<h2>V</h2>
<p><span class="first_word">Next</span> day Daisy cashed the
Micro check for ten hundred
silver smackers, which she
hid in a broken radionic coffee
urn. Gusterson sold his insanity
novel and started a new one
about a mad medic with a hiccupy
hysterical chuckle, who gimmicked
Moodmasters to turn
mental patients into nymphomaniacs,
mass murderers and
compulsive saints. But this time
he couldn’t get Fay out of his
mind, or the last chilling words
the nervous little man had spoken.</p>
<p>For that matter, he couldn’t
blank the underground out of his
mind as effectively as usually.
He had the feeling that a new
kind of mole was loose in the
burrows and that the ground at
the foot of their skyscraper might
start humping up any minute.</p>
<p>Toward the end of one afternoon
he tucked a half dozen newly
typed sheets in his pocket,
shrouded his typer, went to the
hatrack and took down his prize:
a miner’s hard-top cap with electric
headlamp.</p>
<p>“Goin’ below, Cap’n,” he shouted
toward the kitchen.</p>
<p>“Be back for second dog
watch,” Daisy replied. “Remember
what I told you about lassoing
me some art-conscious girl
neighbors.”</p>
<p>“Only if I meet a piebald one
with a taste for Scotch—or maybe
a pearl gray biped jaguar with
violet spots,” Gusterson told her,
clapping on the cap with a We-<ins title="Who Are">Who-Are</ins>-About-To-Die gesture.</p>
<p>Halfway across the park to the
escalator bunker Gusterson’s
heart began to tick. He resolutely
switched on his headlamp.</p>
<p>As he’d known it would, the
hatch robot whirred an extra
and higher-pitched ten seconds
when it came to his topside address,
but it ultimately dilated
the hatch for him, first handing
him a claim check for his ID card.</p>
<p>Gusterson’s heart was ticking
like a sledgehammer by now. He
hopped clumsily onto the escalator,
clutched the moving guard
rail to either side, then shut his
eyes as the steps went over the
edge and became what felt like
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page34" title="34"></SPAN>vertical. An instant later he
forced his eyes open, unclipped a
hand from the rail and touched
the second switch beside his headlamp,
which instantly began to
blink whitely, as if he were a
civilian plane flying into a nest
of military jobs.</p>
<p>With a further effort he kept
his eyes open and flinchingly surveyed
the scene around him.
After zigging through a bombproof
half-furlong of roof, he was
dropping into a large twilit cave.
The blue-black ceiling twinkled
with stars. The walls were pierced
at floor level by a dozen archways
with busy niche stores and
glowing advertisements crowded
between them. From the archways
some three dozen slidewalks
curved out, tangenting off each
other in a bewildering multiple
cloverleaf. The slidewalks were
packed with people, traveling motionless
like purposeful statues or
pivoting with practiced grace
from one slidewalk to another,
like a thousand toreros doing veronicas.</p>
<p class="post_break"><span class="first_word">The</span> slidewalks were moving
faster than he recalled from
his last venture underground and
at the same time the whole pedestrian
concourse was quieter than
he remembered. It was as if the
five thousand or so moles in view
were all listening—for what?
But there was something else
that had changed about them—a
change that he couldn’t for a
moment define, or unconsciously
didn’t want to. Clothing style?
No … My God, they weren’t all
wearing identical monster masks?
No … Hair color?… Well….</p>
<p>He was studying them so intently
that he forgot his escalator
was landing. He came off it with
a heel-jarring stumble and bumped
into a knot of four men on the
tiny triangular hold-still. These
four at least sported a new style-wrinkle:
ribbed gray shoulder-capes
that made them look as if
their heads were poking up out
of the center of bulgy umbrellas
or giant mushrooms.</p>
<p>One of them grabbed hold of
Gusterson and saved him from
staggering onto a slidewalk that
might have carried him to Toledo.</p>
<p>“Gussy, you dog, you must
have esped I wanted to see you,”
Fay cried, patting him on the elbows.
“Meet Davidson and Kester
and Hazen, colleagues of
mine. We’re all Micro-men.”
Fay’s companions were staring
strangely at Gusterson’s blinking
headlamp. Fay explained rapidly,
“Mr. Gusterson is an insanity
novelist. You know, I-D.”</p>
<p>“Inner-directed spells <em>id</em>,” Gusterson
said absently, still staring
at the interweaving crowd beyond
them, trying to figure out
what made them different from
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page35" title="35"></SPAN>last trip. “Creativity fuel. Cranky.
