Authors: The Cyberiad [v1.0] [htm]
his breath.
"Tell me," said Trurl, glad
of the reprieve.
"Because you're not the real
Trurl. Trurl, you see, built a Machine to Grant Your Every Wish and
sent it here as a gift; to test it out, I had it make you! And now
I'm going to knock off your head, put it at the foot of my bed and
use it for a bootjack."
"You monster! Why are you doing
this to me?"
"I already told you: it gives me
pleasure. But enough of this idle chatter!" And Klapaucius got
up and this time picked up a huge bludgeon in both hands—but
Trurl cried out:
"Wait! Stop! I have something to
tell you!!"
"I wonder what you could possibly
tell me to keep me from using your head as a bootjack," replied
Klapaucius.
Trurl quickly yelled:
"I'm not any Trurl from a
machine! I'm the real Trurl —I only wanted to find out what
you've been doing lately behind closed doors and drawn curtains, so I
built a machine, hid in its belly and had it take me here,
pretending to be a gift!"
"Come now, that's an obvious
fabrication and not even clever!" said Klapaucius, hefting his
bludgeon. "Don't waste your breath, I can see right through you.
You came out of a machine that grants wishes, and if it manufactures
paint and sandpaper, a brace and bit, and a No. 5 screw, it can
surely manufacture you!"
"I had all that prepared
beforehand in its belly!" cried Trurl. "It wasn't hard to
anticipate what you'd need in your work! I swear I'm telling the
truth!"
"Are you trying to tell me that
my good friend and colleague, Trurl the Magnificent, is nothing
but a common sneak? No, that I will never believe!" replied
Klapaucius. "Take that!"
And he let him have it.
"That's for slandering my good
friend Trurl! And take
that
! And that!"
And he let him have it again, and
again, clubbing and clobbering until his arm was too tired to club or
clobber anymore.
"Now I'll have a little nap and
rest up," said Klapaucius, throwing aside the bludgeon. "But
don't you worry, I'll be back…" And he left, and soon was
snoring so loud you could hear it even in the cellar. Trurl writhed
and twisted until he loosened his bonds enough to slip off the knots,
got up, crept back to the machine, climbed inside and took off for
home at a gallop. Klapaucius meanwhile was watching the escape from
his bedroom window, pressing a hand over his mouth to keep from
laughing out loud. The next day he went to pay Trurl a visit. It was
a gloomy and silent Trurl that let him in. The room was dark, but
even so, Klapaucius could see that Trurl's person bore the marks of a
good shellacking—though it was apparent that Trurl had gone to
some trouble to touch up the scratches and hammer out the dents.
"Why so gloomy?" asked a
cheerful Klapaucius. "I came to thank you for the nice gift—what
a shame, though, it ran off while I slept, and in such a hurry that
it left the door open!"
"It seems to me," snapped
Trurl, "that you somewhat misused, or should I say abused, my
gift. Oh, you needn't bother to explain, the machine told me
everything. You had it make me, me, then lured me, I mean the copy of
me, to the cellar, where you beat it unmercifully! And after this
great insult to my person, after this act of the blackest
ingratitude, you dare show your face here as if nothing
happened! What do you have to say for yourself?"
"I really don't understand why
you're so angry," said Klapaucius. "It's true I had the
machine make a copy of you, and I must say it was absolutely perfect,
an amazing likeness. As far as the beating goes, well, your machine
must have exaggerated a little—I did give the artificial Trurl
a poke or two, but only to see if it was well made, and perhaps
also to test its reflexes, which were quite good, by the way. It
turned out to be very much on its toes, and even tried to argue that
it was really you, can you imagine—? Of course I didn't believe
it, but then it swore the gift wasn't a gift at all, but some sort of
low and underhanded trick. Well, I had to defend the honor of my good
friend, you understand, so I thrashed it some for slandering you so
shamelessly. On the other hand I found it to be extremely
intelligent; so you see, Trurl, it resembled you mentally as well as
physically. You are indeed a great and magnificent constructor, which
is precisely what I came to tell you so early in the morning!"
"Well, yes, in that case,"
said Trurl, considerably appeased. "Though your use of the
Machine to Grant Your Every Wish was not, I would say, the most
fortunate …"
"Oh yes, one other thing I wanted
to ask," said Klapaucius, all innocence. "What did you do
with the artificial Trurl? Could I see it?"
"It was beside itself with rage,"
explained Trurl. "It said it would ambush you by that mountain
pass near your house and tear you limb from limb. I tried to reason
with it, but it called me names, ran out into the night and started
putting together all sorts of booby traps for you—and so,
dear Klapaucius, though you had insulted me, I remembered our old
friendship and decided to remove this threat to your life and limb.
Hence I had to disassemble it…"
And he touched a few nuts and bolts on
the floor with his shoe, and sighed.
Whereupon they exchanged kind words,
shook hands and parted the best of friends.
