<h2>IV</h2>
<p><span class="first_word">Early next</span> morning windowless
walls began to crawl
up the stripped skyscraper between
them and the lake. Daisy
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page25" title="25"></SPAN>pulled the black-out curtains on
that side. For a day or two longer
their thoughts and conversations
were haunted by Gusterson’s
vague sardonic visions of a horde
of tickler-energized moles pouring
up out of the tunnels to tear
down the remaining trees, tank
the atmosphere and perhaps
somehow dismantle the stars—at
least on this side of the world—but
then they both settled
back into their customary easy-going
routines. Gusterson typed.
Daisy made her daily shopping
trip to a little topside daytime
store and started painting a mural
on the floor of the empty
apartment next theirs but one.</p>
<p>“We ought to lasso some neighbors,”
she suggested once. “I need
somebody to hold my brushes
and admire. How about you making
a trip below at the cocktail
hours, Gusterson, and picking up
a couple of girls for a starter?
Flash the old viriler charm,
cootch them up a bit, emphasize
the delights of high living, but
make sure they’re compatible
roommates. You could pick up
that two-yard check from Micro
at the same time.”</p>
<p>“You’re an immoral money-ravenous
wench,” Gusterson said
absently, trying to dream of an
insanity beyond insanity that
would make his next novel a real
id-rousing best-vender.</p>
<p>“If that’s your vision of me,
you shouldn’t have chewed up
the VV mask.”</p>
<p>“I’d really prefer you with
green stripes,” he told her. “But
stripes, spots, or sun-bathing,
you’re better than those cocktail
moles.”</p>
<p>Actually both of them acutely
disliked going below. They much
preferred to perch in their eyrie
and watch the people of Cleveland
Depths, as they privately
called the local sub-suburb, rush
up out of the shelters at dawn to
work in the concrete fields and
windowless factories, make their
daytime jet trips and freeway
jaunts, do their noon-hour and
coffee-break guerrilla practice,
and then go scurrying back at
twilight to the atomic-proof,
brightly lit, vastly exciting, claustrophobic
caves.</p>
<p>Fay and his projects began
once more to seem dreamlike,
though Gusterson did run across
a cryptic advertisement for ticklers
in <em>The Manchester Guardian</em>,
which he got daily by facsimile.
Their three children reported
similar ads, of no interest
to young fry, on the TV and one
afternoon they came home with
the startling news that the monitors
at their subsurface school
had been issued ticklers. On
sharp interrogation by Gusterson,
however, it appeared that
these last were not ticklers but
merely two-way radios linked to
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page26" title="26"></SPAN>the school police station transmitter.</p>
<div class="image">
<ANTIMG src="images/illo-2.jpg" width-obs="400" height-obs="274" alt="A man looks at another man who has a small electronic device on his shoulder and a wire going into his ear." /></div>
<p>“Which is bad enough,” Gusterson
commented later to Daisy.
“But it’d be even dirtier to think
of those clock-watching superegos
being strapped to kids’
shoulders. Can you imagine Huck
Finn with a tickler, tellin’ him
when to tie up the raft to a tow-head
and when to take a swim?”</p>
<p>“I bet Fay could,” Daisy
countered. “When’s he going to
bring you that check, anyhow?
Iago wants a jetcycle and I
promised Imogene a Vina Kit
and then Claudius’ll have to have
something.”</p>
<p>Gusterson scowled thoughtfully.
“You know, Daze,” he said,
“I got a feeling Fay’s in the hospital,
all narcotized up and being
fed intravenously. The way he
was jumping around last time,
that tickler was going to cootch
him to pieces in a week.”</p>
<p class="post_break"><span class="first_word">As if to</span> refute this intuition,
Fay turned up that very
evening. The lights were dim.
Something had gone wrong with
the building’s old transformer
and, pending repairs, the two remaining
occupied apartments
were making do with batteries,
which turned bright globes to
mysterious amber candles and
made Gusterson’s ancient typewriter
operate sluggishly.</p>
<p>Fay’s manner was subdued or
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page27" title="27"></SPAN>at least closely controlled and
for a moment Gusterson thought
he’d shed his tickler. Then the
little man came out of the shadows
and Gusterson saw the large
bulge on his right shoulder.</p>
<div class="image">
<ANTIMG src="images/illo-3.jpg" width-obs="400" height-obs="273" alt="A rather sexy drawing of a well-endowed woman in a tight-fitting dress putting on a face-shaped mask while a man looks on." /></div>
<p>“Yes, we had to up it a bit
sizewise,” Fay explained in
clipped tones. “Additional super-features.
