Authors: The Cyberiad [v1.0] [htm]
according to the readings of the dragonometer he kept on a chain
around his neck. As for the counter, its pointer had come to rest on
exactly eight-tenths of a dragon.
"What in the devil is it, an
indeterminant dragon?" he thought as he marched, stopping to
rest every now and then, for the sun beat fiercely and the air was so
hot that everything shimmered. There was no vegetation anywhere,
not a scrap, only baked mud, rocks and boulders as far as the eye
could see.
An hour passed, the sun hung lower in
the heavens, and Klapaucius still walked through fields of gravel and
scree, through craggy passes, till he found himself in a place of
narrow canyons and ravines full of chill and darkness. The red
pointer crept to nine-tenths, gave a shudder, and froze.
Klapaucius put his knapsack on a rock
and had just taken off his antidragon belt when the indicator began
to go wild, so he grabbed his probability extinguisher and looked all
around. Situated on a high bluff, he was able to see into the gorge
below, where something moved.
"That must be her!" he
thought, since Echidnosaurs are invariably female.
Could that be why it didn't demand
young virgins? But no, the native said it had before. Odd, most odd.
But the main thing now, Klapaucius told himself, was to shoot
straight and everything would be all right. Just in case, however,
he reached for his knapsack again and pulled out a can of dragon
repellent and an atomizer. Then he peered over the edge of the rock.
At the bottom of the gorge, along the bed of a dried-up stream walked
a grayish brown dragoness of enormous proportions, though with sunken
sides as if it had been starved. All sorts of thoughts ran through
Klapaucius' head. Annihilate the thing by reversing the sign of its
pentapendragonal coefficient from positive to negative, thereby
raising the statistical probability of its nonexistence over that of
its existence? Ah, but how very risky that was, when the least
deviation could prove disastrous: more than one poor soul, seeking to
produce the lack of a dragon, had ended up instead with the back of
the dragon—resulting in a beast with two backs—and nearly
died of embarrassment! Besides, total deprobabilization would rule
out the possibility of studying the Echidnosaur's behavior.
Klapaucius wavered; he could see a splendid dragonskin tacked on
the wall of his den, right above the fireplace. But this wasn't the
time to indulge in daydreams—though a dracozoologist would
certainly be delighted to receive an animal with such unusual tastes.
Finally, as Klapaucius got into position, it occurred to him
what a nice little article might be written up on the strength of a
well-preserved specimen, so he put down the extinguisher, lifted the
gun that fired negative heads, took careful aim and pulled the
trigger.
The roar was deafening. A cloud of
white smoke engulfed Klapaucius and he lost sight of the beast for a
moment. Then the smoke cleared.
There are a great many old wives'
tales about dragons. It is said, for example, that dragons can
sometimes have seven heads. This is sheer nonsense. A dragon can have
only one head, for the simple reason that having two leads to
disagreements and violent quarrels; the polyhydroids, as the
scholars call them, died out as a result of internal feuds. Stubborn
and headstrong by nature, dragons cannot tolerate opposition,
therefore two heads in one body will always bring about a swift
death: each head, purely to spite the other, refuses to eat, then
maliciously holds its breath—with the usual consequences. It
was this phenomenon which Euphorius Cloy exploited when he invented
the anticapita cannon. A small auxiliary electron head is
discharged into the dragon's body. This immediately gives rise to
unreconcilable differences of opinion and the dragon is immobilized
by the ensuing deadlock. Often it will stand there, stiff as a board,
for a day, a week, even a month; sometimes a year goes by before the
beast will collapse, exhausted. Then you can do with it what you
will.
But the dragon Klapaucius shot reacted
strangely, to say the least. True, it did rear up on its hind paws
with a howl that started a landslide or two, and it did thrash the
rocks with its tail until the sparks flew all over the canyon. But
then it scratched its ear, cleared its throat and coolly continued
on its way, though trotting at a slightly quicker pace. Unable to
believe his eyes, Klapaucius ran along the ridge to head the creature
off at the mouth of the dried-up stream —it was no longer an
article, or even two articles in the
Dracological Journal
he
could see his name on now, but a whole monograph elegantly bound,
with a likeness of the dragon and the author on the cover!
At the first bend he crouched behind a
boulder, pulled out his improbability automatic, took aim and
actuated the possibiliballistic destabilizers. The gunstock trembled
in his hands, the red-hot barrel steamed; the dragon was surrounded
with a halo like a moon predicting bad weather— but didn't
disappear! Once again Klapaucius unleashed the utmost improbability
at the beast; the intensity of nonverisimilarity was so great, that a
moth that happened to be flying by began to tap out the Second
Jungle Book
in Morse code with its little wings, and here
and there among the crags and cliffs danced the shadows of witches,
hags and harpies, while the sound of hoofbeats announced that
somewhere in the vicinity there were centaurs gamboling,
summoned into being by the awesome force of the improbability
projector. But the dragon just sat there and yawned, leisurely
scratching its shaggy neck with a hind paw, like a dog. Klapaucius
clutched his sizzling weapon and desperately kept squeezing the
trigger—he had never felt so helpless— and the nearest
stones slowly lifted into the air, while the dust that the dragon had
kicked up, instead of settling, hung in midair and assumed the shape
of a sign that clearly read AT YOUR SERVICE GOV. It grew dim—day
was night and night was day, it grew cold-—hell was freezing
over; a couple of stones went out for a stroll and softly chatted of
this and that; in short, miracles were happening right and left, yet
that horrid monster sitting not more than thirty paces from
Klapaucius apparently had no intention of disappearing.
