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“I know,” said Sara, softly. “I know, Jon. The last three paintings—”

He looked up quickly. “But, Sara—”

She shook her head. “No, Jon. No one wanted them. They’re out of style. Naturalistic stuff is passé. Impressionalism now. Daubs—”

“We are too rich,” said Webster. “We have too much. Everything was left for us—everything and nothing. When Mankind went out to Jupiter the few that were left behind inherited the Earth and it was too big for them. They couldn’t handle it. They couldn’t manage it. They thought they owned it, but they were the ones that were owned. Owned and dominated and awed by the things that had gone before.”

She reached out a hand and touched his arm.

“Poor Jon,” she said.

“We can’t flinch away from it,” he said. “Some day some of us must face the truth, must start over again—from scratch.”

“I—”

“Yes, what is it, Sara?”

“I came here to say good-by.”

“Good-by?”

“I’m going to take the Sleep.”

He came to his feet, swiftly, horrified. “No, Sara!”

She laughed and the laugh was strained. “Why don’t you come with me, Jon. A few hundred years. Maybe it will all be different when we awake.”

“Just because no one wants your canvases. Just because—”

“Because of what you said just a while ago. Illusion, Jon. I knew it, felt it, but I couldn’t think it out.”

“But the Sleep is illusion, too.”

“I know. But you don’t know it’s illusion. You think it’s real. You have no inhibitions and you have no fears except the fears that are planned deliberately. It’s natural, Jon—more natural than life. I went up to the Temple and it was all explained to me.”

“And when you awake?”

“You’re adjusted. Adjusted to whatever life is like in whatever era you awake. Almost as if you belonged, even from the first. And it might be better. Who knows? It might be better.”

“It won’t be,” Jon told her, grimly. “Until, or unless, someone does something about it. And a people that run to the Sleep to hide are not going to bestir themselves.”

She shrank back in the chair and suddenly he felt ashamed.

“I’m sorry, Sara. I didn’t mean you. Nor any one person. Just the lot of us.”

The palms whispered harshly, fronds rasping. Little pools of water, left by the surging tide, sparkled in the sun.

“I won’t try to dissuade you,” Webster said. “You’ve thought it out, you know what it is you want.”

It hadn’t always been like that with the human race, he thought. There would have been a day, a thousand years ago, when a man would have argued about a thing like this. But Juwainism had ended all the petty quarrels. Juwainism had ended a lot of things.

“I’ve always thought,” Sara told him, softly, “if we could have stayed together—”

He made a gesture of impatience. “It’s just another thing we’ve lost, another thing that the human race let loose. Come to think it over, we lost a lot of things. Family ties and business, work and purpose.”

He turned to face her squarely. “If you want to come back, Sara—”

She shook her head. “It wouldn’t work, Jon. It’s been too many years.”

He nodded. There was no use denying it.

She rose and held out her hand. “If you ever decide to take the Sleep, find out my date. I’ll have them reserve a place right next to me.”

“I don’t think I ever shall,” he told her.

“All right, then. Good-bye, Jon.”

“Wait a second, Sara. You haven’t said a word about our son. I used to see him often, but—”

She laughed brightly. “Tom’s almost a grown man now, Jon. And it’s the strangest thing. He—”

“I haven’t seen him for so long,” Webster said again.

“No wonder. He’s scarcely in the city. It’s his hobby. Something he inherited from you, I guess. Pioneering in a way. I don’t know what else you’d call it.”

“You mean some new research. Something unusual.”

“Unusual, yes, but not research. Just goes out in the woods and lives by himself. He and a few of his friends. A bag of salt, a bow and arrows—yes, it’s queer,” Sara admitted, “but he has a lot of fun. Claims he’s learning something. And he does look healthy. Like a wolf. Strong and lean and a look about his eyes.”

She swung around and moved away.

“I’ll see you to the door,” said Webster.

She shook her head. “No. I’d rather that you wouldn’t.”

“You’re forgetting the jug.”

“You keep it, Jon. I won’t need it where I’m going.”

Webster put on the plastic “thinking cap,” snapped the button of the writer on his desk.

Chapter Twenty-six, he thought and the writer clicked and chuckled and wrote “Chapter XXVI.”

For a moment Webster held his mind clear, assembling his data, arranging his outline, then he began again. The writer clicked and gurgled, hummed into steady work:

The machines ran on, tended by the robots as they had been before, producing all the things they had produced before.

And the robots worked as they knew it was their right to work, their right and duty, doing the things they had been made to do.

The machines went on and the robots went on, producing wealth as if there were men to use it, just as if there were millions of men instead of a bare five thousand.

And the five thousand who had stayed behind or who had been left behind suddenly found themselves the masters of a world that had been geared to the millions, found themselves possessed of the wealth and services that only months before had been the wealth and services that had been due the millions.

There was no government, but there was no need of government, for all the crimes and abuses that government had held in check were as effectively held in check by the sudden wealth the five thousand had inherited. No man will steal when he can pick up what he wants without the bother of thievery. No man will contest with his neighbor over real estate when the entire world is real estate for the simple taking. Property rights almost overnight became a phrase that had no meaning in a world where there was more than enough for all.

Crimes of violence long before had been virtually eliminated from human society and with the economic pressure eased to a point where property rights ceased to be a point of friction, there was no need of government. No need, in fact, of many of the encumbrances of custom and convenience which man had carried forward from the beginnings of commerce. There was no need of currency, for exchange had no meaning in a world where to get a thing one need but ask for it or take it.

Relieved of economic pressure, the social pressures lessened, too. A man no longer found it necessary to conform to the standards and the acts of custom which had played so large a part in the post-Jovian world as an indication of commercial character.

Religion, which had been losing ground for centuries, entirely disappeared. The family unit, held together by tradition and by the economic necessity of a provider and protector, fell apart. Men and women lived together as they wished, parted when they wished. For there was no economic reason, no social reason why they shouldn’t.

Webster cleared his mind and the machine purred softly at him. He put up his hands, took off the cap, reread the last paragraph of the outline.