Part 1 (1/2)

The Red Tape War.

Jack L Chalker, George Alec Effinger & Mike Resnick.

INTRODUCTION.

It all began back at the 1980 World Science Fiction Convention in Boston, at about four o'clock in the morning.

Jack Chalker and I were sitting in the hotel lobby, talking about one thing or another, and since he hadn't yet written twenty-odd best-sellers, and I hadn't yet written any best-sellers at all or won any literary awards (all oversights that G.o.d put aright during the ensuing decade), and publishers, while not avoiding us, still weren't beating a path to our doors, we thought that it might be fun to collaborate on a book while we had some free time on our hands.

I don't remember now who suggested it, but before the evening was over we decided that it would be even more fun to invite a third party and do a round-robin novel, one where each of us tried to stick the next guy in line with a near-insoluble problem. It still sounded like a good idea the next morning (mornings arrive at about 2:00 p.m. at conventions), so we decided to go ahead and recruit a third partner.

The first writer we approached agreed immediately, then thought better of it and withdrew from the project before nightfall. The second looked at us like we were crazy, explained that relative unknowns such as ourselves could never hope to sell such a book, and semi-respectfully declined. The third writer didn't know any better, and agreed.

As a show of good faith, I offered to write the opening chapter. (It also meant that everyone else had to copy the style I chose, but n.o.body ever figured this out. Come to think of it, n.o.body ever copied it, either.) As I recall, we flipped coins to determine the order for the rest of the book.

We got about halfway through the project in something less than six months, and then it bogged down. The chapters our collaborator wrote didn't quite fill the bill, so we paid him off and decided to find yet another partner-but then Jack started churning out best-sellers with monotonous regularity, and I signed a pair of multi-book contracts, and we put the round-robin on the back burner until we could catch up with our commitments, and suddenly we looked at the calendar and it was 1989 and not a word had been written on The Red Tape War since 1981.

We met again at the World Science Fiction Convention, which had made its rounds of the world and was back in Boston, where it seems to settle every ninth year, and decided that it was time to resurrect the project. The problem was that we not only needed a third writer, but our status within the field had changed: Jack had just turned down a million-dollar offer from one of his publishers, and was churning out best-sellers on the average of one every four months; and I had just emerged from a very successful auction of my latest book, and was clutching the Hugo Award for Best Short Story of 1989 to my bosom.

So what we needed now was a writer of at least equal prestige within the community, one with an excellent sense of style and humor, and one who was willing to drop everything he was doing and go right to work on the project. Not only that, but he had to be skilled enough to totally rewrite the chapters our departed collaborator had submitted without removing anything that Jack or I had built upon in future chapters-all in exchange for third billing on the cover.

”Where will we ever find anyone that naive?” asked Jack.

At precisely that moment, George Alec Effinger walked by, hugging his Best Novelette Hugo to his bosom-and after two hours of our appealing to his ego, his bank account, and his desire to ever see another sunset (writers don't wake up early enough to see sunrises), he finally agreed.

The rest, as they say, is history-in this case, the history of Millard Fillmore Pierce (all three of him).

-Mike Resnick

P.S.-It belatedly occurs to me that you might be interested in knowing who wrote which chapters. We'll let you guess for a while, but we'll slip the answer in somewhere along the way.

”G.o.ddammit!” snapped Pierce.

”What is it now?” asked his navigational computer.

”You cheated!”

”Did not.”

”Like h.e.l.l you didn't!” said Pierce. ”You moved your bishop one square to the left when I wasn't looking.”

”Oh, that,” said the computer.

”Yes-that!”

”I was ethically compelled to do it,” said the computer in a sullen whine.

”What are you talking about?” demanded Pierce. ”I'm supposed to try to beat you, aren't I?”

asked the computer.

”So?”

”So if I didn't move my bishop, you would have announced mate in six more moves. I had to move it.”

”But you broke the rules!” said Pierce.

”Trying to beat you was a higher imperative,” said the computer. ”It was simply a value judgment. All Model XB-223 navigational computers are qualified to make-”

”Never mind,” interrupted. Pierce disgustedly. He leaned back and looked at the viewscreen, which showed nothing but a few stray stars in the distance. ”You know, things couldn't get this screwed up by chance,” he said, more to himself than to the computer, which in Pierce's opinion was merely the latest in a long line of things that had been screwed up. ”It took a long, hard, concerted effort.”

Which, of course, was true.

There are all kinds of truths, however. Certain truths are timeless and immutable, as in: There is no crisis so urgent today that it won't become even more urgent tomorrow. It was the maxim that seemed to provide the motive force for the entire galaxy.

Most truths, though, are ephemeral. When Wee Willie Keeler told a mob of boyishly devoted wors.h.i.+pers that the secret of success in life was to hit 'em where they ain't, it was a valid statement for a member of the 1901 Brooklyn Dodgers-but sixty-seven centuries later, poor old Willie would have been hard-pressed to find anyplace where they weren't.

Despite Pierce's current spare surroundings, the galaxy was getting crowded, and life in that galaxy had grown more complicated in geometric leaps and bounds. For, to paraphrase J. B. S.

Haldane, the universe not only held more red tape than anyone imagined; it held more red tape than anyone could imagine.

There were, for example, 132,476 mining worlds; the owners.h.i.+p of all but six was in dispute.

There were five faster-than-light drives on the market; royalties for four of them were being held in escrow pending some 1,300 separate legal actions. The Spiral Fed-that loose economic federation of worlds on one of the Milky Way's spiral arms-possessed some 73 races and 1,786 worlds, allpledged to each other's economic welfare and territorial integrity; there were upward of 5,000 separate and distinct military alliances in the Spiral Fed, and on any given day there were more than 200 different economic boycotts and embargoes in effect among the Fed worlds.

Language posed another problem. It wasn't bad enough that there were more than 20,000 intelligent races in the galaxy. Sooner or later someone could have programmed a computer to translate 20,000 varieties of groans, grunts, squawks, squeaks, roars and gurgles. But only seven worlds possessed planetary languages. The inhabitants of Earth, to name one of the less extreme examples, spoke 67 languages and more than 1,200 dialects, and her colonies had added another 27 languages over the centuries.

Indeed, far from the world government that so many utopian writers had piously predicted, nationalism-on Earth and elsewhere-flourished as never before. The Indian planet of Gromm, for example, traded with the insectile population of Sirius VII and the purple reptiles of Beta Cancri II-but Pakistanis were shot on sight. The Cook County Democratic machine of Illinois had founded a colony on the distant world of New Daley, which interacted with the rest of humanity only during voter registration drives every fourth year. Kenya and Tanzania jointly opened a half dozen worlds to commercial exploitation, but the border between the two nations remained' closed. And most of the other races made humanity look like amateurs in matters of self-interest.

And, reflected Pierce, despite it all, it was the little things that finally got to a man-like finding himself in the middle of nowhere because his computer had been so intent upon cheating him at chess that it hadn't paid any attention to where they were going.

”It's not my fault,” said the computer petulantly.

”What's not your fault?” asked Pierce.

”Whatever you're thinking about. Whenever you're quiet like that, you always wind up blaming me for something.”

”Forget it,” said Pierce.

”I try to do my job,” sniffed the computer. ”I really do.. It's not as if I were free to disengage myself from the instruments and walk around the decks like some people I could mention.”

”It's all right,” said Pierce with a sigh. ”I'm not mad at you.”

”You're sure?”