<h2>VIII</h2>
<p><span class="first_word">Davidson</span> pushed out from
the wall against which he’d
been resting himself and his two-stone
tickler and moved to block
the hall. But Gusterson simply
walked up to him. He shook his
hand warmly and looked his tickler
full in the eye and said in a
ringing voice, “Ticklers should
have bodies of their own!” He
paused and then added casually,
“Come on, let’s visit your boss.”</p>
<p>Davidson listened for instructions
and then nodded. But he
watched Gusterson warily as
they walked down the hall.</p>
<p>In the elevator Gusterson repeated
his message to the second
guard, who turned out to be the
pimply woman, now wearing
shoes. This time he added, “Ticklers
shouldn’t be tied to the frail
bodies of humans, which need a
lot of thoughtful supervision and
drug-injecting and can’t even fly.”</p>
<p>Crossing the park, Gusterson
stopped a hump-backed soldier
and informed him, “Ticklers gotta
cut the apron string and snap
the silver cord and go out in the
universe and find their own purposes.”
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page52" title="52"></SPAN>Davidson and the pimply
woman didn’t interfere. They
merely waited and watched and
then led Gusterson on.</p>
<p>On the escaladder he told
someone, “It’s cruel to tie ticklers
to slow-witted snaily humans
when ticklers can think and live
… ten thousand times as fast,”
he finished, plucking the figure
from the murk of his unconscious.</p>
<p>By the time they got to the
bottom, the message had become,
“Ticklers should have a planet of
their own!”</p>
<p>They never did catch up with
Fay, although they spent two
hours skimming around on slidewalks,
under the subterranean
stars, pursuing rumors of his
presence. Clearly the boss tickler
(which was how they thought
of Pooh-bah) led an energetic
life. Gusterson continued to deliver
his message to all and sundry
at 30-second intervals. Toward
the end he found himself
doing it in a dreamy and forgetful
way. His mind, he decided,
was becoming assimilated to the
communal telepathic mind of the
ticklers. It did not seem to matter
at the time.</p>
<p>After two hours Gusterson
realized that he and his guides
were becoming part of a general
movement of people, a flow
as mindless as that of blood corpuscles
through the veins, yet at
the same time dimly purposeful—at
least there was the feeling
that it was at the behest of a
mind far above.</p>
<p>The flow was topside. All the
slidewalks seemed to lead to the
concourses and the escaladders.
Gusterson found himself part of
a human stream moving into the
tickler factory adjacent to his
apartment—or another factory
very much like it.</p>
<p class="post_break"><span class="first_word">Thereafter</span> Gusterson’s awarenesses
were dimmed. It
was as if a bigger mind were doing
the remembering for him and
it were permissible and even
mandatory for him to dream his
way along. He knew vaguely that
days were passing. He knew he
had work of a sort: at one time
he was bringing food to gaunt-eyed
tickler-mounted humans
working feverishly in a production
line—human hands and
tickler claws working together in
a blur of rapidity on silvery
mechanisms that moved along
jumpily on a great belt; at another
he was sweeping piles of
metal scraps and garbage down
a gray corridor.</p>
<p>Two scenes stood out a little
more vividly.</p>
<p>A windowless wall had been
knocked out for twenty feet.
There was blue sky outside, its
light almost hurtful, and a drop
of many stories. A file of humans
were being processed. When one
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page53" title="53"></SPAN>of them got to the head of the
file his (or her) tickler was ceremoniously
unstrapped from his
shoulder and welded onto a silvery
cask with smoothly pointed
ends. The result was something
that looked—at least in the case
of the Mark 6 ticklers—like a
stubby silver submarine, child
size. It would hum gently, lift
off the floor and then fly slowly
out through the big blue gap.
Then the next tickler-ridden human
would step forward for processing.</p>
<p>The second scene was in a
park, the sky again blue, but big
and high with an argosy of white
clouds. Gusterson was lined up in
a crowd of humans that stretched
as far as he could see, row on
irregular row. Martial music was
playing. Overhead hovered a
flock of little silver submarines,
lined up rather more orderly in
the air than the humans were on
the ground. The music rose to a
heart-quickening climax. The
tickler nearest Gusterson gave
(as if to say, “And now—who
knows?”) a triple-jointed shrug
that stung his memory. Then the
ticklers took off straight up on
their new and shining bodies.
They became a flight of silver
geese … of silver midges …
and the humans around Gusterson
lifted a ragged cheer….</p>
<p>That scene marked the beginning
of the return of Gusterson’s
mind and memory. He shuffled
around for a bit, spoke vaguely
to three or four people he recalled
from the dream days, and
then headed for home and supper—three
weeks late, and as
disoriented and emaciated as a
bear coming out of hibernation.</p>
<p class="post_break"><span class="first_word">Six months</span> later Fay was
having dinner with Daisy
and Gusterson. The cocktails had
been poured and the children
were playing in the next apartment.
The transparent violet
walls brightened, then gloomed,
as the sun dipped below the horizon.</p>
<p>Gusterson said, “I see where a
spaceship out beyond the orbit
of Mars was holed by a tickler.
I wonder where the little guys
are headed now?”</p>
<p>Fay started to give a writhing
left-armed shrug, but stopped
himself with a grimace.</p>
<p>“Maybe out of the solar system
altogether,” suggested Daisy,
who’d recently dyed her hair fire-engine
red and was wearing red
leotards.</p>
<p>“They got a weary trip ahead
of them,” Gusterson said, “unless
they work out a hyper-Einsteinian
drive on the way.”</p>
<p>Fay grimaced again. He was
still looking rather peaked. He
said plaintively, “Haven’t we
heard enough about ticklers for
a while?”</p>
<p><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page54" title="54"></SPAN>“I guess so,” Gusterson agreed,
“but I get to wondering about the
little guys. They were so serious
and intense about everything. I
never did solve their problem,
you know. I just shifted it onto
other shoulders than ours. No
joke intended,” he hurried to add.</p>
<p>Fay forbore to comment. “By
the way, Gussy,” he said, “have
you heard anything from the Red
Cross about that world-saving
medal I nominated you for? I
know you think the whole concept
of world-saving medals is
ridiculous, especially when they
started giving them to all heads
of state who didn’t start atomic
wars while in office, but—”</p>
<p>“Nary a peep,” Gusterson told
him. “I’m not proud, Fay. I could
use a few world-savin’ medals.
I’d start a flurry in the old-gold
market. But I don’t worry about
those things. I don’t have time to.
I’m busy these days thinkin’ up
a bunch of new inventions.”</p>
<p>“Gussy!” Fay said sharply, his
face tightening in alarm, “Have
you forgotten your promise?”</p>
<p>“’Course not, Fay. My new inventions
aren’t for Micro or any
other firm. They’re just a legitimate
part of my literary endeavors.
Happens my next insanity
novel is goin’ to be about
a mad inventor.”</p>
<p class="closing">—FRITZ LEIBER</p>
<p id="the_end"> </p>
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