Barry N. Malzberg - Closing the Deal.pdf

(11 KB) Pobierz
303218947 UNPDF
"She flies," the father said, indicating the little girl dangling uncomfortably midway between a baroque
chandelier and the rather mottled carpeting. "And she has for more than five years. You can imagine that
it gave us quite a turn when we saw this three-year-old just swoop up from her toys and begin to bat
around the room, but after a while you can become accustomed to almost anything. That's the human
condition, am I right?" He spread his hands and looked at the guest directly, gave a little laugh. "Actually,
she's a very sweet, unspoiled little child and I've tried to give her a healthy, wholesome upbringing to
make her take her gift in stride. Never in front of anyone other than me without permission and double
never out of the house. All right dear," he said, "our guest has seen everything he needs, I'm sure. Come
down now."
The little girl bobbled near ceiling level. "I can turn over in the air," she said to the guest. "I can do
dips and floats and even pirouettes. If I went to ballet school like I wanted to I could do even the better
stuff but he won't let me."
"I'm sure he would," the guest said gently. He opened the loose-leaf binder on his knee, took a pen
from his suit pocket and made a note. "You have a very kind and understanding father."
"I have a very kind and under standing father but he won't let me go to ballet school and he won't
even let me fly unless he wants to show me off," the girl said. "I don't think that's right, do you? Not
letting someone do what they really do best except when he wants me to." She revolved slowly, drifted
toward the floor headfirst, reversed herself clumsily near the prospective point of impact and landed,
wobbling, on her feet. "I'll go and watch television," she said. "I know you want me out of the room now.
He always wants to show me off and then throw me out."
"That's not necessary, Jessica," her father said uncomfortably, "and you know perfectly well—"
"But it's true," the girl said. She nodded at the guest. "Actually I can't fly all the time," she said, "you
ought to know the truth; I can't even do it every time I want to. Actually it's a very tiring thing. No more
than fifteen or twenty minutes and then I have to rest for a whole day." She walked to the door, as
clumsy on her feet as in the air, attempted a curtsy and left, closing the door not too gently.
The guest and her father sat in the living room, looking at one another rather uneasily for a time. The
clock banged out four syllables, or then again the guest thought that it might have been five; it was very
hard to keep track of the sounds which were swallowed by carpeting and then too, this was a peculiar
household. Nothing was quite as it seemed to be. Four or five, however, it was certainly late afternoon
and he wanted to complete his business and go on his way.
Idly, the guest imagined a large frosted cocktail glass before him. Around him was a large roadhouse,
quiet conversation. He could ask this man for a drink, of course. But that would only compromise their
dealings. A drink could cost him a hundred dollars in this living room. I must get hold of myself, the
guest thought rather frantically, this is only a job and I ought to be glad to have it, everything
considered Involvement, pressures are on the agency, not on me. "Remarkable child," he said
hoarsely, scribbling something else and then slamming the binder closed, reinserting pen in pocket. "Very
intelligent for her age. Of course extremely undeveloped as both you and she know. Her management of
distances—"
"Well," her father said, Spreading his hands again, "I have tried. The fact that she has one remarkable
talent doesn't excuse her, after all, from living in the world. She's in an accelerated program at school
where they take her to be simply a bright, normal child and I've also arranged for reading tutorials at
home and music lessons twice a week. She's studying the violin, my favorite instrument. Frankly, the
child has almost no ability but the cultural background—"
"I understand," the guest said rather hurriedly, "you're doing an excellent job within the limits—"
"It isn't easy in a motherless household you know. I've had to be both parents to Jessica, which
would be difficult with even a dull child, and she has to be shielded and educated carefully." The man
paused, wiped a hand across his streaming forehead. "It's really been quite difficult," he said, "I'm sure
that my wife had her reasons for leaving me and I was right to insist upon custody and I'll concede too
that it was a relief when she walked out, but all of this has descended on me and I've had very little help
 
