Master of Life and Death - Cover

Master of Life and Death

Public Domain

Chapter 17

Walton stepped off the jetbus at Broadway and West 382nd Street, paused for a moment beneath a street lamp, and fingered his chin to see if his mask were on properly. It was.

Three youths stood leaning against a nearby building. “Could you tell me where the block meeting’s being held?” Walton asked.

“Down the street and turn left. You a telefax man?”

“Just an interested citizen,” Walton said. “Thanks for the directions.”

It was easy to see where the block meeting was; Walton saw streams of determined-looking men and women entering a bulky old building just off 382nd Street. He joined them and found himself carried along into the auditorium.

Nervously he found a seat. The auditorium was an old one, predominantly dark brown and cavernous, with row after row of hard wooden folding chairs. Someone was adjusting a microphone on stage. A sharp metallic whine came over the public-address system.

“Testing. Testing, one two three...”

“It’s all right, Max!” someone yelled from the rear. Walton didn’t turn around to look.

A low undercurrent of murmuring was audible. It was only 1815; the meeting was not due to start for another fifteen minutes, but the hall was nearly full, with more than a thousand of the local residents already on hand.

The fifteen minutes passed slowly. Walton listened carefully to the conversations around him; no one was discussing the Venus situation. Apparently his cloud of censorship had been effective. He had instructed Percy to keep all word of the disaster from the public until the 2100 newsblares. By that time, the people would have been exposed to the indoctrinating kaleidowhirl program at 2000, and their reaction would be accordingly more temperate--he hoped.

Also, releasing the news early would have further complicated the survey Walton was trying to make by attending this public meeting. The Index of Public Confusion increased factorially; one extra consideration for discussion and Walton’s task would be hopelessly difficult.

At exactly 1830, a tall, middle-aged man stepped out on the stage. He seized the microphone as if it were a twig and said, “Hello, folks. Glad to see you’re all here tonight. This is an important meeting for us all. In case some of you don’t know me--and I do see some new faces out there--I’m Dave Forman, president of the West 382nd Street Association. I also run a little law business on the side, just to help pay the rent.” (Giggles.)

“As usual in these meetings,” Forman went on, “we’ll have a brief panel discussion, and then I’ll throw the thing open to you folks for floor discussion. The panelists tonight are people you all know--Sadie Hargreave, Dominic Campobello, Rudi Steinfeld. Come on out here, folks.”

The panelists appeared on the stage diffidently. Sadie Hargreave was a short, stout, fierce-looking little woman; Campobello was chunky, balding, Steinfeld tall and ascetic. Walton was astonished that there should be such camaraderie here. Was it all synthetic? It didn’t seem that way.

He had always remained aloof, never mingling with his neighbors in the gigantic project where he lived, never suspecting the existence of community life on this scale. But, somehow, community life had sprung up in this most Gargantuan of cities. Organizations within each project, within each block perhaps, had arisen, converting New York into an interlocking series of small towns. I ought to investigate the grass roots more often, Walton thought. Caliph Haroun-al-Raschid having a night on the town.

“Hello, folks,” Sadie Hargreave said aggressively. “I’m glad I can talk to you tonight. Gosh, I want to speak out. I think it’s crazy to let these thing-men from outer space push us around. I for one feel we ought to take strong action against that space world.”

Cries of “Yeah! Yeah! Go to it, Sadie!” rose from the audience.

Skillfully she presented three inflammatory arguments in favor of war with Dirna, backing up each with a referent of high emotional connotation. Walton watched her performance with growing admiration. The woman was a born public relations technician. It was too bad she was on the other side of the fence.

He saw the effect she had: people were nodding in agreement, grimacing vehemently, muttering to themselves. The mood of the meeting, he gathered, was overwhelmingly in favor of war if Dirna did not yield New Earth.

Dominic Campobello began his address by inviting all and sundry to his barber shop; this was greeted with laughter. Then he launched into a discourse on Popeek as an enemy of mankind. A few catcalls, Walton noted, but again chiefly approval. Campobello seemed sincere.

The third man, Rudi Steinfeld, was a local music teacher. He, too, spoke out against Popeek, though in a restrained, dryly intellectual manner. People began yawning. Steinfeld cut his speech short.

It was now 1900. In one hour Percy’s kaleidowhirl program would be screened.

Walton stayed at the block meeting until 1930, listening to citizen after citizen rise and heap curses upon Popeek, Dirna, or Walton, depending on where his particular ire lay. At 1930 Walton rose and left the hall.

He phoned Percy. “I’m on West 382nd Street. Just attended a block meeting. I’d say the prevailing sentiment runs about ninety percent agin us. We don’t have the people backing our program any more, Lee.”

“We never did. But I think we’ll nail ‘em now. The kaleidowhirl’s ready to go, and it’s a honey. And I think Citizen will sell ‘em too! We’re on our way, Roy.”

“I hope so,” Walton said.


He was unable to bring himself to watch Percy’s program, even though he reached his room in time that night. He knew there could be no harm in watching--at least not for him--but the idea of voluntarily submitting his mind to external tampering was too repugnant to accept.

Instead he spent the hour dictating a report on the block meeting, for benefit of his pollster staff. When he was done with that, he turned to the 2100 edition of Citizen, which came clicking from the telefax slot right on schedule.

He had to look hard for the Venus story. Finally he found it tucked away at the bottom of the sheet.

ACCIDENT ON VENUS

_A big blowup took place on the planet Venus earlier today. Sky-men

who watched the popoff say it was caused by an atomic explosion in

the planet’s atmosphere._

_Meanwhile, attempts are being made to reach the team of Earth

engineers working on Venus. No word from them yet. They may be

dead._

The source of this story is SciFi-Stories

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