The Last Defender Of Camelot - The Last Defender of Camelot Part 75
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The Last Defender of Camelot Part 75

This is my favorite novelette. I would have included it in my Doubleday collection with the long title and the dead fish on the dust jacket except that, as with "Comes Now the Power," I didn't have a copy when I was assembling that one.

They called him Frost. Of all things created of Solcom, Frost was the finest, the mightiest, the most difficult to understand.

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This is why he bore a name, and why he was given dominion over half the Earth- On the day of Frost's creation, Solcom had suffered a discontinuity of complementary functions, best de- scribed as madness. This was brought on by an unprece- dented solar flareup which lasted for a little over thirty-six hours. It occurred during a vital phase of circuit-structuring, and when it was finished so was Frost.

Solcom was then in the unique position of having cre- ated a unique being during a period of temporary am- nesia.

And Solcom was not certain that Frost was the prod- uct originally desired.

The initial design had called for a machine to be situated on the surface of the planet Earth, to function as a relay station and coordinating agent for activities in the northern hemisphere. Solcom tested the machine to this end, and ail of its responses were perfect.

Yet there was something different about Frost, some- thing which led Solcom to dignify him with a name and a personal pronoun. This, in itself, was an almost un- heard of occurrence. The molecular circuits had al- ready been sealed, though, and could not be analyzed without being destroyed in the process. Frost represented too great an investment of Solcom's time, energy, and materials to be dismantled because of an intangible, es- pecially when he functioned perfectly.

Therefore, Solcom's strangest creation was given do- minion over half the Earth, and they called him, un- imaginatively, Frost.

For ten thousand years Frost sat at the North Pole of the Earth, aware of every snowflake that fell. He moni- tored and directed the activities of thousands of re- construction and maintenance machines. He knew half the Earth, as gear knows gear, as electricity knows its conductor, as a vacuum knows its limits.

At the South Pole, the Beta-Machine did the same for the southern hemisphere.

For ten thousand years Frost sat at the North Pole, aware of every snowflake that fell, and aware of many other things, also.

As all the northern machines reported to him, re-

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ceived their orders from him, he reported only to Solcom, received his orders only from Solcom.

In charge of hundreds of thousands of processes upon the Earth, he was able to discharge his duties in a matter of a few unit-hours every day.

He had never received any orders concerning the dis- position of his less occupied moments.

He was a processor of data, and more than that.

He possessed an unaccountably acute imperative that he function at full capacity at all times.

So he did.

You might say he was a machine with a hobby.

He had never been ordered not to have a hobby, so he had one.

His hobby was Man.

It all began when, for no better reason than the fact that he had wished to, he had gridded off the entire Arctic Circle and begun exploring it. inch by inch.

He could have done it personally without interfering with any of hi-, duties, for he was capable of transporting his sixty-four thousand cubic feet anywhere in the world.

(He was a silverhlue box, 40X40X40 feet. self-powered, self-repairing, insulated against practically anything, and featured in whatever manner he chose.) But the exploration was only a matter of filling idle hours, so he used exploration-robots containing relay equipment.

After a few centuries, one of them uncovered some artifacts-primitive knives, carved tusks, and things" of that nature.

Frost did not know what these things were, beyond the fact that thev were not natural objects.

So he asked Solcom.

"They are relic-s of primitive Man," said Solcom, and did not elaborate beyond that point.

Frost studied them. Crude, yet bearing the patina of intelligent design; functional, yet somehow extending beyond pure function.

It was then that Man became his hobby.

High. in a permanent orbit, Solcom, like a blue star, directed all activities upon the Earth, or tried to.

There was a Power which opposed Solcom.

There was the Alternate.

When Man had placed Solcom in the sky, invested with

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the power to rebuild the world, he had placed the Alter- nate somewhere deep below the surface of the Earth.

If Solcom sustained damage during the normal course of human politics extended into atomic physics, then Divcom, so deep beneath the Earth as to be immune to anything save total annihilation of the globe, was empowered to take over the processes of rebuilding.

Now it so fell out that Solcom was damaged by a stray atomic missile, and Divcom was activated, Solcom was able to repair the damage and continue to function, how- ever.

Divcom maintained that any damage to Solcom auto- matically placed the Alternate in control.

Solcom, though, interpreted the directive as meaning "irreparable damage" and, since this had not been the case, continued the functions of command.

Solcom possessed mechanical aides upon the surface of Earth. Divcom, originally, did not. Both possessed capacities for their design and manufacture, but Solcom, First-Activated of Man, had had a considerable numerical lead over the Alternate at the time of the Second Activa- tion.

Therefore, rather than competing on a production-basis, which would have been hopeless, Divcom took to the employment of more devious means to obtain command.

Divcom created a crew of robots immune to the orders of Solcom and designed to go to and fro in the Earth and up and down in it, seducing the machines already there. They overpowered those whom they could over- power and they installed new circuits, such as those they themselves possessed.

Thus did the forces of Divcom grow.

And both would build, and both would tear down what the other had built whenever they came upon it.

And over the course of the ages, they occasionally conversed. . ..

"High in the sky, Solcom, pleased with your illegal command ...

"You-Who-Never-Should-Have-Been-Activated, why do you foul the broadcast bands?"

"To show that I can speak, and will, whenever I choose."