While brilliantly successful
on the whole, the subliminal
euphorics were a shade
too effective. Several hundred
users went hoppity manic. We
gentled the cootch and qualified
the subliminals—you know,
‘Day by day in every way I’m
getting sharper <em>and more serene</em>’—but
a stabilizing influence was
still needed, so after a top-level
conference we decided to combine
Tickler with Moodmaster.”</p>
<p>“My God,” Gusterson interjected,
“do they have a machine
now that does that?”</p>
<p>“Of course. They’ve been using
them on ex-mental patients for
years.”</p>
<p>“I just don’t keep up with
progress,” Gusterson said, shaking
his head bleakly. “I’m falling
behind on all fronts.”</p>
<p>“You ought to have your tickler
remind you to read Science
Service releases,” Fay told him.
“Or simply instruct it to scan the
releases and—no, that’s still in
research.” He looked at Gusterson’s
shoulder and his eyes widened.
“You’re not wearing the
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page28" title="28"></SPAN>new-model tickler I sent you,”
he said accusingly.</p>
<p>“I never got it,” Gusterson assured
him. “Postmen deliver
<ins title="top-side">topside</ins> mail and parcels by
throwing them on the high-speed
garbage boosts and hoping a tornado
will blow them to the right
addresses.” Then he added helpfully,
“Maybe the Russians stole
it while it was riding the whirlwinds.”</p>
<p>“That’s not a suitable topic for
jesting,” Fay frowned. “We’re
hoping that Tickler will mobilize
the full potential of the Free
World for the first time in history.
Gusterson, you are going to
have to wear a ticky-tick. It’s becoming
impossible for a man to
get through modern life without
one.”</p>
<p>“Maybe I will,” Gusterson said
appeasingly, “but right now tell
me about Moodmaster. I want to
put it in my new insanity novel.”</p>
<p>Fay shook his head. “Your
readers will just think you’re behind
the times. If you use it,
underplay it. But anyhow, Moodmaster
is a simple physiotherapy
engine that monitors bloodstream
chemicals and body electricity. It
ties directly into the bloodstream,
keeping blood, sugar, et
cetera, at optimum levels and injecting
euphrin or depressin as
necessary—and occasionally a
touch of extra adrenaline, as during
work emergencies.”</p>
<p>“Is it painful?” Daisy called
from the bedroom.</p>
<p>“Excruciating,” Gusterson called
back. “Excuse it, please,” he
grinned at Fay. “Hey, didn’t I
suggest cocaine injections last
time I saw you?”</p>
<p>“So you did,” Fay agreed flatly.
“Oh by the way, Gussy, here’s
that check for a yard I promised
you. Micro doesn’t muzzle the
ox.”</p>
<p>“Hooray!” Daisy cheered faintly.</p>
<p class="post_break"><span class="first_word">“I thought</span> you said it was
going to be for two.” Gusterson
complained.</p>
<p>“Budgeting always forces a
last-minute compromise,” Fay
shrugged. “You have to learn to
accept those things.”</p>
<p>“I love accepting money and
I’m glad any time for three feet,”
Daisy called agreeably. “Six feet
might make me wonder if I
weren’t an insect, but getting a
yard just makes me feel like a
gangster’s moll.”</p>
<p>“Want to come out and gloat
over the yard paper, Toots, and
stuff it in your diamond-embroidered
net stocking top?” Gusterson
called back.</p>
<p>“No, I’m doing something to
that portion of me just now. But
hang onto the yard, Gusterson.”</p>
<p>“Aye-aye, Cap’n,” he assured
her. Then, turning back to Fay,
“So you’ve taken the Dr. Coué
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page29" title="29"></SPAN>repeating out of the tickler?”</p>
<p>“Oh, no. Just balanced it off
with depressin. The subliminals
are still a prime sales-point. All
the tickler features are cumulative,
Gussy. You’re still underestimating
the scope of the device.”</p>
<p>“I guess I am. What’s this
‘work-emergencies’ business? If
you’re using the tickler to inject
drugs into workers to keep them
going, that’s really just my cocaine
suggestion modernized and
I’m putting in for another thou.
Hundreds of years ago the South
American Indians chewed coca
leaves to kill fatigue sensations.”</p>
<p>“That so? Interesting—and
it proves priority for the Indians,
doesn’t it? I’ll make a try for you,
Gussy, but don’t expect anything.”
He cleared his throat, his
eyes grew distant and, turning
his head a little to the right, he
enunciated sharply, “Pooh-Bah.
Time: Inst oh five. One oh five
seven. Oh oh. Record: Gussy
coca thou budget. Cut.” He explained,
“We got a voice-cued
setter now on the deluxe models.
You can record a memo to yourself
without taking off your shirt.
Incidentally, I use the ends of the
hours for trifle-memos. I’ve already
used up the fifty-nines and
eights for tomorrow and started
on the fifty-sevens.”</p>
<p>“I understood most of your
memo,” Gusterson told him gruffly.
