You know how rare executive capacity is. Even if we didn’t
it’s—it’s refreshing to find any one interested enough in our job to damn
our eyes. You don’t know what it means to work, year in, year out, without
a spark of difference with a living soul.’
‘Oh, don’t we!’ said De Forest. ‘There are times on the Board when we’d
give our positions if any one would kick us out and take hold of things
themselves.’
‘But they won’t,’ said the Mayor ruefully. ‘I assure you, sir, we Four
have done things in Chicago, in the hope of rousing people, that would
have discredited Nero. But what do they say? “Very good, Andy. Have it
your own way. Anything’s better than a Crowd. I’ll go back to my land.”
You can’t do anything with folk who can go where they please, and
don’t want anything on God’s earth except their own way. There isn’t a
kick or a kicker left on the Planet.’
‘Then I suppose that little shed yonder fell down by itself?’ said De
Forest. We could see the bare and still smoking ruins, and hear the
slag-pools crackle as they hardened and set.
‘Oh, that’s only amusement. ‘Tell you later. As I was saying, our
Serviles held the meeting, and pretty soon we had to ground-circuit the
platform to save ’em from being killed. And that didn’t make our people
any more pacific.’
‘How d’you mean?’ I ventured to ask.
‘If you’ve ever been ground-circuited,’ said the Mayor, ‘you’ll know it
don’t improve any man’s temper to be held up straining against nothing.
No, sir! Eight or nine hundred folk kept pawing and buzzing like flies in
treacle for two hours, while a pack of perfectly safe Serviles invades
their mental and spiritual privacy, may be amusing to watch, but they are
not pleasant to handle afterwards.’
Pirolo chuckled.
‘Our folk own themselves. They were of opinion things were going too
far and too fiery. I warned the Serviles; but they’re born house-dwellers.
Unless a fact hits ’em on the head they cannot see it. Would you believe
me, they went on to talk of what they called “popular government”? They
did! They wanted us to go back to the old Voodoo-business of voting with
papers and wooden boxes, and word-drunk people and printed formulas, and
news-sheets! They said they practised it among themselves about what
they’d have to eat in their flats and hotels. Yes, sir! They stood up
behind Bluthner’s doubled ground-circuits, and they said that, in this
present year of grace, to self-owning men and women, on
that very spot! Then they finished’—he lowered his voice cautiously—‘by
talking about “The People.” And then Bluthner he had to sit up all night
in charge of the circuits because he couldn’t trust his men to keep ’em
shut.’
‘It was trying ’em too high,’ the Chief of Police broke in. ‘But we
couldn’t hold the Crowd ground-circuited for ever. I gathered in all the
Serviles on charge of Crowd-making, and put ’em in the water-tower, and
then I let things cut loose. I had to! The District lit like a sparked
gas-tank!’
‘The news was out over seven degrees of country,’ the Mayor continued;
‘and when once it’s a question of invasion of privacy, good-bye to right
and reason in Illinois! They began turning out traffic-lights and locking
up landing-towers on Thursday night. Friday, they stopped all traffic and
asked for the Board to take over. Then they wanted to clean Chicago off
the side of the Lake and rebuild elsewhere—just for a souvenir of “The
People” that the Serviles talked about. I suggested that they should slag
the Old Market where the meeting was held, while I turned in a call to you
all on the Board. That kept ’em quiet till you came along. And—and now
you can take hold of the situation.’
‘Any chance of their quieting down?’ De Forest asked.
‘You can try,’ said the Mayor.
De Forest raised his voice in the face of the reviving Crowd that had
edged in towards us. Day was come.
‘Don’t you think this business can be arranged?’ he began. But there
was a roar of angry voices:
‘We’ve finished with Crowds! We aren’t going back to the Old Days! Take
us over! Take the Serviles away! Administer direct or we’ll kill ’em! Down
with The People!’
An attempt was made to begin MacDonough’s Song. It got no further than
the first line, for the Victor Pirolo sent down a warning drone
on one stopped horn. A wrecked side-wall of the Old Market tottered and
fell inwards on the slag-pools.
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