Klapaucius threw down his gun, pulled an antidragon grenade from his
vest pocket and, committing his soul to the Universal Matrix of
Transfinite Transformations, hurled it with all his might. There was
a loud ker-boom, and into the air with a spray of rock flew the
dragon's tail, and the dragon shouted "Yipe!"—just
like a person—and galloped straight for Klapaucius.
Klapaucius, seeing the end was near, leaped out from behind his
boulder, swinging his antimatter saber blindly, but then he heard
another shout:
"Stop! Stop! Don't kill me!"
"What's that, the dragon
talking?" thought Klapaucius. "I must be going mad …"
But he asked:
"Who said that? The dragon?"
"What dragon? It's me!!"
And as the cloud of dust blew away,
Trurl stepped out of the beast, pushing a button that made it sink to
its knees and go dead with a long, drawn-out wheeze.
"Trurl, what on earth is going
on? Why this masquerade? Where did you find such a costume? And what
about the real dragon?" Klapaucius bombarded his friend with
questions. Trurl finished brushing himself off and held up his
hands.
"Just a minute, give me a chance!
The dragon I destroyed, but the King wouldn't pay …"
"Why not?"
"Stingy, most likely. He blamed
it on the bureaucracy, of course, said there had to be a notarized
death certificate, an official autopsy, all sorts of forms in
triplicate, the approval of the Royal Appropriations Commission, and
so on. The Head Treasurer claimed he didn't know the procedure to
hand over the money, for it wasn't wages, nor did it come under
maintenance. I went from the King to the Cashier to the Commission,
back and forth, and no one would do anything; finally, when they
asked me to submit a vita sheet with photographs and references, I
walked out—but by then the dragon was beyond recall. So I
pulled the skin off it, cut up a few sticks and branches, found an
old telephone pole, and that was really all I needed; a frame for the
skin, some pulleys—you know—and I was ready …"
"You, Trurl? Resorting to such
shameful tactics? Impossible! What could you hope to gain by it?
I mean, if they didn't pay you in the first place…"
"Don't you understand?" said
Trurl, shaking his head. "This way I get the tribute! Already
there's more than I know what to do with."
"Ah! Of course!!" Klapaucius
saw it all now. But he added, "Still, it wasn't right to force
them …"
"Who was forcing them? I only
walked around in the mountains, and in the evenings I howled a
little. But really, I'm absolutely bushed." And he sat down next
to Klapaucius.
"What, from howling?"
"Howling? What are you talking
about? Every night I have to drag sacks of gold from the designated
cave—all the way up there!" He pointed to a distant ridge.
"I made myself a blast-off pad—it's right over there.
Just carry several hundred pounds of bullion from sundown to sunup
and you'll see what I mean! And that dragon was no ordinary
dragon—the skin itself weighs a couple of tons, and I have to
cart that around with me all day, roaring and stamping —and
then it's all night hauling and heaving. I'm glad you showed up, I
can't take much more of this…"
"But… why didn't the
dragon—the fake one, that is— why didn't it disappear
when I lowered the probability to the point of miracles?"
Klapaucius asked. Trurl smiled.
"I didn't want to take any
chances," he explained. "Some fool of a hunter might've
happened by, maybe even Basiliscus himself, so I put
probability-proof shields under the dragonskin. But come, I've got a
few sacks of platinum left —saved them for last since they're
the heaviest. Which is just perfect, now that you can give me a
hand…"
The
Fourth Sally
Or
How Trurl
Built a Femfatalatron
to Save Prince
Pantaloon from the
Pangs of Love,
and How Later He
Resorted to a
Cannonade of Babies
One day, in the middle of the night,
as Trurl lay deep in slumber, there came a violent knocking at the
door of his domicile, as if someone was trying to knock it off its
hinges. Still in a stupor, Trurl pulled back the bolts and saw
standing there against the paling stars an enormous ship. It
looked like a giant sugar loaf or flying pyramid, and out of this
colossus, which had landed right on his front lawn, long rows of
andromedaries laden with packs walked down a wide ramp, while robots,
garbed in turbans and togas and painted black, unloaded the bags at
his doorstep, and so quickly, that before Trurl knew it, he was
hemmed in by a growing embankment of bulging sacks—though a
narrow passageway was left therein, and through this approached an
electroknight of remarkable countenance, for his jeweled eyes blazed
like comets, and he had radar antennas jauntily thrown back, and an
elegant diamond-studded stole. This imposing personage doffed his
armored cap and in a mighty yet silken voice inquired:
"Have I the honor to speak with
his lordship Trurl, Trurl the highborn, Trurl the illustrious
constructor?"
"Why yes, of course… won't
you come in … I wasn't expecting… that is, I was
asleep," said Trurl, terribly flustered, pulling on a bathrobe,
for a nightshirt was all he was wearing, and that wasn't the
cleanest.
The magnificent electroknight,
however, appeared not to notice any shortcoming in Trurl's attire.
Doffng his cap again, which purred and hummed above his castellated
brow, he gracefully entered the room. Trurl excused himself for a
moment, perfunctorily performed his morning ablutions, then
hurried back downstairs. By now it was growing light outside, and the
first rays of the sun gleamed on the turbans of the robots, who sang
the old sad and soulful song of bondage, "Tote Dat Jack,"
as they formed in triple rows around both house and pyramidal ship.
Trurl took a seat opposite his guest, who blinked his shining eyes
and finally spoke as follows:
"The planet from which I come to
you, Sir Constructor, is at present deep in the Dark Ages. Ah, but
Your Excellency must forgive our untimely arrival, which did so