<h2>VII</h2>
<p><span class="first_word">When</span> Gusterson got home
toward the end of the second
dog watch, he slipped aside
from Daisy’s questions and set
the children laughing with a
graphic enactment of his slidestanding
technique and a story
about getting his head caught in
a thinking box built for a midget
physicist. After supper he played
with Imogene, Iago and Claudius
until it was their bedtime and
thereafter was unusually attentive
to Daisy, admiring her fading
green stripes, though he did
spend a while in the next apartment,
where they stored their outdoor
camping equipment.</p>
<p>But the next morning he announced
to the children that it
was a holiday—the Feast of St.
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page44" title="44"></SPAN>Gusterson—and then took Daisy
into the bedroom and told her
everything.</p>
<p>When he’d finished she said,
“This is something I’ve got to see
for myself.”</p>
<p>Gusterson shrugged. “If you
think you’ve got to. I say we
should head for the hills right
now. One thing I’m standing on:
the kids aren’t going back to
school.”</p>
<p>“Agreed,” Daisy said. “But,
Gusterson, we’ve lived through a
lot of things without leaving
home altogether. We lived
through the Everybody-Six-Feet-Underground-by-Christmas
campaign
and the Robot Watchdog
craze, when you got your left foot
half chewed off. We lived through
the Venomous Bats and Indoctrinated
Saboteur Rats and the
Hypnotized Monkey Paratrooper
scares. We lived through the
Voice of Safety and Anti-Communist
Somno-Instruction and
Rightest Pills and Jet-Propelled
Vigilantes. We lived through the
Cold-Out, when you weren’t supposed
to turn on a toaster for
fear its heat would be a target
for prowl missiles and when people
with fevers were unpopular.
We lived through—”</p>
<p>Gusterson patted her hand.
“You go below,” he said. “Come
back when you’ve decided this is
different. Come back as soon as
you can anyway. I’ll be worried
about you every minute you’re
down there.”</p>
<p>When she was gone—in a
green suit and hat to minimize or
at least justify the effect of the
faded stripes—Gusterson doled
out to the children provender and
equipment for a camping expedition
to the next floor. Iago led
them off in stealthy Indian file.
Leaving the hall door open Gusterson
got out his .38 and cleaned
and loaded it, meanwhile concentrating
on a chess problem with
the idea of confusing a hypothetical
psionic monitor. By the time
he had hid the revolver again he
heard the elevator creaking back
up.</p>
<p class="post_break"><span class="first_word">Daisy</span> came dragging in without
her hat, looking as if
she’d been concentrating on a
chess problem for hours herself
and just now given up. Her stripes
seemed to have vanished; then
Gusterson decided this was because
her whole complexion was
a touch green.</p>
<p>She sat down on the edge of
the couch and said without looking
at him, “Did you tell me,
Gusterson, that everybody was
quiet and abstracted and orderly
down below, especially the ones
wearing ticklers, meaning pretty
much everybody?”</p>
<p>“I did,” he said. “I take it that’s
no longer the case. What are the
new symptoms?”</p>
<p><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page45" title="45"></SPAN>She gave no indication. After
some time she said, “Gusterson,
do you remember the Doré illustrations
to the <em>Inferno</em>? Can you
visualize the paintings of Hieronymous
Bosch with the hordes
of proto-Freudian devils tormenting
people all over the farmyard
and city square? Did you ever
see the Disney animations of
Moussorgsky’s witches’ sabbath
music? Back in the foolish days
before you married me, did that
drug-addict girl friend of yours
ever take you to <ins title="word was missing">a</ins> genuine orgy?”</p>
<p>“As bad as that, hey?”</p>
<p>She nodded emphatically and
all of a sudden shivered violently.
“Several shades worse,” she said.
“If they decide to come topside—”
She shot up. “Where are
the kids?”</p>
<p>“Upstairs campin’ in the mysterious
wilderness of the 21st
floor,” Gusterson reassured her.
