hundred to one. But most of those robots were no longer with the people. Grieg
had confiscated them, sent them off to plant trees in the northern wastes of
Terra Grande. Maybe--just maybe--Grieg was right. Maybe excessive use of
personal robots had been wasteful. Maybe, in the current emergency situation,
it made sense for robots to be put to work rebuilding the planet rather than
serving as uselessly redundant servants.
But all that to one side, these days, wealth was equated, more than
ever, with robots. And in these days of hardships, one simply did not flaunt
one’s wealth.
Kresh, however, equated robots not with wealth but with safety. The
First Law turned every robot into a superb bodyguard--and suddenly Kresh
didn’t have any such bodyguards handy.
The Governor’s Compound had a full staff of service robots, of course.
They had been shipped in from the capital just a week before in preparation
for the visit. Tonight, however, all but a handful of them were back in their
air-cargo transport, powered down and out of sight. The Governor’s Rangers
were providing the catering staff--and most of the Rangers on duty seemed none
too happy about it. They were, after all, law enforcement professionals, more
or less, not waiters.
After the reception tonight, the household robots would be permitted to
make their appearance. But tonight, with all the powerful and elite on hand,
and the reception being recorded for broadcast on all the news feeds, it would
not do for the Governor to be seen surrounded by robots.
Tonight, when the crowds around him were thickest, the Governor would
have the least protection. In normal times, Kresh would not have worried so
much. But these were not normal times.
The planet Inferno was changing, experiencing the most wrenching of
upheavals. The change was needed and, perhaps, would be for the best--but for
all of that, it would leave unhappy and frustrated people in its wake.
Change hurt, and some of the people it was hurting had already tried to
strike back. There had been more than a few unpleasant incidents in recent
weeks. Kresh’s deputies had been going half mad trying to keep the lid on. It
was Kresh’s professional opinion that there was no way he could feel certain
of the Governor’s safety in public. Not without an army of robotic bodyguards.
Aside from Donald, there was not a single powered-up robot in the entire
building. They should have been serving the drinks, opening the doors,
circulating with trays of food, catering to whatever whim one of the guests
might have--and protecting against any chance of one human harming another.
Even the guests had no personal robots in tow. It would be political
suicide for any of the Governor’s friends to be seen here with a flock of
robots. Indeed, the whole point of the evening was to be seen without robots
during the shortage. Politics made for very strange logic sometimes.
Most of the Spacer dignitaries looked a trifle lost, out by themselves.
For some of them, this was the first time in their lives they had ever set
foot outside their own doors without robotic servants following along.
Punishment. Shortage. It was all nonsense, of course. The new
regulations limited each household to a maximum of twenty robots. Somehow, to
Kresh’s point of view, getting through the day with only twenty personal
servants at one’s beck and call did not seem that much of a hardship.
But right now, Alvar Kresh had little or no patience with politics or
economics. The plain fact was that it was a lot tougher for an assassin to act
if there were robots allover the place, and there weren’t any such here.
In the old days, with a swarm of robots always there, always taken for
granted, security had been so easy, so taken for granted, that even the most
prominent and controversial public figures never gave it a thought. Not
anymore. Now they could not take any chances at all. “Anything more, Donald?”
“I was more or less finished, sir. I only wished to say that the