to feel the straining muscles of the _chink_ transmitted in the form of regular vibrations; a sort
of relaxing machine, Childan reflected. To be pulled instead of having to pull. And--to have, if
even for a moment, higher place.
Guiltily, he woke himself. Too much to plan; no time for a midday doze. Was he absolutely
properly dressed to enter the Nippon Times Building? Possibly he would faint in the high-speed
elevator. But he had motion-illness tablets with him, a German compound. The various modes of
address . . . he knew them. Whom to treat politely, whom rudely. Be brusque with the doorman,
elevator operator, receptionist, guide, any janitorial person. Bow to any Japanese, of course,
even if it obliged him to bow hundreds of times. But the _pinocs_. Nebulous area. Bow, but look
straight through them as if they did not exist. Did that cover every situation, then? What about a
visiting foreigner? Germans often could be seen at the Trade Missions, as well as neutrals.
And then, too, he might see a slave.
German or South ships docked at the port of San Francisco all the time, and blacks
occasionally were allowed off for short intervals. Always in groups of fewer than three. And they
could not be out after nightfall; even under Pacific law, they had to obey the curfew. But also
slaves unloaded at the docks, and these lived perpetually ashore, in shacks under the wharves,
above the waterline. None would be in the Trade Mission offices, but if any unloading were taking
place--for instance, should he carry his own bags to Mr. Tagomi's office? Surely not. A slave
would have to be found, even if he had to stand waiting an hour. Even if he missed his
appointment. It was out of the question to let a slave see him carrying something; he had to be
quite careful of that. A mistake of that kind would cost him dearly; he would never have place of
any sort again, among those who saw.
In a way, Childan thought, I would almost enjoy carrying my own bags into the Nippon Times
Building in broad daylight. What a grand gesture. It is not actually illegal; I would not go to
jail. And I would show my real feelings, the side of a man which never comes out in public life.
But . . .
I could do it, he thought, if there weren't those damn black slaves lurking around; I
could endure those above me seeing it, their scorn--after all, they scorn me and humiliate me
every day. But to have those beneath see me, to feel their contempt. Like this _chink_ peddling
away ahead of me. if I hadn't taken a pedecab, if he had seen me trying to _walk_ to a business
appointment . . .
One had to blame the Germans for the situation. Tendency to bite off more than they could
chew. After all, they had barely managed to win the war, and at once they had gone off to conquer
the solar system, while at home they had passed edicts which . . . well, at least the idea was
good. And after all, they had been successful with the Jews and Gypsies and Bible Students. And
the Slavs had been rolled back two thousand years' worth, to their heartland in Asia. Out of
Europe entirely, to everyone's relief. Back to riding yaks and hunting with bow and arrow. And
those great glossy magazines printed in Munich and circulated around to all the libraries and
newsstands . . . one could see the full-page color pictures for oneself: the blue-eyed, blond-
haired Aryan settlers who now industriously tilled, culled, plowed, and so forth in the vast grain
bowl of the world, the Ukraine. Those fellows certainly looked happy. And their farms and cottages
were clean. You didn't see pictures of drunken dull-wilted Poles any more, slouched on sagging
porches or hawking a few sickly turnips at the village market. All a thing of the past, like
rutted dirt roads that once turned to slop in the rainy season, bogging down the carts.
But Africa. They had simply let their enthusiasm get the better of them there, and you had
to admire that, although more thoughtful advice would have cautioned them to perhaps let it wait a
bit until, for instance, Project Farmland had been completed. Now _there_ the Nazis had shown
genius; the artist in them had truly emerged. The Mediterranean Sea bottled up, drained, made into
tillable farmland, through the use of atomic power--what daring! How the sniggerers had been set
back on their heels, for instance certain scoffing merchants along Montgomery Street. And as a
matter of fact, Africa had almost been successful . . . but in a project of that sort, _almost_
was an ominous word to begin to hear. Rosenberg's well-known powerful pamphlet issued in 1958; the
word had first shown up, then. _As to the Final Solution of the African Problem, we have almost
achieved our objectives. Unfortunately, however_--
Still, it had taken two hundred years to dispose of the American aborigines, and Germany
had almost done it in Africa in fifteen years. So no criticism was legitimately in order. Childan
had, in fact, argued it out recently while having lunch with certain of those other merchants.
They expected miracles, evidently, as if the Nazis could remold the world by magic. No, it was
science and technology and that fabulous talent for hard work; the Germans never stopped applying
themselves. And when they did a task, they did it right.
And anyhow, the flights to Mars had distracted world attention from the difficulty in
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