Page 7 of Foundation and Earth (Foundation 5)
âHuman beings, of course. All parts of Gaia are alive and equal in that respect, but some, like human beings, are obviously more equal than others.â
âDonât be foolishly sarcastic,â said Bliss, with a trace of waspishness. âThe level and intensity of consciousness and awareness are important. A human being is a more useful portion of Gaia than a rock of the same weight would be, and the properties and functions of Gaia as a whole are necessarily weighted in the direction of the human beingânot as much so as on your Isolate worlds, however. Whatâs more, there are times when it is weighted in other directions, when that is needed for Gaia as a whole. It might even, at long intervals, be weighted in the direction of the rocky interior. That, too, demands attention or, in the lack of that attention all parts of Gaia might suffer. We wouldnât want an unnecessary volcanic eruption, would we?â
âNo,â said Trevize. âNot an unnecessary one.â
âYouâre not impressed, are you?â
âLook,â said Trevize. âWe have worlds that are colder than average and worlds that are warmer; worlds that are tropical forests to a large extent, and worlds that are vast savannahs. No two worlds are alike, and every one of them is home to those who are used to it. I am used to the relative mildness of Terminusâweâve tamed it to an almost Gaian moderation, actuallyâbut I like to get away, at least temporarily, to something different. What we have, Bliss, that Gaia doesnât have, is variation. If Gaia expands into Galaxia, will every world in the Galaxy be forced into mildness? The sameness would be unbearable.â
Bliss said, âIf that is so, and if variety seems desirable, variety will be maintained.â
âAs a gift from the central committee, so to speak?â said Trevize dryly. âAnd as little of it as they can bear to part with? Iâd rather leave it to nature.â
âBut you havenât left it to nature. Every habitable world in the Galaxy has been modified. Every single one was found in a state of nature that was uncomfortable for humanity, and every single one was modified until it was as mild as could be managed. If this world here is cold, I am certain that is because its inhabitants couldnât warm it any further without unacceptable expense. And even so, the portions they actually inhabit we can be sure are artificially warmed into mildness. So donât be so loftily virtuous about leaving it to nature.â
Trevize said, âYou speak for Gaia, I suppose.â
âI always speak for Gaia. I am Gaia.â
âThen if Gaia is so certain of its own superiority, why did you require my decision? Why have you not gone ahead without me?â
Bliss paused, as though to collect her thoughts. She said, âBecause it is not wise to trust oneâs self overmuch. We naturally see our virtues with clearer eyes than we see our defects. We are anxious to do what is right; not necessarily what seems right to us, but what is right, objectively, if such a thing as objective right exists. You seem to be the nearest approach to objective right that we can find, so we are guided by you.â
âSo objectively right,â said Trevize sadly, âthat I donât even understand my own decision and I seek its justification.â
âYouâll find it,â said Bliss.
âI hope so,â said Trevize.
âActually, old chap,â said Pelorat, âit seems to me that this recent exchange was won rather handily by Bliss. Why donât you recognize the fact that her arguments justify your decision that Gaia is the wave of the future for humanity?â
âBecause,â said Trevize harshly, âI did not know those arguments at the time I made my decision. I knew none of these details about Gaia. Something else influenced me, at least unconsciously, something that doesnât depend upon Gaian detail, but must be more fundamental. It is that which I must find out.â
Pelorat held up a placating hand. âDonât be angry, Golan.â
âIâm not angry. Iâm just under rather unbearable tension. I donât want to be the focus of the Galaxy.â
Bliss said, âI donât blame you for that, Trevize, and Iâm truly sorry that your own makeup has somehow forced you into the post. âWhen will we be landing on Comporellon?â
âIn three days,â said Trevize, âand only after we stop at one of the entry stations in orbit about it.â
Pelorat said, âThere shouldnât be any problem with that, should there?â
Trevize shrugged. âIt depends on the number of ships approaching the world, the number of entry stations that exist, and, most of all, on the particular rules for permitting and refusing admittance. Such rules change from time to time.â
Pelorat said indignantly, âWhat do you mean refusing admittance? How can they refuse admittance to citizens of the Foundation? Isnât Comporellon part of the Foundation dominion?â
âWell, yesâand no. Thereâs a delicate matter of legalism about the point and Iâm not sure how Comporellon interprets it. I suppose thereâs a chance weâll be refused admission, but I donât think itâs a large chance.â
âAnd if we are refused, what do we do?â
âIâm not sure,â said Trevize. âLetâs wait and see what happens before we wear ourselves out making contingency plans.â
11.