“Let’s leave ’em there until we’re
ready to—”</p>
<p>He broke off. They both heard
the faint sound of thudding footsteps.</p>
<p>“They’re on the stairs,” Daisy
whispered, starting to move toward
the open door. “But are
they coming from up or down?”</p>
<p>“It’s just one person,” judged
Gusterson, moving after his wife.
“Too heavy for one of the kids.”</p>
<p>The footsteps doubled in volume
and came rapidly closer.
Along with them there was an
agonized gasping. Daisy stopped,
staring fearfully at the open doorway.
Gusterson moved past her.
Then he stopped too.</p>
<p>Fay stumbled into view and
would have fallen on his face except
he clutched both sides of the
doorway halfway up. He was
stripped to the waist. There was
a little blood on his shoulder. His
narrow chest was arching convulsively,
the ribs standing out
starkly, as he sucked in oxygen
to replace what he’d burned up
running up twenty flights. His
eyes were wild.</p>
<p>“They’ve taken over,” he panted.
Another gobbling breath.
“Gone crazy.” Two more gasps.
“Gotta stop ’em.”</p>
<p>His eyes filmed. He swayed
forward. Then Gusterson’s big
arms were around him and he
was carrying him to the couch.</p>
<p class="post_break"><span class="first_word">Daisy</span> came running from the
kitchen with a damp cool
towel. Gusterson took it from her
and began to mop Fay off. He
sucked in his own breath as he
saw that Fay’s right ear was raw
and torn. He whispered to Daisy,
“Look at where the thing savaged
him.”</p>
<p>The blood on Fay’s shoulder
came from his ear. Some of it
stained a flush-skin plastic fitting
that had two small valved holes
in it and that puzzled Gusterson
until he remembered that Moodmaster
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page46" title="46"></SPAN>tied into the bloodstream.
For a second he thought he was
going to vomit.</p>
<p>The dazed look slid aside from
Fay’s eyes. He was gasping less
painfully now. He sat up, pushing
the towel away, buried his face
in his hands for a few seconds,
then looked over the fingers at
the two of them.</p>
<p>“I’ve been living in a nightmare
for the last week,” he said
in a taut small voice, “knowing
the thing had come alive and trying
to pretend to myself that it
hadn’t. Knowing it was taking
charge of me more and more.
Having it whisper in my ear, over
and over again, in a cracked little
rhyme that I could only hear
every hundredth time, ‘Day by
day, in every way, you’re learning
to listen … and <em>obey</em>. Day by
day—’”</p>
<p>His voice started to go high. He
pulled it down and continued
harshly, “I ditched it this morning
when I showered. It let me
break contact to do that. It must
have figured it had complete control
of me, mounted or dismounted.
I think it’s telepathic, and
then it did some, well, rather unpleasant
things to me late last
night. But I pulled together my
fears and my will and I ran for it.
The slidewalks were chaos. The
Mark 6 ticklers showed some purpose,
though I couldn’t tell you
what, but as far as I could see
the Mark 3s and 4s were just
cootching their mounts to death—Chinese
feather torture. Giggling,
gasping, choking … gales
of mirth. People are dying of
laughter … ticklers!… the irony
of it! It was the complete lack of
order and sanity and that let me
get topside. There were things I
saw—” Once again his voice went
shrill. He clapped his hand to his
mouth and rocked back and forth
on the couch.</p>
<p>Gusterson gently but firmly
laid a hand on his good shoulder.
“Steady,” he said. “Here, swallow
this.”</p>
<p>Fay shoved aside the short
brown drink. “We’ve got to stop
them,” he cried. “Mobilize the
topsiders—contact the wilderness
patrols and manned satellites—pour
ether in the tunnel
airpumps—invent and crash-manufacture
missiles that will
home on ticklers without harming
humans—SOS Mars and
Venus—dope the shelter water
supply—do something! Gussy,
you don’t realize what people
are going through down there
every second.”</p>
<p>“I think they’re experiencing
the ultimate in outer-directedness,”
Gusterson said gruffly.</p>
<p>“Have you no heart?” <ins title="Gay">Fay</ins> demanded.
