The Eyes of Heisenberg (6 page)

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Authors: Frank Herbert

BOOK: The Eyes of Heisenberg
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Who have they shaped to destroy me?
Allgood wondered.
“Many little tick-tock years,” Calapine said.
“Enough!” Schruille growled. He detested these interviews with the underclasses, the way Calapine baited the Folk. He swiveled his throne and now all the Tuyere faced the open segment. Schruille looked at his fingers, the ever
youthful skin, and wondered why he had snapped that way. An enzymic imbalance? The thought touched him with disquiet. He generally held his silence during these sessions—as a defense because he tended to get sentimental about the pitiful
meres
and despise himself for it afterward.
Boumour moved up beside Allgood, said, “Does the Tuyere wish now the report on the Durants?”
Allgood stifled a feeling of rage at the interruption. Didn't the fool know that the Optimen must always appear to lead the interview?
“The words and images of your report have been seen, analyzed and put away,” Nourse rumbled. “Now, it is the non-report that we wish.”
Non-report?
Allgood asked himself.
Does he think we've hidden something?
“Little Max,” Calapine said. “Have you bowed to our necessity and questioned the computer nurse under narcosis?”
Here it comes,
Allgood thought. He took a deep breath, said, “She has been questioned, Calapine.”
Igan took his place beside Boumour, said, “There's something I wish to say about that if I—”
“Hold your tongue, pharmacist,” Nourse said. “We talk to Max.”
Igan bowed his head, thought,
How dangerous this is! And all because of that fool nurse. She wasn't even one of us. No Cyborg-of-the-register knows her. A member of no cell or platoon. An accidental, a Sterrie, and she puts us in this terrible peril!
Allgood saw that Igan's hands trembled, wondered,
What's driving these surgeons? They can't be such fools.
“Was it not a deliberate thing that nurse did?” Calapine asked.
“Yes, Calapine,” Allgood said.
“Your agents did not see it, yet we knew it had to be,” Calapine said. She turned to scan the instruments of the control center, returned her attention to Allgood. “Say now why this was.”
Allgood sighed. “I have no excuses, Calapine. The men have been censured.”
“Say now why the nurse acted thus,” Calapine ordered.
Allgood wet his lips with his tongue, glanced at Boumour and Igan. They looked at the floor. He looked back to Calapine, at her face shimmering within the globe. “We were unable to discover her motives, Calapine.”
“Unable?” Nourse demanded.
“She … ahh … ceased to exist during the interrogation, Nourse,” Allgood said. As the Tuyere stiffened, sitting bolt upright in their thrones, he added, “A flaw in her genetic cutting, so the pharmacists tell me.”
“A profound pity,” Nourse said, settling back.
Igan looked up, blurted, “It could've been a deliberate self-erasure, Nourse.”
That damn' fool!
Allgood thought.
But Nourse stared now at Igan. “You were present, Igan?”
“Boumour and I administered the narcotics.”
And she died,
Igan thought.
But we did not kill her. She died and we'll be blamed for it. Where could she have learned the trick of stopping her own heart? Only Cyborgs are supposed to know and teach it.
“Deliberate … self-erasure?” Nourse asked. Even when considered indirectly, the idea held terrifying implications.
“Max!” Calapine said. “Say now if you used excessive … cruelty.” She leaned forward, wondering why she wanted him to admit barbarity.
“She suffered nothing, Calapine;” Allgood said.
Calapine sat back disappointed.
Could he be lying?
She read her instruments: Calmness. He wasn't lying.
“Pharmacist,” Nourse said, “explain your opinion.”
“We examined her carefully,” Igan said. “It couldn't have been the narcotics. There's no way …”
“Some of us think it was a genetic flaw,” Boumour said.
“There's disagreement,” Igan said. He glanced at Allgood, feeling the man's disapproval. It had to be done, though. The Optimen must be made to know disquiet. When they could be tricked into acting emotionally, they
made mistakes. The plan called for them to make mistakes now. They must be put off balance—subtly, delicately.
“Your opinion, Max?” Nourse asked. He watched carefully. They'd been getting poorer models lately, doppleganger degeneration.
“We've already taken cellular matter, Nourse,” Allgood said, “and are growing a duplicate. If we get a true copy, we'll check the question of genetic flaw.”
“It is a pity the doppleganger won't have the original's memories,” Nourse said.
“Pity of pities,” Calapine said. She looked at Schruille “Is this not true, Schruille?”
Schruille looked up at her without answering. Did she think she could bait him the way she did the
meres
?
“This woman had a mate?” Nourse asked.
“Yes, Nourse,” Allgood said.
“Fertile union?”
“No, Nourse,” Allgood said. “A Sterrie.”
“Compensate the mate,” Nourse said. “Another woman, a bit of leisure. Let him think she was loyal to us.”
Allgood nodded, said, “We are giving him a woman, Nourse, who will keep him under constant surveillance.”
A trill of laughter escaped Calapine. “Why has no one mentioned this Potter, the genetic engineer?” she asked.
“I was coming to him, Calapine,” Allgood said.
“Has anyone examined the embryo?” Schruille asked, looking up suddenly.
“No, Schruille,” Allgood said.
“Why not?”
“If this is a concerted action to escape genetic controls, Schruille, we don't want members of the organization to know we suspect them. Not yet. First, we must learn all about these people—the Durants, their friends, Potter … everyone.”
“But the embryo's the key to the entire thing,” Schruille said. “What was done to it? What is it?”
“It is bait, Schruille,” Allgood said. “Bait?”
“Yes, Schruille, to catch whoever else may be involved.”
“But what was done to it?”
“How can that matter, Schruille, as long as we can … as long as we have complete control over it.”
“The embryo is being guarded most adroitly, I hope,” Nourse said.
“Most adroitly, Nourse.”
“Send the pharmacist Svengaard to us,” Calapine ordered.
“Svengaard … Calapine?” Allgood asked.
“You need not know why,” she said. “Merely send him.”
“Yes, Calapine.”
She stood up to signify the end of the interview. The acolytes turned around, still swinging their thuribles, prepared now to escort the
meres
from the hall. But Calapine was not finished. She stared at Allgood, said, “Look at me, Max.”
He looked, recognizing that strange, studying set to her eyes.
“Am I not beautiful?” she asked.
Allgood stared at her, the slender figure with its outlines softened by the robe and curtains of power within the globe. She was beautiful as were many Optimen females. But the beauty repelled him with its threatening perfection. She would live indefinitely, already had lived forty or fifty thousand years. But one day his lesser flesh would reject the medical replacements and the enzyme prescriptions. He would die while she went on and on and on.
His lesser flesh rejected her.
“You are beautiful, Calapine,” he said.
“Your eyes never admit it,” she said.
“What do you want, Cal?” Nourse asked. “Do you want this … do you want Max?”
“I want his eyes,” she said. “Just his eyes.”
Nourse looked at Allgood, said, “Women.” His voice held a note of false camaraderie.
Allgood stood astonished. He had never heard that tone from an Optiman before.
“I make a point,” Calapine said. “Don't interrupt my words with male jokes. In your heart of hearts, Max, how do you feel about me?”
“Ahhhh,” Nourse said. He nodded.
“I shall say it for you,” she said as Allgood remained mute. “You worship me. Never forget that, Max. You worship me.” She looked at Boumour and Igan, dismissed them with a wave of her hand.
Allgood lowered his eyes, feeling the truth in her words. He turned, and with the acolytes flanking them, led Igan and Boumour out of the hall.