Explodes through the parietal fissure
if you look at it cross-eyed.”</p>
<p>“Ha-ha,” Fay laughed. “Well,
boys, I’ve found my man. How’s
the new novel perking, Gussy?”</p>
<p>“Got my climax, I think,” Gusterson
mumbled, still peering
puzzledly around Fay at the
slidestanders. “Moodmaster’s going
to come alive. Ever occur to
you that ‘mood’ is ‘doom’ spelled
backwards? And then….” He
let his voice trail off as he realized
that Kester and Davidson
and Hazen had made their farewells
and were sliding into the
distance. He reminded himself
wryly that nobody ever wants to
hear an author talk—he’s much
too good a listener to be wasted
that way. Let’s see, was it that
everybody in the crowd had the
same facial expression…? Or
showed symptoms of the same
disease…?</p>
<p>“I was coming to visit you, but
now you can pay me a call,” Fay
was saying. “There are two matters
I want to—”</p>
<p>Gusterson stiffened. “My God,
<em>they’re all hunchbacked</em>!” he
yelled.</p>
<p>“Shh! Of course they are,” Fay
whispered reprovingly. “They’re
all wearing their ticklers. But you
don’t need to be insulting about
it.”</p>
<p>“<em>I’m gettin’ out o’ here.</em>” Gusterson
turned to flee as if from
five thousand Richard the Thirds.</p>
<p>“Oh no you’re not,” Fay
amended, drawing him back with
one hand. Somehow, underground,
the little man seemed to
carry more weight. “You’re having
cocktails in my thinking box.
Besides, climbing a down escaladder
will give you a heart attack.”</p>
<p class="post_break"><span class="first_word">In his</span> home habitat Gusterson
was about as easy to handle
as a rogue rhinoceros, but away
from it—and especially if underground—he
became more
like a pliable elephant. All his
bones dropped out through his
feet, as he described it to Daisy.
So now he submitted miserably
as Fay surveyed him up and
down, switched off his blinking
headlamp (“That coalminer caper
is corny, Gussy.”) and then—surprisingly—rapidly
stuffed his
belt-bag under the right shoulder
of Gusterson’s coat and buttoned
the latter to hold it in place.</p>
<p>“So you won’t stand out,” he
explained. Another swift survey.
“You’ll do. Come on, Gussy. I got
lots to brief you on.” Three rapid
paces and then Gusterson’s feet
would have gone out from under
him except that Fay gave him a
mighty shove. The small man
sprang onto the slidewalk after
him and then they were skimming
effortlessly side by side.</p>
<p>Gusterson felt frightened and
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page36" title="36"></SPAN>twice as hunchbacked as the
slidestanders around him—morally
as well as physically.</p>
<p>Nevertheless he countered
bravely, “I got things to brief <em>you</em>
on. I got six pages of cautions on
ti—”</p>
<p>“Shh!” Fay stopped him. “Let’s
use my hushbox.”</p>
<p>He drew out his pancake phone
and stretched it so that it covered
both their lower faces, like a
double yashmak. Gusterson, his
neck pushing into the ribbed
bulge of the shoulder cape so he
could be cheek to cheek with
Fay, felt horribly conspicuous,
but then he noticed that none of
the slidestanders were paying
them the least attention. The
reason for their abstraction occurred
to him. They were listening
to their ticklers! He shuddered.</p>
<p>“I got six pages of caution on
ticklers,” he repeated into the hot,
moist quiet of the pancake phone.
“I typed ’em so I wouldn’t forget
’em in the heat of polemicking.
I want you to read every word.
Fay, I’ve had it on my mind ever
since I started wondering whether
it was you or your tickler
made you duck out of our place
last time you were there. I want
you to—”</p>
<p>“Ha-ha! All in good time.” In
the pancake phone Fay’s laugh
was brassy. “But I’m glad you’ve
decided to lend a hand, Gussy.
This thing is moving faaaasst.
Nationwise, adult underground
ticklerization is 90 per cent complete.”</p>
<p>“I don’t believe that,” Gusterson
protested while glaring at the
hunchbacks around them. The
slidewalk was gliding down a low
glow-ceiling tunnel lined with
doors and advertisements. Rapt-eyed
people were pirouetting on
and off. “A thing just can’t develop
that fast, Fay. It’s against
nature.”</p>
<p>“Ha, but we’re not in nature,
we’re in culture. The progress of
an industrial scientific culture is
geometric. It goes n-times as
many jumps as it takes. More
than geometric—exponential.