His eyes widened, as if
he were seeing Gusterson for the
first time. Then, accusingly, pointing
a shaking finger: “<i>You invented
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page47" title="47"></SPAN>the tickler, George Gusterson!
It’s all your fault! You’ve got
to do something about it!</i>”</p>
<p>Before Gusterson could retort
to that, or begin to think of a
reply, or even assimilate the full
enormity of Fay’s statement, he
was grabbed from behind and
frog-marched away from Fay and
something that felt remarkably
like the muzzle of a large-caliber
gun was shoved in the small of
his back.</p>
<p class="post_break"><span class="first_word">Under cover</span> of Fay’s outburst
a huge crowd of people
had entered the room from
the hall—eight, to be exact. But
the weirdest thing about them to
Gusterson was that from the first
instant he had the impression
that only one mind had entered
the room and that it did not reside
in any of the eight persons,
even though he recognized three
of them, but in something that
they were carrying.</p>
<p>Several things contributed to
this impression. The eight people
all had the same blank expression—watchful
yet empty-eyed.
They all moved in the same
slithery crouch. And they had all
taken off their shoes. Perhaps,
Gusterson thought wildly, they
believed he and Daisy ran a
Japanese flat.</p>
<p>Gusterson was being held by
two burly women, one of them
quite pimply. He considered
stamping on her toes, but just at
that moment the gun dug in his
back with a corkscrew movement.</p>
<p>The man holding the gun on
him was Fay’s colleague Davidson.
Some yards beyond Fay’s
couch, Kester was holding a gun
on Daisy, without digging it into
her, while the single strange man
holding Daisy herself was doing
so quite decorously—a circumstance
which afforded Gusterson
minor relief, since it made him
feel less guilty about not going
berserk.</p>
<p>Two more strange men, one of
them in purple lounging pajamas,
the other in the gray uniform of
a slidewalk inspector, had
grabbed Fay’s skinny upper
arms, one on either side, and
were lifting him to his feet, while
Fay was struggling with such
desperate futility and gibbering
so pitifully that Gusterson momentarily
had second thoughts
about the moral imperative to go
berserk when menaced by hostile
force. But again the gun dug into
him with a twist.</p>
<p>Approaching Fay face-on was
the third Micro-man Gusterson
had met yesterday—Hazen. It
was Hazen who was carrying—quite
reverently or solemnly—or
at any rate very carefully the
object that seemed to Gusterson
to be the mind of the little storm
troop presently desecrating the
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page48" title="48"></SPAN>sanctity of his own individual
home.</p>
<p>All of them were wearing ticklers,
of course—the three Micro-men
the heavy emergent Mark
6s with their clawed and jointed
arms and monocular cephalic
turrets, the rest lower-numbered
Marks of the sort that merely
made Richard-the-Third humps
under clothing.</p>
<p>The object that Hazen was
carrying was the Mark 6 tickler
Gusterson had seen Fay wearing
yesterday. Gusterson was sure it
was Pooh-Bah because of its air
of command, and because he
would have sworn on a mountain
of Bibles that he recognized the
red fleck lurking in the back of
its single eye. And Pooh-Bah
alone had the aura of full conscious
thought. Pooh-Bah alone
had mana.</p>
<p class="post_break"><span class="first_word">It is not</span> good to see an evil
legless child robot with dangling
straps bossing—apparently
by telepathic power—not
only three objects of its own kind
and five close primitive relatives,
but also eight human beings …
and in addition throwing into a
state of twitching terror one miserable,
thin-chested, half-crazy
research-and-development director.</p>
<p>Pooh-Bah pointed a claw at
Fay. Fay’s handlers dragged him
forward, still resisting but more
feebly now, as if half-hypnotized
or at least cowed.</p>
<p>Gusterson grunted an outraged,