THEY WERE CLOSE ENOUGH TO COMPORELLON now for it to appear as a substantial globe without telescopic enlargement. When such enlargement was added, however, the entry stations themselves could be seen. They were farther out than most of the orbiting structures about the planet and they were well lit.
Approaching as the Far Star was from the direction of the planetâs southern pole, half its globe was sunlit constantly. The entry stations on its night side were naturally more clearly seen as sparks of light. They were evenly spaced in an arc about the planet. Six of them were visible (plus six on the day side undoubtedly) and all were circling the planet at even and identical speeds.
Pelorat, a little awed at the sight, said, âThere are other lights closer to the planet. What are they?â
Trevize said, âI donât know the planet in detail so I canât tell you. Some might be orbiting factories or laboratories or observatories, or even populated townships. Some planets prefer to keep all orbiting objects outwardly dark, except for the entry stations. Terminus does, for instance. Comporellon conducts itself on a more liberal principle, obviously.â
âWhich entry station do we go to, Golan?â
âIt depends on them. Iâve sent in my request to land on Comporellon and weâll eventually get our directions as to which entry station to go to, and when. Much depends on how many incoming ships are trying to make entry at present. If there are a dozen ships lined up at each station, we will have no choice but to be patient.â
Bliss said, âIâve only been at hyperspatial distances from Gaia twice before, and those were both when I was at or near Sayshell. Iâve never been at anything like this distance.â
Trevize looked at her sharply. âDoes it matter? Youâre still Gaia, arenât you?â
For a moment, Bliss looked irritated, but then dissolved into what was almost an embarrassed titter. âI must admit youâve caught me this time, Trevize. There is a double meaning in the word âGaia.â It can be used to refer to the physical planet as a solid globular object in space. It can also be used to refer to the living object that includes that globe. Properly speaking, we should use two different words for these two different concepts, but Gaians always know from the context what is being referred to. I admit that an Isolate might be puzzled at times.â
âWell, then,â said Trevize, âadmitting that you are many thousands of parsecs from Gaia as globe, are you still part of Gaia as organism?â
âReferring to the organism, I am still Gaia.â
âNo attenuation?â
âNot in essence. Iâm sure Iâve already told you there is some added complexity in remaining Gaia across hyperspace, but I remain Gaia.â
Trevize said, âDoes it occur to you that Gaia may be viewed as a Galactic krakenâthe tentacled monster of the legendsâwith its tentacles reaching everywhere.