from the woman or anyone else for that matter. She was always selfish and inconsiderate, her mother,
and I think that the flying business was the last straw in a marriage that frankly, was never very good."
He paused again, eyes rolling meditatively. "But that's neither here nor there," he said, "and you're not
over here to be burdened with my personal problems. The point is: what are you going to do? I brought
you here for your proposal."
"Um," the guest said, "isn't the point though what you want to do? What do you expect, sir? The
organization which I represent, you understand, is an exceptionally cooperative one and never makes
outright conditions. Rather, we're here to listen to what you thought you might have had in mind."
Carefully, the guest put a hand into his jacket pocket and fumbled for a pack of cigarettes, extracted
one, lit it hurriedly and then, in response to a long, poor glare from his host, put it out in a large, green
ashtray at his elbow. Little foul emanations stabbed at him like vipers and he choked. "Sorry," he said.
Sinus trouble again; nervous strain. Why did the caseload always turn out like this? By definition, parents
of the psionically gifted, particularly the levitators and telepaths, seemed to be at least mildly insane.
Maybe that was the biological secret: insanity transmuted itself to psionics in the second generation. Or
then again, maybe levitators and telepathy made parents insane. That was a thought, although, unhappily,
not a new one. He choked again. "I apologize," he said, motioning toward the cigarette, "I didn't realize
that smoke offended—"
"I will not tolerate smoking here," his host said. "That woman smoked, all she did was smoke; it took
me three years after she left to get the air cleared and the smell out of the house. Smoke also inhibits
Jessica's levitation."
"It shouldn't," the guest said firmly. "There is no connection."
"But it does." The man leaned forward, almost forehead to forehead now. "The time for amenities is
past, don't you think?" he said. "And I know you're a busy, responsible man. Now what I'd like to hear is
your offer."
The guest sighed. "It isn't that easy."
"And why not?"
"Everybody, all of the people, think in terms of offers, simple all-inclusive figures. But there are so
many other things involved: the terms, the conditions, and more importantly the strength of the talent and
the degree of its refinement—"
"Flat offer," the man said, touching palms with himself. His face seemed tinted with sweat or
excitement; he had to work on his forehead again. "All inclusive. Everything. Full responsibility, full
control. Live-in."
"You wouldn't even want to retain—"
"Nothing," the man said quickly. "I've done everything I can for my child. Now she ought to be in the
hands of people who can really develop her. I want an all-inclusive offer for total control."
"No subsidiary? How about participation in the secondary rights: performing, options, a
percentage—"
The man cleared his throat. "I'll take it all on the front end, as much as I can get," he said.
"Ah," the guest said. "Ah." He opened his notebook again, extracted the pen, thought for a moment,
and then quickly wrote down a figure on a fresh, blank sheet, tore it past the reinforcements and handed
it to the man, who seized it. "That's really the best we can do," he said, "it's a nice little talent, but
levitation is far more common than you might think, and Jessica is completely untrained. She'd have to be
trained from the beginning; the first thing she would have to do is to unlearn levitation so that we could
start her from the beginning without any bad habits. The child has no body control at all."
He closed the book, sighed. "People think that all we do is go to work," he said, "but there's more
than you might think and the key issue is the training, which is incredibly complex and expensive. Believe
me, I have seen many who would cost more to train than they would eventually return, like doing heavy
repairs on old cars. Fortunately Jessica does show some ability, very raw, but she might be third-string
somewhere and there's a need for this."
The man closed his mouth finally and handed back the paper. "This is ridiculous," he said slowly, "I
mean it's robbery. It's less than a quarter of what the child is worth. A true levitator! A natural talent! Any
 
one of the other agencies would double this price. I don't care who I'd see there."
"Then I suggest you go to one of our competitors," the guest said quietly; he put his pen away for the
second time, closed his book with a snap and stood. "I'm afraid that we do not misrepresent or pack our
offers as our competitors do. Our policy is one figure, a fair offer, taking into account every aspect of the
situation. If it's taken, fine, and if it's not we happily accept the loss because a higher offer would have
been unprofitable and thus self-deceiving. Our policy is built on rigorous fairness and the skills of its
highly-trained field staff; and now," he added, moving toward the door, "if you will excuse me, my
working day is done."
"Now wait a minute," the man said slowly, the words wrenched from him one by one like sobbing
exhalations from a balloon. "I didn't say no. I mean, I didn't flatly say no. I mean, if that's really your
policy, one offer, how was I to know that?" He touched the guest on the arm, trembling slightly, backed
off at once. "I mean, I know your reputation," he said, "that you're honorable people."
"Thank you."
"But frankly, I have to get a little more than that."
"Try one of our competitors then. You said they would do better."
"But I have to think of my child," the man said quickly, almost hysterically. "Now I mean to say,
what's a few dollars more or less when it's your own child at issue; and I know that you'd get the best for
her, make the best possible development."
"If we can."
"So maybe, well let me put it this way then." He placed the most delicate of hands on the guest's wrist
again, this time let it rest there. "Would there be maybe a ten percent give in your position? On the
upward arc of course."
"Of course," the guest said, "of course upward, always upward. No one ever thinks downward, do
they?"
He paused, sighed, looked at the man. "Levitation is a dime a dozen," he said. "We reject more
levitators than we take. In its crude, unfocused state it's worthless except as a party trick. How many
violinists are there for every concertmaster? He paused again and then shrugged. "Look here," he said.
The guest put the binder under his arm, lifted his index finger and as clumsily as Jessica moved
upward two or three feet, dangled his feet, kicked for effect and then swam inexpertly through the air to
his chair. Breathing unevenly he hung there for an instant, then released the field and dropped into the
chair. The father watched this intently.
"You see?" the guest said, taking out a handkerchief and wiping his wet forehead. "And I'll never be
anything more than a field investigator."
That hung in the air for a moment. The father seemed to dwindle within himself, dropped his gaze,
looked at the floor thoughtfully. At length he lifted his head, looked at the guest again and very
awkwardly rose from his own chair, hanging in the air tensely.
"All right," he said. "I see. I'll sign anything."
And so the negotiations ended. Another day; another dollar, the guest thought. ¦
In Times to Come
The planet Mercury hasn't been kind to science-fiction writers. Several very fine stories set on
Mercury have been invalidated by advancing astronomical knowledge about the Sun's nearest neighbor.
A new writer, Brenda Pearce, brings together all that's known about conditions on Mercury for a
strong story of men against nature—and against each other—called "Hot Spot." It's the lead novelette in
April's issue, with a dramatic cover painting by John Schoenherr.
In this age of militant feminism, it would be chauvinistic to marvel about a woman writing a "hard
science" story. But regardless of gender, Ms. Pearce has produced a stunning story in the Hal Clement
tradition, no mean feat for any new writer.
The science article next month will be "Extraterrestrial Organic Matter," by Louis Lenhard. It deals
with the discoveries of organic chemicals in interstellar space and in meteorites, and the implications for
 
the origin of life on Earth.
 
Zgłoś jeśli naruszono regulamin