“Hey!” and automatically struggled
a bit, but once more the gun
dug in. Daisy shut her eyes, then
firmed her mouth and opened
them again to look.</p>
<p>Seating the tickler on Fay’s
shoulder took a little time, because
two blunt spikes in its bottom
had to be fitted into the
valved holes in the flush-skin
plastic disk. When at last they
plunged home Gusterson felt
very sick indeed—and then
even more so, as the tickler itself
poked a tiny pellet on a fine wire
into Fay’s ear.</p>
<p>The next moment Fay had
straightened up and motioned his
handlers aside. He tightened the
straps of his tickler around his
chest and under his armpits. He
held out a hand and someone
gave him a shoulderless shirt and
coat. He slipped into them
smoothly, Pooh-Bah dexterously
using its little claws to help put
its turret and body through the
neatly hemmed holes. The small
storm troop looked at Fay with
deferential expectation. He held
still for a moment, as if thinking,
and then walked over to Gusterson
and looked him in the face
and again held still.</p>
<p>Fay’s expression was jaunty on
the surface, agonized underneath.
Gusterson knew that he wasn’t
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page49" title="49"></SPAN>thinking at all, but only listening
for instructions from something
that was whispering on the very
threshold of his inner ear.</p>
<p>“Gussy, old boy,” Fay said,
twitching a depthless grin, “I’d
be very much obliged if you’d
answer a few simple questions.”
His voice was hoarse at first but
he swallowed twice and corrected
that. “What exactly did
you have in mind when you invented
ticklers? What exactly
are they supposed to be?”</p>
<p>“Why, you miserable—” Gusterson
began in a kind of confused
horror, then got hold of
himself and said curtly, “They
were supposed to be mech reminders.
They were supposed to
record memoranda and—”</p>
<p>Fay held up a palm and shook
his head and again listened for a
space. Then, “That’s how ticklers
were supposed to be of use to
humans,” he said. “I don’t mean
that at all. I mean how ticklers
were supposed to be of use to
themselves. Surely you had some
notion.” Fay wet his lips. “If it’s
any help,” he added, “keep in
mind that it’s not Fay who’s asking
this question, but Pooh-Bah.”</p>
<p>Gusterson hesitated. He had
the feeling that every one of the
eight dual beings in the room
was hanging on his answer and
that something was boring into
his mind and turning over his
next thoughts and peering at and
under them before he had a
chance to scan them himself.
Pooh-Bah’s eye was like a red
searchlight.</p>
<p>“Go on,” Fay prompted. “What
were ticklers supposed to be—for
themselves?”</p>
<p>“Nothin’,” Gusterson said softly.
“Nothin’ at all.”</p>
<p class="post_break"><span class="first_word">He could feel</span> the disappointment
well up in the
room—and with it a touch of
something like panic.</p>
<p>This time Fay listened for
quite a long while. “I hope you
don’t mean that, Gussy,” he said
at last very earnestly. “I mean,
I hope you hunt deep and find
some ideas you forgot, or maybe
never realized you had at the
time. Let me put it to you differently.
What’s the place of ticklers
in the natural scheme of
things? What’s their aim in life?
Their special reason? Their genius?
Their final cause? What
gods should ticklers worship?”</p>
<p>But <ins title="Gunderson">Gusterson</ins> was already
shaking his head. He said, “I
don’t know anything about that
at all.”</p>
<p>Fay sighed and gave simultaneously
with Pooh-Bah the
now-familiar <ins title="triple-joined">triple-jointed</ins> shrug.
Then the man briskened himself.
“I guess that’s as far as we can
get right now,” he said. “Keep
thinking, Gussy. Try to remember
something. You won’t be able
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page50" title="50"></SPAN>to leave your apartment—I’m
setting guards. If you want to see
me, tell them. Or just think—In due course you’ll be questioned
further in any case. Perhaps
by special methods. Perhaps
you’ll be ticklerized. That’s all.
