Let There Be Light
IF Worlds of Science Fiction,
November 1952
No matter what the future, one factor must always be reckoned with—the ingenuity
of the human animal.
The two men attacked the thick
tree trunk with a weary savagery. In the bright sunlight, glistening spatters
of sweat flew from them as the old axes bit alternately into the wood.
Blackie stood nearby, on the
gravel shoulder of the highway, rubbing his short beard as he considered the
depth of the white notch. Turning his broad, tanned face to glance along the
patched and cracked concrete to where squat Vito kept watch, he caught the
latter’s eye and beckoned.
“Okay, Sid—Mike. We’ll take it a
while.”
The rhythm of the axe-strokes
ceased. Red Mike swept the back of a forearm across the semi-shaven stubble
that set him as something of a dandy.
Wordlessly, big Sid ambled up the
road to replace Vito.
“Pretty soon, now,” boasted Mike,
eyeing the cut with satisfaction. “Think it’ll bring them?”
“Sure,” replied Blackie, spitting
on his hands and lifting one of the worn tools. “That’s what they’re for.”
“Funny,” mused Mike. “How some
keep going an’ others bust. These musta been workin’ since I was a little kid—since
before the last blitz.”
“Aw, they don’t hafta do much. ‘Cept
in winter when they come out to clear snow, all they do is put in a patch now
an’ then.”
Mike stared moodily at the
weathered surface of the highway and edged back to avoid the reflected heat.
“It beats me how they know a spot
has cracked.”
“I guess there’s machines to run
the machines,” sighed Blackie. “I dunno; I was too young. Okay, Vito?”
The relieving pair fell to. Mike
stepped out of range of the flying chips to sit at the edge of the soft grass
which was attempting another invasion of the gravel shoulder. Propelled by the
strength of Vito’s powerful torso, a single chip spun through the air to his
feet. He picked it up and held it to his nose. It had a good, clean smell.
When at length the tree crashed
down across the road, Blackie led them to the ambush he had chosen that
morning. It was fifty yards up the road toward the ruined city—off to the side
where a clump of trees and bushes provided shade and concealment.
“Wish we brought something to
eat,” Vito said.
“Didn’t know it would take so
long to creep up on ‘em this morning,” said Blackie. “The women’ll have
somethin’ when we get back.”
“They better,” said Mike.
He measured a slender branch with
his eye. After a moment, he pulled out a hunting knife, worn thin by years of
sharpening, and cut off a straight section of the branch. He began whittling.
“You damn’ fool!” Sid objected. “You
want the busted spot on the tree to show?”
“Aw, they ain’t got the brains to notice.”
“The hell they ain’t! It stands
out like one o’ them old street signs.
D’ya think they can tell,
Blackie?”
“I dunno. Maybe.” Blackie rose
cautiously to peer over a bed of blackberry bushes. “Guess I’ll skin up a tree
an’ see if anything’s in sight.”
He hitched up his pants, looking
for an easy place to climb. His blue denims had been stoutly made, but weakened
by many rips and patches, and he did not want to rip them on a snag. It was
becoming difficult to find good, un-rotted clothing in the old ruins.
***
Choosing a branch slightly over
his head, he sprang for it, pulled, kicked against the trunk, and flowed up
into the foliage with no apparent effort. The others waited below. Sid glanced
up occasionally, Vito idly kicked at one of the clubs made from an old
two-by-four.
The other lay beneath the piled
jackets; but enough of the end protruded to show that they had been chopped
from the same timber, gray-painted on one side, stained and gouged on the other
where boards had once been nailed. A coil of rope lay beside the axes.
High in the upper branches,
Blackie braced himself with negligent confidence and stared along the concrete
ribbon.
From here, he
thought, you’d almost think the place was
still alive, instead of crumbling around our ears.
The windows of the distant houses
were dark, un-glassed holes, but the sunlight made the masonry clean and
shining. To Blackie, the ragged tops of most of the buildings were as natural
as the tattered look of the few people he knew. Beyond, toward the center of
the city, was real evidence of his race’s bygone might—a vast jumble of
shattered stone and fused metal. Queer weeds and mosses infected the area, but
it would be centuries before they could mask the desolation.
Better covered, were the heaps
along the road, seemingly shoved just beyond the gravel shoulders—mouldering
mounds which legend said were once machines to ride in along the pavement.
Something glinted at the bend of
the highway. Blackie peered closer.
He swarmed down the tree from
branch to branch, so lithely that the trio below hardly had the warning of the
vibrating leaves before he dropped, cat-footed, among them.
“They’re comin’!”
He shrugged quickly into his
stained jacket, emulated in silent haste by the others. Vito rubbed his hands
down the hairy chest left revealed by his open jacket and hefted one of the
clubs. In his broad paws, it seemed light.
They were quiet, watching Sid
peer out through narrowly parted brush of the undergrowth. Blackie fidgeted
behind him. Finally, he reached out as if to pull the other aside, but at that
moment Sid released the bushes and crouched.
The others, catching his warning
glance, fell prone, peering through shrubbery and around tree trunks with
savage eyes.
The distant squawk of a jay
became suddenly very clear, as did the sighing of a faint breeze through the
leaves overhead. Then a new, clanking, humming sound intruded.
A procession of three vehicles
rolled along the highway at an unvarying pace which took no account of patches
or worn spots. They jounced in turn across a patch laid over a previous,
unsuccessful patch, and halted before the felled tree. Two were bulldozers; the
third was a light truck with compartments for tools. No human figures were
visible.
A moment later, the working force
appeared—a column of eight robots. These deployed as they reached the obstacle,
and explored like colossal ants along its length.
“What’re they after?” asked Mike,
whispering although he lay fifty yards away.
“They’re lookin’ over the job for
whatever sends them out,” Blackie whispered back. “See those little lights
stickin’ out the tops o’ their heads? I heard tell, once, that’s how they’re
run.”
Some of the robots took saws from
the truck and began to cut through the tree trunk. Others produced cables and
huge hooks to attach the obstacle to the bulldozers.
“Look at ‘em go!” sighed Sid,
hunching his stiff shoulders jealously. “Took us hours, an’ they’re half done
already.”
They watched as the robots
precisely severed the part of the tree that blocked the highway, going not one
inch beyond the gravel shoulder, and helped the bulldozers to tug it aside. On
the opposite side of the concrete, the shoulder tapered off into a six-foot
drop. The log was jockeyed around parallel to this ditch and rolled into it,
amid a thrashing of branches and a spurting of small pebbles.
“Glad we’re on the high side,”
whispered Mike. “That thing ‘ud squash a guy’s guts right out!”
“Keep listenin’ to me,” Blackie
said. “An’ you’ll keep on bein’ in the right place at the right time.”
Mike raised his eyebrows at Vito,
who thrust out his lower lip and nodded sagely. Sid grinned, but no one
contradicted the boast.
“They’re linin’ up,” Blackie
warned tensely. “You guys ready? Where’s that rope?”
Someone thrust it into his hands.
Still squinting at the scene on the highway, he fumbled for the ends and held
one out to Mike. The others gripped their clubs.
“Now, remember!” ordered Blackie.
“Me an’ Mike will trip up the last one in line. You two get in there quick an’
wallop him over the head—but good!”
“Don’t go away while we’re doin’
it,” said big Sid. “They won’t chase ya, but they look out fer themselves. I
don’t wanna get tossed twenty feet again!”
The eyes of the others flicked
toward the jagged white scar running down behind Sid’s right ear and under the
collar of his jacket. Then they swung back to the road.
“Good!” breathed Blackie. “The
rollin’ stuff’s goin’ first.”
The truck and bulldozers set out
toward the city, with the column of robots marching a fair distance behind. The
latter approached the ambush—drew abreast—began to pass.
Blackie raised himself to a
crouch with just the tips of his fingers steadying him.
***
As the last robot plodded by, he
surged out of the brush, joined to Red Mike by their grips on the twenty feet of
rope. They ran up behind the marching machine, trailed by the others.
In his right hand, Blackie
twirled the part of the rope hanging between him and Mike. On the second swing,
he got it over the head of the robot. He saw Mike brace himself.
The robot staggered. It pivoted
clumsily to its left, groping vaguely for the hindrance. Mike and Blackie
tugged again, and the machine wound up facing them in its efforts to maintain
balance. Its companions marched steadily along the road.
“Switch ends!” barked Blackie.
Alert, Mike tossed him the other
end of the rope and caught Blackie’s. They ran past the robot on either side,
looping it in. Blackie kept going until he was above the ditch. He wound a turn
of rope about his forearm and plunged down the bank.
A shower of gravel spattered
after him as Mike jammed his heels into the shoulder of the highway to anchor
the other end. Then he heard the booming sound of the robot’s fall.
Blackie clawed his way up the
bank. Vito and Sid were smashing furiously at the floundering machine. Mike
danced about the melee with bared teeth, charging in once as if to leap upon
the quarry with both feet. Frustrated by the peril of the whirling
two-by-fours, he swept up handfuls of gravel to hurl.
Blackie turned to run for one of
the axes. Just then, Sid struck home to the head of the robot.