“The last ‘Oh oh’ was for seconds,
wasn’t it? Now I call that
crude—why not microseconds
too? But how do you remember
where you’ve made a memo so
you don’t rerecord over it? After
all, you’re rerecording over the
wallpaper all the time.”</p>
<p>“Tickler beeps and then hunts
for the nearest information-free
space.”</p>
<p>“I see. And what’s the Pooh-Bah
for?”</p>
<p>Fay smiled. “Cut. My password
for activating the setter, so
it won’t respond to chance numerals
it overhears.”</p>
<p>“But why Pooh-Bah?”</p>
<p>Fay grinned. “Cut. And you a
writer. It’s a literary reference,
Gussy. Pooh-Bah (cut!) was
Lord High Everything Else in
<em>The Mikado</em>. He had a little list
and nothing on it would ever be
missed.”</p>
<p class="post_break"><span class="first_word">“Oh, yeah</span>,” Gusterson remembered,
glowering. “As
I recall it, all that went on that
list was the names of people who
were slated to have their heads
chopped off by Ko-Ko. Better
watch your step, Shorty. It may
be a back-handed omen. Maybe
all those workers you’re puttin’
ticklers on to pump them full of
adrenaline so they’ll overwork
without noticin’ it will revolt and
come out some day choppin’ for
your head.”</p>
<p><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page30" title="30"></SPAN>“Spare me the Marxist mythology,”
Fay protested. “Gussy,
you’ve got a completely wrong
slant on Tickler. It’s true that
most of our mass sales so far, bar
government and army, have been
to large companies purchasing
for their employees—”</p>
<p>“Ah-ha!”</p>
<p>“—but that’s because there’s
nothing like a tickler for teaching
a new man his job. It tells
him from instant to instant what
he must do—while he’s already
on the job and without disturbing
other workers. Magnetizing a
wire with a job pattern is the
easiest thing going. And you’d be
astonished what the subliminals
do for employee morale. It’s this
way, Gussy: most people are too
improvident and unimaginative
to see in advance the advantages
of ticklers. They buy one because
the company strongly suggests it
and payment is on easy installments
withheld from salary.
They find a tickler makes the
work day go easier. The little fellow
perched on your shoulder is
a friend exuding comfort and
good advice. The first thing he’s
set to say is ‘Take it easy, pal.’</p>
<p>“Within a week they’re wearing
their tickler 24 hours a day—and
buying a tickler for the
wife, so she’ll remember to comb
her hair and smile real pretty
and cook favorite dishes.”</p>
<p>“I get it, Fay,” Gusterson cut
in. “The tickler is the newest fad
for increasing worker efficiency.
Once, I read somewheres, it was
salt tablets. They had salt-tablet
dispensers everywhere, even in
air-conditioned offices where
there wasn’t a moist armpit twice
a year and the gals sweat only
champagne. A decade later people
wondered what all those
dusty white pills were for. Sometimes
they were mistook for tranquilizers.
It’ll be the same way
with ticklers. Somebody’ll open
a musty closet and see jumbled
heaps of these gripping-hand silvery
gadgets gathering dust curls
and—”</p>
<p>“They will not!” Fay protested
vehemently. “Ticklers are not a
fad—they’re history-changers,
they’re Free-World revolutionary!
Why, before Micro Systems
put a single one on the market,
we’d made it a rule that every
Micro employee had to wear one!
If that’s not having supreme confidence
in a product—”</p>
<p>“Every employee except the
top executives, of course,” Gusterson
interrupted jeeringly. “And
that’s not demoting you, Fay.
As the R & D chief most closely
involved, you’d naturally have to
show special enthusiasm.”</p>
<p>“But you’re wrong there, Gussy,”
Fay crowed. “Man for man,
our top executives have been
more enthusiastic about their
personal ticklers than any other
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page31" title="31"></SPAN>class of worker in the whole outfit.”</p>
<p>Gusterson slumped and shook
his head. “If that’s the case,” he
said darkly, “maybe mankind deserves
the tickler.”</p>
<p class="post_break"><span class="first_word">“I’ll say it</span> does!” Fay
agreed loudly without
thinking. Then, “Oh, can the
carping, Gussy. Tickler’s a great
invention. Don’t deprecate it just
because you had something to do
with its genesis. You’re going to
have to get in the swim and wear
one.”</p>
<p>“Maybe I’d rather drown horribly.”</p>
<p>“Can the gloom-talk too! Gussy,
I said it before and I say it
again, you’re just scared of this
new thing. Why, you’ve even got
the drapes pulled so you won’t
have to look at the tickler factory.”</p>
<p>“Yes, I am scared,” Gusterson
said. “Really sca … AWP!”</p>
<p>Fay whirled around. Daisy was
standing in the bedroom doorway,
wearing the short silver
sheath. This time there was no
mask, but her bobbed hair was
glitteringly silvered, while her
legs, arms, hands, neck, face—every
bit of her exposed skin—was
painted with beautifully
even vertical green stripes.</p>
<p>“I did it as a surprise for Gusterson,”
she explained to Fay.
