<h2>19</h2>
<p>"This time," the communications supervisor said with all the firmness
he could muster, "this time there must not be any interference
with communication. There just absolutely must not be!"</p>
<p>"Well, it wasn't my fault," the operator retorted with an exasperation
that blanketed prudent restraint. "You heard what E
McGinnis said—that they could identify E Gray, and the ship's
crew, and many of the colonists, but that there was no sign of
the ship that took them there. If there wasn't any ship there
couldn't be any communication. It's not my fault. I can't receive
something that wasn't sent."</p>
<p>"I know, I know," the supervisor said, and then, worried that
he may be giving the appearance of backing down, commanded
savagely, "just watch it, that's all!" He chewed violently at his
knuckle and glared at the operator.</p>
<p>"Just watch it," the operator mumbled bitterly. "Just watch it,
the man says. And what will I watch if the message stops coming?"</p>
<p>"Now, now, now, now," the supervisor nagged, "we'll have no
insubordination, if you please."</p>
<p>And upstairs this time more than Bill Hayes, sector chief,
were monitoring the message. The top administrative brass
of E.H.Q. were assembled in their big plush conference room
used for arriving at major policy decisions that sometimes affected<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</SPAN></span>
the whole course of man's progress and direction in occupying
the universe.</p>
<p>They sat in worried silence as E McGinnis reported the two
messages he had received from Junior E Gray.</p>
<p>First: Keep clear of me. I am maneuvering with difficulty.</p>
<p>Then: Keep off. No mechanical science allowed in this co-ordinate
system.</p>
<p>They looked at one another under beetled brows. They
wondered, at first privately and then openly if that Junior E had
blown his stack. They had looked at many a problem finally
solved by the E's, but never before had such a ridiculous situation
come up.</p>
<p>And right at the time, too, when the civil government had decided
to place a curb on E.H.Q.'s freedom of movement, its control
over the experimental phases of planet development. The injunction
to halt a Junior E from taking over the Eden problem fooled
none of them. They knew that Gunderson wasn't concerned for
those colonists out there, that he was merely using the public
furor to advance his own personal power. They knew that the
police worked unremittingly, unceasingly, always and ever to
bring every phase of human activity under their control. They
knew it was a centuries-old tactic to wait for the right situation
to arise, so that the lawmakers could be stampeded into passing
some law which seemed only to apply to this given condition but
in actuality broadened police powers over a wide area of man's
actions.</p>
<p>Yes, there was far more at stake here than the fate of fifty
colonists. In a sense E.H.Q. itself was the stake. The whole science
of E was at stake.</p>
<p>And E McGinnis had played right into Gunderson's hands. It
was he who had been the E influence in deciding to allow a
Junior to handle the problem in the first place. It was he who
was standing off from the planet, not landing and taking over
things as he should.</p>
<p>There was obviously no danger. By his own report, the people<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</SPAN></span>
on Eden were in good health, and from their apparent actions, not
even distressed.</p>
<p>This message about no mechanical science being allowed, for
example. Did the Junior mean the colonists wouldn't allow it?
Must mean that. What else could prevent it? But when an E, a
real E, took charge in an experimental colony, the colonists had
nothing further to say about the matter. True, when the five-year
experimental period was over and the three-generation colonists
took over a planet, then it came more under civil control, and
E.H.Q. largely withdrew with the provision that it could step
back in at any time the problem seemed not to have been solved
after all.</p>
<p>But while under the five-year test ... The E was the final
word, or should be. The colonists knew it. The E knew it, or
should know it. Obviously then it was weakness on the part of
the Junior if he allowed the colonists to dictate that there could
be no mechanical science. Proof of his inability to handle the job.</p>
<p>A perfect setup for Gunderson!</p>
<p>They decided they were forced to take a strong hand with
McGinnis. Ordinarily the E was the final word, not only with the
colonists, but with the administration at E.H.Q. But maybe there
were times when he shouldn't be. Yes, definitely they should take
a hand. After all, Gray was still a Junior, hardly more than a
boy. Was it right that a mere boy could stop investigation by
anyone except himself? Tell Earth with all its power and might
what to do?</p>
<p>Definitely there was a time when an exception to general E
policy should be made. Definitely this was that time. If nothing
else, they must take a strong hand to prevent Gunderson from
moving in with his police powers. Protect the E science from
Gunderson, or at least salvage what they might.</p>
<p>Their conference over, they asked for a connection with
McGinnis.</p>
<p>"We assume you will land and take charge, E McGinnis?" the
board chairman asked.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Certainly not," McGinnis snapped back. "An E has forbidden
it."</p>
<p>"Well now," the chairman argued, and sweat began to come
out on his forehead. "He's only a Junior. We have decided his
judgment isn't mature enough for this problem."</p>
<p>"I have every confidence in Junior E Gray," McGinnis said
acidly. "And every E in the system will back me. It makes no
difference what you have decided. Either the science of E means
something, or it doesn't. Either we have complete freedom to
handle a problem, or we don't. Let me remind you, gentlemen,
this isn't the first time that laymen have decided the E is a fool
and tried to take matters into their own hands. Do you want to
repeat past disasters?"</p>
<p>"If we don't land a ship, E McGinnis"—the chairman was all
but pleading now—"Gunderson's police will. We feel we must
land a ship to take a firmer control over the situation. Public
sentiment demands it. Policy demands it. Perhaps the whole future
of E demands it."</p>
<p>A new voice cut into the communications hookup, a feminine
voice.</p>
<p>"Gentlemen," she said, "this is Linda Gray. I requested that
I be cut in on any communication concerning my husband, and
E McGinnis made it an order before he left. If another ship does
land, I must be on it. I want to be with my husband."</p>
<p>"I will not be landing on Eden, Linda," E McGinnis said
firmly. "An E has forbidden it. That is enough for any other E
in the universe. No other E will land. Your husband is all right.
He is in good health, and apparently mentally sound. At least
sound enough to warn us against landing. He must have a reason.
We don't know, yet, what it is.</p>
<p>"Now he has stopped communicating, we don't know why. He
must have a reason for that, too. It is probably a sound reason.
E science has been drilled into him until it is a part of his every
mind cell, perhaps even every body cell.</p>
<p>"I assume he is not communicating because we can't help him,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</SPAN></span>
because communicating with us distracts him from solving the
problem. If E.H.Q. decides to send out a ship on its own, and
risk landing in an unknown co-ordinate system, against the orders
of two E's, which will become the combined orders of all E's in
the universe, that is their decision. If you wish to be on it, that
is your decision.</p>
<p>"I am cutting off now. It will be no accident that E.H.Q. cannot
connect with me. I'm cutting out because I don't want to be distracted
any further. I'm trying to think."</p>
<p>The acid rebuff of the old E left the administrative board
hanging in a vacuum of indecision, frustration. Angry determination
to do something, anything.</p>
<p>They were caught between the intransigence of the E fraternity
it was their duty to serve and from whom they should be able
to expect help, and the obvious determination of Gunderson to
use this incident as his means of regaining control over the E's
and E.H.Q. for civil authority. Didn't the stupid E see the danger?
Wasn't it the same danger that men of science had always faced,
the same mistake they had always made—leaving out the human
element in a problem?</p>
<p>The eternal blind spot in men of science! The average man
doesn't give a tinker's damn for progress or knowledge, not really.
He wants only that he and his shall be ascendant at the center
of things, the inevitable, the only possible goal of the non-science
mind. Surely the history of science versus non-science should have
made this evident long ago! Surely there had been enough
incidents in history....</p>
<p>Very well, it was up to them to help the E in spite of himself.
If he refused the see the clear danger to his whole structure—and
their own ascendant position at the center of it—it was their
clear duty to protect him nonetheless.</p>
<p>They would send out another ship, a large one, a floating
laboratory, a miniature E.H.Q., at least to be there on the scene;
to help in any way they could, perhaps to counter the moves
Gunderson's police might make, at least to stand by.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>At least, in the face of all this public clamor about Eden, to
show their concern. The chairman of the board rationalized it
masterfully, without once mentioning that their real concern was
to remain ascendant at the center of things at all costs, and thereby
maintained the tradition of all non-science endeavors.</p>
<p>"Gentlemen," he said in summary, "we have a grave responsibility
not only to the E structure, but to all mankind as well. In
every system, in every rule, there must be provision for the exception.
Gray is only a Junior E. Herein lies the weakness of our
position. Herein lies Gunderson's strength, his weapon for swaying
the sentiment of the people. A Junior E is not mature enough
to make the decisions affecting the life or death of fifty people.
More than that, perhaps the future progress of mankind.</p>
<p>"May I point out, gentlemen, that in a showdown, if it should
become necessary for us to land a ship to rescue those colonists, in
spite of the Junior's demand that we stay clear of the planet, we
will not be overriding the decision of an E, but of a boy who
has not yet proved his capacity to merit an E.</p>
<p>"We have to draw the line somewhere. I am forced to agree
with Gunderson on that. If we must honor the command of the
Junior E, then why not the Associate E? Why not the student E?
Why not the apprentice student E? Why not any kid in the
universe who thinks he is extra smart?</p>
<p>"The line of demarcation, the point at which civil control over
the individual gives way to immunity from civil control has never
been clearly drawn. We may regret that the issue has arisen at
all, but it has arisen. Gunderson's purpose is clear. He intends to
bring the E structure back under civil control. We must salvage
what we can. Perhaps if we concede his control over the Juniors
on down, we can maintain the immunity of the Senior E. We must
work to save at least that much."</p>
<p>The floating laboratory, which might have to become a rescue
ship, left six hours later.</p>
<p>Linda was on it.</p>
<hr /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</SPAN></span></p>
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