As they emerged onto the steps, the acolytes held back and the barrier dropped. Igan and Boumour turned left, noting a new building at the end of the long esplanade which fronted Administration. They saw its machicolated walls, the openings fitted with colored filters which sent bursts of red, blue and green light upon the surrounding air, and they recognized that it blocked the way they had intended to take out of Central. A building suddenly erected, another Optiman toy. They saw it and planned their steps accordingly with the automatic acceptance that marked them as regulars in the Optiman demesne. The
meres
and inhabitants of Central seemed to know their way through the arabesques of its roads and streets by an instinct. The place defied cartographers because the Optimen were too subject to change and whim.
“Igan!”
It was Allgood calling from behind them.
They turned, waited for him to catch up.
Allgood planted himself in front of them, hands on hips, said, “Do you worship her, too?”
“Don't speak foolishness,” Boumour said.
“No,” Allgood said. His eyes appeared to be sunk in pockets above the high cheekbones. “I belong to no Folk cult, no breeder congregation. How can I worship her?”
“But you do,” Igan said.
“Yes!”
“They are the real religion of our world,” Igan said. “You do not have to belong to a cult or carry a talisman to know this. Calapine merely told you that, if there is a conspiracy, those belonging to it are heretics.”
“Is that what she meant?”
“Of course.”
“And she must know what is done to heretics,” Allgood said.
“Without a doubt,” Boumour said.
S
vengaard had seen this building in the tri-casts and entertainment vids. He'd heard descriptions of the Hall of Counsel—but actually to be standing here at the quarantine wall with the copper sheen of sunset over the hills across from it … he'd never dreamed this could occur.
Elevator caps stood out like plasmeld warts on the hillock in front of him. There were other low hills beyond with piled buildings on them that could've been mistaken for rock outcroppings.
A lone woman passed him on the esplanade pulling a ground-effect cart filled with oddly shaped bundles. Svengaard found himself worried about what the bundles might contain, but he knew he dared not ask or show undue curiosity.
The red triangle of a pharmacy outlet glowed on a pillar beside him. He passed it, glanced back at his escort.
He had come halfway across the continent in the tube with an entire car to himself except for the escort, an agent from T-Security. Deep into Central they'd come, the gray-suited T-Security agent always beside him.
Svengaard began climbing the steps.
Already, Central was beginning to weigh on him. There was a sense of something disastrous about the place. Even
though he suspected the source of the feeling, he couldn't shake it off. It was all the Folk nonsense you could never quite evade, he'd decided. The Folk were a people for the most part without legends or ancient myths except where such matters touched the Optimen. In the Folk memories, Central and the Optimen were fixed with sinister omens compounded of awesome fear and adulation.
Why did they summon me
? Svengaard asked himself. The escort refused to say.
They were stopped by the wall and waited now, silent, nervous.
Even the agent was nervous, Svengaard saw.
Why did they summon me?
The agent cleared his throat, said, “You have all the protocol straight?”
“I think so,” Svengaard said.
“Once you get into the hall, keep pace with the acolytes who'll escort you from there. You'll be interviewed by the Tuyere—Nourse, Schruille and Calapine. Remember to use their names when you address them individually. Use no such words as death or kill or die. Avoid the very concepts if you can. Let them lead the interview. Best not to volunteer anything.”
Svengaard took a trembling breath.
Have they brought me here to advance me
? he wondered.
That must be it. I've served my apprenticeship under such men as Potter and Igan. I'm being promoted to Central.
“And don't say ‘doctor,'” the escort said. “Doctors are pharmacists or genetic engineers in here.”
“I understand,” Svengaard said.
“Allgood wants a complete report on the interview afterward,” the agent said.
“Yes, of course,” Svengaard said.
The quarantine barrier lifted.
“In you go,” the agent said.
“You're not coming with me?” Svengaard asked.
“Not invited,” the agent said. He turned, went down the steps.
Svengaard swallowed, entered the silver gloom of the
portico, stepped through to find himself in the long hall with an escort of six acolytes, three to a side, swinging thuribles from which pink smoke wafted. He smelled the antiseptics in the smoke.
The big red globe at the end of the hall dominated the place. Its open segment showing flashing and winking lights; the moving shapes inside fascinated Svengaard.
