Read The Past Through Tomorrow Online
Authors: Robert A Heinlein
“Around seven hundred million.”
“And you can’t find room to tuck away one-seventieth of one per cent of that number? It sounds preposterous.”
“You don’t understand, sir,” Rodney protested. “Population pressure has become our major problem. Co-incident with it, the right to remain undisturbed in the enjoyment of one’s own homestead, or one’s apartment, has become the most jealously guarded of all civil rights. Before we can find you adequate living room we must make over some stretch of desert, or make other major arrangements.”
“I get it,” said Lazarus. “Politics. You don’t dast disturb anybody for fear they will squawk.”
“That’s hardly an adequate statement of the case.”
“It’s not, eh? could be you’ve got a general election coming up, maybe?”
“As a matter of fact we have, but that has nothing to do with the case.”
Lazarus snorted.
Justin Foote spoke up. “It seems to me that the administration has looked at this problem in the most superficial light. It is not as if we were homeless immigrants. Most of the Members own their own homes. As you doubtless know, the Families were well-to-do, even wealthy, and for obvious reasons we built our homes to endure. I feel sure that most of those structures are still standing.”
“No doubt,” Rodney conceded, “but you will find them occupied.”
Justin Foote shrugged. “What has that to do with us? That is a problem for the government to settle with the persons it has allowed illegally to occupy our homes. As for myself, I shall land as soon as possible, obtain an eviction order from the nearest court, and repossess my home.”
“It’s not that easy. You can make omelet from eggs, but not eggs from omelet. You have been legally dead for many years; the present occupant of your house holds a good title.”
Justin Foote stood up and glared at the Federation’s envoy, looking, as Lazarus thought, “like a cornered mouse.”
“Legally dead! By whose act, sir, by whose act? Mine? I was a respected solicitor, quietly and honorably pursuing my profession, harming no one, when I was arrested without cause and forced to flee for my life. Now I am blandly told that my property is confiscated and my very legal existence as a person and as a citizen has been taken from me because of that sequence of events. What manner of justice is this? Does the Covenant still stand?”
“You misunderstand me. I—”
“I misunderstood nothing. If justice is measured out only when it is convenient, then the Covenant is not worth the parchment it is written on. I shall make of myself a test case, sir, a test case for every Member of the Families. Unless my property is returned to me in full and at once I shall bring personal suit against every obstructing official. I will make of it a
cause celebre
. For many years I have suffered inconvenience and indignity and peril; I shall not be put off with words. I will shout it from the housetops.” He paused for breath.
“He’s right, Miles,” Slayton Ford put in quietly. “The government had better find some adequate way to handle this—and quickly.”
Lazarus caught Libby’s eye and silently motioned toward the door. The two slipped outside. “Justin’ll keep ’em busy for the next hour,” he said. “Let’s slide down to the Club and grab some calories.”
“Do you really think we ought to leave?”
“Relax. If the skipper wants us, he can holler.”
LAZARUS TUCKED AWAY
three sandwiches, a double order of ice cream, and some cookies while Libby contented himself with somewhat less. Lazarus would have eaten more but he was forced to respond to a barrage of questions from the other habitués of the Club.
“The commissary department ain’t really back on its feet,” he complained, as he poured his third cup of coffee. “The Little People made life too easy for them. Andy, do you like chili con carne?”
“It’s all right.”
Lazarus wiped his mouth. “There used to be a restaurant in Tijuana that served the best chili I ever tasted. I wonder if it’s still there?”
“Where’s Tijuana?” demanded Margaret Weatheral.
“You don’t remember Earth, do you, Peggy? Well, darling, it’s in Lower California. You know where that is?”
“Don’t you think I studied geography? It’s in Los Angeles.”
“Near enough. Maybe you’re right—by now.” The ship’s announcing system blared out:
“Chief Astrogator—report to the Captain in the Control Room!”
“That’s me!” said Libby, and hurriedly got up.
The call was repeated, then was followed by, “All hands—prepare for acceleration! All hands—prepare for acceleration!”
“Here we go again, kids.” Lazarus stood up, brushed off his kilt, and followed Libby, whistling as he went:
“ Right back where I started from |
The ship was underway, the stars had faded out. Captain King had left the control room, taking with him his guest, the Earth’s envoy. Miles Rodney had been much impressed; it seemed likely that he would need a drink.
Lazarus and Libby remained in the control room. There was nothing to do; for approximately four hours, ship’s time, the ship would remain in para-space, before returning to normal space near Earth.
Lazarus struck a cigaret. “What d’you plan to do when you get back, Andy?”
“Hadn’t thought about it.”
“Better start thinking. Been some changes.”
“I’ll probably head back home for a while. I can’t imagine the Ozarks having changed very much.”
“The hills will look the same, I imagine. You may find the people changed.”
“How?”
“You remember I told you that I had gotten fed up with the Families and had kinda lost touch with them for a century? By and large, they had gotten so smug and sot in their ways that I couldn’t stand them. I’m afraid we’ll find most everybody that way, now that they expect to live forever. Long term investments, be sure to wear your rubbers when it rains…that sort of thing.”
“It didn’t affect you that way.”
“My approach is different. I never did have any real reason to last forever—after all, as Gordon Hardy has pointed out, I’m only a third generation result of the Howard plan. I just did my living as I went along and didn’t worry my head about it. But that’s not the usual attitude. Take Miles Rodney—scared to death to tackle a new situation with both hands for fear of upsetting precedent and stepping on established privileges.”
“I was glad to see Justin stand up to him.” Libby chuckled. “I didn’t think Justin had it in him.”
“Ever see a little dog tell a big dog to get the hell out of the little dog’s yard?”
“Do you think Justin will win his point?”
“Sure he will, with your help.”
“
Mine?
”
“Who knows anything about the para-drive, aside from what you’ve taught me?”
“I’ve dictated full notes into the records.”
“But you haven’t turned those records over to Miles Rodney. Earth
needs
your starship drive, Andy. You heard what Rodney said about population pressure. Ralph was telling me you have to get a government permit now before you can have a baby.”
“The hell you say!”
“Fact. You can count on it that there would be tremendous emigration if there were just some decent planets to emigrate to. And that’s where your drive comes in. With it, spreading out to the stars becomes really practical. They’ll have to dicker.”
“It’s not really my drive, of course. The Little People worked it out.”
“Don’t be so modest. You’ve got it. And you want to back up Justin, don’t you?”
“Oh, sure.”
“Then we’ll use it to bargain with. Maybe I’ll do the bargaining, personally. But that’s beside the point. Somebody is going to have to do a little exploring before any large-scale emigration starts. Let’s go into the real estate business, Andy. We’ll stake out this corner of the Galaxy and see what it has to offer.”
Libby scratched his nose and thought about it. “Sounds all right, I guess—after I pay a visit home.”
“There’s no rush. I’ll find a nice, clean little yacht, about ten thousand tons and we’ll refit with your drive.”
“What’ll we use for money?”
“We’ll have money. I’ll set up a parent corporation, while I’m about it, with a loose enough charter to let us do anything we want to do. There will be daughter corporations for various purposes and we’ll unload the minor interest in each. Then—”
“You make it sound like work, Lazarus. I thought it was going to be fun.”
“Shucks, we won’t fuss with that stuff. I’ll collar somebody to run the home office and worry about the books and the legal end—somebody about like Justin. Maybe Justin himself.”
“Well, all right then.”
“You and I will rampage around and see what there is to be seen. It’ll be fun, all right.”
They were both silent for a long time, with no need to talk. Presently Lazarus said, “Andy—”
“Yeah?”
“Are you going to look into this new-blood-for-old caper?”
“I suppose so, eventually.”
“I’ve been thinking about it. Between ourselves, I’m not as fast with my fists as I was a century back. Maybe my natural span is wearing out. I do know this: I didn’t start planning our real estate venture till I heard about this new process. It gave me a new perspective. I find myself thinking about thousands of years—and I never used to worry about anything further ahead than a week from next Wednesday.”
Libby chuckled again. “Looks like you’re growing up.”
“Some would say it was about time. Seriously, Andy, I think that’s just what I have been doing. The last two and a half centuries have just been my adolescence, so to speak. Long as I’ve hung around, I don’t know any more about the final answers, the
important
answers, than Peggy Weatheral does. Men—
our
kind of men—Earth men—never have had enough time to tackle the important questions. Lots of capacity and not time enough to use it properly. When it came to the important questions we might as well have still been monkeys.”
“How do you propose to tackle the important questions?”
“How should I know? Ask me again in about five hundred years.”
“You think that will make a difference?”
“I do. Anyhow it’ll give me time to poke around and pick up some interesting facts. Take those Jockaira gods—”
“They weren’t gods, Lazarus. You shouldn’t call them that.”
“Of course they weren’t—I think. My guess is that they are creatures who have had time enough to do a little hard thinking. Someday, about a thousand years from now, I intend to march straight into the temple of Kreel, look him in the eye, and say, ‘Howdy, bub—what do
you
know that
I
don’t know?’”
“It might not be healthy.”
“We’ll have a showdown, anyway. I’ve never been satisfied with the outcome there. There ought not to be anything in the whole universe that man can’t poke his nose into—that’s the way we’re built and I assume that there’s some reason for it.”
“Maybe there aren’t any reasons.”
“Yes, maybe it’s just one colossal big joke, with no point to it.” Lazarus stood up and stretched and scratched his ribs. “But I can tell you this, Andy, whatever the answers are, here’s one monkey that’s going to keep on climbing, and looking around him to see what he can see, as long as the tree holds out.”
Only one short story is missing from this omnibus of Heinlein’s
Future History
:
Let There Be Light
… It should be the second story chronologically, after
Life-Line
. It was omitted for unknown reasons: “possibly because the collection editor disliked it or because Heinlein himself considered it to be inferior” (source: Wikipedia).Here it is, taken from an earlier collection of
Future History
shorts,
The Man Who Sold the Moon
…
ARCHIBALD DOUGLAS
, Sc.D., Ph.D., B.S., read the telegram with unconcealed annoyance.
“
ARRIVING CITY LATE TODAY STOP DESIRE CONFERENCE COLD LIGHT YOUR LABORATORY TEN P M
(signed)
DR. M. L MARTIN
.”
He was, was he? He did, did he? What did he think this lab was; a hotel? And did Martin think that his time was at the disposal of any Joe Doakes who had the price of a telegram? He had framed in his mind an urbanely discouraging reply when he noticed that the message had been filed at a mid-western airport. Very well, let him arrive. Douglas had no intention of meeting him.
Nevertheless, his natural curiosity caused him to take down his copy of
Who’s Who in Science
and look up the offender. There it was: Martin, M. L., bio-chemist and ecologist, P.D.Q., X.Y.Z., N.R.A., C.I.O.—enough degrees for six men. Hmmm…—Director Guggenheim Orinoco Fauna Survey, Author;
Co-Lateral Symbiosis of the Boll Weevil
, and so on, through three inches of fine print The old boy seemed to be a heavy-weight.
A little later Douglas surveyed himself in the mirror of the laboratory washroom. He took off a dirty laboratory smock, removed a comb from his vest pocket, and put a careful polish on his sleek black hair. An elaborately tailored checked jacket, a snap-brim hat and he was ready for the street. He fingered the pale scar that stenciled the dark skin of one cheek. Not bad, he thought, in spite of the scar. If it weren’t for the broken nose he would look O.K.