Clifford Simak - A Heritage of Stars
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- Название:A Heritage of Stars
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"You are talking riddles," said Cushing. "Who is this A and R?"
"Why, he is the Ancient and Revered, the A and R for short. He is a robot and a gentleman and—"
"We have with us a robot," Cushing said. "Rollo, please step forward and meet these new friends of ours. Our company also includes a horse."
"We know of horses," said #2 in a deprecatory tone. "They are animals. But we did not know—"
"Andy is no animal," Meg said acidly. "He may be a horse,
but he is a fey horse. He is a searcher-out of water and a battler of bears and many other things besides."
"What I meant to say," said #2, "is that we did not know there were any robots other than the ones that live upon this geographic eminence. We understood that all other robots had been destroyed in your so-called Time of Trouble."
"I am, so far as I am aware," said Rollo, "the only robot left alive. And yet, you say the Ancient and Revered—"
"The Ancient and Revered," said #1, "and a host of others. Surely you have met them. Nasty little creatures that descend upon one and regale one with endless, senseless chatter, all talking at the same time, all insistent that one listen." He sighed. "They are most annoying. For years we have tried to listen to them, in the hope they would provide a clue. But they provide us nothing but a great confusion. I have the theory, not shared by the other member of the Team, they are naught but ancient storytellers who are so programmed that they recite their fictional adventures to anyone they may chance upon, without regard as to whether what they have to tell—"
"Now, wait a minute," said RoIlo. "You're sure these things are robots? We had thought so, but I had a hope-"
"You have met them, then?"
"Indeed we have," said Meg. "So you think the things they tell us are no more than tales designed for entertainment?"
"That's what I think," said #1. "The other member of the Team believes, mistakenly, that they may talk significances which we, in our alien stupidness, are not able to understand. Let me ask you, in all honesty, how did they sound to you? As humans you may have been able to see in them something we have missed."
"We listened to them for too short a time," said Cushing, "to arrive at any judgment."
"They were with us for only a short while," said Meg, "then someone called them off."
"The A and R, most likely," said #1. "He keeps a sharp eye on them."
"The A and R—" asked Cushing, "how do we go about meeting him?"
"He is somewhat hard to meet," said #2. "He keeps strictly to himself. On occasion he has granted us audiences."
"Audiences," said #1. "For all the good it did."
"Then he tells you little?"
"He tells us much," said #1, "but of such things as his faith in the human race. He pretends to take an extremely long-range view, and, to be fair about it, he does not seem perturbed."
"You say he is a robot?"
"A robot, undoubtedly," said #2, "but something more than that. As if the robotic part of him is no more than a surface indication of another factor that is much greater."
"That is what you think," said #1. "He is clever, that is all. A very clever robot."
"We should have told you sooner," said #2, "but we tell you now. We are very glad to meet you. No other humans come. We understand the Trees will not let them through. How did you manage to get through the Trees?"
"It was no sweat," said Cushing. "We just asked them and they let us through."
"Then you must be very special persons.
"Not at all," said Meg. "We simply seek the Place of Going to the Stars."
"The going to the what? Did we hear you rightly?"
"The stars," said Meg. "The Place of Going to the Stars."
"But this is not," said #1, "a Place of Going to the Stars. In all the time we ye been here, there has been no mention of
going to the stars. We know, of course, that one time men went into space, but whether to the stars—"
"You are sure," asked Cushing, "that this is not the Place of Going to the Stars?"
"We have heard no mention of it," said #2. "There is no evidence it was ever used as such. We have the impression that this is the last place of refuge for those elite intellectuals who may have foreseen the Time of Trouble and sought to save themselves. But if this is so, there is no record of it. We do not know; we simply have surmised. The last stronghold of reason on this planet. Although, if that is true, the refuge failed, for there is no indication there have been any humans here for many centuries."
Cushing said, "Not the Place of Going to the Stars?"
"I fear not," said #1.
Rollo said to Cushing, "I never guaranteed it. I simply told you what I heard."
"You said a while ago," said Meg, "that we are the first people ever to come here, implying that you are glad we have. But if you had wanted to meet and talk with people, it would have been quite simple. All you had to do was go and find them. Unless, of course, the Trees would not let you out."
"We did go and seek out people many years ago," said #2. "The Trees are no barrier to us. We can elevate ourselves and sail over them quite easily. But the people would have none of us—they were frightened of us. They ran howling from us or, in desperation, launched attacks upon us."
"And now that we are here," said Cushing, "now that humans have come to you rather than you going to the humans, what can we do for you?"
"You can tell us," said #1, "if there is any basis for the hope and faith expressed so blindly by the A and R that your race will rise to greatness once again."
"Greatness," said Cushing. "I don't know. How do you measure greatness? What is the greatness? Perhaps you can tell me. You say you have studied other planets where technology has failed."
"They all have been the same as this," said #2. "This planet is a classic example of a classic situation. The technological civilization fails and those intelligences that have brought it about go down to nothingness and never rise again.
"Then why does the rule not apply here? What are you worrying about?"
"It's the A and B," said #1. "He insists upon his faith
"Has it occurred to you that A and R may be pulling your leg?"
"Pulling our—?"
"Misleading you. Covering up. Perhaps laughing at you.
"It hasn't occurred to us," said #2. "The A and R is very much a gentleman. He'd not do such a thing. You must realize that we have spent millennia collecting our data. This is the first time that data has ever been in question, the only time there has been any doubt at all. All the other studies checked out in every detail. Here you can see our great concern.
"I suppose I can," said Cushing. "Let me ask you this—have you ever gone further than your data, your immediate data? You say you are convinced that when technology fails, the race is done, that there is no coming back. But what happens next? What happens after that? If, on this planet, man sinks into insignificance, what takes his place? What comes after man? What supersedes man?"
"This," said #1, in a stricken tone, "we have never thought about. No one has ever raised the question. We have not raised the question. It had not occurred to us."
The two of them rested for a time, no longer talking, but jiggling back and forth, as if in agitation. Finally #2 said,
"We'll have to think about it. We must study your suggestion." With that, they started rolling up the slope, their eyes
skittering all about their surfaces as they rolled, gathering speed as they went up the slope, so that it did not take long before they were out of sight.
Before nightfall, Cushing and the others reached the approach to the City, a huge stone-paved esplanade that fronted on the massive group of gray-stone buildings. They halted to make the evening camp, with an unspoken reluctance to advance into the City itself, preferring to remain on its edge for a time, perhaps to study it from a distance or to become more accustomed to its actuality.
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