INTERVENTION (51 page)

Read INTERVENTION Online

Authors: Julian May,Ted Dikty

BOOK: INTERVENTION
4.15Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

MORENO

How about emotions? Anger, say. Or fear. If a person with strong metafunctions was afraid of the reactions others might have—afraid of hostility—could that make his powers go latent?

REMILLARD

It's possible. A strongly hostile or skeptical group of observers can also inhibit displays of metafunction.

MORENO

Have
you
ever experienced a diminishing of your own mind-powers because of emotional influences?

REMILLARD

(hesitating)

No. If anything, the adrenalin released by my body in response to such emotions would tend to reinforce my metafaculties. But then, I've been using the powers all my life, from the time I was an infant. When we begin training small children to operancy, we'll probably find that their higher faculties will remain usefully operant under all but the most extreme inhibitory conditions. After all—you yourself are seldom too shocked to speak. Or to see or hear. Or even to react in an emergency.

CU MORENO

MORENO

This testing and training program you advocate. Some people might say it had certain dangers. We'd be setting up a kind of elite mind-corps, wouldn't we? One that might eventually feel justified in seeking political power on the basis of their superior mentality.

TWO SHOT

REMILLARD

I don't think there's any danger of that.

MORENO

Oh?...Do you mean these operants would think politics was beneath them?

REMILLARD

(impatiently)

Certainly not. But there are so many other jobs to do that operants would find more satisfying. Einstein didn't run for President, you know.

CU MORENO

MORENO

(suddenly)

Do you, as a powerful operant, feel superior to normal people?

CU REMILLARD

REMILLARD

(again looking at plant, frowning)

The way you've phrased that question is somewhat inimical. Does a concert violinist feel superior to the audience? Does a mathematician feel superior to a cordon-bleu chef? Does a librarian with an eidetic memory feel superior to an absent-minded professor who won a Nobel Prize?

(lifts eyes and speaks deliberately)

Mr. Moreno, we all do things we know are wrong ... like harbor prejudices to boost our insecure egos. One can suffer from shaky self-esteem no matter how well educated or how poorly educated one happens to be. Even television journalists can show bias for or against people they interview ... I don't
think
that I look down upon persons without operant metafunctions. I'd be a fool if I did. I have certain talents, yes. But I lack so many others! I can't play the violin or sing or even cook very well. I'm not good at drawing pictures or playing tennis. I'm a terrible driver because I'm always off in the clouds instead of paying attention to traffic. I tend to shilly-shally around instead of making decisions promptly. So I would be an integral idiot to think of myself as a superior being ... and I don't know of any other operants who think that way. If they do exist, I hope I never meet up with them.

CU MORENO

MORENO

How about the flip side of that question, then? Do you ever feel threatened by nonoperants?

TWO SHOT—REMILLARD FAVORED

REMILLARD

When I was much younger I kept my mind-powers completely under wraps because I didn't want others to know I was different. I wanted to be just like everyone else. You've interviewed a number of other operants for your television series, so you know that such protective coloration activity is the usual thing for youngsters who grow up with self-taught metafunctions. Minorities who seem to be a threat to majorities make the adaptations they must in order to survive.

MORENO

Then you admit that operant psychics
can
pose a threat to normals!

REMILLARD

(calmly)

I said
seem to.
Persons who are different from others in marked ways are often perceived as threatening. But it doesn't have to be that way. That's what civilization is supposed to be all about—resolving differences maturely, not acting like bands of frightened children. The gap between operant and nonoperant is only the latest that modern society has faced. We also have technology gaps, economic gaps, cultural gaps, the generation gap, and even a sexual gap. You can refuse to cross the gap and throw rocks at each other, or you can cooperate to build a bridge to mutual betterment.

INTERCUT STOCK SHOTS—MONTAGE

Riotous scenes at London and Tokyo stock exchanges; mobs besiege banks at Geneva and Zurich; Monte Carlo Casino with sign: RELÂCHE/GESCHLOSSEN/CLOSED UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE;
Time
magazine cover: DEFENSE STOCK DEBACLE; newspaper headlines: RUSSIA DUMPS GOLD, OIL LEASE CHAOS, COCA-COLA FORMULA REVEALED, OFFSHORE TAX REFUGES SELF-DESTRUCT;
Newsweek
magazine cover: WHO WILL WATCH THE WATCHERS?

MORENO (V.O.)

But we've seen the turmoil that rocked the world stock and commodity markets following the Edinburgh Demonstration. And you must know that certain financiers and businesses that depend upon secrecy for their operations look upon telepathy and excorporeal excursion as deadly menaces. Other very serious problems are just beginning to crop up. Operants aren't numerous enough yet to pose much of a threat to society or to the global economy, but what about the future, when the superminds you propose to train begin to invade every walk of life?

TWO SHOT

REMILLARD

Operants aren't invaders from outer space, Mr. Moreno. We're only people. Citizens, not superbeings. We want just about the same things that you want—a peaceful and prosperous world for ourselves and our children, satisfying work, freedom from prejudice and oppression, a bit of fun now and then, someone to love ... This invasion of yours: Do you realize you could be talking about your own children or grandchildren? Our preliminary studies seem to show that the human race has reached a critical point in evolution. Our gene pool is throwing up increasing numbers of individuals with the potential for becoming what you call a supermind.

MORENO

(looking slightly shaken)

My children?