From that time on, Trurl did nothing
but tell everyone how he had given Klapaucius a Machine to Grant Your
Every Wish, how then Klapaucius had insulted him by having it
make an artificial Trurl, which he proceeded to beat black-and-blue;
how then this excellently constructed copy of the great constructor
made clever lies to save itself, and finally managed to escape while
Klapaucius slept, and how Trurl himself, the real Trurl, eventually
had to disassemble the artificial Trurl to protect his good friend
and colleague from its vengeance. Trurl told this story so often and
at such length, elaborating on his glorious achievement (and never
failing to call on Klapaucius as a witness), that it reached the ears
of the Royal Court at last, and now no one spoke of Trurl other than
with the utmost respect, though not long ago he had been commonly
called the Constructor of the World's Stupidest Computer. When
Klapaucius heard, one day, that the King himself had rewarded Trurl
handsomely and decorated him with the Order of the Great
Parallax, he threw up his hands and cried:
"What? Here I was able to see
through his little game and gave him so good a shellacking for it
that he had to sneak home in the middle of the night and patch
himself up, and even then he looked a sight! And for that they
decorate him, praise him, shower him with riches? O tempora, O
mores!…"
Furious, he went home, locked himself
in and drew the blinds. He too had been working on a Machine to Grant
Your Every Wish, only Trurl had beat him to it.
The Seven
Sallies
of Trurl and
Klapaucius
The
First Sally
Or
The Trap
of Gargantius
When the Universe was not so out of
whack as it is today, and all the stars were lined up in their proper
places, so you could easily count them from left to right, or top to
bottom, and the larger and bluer ones were set apart, and the
smaller, yellowing types pushed off to the corners as bodies of a
lower grade, when there was not a speck of dust to be found in outer
space, nor any nebular debris—in those good old days it was the
custom for constructors, once they had received their Diploma of
Perpetual Omnipotence with distinction, to sally forth ofttimes
and bring to distant lands the benefit of their expertise. And so it
happened that, in keeping with this ancient custom, Trurl and
Klapaucius, who could kindle or extinguish suns as easily as shelling
peas, did venture out on such a voyage. When the vastness of the
traveled void had erased in them all recollection of their native
skies, they saw a planet up ahead—not too little, not too big,
just about right—with one continent only, down the middle of
which ran a bright red line: everything on one side was yellow,
everything on the other, pink. Realizing at once that here were two
neighboring kingdoms, the constructors held a brief council of
war before landing.
"With two kingdoms," said
Trurl, "it's best you take one, and I the other. That way
nobody's feelings get hurt."
"Fine," said Klapaucius.
"But what if they ask for military aid? Such things
happen."
"True, they could demand weapons,
even superweapons," Trurl agreed. "We'll simply refuse."
"And if they insist, and threaten
us?" returned Klapaucius. "This too can happen."
"Let's see," said Trurl,
switching on the radio. It blared martial music, a rousing march.
"I have an idea," said
Klapaucius, turning it off. "We can use the Gargantius Effect.
What do you think?"
"Ah, the Gargantius Effect!"
cried Trurl. "I never heard of anyone actually using it. But
there's always a first time. Yes, why not?"
"We'll both be prepared to use
it," Klapaucius explained. "But it's imperative that we use
it together, otherwise we're in serious trouble."
"No problem," said Trurl. He
took a small golden box out of his pocket and opened it. Inside, on
velvet, lay two white beads. "You keep one, I'll keep the other.
Look at yours every evening; if it turns pink, that'll mean I've
started and you must too."
"So be it," said Klapaucius
and put his bead away. Then they landed, shook hands and set off in
opposite directions.
The kingdom to which Trurl repaired
was ruled by King Atrocitus. He was a militarist to the core, and an
incredible miser besides. To relieve the royal treasury, he did away
with all punishments except for the death sentence. His favorite
occupation was to abolish unnecessary offices; since that included
the office of executioner, every condemned citizen was obliged to do
his own beheading, or else—on rare occasions of royal
clemency—have it done by his next of kin. Of the arts Atrocitus
supported only those that entailed little expense, such as choral
recitation, chess and military calisthenics. The art of war he held
in particularly high esteem, for a victorious campaign brought in
excellent returns; on the other hand, one could properly prepare for
war only during an interval of peace, so the King advocated peace,
though in moderation. His greatest reform was the nationalization of
high treason. As the neighboring kingdom was continually sending
spies, he created the office of Royal Informer, who, through a staff
of subordinate traitors, would hand over State secrets to enemy
agents for certain sums of money. Though as a rule the agents
purchased only outdated secrets—those were less expensive and
besides, they were held accountable to their own treasury for every
penny spent.
The subjects of Atrocitus rose early,
were well-behaved, and worked long hours. They wove fascines and
gabions for fortifications, made guns and denunciations. In order
that the kingdom not be flooded with the latter (which in fact had
happened during the reign of Bartholocaust the Walleyed several
hundred years before), whoever wrote too many denunciations was
required to pay a special luxury tax. In this way they were kept at a
reasonable level. Arriving at the Court of Atrocitus, Trurl offered
his services. The King— not surprisingly—wanted powerful
instruments of war. Trurl asked for a few days to think it over, and
as soon as he was alone in the little cubicle they had assigned to