Caves of Steel - Isaac Asimov [18]
The manager plucked his sleeve. “Let’s have no more trouble, Officer.”
Baley said, “There won’t be any trouble.”
It was easy to get rid of the squad-car police. They had come in response to reports of a crowd in the street. They knew no details and could see for themselves that the street was clear. R. Daneel stepped aside and showed no sign of interest as Baley explained to the men in the squad car, minimizing the event and completely burying R. Daneel’s part in it.
Afterward, he pulled R. Daneel to one side, against the steel and concrete of one of the building shafts.
“Listen,” he said, “I’m not trying to steal your show, you understand.”
“Steal my show? Is it one of your Earth idioms?”
“I didn’t report your part in this.”
“I do not know all your customs. On my world, a complete report is usual, but perhaps it is not so on your world. In any case, civil rebellion was averted. That is the important thing, is it not?”
“Is it? Now you look here.” Baley tried to sound as forceful as possible under the necessity of speaking in an angry whisper. “Don’t you ever do it again.”
“Never again insist on the observance of law? If I am not to do that, what then is my purpose?”
“Don’t ever threaten a human being with a blaster again.”
“I would not have fired under any circumstances, Elijah, as you know very well. I am incapable of hurting a human. But, as you see, I did not have to fire. I did not expect to have to.”
“That was the purest luck, your not having to fire. Don’t take that kind of chance again. I could have pulled the grandstand stunt you did—”
“Grandstand stunt? What is that?”
“Never mind. Get the sense from what I’m saying. I could have pulled a blaster on the crowd myself. I had the blaster to do it with. But it isn’t the kind of gamble I am justified in taking, or you, either. It was safer to call squad cars to the scene than to try one-man heroics.”
R. Daneel considered. He shook his head. “I think you are wrong, partner Elijah. My briefing on human characteristics here among the people of Earth includes the information that, unlike the men of the Outer Worlds, they are trained from birth to accept authority. Apparently this is the result of your way of living. One man, representing authority firmly enough, was quite sufficient, as I proved. Your own desire for a squad car was only an expression, really, of your almost instinctive wish for superior authority to take responsibility out of your hands. On my own world, I admit that what I did would have been most unjustified.”
Baley’s long face was red with anger. “If they had recognized you as a robot—”
“I was sure they wouldn’t.”
“In any case, remember that you are a robot. Nothing more than a robot. Just a robot. Like those clerks in the shoe store.”
“But this is obvious.”
“And you’re not human.” Baley felt himself being driven into cruelty against his will.
R. Daneel seemed to consider that. He said, “The division between human and robot is perhaps not as significant as that between intelligence and nonintelligence.”
“Maybe on your world,” said Baley, “but not on Earth.”
He looked at his watch and could scarcely make out that he was an hour and a quarter late. His throat was dry and raw with the thought that R. Daneel had won the first round, had won when he himself had stood by helpless.
He thought of the youngster, Vince Barrett, the teen-ager whom R. Sammy had replaced. And of himself, Elijah Baley, whom R. Daneel could replace. Jehoshaphat, at least his father had been thrown out because of an accident that had done damage, that had killed people. Maybe it was his fault. Baley didn’t know. Suppose he had been eased out to make room for a mechanical physicist. Just for that. For no other reason. Nothing he could do about it.
He said, curtly, “Let’s go now. I’ve got to get you home.”
R. Daneel said, “You see, it is not proper to make any distinction of lesser meaning than the fact of intel—”
Baley’s voice rose. “All right. The subject is