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DWY screamed in terror. “Get away! Get away!” He became a blurred frenzy of flailing arms and legs.

Screeching shrilly, the shelldweller jumped from one bed to the next until he found one on the edge of the cluster, several meters away from any of the people who were standing watching it, shocked and afraid.

The little twisted man huddled on the bed, pulled himself into a furry ball, quaking and whimpering.

He’s more afraid than we are, THX realized.

Slowly, they all returned to normal. PTO began his pedagogical ritual with CAM again, SEN returned to making political commentary and hoarding food. But THX watched the shelldweller. He looked so small and so afraid. Except when he bared those teeth.

THX was walking around the cluster of beds, pacing slowly. TWA and DWY were standing together at the edge of the cluster. The blind TWA was pointing out into the nothingness, and DWY was squinting in the direction of his aim.

“There?” asked TWA.

“No, nothing.”

“You’re sure?”

“Certainly.”

TWA shook his head. “I wish I could see.”

“It’s got to be out there somewhere.”

“I know.”

“SEN claims that if we can spot the barrier, actually see it, we can begin to figure out how to get past it. Do you believe that?”

Shrugging, TWA said, “Let’s look over in that direction.”

SEN was saying to PTO, “I think that a leader must, whenever he possibly can, make the decision for more knowledge rather than less. But he must also have the wisdom to limit freedom so as to insure freedom. That is what will keep us strong and give us direction.”

PTO threw up his hands in helpless protest against SEN.

TWA and DWY trooped over and stood before SEN.

“Well?” SEN asked eagerly.

“We made one hundred and fifty sightings, randomly located, just as you said,” DWY reported.

“And… and?”

“There were one hundred and forty-six absolute negatives and four conditionals, most of which occurred in the early familiarization stages of the project and can probably be discounted.”

PTO chuckled. “Not very encouraging.”

“On the contrary!” DWY retorted. “It absolutely proves what I’ve always suspected. We’re located in a uniform space with no visible limits…”

Cutting him short, SEN said, “Yes, yes, fine. But we must find the barrier. We can do nothing until it’s been located.”

THX walked away from them. They were all insane. Then he heard a policeman approaching, and the triple thud of his pole against the floor. “LUH 9998.”

Before the robot could finish the new prisoner’s number, THX had whirled around and called, “LUH…”

But the newcomer was a quiet-looking man of middle years, still blinking and stunned- looking, surprised and scared at being here.

“He can speak!” DWY marveled. They were all staring at THX.

“Of course he can,” SEN said. “I knew it all along. I told you so.”

But THX didn’t hear them, didn’t see them. For a flash of a second he had felt hope, even happiness. Now he walked dejectedly back to bis bed, slumped onto it, rubbed his face tiredly.

And SEN sat down beside him. “Are you all right? What’s wrong?”

“Go away,” THX said. “I’m tired.”

The chrome robot hadn’t left. He advanced on DWY, who had turned his back to the policeman and was eating a few hoarded crumbs of food. The police robot picked him up by the collar.

DWY looked up in terror. “What are you going to do?” he squeaked.

The robot said nothing, began hauling him away, his legs dangling limp and useless, feet dragging on the floor. A wet stain sprouted in the crotch of DWY’s pants and trickled down his trouser leg to the floor, leaving a trail behind him while he whimpered, “Uhhh… uhhhnn…”

The shelldweller hopped off his bed, scampered to the wet trail, dabbed a finger in the urine and tasted it. It was impossible to tell, behind all that hair, whether he frowned or smiled.

The musical tone and blue flash of food arrival broke their mood. Everyone went to his bed and reached into the dispenser bins. Conditoned reflex. But the bins were empty.

“Empty again,” TWA raged.

“What are we going to do? They’re empty more than they’re full anymore. They’re going to starve us to death!”

But THX thought he heard someone laughing, someone who was watching them all on observation screens.

“Be calm,” SEN was saying. “Remain calm above all else. This elemental crisis is one that makes us feel endangered. But so-called bravery is not as useful in these situations as the ability to eliminate any elements of individual fear by thinking selflessly…”

TWA interrupted, “You’ve got food hidden away. It’s easy for you to talk!”

“Yeah!”

SEN raised his hands for quiet. “Now, now. Selfishness won’t help the situation. We must all…”

“Search his module!”

Five of the men started toward SEN.

“Wait,” he said, smiling hugely. “Of course I have been storing food away. For just such an emergency as this! What kind of a leader would I be if I didn’t prepare for emergencies?”

They stopped and watched him as SEN reached well down under his mattress and pulled out a handful of food cubes.

“All in line now, share and share alike.”

They lined up obediently.

“No pushing, no jostling,” SEN called out. “There’s enough here for everybody.”

He handed each man a food cube in turn, while he muttered, “Discipline and order, the basic ingredients of true freedom. Discipline and order.”

THX watched from his bed. He wasn’t hungry; they had been fed only a little while ago. At least, it seemed like only a little while ago to him. But the others seemed to think they were starving. Even old PTO was standing in line. SEN absolutely beamed when he handed the old man a food cube.

PTO accepted the cube, then said, “Our life is brief and powerless. On all of us, the slow, sure doom falls pitiless and dark. Blind to good and evil, reckless of destruction, omnipotent authority rolls on its relentless way.”

SEN turned to THX with a look of absolute disgust on his face.

As if in anger, the musical tone sounded again and the blue food light flashed. There was the unmistakable clunk! of arrival in the dispenser bins. Everyone rushed to his module and opened the bins. Four cubes in each one!

“We’re saved!” CAM shouted, his boyish voice cracking.

“Friends, friends,” SEN called, his arms outstretched, his smile beatific, “we have survived the crisis. But, as your duly elected leader, I must point put that we never know when another emergency will descend upon us. Let us prepare now. Store half your food with mine, share and share alike, one and all.”

So now the line formed again and reversed itself, each man dumping two food cubes on SEN’s bed. The pile became quite respectable.

Through it all THX remained on his own bed. Finally, when everyone was busily eating and SEN had finished tucking the last of the hoard in the crannies inside his module, SEN walked smilingly over to THX.

“Everyone is sharing his good fortune,” he said softly. “From each for each, that’s how we survive. As your leader, I must ask you to do your share, too.”

THX looked at his round smiling face and thought for a moment how pleasant it would be to smash a fist through it. But instead he reached down and opened his dispenser bin. Pulling out four brown food cubes, he handed them all to SEN.

“All of them?” SEN seemed overwhelmed.

THX got up from the bed. “Yes. Enjoy them all.”

“But what are you going to do? Where are you going?”