The acolytes stopped him twenty paces from the opening and he looked up at the Tuyere, recognizing them through the power curtains—Nourse in the center flanked by Calapine and Schruille.
“I came,” Svengaard said, mouthing the greeting the agent had told him to use. He rubbed sweaty palms against his best tunic.
Nourse spoke with a rumbling voice, “You are the genetic engineer, Svengaard.”
“Thei Svengaard, yes … Nourse.” He took a deep breath, wondering if they'd caught the hesitation while he remembered to use the Optiman's name.
Nourse smiled.
“You assisted recently in the genetic alteration of an embryo from a couple named Durant,” Nourse said. “The chief engineer at the cutting was Potter.”
“Yes, I was the assistant, Nourse.”
“There was an accident during this operation,” Calapine said.
There was a strange musical quality in her voice, and Svengaard recognized she hadn't asked a question, but had reminded him of a detail to which she wanted him to give his attention. He felt the beginnings of a profound disquiet.
“An accident, yes … Calapine,” he said.
“You followed the operation closely?” Nourse asked.
“Yes, Nourse.” And Svengaard found his attention swinging to Schruille, who sat there brooding and silent.
“Now then,” Calapine said, “you will be able to tell us what it is Potter has concealed about this genetic alteration.”
Svengaard found that he had lost his voice. He could only shake his head.
“He concealed nothing?” Nourse asked. “Is that what you say?”
Svengaard nodded.
“We mean you no harm, Thei Svengaard,” Calapine said. “You may speak.”
Svengaard swallowed, cleared his throat. “I …” he said. “ … the question … I saw nothing … concealed.” He fell silent, then remembered he was supposed to use her name and said, “Calapine,” just as Nourse started to speak.
Nourse broke off, scowled.
Calapine giggled.
Nourse said, “Yet you tell us you followed the genetic alteration.”
“I … wasn't on the microscope with him every second,” Svengaard said. “Nourse. I … uh … the duties of the assistant—instructions to the computer nurse, keying the feeder tapes and so on.”
“Say now if the computer nurse was a special friend of yours,” Calapine ordered.
“I … she'd …” Svengaard wet his lips with his tongue.
What do they want
? “We'd worked together for a number of years, Calapine. I can't say she was a friend. We worked together.”
“Did you examine the embryo after the operation?” Nourse asked.
Schruille sat up, stared at Svengaard.
“No, Nourse,” Svengaard said. “My duties were to secure the vat, check life support systems.” He took a deep breath. Perhaps they were only testing him after all … but such odd questions!
“Say now if Potter is a special friend,” Calapine ordered.
“He was one of my teachers, Calapine, someone I've worked with on delicate gentic problems.”
“But not in your particular circle,” Nourse said.
Svengaard shook his head. Again, he sensed menace. He didn't know what to expect—perhaps that the great globe would roll over, crush him, reduce his body to scattered atoms. But no, the Optimen couldn't do that. He studied the three faces as they became clear through the power
curtains, seeking a sign. Clean, sterile faces. He could see the genetic markers in their features—they might be any Sterries of the Folk except for the Optiman aura of mystery. Folk rumor said they were sterile by choice, that they saw breeding as the beginning of death, but the genetic clues of their features spoke otherwise to Svengaard.
“Why did you call Potter on this particular problem?” Nourse asked.
Svengaard took a tight, quavering breath, said, “He … the embryo's genetic configuration … near-Opt. Potter is familiar with our hospital. He … I have confidence in him; brilliant sur—genetic engineer.”
“Say now if you are friendly with any other of our pharmacists,” Calapine said.
“They … I work with them when they come to our facility,” Svengaard said.
“Calapine,” Nourse supplied.
A trill of laughter shook her.
A dark flush spread up from Svengaard's collar. He began to feel angry. What kind of test was this? Couldn't they do anything but sit there, mocking, questioning?