“He says he likes me this way.
The green glop’s supposed to be
smudgeproof.”</p>
<p>Gusterson did not comment.
His face had a rapt expression.
“I’ll tell you why your tickler’s
so popular, Fay,” he said softly.
“It’s not because it backstops the
memory or because it boosts the
ego with subliminals. It’s because
it takes the hook out of a guy, it
takes over the job of withstanding
the pressure of living. See,
Fay, here are all these little guys
in this subterranean rat race with
atomic-death squares and chromium-plated
reward squares and
enough money if you pass Go
almost to get to Go again—and
a million million rules of the
game to keep in mind. Well,
here’s this one little guy and
every morning he wakes up
there’s all these things he’s got
to keep in mind to do or he’ll
lose his turn three times in a row
and maybe a terrible black rook
in iron armor’ll loom up and bang
him off the chessboard. But now,
look, now he’s got his tickler and
he tells his sweet silver tickler
all these things and the tickler’s
got to remember them. Of course
he’ll have to do them eventually
but meanwhile the pressure’s off
him, the hook’s out of his short
hairs. He’s shifted the responsibility….”</p>
<p>“Well, what’s so bad about
that?” Fay broke in loudly.
“What’s wrong with taking the
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page32" title="32"></SPAN>pressure off little guys? Why
shouldn’t Tickler be a super-ego
surrogate? Micro’s Motivations
chief noticed that positive feature
straight off and scored it
three pluses. Besides, it’s nothing
but a gaudy way of saying that
Tickler backstops the memory.
Seriously, Gussy, what’s so bad
about it?”</p>
<p>“I don’t know,” Gusterson said
slowly, his eyes still far away. “I
just know it feels bad to me.” He
crinkled his big forehead. “Well
for one thing,” he said, “it means
that a man’s taking orders from
something else. He’s got a kind
of master. He’s sinking back into
a slave psychology.”</p>
<p>“He’s only taking orders from
himself,” Fay countered disgustedly.
“Tickler’s just a mech
reminder, a notebook, in essence
no more than the back of an old
envelope. It’s no master.”</p>
<p>“Are you absolutely sure of
that?” Gusterson asked quietly.</p>
<p>“Why, Gussy, you big oaf—”
Fay began heatedly. Suddenly
his features quirked and he
twitched. “’Scuse me, folks,” he
said rapidly, heading for the
door, “but my tickler told me I
gotta go.”</p>
<p>“Hey Fay, don’t you mean you
told your tickler to tell you when
it was time to go?” Gusterson
called after him.</p>
<p>Fay looked back in the doorway.
He wet his lips, his eyes
moved from side to side. “I’m not
quite sure,” he said in an odd
strained voice and darted out.</p>
<p class="post_break"><span class="first_word">Gusterson</span> stared for some
seconds at the pattern of
emptiness Fay had left. Then he
shivered. Then he shrugged. “I
must be slipping,” he muttered.
“I never even suggested something
for him to invent.” Then he
looked around at Daisy, who was
still standing poker-faced in her
doorway.</p>
<p>“Hey, you look like something
out of the Arabian Nights,” he
told her. “Are you supposed to
be anything special? How far do
those stripes go, anyway?”</p>
<p>“You could probably find out,”
she told him coolly. “All you have
to do is kill me a dragon or two
first.”</p>
<p>He studied her. “My God,” he
said reverently, “I really have all
the fun in life. What do I do to
deserve this?”</p>
<p>“You’ve got a big gun,” she
told him, “and you go out in the
world with it and hold up big
companies and take yards and
yards of money away from them
in rolls like ribbon and bring it
all home to me.”</p>
<p>“Don’t say that about the gun
again,” he said. “Don’t whisper it,
don’t even think it. I’ve got one,
dammit—thirty-eight caliber,
yet—and I don’t want some
psionic monitor with two-way
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page33" title="33"></SPAN>clairaudience they haven’t told
me about catching the whisper
and coming to take the gun away
from us. It’s one of the few individuality
symbols we’ve got left.”</p>
<p>Suddenly Daisy whirled away
from the door, spun three times
so that her silvered hair stood
out like a metal coolie hat, and
sank to a curtsey in the middle
of the room.</p>
<p>“I’ve just thought of what I
am,” she announced, fluttering
her eyelashes at him. “I’m a sweet
silver tickler with green stripes.”</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />