in an invented symbology that no one else would understand.
Amaryl said, “Once you work your way further into your duties, you’ll begin to delegate and then
you’ll have more time.”
“I hope so,” said Seldon dubiously. “But tell me, what is it about Eto Demerzel that is so
important?”
“Simply that Eto Demerzel, our great Emperor’s First Minister, is busily creating an insurrection.”
Seldon frowned. “Why would he want to do that?”
“I didn’t say he wants to. He’s simply doing it--whether he knows it or not--and with considerable
help from some of his political enemies. That’s all right with me, you understand. I think that, under ideal
conditions, it would be a good thing to have him out of the Palace, off Trantor . . . beyond the Empire, for
that matter. But you think highly of him, as I’ve said, and so I’m warning you, because I suspect that you
are not following the recent political course of events as closely as you should.”
“There are more important things to do,” said Seldon mildly.
“Like psychohistory. I agree. But how are we going to develop psychohistory with any hope of
success if we remain ignorant of politics? I mean, present-day politics. Now--now--is the time when the
present is turning into the future. We can’t just study the past. We know what happened in the past. It’s
against the present and the near future that we can check our results.”
“It seems to me,” said Seldon, “that I have heard this argument before.”
“And you’ll hear it again. It doesn’t seem to do me any good to explain this to you.”
Seldon sighed, sat back in his chair, and regarded Amaryl with a smile. The younger man could be
abrasive, but he took psychohistory seriously--and that repaid all.
Amaryl still had the mark of his early years as a heatsinker. He had the broad shoulders and the
muscular build of one who had been used to hard physical labor. He had not allowed his body to turn
flabby and that was a good thing, for it inspired Seldon to resist the impulse to spend all of his time at the
desk as well. He did not have Amaryl’s sheer physical strength, but he still had his own talents as a
Twister--for all that he had just turned forty and could not keep it up forever. But for now, he would
continue. Thanks to his daily workouts, his waist was still trim, his legs and arms firm.
He said, “This concern for Demerzel cannot be purely a matter of his being a friend of mine. You
must have some other motive.”
“There’s no puzzle to that. As long as you’re a friend of Demerzel, your position here at the
University is secure and you can continue to work on psychohistorical research.”
“There you are. So I do have a reason to be friends with him. It isn’t beyond your understanding at
all.”
“You have an interest in cultivating him. That, I understand. But as for friendship--that, I don’t
understand. However--if Demerzel lost lower, quite apart from the effect it might have on your position,
then Cleon himself would be running the Empire and the rate of its decline would increase. Anarchy might
then be upon us before we have worked out all the implications of psychohistory and made it possible for
the science to save all humanity.”
“I see. --but, you know, I honestly don’t think that we’re going to work out psychohistory in time
to prevent the Fall of the Empire.”
“Even if we could not prevent the Fall, we could cushion the effects, couldn’t we?”
“Perhaps.”
“There you are, then. The longer we have to work in peace, the greater the chance we will have to
prevent the Fall or, at least, ameliorate the effects. Since that is the case, working backward, it may be
necessary to save Demerzel, whether we--or, at least, I--like it or not.”
“Yet you just said that you would like to see him out of the Palace and away from Trantor and
beyond the Empire.”
“Yes, under ideal conditions, I said. But we are not living under ideal conditions and we need our
First Minister, even if he is an instrument of repression and despotism.”
“I see. But why do you think the Empire is so close to dissolution that the loss of a First Minister
will bring it about?”
“Psychohistory.”
“Are you using it for predictions? We haven’t even gotten the framework in place. What
predictions can you make?”
“There’s intuition, Hari.”
“There’s always been intuition. We want something more, don’t we? We want a mathematical