Anger gave Svengaard command of his voice and he said, “I'm only head of genetic engineering at one facility, Nourse—a lowly district engineer. I handle routine cuttings. When something requires a specialist, I follow orders, call a specialist. Potter was the indicated specialist for this case.”

One
of the specialists,” Nourse said.
“One I know and respect,” Svengaard said. He didn't bother adding the Optiman's name.
“Say now if you are angry,” Calapine ordered, and there was that musical quality in her voice.
“I'm angry.”
“Say why.”
“Why am I here?” Svengaard asked. “What kind of interrogation is this? Have I done something wrong? Am I to be censured?”
Nourse bent forward, hands on knees. “You dare question us?”
Svengaard stared at the Optiman. In spite of the tone of the question, the square, heavy-boned face appeared reassuring, calming. “I'll do anything I can to help you,” Svengaard said. “Anything. But how can I help or answer you when I don't know what you want?”
Calapine started to speak, but stopped as Nourse raised a hand.
“Our most profound wish is that we could tell you,” Nourse said. “But surely you know we can have no true discourse. How could you understand what we understand? Can a wooden bowl contain sulphuric acid? Trust us. We seek what is best for you.”
A sense of warmth and gratitude permeated Svengaard. Of course he trusted them. They were the genetic apex of humankind. And he reminded himself: “
They are the power that loves us and cares for us.

Svengaard sighed. “What do you wish of me?”
“You have answered all our questions,” Nourse said. “Even our non-questions are answered.”
“Now, you will forget everything that has happened here between us,” Calapine said. “You will repeat our conversation to no person.”
Svengaard cleared his throat. “To no one … Calapine?”
“No one.”
“Max Allgood has asked that I report to him on—”
“Max must be denied,” she said. “Fear not, Thei Svengaard. We will protect you.”
“As you command,” Svengaard said. “Calapine.”
“It is not our wish that you think us ungrateful of your loyalty and services,” Nourse said. “We are mindful of your good opinion and would not appear cold nor callous in your eyes. Know that our concern is for the larger good of humankind.”
“Yes, Nourse,” Svengaard said.
It was a gratuitous speech, its tone disturbing to Svengaard, but it helped clear his reason. He began to see the direction of their curiosity, to sense their suspicions. Those were his suspicions now. Potter had betrayed his trust, had he? The business with the accidentally destroyed tape had
not been an accident. Very well—the criminals would pay.
“You may go now,” Nourse said.
“With our blessing,” Calapine said.
Svengaard bowed. And he marked that Schruille had not spoken or moved during the entire interview. Svengaard wondered why this fact, of itself, should be a suddenly terrifying thing. His knees trembled as he turned, the acolytes flanking him with their smoking thuribles, and left the hall.
The Tuyere watched until the barrier dropped behind Svengaard.
“Another one who doesn't know what Potter achieved.” Calapine said.
“Are you sure Max doesn't know?” Schruille asked.
“I'm sure,” she said.
“Then we should've told him.”
“And told him how we knew?” she asked.
“I know the argument,” Schruille said. “Blunt the instrument, spoil the work.”
“That Svengaard, he's one of the reliable ones,” Nourse said.
“It is said we walk the sharp edge of a knife,” Schruille said. “When you walk the knife, you must be careful
how
you place your feet.”
“What a disgusting idea,” Calapine said. She turned to Nourse. “Are you still hobbying da Vinci, dearest?”
“His brush stroke,” Nourse said. “A most exacting discipline. I should have it in forty or fifty years. Soon at any rate.”
“Provided you've placed each step correctly,” Schruille said.
Presently, Nourse said, “Sometimes, Schruille, you allow cynicism to carry you beyond the bounds of propriety.” He turned, studied the instrument gauges, sensors, peek-eyes and read-outs across from Calapine on the inner wall of the globe. “It's reasonably quiet today. Shall we leave the control with Schruille, Cal, and go down for a swim and a pharmacy session.”

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