Sparks spat out amid a tinkle of
glass. The machine ceased all motion.
“All right!” panted Blackie. “All
right! That’s enough!”
They stepped back, snarls fading.
A handful of gravel trickled through Mike’s fingers and pattered loudly on the
concrete. Gradually, the men began to straighten up, seeing the robot as an
inert heap of metal rather than as a weird beast in its death throes.
“We better load up an’ get,” said
Blackie. “We wanna be over on the trail if they send somethin’ up the road to
look for this.”
Vito dragged the robot off the
highway by the head, and they began the task of lashing it to the two-by-fours.
It was about two hours later when
they plodded around a street corner among the ruins and stopped before a fairly
intact building. By that time, they had picked up an escort of dirty, half-clad
children who ran ahead to spread the news.
Two other men and a handful of
women gathered around with eager exclamations.
The hunters dropped their catch.
“Better get to work on him,” said
Blackie, glancing at the sky. “Be dark soon.”
The men who had remained as
guards ran inside the entrance of polished granite and brought out tools:
hammers, crowbars, hatchets. Behind them hurried women with basins and large
cans. The original four, weary from the weight of the robot despite frequent
pauses on the trail, stepped back.
“Where first, Blackie?” asked one
of the men, waiting for the women to untangle the rope and timbers.
“Try all the joints. After that,
we’ll crack him open down the middle for the main supply tank.”
He watched the metal give way
under the blows. As the robot was dismembered, the fluid that had lubricated
the complex mechanism flowed from its wounds and was poured by the women into a
five-gallon can.
“Bring a cupful, Judy,” Blackie
told his woman, a wiry blond girl. “I wanna see if it’s as good as the last.”
He lit a stick at the fire as
they crossed the littered, once-ornate lobby, and she followed him down a dim
hall. He pulled aside the skins that covered their doorway, then stumbled his
way to the table. The window was still uncovered against the night chill, but
it looked out on a courtyard shadowed by towering walls. To eyes adjusted to
the sunny street, the room was dark.
Judy poured the oil into the
makeshift lamp, waited for the rag wick to soak, and held it out to Blackie. He
lit the wick from his stick.
“It burns real good, Blackie,”
the girl said, wrinkling her nose against the first oily smoke. “Gee, you’re
smart to catch one the first day out.”
“Tell them other dames to watch
how they use it!” he warned. “This oughta last a month or more when we get him
all emptied.”
He blew out the dying flame on
the stick and dropped the charred wood thoughtfully to the floor.
“Naw, I ain’t so smart,” he
admitted. “Or I’d figure a way to make one of them work the garden for us.
Maybe someday—but this kind won’t do nothin’
but fix that goddam road, an’ what good’s that to anybody?”
His woman moved the burning lamp
carefully to the center of the table.
“Anyway, it’s gonna be better’n
last winter,” she said. “We’ll have lights now.”
End
Yeah, you really got to hope the robots don’t look
back just as you’re sneaking up on them…
One has to wonder what they run on, considering there’s
some kind of fuel or lubrication tank in the belly or trunk of the beast. Also,
road-repair or road-building robots wouldn’t necessarily have to be small and humanoid, tall, skinny things with
bipedal locomotion. Some specialization would be in order, but it might be
better to think in terms of an autonomous backhoe, an autonomous road-grader,
or an autonomous dump-truck/snow-plow. They could come in various sizes, and be
transported to the work area in groups, on an autonomous flatbed. In which
case, running them on batteries and solar power makes more sense than filling
up a tank with gasoline or diesel fuel, or any bottled-gas type fuel.
Basically, at the end of a day, any given autonomous
vehicle pulls up to a convenient charging station and an extensible arm plugs
it in to a storage/charging system for the night, all set for the next working
period. The cycle might even be diurnal, in spite of robotic night-vision. Even
for a robot, festooned with cameras and sensors, there’s nothing quite like
plentiful, natural light.
A small group of hunter-gatherers taking down an
autonomous bulldozer sounds like a
pretty big challenge…perhaps some sort of deadfall trap might work, if it was
big enough and you could lure the thing into it. Then all you have to do is
unscrew the filler cap and siphon out the fuel, assuming that’s what it runs on.
If you knew anything at all, you’d steal batteries, lights and electrical
components including switches, relays, voltage controls, servo-motors, even
just copper or other type of wire. You’d use the metal or plastic to make
tools, weapons, kitchen utensils and even jewelry.
The image is a free download. Get
it here.
Louis Shalako has four pages of books and stories,
print and ebooks, available
from Amazon.
Thank you for reading.
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