it wouldn't devour you
in turn!" Trurl replies. And he flies off, nodding to them
kindly—and his smile is like the stars.
The
Sixth Sally
OR
How Trurl
and Klapaucius
Created a Demon
of the Second Kind to
Defeat the
Pirate Pugg
"There are but two caravan trails
that lead south from the Lands of the Upper Suns. The first, which is
older, goes from the Stellar Quadriferum past the Great
Glossaurontus, a most treacherous star, for its magnitude varies, and
at its dimmest it resembles the Dwarf of the Abyssyrs, and thereby
causes travelers to blunder into the Great Shroud Wastes, from whence
only one caravan in nine ever returns. The second, newer trail was
opened up by the Imperium Myrapoclean, whose turboservoslaves carved
a tunnel six billion miles in length through the heart of the Great
Glossaurontus itself.
"The northern entrance to the
tunnel may be found in the following manner: from the last of the
Upper Suns proceed directly toward the Pole for the time it
takes to recite seven Now-I-lay me-down-to-sleep's. Then go left,
till you reach the wall of fire, which is a side of Glossaurontus,