Authors: The Cyberiad [v1.0] [htm]
from the Leyden jug to bolster their strength, then went back to work
and tried it again from the beginning, this time unleashing
their entire arsenal of tensor matrices and grand canonical
ensembles, attacking the problem with such fervor that the very
paper began to smoke. The King rushed forward with all his cruel
coordinates and mean values, stumbled into a dark forest of roots and
logarithms, had to backtrack, then encountered the beast on a
field of irrational numbers (F
1
) and smote it so
grievously that it fell two decimal places and lost an epsilon, but
the beast slid around an asymptote and hid in an
n
-dimensional
orthogonal phase space, underwent expansion and came out, fuming
factorially, and fell upon the King and hurt him passing sore. But
the King, nothing daunted, put on his Markov chain mail and all his
impervious parameters, took his increment Δ
k
to
infinity and dealt the beast a truly Boolean blow, sent it reeling
through an x-axis and several brackets—but the beast, prepared
for this, lowered its horns and—wham!!—the pencils flew
like mad through transcendental functions and double
eigentransformations, and when at last the beast closed in and the
King was down and out for the count, the constructors jumped up,
danced a jig, laughed and sang as they tore all their papers to
shreds, much to the amazement of the spies perched in the
chandelier-—perched in vain, for they were uninitiated
into the niceties of higher mathematics and consequently had no idea
why Trurl and Klapaucius were now shouting, over and over, "Hurrah!
Victory!!"
Well after midnight, the Leyden jug
from which the constructors had on occasion refreshed themselves
in the course of their labors was quietly taken to the headquarters
of the King's secret police, where its false bottom was opened and a
tiny tape recorder removed. This the experts switched on and listened
to eagerly, but the rising sun found them totally unenlightened
and looking haggard. One voice, for example, would say:
"Well? Is the King ready?"
"Right!"
"Where'd you put him? Over there?
Good! Now—hold on, you have to keep the feet together. Not
yours, idiot, the King's! All right now, ready? One, two, find the
derivative! Quick! What do you get?"
"Pi."
"And the beast?"
"Under the radical sign. But
look, the King's still standing!"
"Still standing, eh? Factor both
sides, divide by two, throw in a few imaginary numbers—good!
Now change variables and subtract—Trurl, what on earth are
you doing?! The
beast
, not the King, the
beast
!
That's right! Good! Perfect!! Now transform, approximate and
solve for
x
. Do you have it?"
"I have it! Klapaucius! Look at
the King now!!"
There was a pause, then a burst of
wild laughter.
That same morning, as all the experts
and high officials of the secret police shook their heads,
bleary-eyed after a sleepless night, the constructors asked for
quartz, vanadium, steel, copper, platinum, rhinestones, dysprosium,
yttrium and thulium, also cerium and germanium, and most of the other
elements that make up the Universe, plus a variety of machines and
qualified technicians, not to mention a wide assortment of
spies—for so insolent had the constructors become, that on the
triplicate requisition form they boldly wrote: "Also, kindly
send agents of various cuts and stripes at the discretion and with
the approval of the Proper Authorities." The next day they
asked for sawdust and a large red velvet curtain on a stand, a
cluster of little glass bells in the center and a large tassel at
each of its four corners; everything, even down to the littlest glass
bell, was specified with the utmost precision. The King scowled when
he heard these requests, but ordered them to be carried out to the
letter, for he had given his royal word. The constructors were thus
granted all that they wished.
All that they wished grew more and
more outlandish. For instance, in the files of the secret police
under code number 48999/11K/T was a copy of a requisition for three
tailor's mannequins as well as six full police uniforms, complete
with sash, side arm, shako, plume and handcuffs, also all available
back issues of the magazine
The
Patriotic
Policeman
,
yearbooks and supplements included—under "Comments"
the constructors had guaranteed the return of all items listed above
within twenty-four hours of delivery and in perfect condition. In
another, classified section of the police archives was a copy of a
letter from Klapaucius in which he demanded the immediate shipment of
(1) a life-size doll representing the Postmaster General in full
regalia, and (2) a light gig painted green with a kerosene lamp on
the left and a sky-blue sign on the back that said THINK. The doll
and gig proved too much for the Chief of Police: he had to be taken
away for a much-needed rest. During the next three days the
constructors asked only for barrels of red castor oil, and after
that—nothing. From then on, they worked in the basement of the
palace, hammering away and singing space chanties, and at night blue
lights came flashing from the basement windows and gave weird shapes
to the trees in the garden outside. Trurl and Klapaucius with their
many helpers bustled about amid arcs and sparks, now and then looking
up to see faces pressed against the glass: the servants, as if out of
idle curiosity, were photographing their every move. One evening,
when the weary constructors had finally dragged themselves off to
bed, the components of the apparatus they had been working on were
quickly transported by unmarked balloon to police headquarters and
assembled by eighteen of the finest cyberneticians in the land, who
had been deputized and duly sworn in for that very purpose, whereupon
a gray tin mouse ran out from under their hands, blowing soap bubbles
and dropping a thin trail of chalk dust from under its tail, which
spelled, as it danced this way and that across the table, WHAT, DON'T
YOU LOVE US ANYMORE? Never before in the kingdom's history did Chiefs
of Police have to be replaced with such speed and regularity.
