"If you put false data into the memory bank of a computer--such as telling it that the square of two is five--you cannot correct the error simply by telling it that the square of two is four. You must first remove the erroneous data, not so?
"Very good. Then let us look at the Nipe race, wherever it was sp.a.w.ned in this universe. Let us look at their race a long time back--when they first became _Nipe sapiens_. Back when they first developed a true language.
Each child, as it is born or hatched or budded--whatever it is they do--is taught as rapidly as possible all the things it must know to survive. And once it is taught a thing, it _knows_. And if it is taught a falsehood, then it cannot be taught the truth."
"Wouldn"t cold reality force a change?" Stanton asked.
"Ah. In some cases, yes. In most, no. Look: Suppose a primordial Nipe runs across a tiger--or whatever pa.s.ses for a tiger on their planet. He has never seen a tiger before, so he does not see that this particular tiger is old, ill, and weak. He hits it on the head, and it drops dead. He takes it home for the family to feed on.
""How did you kill it, Papa?""
""I walked up to it, bashed it on the noggin, and it died. That is the way to kill tigers.""
Yoritomo smiled. "It is also a good way to kill Nipes. Eh?" He took the towel and wiped Stanton"s brow again.
[Ill.u.s.tration]
"The error," he continued, "was made when Papa Nipe generalized from _one_ tiger to _all_ tigers. If tigers were rare, this bit of lore might be pa.s.sed on for many generations. Those who learned that most tigers are _not_ conquered by walking up to them and hitting them on the noggin undoubtedly died before they could pa.s.s this bit of information on. Then, one day, a Nipe survived the ordeal. His mind now contained conflicting information, which must be resolved. He _knows_ that tigers are killed in this way. He also _knows_ that this one did not die. Plainly, then, _this_ one is not a tiger. Ha! He has the solution!
"What does he tell his children? Why, first he tells them how tigers are killed. Then he warns them that there is an animal that looks _just like_ a tiger, but is _not_ a tiger. One should not make the mistake of thinking it _is_ a tiger or one will get badly hurt. Since the only way to tell the true tiger from the false is to hit it, and since that test may prove fatal to the Nipe who tries it, it follows that one is better off if one avoids all animals that look like tigers. You see?"
"Yeah," said Stanton. "Some snarks are boojums."
"Exactly! Thank you for that allusion. I must remember to use it in my report."
"It seems to me to follow," Stanton said musingly, "that there would be some things that they"d never learn the truth about, once they"d gotten a wrong idea in their heads."
"Ah! Indeed. It is precisely that which led me to formulate my theory in the first place. How else to explain the fact that the Nipe, for all his technical knowledge, is still in the ancient ritual-taboo stage of development?"
"A savage?"
Yoritomo smiled. "As to his savagery, I think no one on Earth would disagree. But they are not the same thing. What I do mean is that the Nipe is undoubtedly the most superst.i.tious and bigoted being on the face of this planet."
XIV
There was a knock at the door, and the physical therapist put his head in.
"Sorry to interrupt, but the clam is done. I"ll give him a rubdown, Doc, and you can have him back."
"Excellent. Would you come up to my office, Bart, as soon as you"ve had your mauling?"
"Sure. I"ll be right up."
Yoritomo left, and the P.T. man opened the steam box. "Feel O.K., Bart?"
"Yeah, sure," he said abstractedly as he got up on the rubdown table and lay p.r.o.ne. The therapist saw that Stanton was in no mood for conversation, so he proceeded with the ma.s.sage in silence.
For the first time, Stanton was seeing the Nipe as an individual, as a person, as a thinking, feeling being.
_We have a great deal in common, you and I, he thought. Except that you"re a lot worse off than I am._
I"m actually feeling sorry for the poor guy, Stanton thought. Which, I suppose, is better than feeling sorry for myself. The only difference between us freaks is that you"re a bigger freak than I am. "Molly O"Grady and the Colonel"s lady are sisters under the skin."
Where"d that come from? Something I learned in school, I guess--like the snarks and boojums.
"He would answer to Hi! or to any loud cry, Such as Fry me! or Fritter my wig!"
Who was that? The snark? No.
_d.a.m.n_ this memory of mine!
Or can I even call it mine when I can"t even use it?
"For now we see through a gla.s.s, darkly; but then face to face: now I know in part; but then shall I know even as also I am known."
Another jack-in-the-box thought popping up from nowhere.
The only way I"ll ever get all this stuff straightened out is to get more information. And it doesn"t look as though anyone is going to give it to me on a platter. The Inst.i.tute seems to be awfully chary about giving information away. George even had to chase away old rub-and-pound, here (That feels good!) before he would talk about the Nipe. Can"t blame "em for that, I guess. There"d be h.e.l.l to pay if the public ever found out that the Nipe has been kept as a pet for six years.
How many people has he killed in that time? Twenty? Thirty? How much blood does Colonel Mannheim have on his hands?
"Though they know not why, Or for what they give, Still, the few must die, That the many may live."
I wonder whether I read all that stuff complete or just browsed through a copy of Bartlett"s Quotations. Fragments.
We"ve got to get organized here, brother. Colonel Mannheim"s little puppet is going to cut his strings and do a Pinocchio.
"O.K., Bart," the P.T. said, giving Stanton a final slap, "you"re all set.
See you tomorrow."
"Right. Gimme my clothes."
Stanton dressed and took the elevator up to Yoritomo"s office. This section of the building was off-limits to the other patients in the Inst.i.tute, but Stanton, the star border, had free rein.
Not that it mattered, one way or another. There wasn"t any way they could have stopped him. Aside from the fact that he was physically capable of going through or around almost any guards they wanted to put up, there was also the little matter of gentle blackmail. When a man is genuinely indispensable, he can work wonders by threatening to drop the whole business.
He felt as though he had been slowly awakening from a long sleep. At first, he had accepted as natural that he should obey orders and do as he was told without question, as thought he had been drugged or hypnotized.
_And it"s very likely they subjected me to both at one time or another,_ he told himself.
But now his brain was beginning to function again, and the need to know was strong in his mind.
Dr. Yoritomo was sitting in one of the big, soft chairs, puffing at his pipe, but he leaped to his feet when Stanton came in.