Confidentially, Micro’s Math
chief tells me we’re currently on
a fourth-power progress curve
trending into a fifth.”</p>
<p>“You mean we’re goin’ so fast
we got to watch out we don’t
bump ourselves in the rear when
we come around again?” Gusterson
asked, scanning the tunnel
ahead for curves. “Or just shoot
straight up to infinity?”</p>
<p>“Exactly! Of course most of the
last power and a half is due to
Tickler itself. Gussy, the tickler’s
already eliminated absenteeism,
alcoholism and aboulia in numerous
urban areas—and that’s just
one letter of the alphabet! If
Tickler doesn’t turn us into a
nation of photo-memory constant-creative-flow
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page37" title="37"></SPAN>geniuses in six
months, I’ll come live topside.”</p>
<p class="post_break"><span class="first_word">“You</span> mean because a lot of
people are standing around
glassy-eyed listening to something
mumbling in their ear that
it’s a good thing?”</p>
<p>“Gussy, you don’t know progress
when you see it. Tickler is
the greatest invention since language.
Bar none, it’s the greatest
instrument ever devised for integrating
a man into all phases of
his environment. Under the present
routine a newly purchased
tickler first goes to government
and civilian defense for primary
patterning, then to the purchaser’s
employer, then to his doctor-psycher,
then to his local bunker
captain, then to <em>him</em>. <em>Everything</em>
that’s needful for a man’s welfare
gets on the spools. Efficiency
cubed! Incidentally, Russia’s got
the tickler now. Our dip-satellites
have photographed it. It’s like
ours except the Commies wear it
on the left shoulder … but
they’re two weeks behind us developmentwise
and they’ll never
close the gap!”</p>
<p>Gusterson reared up out of the
pancake phone to take a deep
breath. A sulky-lipped sylph-figured
girl two feet from him
twitched—medium cootch, he
judged—then fumbled in her
belt-bag for a pill and popped it
in her mouth.</p>
<p>“Hell, the tickler’s not even efficient
yet about little things,”
Gusterson blatted, diving back
into the privacy-yashmak he was
sharing with Fay. “Whyn’t that
girl’s doctor have the Moodmaster
component of her tickler
inject her with medicine?”</p>
<p>“Her doctor probably wants
her to have the discipline of pill-taking—or
the exercise,” Fay
answered glibly. “Look sharp
now. Here’s where we fork. I’m
taking you through Micro’s postern.”</p>
<p>A ribbon of slidewalk split itself
from the main band and
angled off into a short alley.
Gusterson hardly felt the constant-speed
juncture as they
crossed it. Then the secondary
ribbon speeded up, carrying them
at about 30 feet a second toward
the blank concrete wall in which
the alley ended. Gusterson prepared
to jump, but Fay grabbed
him with one hand and with the
other held up toward the wall a
badge and a button. When they
were about ten feet away the
wall whipped aside, then whipped
shut behind them so fast that
Gusterson wondered momentarily
if he still had his heels and the
seat of his pants.</p>
<p>Fay, tucking away his badge
and pancake phone, dropped the
button in Gusterson’s vest pocket.
“Use it when you leave,” he said
casually. “That is, if you leave.”</p>
<p><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page38" title="38"></SPAN>Gusterson, who was trying to
read the Do and Don’t posters
papering the walls they were
passing, started to probe that last
sinister supposition, but just then
the ribbon slowed, a swinging
door opened and closed behind
them and they found themselves
in a luxuriously furnished thinking
box measuring at least eight
feet by five.</p>
<p class="post_break"><span class="first_word">“Hey</span>, this is something,”
Gusterson said appreciatively
to show he wasn’t an utter
yokel. Then, drawing on research
he’d done for period novels,
“Why, it’s as big as a Pullman
car compartment, or a first mate’s
cabin in the War of 1812. You
really must rate.”</p>
<p>Fay nodded, smiled wanly and
sat down with a sigh on a compact
overstuffed swivel chair. He
let his arms dangle and his head
sink into his puffed shoulder
cape. Gusterson stared at him. It
was the first time he could ever
recall the little man showing fatigue.</p>
<p>“Tickler currently does have
one serious drawback,” Fay volunteered.
“It weighs 28 pounds.
You feel it when you’ve been on
your feet a couple of hours. No
question we’re going to give the
next model that antigravity feature
you mentioned for pursuit
grenades. We’d have had it in this
model except there were so many
other things to be incorporated.”
He sighed again. “Why, the scanning
<ins title="and and">and</ins> decision-making elements
alone tripled the mass.”</p>
<p>“Hey,” Gusterson protested,
thinking especially of the sulky-lipped
girl, “do you mean to tell
me all those other people were
toting two stone?”</p>
<p>Fay shook his head heavily.