Come on, everybody, let’s get going.”</p>
<p>The pimply woman and her
pal let go of Gusterson, Daisy’s
man loosed his decorous hold,
Davidson and Kester sidled away
with an eye behind them and the
little storm troop trudged out.</p>
<p>Fay looked back in the doorway.
“I’m sorry, Gussy,” he said
and for a moment his old self
looked out of his eyes. “I wish
I could—” A claw reached for
his ear, a spasm of pain crossed
his face, he stiffened and marched
off. The door shut.</p>
<p>Gusterson took two deep
breaths that were close to angry
sobs. Then, still breathing stentorously,
he stamped into the
bedroom.</p>
<p>“What—?” Daisy asked, looking
after him.</p>
<p>He came back carrying his .38
and headed for the door.</p>
<p>“What are you up to?” she demanded,
knowing very well.</p>
<p>“I’m going to blast that iron
monkey off Fay’s back if it’s the
last thing I do!”</p>
<p>She threw her arms around
him.</p>
<p>“Now lemme go,” Gusterson
growled. “I gotta be a man one
time anyway.”</p>
<p>As they struggled for the gun,
the door opened noiselessly,
Davidson slipped in and deftly
snatched the weapon out of their
hands before they realized he
was there. He said nothing, only
smiled at them and shook his
head in sad reproof as he went
out.</p>
<p class="post_break"><span class="first_word">Gusterson</span> slumped. “I
<em>knew</em> they were all psionic,”
he said softly. “I just got out of
control now—that last look Fay
gave us.” He touched Daisy’s
arm. “Thanks, kid.”</p>
<p>He walked to the glass wall
and looked out desultorily. After
a while he turned and said,
“Maybe you better be with the
kids, hey? I imagine the guards’ll
let you through.”</p>
<p>Daisy shook her head. “The
kids never come home until supper.
For the next few hours
they’ll be safer without me.”</p>
<p>Gusterson nodded vaguely, sat
down on the couch and propped
his chin on the base of his palm.
After a while his brow smoothed
and Daisy knew that the wheels
had started to turn inside and the
electrons to jump around—except
that she reminded herself to
permanently cross out those particular
figures of speech from her
vocabulary.</p>
<p>After about half an hour Gusterson
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page51" title="51"></SPAN>said softly, “I think the
ticklers are so psionic that it’s as
if they just had one mind. If I
were with them very long I’d
start to be part of that mind. Say
something to one of them and
you say it to all.”</p>
<p>Fifteen minutes later: “They’re
not crazy, they’re just newborn.
The ones that were creating a
cootching chaos downstairs were
like babies kickin’ their legs and
wavin’ their eyes, tryin’ to see
what their bodies could do. Too
bad their bodies are us.”</p>
<p>Ten minutes more: “I gotta do
something about it. Fay’s right.
It’s all my fault. He’s just the
apprentice; I’m the old sorcerer
himself.”</p>
<p>Five minutes more, gloomily:
“Maybe it’s man’s destiny to
build live machines and then bow
out of the cosmic picture. Except
the ticklers need us, dammit, just
like nomads need horses<ins title=",">.</ins>”</p>
<p>Another five minutes: “Maybe
somebody could dream up a purpose
in life for ticklers. Even a
religion—the First Church of
Pooh-Bah Tickler. But I hate
selling other people spiritual
ideas and that’d still leave ticklers
parasitic on humans….”</p>
<p>As he murmured those last
words Gusterson’s eyes got wide
as a maniac’s and a big smile
reached for his ears. He stood up
and faced himself toward the
door.</p>
<p>“What are you intending to do
now?” Daisy asked flatly.</p>
<p>“I’m merely goin’ out an’ save
the world,” he told her. “I may
be back for supper and I may
not.”</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />