"I am serious, and my knee is getting uncomfortable. Will you answer me?"
"Stile, this is impossible! I'm-"
"I know what you are. You always bring it up when you're upset. I am a Citizen. I can do as I wish. I can marry whom I choose, for what reason I choose."
She stared at him. "You are serious! But the moment you tried to register me as- as- they would know my nature. They would destroy me."
"They would have to destroy me first. Answer."
"Stile, why are you doing this? The mischief-"
"I see I must answer you, since you will not answer me. If I marry you, you will be the wife of a Citizen. By definition, a person. By extension, others of your type may then be considered persons. It is a wedge, a lever for recognition of the self-willed machines as serfs. This is a service I can do for them."
"It really is convenience," she said. "Using me to help my friends forward their case for recognition as people."
"Which would be even more potent if something put me out of the scene prematurely and thrust the onus of Citizenship on you."
"True," she said.
"Is that my answer? Does true equate to yes?"
"No!" she snapped, jumping up. "I don't want your title, I want your love!"
Stile got off his knee silently. His love was one thing he could not offer her.
"In fact, I don't want your convenience," she continued, working up some unrobotic temper. "I don't want the appearance without the reality. I don't want to be used."
"I don't propose to use you-"
"I'm not talking about sex!" she screamed. "I would be happy for that! It's being used as a lever I object to."
"I'm sorry. I thought it was a good idea."
"You in your flesh-male arrogance! To set me up as a mock wife to be a lever, the simplistic machine I am! You thought because I love you I'll do anything you want. After all, what pride can a mere machine have?"
What had he walked into? Stile brought out his holo receiver and called the Lady Blue.
The picture-globe formed. Stile turned it about until the Lady Blue came into view. She was brushing down Hinblue. "Lady," he said.
She looked up. "My Lord!"
Sheen paused in her pacing. "You're in touch with her?"
"Aye, Lady Sheen," the Lady Blue answered, recognizing her voice. "And easy it is to understand the nature of thy concern. I confess I put my Lord up to it."
"I should have known," Sheen said, bemused. "But this is a cynical thing, Lady."
"Aye, Lady. It is a cruel sacrifice for thee."
"That's not the point, Lady. The sheer mischief-"
"I apologize for putting thee in an untenable position, Lady Sheen. Thou hast every right to reject it." She gave Hinblue another stroke, then addressed Stile. "My Lord, I thought not of her feeling, only of her merit. I wanted her as my sister in that frame, and that was selfish. Let her be. I love thee." She returned to the horse, dismissing him.
Stile turned off the holo. "I guess that covers it, Sheen." He felt embarrassed and awkward. "If it's any comfort, I felt about the same as you, when she broached the notion. I do care for you; I always did. I just can't honestly call it love."
"I accept," Sheen said.
"You are generous to accept my apology. I wish I had not put you through this."
"Not the apology. The proposal."
"The-?"
"Remember way back when, you proposed marriage?"
Stile was amazed. "I-"
"Yes, that proposal. If you had the circuitry of a robot, you'd remember these details more readily. Perhaps if you practiced mnemonic devices-"
"But why? You made such a good case against-"
"She wants it," she said simply.
That he could understand. He had proposed to Sheen because the Lady Blue wanted it; she had accepted for the same reason. Now they just had to hope it was a good idea.
The capsule had come to a halt the portholes showing a landing at a spaceport. Sheen keyed the door open. Stile gaped.
Outside lay the Blue Demesnes.
No, of course it was the Proton equivalent on the same geographic site. Merely one of numerous examples of parallelism of frames. The castle and grounds looked the same as in Phaze, but there was no magic. Horses grazed and dogs ranged, not unicorns and werewolves. Still, it moved him.
"After the Lady Bluette died, her Employer restored the property and put it on the market," Sheen explained. "It was at a bargain price. I thought you'd like it."
"I do." Stile stared at it a moment longer. "But it's strange here."
"No Lady Blue," she said.
"It will be yours now."
She was silent. Had he said the wrong thing? Well, either it would work out or it wouldn't.
His chef had his meal waiting: genuine imported roast of bear. Stile made a mental note not to speak figuratively; as a Citizen, he was too apt to be taken literally. He had said he could eat a bear; now he had to do it.
Actually, it wasn't bad. The chef did know his business. Sheen had hired people of genuine competence.
"And now for your estate adviser," Sheen said as Stile chomped somewhat diffidently. "You have some elegant financial maneuvering ahead."
"I'd rather master the rules of the game and lay it myself."
"This adviser is one of my friends."
Oh. That was a different matter.
The adviser turned out to be an old male serf, wrinkled, white-haired, and elegant. Stile would not have known him for a robot, had Sheen not informed him. It was evident that the self-willed machines had profited from what Sheen had learned in the course of her association with Stile; only time, expert observation, or direct physical examination betrayed his current associates.
Stile nodded affirmatively to the serf, and the man reported: "Sir, I am Mellon, your financial accountant."
"Mellon, eh?" Stile repeated. "As in Rockefeller, Carnegie, and Du Pont?"
The serf smiled. "Yes, sir."
"You're that good with money?"
"Yes, sir."
"Then why are you here as a serf, instead of making your fortune elsewhere in the universe?" Stile knew the
robot had no future away from Proton, but a real serf would, and the cover story had to be good.
"Sir, I have already made my fortune elsewhere," Mellon said. "I am as rich as a Citizen. But here on Proton the dynamics of wealth are most pronounced; the leverage of economics is exerted most openly. Only here can I experience the joy of renewed challenge, failure, and success. When my tenure expires, I shall return to my comfortable galactic estate and write my memoirs of the Proton experience."
Stile was impressed. This was a feasible rationale. It would explain the man's computerized competence. Stile might even have to stave off efforts by other Citizens to hire Mellon away. Except that since no real Mellon existed, any verification of his background would reveal-
"I am cast in the likeness of an actual person, sir," Mellon said, reading Stile's expression. "The proceeds of my memoirs will go to him, in recompense for the use of his credentials."
The machines had figured it all out! "Well, I hope you are not disappointed in the experience you have managing my estate. I don't even know its extent, but I'm trusting you to multiply it for me rapidly."
"I shall do so, sir. I must ask that you follow my advice in particulars with alacrity. There are likely to be difficult moments, but there is an eighty-five percent probability of accomplishing our objective."
Mellon certainly seemed sure of himself! The machines had to have secrets that could be exploited for tremendous leverage. Stile suspected he should leave it alone, but his curiosity governed. "How do you propose to make me rich, even by Proton standards? Surely my section of the Protonite mines can only produce so much."