Commune 2000 AD. Mack Reynolds
afraid I’m committed,” Ted grumbled. “How am I going to locate some of these people?”
Mike was unhappy with him but he said, “Probably your best bet is to get names and locations from the communes you investigate. One will tell you about others. I know of some in the near vicinity you can start with. That new art colony mobile town, New Woodstock, for instance. Then there’s Lesbos, over near Kingston. It’s something like West Hurley, here, only several times larger. Then there’s Walden, up near Lake Bomoseen; it’s an agricultural commune.”
“I’ve heard about that one,” Ted nodded. “I would have thought they’d have picked a better climate.”
“They seem to like the change in season,” Mike said. “There are quite a few of these agriculture communes. The back-to-nature fling. Natural foods and all. Horse and cow shit, instead of chemical fertilizer.”
“I’ll have to take in at least one of those,” Ted nodded. “Well, tomorrow I start.”
“Zoroaster knows where you’ll end,” Mike told him sourly. “How about an after-dinner drink?”
“Not for me, tonight,” Ted told him. “Guzzle makes me sleepy and I have some thinking to do.”
“You sure as hell have,” Mike Latimer told him.
“Don’t roach me, hombre,” Ted said, coming to his feet. “See you in the future.”
“I hope you have one,” Mike said.
As Ted Swain left the building, he passed a handsome athletic-type girl, who was carrying a tennis racket and smelled faintly of perspiration, just entering. She was topless, which revealed that she was well-tanned, and flashed a brilliant smile revealing a set of teeth as beautiful as any Ted had ever seen. He ruefully remembered those teeth, from a past engagement. Fay was prone to bite, in climax.
“Hi, Fay, what spins?” he asked her.
“Hello, Ted. Listen, do you have anybody on tonight? Marsha’s been spreading around about that Hindu—or whatever it is—position of yours.”
He said, “Not tonight, sweety. Ordinarily, I’d say wizard, but I’ve got some things to work out. Try Mike, over there, if you need to get poked. He seems to be at loose ends.”
“I like bigger men,” she said. “I’ll scout around.” She grinned at him as she passed by into the dining room. “Hombre, it’s getting tough in West Hurley when a girl’s got to beg to get laid.”
“Maybe things will look up later,” he called after her as he turned to go.
Back at the house he made a few notes on what Mike had told him, including the names of the communes he’d known about.
He dubiously eyed the library-booster screen on his desk. He had planned to resume his investigations of earlier in the day but somehow didn’t feel up to it. Tomorrow was another time; he’d pitch in then, he decided.
He went on back into his kitchen, took down a ceramic canister from one of the shelves and took off the lid. There were only two pieces of hashish fudge left. He’d have to whomp up another batch; he disliked the commercial stuff. He took up one of the pieces and ate it slowly.
Ted Swain invariably ate his cannabis, either in fudge form or marmalade, since he had never learned to smoke, or, at least, not to inhale, which was necessary for any real effect from smoking pot.
By the time he had reached his teens and had taken the required school subjects in narcotics and their affiliates, the use of tobacco had dropped off precipitously. Once the profit motive had disappeared from production and distribution, and courses for all citizens were mandatory, some of the old means of flight from reality had fallen away. Not disappeared, but dropped off. Few among the younger generations took tobacco or even alcohol, for that matter. Cannabis, after it had become legalized for all those who had passed their tests on the subject, had taken over. The hard drugs were as illegal as ever and their sources so well dried up that they were all but unknown.
Ted Swain had taken his examinations on narcotics and since then had been eligible to purchase both alcohol and cannabis. He wasn’t a heavy user of either, but he enjoyed the escape both offered, occasionally.
He returned to his living room to watch the evening news broadcast that he particularly favored.
The Reunited Nations were still at their debate on whether or not there should be more consolidation of the smaller nations still remaining. Now that Interlingua was understood by literally everyone under the age of about twenty-five and most others as well, there was no reason why small islands, former tribal areas, and midget nations should not amalgamate, or possibly join one of the great political units such as United America, Common Europe, or the Soviet Complex.
At that point, Ted Swain wondered why they still called it the “Soviet Complex.” It was about as Soviet, in the old sense, as Europe or the Americas. Time had marched on.
There were evidently new breakthroughs in the field of the laser moles, which were now delving as deep as five miles into the earth’s crust in mining operations. Completely automated, of course; men couldn’t work at that depth. Well, Swain thought, that would at least mean an end to the alarm about depletion of world resources. That and extracting minerals and other valuables from the sea.
There was a brief flash from Denver, the new national capital. Warren Edgar, Chief Director of the National Security Forces, had requested of the Civil Congress an increase of 50,000 police agents in his department.
Ted looked blankly at the screen. 50,000 more police agents? For what? So far as he could see the nation already had more than it required. He had always thought that the large number of National Security men employed was just one more make-work affair.
There were a couple of items about the moon base and Satellite City, but he was completely out of his depth and their significance escaped him.
The cannabis was beginning to get to him. He felt moderately high and decided that he had made a mistake in turning Fay down. If the girls in the community wanted to try some of the more exotic sex positions he had turned up in his researches into other cultures, who was he to say no?
He turned off the screen, took out his pocket transceiver and dialed Fay. She was sitting in the community bar, obviously just a bit tight.
Ted said, “Hi, girl. Listen, I changed my mind.”
She grinned at him mockingly. “Oh, you did, eh? Wizard. But the trouble is this little mink has found another hombre, so you can just go get goosed.”
“Hmmm,” he said. “Okay, but you’ll never learn how the Mayans did it, from whoever he is. I’ve got a monopoly.”
“Shirk off, chum-pal,” she laughed, and her face faded.
He grunted mild irritation and dialed Marsha.
Marsha was in bed and behind her, faintly, he could make out a man’s head.
“Never mind,” he said. “Carry on.”
There were a multitude of other girls in town, of course, but he decided the hell with it and went on into his bedroom, undressed and retired. He picked up his bedroom library booster from the nightstand and dialed the day’s book reviews. He scanned the novels and decided on one set in Peru, some sort of an exploration-suspense story.
In the morning, following the usual routine of his toilet and then breakfast, he had to face up to it. If he was going to follow through on this project he had to get going. Possibly Englebrecht had been right; somebody else might beat him to publication. With so little material available on the communes, it was just a matter of time until writers, both scholars and otherwise, began to fill the void.
He looked down at the few notes on his desk and grimaced. He hardly knew where to begin. Well, one thing was sure: if some of these groups were as touchy as Mike Latimer had said, he wasn’t going to be able to sit around taking notes in full view.
He