Part 18 (2/2)
”Wake up! It's happening all over, all the time, and nothing is being done to prevent it. Security is too weak and officials are too timid to risk open warfare. So the Yardsticks win, and I'm going to see that they win this place.”
”But how will that help us?”
”You don't see it yet, do you? And neither will the Yardsticks. Until, some fine day three or four months from now, we get around to what will be planted in the cellars. Somebody will throw a switch, miles away, and--boom!”
”Wolzek, you couldn't--”
”It's coming. Not only here, but in fifty other places. We've got to fight fire with fire, Eric. It's our only chance. Bring this thing out into the open. Make the government realize this is war. Civil war.
That's the only way to force them to take real action. We can't do it any other way; it's illegal to organize politically, and pet.i.tions do no good. We can't get a hearing. Well, they'll have to listen to the explosions.”
”I just don't know--”
”Maybe you're the one who should have married Annette after all.”
Wolzek's voice was cold. ”Maybe you could have watched her, watched her scream and beg and die, and never wanted to move a muscle to do anything about it afterwards. Maybe you're the model citizen, Eric; you and the thousands of others who are standing by and letting the Yardsticks chop us down, one by one. They say in Nature it's the survival of the fittest. Well, perhaps you're not fit to survive.”
Eric wasn't listening. ”She screamed,” he said. ”You heard her scream?”
Wolzek nodded. ”I can still hear her. I'll always hear her.”
”Yes.” Eric blinked abruptly. ”When do we start?”
Wolzek smiled at him. It was a pretty good smile for a man who can always hear screaming. ”I knew I could count on you,” he murmured.
”Nothing like old friends.”
”Funny, isn't it?” Eric tried to match his smile. ”The way things work out. You and I being kids together. You marrying my girl. And then, us meeting up again this way.”
”Yes,” said Wolzek, and he wasn't smiling now. ”I guess it's a small world.”
10. Harry Collins--2032
Harry's son's house was on the outskirts of Was.h.i.+ngton, near what had once been called Gettysburg. Harry was surprised to find that it _was_ a house, and a rather large one, despite the fact that almost all the furniture had been scaled down proportionately to fit the needs of a man three feet high.
But then, Harry was growing accustomed to surprises.
He found a room of his own, ready and waiting, on the second floor; here the furniture was of almost antique vintage, but adequate in size. And here, in an atmosphere of unaccustomed comfort, he could talk.
”So you're a physician, eh?” Harry gazed down into the diminutive face, striving to accept the fact that he was speaking to a mature adult. His own son--his and Sue's--a grown man and a doctor! It seemed incredible. But then, nothing was more incredible than the knowledge that he was actually here, in his child's home.
”We're all specialists in one field or another,” his son explained.
”Every one of us born and surviving during the early experimental period received our schooling under a plan Leffingwell set up. It was part of his conditional agreement that we become wards of the state.
He knew the time might come when we'd be needed.”
”But why wasn't all this done openly?”
”You know the answer to that. There was no way of educating us under the prevailing system, and there was always a danger we might be singled out as freaks who must be destroyed--particularly in those early years. So Leffingwell relied on secrecy, just as he did during his experimentation period. You know how _you_ felt about that. You believed innocent people were being murdered. Would you have listened to his explanations, accepted the fact that his work was worth the cost of a few lives so that future billions of human beings might be saved? No, there was no time for explanation or indoctrination.
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