Authors: The Cyberiad [v1.0] [htm]
provides us with no end of enjoyment. Indeed, the art of the
preparation of corpses is more esteemed among us than astronautics
and is termed gastronautics, or gastronomy—which, however, has
nothing to do with astronomy."
"Does this then mean that you
play at being cemeteries, making of yourselves the very coffins that
hold your four-legged brethren?" This question was dangerously
loaded, but Ferrix, instructed by the sage, answered thus:
"It is no game, Your Highness,
but rather a necessity, for life lives on life. But we have made of
this necessity a great art."
"Well then, tell me, Myamlak the
paleface, how do you build your progeny?" asked the princess.
"In faith, we do not build them
at all," said Ferrix, "but program them statistically,
according to Markov's formula for stochastic probability,
emotional-evolutional albeit distributional, and we do this
involuntarily and coincidentally, while thinking of a variety of
things that have nothing whatever to do with programming,
whether statistical, alinear or algorithmical, and the programming
itself takes place autonomously, automatically and wholly
autoerotically, for it is precisely thus and not otherwise that we
are constructed, that each and every paleface strives to program his
progeny, for it is delightful, but programs without programming,
doing all within his power to keep that programming from bearing
fruit."
"Strange," said the
princess, whose erudition in this area was less extensive than that
of the wise Polyphase. "But how exactly is this done?"
"O Princess!" replied
Ferrix. "We possess suitable apparatuses constructed on the
principle of regenerative feedback coupling, though of course all
this is in water. These apparatuses present a veritable miracle of
technology, yet even the greatest idiot can use them. But to describe
the precise procedure of their operation I would have to lecture at
considerable length, since the matter is most complex. Still, it is
strange, when you consider that we never invented these methods, but
rather they, so to speak, invented them- | selves. Even so, they are
perfectly functional and we have | nothing against them."
"Verily," exclaimed Crystal,
"you are a paleface! That which you say, it's as if it made
sense, though it doesn't really, not in the least. For how can one be
a cemetery without being a cemetery, or program progeny, yet not
program it at all?! Yes, you are indeed a paleface, Myamlak, and
therefore, should you so desire it, I shall couple with you in a
closed-circuit matrimonial coupling, and you shall ascend the
throne with me—provided you pass one last test."
"And what is that?" asked
Ferrix.
"You must…" began the
princess, but suddenly suspicion again entered her heart and she
asked, "Tell me first, what do your brothers do at night?"
"At night they lie here and
there, with bent arms and twisted legs, and air goes into them and
comes out of them, raising in the process a noise not unlike the
sharpening of a rusty saw."
"Well then, here is the test:
give me your hand!" commanded the princess.
Ferrix gave her his hand, and she
squeezed it, whereupon he cried out in a loud voice, just as the sage
had instructed him. And she asked him why he had cried out.
"From the pain!" replied
Ferrix.
At this point she had no more doubts
about his palefaceness and promptly ordered the preparations for the
wedding ceremony to commence.
But it so happened, at that very
moment, that the spaceship of Cybercount Cyberhazy, the
princess' Elector, returned from its interstellar expedition to
find a paleface (for the insidious Cybercount sought to worm his way
into her good graces). Polyphase, greatly alarmed, ran to Ferrix's
side and said:
"Prince, Cyberhazy's spaceship
has just arrived, and he's brought the princess a genuine paleface—I
saw the thing with my own eyes. We must leave while we still can,
since all further masquerade will become impossible when the princess
sees it and you together: its stickiness is stickier, its ickiness is
ickier! Our subterfuge will be discovered and we beheaded!"
Ferrix, however, could not agree to
ignominious flight, for his passion for the princess was great, and
he said:
"Better to die, than lose her!"
Meanwhile Cyberhazy, having learned of
the wedding preparations, sneaked beneath the window of the room
where they were staying and overheard everything; then he rushed back
to the palace, bubbling over with villainous joy, and announced to
Crystal:
"You have been deceived, Your
Highness, for the so-called Myamlak is actually an ordinary mortal
and no paleface. Here is the real paleface!"
And he pointed to the thing that had
been ushered in. The thing expanded its hairy breast, batted its
watery eyes and said:
"Me paleface!"
The princess summoned Ferrix at once,
and when he stood before her alongside that thing, the sage's ruse
became entirely obvious. Ferrix, though he was smeared with mud,
dust and chalk, anointed with oil and aqueously gurgling, could
hardly conceal his electroknightly stature, his magnificent posture,
the breadth of those steel shoulders, that thunderous stride. Whereas
the paleface of Cybercount Cyberhazy was a genuine monstrosity: its
every step was like the overflowing of marshy vats, its face was like
a scummy well; from its rotten breath the mirrors all covered over
with a blind mist, and some iron nearby was seized with rust.
Now the princess realized how utterly
revolting a paleface was—when it spoke, it was as if a pink
worm tried to squirm from its maw. At last she had seen the light,
but her pride would not permit her to reveal this change of heart. So
she said:
"Let them do battle, and to the
winner—my hand in marriage…"
Ferrix whispered to the sage:
"If I attack this abomination and
crush it, reducing it to the mud from which it came, our imposture
will become apparent, for the clay will fall from me and the steel
will show. What should I do?"
"Prince," replied Polyphase,
"don't attack, just defend yourself!"
Both antagonists stepped out into the
palace courtyard, each armed with a sword, and the paleface leaped
upon Ferrix as the slime leaps upon a swamp, and danced about him,
gurgling, cowering, panting, and it swung at him with its blade, and
the blade cut through the clay and shattered against the steel, and
the paleface fell against the prince due to the momentum of the blow,
and it smashed and broke, and splashed apart, and was no more.
But the dried clay, once moved,
slipped from Ferrix's shoulders, revealing his true steely nature to
the eyes of the princess; he trembled, awaiting his fate. Yet in her
crystalline gaze he beheld admiration, and understood then how
much her heart had changed.
Thus they joined in matrimonial
coupling, which is permanent and reciprocal—joy and happiness
for some, for others misery until the grave—and they reigned
long and well, programming innumerable progeny. The skin of
Cybercount Cyberhazy's paleface was stuffed and placed in the royal
museum as an eternal reminder. It stands there to this day, a
scarecrow thinly overgrown with hair. Many pretenders to wisdom
say that this is all a trick and make-believe and nothing more, that
there's no such thing as paleface cemeteries, doughy-nosed and
gummy-eyed, and never was. Well, perhaps it was just another empty
invention—there are certainly fables enough in this world. And
yet, even if the story isn't true, it does have a grain of sense and
instruction to it, and it's entertaining as well, so it's worth
the telling.
THE END