<h2>8</h2>
<p>After lunch at E.H.Q., the colonizing administrator took over the
review.</p>
<p>The precolonizing scientists had not been trapped by the obviously
favorable aspects of Eden into neglecting their full duties.
No indeed they had given the full routine of tests and had
come up with exactly nothing that might be unfavorable to man,
at least not more so than on Earth.</p>
<p>Colonization had followed the usual plan. Fifty professional
colonists had been sent out to Eden. They knew their jobs. They
were temperamentally suited to the work.</p>
<p>As usual, they were to live there for five years, leaning as
lightly as possible on Earth supplement. Their prime purpose was
to adapt primitive ecology to human needs, how it could be done.
It was not the job of this first colony to explore, to catalogue.
They were expected to do only what any pioneer does—endure,
exist, and prove it possible.</p>
<p>In honesty the colonizing administrator had to point out there
had been more than the usual dissatisfaction from this colony.
The burden of their complaint was that they found living too
easy. They were professionals, accustomed to challenge.</p>
<p>They had first recommended, then demanded, that they be
transferred and the planet given over to the second-phase colonists.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>They complained they were dying on the vine, that easy living
was making farmers and storekeepers out of them, that they were
getting soft, ruined by disuse of their talents for meeting and
coping with hostile conditions. There had even been threats that
one of these days they would all pile into their ship and come
back home. So far he had stopped them by threats of his own,
that he would personally see they never got another assignment.</p>
<p>He had resisted their demands. Five years was a short enough
time. Some organisms took longer than that to develop in the
human body or mind, to make their inimical presence known.
Some did not show up until the second or third generation; which
was the reason for the second-phase colonists, to live there for
three generations, before the planet could be opened to young
John Smith and his wife Mary who dreamed of owning a little
chicken ranch out away from it all. He had argued that boredom
might be just the very inimical condition they were having to
test.</p>
<p>Cal felt a twinge of disappointment here. Perhaps the dissatisfied
colonists had merely gone on strike! Unable to get satisfaction
from their administrator, they chose not to communicate as a
means of drawing attention, getting an investigation of their
plight. Drastic, perhaps, but man had been known to do drastic
things before when he felt treated unfairly.</p>
<p>This seemed such a likely solution that for a moment he let
his disappointment override his interest. Such would be an
administrative hassle, nothing to challenge an E at all, not even
a Junior.</p>
<p>Still, it might not be the solution. He had better listen to the
whole of the problem.</p>
<p>The colonists had chosen a large island for their first settlement.
In the center was a small mountain. It had been given the
name of Crystal Palace Mountain because it was crested with an
outcropping of amethystine quartz-crystal structures in <i>natural</i>
pillars, domes, arches, spires.</p>
<p>Like spokes of a wheel radiating out from the hub, ridges fell<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</SPAN></span>
away from this mountain, and in between the ridges there lay
fertile valleys watered by perpetual streams.</p>
<p>It was in one of these valleys, about halfway between the
mountain and the sea, that the colonists settled. Some bucolic wit
had named the first settlement Appletree, because there they
would gain knowledge, and everybody knows that the apple was
the Garden of Eden's fruit of knowledge. No one quite knew
when the name Eden was first applied to the planet. Suddenly,
during the first scientific expedition, everyone was referring to it
that way.</p>
<p>"For exactitude," the administrator said diplomatically. "Of
course we still designate it as Ceti II."</p>
<p>As was customary, the colony had communicated multitudes
of progress pictures over the space-jump band. Here was the
valley before they had started to fell trees. Here it was in progress
of clearing. Here they were converting the trees into lumber for
houses. Here were the first houses so that some could move out
of the living quarters in the ship. Here they were uprooting the
stumps, turning the sod, planting Earth seed. These were barns
for the cattle and horses sent with them from Earth.</p>
<p>A collection of community buildings came next in the series of
photographs, and finally there was the whole village of Appletree,
with a collection of small farms surrounding it. The pictures
showed it all as ideal for man as a distant view of a rural valley
in Ohio. Productive, progressive, and peaceful—from a distance.</p>
<p>But back of the post-card scene, human psychology progressed
normally also.</p>
<p>The reporting psychologist was most emphatic on this issue. His
department would have been most alarmed had differences and
schisms <i>not</i> developed. <i>That</i> would have been an abnormality
calling for investigation.</p>
<p>Differences in outlook became apparent in spite of the common
temperament and experience of the group. Little personal enmities
developed and grew. Sympathizers drew together in little<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</SPAN></span>
groups, each group considering its stand to be the right one, and
therefore all who disagreed wrong.</p>
<p>The psychologist said he was sure all viewing would remember
the classical picture of primitive Earth man at first awareness.
He stands upon a hill and looks about him. There comes the
astonishing realization that he can see about the same distance
in all directions.</p>
<p>"Why," he exclaims to himself, "I must be at the very center
of creation!"</p>
<p>His awe and wonder was to grow. Wherever he went, he found
he was still at the center of things. There could be only one conclusion.</p>
<p>"Because I am always at the center of things, I must be the
most important event in all creation!"</p>
<p>Still later comes another realization.</p>
<p>"Those who are with me, and are therefore a part of me-and-mine,
are also at the center of things and share my importance.
Those who are not with me, and not a part of me-and-mine,
are not at the center of things, and are therefore of an inferior
nature!"</p>
<p>It could readily be seen—the psychologist was allowing a note
of dryness to enter his comments—that the bulk of man's philosophy,
religion, politics, social values, and yes, too often even his
scientific conclusions, was based upon this egocentric notion; the
supreme importance and rightness of me-and-mine ascendant at
the center of things, opposed to those who are not a part of me-and-mine,
on the outside, and therefore inferior.</p>
<p>There must have been a signal from Bill Hayes, for the
psychologist left the generalities behind and came back to the
issue.</p>
<p>The very ease of living on Eden fostered the growth of schisms,
for there was no common enemy to band the group into one
solid me-and-mine organism—the audience would recall that when
Earth was divided into nations it had always been imperative to
find a common enemy in some other nation; that this was the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</SPAN></span>
only cohesive force man had been able to find to keep the nation
from disintegrating.</p>
<p>Another nudge.</p>
<p>Factions took shape on Eden and clashed in town meetings.
At last, as expected, some dissident individuals and family groups
could no longer tolerate the irritation of living in the same
neighborhood with the rest. These broke off from the main
colony, and migrated across the near ridge to settle in an adjacent
valley.</p>
<p>Psychologically, it was a most satisfactory development, playing
out in classical microcosm the massive behavior of total man. For,
as everyone knew, had men ever been able to settle their differences,
had man been able to get along peacefully with himself,
he might have developed no civilization at all.</p>
<p>Man's inability to stand the stench of his own kind was the
most potent of all forces in driving him out to the stars.</p>
<p>Bill Hayes, a weary and red-eyed moderator now, apparently
decided he could no longer stand the stench of the psychologist
and abruptly cut him off. He himself took over the summation.
It boiled down to a simple statement.</p>
<p>The colonists had reported everything that happened, of significance
or not. These reports had all been thoroughly sifted in the
normal course of E.H.Q.'s daily work as they were received. They
had been collated and extended both by human and machine
minds to detect any subtle trends away from norm.</p>
<p>There had been nothing, absolutely nothing. The reports might
as well have originated somewhere near Eugene, Oregon. They
were about as unusual as a Saturday night bath back on the farm.</p>
<p>Then silence. Sudden, inexplicable silence.</p>
<hr /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</SPAN></span></p>
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