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to kill several obs for all three of us?"
"Only one for myself."
"How come?"
"Seth's got ideas of his own. He doesn't feel happy about Antigands any more than does anyone else."
"And so?"
"But he's got the missionary instinct. He doesn't agree entirely with the idea of giving all Antigands the
ghost-treatment. He thinks it should be reserved only for those too stubborn or stupid to be converted."
She smiled at Gleed, making his top hairs quiver. "Seth thinks that any intelligent Antigand is a would- be Gand."
"What is a Gand, anyway?" asked Harrison.
"An inhabitant of this world, of course."
"I mean, where did they dig up the name?"
"From Gandhi," she said.
Harrison frowned in puzzlement. "Who the deuce was he?"
"An ancient Terran. The one who invented The Weapon."
"Never heard of him."
"That doesn't surprise me," she remarked.
"Doesn't it?" he felt a little irritated. "Let me tell you that these days we Terrans get as good an education as-"
"Calm down, Jim." She made it more soothing by p.r.o.nouncing it "Jeem." "All I mean is that ten to one he's been blanked out of your history books. He might have given you unwanted ideas, see? You couldn't be expected to know what you've been deprived of the chance to learn."
"If you mean that Terran history is censored, I don't believe it," he a.s.serted.
"It's your right to refuse to believe. That's freedom, isn't it?"
"Up to a point. A man has duties. He's no right to refuse those."
"No?" She raised tantalizing eyebrows, delicately curved. "Who defines those duties-himself, or somebody else?"
"His superiors, most times."
"No man is superior to another. No man has the right to define another man's duties." She paused, eyeing him speculatively. "If anyone on Terra exercises such idiotic power, it is only because idiots permit him.
They fear freedom. They prefer to be told. They like being ordered around. What men!"
"I shouldn't listen to you," protested Gleed, chipping in. His leathery face was flushed. "You're as naughty as you're pretty."
"Afraid of your own thoughts?" she jibed, pointedly ignoring his compliment.
He went redder. "Not on your life. But I-" His voice tailed off as Seth arrived with three loaded plates and dumped them on the table.
"See you afterward," reminded Seth. He was medium-sized, with thin features and sharp, quick-moving eyes. "Got something to say to you." * * *
Seth joined them shortly after the end of the meal. Taking a chair, he wiped condensed steam off his face, looked them over.
"How much do you two know?"
"Enough to argue about it," put in Elissa. "They are bothered about duties, who defines them, and who does them."
"With good reason," Harrison riposted. "You can't escape them yourselves."
"Meaning-?" asked Seth.
"This world runs on some strange system of swapping obligations. How will any person kill an ob unless he recognizes his duty to do so?"
"Duty has nothing to do with it," said Seth. "And if it did happen to be a matter of duty, every man would recognize it for himself. It would be outrageous impertinence for anyone else to remind him, unthinkable to anyone to order him."'
"Some guys must make an easy living," interjected Gleed. "There's nothing to stop them that I can see."
He studied Seth briefly before he continued, "How can you cope with a citizen who has no conscience?"
"Easy as pie."
Elissa suggested, "Tell them the story of Idle Jack."
"It's a kid's yarn," explained Seth. "All children here know it by heart. It's a cla.s.sic fable like . . . like-"
He screwed up his face. "I've lost track of the Terran tales the first comers brought with them."
"Red Riding Hood," offered Harrison.
"Yes." Seth seized on it gratefully. "Something like that one. A nursery story." He licked his lips, began,
"This Idle Jack came from Terra as a baby, grew up in our new world, studied our economic system and thought he'd be mighty smart. He decided to become a scratcher."
"What's a scratcher?" inquired Gleed.
"One who lives by taking obs and does nothing about killing them or planting any of his own. One who accepts everything that's going and gives nothing in return."
"I get it. I've known one or two like that in my time."
"Up to age sixteen, Jack got away with it. He was a kid, see. All kids tend to scratch to a certain extent.
We expect it and allow for it. After sixteen, he was soon in the soup."
"How?" urged Harrison, more interested than he was willing to show.
"He went around the town gathering obs by the armful. Meals, clothes and all sorts for the mere asking.
It's not a big town. There are no big ones on this planet. They're just small enough for everyone to know everyone-and everyone does plenty of gabbing. Within three or four months the entire town knew Jack was a determined scratcher."
"Go on," said Harrison, getting impatient.
"Everything dried up," said Seth. "Wherever Jack went, people gave him the 'I Won't'. That's freedom,
isn't it? He got no meals, no clothes, no entertainment, no company, nothing! Soon he became terribly hungry, busted into someone's larder one night, gave himself the first square meal in a week."
"What did they do about that?"
"Nothing. Not a thing."
"That would encourage him some, wouldn't it?"
"How could it?" Seth asked, with a thin smile. "It did him no good. Next day his belly was empty again.
He had to repeat the performance. And the next day. And the next. People became leery, locked up their stuff, kept watch on it. It became harder and harder. It became so unbearably hard that it was soon a lot easier to leave the town and try another. So Idle Jack went away."
"To do the same again," Harrison suggested.
"With the same results for the same reasons," retorted Seth. "On he went to a third town, a fourth, a fifth, a twentieth. He was stubborn enough to be witless."
"He was getting by," Harrison observed. "Taking all at the mere cost of moving around."
"No he wasn't. Our towns are small, like I said. And folk do plenty of visiting from one to another. In
town number two Jack had to risk being seen and talked about by someone from town number one. As he went on it got a whole lot worse. In the twentieth he had to take a chance on gabby visitors from any of the previous nineteen." Seth leaned forward, said with emphasis, "He never got to town number twenty-eight."
"No?"
"He lasted two weeks in number twenty-five, eight days in twenty-six, one day in twenty-seven. That was almost the end."
"What did he do then?"
"Took to the open country, tried to live on roots and wild berries. Then he disappeared-until one day
some walkers found him swinging from a tree. The body was emaciated and clad in rags. Loneliness and self-neglect had killed him. That was Idle Jack, the scratcher. He wasn't twenty years old."
"On Terra," informed Gleed, "we don't hang people merely for being lazy."
"Neither do we," said Seth. "We leave them free to go hang themselves." He eyed them shrewdly, went
on, "But don't let it worry you. n.o.body has been driven to such drastic measures in my lifetime, leastways, not that I've heard about. People honor their obs as a matter of economic necessity and not from any sense of duty. n.o.body gives orders, n.o.body pushes anyone around, but there's a kind of compulsion built into the circ.u.mstances of this planet's way of living. People play square-or they suffer. n.o.body enjoys suffering-not even a numbskull."
"Yes, I suppose you're right," put in Harrison, much exercised in mind.
"You bet I'm dead right!" Seth a.s.sured. "But what I wanted to talk to you two about is something more important. It's this: What's your real ambition in life?"
Without hesitation, Gleed said, "To ride the s.p.a.ceways while remaining in one piece."
"Same here," Harrison contributed.
"I guessed that much. You'd not be in the s.p.a.ce service if it wasn't your choice. But you can't remain in