You have but to put a few Gaians on each of the populated worlds and you will virtually have Galaxia right there. In fact, you have probably done exactly that. Where are your Gaians located? I presume that one or more are on Terminus and one or more are on Trantor. How much farther does this go?â
Bliss looked distinctly uncomfortable. âI have said I wonât lie to you, Trevize, but that doesnât mean I feel compelled to give you the whole truth. There are some things you have no need to know, and the position and identity of individual bits of Gaia are among them.â
âDo I need to know the reason for the existence of those tentacles, Bliss, even if I donât know where they are?â
âIt is the opinion of Gaia that you do not.â
âI presume, though, that I may guess. You believe you serve as the guardians of the Galaxy.â
âWe are anxious to have a stable and secure Galaxy; a peaceful and prosperous one. The Seldon Plan, as originally worked out by Hari Seldon at least, is designed to develop a Second Galactic Empire, one that is more stable and more workable than the First was. The Plan, which has been continually modified and improved by the Second Foundation, has appeared to be working well so far.â
âBut Gaia doesnât want a Second Galactic Empire in the classic sense, does it? You want Galaxiaâa living Galaxy.â
âSince you permit it, we hope, in time, to have Galaxia. If you had not permitted it, we would have striven for Seldonâs Second Empire and made it as secure as we could.â
âBut what is wrong withââ
His ear caught the soft, burring signal. Trevize said, âThe computer is signaling me. I suppose it is receiving directions concerning the entry station. Iâll be back.â
He stepped into the pilot-room and placed his hands on those marked out on the desk top and found that there were directions for the specific entry station he was to approachâits co-ordinates with reference to the line from Comporellonâs center to its north poleâthe prescribed route of approach.
Trevize signaled his acceptance, and then sat back for a moment.
The Seldon Plan! He had not thought of it for quite a time. The First Galactic Empire had crumbled and for five hundred years the Foundation had grown, first in competition with that Empire, and then upon its ruinsâall in accordance with the Plan.
There had been the interruption of the Mule, which, for a time, had threatened to shiver the Plan into fragments, but the Foundation had pulled throughâprobably with the help of the ever-hidden Second Foundationâpossibly with the help of the even-better-hidden Gaia.
Now the Plan was threatened by something more serious than the Mule had ever been. It was to be diverted from a renewal of Empire to something utterly different from anything in historyâGalaxia. And he himself had agreed to that.
But why? Was there a flaw in the Plan? A basic flaw?
For one flashing moment, it seemed to Trevize that this flaw did indeed exist and that he knew what it was, that he had known what it was when he made his decisionâbut the knowledge ⦠if that were what it was ⦠vanished as fast as it came, and it left him with nothing.
Perhaps it was all only an illusion; both when he had made his decision, and now. After all, he knew nothing about the Plan beyond the basic assumptions that validated psychohistory. Apart from that, he knew no detail, and certainly not a single scrap of its mathematics.
He closed his eyes and thoughtâ
There was nothing.
Might it be the added power he received from the computer? He placed his hands on the desk top and felt the warmth of the computerâs hands embracing them. He closed his eyes and once more he thoughtâ
There was still nothing.
12.
THE COMPORELLIAN WHO BOARDED THE SHIP wore a holographic identity card. It displayed his chubby, lightly bearded face with remarkable fidelity, and underneath it was his name, A. Kendray.
He was rather short, and his body was as softly rounded as his face was. He had a fresh and easygoing look and manner, and he stared about the ship with clear amazement.
He said, âHow did you get down this fast? We werenât expecting you for two hours.â
âItâs a new-model ship,â said Trevize, with noncommittal politeness.
Kendray was not quite the young innocent he looked, however. He stepped into the pilot-room and said at once, âGravitic?â
Trevize saw no point in denying anything that was apparently that obvious. He said tonelessly, âYes.â
âVery interesting. You hear of them, but you never see them somehow. Motors in the hull?â
âThatâs so.â
Kendray looked at the computer. âComputer circuits, likewise?â
âThatâs so. Anyway, Iâm told so. Iâve never looked.â
âOh well. What I need is the shipâs documentation; engine number, place of manufacture, identification code, the whole patty-cake. Itâs all in the computer, Iâm sure, and it can probably turn out the formal card I need in half a second.â
It took very little more than that. Kendray looked about again. âYou three all the people on board?â
Trevize said, âThatâs right.â
âAny live animals? Plants? State of health?â
âNo. No. And good,â said Trevize crisply.
âUm!â said Kendray, making notes. âCould you put your hand in here? Just routine. âRight hand, please.â
Trevize looked at the device without favor. It was being used more and more commonly, and was growing quickly more elaborate. You could almost tell the backwardness of a world at a glance by the backwardness of its microdetector. There were now few worlds, however backward, that didnât have one at all. The start had come with the final breakup of the Empire, as each fragment of the whole grew increasingly anxious to protect itself from the diseases and alien microorganisms of all the others.
