|
SIX
The TV set boomed; descending the great empty
apartment building's dust-stricken stairs to the level
below, John Isidore made out now the familiar voice of
Buster Friendly, burbling happily to his system-wide
vast audience.
"-- ho ho, folks! Zip click zip! Time for a brief note
on tomorrow's weather; first the Eastern seaboard of the
U.S.A. Mongoose satellite reports that fallout will be
especially pronounced toward noon and then will taper
off. So all you dear folks who'll be venturing out ought
to wait until afternoon, eh? And speaking of waiting,
it's now only ten hours 'til that big piece of news, my
special expose! Tell your friends to watch! I'm revealing something that'll amaze you. Now, you might guess
that it's just the usual --"
As Isidore knocked on the apartment door the television died immediately into nonbeing. It had not merely
become silent; it had stopped existing, scared into its
grave by his knock.
He sensed, behind the closed door, the presence of
life, beyond that of the TV. His straining faculties
manufactured or else picked up a haunted, tongueless
fear, by someone retreating from him, someone blown
back to the farthest wall of the apartment in an attempt
to evade him.
"Hey," he called. "I live upstairs. I
heard your TV.
Let's meet; okay?" He waited, listening. No sound and
no motion; his words had not pried the person loose. "I
brought you a cube of margarine," he said, standing close to the
door in an effort to speak through its thickness. "My name's J. R. Isidore and I work for the well-known animal vet Mr. Hannibal Sloat; you've heard of
him. I'm reputable; I have a job. I drive Mr. Sloat's
truck."
The door, meagerly, opened and he saw within the
apartment a fragmented and misaligned shrinking figure, a girl who cringed and slunk away and yet held
onto the door, as if for physical support. Fear made her
seem ill; it distorted her body lines, made her appear as
if someone had broken her and then, with malice,
patched her together badly. Her eyes, enormous, glazed
over fixedly as she attempted to smile.
He said, with sudden understanding, "You thought
no one lived in this building. You thought it was abandoned."
Nodding, the girl whispered,"Yes."
"But," Isidore said, "it's good to have neighbors.
Heck, until you came along I didn't have any." And
that was no fun, god knew.
"You're the only one?" the girl asked.
"In this building besides me?" She seemed less timid, now; her body
straightened and with her hand she smoothed her dark
hair. Now he saw that she had a nice figure, although
small, and nice eyes markedly established by long black
lashes. Caught by surprise, the girl wore pajama bottoms and nothing more. And as he looked past her he
perceived a room in disorder. Suitcases lay here and there, opened,
their contents half spilled onto the littered floor. But this was natural; she had barely arrived.
"I'm the only one besides you," Isidore said. " And I
won't bother you." He felt glum; his offering, possessing the quality of an authentic old pre-war ritual,
had not been accepted. In fact the girl did not even seem
aware of it. Or maybe she did not understand what a
cube of margarine was for. He had that intuition; the
girl seemed more bewildered than anything else. Out of
her depth and helplessly floating in now-receding circles
of fear. "Good old Buster," he said, trying to reduce
her rigid postural stance. "You like him? I watch him
every morning and then again at night when I get home;
I watch him while I'm eating dinner and then his late
late show until I go to bed. At least until my TV set
broke."
"Who --" the girl began and then broke off; she bit
her lip as if savagely angry. Evidently at herself.
"Buster Friendly," he explained. It seemed odd to
him that this girl had never heard of Earth's most knee-slapping TV comic. "Where did you come here from?"
he asked curiously.
"I don't see that it matters." She shot a swift glance
upward at him. Something that she saw seemed to ease
her concern; her body noticeably relaxed. "I'll be glad
to receive company," she said, "later on when I'm more
moved in. Right now, of course, it's out of the question."
"Why out of the question?" He was puzzled; everything about her puzzled him. Maybe, he thought, I've
been living here alone too long. I've become strange.
They say chickenheads are like that. The thought made him feel even more
glum. "I could help you unpack,"
he ventured; the door, now, had virtually shut in his
face. "And your furniture."
The girl said, "I have no furniture. All these things"
-- she indicated the room behind her -- "they were
here."
"They won't do," Isidore said. He could tell that at a
glance. The chairs, the carpet, the tables -- all had
rotted away; they sagged in mutual ruin, victims of the
despotic force of time. And of abandonment. No one had lived in this
apartment for years; the ruin had become almost complete. He couldn't imagine how she
figured on living in such surroundings. "Listen," he said
earnestly. "If we go all over the building looking we can
probably find you things that aren't so tattered. A lamp
from one apartment, a table from another."
"I'll do it," the girl said. "Myself, thanks."
"You'd go into those apartments alone?" He could
not believe it.
"Why not?" Again she shuddered nervously, grimacing in awareness of saying something wrong.
Isidore said, "I've tried it. Once. After that I just
come home and go in my own place and I don't think
about the rest. The apartments in which no one lives --
hundreds of them and all full of the possessions people
had, like family photographs and clothes. Those that
died couldn't take anything and those who emigrated
didn't want to. This building, except for my apartment,
is completely kipple-ized."
"Kipple-ized'?" She did not comprehend.
"Kipple is useless objects, like junk mail or match
folders after you use the last match or gum wrappers or
yesterday's homeopape. When nobody's around, kipple
reproduces itself. For instance, if you go to bed leaving
any kipple around your apartment, when you wake up
the next morning there's twice as much of it. It always
gets more and more."
"I see." The girl regarded him
uncertainly, not knowing whether to believe him. Not sure if he meant it
seriously.
"There's the First Law of Kipple," he said. "'Kipple
drives out nonkipple.' Like Gresham's law about bad
money. And in these apartments there's been nobody
there to fight the kipple."
"So it has taken over completely," the girl finished.
She nodded. "Now I understand."
"Your place, here," he said, "this apartment you've
picked -- it's too kipple-ized to live in. We can roll the
kipple-factor back; we can do like I said, raid the other
apts. But --" He broke off.
"But what?"
Isidore said, "We can't win."
"Why not?" The girl stepped into the hall, closing
the door behind her; arms folded self-consciously before her small high breasts she faced him, eager to
understand. Or so it appeared to him, anyhow. She was
at least listening.
"No one can win against kipple," he said, "except
temporarily and maybe in one spot, like in my apartment I've sort of created a stasis between the pressure
of kipple and nonkipple, for the time being. But eventually I'll die or go away, and then the kipple will again
take over. It's a universal principle operating throughout the universe; the entire universe is moving toward a
final state of total, absolute kippleization." He added. "Except of course for the upward climb of Wilbur
Mercer."
The girl eyed him. "I don't see any
relation."
"That's what Mercerism is all about." Again he
found himself puzzled. "Don't you participate in fusion? Don't you own an empathy
box?"
After a pause the girl said carefully, "I didn't bring
mine with me. I assumed I'd find one here."
"But an empathy box," he said, stammering in his
excitement, "is the most personal possession you have!
It's an extension of your body; it's the way you touch
other humans, it's the way you stop being alone. But
you know that. Everybody knows that. Mercer even lets
people like me --" He broke off. But too late; he had
already told her and he could see by her face, by the flicker of sudden
aversion, that she knew. "I almost
passed the IQ test," he said in a low, shaky voice. "I'm
not very special, only moderately; not like some you
see. But that's what Mercer doesn't care about."
"As far as I'm concerned," the girl said,
"you can
count that as a major objection to Mercerism." Her
voice was clean and neutral; she intended only to state
a fact, he realized. The fact of her attitude toward
chickenheads.
"I guess I'll go back upstairs," he said, and started
away from her, his cube of margarine clutched; it had
become plastic and damp from the squeeze of his hand.
The girl watched him go, still with the neutral expression on her face. And then she called, "Wait."
Turning, he said, "Why?"
"I'll need you. For getting myself adequate furniture.
From other apartments, as you said." She strolled
toward him, her bare upper body sleek and trim, without an excess gram of fat. "What time do you get home
from work? You can help me then."
Isidore said, "Could you maybe fix dinner for us? If I
brought home the ingredients?"
"No, I have too much to do." The girl shook off the
request effortlessly and he noticed that, perceived it
without understanding it. Now that her initial fear had
diminished, something else had begun to emerge from her. Something
more strange. And, he thought, deplorable. A coldness. Like, he thought, a breath from
the vacuum between inhabited worlds, in fact from nowhere: it was not what she did or said but what she did
not do and say. "Some other time," the girl said, and
moved back toward her apartment door.
"Did you get my name?" he said eagerly. "John Isidore, and I work for
--"
"You told me who you work for." She had stopped
briefly at her door; pushing it open she said, "Some
incredible person named Hannibal Sloat, who I'm sure
doesn't exist outside your imagination. My name is --"
She gave him one last warmthless glance as she returned to her apartment, hesitated, and said, "I'm
Rachael Rosen."
"Of the Rosen Association?" he asked.
"The system's largest manufacturer of humanoid robots used in
our colonization program?"
A complicated expression instantly crossed her face,
fleetingly, gone at once. "No," she said. "I never heard
of them; I don't know anything about it. More of your
chickenhead imagination, I suppose. John Isidore and
his personal, private empathy box. Poor Mr. Isidore."
"But your name suggests --"
"My name," the girl said, "is Pris Stratton. That's
my married name; I always use it. I never use any other
name but Pris. You can call me Pris." She reflected,
then said, "No, you'd better address me as Miss Stratton. Because we don't really know each other. At least
I don't know you." The door shut after her and he
found himself alone in the dust-strewn dim hall.
Go to Next Page |