Read Asimov's Future History Volume 4 Online
Authors: Isaac Asimov
Asimov’s Future History
Volume IV
All stories copyright Isaac Asimov and the Estate of Isaac Asimov, unless otherwise noted below.
All other stories copyright by the respective authors listed below.
The Caves of Steel
-First published as a serial in
Galaxy Science Fiction
, October, November & December, 1953
The Naked Sun
-First published as a serial in
Astounding Science Fiction
, October, November & December, 1956
Mirror Image
-First published in
Analog Science Fiction/Science Fact
, May, 1972
Strip-Runner
-By
Pamela Sargent
. First published in
Foundation’s Friends: Stories in Honor of Isaac Asimov
, September, 1989
The Robots of Dawn
-First published in October, 1983
This
ePub edition v1.0 by Dead^Man March, 2011
Layout and design by DeadMan
Cover art “
New London
” By
Xenomorph Designs
of DeviantArt
Future History
inlay “
Summer days
” by
Talros
of DeviantArt
Cover design by Dead^Man
Chronology of events in Isaac Asimov’s positronic robot and Foundation stories, compiled by Johnny Pez.
Table of Contents
3421 AD
The Caves of Steel
10: Afternoon of a Plain-clothes Man
16: Questions Concerning a Motive
3422 AD
The Naked Sun
13: A Roboticist Is Confronted
3423 AD
Mirror Image
3424 AD
Strip-Runner
3424 AD
The Robots of Dawn
The Caves of Steel
3421 A.D.
10: Afternoon of a Plain-clothes Man
T
HE
SQUAD
CAR
veered to one side, halted against the impersonal concrete wall of the motorway. With the humming of its motor stopped, the silence was dead and thick.
Baley looked at the robot next to him and said in an incongruously quiet voice, “What?”
Time stretched while Baley waited for an answer. A small and lonesome vibration rose and reached a minor peak, then faded. It was the sound of another squad car, boring its way past them on some unknown errand, perhaps a mile away. Or else it was a fire car hurrying along toward its own appointment with combustion.
A detached portion of Baley’s mind wondered if any one man any longer knew all the motorways that twisted about in New York City’s bowels. At no time in the day or night could the entire motorway system be completely empty, and yet there must be individual passages that no man had entered in years. With sudden, devastating clarity, he remembered a short story he had viewed as a youngster.
It concerned the motorways of London and began, quietly enough, with a murder. The murderer fled toward a prearranged hideout in the corner of a motorway in whose dust his own shoeprints had been the only disturbance for a century. In that abandoned hole, he could wait in complete safety till the search died.
But he took a wrong turning and in the silence and loneness of those twisting corridors he swore a mad and blaspheming oath that, in spite of the Trinity and all the saints, he would yet reach his haven.
From that time on, no turning was right. He wandered through an unending maze from the Brighton Sector on the Channel to Norwich and from Coventry to Canterbury. He burrowed endlessly beneath the great City of London from end to end of its sprawl across the south-eastern corner of Medieval England. His clothes were rags and his shoes ribbons, his strength wore down but never left him. He was tired, tired, but unable to stop. He could only go on and on with only wrong turnings ahead of him.
Sometimes he heard the sound of passing cars, but they were always in the next corridor, and however fast he rushed (for he would gladly have given himself up by then) the corridors he reached were always empty. Sometimes he saw an exit far ahead that would lead to the City’s life and breath, but it always glimmered further away as he approached until he would turn–and it would be gone.
Occasionally, Londoners on official business through the underground would see a misty figure limping silently toward them, a semitransparent arm lifted in pleading, a mouth open and moving, but soundless. As it approached, it would waver and vanish.
It was a story that hid lost the attributes of ordinary fiction and had entered the realm of folklore. The “Wandering Londoner” had become a familiar phrase to all the world.
In the depths of New York City, Baley remembered the story and stirred uneasily.
R. Daneel spoke and there was a small echo to his voice. He said, “We may be overheard.”
“Down here? Not a chance. Now what about the Commissioner?”
“He was on the scene, Elijah. He is a City dweller. He was inevitably a suspect.”
“Was! Is he still a suspect?”
“No. His innocence was quickly established. For one thing, there was no blaster in his possession. There could not very well be one. He had entered Spacetown in the usual fashion; that was quite certain; and, as you know, blasters are removed as a matter of course.”
“Was the murder weapon found at all, by the way?”
“No, Elijah. Every blaster in Spacetown was checked and none had been fired for weeks. A check of the radiation chambers was quite conclusive.”
“Then whoever had committed the murder had either hidden the weapon so well–”
“It could not have been hidden anywhere in Spacetown. We were quite thorough.”
Baley said impatiently, “I’m trying to consider all possibilities. It was either hidden or it was carried away by the murderer when he left.”
“Exactly.”
“And if you admit only the second possibility, then the Commissioner is cleared.”
“Yes. As a precaution, of course, he was cerebroanalyzed.”
“What?”
“By cerebroanalysis, I mean the interpretation of the electromagnetic fields of the living brain cells.”
“Oh,” said Baley, unenlightened. “And what does that tell you?”
“It gives us information concerning the temperamental and emotional makeup of an individual. In the case of Commissioner Enderby, it told us that he was incapable of killing Dr. Sarton. Quite incapable.”
“No,” agreed Baley. “He isn’t the type. I could have told you that.”
“It is better to have objective information. Naturally, all our people in Spacetown allowed themselves to be cerebroanalyzed as well.”
“All incapable, I suppose.”
“No question. It is why we know that the murderer must be a City dweller.”
“Well, then, all we have to do is pass the whole City under your cute little process.”
“It would not be very practical, Elijah. There might be millions temperamentally capable of the deed.”
“Millions,” grunted Baley, thinking of the crowds of that long ago day who had screamed at the dirty Spacers, and of the threatening and slobbering crowds outside the shoe store the night before.
He thought: Poor Julius. A suspect!
He could hear the Commissioner’s voice describing the period after the discovery of the body: “It was brutal, brutal.” No wonder he broke his glasses in shock and dismay. No wonder he did not want to return to Spacetown. “I hate them,” he had ground out between his teeth..
Poor Julius. The man who could handle Spacers. The man whose greatest value to the City lay in his ability to get along with them. How much did that contribute to his rapid promotions?
No wonder the Commissioner had wanted Baley to take over. Good old loyal, close-mouthed Baley. College chum! He would keep quiet if he found out about that little incident. Baley wondered how cerebroanalysis was carried out. He imagined huge electrodes, busy pantographs skidding inklines across graphed paper, self-adjusting gears clicking into place now and then.
Poor Julius. If his state of mind were as appalled as it almost had a right to be, he might already be seeing himself at the end of his career with a forced letter of resignation in the hands of the Mayor.
The squad car slanted up into the sublevels of City Hall.
It was 14:30 when Baley arrived back at his desk. The Commissioner was out. R. Sammy, grinning, did not know where the Commissioner was.
Baley spent some time thinking. The fact that he was hungry didn’t register.
At 15:20 R. Sammy came to his desk and said, “The Commissioner is in now, Lije.”
Baley said, “Thanks.”
For once he listened to R. Sammy without being annoyed. R. Sammy, after all, was a kind of relation to R. Daneel, and R. Daneel obviously wasn’t a person–or thing, rather–to get annoyed with. Baley wondered how it would be on a new planet with men and robots starting even in a City culture. He considered the situation quite dispassionately.