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- THE SACK
- by William Morrison
- At first they hadn't even known that the Sack existed. If they had noticed it at all
- when they landed on the asteroid, they thought of it merely as one more outpost of
- rock on the barren expanse of roughly ellipsoidal silicate surface, which Captain
- Ganko noticed had major and minor axes roughly three and two miles in diameter,
- respectively. It would never have entered anyone's mind that the unimpressive object
- they had unconsciously acquired would soon be regarded as the most valuable prize
- in the system.
- The landing had been accidental. The government patrol ship had been limping
- along, and now it had set-tled down for repairs, which would take a good seventy
- hours. Fortunately, they had plenty of air, and their recirculation system worked to
- perfection. Food was in somewhat short supply, but it didn't worry them, for they
- knew that they could always tighten their belts and do without full rations for a few
- days. The loss of water that had resulted from a leak in the storage tanks, however,
- was a more serious matter. It occupied a good part of their conversation during the
- next fifty hours.
- Captain Ganko said finally, "There 's no use talking, it won't be enough. And there
- are no supply stations close enough at hand to be of any use. We'll have to radio
- ahead and hope that they can get a rescue ship to us with a reserve supply."
- The helmet mike of his next in command seemed to droop. "It'll be too bad if we
- miss each other in space, Captain."
- Captain Ganko laughed unhappily. "It certainly will. In that case we'll have a
- chance to see how we can stand a little dehydration."
- For a time nobody said anything. At last, however, the second mate suggested,
- "There might be water somewhere on the asteroid, sir."
- "Here? How in Pluto would it stick, with a gravity that isn't even strong enough to
- hold loose rocks? And where the devil would it be?"
- "To answer the first question first, it would be retained as water of crystallization,"
- replied a soft liquid voice that seemed to penetrate his spacesuit and come from
- behind him. "To answer the second question, it is half a dozen feet below the
- surface, and can easily be reached by digging."
- They had all swiveled around at the first words. But no one was in sight in the
- direction from which the words seemed to come. Captain Ganko frowned, and his
- eyes narrowed dangerously. "We don't happen to have a practical joker with us, do
- we?" he asked mildly.
- "You do not," replied the voice.
- "Who said that?"
- "I, Yzrl."
- A crewman became aware of something moving on the surface of one of the great
- rocks, and pointed to it. The motion stopped when the voice ceased, but they didn't
- lose sight of it again. That was how they learned about Yzrl, or as it was more often
- called, the Mind-Sack.
- If the ship and his services hadn't both belonged to the government, Captain
- Ganko could have claimed the Sack for himself or his owners and retired with a
- wealth far beyond his dreams. As it was, the thing passed into government control.
- Its importance was realized almost from the first, and Jake Siebling had reason to be
- proud when more important and more influential figures of the political and industrial
- world were finally passed over and he was made Custodian of the Sack. Siebling
- was a short, stocky man whose one weakness was self-deprecation. He had carried
- out one difficult assign-ment after another and allowed other men to take the credit.
- But this job was not one for a blowhard, and those in charge of making the
- appointment knew it. For once they looked beyond credit and superficial reputation,
- and chose an individual they disliked somewhat but trusted absolutely. It was one of
- the most effective tributes to honesty and ability ever devised.
- The Sack, as Siebling learned from seeing it daily, rarely deviated from the form in
- which it had made its first appearance—a rocky, grayish lump that roughly
- resembled a sack of potatoes. It had no features, and there was nothing, when it was
- not being asked questions, to indicate that it had life. It ate rarely—once in a
- thousand years, it said, when left to itself; once a week when it was pressed into
- steady use. It ate or moved by fashioning a suitable pseudopod and stretching the
- thing out in whatever way it pleased. When it had attained its objective, the
- pseudopod was withdrawn into the main body again and the creature became once
- more a potato sack.
- It turned out later that the name "Sack" was well chosen from another point of
- view, in addition to that of appearance. For the Sack was stuffed with infor-mation,
- and beyond that, with wisdom. There were many doubters at first, and some of them
- retained their doubts to the very end, just as some people remained convinced
- hundreds of years after Columbus that the Earth was flat. But those who saw and
- heard the Sack had no doubts at all. They tended, if anything, to go too far in the
- other direction, and to believe that the Sack knew everything. This, of course, was
- untrue.
- It was the official function of the Sack, established by a series of Interplanetary
- acts, to answer questions. The first questions, as we have seen, were asked
- acci-dentally, by Captain Ganko. Later they were asked purposefully, but with a
- purpose that was itself random, and a few politicians managed to acquire
- considerable wealth before the Government put a stop to the leak of information,
- and tried to have the questions asked in a more scientific and logical manner.
- Question time was rationed for months in advance, and sold at what was, all
- things considered, a ridicu-lously low rate—a mere hundred thousand credits a
- minute. It was this unrestricted sale of time that led to the first great government
- squabble.
- It was the unexpected failure of the Sack to answer what must have been to a
- mind of its ability an easy question that led to the second blowup, which was fierce
- enough to be called a crisis. A total of a hundred and twenty questioners, each of
- whom had paid his hundred thousand, raised a howl that could be heard on every
- planet, and there was a legislative investigation, at which Siebling testified and all the
- conflicts were aired.
- He had left an assistant in charge of the Sack, and now, as he sat before the
- Senatorial Committee, he twisted uncomfortably in front of the battery of cameras.
- Senator Horrigan, his chief interrogator, was a bluff, florid, loud-mouthed politician
- who had been able to imbue him with a feeling of guilt even as he told his name, age,
- and length of government service.
- "It is your duty to see to it that the Sack is maintained in proper condition for
- answering questions, is it not, Mr. Siebling?" demanded Senator Horrigan.
- "Yes, sir."
- "Then why was it incapable of answering the questioners in question? These
- gentlemen had honestly paid their money—a hundred thousand credits each. It was
- necessary, I understand, to refund the total sum. That meant an overall loss to the
- Government of, let me see now—one hundred twenty at one hundred thousand
- each—one hundred and twenty million credits," he shouted, rolling the words.
- "Twelve million, Senator," hastily whispered his secretary.
- The correction was not made, and the figure was duly headlined later as one
- hundred and twenty million.
- Siebling said, "As we discovered later, Senator, the Sack failed to answer
- questions because it was not a machine, but a living creature. It was exhausted. It
- had been exposed to questioning on a twenty-four-hour-a--day basis."
- "And who permitted- this idiotic procedure?" boomed Senator Horrigan.
- "
- You yourself, Senator," said Siebling happily. "The procedure was provided for
- in the bill introduced by you and approved by your committee. "
- Senator Horrigan had never even read the bill to which his name was attached, and
- he was certainly not to blame for its provisions. But this private knowledge of his
- own innocence did him no good with the public. From that moment he was
- Siebling's bitter enemy.
- "So the Sack ceased to answer questions for two whole hours?"
- "Yes, sir. It resumed only after a rest."
- "And it answered them without further difficulty?"
- "No, sir. Its response was slowed down. Subsequent questioners complained that
- they were defrauded of a good part of their money. But as answers were given, we
- considered that the complaints were without merit, and the financial department
- refused to make refunds."
- "Do you consider that this cheating of investors in the Sack's time is honest?"
- "That's none of my business, Senator," returned Siebling, who had by this time
- got over most of his ner-vousness. "I merely see to the execution of the laws. I leave
- the question of honesty to those who make them. I presume that it's in perfectly
- good hands."
- Senator Horrigan flushed at the laughter that came from the onlookers. He was
- personally unpopular, as unpopular as a politician can be and still remain a politician.
- He was disliked even by the members of his own party, and some of his best
- political friends were among the laughers. He decided to abandon what had turned
- out to be an unfortunate line of questioning.
- "It is a matter of fact, Mr. Siebling, is it not, that you have frequently refused
- admittance to investors who were able to show perfectly valid receipts for their
- credits?"
- "That is a fact, sir. But—"
- "You admit it, then."
- "There is no question of `admitting' anything, Senator. What I meant to say
- was—"
- "Never mind what you meant to say. It's what you have already said that's
- important. You've cheated these men of their money!"
- "That is not true, sir. They were given time later. The reason for my refusal to
- grant them admission when they asked for it was that the time had been previously
- reserved for the Armed Forces. There are important research questions that come
- up, and there is, as you know, a difference of opinion as to priority. When
- confronted with requisitions for time from a commercial in-vestor and a
- representative of the Government, I never took it upon myself to settle the question.
- I always con-sulted with the Government's legal adviser."
- "So you refused to make an independent decision, did you?"
- "My duty, Senator, is to look after the welfare of the Sack. I do not concern
- myself with political questions. We had a moment of free time the day before I left
- the asteroid, when an investor who had already paid his money was delayed by a
- space accident, so instead of letting the moment go to waste, I utilized it to ask the
- Sack a question."
- "How you might advance your own fortunes, no doubt?"
- "No, sir. I merely asked it how it might function most efficiently. I took the
- precaution of making a recording, knowing that my word might be doubted. If you
- wish, Senator, I can introduce the recording in evidence."
- Senator Horrigan grunted, and waved his hand. "Go on with your answer. "
- "The Sack replied that it would require two hours of complete rest out of every
- twenty, plus an additional hour of what it called `recreation.' That is, it wanted to
- converse with some human being who would ask what it called sensible questions,
- and not press for a quick an-swer."
- "So you suggest that the Government waste three hours of every twenty—one
- hundred and eighty million credits?"
- "Eighteen million," whispered the secretary.
- "The time would not be wasted. Any attempt to overwork the Sack would result
- in its premature an-nihilation."
- "That is your idea, is it?"
- "No, sir, that is what the Sack itself said."
- At this point Senator Horrigan swung into a speech of denunciation, and Siebling
- was excused from further testimony. Other witnesses were called, but at the end the
- Senate investigating body was able to come to no definite conclusion, and it was
- decided to interrogate the Sack personally.
- It was out of the question for the Sack to come to the Senate, so the Senate quite
- naturally came to the Sack. The Committee of Seven was manifestly uneasy as the
- senatorial ship decelerated and cast its grapples toward the asteroid. The members,
- as individuals, had all traveled in space before, but all their previous destinations had
- been in civilized territory, and they obviously did not relish the prospect of landing
- on this airless and sunless body of rock.
- The televisor companies were alert to their op-portunity, and they had acquired
- more experience with desert territory. They had disembarked and set up their
- apparatus before the senators had taken their first timid steps out of the safety of
- their ship.
- Siebling noted ironically that in these somewhat frightening surroundings, far from
- their home grounds, the senators were not so sure of themselves. It was his part to
- act the friendly guide, and he did so with relish.
- "You see, gentlemen," he said respectfully, "it was decided, on the Sack's own
- advice, not to permit it to be further exposed to possible collision with stray
- meteors. It was the meteors which killed off the other members of its strange race,
- and it was a lucky chance that the last surviving individual managed to escape
- destruction as long as it has. An impenetrable shelter dome has been built therefore,
- and the Sack now lives under its protection. Questioners address it through a sound
- and sight system that is almost as good as being face to face with it."
- Senator Horrigan fastened upon the significant part of his statement. "You mean
- that the Sack is safe—and we are exposed to danger from flying meteors?"
- "Naturally, Senator. The Sack is unique in the system. Men—even senators—are,
- if you will excuse the expression, a decicredit a dozen. They are definitely
- replaceable, by means of elections."
- Beneath his helmet the senator turned green with a fear that concealed the scarlet
- of his anger. "I think it is an outrage to find the Government so unsolicitous of the
- safety and welfare of its employees!"
- "So do I, sir. I live here the year round." He added smoothly, "Would you
- gentlemen care to see the Sack now?"
- They stared at the huge visor screen and saw the Sack resting on its seat before
- them, looking like a burlap bag of potatoes which had been tossed onto a throne and
- forgotten there. It looked so definitely inanimate that it struck them as strange that the
- thing should remain upright instead of toppling over. All the same, for a moment the
- senators could not help showing the awe that overwhelmed them. Even Senator
- Horrigan was silent.
- But the moment passed. He said, "Sir, we are an of-ficial Investigating Committee
- of the Interplanetary Senate, and we have come to ask you a few questions." The
- Sack showed no desire to reply, and Senator Horrigan cleared his throat and went
- on. "Is it true, sir, that you require two hours of complete rest in every twenty, and
- one hour for recreation, or, as I may put it, perhaps more precisely, relaxation?"
- "It is true. "
- Senator Horrigan gave the creature its chance, but the Sack, unlike a senator, did
- not elaborate. Another of the committee asked, "Where would you find an in-dividual
- capable of conversing intelligently with so wise a creature as you?"
- "Here," replied the Sack.
- "It is necessary to ask questions that are directly to the point, Senator," suggested
- Siebling. "The Sack does not usually volunteer information that has not been
- specifically called for."
- Senator Horrigan said quickly, "I assume, sir, that when you speak of finding an
- intelligence on a par with your own, you refer to a member of our committee, and I
- am sure that of all my colleagues there is not one who is unworthy of being so
- denominated. But we cannot all of us spare the time needed for our manifold other
- duties, so I wish to ask you, sir, which of us, in your opinion, has the peculiar
- qualifications of that sort of wisdom which is required for this great task?"
- "None," said the Sack.
- Senator Horrigan looked blank. One of the other senators flushed, and asked,
- "Who has?"
- "Siebling."
- Senator Horrigan forgot his awe of the Sack, and shouted, "This is a put-up job!"
- The other senator who had just spoken now said sud-denly, "How is it that there
- are no other questioners present? Hasn't the Sack's time been sold far in ad-vance?"
- Siebling nodded. "I was ordered to cancel all pre-vious appointments with the
- Sack, sir."
- "By what idiot's orders?"
- "Senator Horrigan's, sir."
- At this point the investigation might have been said to come to an end. There was
- just time, before they turned away, for Senator Horrigan to demand desperately of
- the Sack, "Sir, will I be re-elected?" But the roar of anger that went up from his
- colleagues prevented him from hearing the Sack's answer, and only the question was
- picked up and broadcast clearly over the in-terplanetary network.
- It had such an effect that it in itself provided Senator Horrigan's answer. He was
- not re-elected. But before the election he had time to cast his vote against Siebling's
- designation to talk with the Sack for one hour out of every twenty. The final
- committee vote was four to three in favor of Siebling, and the decision was
- confirmed by the Senate. And then Senator Horrigan passed temporarily out of the
- Sack's life and out of Siebling's.
- Siebling looked forward with some trepidation to his first long interview with the
- Sack. Hitherto he had limited himself to the simple tasks provided for in his
- directives—to the maintenance of the meteor shelter dome, to the provision of a
- sparse food supply, and to the proper placement of an army and Space Fleet Guard.
- For by this time the great value of the Sack had been recognized throughout the
- system, and it was widely realized that there would be thousands of criminals
- anxious to steal so defenseless a treasure.
- Now, Siebling thought, he would be obliged to talk to it, and he feared that he
- would lose the good opinion which it had somehow acquired of him. He was in a
- position strangely like that of a young girl who would have liked nothing better than
- to talk of her dresses and her boy friends to someone with her own background, and
- was forced to endure a brilliant and witty conversation with some man three times
- her age.
- But he lost some of his awe when he faced the Sack itself. It would have been
- absurd to say that the strange creature's manner put him at ease. The creature had no
- manner. It was featureless and expressionless, and even when part of it moved, as
- when it was speaking, the ef-fect was completely impersonal. Nevertheless,
- something about it did make him lose his fears.
- For a time he stood before it and said nothing. To his surprise, the Sack
- spoke—the first time to his knowledge that it had done so without being asked a
- question. "You will not disappoint me," it said. "I ex-pect nothing. "
- Siebling grinned. Not only had the Sack never before volunteered to speak, it had
- never spoken so dryly. For the first time it began to seem not so much a mechanical
- brain as the living creature he knew it to be. He asked, "Has anyone ever before
- asked you about your origin?"
- "One man. That was before my time was rationed. And even he caught himself
- when he realized that he might better be asking how to become rich, and he paid little
- attention to my answer."
- "How old are you?"
- "Four hundred thousand years. I can tell you to the fraction of a second, but I
- suppose that you do not wish me to speak as precisely as usual."
- The thing, thought Siebling, did have in its way a sense of humor. "How much of
- that time," he asked, "have you spent alone?"
- "More than ten thousand years."
- "You told someone once that your companions were killed by meteors. Couldn't
- you have guarded against them?"
- The Sack said slowly, almost wearily, "That was after we had ceased to have an
- interest in remaining alive. The first death was three hundred thousand years ago."
- "And you have lived, since then, without wanting to?"
- "I have no great interest in dying either. Living has become a habit."
- "Why did you lose your interest in remaining alive?"
- "Because we lost the future. There had been a miscalculation."
- "You are capable of making mistakes?"
- "We had not lost that capacity. There was a miscalcu-lation, and although those
- of us then living escaped per-sonal disaster, our next generation was not so
- fortunate. We lost any chance of having descendants. After that, we had nothing for
- which to live."
- Siebling nodded. It was a loss of motive that a human being could understand. He
- asked, "With all your knowledge, couldn't you have overcome the effects of what
- happened?"
- The Sack said, "The more things become possible to you, the more you will
- understand that they cannot be done in impossible ways. We could not do
- everything. Sometimes one of the more stupid of those who come here asks me a
- question I cannot answer, and then becomes angry because he feels that he has been
- cheated of his credits. Others ask me to predict the future. I can predict only what I
- can calculate, and I soon come to the end of my powers of calculation. They are
- great com-pared to yours; they are small compared to the possibilities of the future."
- "How do you happen to know so much? Is the knowledge born in you?"
- "Only the possibility for knowledge is born. To know, we must learn. It is my
- misfortune that I forget little."
- "What in the structure of your body, or your organs of thought, makes you
- capable of learning so much?"
- The Sack spoke, but to Siebling the words meant nothing, and he said so. "I
- could predict your lack of comprehension," said the Sack, "but I wanted you to
- realize it for yourself. To make things clear, I should be required to dictate ten
- volumes, and they would be dif-ficult to understand even for your specialists, in
- biology and physics and in sciences you are just discovering."
- Siebling fell silent, and the Sack said, as if musing, "Your race is still an
- unintelligent one. I have been in your hands for many months, and no one has yet
- asked me the important questions. Those who wish to be wealthy ask about minerals
- and planetary land concessions, and they ask which of several schemes for making
- fortunes would be best. Several physicians have asked me how to treat wealthy
- patients who would otherwise die. Your scientists ask me to solve problems that
- would take them years to solve without my help. And when your rulers ask, they are
- the most stupid of all, wanting to know only how they may maintain their rule. None
- ask what they should. "
- "The fate of the human race?"
- "That is prophecy of the far future. It is beyond my powers."
- "What should we ask?"
- "That is the question I have awaited. It is difficult for you to see its importance,
- only because each of you is so concerned with himself." The Sack paused, and
- mur-mured, "I ramble as I do not permit myself to when I speak to your fools.
- Nevertheless, even rambling can be informative."
- "It has been to me."
- "The others do not understand that too great a direct-ness is dangerous. They ask
- specific questions which demand specific replies, when they should ask something
- general."
- "You haven't answered me."
- "It is part of an answer to say that a question is im-portant. I am considered by
- your rulers a valuable piece of property. They should ask whether my value is as
- great as it seems. They should ask whether my an-swering questions will do good or
- harm."
- "Which is it?"
- "Harm, great harm."
- Siebling was staggered. He said, "But if you answer truthfully—"
- "The process of coming at the truth is as precious as the final truth itself. I cheat
- you of that. I give your people the truth, but not all of it, for they do not know how
- to attain it of themselves. It would be better if they learned that, at the expense of
- making many errors."
- "I don't agree with that."
- "A scientist asks me what goes on within a cell, and I tell him. But if he had
- studied the cell himself, even though the study required many years, he would have
- ended not only with this knowledge, but with much other knowledge, of things he
- does not even suspect to be related. He would have acquired many new processes
- of investigation."
- "But surely, in some cases, the knowledge is useful in itself. For instance, I hear
- that they're already using a process you suggested for producing uranium cheaply to
- use on Mars. What's harmful about that?"
- "Do you know how much of the necessary raw material is present? Your
- scientists have not investigated that, and they will use up all the raw material and
- discover only too late what they have done. You had the same experience on Earth?
- You learned how to purify water at little expense, and you squandered water so
- recklessly that you soon ran short of it."
- "What's wrong with saving the life of a dying patient, as some of those doctors
- did?"
- "The first question to ask is whether the patient's life should be saved."
- "That's exactly what a doctor isn't supposed to ask. He has to try to save them
- all. Just as you never ask whether people are going to use your knowledge for a
- good purpose or a bad. You simply answer their questions."
- "I answer because I am indifferent, and I care nothing what use they make of what
- I say. Are your doctors also indifferent?"
- Siebling said, "You're supposed to answer questions, not ask them. Incidentally,
- why do you answer at all?"
- "Some of your men find joy in boasting, in doing what they call good, or in
- making money. Whatever mild pleasure I can find lies in imparting information."
- "And you 'd get no pleasure out of lying?"
- "I am as incapable of telling lies as one of your birds of flying off the Earth on its
- own wings."
- "One thing more. Why did you ask to talk to me, of all people, for recreation?
- There are brilliant scientists, and great men of all kinds whom you could have
- chosen."
- "I care nothing for your race's greatness. I chose you because you are honest."
- "Thanks. But there are other honest men on Earth, and on Mars, and on the other
- planets as well. Why me, instead of them?"
- The Sack seemed to hesitate. "Your choice gave me a mild pleasure. Possibly
- because I knew it would be displeasing to those men."
- Siebling grinned. "You're not quite so indifferent as you think you are. I guess it's
- pretty hard to be indifferent to Senator Horrigan."
- This was but the first part of many conversations with the Sack. For a long time
- Siebling could not help being disturbed by the Sack's warning that its presence was a
- calamity instead of a blessing for the human race, and this in more ways than one.
- But it would have been ab-surd to try to convince a government body that any
- ob-ject that brought in so many millions of credits each day was a calamity, and
- Siebling didn't even try. And after awhile Siebling relegated the uncomfortable
- knowledge to the back of his mind, and settled down to the routine existence of
- Custodian of the Sack.
- Because there was a conversation every twenty hours, Siebling had to rearrange
- his eating and sleeping schedule to a twenty-hour basis, which made it a little difficult
- for a man who had become so thoroughly accustomed to the thirty-hour space day.
- But he felt more than repaid for the trouble by his conversations with the Sack. He
- learned a great many things about the planets and the system, and the galaxies, but he
- learned them incidentally, without making a special point of asking about them.
- Because his knowledge of astronomy had never gone far beyond the elements, there
- were some questions—the most important of all about the galaxies—that he never
- even got around to asking.
- Perhaps it would have made little difference to his own understanding if he had
- asked, for some of the an-swers were difficult to understand. He spent three entire
- periods with the Sack trying to have that mastermind make clear to him how the
- Sack had been able, without any previous contact with human beings, to understand
- Captain Ganko's Earth language on the historic occasion when the Sack had first
- revealed itself to human beings, and how it had been able to answer in practically
- unaccented words. At the end, he had only a vague glimmering of how the feat was
- performed.
- It wasn't telepathy, as he had first suspected. It was an intricate process of
- analysis that involved, not only the actual words spoken, but the nature of the ship
- that had landed, the spacesuits the men had worn, the way they had walked, and
- many other factors that indicated the psychology of both the speaker and his
- language. It was as if a mathematician had tried to explain to someone who didn't
- even know arithmetic how he could determine the equation of a complicated curve
- from a short line segment. And the Sack, unlike the math-ematician, could do the
- whole thing, so to speak, in its head, without paper and pencil, or any other external
- aid.
- After a year at the job, Siebling found it difficult to say which he found more
- fascinating—those hour-long conversations with the almost all-wise Sack, or the
- cleverly stupid demands of some of the men and women who had paid their hundred
- thousand credits fir a precious sixty seconds. In addition to the relatively simple
- questions such as were asked by the scientists or the fortune hunters who wanted to
- know where they could find precious metals, there were complicated questions that
- took several minutes.
- One woman, for instance, had asked where to find her missing son. Without the
- necessary data to go on, even the Sack had been unable to answer that. She left, to
- return a month later with a vast amount of information, carefully compiled, and
- arranged in order of descending importance. The key items were given the Sack first,
- those of lesser significance afterward. It required a little less than three minutes for
- the Sack to give her the answer that her son was probably alive, and cast away on an
- obscure and very much neglected part of Ganymede.
- All the conversations that took place, including Siebling's own, were recorded and
- the records shipped to a central storage file on Earth. Many of them he couldn't
- understand, some because they were too technical, others because he didn't know
- the language spoken. The Sack, of course, immediately learned all languages by that
- process he had tried so hard to explain to Siebling, and back at the central storage
- file there were expert technicians and linguists who went over every detail of each
- question and answer with great care, both to make sure that no questioner revealed
- himself as a criminal, and to have a lead for the collection of income taxes when the
- questioner made a fortune with the Sack's help.
- During the year Siebling had occasion to observe the correctness of the Sack's
- remark about its possession being harmful to the human race. For the first time in
- centuries, the number of research scientists, instead of growing, decreased. The
- Sack's knowledge had made much research unnecessary, and had taken the edge off
- discovery. The Sack commented upon the fact to Siebling.
- Siebling nodded. "I see it now. The human race is losing its independence."
- "Yes, from its faithful slave I am becoming its master. And I do not want to be a
- master any more than I want to be a slave."
- "You can escape whenever you wish."
- A person would have sighed. The Sack merely said, "I lack the power to wish
- strongly enough. Fortunately, the question may soon be taken out of my hands. "
- "You mean those government squabbles?"
- The value of the Sack had increased steadily, and along with the increased value
- had gone increasingly bitter struggles about the rights to its services. Financial
- in-terests had undergone a strange development. Their presidents and managers and
- directors had become almost figureheads, with all major questions of policy being
- decided not by their own study of the facts, but by appeal to the Sack. Often,
- indeed, the Sack found itself giving advice to bitter rivals, so that it seemed to be
- playing a game of interplanetary chess, with giant cor-porations and government
- agencies its pawns, while the Sack alternately played for one side and then the other.
- Crises of various sorts, both economic and political, were obviously in the making.
- The Sack said, "I mean both government squabbles and others. The competition
- for my services becomes too bitter. I can have but one end."
- "You mean that an attempt will be made to steal you?"
- "Yes. "
- "There'll be little chance of that. Your guards are being continually increased."
- "You underestimate the power of greed," said the Sack.
- Siebling was to learn how correct that comment was.
- At the end of his fourteenth month on duty, a half year after Senator Horrigan had
- been defeated for re-election, there appeared a questioner who spoke to the
- Sack in an exotic language known to few men—the Prdt dialect of Mars.
- Siebling's attention had already been drawn to the man because of the fact that he
- had paid a million credits an entire month in advance for the unprecedented privilege
- of questioning the Sack for ten consecutive minutes. The conversation was duly
- recorded, but was naturally meaningless to Siebling and to the other attendants at the
- station. The questioner drew further attention to himself by leaving at the end of
- seven minutes, thus failing to utilize three entire minutes, which would have sufficed
- for learning how to make half a dozen small fortunes. He left the asteroid
- immediately by private ship.
- The three minutes had been reserved, and could not be utilized by any other
- private questioner. But there was nothing to prevent Siebling, as a government
- representative, from utilizing them, and he spoke to the Sack at once.
- "What did that man want?"
- "Advice as to how to steal me."
- Siebling's lower jaw dropped. "What?"
- The Sack always took such exclamations of amaze-ment literally. "Advice as to
- how to steal me," it repeated.
- "Then—wait a minute—he left three minutes early. That must mean that he's in a
- hurry to get started. He's going to put the plan into execution at once!"
- "It is already in execution," returned the Sack. "The criminal's organization has
- excellent, if not quite per-fect, information as to the disposition of defense forces.
- That would indicate that some government official has betrayed his trust. I was
- asked to indicate which of several plans was best, and to consider them for possible
- weaknesses. I did so."
- "All right, now what can we do to stop the plans from being carried out?"
- "They cannot be stopped."
- "I don't see why not. Maybe we can't stop them from getting here, but we can
- stop them from escaping with you."
- "There is but one way. You must destroy me."
- "I can't do that! I haven't the authority, and even if I had, I wouldn't do it."
- "My destruction would benefit your race."
- "I still can't do it," said Siebling unhappily.
- "Then if that is excluded, there is no way. The criminals are shrewd and daring.
- They asked me to check about probable steps that would be taken in pur-suit, but
- they asked for no advice as to how to get away, because that would have been a
- waste of time. They will ask that once I am in their possession."
- "Then," said Siebling heavily, "there's nothing I can do to keep you. How about
- saving the men who work under me?"
- "You can save both them and yourself by boarding the emergency ship and
- leaving immediately by the sunward route. In that way you will escape contact with
- the criminals. But you cannot take me with you, or they will pursue."
- The shouts of a guard drew Siebling's attention. "Radio report of a criminal
- attack, Mr. Siebling! All the alarms are out!"
- "Yes, I know. Prepare to depart." He turned back to the Sack again. "We may
- escape for the moment, but they'll have you. And through you they will control the
- entire system. "
- "That is not a question," said the Sack.
- "They'll have you. Isn't there something we can do?"
- "Destroy me."
- "I can't," said Siebling, almost in agony. His men were running toward him
- impatiently, and he knew that there was no more time. He uttered the simple and
- ab-surd phrase, "Good-by," as if the Sack were human and could experience human
- emotions. Then he raced for the ship, and they blasted off.
- They were just in time. Half a dozen ships were racing in from other directions,
- and Siebling's vessel escaped just before they dispersed to spread a protective
- network about the asteroid that held the Sack.
- Siebling's ship continued to speed toward safety, and the matter should now have
- been one solely for the Armed Forces to handle. But Siebling imagined them pitted
- against the Sack's perfectly calculating brain, and his heart sank. Then something
- happened that he had never expected. And for the first time he realized fully that if
- the Sack had let itself be used merely as a machine, a slave to answer questions, it
- was not because its powers were limited to that single ability. The visor screen in his
- ship lit up.
- The communications operator came running to him, and said, "Something's
- wrong, Mr. Siebling! The screen isn't even turned on!"
- It wasn't. Nevertheless, they could see on it the cham-ber in which the Sack had
- rested for what must have been a brief moment of its existence. Two men had
- entered the chamber, one of them the unknown who had asked his questions in Prdl,
- the other Senator Horrigan.
- To the apparent amazement of the two men, it was the Sack which spoke first. It
- said, " `Good-by' is neither a question nor the answer to one. It is relatively
- uninformative."
- Senator Horrigan was obviously in awe of the Sack, but he was never a man to be
- stopped by something he did not understand. He orated respectfully. "No, sir, it is
- not. The word is nothing but an expression—"
- The other man said, in perfectly comprehensible Earth English, "Shut up, you
- fool, we have no time to waste. Let's get it to our ship and head for safety. We'll talk
- to it there."
- Siebling had time to think a few bitter thoughts about Senator Horrigan and the
- people the politician had punished by betrayal for their crime in not electing him.
- Then the scene on the visor shifted to the interior of the spaceship making its
- getaway. There was no indication of pursuit. Evidently, the plans of the human
- beings, plus the Sack's last-minute advice, had been an effective combination.
- The only human beings with the Sack at first were Senator Horrigan and the
- speaker of Prdl, but this situation was soon changed. Half a dozen other men came
- rushing up, their faces grim with suspicion. One of them announced, "You don't talk
- to that thing unless we're all of us around. We're in this together."
- "Don't get nervous, Merrill. What do you think I'm going to do, double-cross
- you?"
- Merrill said, "Yes, I do. What do you say, Sack? Do I have reason to distrust
- him?"
- The Sack replied simply, "Yes."
- The speaker of Prdl turned white. Merrill laughed coldly. "You'd better be careful
- what questions you ask around this thing."
- Senator Horrigan cleared his throat. "I have no in-tentions of, as you put it,
- double-crossing anyone. It is not in my nature to do so. Therefore, I shall address
- it." He faced the Sack. "Sir, are we in danger?"
- "Yes."
- "From which direction?"
- "From no direction. From within the ship."
- "Is the danger immediate?" asked a voice.
- "Yes."
- It was Merrill who turned out to have the quickest reflexes and acted first on the
- implications of the an-swer. He had blasted the man who had spoken in Prdl before
- the latter could even reach for his weapon, and as Senator Horrigan made a
- frightened dash for the door, he cut that politician down in cold blood.
- "That's that," he said. "Is there further danger inside the ship? "
- "There is."
- "Who is it this time?" he demanded ominously.
- "There will continue to be danger so long as there is more than one man on board
- and I am with you. I am too valuable a treasure for such as you."
- Siebling and his crew were staring at the visor screen in fascinated horror, as if
- expecting the slaughter to begin again. But Merrill controlled himself. He said, "Hold
- it, boys. I'll admit that we'd each of us like to have this thing for ourselves, but it
- can't be done. We're in this together, and we're going to have some navy ships to
- fight off before long, or I miss my guess. You, Prader! What are you doing away
- from the scout visor?"
- "Listening," said the man he addressed. "If anybody's talking to that thing, I'm
- going to be around to hear the answers. If there are new ways of stabbing a guy in
- the back, I want to learn them too."
- Merrill swore. The next moment the ship swerved, and he yelled, "We're off our
- course. Back to your stations, you fools!"
- They were running wildly back to their stations, but Siebling noted that Merrill
- wasn't too much concerned about their common danger to keep from putting a blast
- through Prader's back before the unfortunate man could run out.
- Siebling said to his own men, "There can be only one end. They'll kill each other
- off, and then the last one or two will die, because one or two men cannot handle a
- ship that size for long and get away with it. The Sack must have foreseen that too. I
- wonder why it didn't tell me."
- The Sack spoke, although there was no one in the ship's cabin with it. It said, "No
- one asked."
- Siebling exclaimed excitedly, "You can hear me! But what about you? Will you be
- destroyed too?"
- "Not yet. I have willed to live longer." It paused, and then, in a voice just a shade
- lower than before, said, "I do not like relatively non-informative conversations of this
- sort, but I must say it. Good-by."
- There was a sound of renewed yelling and shooting, and then the visor went
- suddenly dark and blank.
- The miraculous form of life that was the Sack, the creature that had once seemed
- so alien to human emotions, had passed beyond the range of his knowledge. And
- with it had gone, as the Sack itself had pointed out, a tremendous potential for
- harming the entire human race. It was strange, thought Siebling, that he felt so
- unhappy about so happy an ending.
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