âWhat is that?â asked Bliss, in a low and interested voice, craning her head to see it first on one side, then the other.
Pelorat said, âA microdetector, I believe they call it.â
Trevize added, âItâs nothing mysterious. Itâs a device that automatically checks a portion of your body, inside and out, for any microorganism capable of transmitting disease.â
âThis will classify the microorganisms, too,â said Kendray, with rather more than a hint of pride. âItâs been worked out right here on Comporellon. âAnd if you donât mind, I still want your right hand.â
Trevize inserted his right hand, and watched as a series of small red markings danced along a set of horizontal lines. Kendray touched a contact and a facsimile in color appeared at once. âIf youâll sign that, sir,â he said.
Trevize did so. âHow badly off am I?â he asked. âIâm not in any great danger, am I?â
Kendray said, âIâm not a physician, so I canât say in detail, but it shows none of the marks that would require you to be turned away or to be put in quarantine. Thatâs all Iâm interested in.â
âWhat a lucky break for me,â said Trevize dryly, shaking his hand to rid himself of the slight tingle he felt.
âYou, sir,â said Kendray.
Pelorat inserted his hand with a certain hesitancy, then signed the facsimile.
âAnd you, maâam?â
A few moments later, Kendray was staring at the result, saying, âI never saw anything like this before.â He looked up at Bliss with an expression of awe. âYouâre negative. Altogether.â
Bliss smiled engagingly. âHow nice.â
âYes, maâam. I envy you.â He looked back at the first facsimile, and said, âYour identification, Mr. Trevize.â
Trevize presented it. Kendray, glancing at it, again looked up in surprise. âCouncilman of the Terminus Legislature?â
âThatâs right.â
âHigh official of the Foundation?â
Trevize said coolly, âExactly right. So letâs get through with this quickly, shall we?â
âYouâre captain of the ship?â
; âYes, I am.â
âPurpose of visit?â
âFoundation security, and thatâs all the answer Iâm going to give you. Do you understand that?â
âYes, sir. How long do you intend to stay?â
âI donât know. Perhaps a week.â
âVery well, sir. And this other gentleman?â
âHe is Dr. Janov Pelorat,â said Trevize. âYou have his signature there and I vouch for him. He is a scholar of Terminus and he is my assistant in this business of my visit.â
âI understand, sir, but I must see his identification. Rules are rules, Iâm afraid. I hope you understand, sir.â
Pelorat presented his papers.
Kendray nodded. âAnd you, miss?â
Trevize said quietly, âNo need to bother the lady. I vouch for her, too.â
âYes, sir. But I need the identification.â
Bliss said, âIâm afraid I donât have any papers, sir.â
Kendray frowned. âI beg your pardon.â
Trevize said, âThe young lady didnât bring any with her. An oversight. Itâs perfectly all right. Iâll take full responsibility.â
Kendray said, âI wish I could let you do that, but Iâm not allowed. The responsibility is mine. Under the circumstances, itâs not terribly important. There should be no difficulty getting duplicates. The young woman, I presume, is from Terminus.â
âNo, sheâs not.â
âFrom somewhere in Foundation territory, then?â
âAs a matter of fact, she isnât.â
Kendray looked at Bliss keenly, then at Trevize. âThatâs a complication, Councilman. It may take additional time to obtain a duplicate from some non-Foundation world. Since youâre not a Foundation citizen, Miss Bliss, I must have the name of your world of birth and of the world of which youâre a citizen. You will then have to wait for duplicate papers to arrive.â
Trevize said, âSee here, Mr. Kendray. I see no reason why there need be any delay whatever. I am a high official of the Foundation government and I am here on a mission of great importance. I must not be delayed by a matter of trivial paperwork.â