The uniforms, the doll, the green gig, even the sawdust, everything
which the constructors returned exactly as promised, was thoroughly
examined under electron microscope. But except for a minuscule
card in the sawdust which read JUST SAWDUST, there was nothing out of
the ordinary. Then individual atoms of the uniforms and gig were
thoroughly searched— with equal lack of success. At last the
day came when the work was completed. A huge vehicle on three hundred
wheels, looking something like a refrigerator, was drawn up to the
main entrance and opened in the presence of witnesses and
officials; Trurl and Klapaucius brought out a curtain, the one with
the tassels and bells, and placed it carefully inside, in the middle
of the floor. Then they got in themselves, closed the door, did
something, then went and got various containers from the basement,
cans of chemicals, all sorts of finely ground powders—gray,
silver, white, yellow, green—and sprinkled them under and
around the curtain, then stepped out, had the vehicle closed and
locked, consulted their watches and together counted out fourteen and
a half seconds—at which time, much to everyone's surprise,
since the vehicle was stationary and there could be no question of a
breeze inside (for the seal was hermetic), the glass bells tinkled.
The constructors exchanged a wink and said:
"You can take it now!"
The rest of the day they spent blowing
soap bubbles from the veranda. That evening Lord Protozor, Master of
the Royal Hunt, came with an escort and politely but firmly informed
them that they were to go with him at once to an assigned place. They
were required to leave all their possessions behind, even their
clothes; in exchange they were given rags, then put in irons. The
guards and police dignitaries present were astounded by their
perfect sang-froid: instead of demanding justice or trembling with
fear, Trurl giggled as the shackles were being hammered on, saying he
was ticklish. And when the constructors were thrown into a dark and
dismal dungeon, they promptly struck up a rousing chorus of
"Sing Sweet Software."
Meanwhile mighty Krool rode forth from
the village on his mighty hunting chariot, surrounded by all his
retinue and followed by a long and winding train of riders and
machines, machines that included not only the traditional
catapult and cannon, but enormous laser guns and beta ray
bazookas, and a tar-thrower guaranteed to immobilize anything
that walked, swam, flew or rolled along.
And so this grand procession wended
its way to the royal game preserve, and many jokes were made, and
boasts, and haughty toasts, and no one gave a thought to the two
constructors, except perhaps to remark that those fools were in
a pretty pickle now.
But when the silver trumpets announced
His Majesty's approach, one could see a huge vehicle-refrigerator
coming up in the opposite direction. Its door flung open, and for one
brief moment there gaped the black maw of what appeared to be
some sort of field gun. Next there was a boom, a puff of yellow
smoke, and something came rocketing out, a form as blurry as a
tornado and with the general consistency of a sandstorm; it
arced through the air so fast that no one really got a good look at
it anyway. Whatever it was flew a hundred paces or more and landed
without a sound; the curtain that had been wrapped around it floated
to the earth, glass bells tinkling oddly in that perfect silence, and
lay there like a crushed strawberry. Now everyone could see the beast
clearly—though it wasn't clear at all, but looked a little like
a hill, rather large, fairly long, its color much like its
surroundings, a clump of dried-up weeds. The King's huntsmen
unleashed the whole pack of automated hounds (mainly Saint Cybernards
and Cyberman pinschers, with an occasional high-frequency terrier);
these hurled themselves, howling and slavering, at the crouching
beast. The beast didn't rear back, didn't roar, didn't even breathe
fire, but only opened its two eyes wide and reduced half the pack to
ashes in a trice.
"Oho! Laser-eyed, is it?"
cried the King. "Hand me my trusty duralumin doublet, my
bulletproof buckler, my halberd and arquebus!" Thus
accoutered and gleaming like a supernova, he rode out upon his
fearless high-fidelity cybersteed, came nigh the beast and smote it
such a mighty blow that the air crackled and its head tumbled neatly
to the ground. Though the retinue dutifully hallooed his triumph, the
King took no delight in it; greatly angered, he swore in his heart to
devise some special torment for those wretches who dared to call
themselves constructors. The beast, however, shook another head
out of its severed neck, opened its new eyes wide and played a
withering beam across the King's armor (which, however, was proof
against all manner of electromagnetic radiation). "Well,
those two weren't a total loss," said the King to himself,
"though this still won't help them." And he recharged his
charger and spurred it into the fray.
This time he swung full and cleaved
the beast in twain. The beast didn't seem to mind—in fact, it
positioned itself helpfully beneath the whistling blade and gave a
grateful twitch as it fell. And small wonder! The King took another
look: the thing was twinned instead of twained! There were two
spitting images, each a little smaller than the original, plus a
third, a baby beast gamboling between them—that was the head he
had cut off earlier: it now had a tail and feet and was doing
cartwheels through the weeds.
"What next?" thought the
King. "Chop it into mice or little worms? A fine way to hunt!"