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For a long moment, Webster stood on the broad marble steps before his house, looking down the street. A pretty street, he told himself, the prettiest street in all Geneva, with its boulevard of trees, its carefully tended flower beds, the walks that glistened with the scrub and polish of ever-working robots.

No one moved along the street and it wasn’t strange. The robots had finished their work early in the day and there were few people.

From some high treetop a bird sang and the song was one with the sun and flowers, a gladsome song that strained at the bursting throat, a song that tripped and skipped with boundless joy.

A neat street drowsing in the sun and a great, proud city that had lost its purpose. A street that should be filled with laughing children and strolling lovers and old men resting in the sun. And a city, the last city on Earth, the only city on Earth, that should be filled with noise and business.

A bird sang and a man stood on the steps and looked and the tulips nodded blissfully in the tiny fragrant breeze that wafted down the street.

Webster turned to the door, fumbled it open, walked across the threshold.

The room was hushed and solemn, cathedral-like with its stained glass windows and soft carpeting. Old wood glowed with the patina of age and silver and brass winked briefly in the light that fell from the slender windows. Over the fireplace hung a massive canvas, done in subdued coloring—a house upon a hill, a house that had grown roots and clung against the land with a jealous grip. Smoke came from the chimney, a wind-whipped, tenuous smoke that smudged across a storm-gray sky.

Webster walked across the room and there was no sound of walking. The rugs, he thought, the rugs protect the quietness of the place. Randall wanted to do this one over, too, but I wouldn’t let him touch it and I’m glad I didn’t. A man must keep something that is old, something he can cling to, something that is a heritage and a legacy and promise.

He reached his desk, thumbed a tumbler and the light came on above it. Slowly, he let himself into a chair, reached out for the portfolio of notes. He flipped the cover open and stared at the title page: “A study of the Functional Development of the City of Geneva.”

A brave title. Dignified and erudite. And a lot of work. Twenty years of work. Twenty years of digging among old dusty records, twenty years of reading and comparing, of evaluating the weight and words of those who had gone before, sifting and rejecting and working out the facts, tracing the trend not only of the city but of men. No hero worship, no legends, but facts. And facts are hard to come by.

Something rustled. No footstep, but a rustle, a sense that someone was near. Webster twisted in his chair. A robot stood just outside the circle of the desk light.

“Beg pardon, sir,” the robot said, “but I was supposed to tell you. Miss Sara is waiting in the Seashore.”

Webster started slightly. “Miss Sara, eh? It’s been a long time since she’s been here.”

“Yes, sir,” said the robot. “It seemed almost like old times, sir, when she walked in the door.”

“Thank you, Roscoe, for telling me,” said Webster. “I’ll go right out. You will bring some drinks.”

“She brought her own drinks, sir,” said Roscoe. “Something that Mr. Ballentree fixed up.”

“Ballentree!” exclaimed Webster. “I hope it isn’t poison.”

“I’ve been observing her,” Roscoe told him, “and she’s been drinking it and she’s still all right.”

Webster rose from his chair, crossed the room and went down the hall. He pushed open the door and the sound of the surf came to him. He blinked in the light that shone on the hot sand beach, stretching like a straight white line to either horizon. Before him the ocean was a sun-washed blue tipped with the white of foaming waves.

Sand gritted underneath his feet as he walked forward, eyes adjusting themselves to the blaze of sunlight.

Sara, he saw, was sitting in one of the bright canvas chairs underneath the palm trees and beside the chair was a pastel, very ladylike jug.

The air had a tang of salt and the wind off the water was cool in the sun-warm air.

The woman heard him and stood up and waited for him, with her hands outstretched. He hurried forward, clasped the outstretched hands and looked at her.

“Not a minute older,” he said. “As pretty as the day I saw you first.”

She smiled at him, eyes very bright. “And you, Jon. A little gray around the temples. A little handsomer. That is all.”

He laughed. “I’m almost sixty, Sara. Middle age is creeping up.”

“I brought something,” said Sara. “One of Ballentree’s latest masterpieces. It will cut your age in half.”

He grunted. “Wonder Ballentree hasn’t killed off half Geneva, the drinks that he cooks up.”

“This one is really good.”

It was. It went down smooth and it had a strange, half metallic, half ecstatic taste.

Webster pulled another chair close to Sara’s, sat down and looked at her.

“You have such a nice place here,” said Sara. “Randall did it, didn’t he?”

Webster nodded. “He had more fun than a circus, I had to beat him off with a club. And those robots of his! They’re crazier than he is.”

“But he does wonderful things. He did a Martian room for Quentin and it’s simply unworldly.”

“I know,” said Webster. “Was set on a deep-space one for here. Said it would be just the place to sit and think. Got sore at me when I wouldn’t let him do it.”

He rubbed the back of his left hand with his right thumb, staring off at the blue haze above the ocean. Sara leaned forward, pulled his thumb away.

“You still have the warts,” she said.

He grinned. “Yes. Could have had them taken off, but never got around to it. Too busy, I guess. Part of me by now.”

She released the thumb and he went back to rubbing the warts absent-mindedly.

“You’ve been busy,” she said. “Haven’t seen you around much. How is the book coming?”

“Ready to write,” said Webster. “Outlining it by chapters now. Checked on the last thing today. Have to make sure, you know. Place way down under the old Solar Administration Building. Some sort of a defense set-up. Control room. You push a lever and—”

“And what?”

“I don’t know,” said Webster. “Something effective, I suppose. Should try to find out, but can’t find the heart to do it. Been digging around in too much dust these last twenty years to face any more.”

“You sound discouraged, Jon. Tired. You shouldn’t get tired. There’s no reason for it. You should get around. Have another drink?”

He shook his head. “No, Sara, thanks. Not in the mood, I guess. I’m afraid, Sara—afraid.”

“Afraid?”

“This room,” said Webster. “Illusion. Mirrors that give an illusion of distance. Fans that blow the air through a salt spray, pumps that stir up the waves. A synthetic sun. And if I don’t like the sun, all I have to do is snap a switch and I have a moon.”

“Illusion,” said Sara.

“That’s it,” said Webster. “That is all we have. No real work, no real job. Nothing that we’re working for, no place we’re going. I’ve worked for twenty years and I’ll write a book and not a soul will read it. All they’d have to do would be spend the time to read it, but they won’t take the time. They won’t care. All they’d have to do would be come and ask me for a copy—and if they didn’t want to do that I’d be so glad someone was going to read it that I’d take it to them. But no one will. It will go on the shelves with all the other books that have been written. And what do I get out of it? Wait… I’ll tell you. Twenty years of work, twenty years of fooling myself, twenty years of sanity.”