<h2>17</h2>
<p>Leda Crannon was standing outside the cubicle that had been built for
Snookums. Her back and the palms of her hands were pressed against the
door. Her head was bowed, and her red hair, shining like a hellish flame
in the light of the glow panels, fell around her shoulders and cheeks,
almost covering her face.</p>
<p>“Leda,” said Mike the Angel gently.</p>
<p>She looked up. There were tears in her blue eyes.</p>
<p>“Mike! Oh, Mike!” She ran toward him, put her arms around
him, and tried to bury her face in Mike’s chest.</p>
<p>“What’s the matter, honey? What’s happened?” He
was certain she couldn’t have heard about Mellon’s death
yet. He held her in his arms, carefully, tenderly, not passionately.</p>
<p>“He’s crazy, Mike. He’s completely crazy.” Her
voice had suddenly lost everything that gave it color. It was only dead
and choked.</p>
<p>Mike the Angel knew it was an emotional reaction. As a psychologist, she
would never have used the word “crazy.” But as a woman ...
as a human being....</p>
<p>“Fitz is still in there talking to him, but
he’s—he’s—” Her voice choked off again into sobs.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</SPAN></span>
Mike waited patiently, holding her, caressing her hair.</p>
<p>“Eight years,” she said after a minute or so. “Eight
years I spent. And now he’s gone. He’s broken.”</p>
<p>“How do you know?” Mike asked.</p>
<p>She lifted her head and looked at him. “Mike—did he really hit
you? Did he refuse to stop when you ordered him to? What <i>really</i>
happened?”</p>
<p>Mike told her what had happened in the darkened companionway just
outside his room.</p>
<p>When he finished, she began sobbing again. “He’s lying,
Mike,” she said. “<i>Lying!</i>”</p>
<p>Mike nodded silently and slowly. Leda Crannon had spent all of her adult
life tending the hurts and bruises and aches of Snookums the Child. She
had educated him, cared for him, taken pleasure in his triumphs, worried
about his health, and watched him grow mentally.</p>
<p>And now he was sick, broken, ruined. And, like all parents, she was
asking herself: “What did I do wrong?”</p>
<p>Mike the Angel didn’t give her an answer to that unspoken
question, but he knew what the answer was in so many cases:</p>
<p>The grieving parent has not necessarily done anything wrong. It may
simply be that there was insufficient or poor-quality material to work
with.</p>
<p>With a human child, it is even more humiliating for a parent to admit
that he or she has contributed inferior genetic material to a child than
it is to admit a failure in upbringing. Leda’s case was different.</p>
<p>Leda had lost her child, but Mike hesitated to point out that it
wasn’t her fault in the first place because the material
wasn’t up to the task she had given it, and in the second
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</SPAN></span>
place because she hadn’t really lost anything. She was still
playing with dolls, not human beings.</p>
<p>“Hell!” said Mike under his breath, not realizing that he
was practically whispering in her ear.</p>
<p>“Isn’t it?” she said. “Isn’t it Hell? I
spent eight years trying to make that little mind of his tick properly.
I wanted to know what was the right, proper, and logical way to bring up
children. I had a theory, and I wanted to test it. And now I’ll
never know.”</p>
<p>“What sort of theory?” Mike asked.</p>
<p>She sniffled, took a handkerchief from her pocket, and began wiping at
her tears. Mike took the handkerchief away from her and did the wiping
job himself. “What’s this theory?” he said.</p>
<p>“Oh, it isn’t important now. But I felt—I still feel—that
everybody is born with a sort of Three Laws of Robotics in him. You know
what I mean—that a person wouldn’t kill or harm anyone, or refuse
to do what was right, in addition to trying to preserve his own life. I
think babies are born that way. But I think that the information
they’re given when they’re growing up can warp them. They
still think they’re obeying the laws, but they’re obeying
them wrongly, if you see what I mean.”</p>
<p>Mike nodded without saying anything. This was no time to interrupt her.</p>
<p>“For instance,” she went on, “if my theory’s
right, then a child would never disobey his father—unless he was
convinced that the man was not really his father, you see. For instance,
if he learned, very early, that his father never spanks him, that
becomes one of the identifying marks of ‘father.’ Fine. But
the first time his father <i>does</i> spank him, doubt enters. If that sort
of thing goes on, he becomes disobedient <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</SPAN></span>
because he doesn’t believe that the man is his father.</p>
<p>“I’m afraid I’m putting it a little crudely, but you
get the idea.”</p>
<p>“Yeah,” said Mike. For all he knew, there might be some
merit in the girl’s idea; he knew that philosophers had talked of
the “basic goodness of mankind” for centuries. But he had a
hunch that Leda was going about it wrong. Still, this was no time to
argue with her. She seemed calmer now, and he didn’t want to upset
her any more than he had to.</p>
<p>“That’s what you’ve been working on with
Snookums?” he asked.</p>
<p>“That’s it.”</p>
<p>“For eight years?”</p>
<p>“For eight years.”</p>
<p>“Is that the information, the data, that makes Snookums so
priceless, aside from his nucleonics work?”</p>
<p>She smiled a little then. “Oh no. Of course not, silly. He’s
been fed data on everything—physics, subphysics, chemistry,
mathematics—all kinds of things. Most of the major research
laboratories on Earth have problems of one kind or another that Snookums
has been working on. He hasn’t been given the problem <i>I</i> was
working on at all; it would bias him.” Then the tears came back.
“And now it doesn’t matter. He’s insane. He’s
lying.”</p>
<p>“What’s he saying?”</p>
<p>“He insists that he’s never broken the First Law, that he
has never hurt a human being. And he insists that he has followed the
orders of human beings, according to the Second Law.”</p>
<p>“May I talk to him?” Mike asked.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</SPAN></span>
She shook her head. “Fitz is running him through an analysis. He
even made me leave.” Then she looked at his face more closely.
“You don’t just want to confront him and call him a liar, do
you? No—that’s not like you. You know he’s just a
machine—better than I do, I guess.... What is it, Mike?”</p>
<p><i>No</i>, he thought, looking at her, <i>she still thinks he’s human.
Otherwise, she’d know that a computer can’t lie—not in the
human sense of the word.</i></p>
<p><i>Most people, if told that a man had said one thing, and that a computer
had given a different answer, would rely on the computer.</i></p>
<p>“What is it, Mike?” she repeated.</p>
<p>“Lew Mellon,” he said very quietly, “is dead.”</p>
<p>The blood drained from her face, leaving her skin stark against the
bright red of her hair. For a moment he thought she was going to faint.
Then a little of the color came back.</p>
<p>“Snookums.” Her voice was whispery.</p>
<p>He shook his head. “No. Apparently he tried to jump Vaneski and
got hit with a stun beam. It shouldn’t have killed him—but
apparently it did.”</p>
<p>“God, God, God,” she said softly. “Here I’ve
been crying about a damned machine, and poor Lew has been lying up there
dead.” She buried her face in her hands, and her voice was muffled
when she spoke again. “And I’m all cried out, Mike. I
can’t cry any more.”</p>
<p>Before Mike could make up his mind whether to say anything or not, the
door of Snookums’ room opened and Dr. Fitzhugh came out, closing
the door behind him. There was an odd, stricken look on his face. He
looked at Leda and then at Mike, but the expression on his face showed
that he really hadn’t seen them clearly.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</SPAN></span>
“Did you ever wonder if a robot had a soul, Mike?” he asked
in a wondering tone.</p>
<p>“No,” Mike admitted.</p>
<p>Leda took her hands from her face and looked at him. Her expression was
a bright blank stare.</p>
<p>“He won’t answer my questions,” Fitzhugh said in a
hushed tone. “I can’t complete the analysis.”</p>
<p>“What’s that got to do with his soul?” Mike asked.</p>
<p>“He won’t answer my questions,” Fitzhugh repeated,
looking earnestly at Mike. “He says God won’t allow him
to.”</p>
<hr /><p class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</SPAN></p>
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