REMILLARD

Or those of your cousins and uncles and aunts ... or neighbors, or coworkers. In years to come, all humans will be born operant! But that's a long way off, and we poor souls are going to have to endure life in the transition zone during the foreseeable future. I won't minimize the fact that we may have a tough time. Adjustments will have to be made. But all throughout human history society has had to confront revolutions that overturned the old order. In the Stone Age, metal was a threat! The first automobiles frightened the horses and doomed the buggy-whip makers. But what one group sees as a threat, another group may hail as a blessing. Not to belabor the point... but did you notice that the latest issue of the
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists
has turned back the hands of its doomsday clock from two minutes before midnight to half past eleven?

MORENO

(permitting himself a wintry smile)

Is that how you operants see yourselves, Professor? As the saviors of humanity?

CU REMILLARD

REMILLARD

(sighs, fingering the plant)

Sometimes I wonder whether we might be the first scattered spores of the evolving World Mind ... and then again, we might be only evolutionary dead ends, the mental equivalents of those fossil Irish elk with the six-foot antlers that were gorgeous to look at but losers in the survival game.

He looks at the plant, which seems noticeably perkier. Opening a desk decanter, he pours a bit of water into the pot.

MORENO (V.O.)

(incredulously)

A
World Mind!
You mean, some kind of superstate, like the Marxists envisioned? Operancy will lead to that?

TWO SHOT

REMILLARD

(laughs heartily)

No, no. Not a bit of it! No chance of our evolving into a metapsychic beehive. Humanity's individuality is its strength. But, you see ... with the telepathy, especially, you have the potential for vastly increased empathy: mind-to-mind socialization on a level above any we've ever known ... And it would be such a logical and elegant survival response, the World Mind. A perfect counterpoint to our increasingly dangerous technical advances.

MORENO

I still don't understand.

INTERCUT MYXOMYCETES NATURAL HISTORY SEQUENCE—paralleling Remillard's VOICE OVER.

REMILLARD (V.O.)

Perhaps an analogy will help. There's a peculiar group of living things called Myxomycetes—or, to give them their more prosaic name, slime molds. A slime mold is either an animal that acts like a plant, or a plant that acts like an animal. Officially, it's a type of fungus. But it's capable of independent movement, like an animal. In its usual form, the slime mold is like a tiny amoeba, flowing here and there on the forest floor engulfing and eating bacteria and other microscopic goodies. It eats, it grows, and in time it splits like a genuine amoeba into two individuals. In a favorable forest environment there will be thousands or even millions of these little single-celled eaters going about their individual business ... But sometimes, the food supply gives out. Perhaps the forest dries up in a prolonged drought. In some way the individual cells seem to realize that it's "unite or die" time. They begin to come together. First they form blobs and then rivulets of slime. These flow toward a central point and combine into a multicelled mass of jelly that becomes a real
organism,
sometimes more than thirty centimeters in diameter ... and it creeps along the ground. Some creeping slime molds look like pancakes of dusty jelly and some look like slugs, leaving a trail of slime behind. The organism may travel for two weeks, looking for a more favorable place to live. When it stops migrating it changes shape again—often to a thing like a knob at the end of a stalk. In time the knob splits open and releases a cloud of dusty spores that fly through the air. Eventually the spores come to earth, where warmth and moisture turn them into amoebalike individuals again. They take up their old life—until the
next time things get rough and
Unity becomes imperative ...

TWO SHOT—REMILLARD AND MORENO—STEADICAM FOLLOWING—

We discover them as they are approaching the exit of the RESEARCH FACILITY. Moreno is leaving.

MORENO

And you really believe that human minds will have to come together in somewhat the same way in order to survive?

REMILLARD

The idea seems very natural to a telepath, Mr. Moreno. It's only a higher form of socialization, after all. To a tribe of primitives living at the clan level, the notion of a complex democratic society seems hopelessly bizarre. But primitives transplanted into industrial nations have often adapted very successfully. Think of some of the Southeast Asian hill folk who came to America in the 1970s and '80s. A World Mind is quite plausible to operants, and of course it would include nonoperant minds as well.

MORENO

I don't see how!

REMILLARD

Neither do I ... at the moment. But that's the payoff that some of us metapsychic theoreticians envision. A society of the mind evolving toward harmony and mutualism that still lets individuals retain their freedom. That's one of the topics we'll be discussing in Alma-Ata next year, at the First World Congress on Metapsychology. We'll deal with practicalities first, but then the universe is the limit! It may take a few thousand years to accomplish a World Mind, but I like to think of the meeting there in Kazakhstan as the first little blob of amoebas flowing together into a true organism. The creature is still tiny and not very effectual... but it'll grow.

CUT TO MORENO CU—AGAINST PROGRAM LOGO (MATTE)

MORENO

(addressing viewers)

Denis Remillard's vision is an amazing one—but then he is an amazing man. Perhaps, as the President said, a supermind. Right now there are at most a few hundred others like him scattered around the world. But tomorrow, and next year, and in the twenty-first century fast approaching, those superminds among us will multiply. And as they do, they'll change the world. How they change it remains to be seen ... I'm Carlos Moreno for
60 Minutes.

FADE TO COMMERCIAL BREAK

23

FROM THE MEMOIRS OF ROGATIEN REMILLARD

 

W
HY HAD I
done it?

Other books

The Wedding Deal by Marie Kelly
Leaning Land by Rex Burns
The Complete Simon Iff by Aleister Crowley
A Spy's Honor by Russell, Charlotte
The Silver Dragon by Jean S. MacLeod