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"But we can survive.  We can process raw hydrogen and oxygen from the regolith, and burn them to produce water.  We already make our own air.  We can do without most nanoelectronics.  We can thrive and prosper and grow, even if Earth ... even if the worst happens.  But to do so we'll need our full manufacturing capability, and full supervisory capability as well.  We must not only restore our factories, but find a way to restore our people.  There'll be work and more for all of us in the days ahead."

Nagenda touched helmets with Gunther and muttered, "What a crock."

"Come on, I want to hear this."

"Fortunately, the Crisis Management Program has contingency plans for exactly this situation.  According to its records, which may be incomplete, I have more military command experience than any other functional.  Does anyone wish to challenge this?"  She waited, but nobody said anything.  "We will go to a quasimilitary structure for the duration of the emergency.   This is strictly for organizational purposes.  There will be no privileges afforded the officers, and the military structure will be dismantled immediately upon resolution of our present problems.  That's paramount."

She glanced down at her peecee.  "To that purpose, I am establishing beneath me a triumvirate of subordinate officers, consisting of Carlos Diaz-Rodrigues, Miiko Ezumi, and Will Posner.  Beneath them will be nine officers, each responsible for a cadre of no more than ten individuals."

She read out names.  Gunther was assigned to Cadre Four, Beth Hamilton's group.  Then Ekatarina said, "We're all tired.  The gang back at the Center have rigged up a decontamination procedure, a kitchen and sleeping spaces of sorts.  Cadres One, Two and Three will put in four more hours here, then pull down a full eight hours sleep.  Cadres Four through Nine may return now to the Center for a meal and four hours rest."  She stopped.  "That's it.  Go get some shut-eye."

A ragged cheer arose, fell flat and died.  Gunther stood.  Liza Nagenda gave him a friendly squeeze on the butt and when he started to the right yanked his arm and pointed him left, toward the service escalators.  With easy familiarity, she slid an arm around his waist.

He'd known guys who'd slept with Liza Nagenda, and they all agreed that she was bad news, possessive, hysterical, ludicrously emotional.  But what the hell.  It was easier than not.

They trudged off.

There was too much to do.  They worked to exhaustion--it was not enough.  They rigged a system of narrow-band radio transmissions for the CMP and ran a microwave patch back to the Center, so it could direct their efforts more efficiently--it was not enough.  They organized and rearranged constantly.  But the load was too great and accidents inevitably happened.

Half the surviving railguns--small units used to deliver raw and semiprocessed materials over the highlands and across the bay--were badly damaged when the noonday sun buckled their aluminum rails; the sunscreens had not been put in place in time.  An unknown number of robot bulldozers had wandered off from the strip mines and were presumably lost.  It was hard to guess how many because the inventory records were scrambled.  None of the food stored in Bootstrap could be trusted; the Center's meals had to be harvested direct from the farms and taken out through the emergency locks.  An inexperienced farmer mishandled her remote, and ten aquaculture tanks boiled out into vacuum geysering nine thousand fingerlings across the surface.  On Posner's orders, the remote handler rigs were hastily packed and moved to the Center.  When uncrated, most were found to have damaged rocker arms.

There were small victories.  On his second shift, Gunther found fourteen bales of cotton in vacuum storage and set an assembler to sewing futons for the Center.  That meant an end to sleeping on bare floors and made him a local hero for the rest of that day.  There were not enough toilets in the Center; Diaz-Rodrigues ordered the flare storm shelters in the factories stripped of theirs.  Huriel Garza discovered a talent for cooking with limited resources.

But they were losing ground.  The afflicted were unpredictable, and they were everywhere.  A demented systems analyst, obeying the voices in his head, dumped several barrels of lubricating oil in the lake.  The water filters clogged, and the streams had to be shut down for repairs.  A doctor  somehow managed to strangle herself with her own diagnostic harness.  The city's ecologics were badly stressed by random vandalism.

Finally somebody thought to rig up a voice loop for continuous transmission.  "I am calm," it said.  "I am tranquil.  I do not want to do anything.  I am happy where I am."

Gunther was working with Liza Nagenda trying to get the streams going again when the loop came on.  He looked up and saw an uncanny quiet spread over Bootstrap.  Up and down the terraces, the flicks stood in postures of complete and utter impassivity.  The only movement came from the small number of suits scurrying like beetles among the newly catatonic.

Liza put her hands on her hips.  "Terrific.  Now we've got to feed them."

"Hey, cut me some slack, okay?  This is the first good news I've heard since I don't know when."

"It's not good anything, sweetbuns.  It's just more of the same."

She was right.  Relieved as he was, Gunther knew it.  One hopeless task had been traded for another.

He was wearily suiting up for his third day when Hamilton stopped him and said, "Weil!  You know any electrical engineering?"

"Not really, no.  I mean, I can do the wiring for a truck, or maybe rig up a microwave relay, stuff like that, but ..."

"It'll have to do.  Drop what you're on, and help Krishna set up a system for controlling the flicks.  Some way we can handle them individually."

They set up shop in Krishna's old lab.  The remnants of old security standards still lingered, and nobody had been allowed to sleep there.  Consequently, the room was wonderfully neat and clean, all crafted-in-orbit laboratory equipment with smooth, anonymous surfaces.  It was a throwback to a time before clutter and madness had taken over.  If it weren't for the new-tunnel smell, the raw tang of cut rock the air carried, it would be possible to pretend nothing had happened.

Gunther stood in a telepresence rig, directing a remote through Bootstrap's apartments.  They were like so many unconnected cells of chaos.  He entered one and found the words BUDDHA = COSMIC INERTIA scrawled on its wall with what looked to be human feces.  A woman sat on the futon tearing handfuls of batting from it and flinging them in the air.  Cotton covered the room like a fresh snowfall.  The next apartment was empty and clean, and a microfactory sat gleaming on a ledge.  "I hereby nationalize you in the name of the People's Provisional Republic of Bootstrap, and of the oppressed masses everywhere," he said dryly.  The remote gingerly picked it up.  "You done with that chip diagram yet?"

"It will not be long now," Krishna said.

They were building a prototype controller.  The idea was to code each peecee, so the CMP could identify and speak to its owner individually.  By stepping down the voltage, they could limit the peecee's transmission range to a meter and a half so that each afflicted person could be given individualized orders.  The existing chips, however, were high-strung Swiss Orbital thoroughbreds, and couldn't handle oddball power yields.  They had to be replaced.

"I don't see how you can expect to get any useful work out of these guys, though.  I mean, what we need are supervisors.  You can't hope to get coherent thought out of them."

Bent low over his peecee, Krishna did not answer at first.  Then he said, "Do you know how a yogi stops his heart?  We looked into that when I was in grad school.  We asked Yogi Premanand if he would stop his heart while wired up to our instruments, and he graciously consented.  We had all the latest brain scanners, but it turned out the most interesting results were recorded by the EKG.