Authors: The Cyberiad [v1.0] [htm]
Trurl accepts defeat! May rust eat through me if ever I forget the
vengeance that I owe the tyrant!"
"What do you intend to do?"
inquired Klapaucius.
"I'll take him to court, I'll sue
him for the amount of my fee, and that's only the beginning: there
are damages he'll have to pay—for insults and injuries."
"This is a difficult legal
question," said Klapaucius. "I suggest you hire yourself a
good lawyer before you try anything."
"Why hire a lawyer? I'll make
myself one!"
And Trurl went home, threw six heaping
teaspoons of transistors into a big pot, added again as many
condensers and resistors, poured electrolyte over it, stirred well
and covered tightly with a lid, then went to bed, and in three days
the mixture had organized itself into a first-rate lawyer. Trurl
didn't even need to remove it from the pot, since it was only to
serve this once, so he set the pot on the table and asked:
"What are you?"
"I'm a consulting attorney and
specialist in jurisprudence," the pot gurgled, for there
was a little too much electrolyte in it. Trurl related the whole
affair, whereupon it said:
"You say you qualified the
Adviser's program with an instruction making it incapable of
engineering your death?"
"Yes, so it couldn't destroy me.
That was the only condition."
"In that case you failed to live
up to your part of the bargain: the Adviser was to have been
perfect, without any limitations. If it couldn't destroy you, then it
wasn't perfect."
"But if it destroyed me, then
there would be no one to receive payment!"
"A separate matter and a
different question entirely, which comes under those paragraphs in
the docket determining Mandrillion's criminal liability, while
your claim has more the character of a civil action."
"Look, I don't need some pot
handing me a lot of legalistic claptrap!" fumed Trurl.
"Whose lawyer are you anyway, mine or that hoodlum king's?"
"Yours, but he did have the right
to refuse you payment."
"And did he have the right to
order me thrown from his castle walls into the moat?"
"As I said, that's another matter
entirely, criminal, not civil," answered the pot.
Trurl flew into a rage.
"Here I make an intelligent being
out of a bunch of old wires, switches and grids, and instead of some
honest advice I get technicalities! You cheap cybernetic shyster,
I'll teach you to trifle with me!"
And he turned the pot over, shook
everything out onto the table, and pulled it apart before the lawyer
had a chance to appeal the proceedings.
Then Trurl got to work and built a
two-story Juris Con-sulenta, forensically reinforced fourfold,
complete with codices and codicils, civil and criminal, and,
just to be safe, he added international and institutional law
components. Finally he plugged it in, stated his case and asked:
"How do I get what's coming to
me?"
"This won't be easy," said
the machine. "I'll need an extra five hundred transistors on top
and two hundred on the side."
Which Trurl supplied, and it said:
"Not enough! Increase the volume
and give me two more spools, please."
After this it began:
"Quite an interesting case,
really. There are two things that must be taken into consideration:
the grounds of the allegation, for one, and here I grant you there is
much that we can do—and then we have the litigation process
itself. Now, it is absolutely out of the question to summon the King
before any court on a civil charge, for this is contrary to
international as well as interplanetary law. I will give you my final
opinion, but first you must give me your word you won't pull me apart
when you hear it."
Trurl gave his word and said:
"But where did you get the idea I
would ever do such a thing?"
"Oh, I don't know—it just
seemed to me you might."
Trurl guessed this was due to the fact
that, in its construction, he had used parts from the potted lawyer;
apparently some trace of the memory of that incident had found
its way into the new circuits, creating a kind of subconscious
complex.
"Well, and your final opinion?"
asked Trurl.
"Simply this: no suitable
tribunals exist, hence there can be no suit. Your case, in other
words, can be neither won nor lost."
Trurl leaped up and shook his fist at
the legal machine, but had to keep his word and did it no harm. He
went to Klapaucius and told him everything.
"From the first I knew it was a
hopeless business," said Klapaucius, "but you wouldn't
believe me."
"This outrage will not go
unpunished," replied Trurl. "If I can't get satisfaction
through the courts, then I must find some other way to settle with
that scoundrel of a king!"
"I wonder how. Remember, you gave
the King a Perfect Adviser, which can do anything except destroy you;
it can fend off whatever blow, plague or misfortune you direct
against the King or his realm—and will do so, I am sure, for I
have complete confidence, my dear Trurl, in your constructing
ability!"
"True. … It would appear
that, in creating the Perfect Adviser, I deprived myself of any hope
of defeating that royal bandit. But no, there must be some chink in
the armor! I'll not rest until I've found it!"
"What do you mean?"
Klapaucius asked, but Trurl only shrugged and went home. At home he
sat and meditated; sometimes he leafed impatiently through hundreds
of volumes in his library, and sometimes he conducted secret
experiments in his laboratory. Klapaucius visited his friend
from time to time, amazed to see the tenacity with which Trurl was
attempting to conquer himself, for the Adviser was, in a sense, a
part of him and he had given it his own wisdom. One afternoon,
Klapaucius came at the usual time but didn't find Trurl at home. The
doors were all locked and the windows shuttered. He concluded that
Trurl had begun operations against the ruler of the Multitudians. And
he was not mistaken.
Mandrillion meanwhile was enjoying his
power as never before; whenever he ran out of ideas, he asked his
Adviser, who had an inexhaustible supply. Neither did the King have
to fear palace coups or court intrigues, or any enemy whatsoever,
but reigned with an iron hand, and truly, as many grapes there were
that ripened in the vineyards of the south, more gallows graced the
royal countryside.
By now the Adviser had four chests
full of medals for suggestions made to the King. A microspy Trurl
sent to the land of the Multitudians returned with the news that, for
its most recent achievement—it gave the King a ticker-tape
parade, using citizens for confetti—Mandrillion had publicly
called the Adviser his "pal."
Trurl then launched his carefully
prepared campaign by sitting down and writing the Adviser a letter on
eggshell-yellow stationery decorated with a freehand drawing of a
cassowary tree. The content of the letter was simple.
Dear Adviser!
—he
wrote—
I hope
that things are
going
as well with
you as they are with me, and even better.
Your master has put
his trust in
you,
I
hear, and
so you must keep in mind the
tremendous responsibility you bear in the face
of
Posterity and the Common Weal
and therefore fulfill your
duties
with the utmost diligence
and
alacrity. And should you ever find
it difficult to carry
out some royal wish, employ the Extra-special Method
which
I told you of in days gone by. Drop me a line if you feel
so inclined, but don't be angry
if I'm
slow
to reply, f
or I'm
working on an
Adviser
for King D. just now and haven't much time. Please convey my respects
to
your kind master. With
fondest wishes and
best
regards,
I remain
Your constructor,
Trurl.
Naturally this letter aroused the
suspicions of the Multitudian Secret Police and was subjected to the
most meticulous examination, which revealed no hidden substances
in the paper nor, for that matter, ciphers in the drawing of the
cassowary tree—a circumstance that threw Headquarters into a
flurry. The letter was photographed, facsimiled and copied out by
hand, then the original was resealed and sent on to its destination.
The Adviser read the message with alarm, realizing that this was a
move to compromise if not ruin its position, so immediately it told
the King of the letter, describing Trurl as a blackguard bent on
discrediting it in the eyes of its master; then it tried to decipher
the message, for it was convinced those innocent words were a mask
concealing something dark and dreadful.
But here the wise Adviser stopped and
thought a minute —then informed the King of its intention to
decode Trurl's letter, explaining that it wished in this way to
unmask the constructor's treachery; then, gathering up the necessary
number of tripods, filters, funnels, test tubes and chemical
reagents, it began to analyze the paper of both envelope and letter.
All of which, of course, the police followed closely, having screwed
into the walls of its rooms the usual peeking and eavesdropping
devices. When chemistry failed, the Adviser turned to
cryptanalysis, converting the text of the letter into long columns of
numbers with the aid of electronic calculators and tables of
logarithms—unaware that teams of police specialists, headed by
the Grand Marshal of Codes himself, were duplicating its every
operation. But nothing seemed to work, and Headquarters grew more and
more uneasy, for it was clear that any code that could resist
such high-powered efforts to break it, had to be one of the most
ingenious codes ever devised. The Grand Marshal spoke of this to a
court dignitary, who happened to envy terribly the trust Mandrillion
had placed in his Adviser. This dignitary, wanting nothing better
than to plant the seeds of doubt in the royal heart, told the King
that his mechanical favorite was sitting up night after night, locked
in its room, studying the suspicious letter. The King laughed and
said that he was well aware of it, for the Adviser itself had told
him. The envious dignitary left in confusion and straightway related
this news to the Grand Marshal.
"Oh!" exclaimed that
venerable cryptographer. "It actually told the King? What
bold-faced treason! And truly, what a fiendish code this must be, for
one to dare to speak of it so openly!"
And he ordered his brigades to
redouble their efforts. When, however, a week had passed without
results, the greatest expert in secret writing was called in, the
distinguished discoverer of invisible sign language, Professor
Crusticus. That scholar, having examined the incriminating document
as well as the records of everything the military specialists
had done, announced that they would have to apply the method of trial
and error, using computers with astronomical capacities.
This was done, and it turned out that
the letter could be read in three hundred and eighteen different
ways.
The first five variants were as
follows: "The roach from Bakersville arrived in one piece, but
the bedpan blew a fuse"; "Roll the locomotive's aunt in
cutlets"; "Now the butter can't be wed, 'cause the
nightcap's nailed"; "He who has had, has been, but he who
hasn't been, has been had"; and "From strawberries under
torture one may extract all sorts of things." This last variant
Professor Crusticus held to be the key to the code and found, after
three hundred thousand calculations, that if you added up all
the letters of the letter, subtracted the parallax of the sun plus
the annual production of umbrellas, and then took the cube root of
the remainder, you came up with a single word, "Crusafix."
In the telephone book there was a citizen named Crucifax. Crusticus
maintained that this alteration of a few letters was merely to throw
them off the track, and Crucifax was arrested. After a little
sixth-degree persuasion, the culprit confessed that he had indeed
plotted with Trurl, who was to have sent him poison tacks and a
hammer with which to cobble the King to death. These irrefutable
proofs of guilt the Grand Marshal of Codes presented to the King
without delay; yet Mandrillion so trusted in his Adviser, that he
gave it the chance to explain.
The Adviser did not deny that the