“Very well. Then this is
He came to an end and stared at the Texcocans.
Taller said, “There seems to be no agreement between the two delegations.”
Across from him the ancient Honorable Russ said, “It is difficult to measure this progress which both planets advocate. We seem to count refrigerators, television and privately owned cars and houses. You seem to ignore personal standards and concentrate on steel tonnage and the size of the grain harvest.”
The Texcocan scientist, Wiss, said easily, “Given the steel mills, and eventually automobiles and refrigerators will run off our assembly lines like water and will be available for everyone, not just for those who can afford to buy them. That is our goal, an abundance for all, and eventually we will reach it.”
“Hmmm, eventually,” Peter MacDonald laughed nastily.
The atmosphere was suddenly hostile. Hostile beyond anything that had gone before in earlier conference. There was an absolute burden of hate in the air.
And then Martin Gunther said without inflection, “I note that you have removed from the
“For the purpose of study,” Dick Hawkins said smoothly.
“Of course,” Gunther said. “Did you plan to return it in the immediate future?”
“I am afraid our studies will take some time,” Barry Watson said flatly.
“I was afraid so,” Gunther said. “Happily, I took the precaution of making microfilms of the material involved more than a year ago.”
Barry Watson pushed his chair back and came to his feet. “We seem to have accomplished what little was possible by the meeting,” he said. Then, “If anything.” He looked to his right and his left at his cohorts. “Let’s go, gentlemen.”
They came stiffly erect. Watson turned on his heel and started for the door.
As they left, Natt Roberts turned for a moment and said to Gunther, “One thing, Martin. During this next ten years you might consider whether or not half a century has been enough to accomplish our task. Should we consider staying on? I would think the Co-ordinator would accept any recommendation along this line that we might make.”
The Genoese delegation looked after him thoughtfully, long after he had gone.
Finally, Martin Gunther said, “Baron Leonar, I think it might be a good idea if you put some of your men to work on making steel alloys suitable for spacecraft. The way things are developing, perhaps well need them in the not too distant future.”
Buchwald and MacDonald looked at him unblinkingly.
It was fifty years to a day since the
Of the original crew of the
Barry Watson, Natt Roberts, Dick Hawkins, Isobel Sanchez, of the Texcocan team.
Martin Gunther, Peter MacDonald, Fredric Buchwald of the Genoese.
The gathering wasn’t so large as the one before. Only Taller and the scientist Wiss attended from Texcoco; only Baron Leonar and the son of Honorable Russ, from Genoa.
From the beginning they stared with hostility across the conference table. Even the pretense of amiability was gone.
Barry Watson rapped finally. “I am not going to dwell upon the measures you have been taking that can only be construed as military ones aimed eventually at the Texcocan State.”
Martin Gunther laughed nastily. “Is your implication that your own people have not taken the same measures, in fact, inaugurated them?”
Watson said, “As I say, I have no intention of even discussing this. Surely we can arrive at no agreement. There is one point, however, that we should consider on this occasion.”
The corpulent Peter MacDonald wheezed. “Well, out with it, then!”
Natt Roberts said, “I mentioned the matter to you at the last meeting.”