The Gods Themselves Read online


Chapter 1

  The story starts with section 6. This is not a mistake. I have my own subtle reasoning. So just read and, I hope, enjoy.

  1

  Against stupidity . . .

  "No good!" said Lamont, sharply. "I didn't get anywhere. " He had a brooding look about him that went with his deep-set eyes and the slight asymmetry of his long chin. There was a brooding look about him at the best of times, and this was not the best of times. His second formal interview with Hallam had been a greater fiasco than the first.

  "Don't be dramatic," said Myron Bronowski, placidly. "You didn't expect to. You told me that. " He was tossing peanuts into the air and catching them in his plump-lipped mouth as they came down. He never missed. He was not very tall, not very thin.

  "That doesn't make it pleasant. But you're right, it doesn't matter. There are other things I can do and intend to do and, besides that, I depend on you. If you could only find out - "

  "Don't finish, Pete. I've heard it all before. All I have to do is decipher the thinking of a non-human intelligence. "

  "A better-than-human intelligence. Those creatures from the para-Universe are trying to make themselves understood. "

  "That may be," sighed Bronowski, "but they're trying to do it through my intelligence, which is better than human I sometimes think, but not much. Sometimes, in the dark of the night, I lie awake and wonder if different intelligences can communicate at all; or, if I've had a particularly bad day, whether the phrase 'different intelligences' has meaning at all. "

  "It does," said Lamont savagely, his hands clearly balling into fists within his lab coat pockets. "It means Hallam and me. It means that fool-hero, Dr. Frederick Hallam and me. We're different intelligences because when I talk to him he doesn't understand. His idiot face gets redder and his eyes bulge and his ears block. I'd say his mind stops functioning, but I lack the proof of any other state from which it might stop. "

  Bronowski murmured, "What a way to speak of the Father of the Electron Pump. "

  "That's it. Reputed Father of the Electron Pump. A bastard birth, if ever there was one. His contribution was least in substance. I know. "

  "I know, too. You've told me often," and Bronowski tossed another peanut into the air. He didn't miss.

  It had happened thirty years before, Frederick Hallam was a radiochemist, with the print on his doctoral dissertation still wet and with no sign whatever of being a world-shaker.

  What began the shaking of the world was the fact that a dusty reagent bottle marked "Tungsten Metal" stood on his desk. It wasn't his; he had never used it. It was a legacy from some dim day when some past inhabitant of the office had wanted tungsten for some long-forgotten reason. It wasn't even really tungsten any more. It consisted of small pellets of what was now heavily layered with oxide - gray and dusty. No use to anyone.

  And one day Hallam entered the laboratory (well, it was October 3, 2070, to be exact), got to work, stopped shortly before 10 a. m. , stared transfixed at the bottle, and lifted it. It was as dusty as ever, the label as faded, but he called out, "God damn it; who the hell has been tampering with this?"

  That, at least, was the account of Denison, who overheard the remark and who told it to Lamont a generation later. The official tale of the discovery, as reported in the books, leaves out the phraseology. One gets the impression of a keen-eyed chemist, aware of change and instantly drawing deep-seated deductions.

  Not so. Hallam had no use for the tungsten; it was of no earthly value to him and any tampering with it could be of no possible importance to him. However, he hated any interference with his desk (as so many do) and he suspected others of possessing keen desires to engage in such interference out of sheer malice.

  No one at the time admitted to knowing anything about the matter. Benjamin Allan Denison, who overheard the initial remark, had an office immediately across the corridor and both doors were open. He looked up and met Hallam's accusatory eye.

  He didn't particularly like Hallam (no one particularly did) and he had slept badly the night before. He was, as it happened and as he later recalled, rather pleased to have someone on whom to vent his spleen, and Hallam made the perfect candidate.

  When Hallam held the bottle up to his face, Denison pulled back with clear distaste. "Why the devil should I be interested in your tungsten?" he demanded. "Why should anyone? If you'll look at the bottle, you'll see that the thing hasn't been opened for twenty years; and if you hadn't put your own grubby paws on it, you would have seen no one had touched it. "

  Hallam flushed a slow, angry red. He said, tightly, "Listen, Denison, someone has changed the contents. That's not the tungsten. "

  Denison allowed himself a small, but distinct sniff. "How would you know?"

  Of such things, petty annoyance and aimless thrusts, is history made.

  It would have been an unfortunate remark in any case. Denison's scholastic record, as fresh as Hallam's, was far more impressive and he was the bright-young-man of the department. Hallam knew this and, what was worse, Denison knew it too, and made no secret of it Denison's "How would you know?" with the clear and unmistakable emphasis on the "you," was ample motivation for all that followed. Without it, Hallam would never have become the greatest and most revered scientist in history, to use the exact phrase Denison later used in his interview with Lamont.

  Officially, Hallam had come in on that fateful morning, noticed the dusty gray pellets gone - not even the dust on the inside surface remaining - and clear iron-gray metal in their place. Naturally, he investigated -

  But place the official version to, one side. It was Denison. Had he confined himself to a simple negative, or a shrug, the chances are that Hallam would have asked others, then eventually weariest of the unexplained event, put the bottle to one side, and let subsequent tragedy, whether subtle or drastic (depending on how long the ultimate discovery was delayed), guide the future. In any event, it would not have been Hallam who rode the whirlwind to the heights.

  With the "How would you know?" cutting him down, however, Hallam could only retort wildly, "I'll show you that I know. "

  And after that, nothing could prevent him from going to extremes. The analysis of the metal in the old container became his number-one priority, and his prime goal was to wipe the haughtiness from Denison's thin-nosed face and the perpetual trace of a sneer from his pale lips.

  Denison never forgot that moment for it was his own remark that drove Hallam to the Nobel Prize and himself to oblivion.

  He had no way of knowing (or if he knew he would not then have cared) that there was an overwhelming stubbornness in Hallam, the mediocrity's frightened need to safeguard his pride, that would carry the day at that time more than all Denison's native brilliance would have.

  Hallam moved at once and directly. He carried his metal to the mass spectrography department. As a radiation chemist it was a natural move. He knew the technicians there, he had worked with them, and he was forceful. He was forceful to such an effect, indeed, that the job was placed ahead of projects of much greater pith and moment.

  The mass spectrographer said eventually, "Well, it isn't tungsten. "

  Hallam's broad and humorless face wrinkled into a harsh smile. "All right. Well tell that to Bright-boy Denison. I want a report and - "

  "But wait awhile, Dr. Hallam. I'm telling you it's not tungsten, but that doesn't mean I know what it is. "

  "What do you mean you don't know what it is. "

  "I mean the results are ridiculous. " The technician thought a while. "Impossible, actually. The charge-mass ratio is all wrong. "

  "All wrong in what way?"

  "Too high. It just can't be. "

  "Well, then," sai
d Hallam and, regardless of the motive that was driving him, his next remark set him on the road to the Nobel Prize and, it might even be argued, a deserved one, "get the frequency of its characteristic x-radiation and figure out the charge. Don't just sit around and talk about something being impossible. "

  It was a troubled technician who came into Hallam's office a few days later.

  Hallam ignored the trouble on the other's face - he was never sensitive - and said, "Did you find - " He then cast a troubled look of his own at Denison, sitting at the desk in his own lab and shut the door. "Did you find the nuclear charge?"

  "Yes, but it's wrong. "

  "All right, Tracy. Do it over. "

  "I did it over a dozen times. It's wrong. "

  "If you made the measurement, that's it; Don't argue with the facts. "

  Tracy rubbed his ear and said, "I've got to, Doc. If I take the measurements seriously, then what you've given me is plutonium-186. "

  "Plutonium-186? Plutonium - 186?"

  "The charge is +94. The mass is 186. "

  "But that's impossible. There's no such isotope. There can't be. "

  "That's what I'm saying to you. But those are the measurements. "

  "But a situation like that leaves the nucleus over fifty neutrons short. You can't have plutonium-186. You couldn't squeeze ninety-four protons into one nucleus with only ninety-two neutrons and expect it to hang together for even a trillion-trillionth of a second. "

  "That's what I'm telling you, Doc," said Tracy, patiently.

  And then Hallam stopped to think. It was tungsten he was missing and one of its isotopes, tungsten-186, was stable. Tungsten-186 had 74 protons and 112 neutrons in its nucleus. Could something have turned twenty neutrons into twenty protons? Surely that was impossible.

  "Are there any signs of radioactivity?" asked Hallam, groping somehow for a road out of the maze.

  "I thought of that," said the technician. "It's stable. Absolutely stable. "

  "Then it can't be plutonium-186. "

  "I keep telling you, Doc. "

  Hallam said, hopelessly, "Well, give me the stuff. " Alone once more, he sat and looked at the bottle in stupefaction. The most nearly stable isotope of plutonium was plutonium-240, where 146 neutrons were needed to make the 94 protons stick together with some semblance of partial stability.

  What could he do now? It was beyond him and he was sorry he had started. After all, he had real work begging to be done, and this thing - this mystery - had nothing to do with him. Tracy had made some stupid mistake or the mass spectrometer was out of whack, or - Well, what of it? Forget the whole thing! Except that Hallam couldn't do that. Sooner or later, Denison would be bound to stop by and, with that irritating half-smile of his, ask after the tungsten. Then what could Hallam say? Could he say, "It isn't tungsten, just as I told you. "

  Surely Denison would ask, "Oh, and what is it, then?" and nothing imaginable could have made Hallam expose himself to the kind of derision that would follow any claim that it was plutonium-186. He had to find out what it was, and he had to do it himself. Clearly, he couldn't trust anyone.

  So about two weeks later he entered Tracy's laboratory in what can fairly be described as a first-class fury.

  "Hey, didn't you tell me that stuff was non-radioactive?"

  "What stuff?" said Tracy automatically, before he remembered.

  "That stuff you called plutonium-186," said Hallam.

  "Oh. Well it was stable. "

  "About as stable as your mental state. If you call this non-radioactive, you belong in a plumber's shop. "

  Tracy frowned. "Okay, Doc. Pass it over and let's try. " And then he said, "Beats me! It is radioactive. Not much, but it is. I don't see how I could have missed that. "

  "And how far can I trust your crap about plutonium-186?"

  The matter had Hallam by the throat now. The mystery had become so exasperating as to be a personal affront Whoever had switched bottles, or switched contents, must either have switched again or have devised a metal for the specific purpose of making a fool of him. In either case, he was ready to pull the world apart to solve the matter if he had to - and if he could.

  He had his stubbornness, and an intensity that could not easily be brushed aside, and he went straight to G. C. Kantrowitsch, who was then in the final year of his own rather remarkable career. Kantrowitsch's aid was difficult to enlist but, once enlisted, it quickly caught fire.

  Two days later, in fact, he was storming into Hallam's office in a blaze of excitement. "Have you been handling this thing with your hands?"

  "Not much," said Hallam.

  "Well, don't If you've got any mere, don't. It's emitting positrons. "

  "Oh?"

  "The most energetic positrons I've ever seen . . . And your figures on its radioactivity are too low. "

  "Too low?"

  "Distinctly. And what bothers me is that every measurement I take is just a trifle higher than the one before. "

  Bronowski came across an apple in the capacious pocket of his jacket and bit into it. "Okay, you've seen Hallam and been kicked out as expected. What next?"

  "I haven't quite decided. But whatever it is, it's going to dump him on his fat behind. I saw him once before, you know; years ago, when I first came here; when I thought he was a great man. A great man - He's the greatest villain in the history of science. He's rewritten the history of the Pump, you know, rewritten it here - " Lamont tapped his temple. "He believes his own fantasy and fights for it with a diseased fury. He's a pygmy with only one talent, the ability to convince others he's a giant. "

  Lamont looked up at Bronowski's wide and placid face, wreathed now in amusement, and forced a laugh. "Oh, well, that doesn't do any good, and I've told it all to you before anyway. "

  "Many times," agreed Bronowski.

  "But it just gravels me to have the whole world - "

 

    The Return of the Black Widowers Read onlineThe Return of the Black WidowersThe Stars, Like Dust Read onlineThe Stars, Like DustFoundation Read onlineFoundationDavid Starr Space Ranger Read onlineDavid Starr Space RangerI, Robot Read onlineI, RobotPuzzles of the Black Widowers Read onlinePuzzles of the Black WidowersCasebook of the Black Widowers Read onlineCasebook of the Black WidowersThe Ugly Little Boy Read onlineThe Ugly Little BoyAzazel Read onlineAzazelPebble in the Sky Read onlinePebble in the SkyFoundation and Empire Read onlineFoundation and EmpireThe Complete Robot Read onlineThe Complete RobotFantastic Voyage Read onlineFantastic VoyageFoundation and Earth Read onlineFoundation and EarthThe Naked Sun Read onlineThe Naked SunThe Currents of Space Read onlineThe Currents of SpaceFoundation's Edge Read onlineFoundation's EdgeThe Robots of Dawn Read onlineThe Robots of DawnNightfall Read onlineNightfallThe Caves of Steel Read onlineThe Caves of SteelPrelude to Foundation Read onlinePrelude to FoundationNemesis Read onlineNemesisRobot Dreams Read onlineRobot DreamsMore Tales of the Black Widowers Read onlineMore Tales of the Black WidowersThe Complete Stories Read onlineThe Complete StoriesRobot Visions Read onlineRobot VisionsLucky Starr And The Moons of Jupiter Read onlineLucky Starr And The Moons of JupiterLucky Starr and the Big Sun of Mercury Read onlineLucky Starr and the Big Sun of MercuryThe End of Eternity Read onlineThe End of EternityThe Bicentennial Man and Other Stories Read onlineThe Bicentennial Man and Other StoriesLucky Starr And The Rings Of Saturn Read onlineLucky Starr And The Rings Of SaturnBuy Jupiter and Other Stories Read onlineBuy Jupiter and Other StoriesForward the Foundation Read onlineForward the FoundationLucky Starr and the Oceans of Venus Read onlineLucky Starr and the Oceans of VenusThe Positronic Man Read onlineThe Positronic ManThe Portable Star Read onlineThe Portable StarAsimovs Mysteries Read onlineAsimovs MysteriesEarth Is Room Enough Read onlineEarth Is Room EnoughThe Gods Themselves Read onlineThe Gods ThemselvesYouth Read onlineYouthThe Early Asimov Volume 3 Read onlineThe Early Asimov Volume 3The Winds of Change and Other Stories Read onlineThe Winds of Change and Other StoriesOf Time, Space, and Other Things Read onlineOf Time, Space, and Other ThingsNine Tomorrows Read onlineNine TomorrowsTime Warps Read onlineTime WarpsRobots and Empire Read onlineRobots and EmpireYoung Star Travelers Read onlineYoung Star TravelersFantastic Voyage II: Destination Brain Read onlineFantastic Voyage II: Destination BrainSecond Foundation Read onlineSecond FoundationThe Rest of the Robots Read onlineThe Rest of the RobotsNINE TOMORROWS Tales of the Near Future Read onlineNINE TOMORROWS Tales of the Near FutureDaneel Olivaw 1 - The Caves of Steel Read onlineDaneel Olivaw 1 - The Caves of SteelTHE BICENTENNIAL MAN Read onlineTHE BICENTENNIAL MANDavid Starr Space Ranger (lucky starr) Read onlineDavid Starr Space Ranger (lucky starr)David Starr Space Ranger (ls) Read onlineDavid Starr Space Ranger (ls)Lucky Starr And The Big Sun Of Mercury ls-4 Read onlineLucky Starr And The Big Sun Of Mercury ls-4Pebble In The Sky te-1 Read onlinePebble In The Sky te-1Asimov’s Future History Volume 9 Read onlineAsimov’s Future History Volume 9Gold: The Final Science Fiction Collection Read onlineGold: The Final Science Fiction CollectionFoundation and Earth f-7 Read onlineFoundation and Earth f-7Asimov's New Guide to Science Read onlineAsimov's New Guide to ScienceSTORM OVER WARLOCK Read onlineSTORM OVER WARLOCKStars, Like Dust Read onlineStars, Like DustNorby The Mixed-Up Robot Read onlineNorby The Mixed-Up RobotFound! Read onlineFound!Asimov’s Future History Volume 11 Read onlineAsimov’s Future History Volume 11Second Foundation f-5 Read onlineSecond Foundation f-5Asimov’s Future History Volume 15 Read onlineAsimov’s Future History Volume 15The Early Asimov. Volume 1 Read onlineThe Early Asimov. Volume 1Secound Foundation Read onlineSecound FoundationDaneel Olivaw 3 - The Robots of Dawn Read onlineDaneel Olivaw 3 - The Robots of DawnAsimov’s Future History Volume 6 Read onlineAsimov’s Future History Volume 6The Early Asimov. Volume 2 Read onlineThe Early Asimov. Volume 2Lucky Starr And The Rings Of Saturn ls-6 Read onlineLucky Starr And The Rings Of Saturn ls-6100 Malicious Little Mysteries Read online100 Malicious Little MysteriesForward the Foundation f-2 Read onlineForward the Foundation f-2I.Asimov: A Memoir Read onlineI.Asimov: A MemoirFoundation's Edge f-6 Read onlineFoundation's Edge f-6Lucky Starr and the Pirates of the Asteroids ls-2 Read onlineLucky Starr and the Pirates of the Asteroids ls-2Robot City 1 & 2 Read onlineRobot City 1 & 2The Fourth Science Fiction Megapack Read onlineThe Fourth Science Fiction MegapackAsimov’s Future History Volume 16 Read onlineAsimov’s Future History Volume 16The Dim Rumble Read onlineThe Dim RumbleAsimov's Future History Volume 3 Read onlineAsimov's Future History Volume 3The Currents Of Space te-3 Read onlineThe Currents Of Space te-3Asimov’s Guide To Shakespear. Volume 1 Read onlineAsimov’s Guide To Shakespear. Volume 1Asimov’s Future History Volume 13 Read onlineAsimov’s Future History Volume 13Asimov’s Future History Volume 12 Read onlineAsimov’s Future History Volume 12The Secret Sense Read onlineThe Secret SenseOf Time and Space and Other Things Read onlineOf Time and Space and Other ThingsNorby tnc-2 Read onlineNorby tnc-2Norby The Mixed-Up Robot tnc-1 Read onlineNorby The Mixed-Up Robot tnc-1Misbegotten Missionary Read onlineMisbegotten MissionaryAsimov’s Future History Volume 19 Read onlineAsimov’s Future History Volume 19Fantastic Voyage II: Destination Brain fv-2 Read onlineFantastic Voyage II: Destination Brain fv-2Asimov’s Future History Volume 10 Read onlineAsimov’s Future History Volume 10Asimov's Future History Volume 2 Read onlineAsimov's Future History Volume 2Feeling of Power Read onlineFeeling of PowerIn the Beginning Read onlineIn the BeginningThe Caves of Steel trs-1 Read onlineThe Caves of Steel trs-1Asimov's Future History Vol 2 Read onlineAsimov's Future History Vol 2Caliban c-1 Read onlineCaliban c-1The Gentle Vultures Read onlineThe Gentle VulturesUtopia c-3 Read onlineUtopia c-3Prelude to Foundation f-1 Read onlinePrelude to Foundation f-1Short Stories Vol.1 Read onlineShort Stories Vol.1Asimov’s Future History Volume 8 Read onlineAsimov’s Future History Volume 8Daneel Olivaw 4 - Robots and Empire Read onlineDaneel Olivaw 4 - Robots and EmpireLucky Starr The And The Moons of Jupiter ls-5 Read onlineLucky Starr The And The Moons of Jupiter ls-5Gold Read onlineGoldAsimov’s Future History Volume 4 Read onlineAsimov’s Future History Volume 4Foundation and Empire f-4 Read onlineFoundation and Empire f-4Potential Read onlinePotentialAsimov’s Future History Volume 14 Read onlineAsimov’s Future History Volume 14Asimov’s Future History Volume 7 Read onlineAsimov’s Future History Volume 7Daneel Olivaw 2 - The Naked Sun Read onlineDaneel Olivaw 2 - The Naked SunLucky Starr and the Pirates of the Asteroids Read onlineLucky Starr and the Pirates of the AsteroidsFoundation f-3 Read onlineFoundation f-3All the Troubles of the World Read onlineAll the Troubles of the WorldCleon the Emperor Read onlineCleon the EmperorAsimov's Future History Volume 5 Read onlineAsimov's Future History Volume 5Asimov’s Future History Volume 20 Read onlineAsimov’s Future History Volume 20Robots and Empire trs-4 Read onlineRobots and Empire trs-4Profession Read onlineProfessionIt's Been a Good Life Read onlineIt's Been a Good LifeThe Robots of Dawn trs-3 Read onlineThe Robots of Dawn trs-3Lucky Starr And The Oceanf Of Venus ls-3 Read onlineLucky Starr And The Oceanf Of Venus ls-3The Naked Sun trs-2 Read onlineThe Naked Sun trs-2Asimov's Future History Volume 1 Read onlineAsimov's Future History Volume 1