“They were all wearing Mark 3
or 4. I’m wearing Mark 6,” he
said, as one might say, “I’m carrying
the genuine Cross, not one of
the balsa ones.”</p>
<p>But then his face brightened a
little and he went on. “Of course
the new improved features make
it more than worth it … and you
hardly feel it at all at night when
you’re lying down … and if you
remember to talcum under it
twice a day, no sores develop …
at least not very big ones….”</p>
<p>Backing away involuntarily,
Gusterson felt something prod
his right shoulderblade. Ripping
open his coat, he convulsively
plunged his hand under it and
tore out Fay’s belt-bag … and
then set it down very gently on
the top of a shallow cabinet and
relaxed with the sigh of one who
has escaped a great, if symbolic,
danger. Then he remembered
something Fay had mentioned.
He straightened again.</p>
<p>“Hey, you said it’s got scanning
and decision-making elements.
That means your tickler thinks,
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page39" title="39"></SPAN>even by your fancy standards.
And if it thinks, it’s conscious.”</p>
<p>“Gussy,” Fay said wearily,
frowning, “all sorts of things nowadays
have S&DM elements.
Mail sorters, missiles, robot medics,
high-style mannequins, just to
name some of the Ms. They
‘think,’ to use that <ins title="archiac">archaic</ins> word,
but it’s neither here nor there.
And they’re certainly not conscious.”</p>
<p>“Your tickler thinks,” Gusterson
repeated stubbornly, “just
like I warned you it would. It sits
on your shoulder, ridin’ you like
you was a pony or a starved St.
Bernard, and now it thinks.”</p>
<p>“Suppose it does?” Fay yawned.
“What of it?” He gave a rapid
sinuous one-sided shrug that
made it look for a moment as if
his left arm had three elbows. It
stuck in Gusterson’s mind, for he
had never seen Fay use such a
gesture and he wondered where
he’d picked it up. Maybe imitating
a double-jointed Micro Finance
chief? Fay yawned again
and said, “Please, Gussy, don’t
disturb me for a minute or so.”
His eyes half closed.</p>
<p>Gusterson studied Fay’s sunken-cheeked
face and the great
puff of his shoulder cape.</p>
<p>“Say, Fay,” he asked in a soft
voice after about five minutes,
“are you meditating?”</p>
<p>“Why, no,” Fay responded,
starting up and then stifling another
yawn. “Just resting a bit.
I seem to get more tired these
days, somehow. You’ll have to excuse
me, Gussy. But what made
you think of meditation?”</p>
<p>“Oh, I just got to wonderin’ in
that direction,” Gusterson said.
“You see, when you first started
to develop Tickler, it occurred to
me that there was one thing
about it that might be real good
even if you did give it S&DM
elements. It’s this: having a mech
secretary to take charge of his
obligations and routine in the real
world might allow a man to slide
into the other world, the world of
thoughts and feelings and intuitions,
and sort of ooze around in
there and accomplish things.
Know any of the people using
Tickler that way, hey?”</p>
<p>“Of course not,” Fay denied
with a bright incredulous laugh.
“Who’d want to loaf around in an
imaginary world and take a
chance of <em>missing out on what his
tickler’s doing?</em>—I mean, on
what his tickler has in store for
him—what he’s <em>told</em> his tickler
to have in store for him.”</p>
<p>Ignoring Gusterson’s shiver,
Fay straightened up and seemed
to brisken himself. “Ha, that
little slump did me good. A tickler
<em>makes</em> you rest, you know—it’s
one of the great things about
it. Pooh-Bah’s kinder to me than
I ever was to myself.” He buttoned
open a tiny refrigerator and
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page40" title="40"></SPAN>took out two waxed cardboard
cubes and handed one to Gusterson.
“Martini? Hope you don’t
mind drinking from the carton.
Cheers. Now, Gussy old pal, there
are two matters I want to take
up with you—”</p>
<p>“Hold it,” Gusterson said with
something of his old authority.
“There’s something I got to get
off my mind first.” He pulled the
typed pages out of his inside
pocket and straightened them. “I
told you about these,” he said.
“I want you to read them before
you do anything else. Here.”</p>
<p>Fay looked toward the pages
and nodded, but did not take
them yet. He lifted his hands to
his throat and unhooked the
clasp of his cape, then hesitated.</p>
<p>“You wear that thing to hide
the hump your tickler makes?”
Gusterson filled in. “You got better
taste than those other moles.”</p>
<p>“Not to hide it, exactly,” Fay
protested, “but just so the others
won’t be jealous. I wouldn’t feel
comfortable parading a free-scanning
decision-capable Mark
6 tickler in front of people who
can’t buy it—until it goes on
open sale at twenty-two fifteen
tonight. Lot of shelterfolk won’t
be sleeping tonight. They’ll be
queued up to trade in their old
tickler for a Mark 6 almost as
good as Pooh-Bah.”</p>
<p>He started to jerk his hands
apart, hesitated again with an
oddly apprehensive look at the
big man, then whirled off the
cape.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />