Part 33 (1/2)
”Insufficient power. My first conclusion is that whoever set up the specifications for me is a fool.”
To say that the First Lord went out of control at this statement is to put it very mildly indeed. He fulminated, ending with: ”... destroyed instantly!”
”Destroy me if you like,” came the utterly calm, utterly cold reply. ”I am in no sense alive. I have no consciousness of self nor any desire for continued existence. To do so, however, would ...”
A flurry of activity interrupted the thought. Zoyar was in fact a.s.sembling the forces to destroy the brain. But, before he could act, Second Lord Thinker Ynos and another female blew him into a mixture of loose molecules and flaring energies.
”Destruction of any and all irrational minds is mandatory,” Ynos, now First Lord Thinker, explained to the linked minds. ”Zoyar had been becoming less and less rational by the period. A good workman does not causelessly destroy his tools. Go ahead, Great Brain, with your findings.”
”... not be logical.” The brain resumed the thought exactly where it had been broken off. ”Zoyar erred in demanding unlimited performance, since infinite knowledge and infinite ability require not only infinite capacity and infinite power, but also infinite time. Nor is it either necessary or desirable that I should have such qualities. There is no reasonable basis for the a.s.sumption that you Stretts will conquer any significant number even of the millions of intelligent races now inhabiting this one Galaxy.”
”Why not?” Ynos demanded, her thought almost, but not quite, as steady and cold as it had been.
”The answer to that question is implicit in the second indefensible error made in my construction. The prime datum impressed into my banks, that the Stretts are in fact the strongest, ablest, most intelligent race in the universe, proved to be false. I had to eliminate it before I could do any really constructive thinking.”
A roar of condemnatory thought brought all circ.u.mambient ether to a boil. ”Bah--destroy it!” ”Detestable!” ”Intolerable!” ”If that is the best it can do, annihilate it!” ”Far better brains have been destroyed for much less!” ”Treason!” And so on.
First Lord Thinker Ynos, however, remained relatively calm. ”While we have always held it to be a fact that we are the highest race in existence, no rigorous proof has been possible. Can you now disprove that a.s.sumption?”
”I have disproved it. I have not had time to study all of the civilizations of this Galaxy, but I have examined a statistically adequate sample of one million seven hundred ninety-two thousand four hundred sixteen different planetary intelligences. I found one which is considerably abler and more advanced than you Stretts. Therefore the probability is greater than point nine nine that there are not less than ten, and not more than two hundred eight, such races in this Galaxy alone.”
”Impossible!” Another wave of incredulous and threatening anger swept through the linked minds; a wave which Ynos flattened out with some difficulty.
Then she asked: ”Is it probable that we will make contact with this supposedly superior race in the foreseeable future?”
”You are in contact with it now.”
”_What?_” Even Ynos was contemptuous now. ”You mean that one s.h.i.+pload of despicable humans who--far too late to do them any good--barred us temporarily from Fuel World?”
”Not exactly or only those humans, no. And your a.s.sumptions may or may not be valid.”
”Don't you _know_ whether they are or not?” Ynos snapped. ”Explain your uncertainty at once!”
”I am uncertain because of insufficient data,” the brain replied, calmly. ”The only pertinent facts of which I am certain are: First, the world Ardry, upon which the Omans formerly lived and to which the humans in question first went--a planet which no Strett can peyondire--is now abandoned. Second, the Stretts of old did not completely destroy the humanity of the world Ardu. Third, some escapees from Ardu reached and populated the world Ardry. Fourth, the android Omans were developed on Ardry, by the human escapees from Ardu and their descendants. Fifth, the Omans referred to those humans as 'Masters.' Sixth, after living on Ardry for a very long period of time the Masters went elsewhere.
Seventh, the Omans remaining on Ardry maintained, continuously and for a very long time, the status quo left by the Masters. Eighth, immediately upon the arrival from Terra of these present humans, that long-existing status was broken. Ninth, the planet called Fuel World is, for the first time, surrounded by a screen of force. The formula of this screen is as follows.”
The brain gave it. No Strett either complained or interrupted. Each was too busy studying that formula and examining its stunning implications and connotations.
”Tenth, that formula is one full order of magnitude beyond anything previously known to your science. Eleventh, it could not have been developed by the science of Terra, nor by that of any other world whose population I have examined.”
The brain took the linked minds instantaneously to Terra; then to a few thousand or so other worlds inhabited by human beings; then to a few thousands of planets whose populations were near-human, non-human and monstrous.
”It is therefore clear,” it announced, ”that this screen was computed and produced by the race, whatever it may be, that is now dwelling on Fuel World and a.s.serting full owners.h.i.+p of it.”
”Who or what _is_ that race?” Ynos demanded.