From Gustible's Planet
Shortly after the celebration of the four
thousandth anniversary of the opening of space, Angary J. Gustible
discovered Gustible's planet. The discovery turned out to be a tragic
mistake.
Gustible's planet was inhabited by highly intelligent life forms. They
had moderate telepathic powers. They immediately mind-read Angary J.
Gustible's entire mind and life history, and embarrassed him very
deeply by making up an opera concerning his recent divorce.
The climax of the opera portrayed his wife throwing a teacup at him.
This created an unfavorable impression concerning Earth culture, and
Angary J. Gustible, who held a reserve commission as a Subchief of the
Instrumentality, was profoundly embarrassed to find that it was not the
higher realities of Earth which he had conveyed to these people, but
the unpleasant intimate facts.
As negotiations proceeded, other embarrassments developed.
In physical appearance the inhabitants of Gustible's planet, who called
themselves Apicians, resembled nothing more than oversize ducks, ducks
four feet to four feet six in height. At their wing tips, they had
developed juxtaposed thumbs. They were paddle-shaped and sufficed to
feed the Apicians.
Gustible's planet matched Earth in several respects: in the dishonesty
of the inhabitants, in their enthusiasm for good food, in their instant
capacity to understand the human mind. Before Gustible began to get
ready to go back to Earth, he discovered that the Apicians had copied
his ship. There was no use hiding this fact. They had copied it in
such detail that the discovery of Gustible's planet meant the
simultaneous discovery of Earth . . .
By the Apicians.
The implications of this tragic development did not show up until the
Apicians followed him home. They had a plano forming ship capable of
traveling in non-space just as readily as his.
The most important feature of Gustible's planet was its singularly
close match to the biochemistry of Earth. The Apicians were the first
intelligent life forms ever met by human beings who were at once
capable of smelling and enjoying everything which human beings smelled
and enjoyed, capable of following any human music with forthright
pleasure, and capable of eating and drinking everything in sight.
The very first Apicians on Earth were greeted by somewhat alarmed
ambassadors who discovered that an appetite for Munich beer, Camembert
cheese, tortillas, and enchiladas, as well as the better grades of chow
mein, far transcended any serious cultural, political, or strategic
interests which the new visitors might have.
Arthur Djohn, a Lord of the Instrumentality who was acting for this
particular matter, delegated an Instrumentality agent named Calvin
Dredd as the chief diplomatic officer of Earth to handle the matter.
Dredd approached one Schmeckst, who seemed to be the Apician leader.
The interview was an unfortunate one.
Dredd began by saying,
"Your Exalted Highness, we are delighted to welcome you to Earth "
Schmeckst said,
"Are those edible?" and proceeded to eat the plastic buttons from
Calvin Dredd's formal coat, even before Dredd could say though not
edible they were attractive.
Schmeckst said,
"Don't try to eat those, they are really not very good."
Dredd, looking at his coat sagging wide open, said,
"May I offer you some food?"
Schmeckst said,
"Indeed, yes."
And while Schmeckst ate an Italian dinner, a Peking dinner, a red-hot
peppery Szechuanese dinner, a Japanese sukiyaki dinner, two British
breakfasts, a smorgasbord, and four complete servings of
diplomatic-level Russian zakouska, he listened to the propositions of
the Instrumentality of Earth.
These did not impress him. Schmeckst was intelligent despite his gross
and offensive eating habits. He pointed out: "We two worlds are equal
in weapons. We can't fight. Look," said he to Calvin Dredd in a
threatening tone.
Calvin Dredd braced himself, as he had learned to do.
Schmeckst also braced him.
For an instant Dredd did not know what had happened. Then he realized
that in putting his body into a rigid and controlled posture he had
played along with the low-grade but manipulable telepathic powers of
the visitors. He was frozen rigid till Schmeckst laughed and released
him.
Schmeckst said,
"You see, we are well matched. I can freeze you. Nothing short of
utter desperation could get you out of it. If you try to fight us,
we'll lick you. We are going to move in here and live with you. We
have enough room on our planet. You can come and live with us too. We
would like to hire a lot of those cooks of yours. You'll simply have
to divide space with us, and that's all there is to it."
That really was all there was to it. Arthur Djohn reported back to the
Lords of the Instrumentality that, for the time being, nothing could be
done about the disgusting people from Gustible's planet.
They kept their greed within bounds by their standards. A mere
seventy-two thousand of them swept the Earth, hitting every wine shop,
dining hall, snack bar, soda bar, and pleasure center in the world.
They ate popcorn, alfalfa, raw fruit, live fish, birds on the wing,
prepared foods, cooked and canned foods, food concentrates, and
assorted medicines.
Outside of an enormous capacity to hold many times what the human body
could tolerate in the way of food, they showed very much the same
effects as persons. Thousands of them got various local diseases,
sometimes called by such undignified names as the Yangtze rapids, Delhi
belly, the Roman groanin', or the like.
Other thousands became ill and had to relieve themselves in the fashion
of ancient emperors. Still they came.
Nobody liked them. Nobody disliked them enough to wish a disastrous
war.
Actual trade was minimal. They bought large quantities of foodstuffs,
paying in rare metals. But their economy on their own planet produced
very little which the world itself wanted. The cities of mankind had
long since developed to a point of comfort and corruption where a
relatively inonocultural being, such as the citizens of Gustible's
planet, could not make much impression.
The word
"Apician" came to have unpleasant connotations of bad manners,
greediness, and prompt payment. Prompt payment was considered rude in
a credit society, but after all it was better than not being paid at
all.
The tragedy of the relationship of the two groups came from the
unfortunate picnic of the lady Ch'ao, who prided herself on having
ancient Chinesian blood. She decided that it would be possible to
satiate Schmeckst and the other Apicians to a point at which they would
be able to listen to reason. She arranged a feast which, for quality
and quantity, had not been seen since previous historic times, long
before the many interruptions of war, collapse, and rebuilding of
culture. She searched the museums of the world for recipes.
The dinner was set forth on the tele screens of the entire world. It
was held in a pavilion built in the old Chinesian style.
A soaring dream of dry bamboo and paper walls, the festival building
had a thatched roof in the true ancient fashion. Paper lanterns with
real candles illuminated the scene. The fifty selected Apician guests
gleamed like ancient idols. Their
of Man feathers shone in the light and they clicked their paddle like
thumbs readily as they spoke, telepathically and fluently, in any Earth
language which they happened to pick out of the heads of their
hearers.
The tragedy was fire. Fire struck the pavilion, wrecked the dinner.
The lady Ch'ao was rescued by Calvin Dredd. The Apicians fled. All of
them escaped, all but one. Schmeckst himself. Schmeckst suffocated.
He let out a telepathic scream which was echoed in the living voices of
all the human beings, other Apicians, and animals within reach, so that
the television viewers of the world caught a sudden cacophony of birds
shrilling, dogs barking, cats yowling, otters screeching, and one lone
panda letting out a singularly high grunt. Then Schmeckst perished.
The pity of it... The Earth leaders stood about, wondering how to solve
the tragedy. On the other side of the world, the Lords of the
Instrumentality watched the scene. What they saw was amazing and
horrible. Calvin Dredd, cold, disciplined agent that he was,
approached the ruins of the pavilion. His face was twisted in an
expression which they had difficulty in understanding. It was only
after he licked his lips for the fourth time and they saw a ribbon of
drool running down his chin that they realized he had gone mad with
appetite. The lady Ch'ao followed close behind, drawn by some
remorseless force.
She was out of her mind. Her eyes gleamed. She stalked like a cat. In
her left hand she held a bowl and chopsticks.
The viewers all over the world watching the screen could not understand
the scene. Two alarmed and dazed Apicians followed the humans,
wondering what was going to happen.
Calvin Dredd made a sudden reach. He pulled out the body of
Schmeckst.
The fire had finished Schmeckst. Not a feather remained on him. And
then the flash fire, because of the peculiar dryness of the bamboo and
the paper and the thousands upon thousands of candles, had baked him.
The television operator had an inspiration. He turned on the
smell-control.
Throughout the planet Earth, where people had gathered to watch this
unexpected and singularly interesting tragedy, there swept a smell
which mankind had forgotten. It was an essence of roast duck.
Beyond all imagining, it was the most delicious smell that any human
being had ever smelled. Millions upon millions of human mouths
watered. Throughout the world people looked away from their sets to
see if there were any Apicians in the neighborhood.
Just as the Lords of the Instrumentality ordered the disgusting scene
cut off, Calvin Dredd and the lady Ch'ao began eating the roast
Apician, Schmeckst.
Within twenty-four hours most of the Apicians on Earth had been
served, some with cranberry sauce, others baked, some fried Southern
style. The serious leaders of Earth dreaded the consequences of such
uncivilized conduct. Even as they wiped their lips and asked for one
more duck sandwich, they felt that this behavior was difficult beyond
all imagination.
The blocks that the Apicians had been able to put on human action did
not operate when they were applied to human beings who, looking at an
Apician, went deep into the recesses of their personality and were
animated by a mad hunger which transcended all civilization.
The Lords of the Instrumentality managed to round up Schmeckst's deputy
and a few other Apicians and to send them back to their ship.
The soldiers watching them licked their lips. The captain tried to see
if he could contrive an accident as he escorted his state visitors.
Unfortunately, tripping Apicians did not break their necks, and the
Apicians kept throwing violent mind-blocks at human beings in an
attempt to save themselves.
One of the Apicians was so undiplomatic as to ask for a chicken salad
sandwich and almost lost a wing, raw and alive, to a soldier whose
appetite had been restimulated by reference to food.
The Apicians went back, the few survivors. They liked Earth well
enough and Earth food was delicious, but it was a horrible place when
they considered the cannibalistic human beings who lived there so
cannibalistic that they ate ducks!
The Lords of the Instrumentality were relieved to note that when the
Apicians left they closed the space lane behind them.
No one quite knows how they closed it, or what defenses they had.
Mankind, salivating and ashamed, did not push the pursuit hotly.
Instead, people tried to make up chicken, duck, goose, Cornish hen,
pigeon, sea-gull, and other sandwiches to duplicate the incomparable
taste of a genuine inhabitant of Gustible's planet. None were quite
authentic and people, in their right minds, were not uncivilized enough
to invade another world solely for getting the inhabitants as
tidbits.
The Lords of the Instrumentality were happy to report to one another
and to the rest of the world at their next meeting that the Apicians
had managed to close Gustible's planet altogether, had had no further
interest in dealing with Earth, and appeared to possess just enough of
a technological edge on human beings to stay concealed from the eyes
and the appetites of men.
Save for that, the Apicians were almost forgotten. A confidential
secretary of the Office of Interstellar Trade was astonished when the
frozen intelligences of a methane planet ordered forty thousand cases
of Munich beer He suspected them of being jobbers, not consumers. But
on the instructions of his superiors he kept the matter confidential
and allowed the beer to be shipped.
It undoubtedly went to Gustible's planet, but they did not offer any of
their own citizens in exchange.
The matter was closed. The napkins were folded. Trade and diplomacy
were at an end.