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+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1" />
+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Confidence Game, by James McKimmey, Jr</title>
+
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Confidence Game, by James McKimmey
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Confidence Game
+
+Author: James McKimmey
+
+Release Date: May 4, 2010 [EBook #32243]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CONFIDENCE GAME ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Greg Weeks, David Wilson and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+<hr class="pg" />
+
+<div class="tnote">
+<img class="framed fltleft" src="images/cover.jpg" width="227" height="299"
+ alt="If: Worlds of Science Fiction" title="Magazine Cover" />
+<h3>Transcriber&#8217;s note:</h3>
+<p>This story was published in <cite>If: Worlds of Science Fiction</cite>,
+ September 1954.
+Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the
+ U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.</p><p class="clearup">&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="illus">
+<p class="ctr"><a name="png.001" id="png.001" href="#png.001"><span class="ns">[</span><span
+ class="pgmark">36</span><span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></a>
+<img src="images/illo-036.png" width="578" height="560"
+ alt="" title="" /></p>
+
+<p><small><i>Illustrated by Ed Emsh</i></small></p>
+
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="main">
+
+<h1>CONFIDENCE GAME</h1>
+
+<p class="blurb"><i>Cutter demanded more and more and more efficiency&mdash;and got
+it! But, as in anything, enough is enough, and too much is&nbsp;&hellip;</i></p>
+
+<p class="author">By JAMES McKIMMEY, JR.</p>
+
+<p class="noindent tb"><br class="ns"
+ /><a name="png.002" id="png.002" href="#png.002"><span class="ns">[</span><span
+ class="pgmark">37</span><span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></a><span class="drop">G</span><span class="uc">eorge H.&nbsp;Cutter</span> wheeled
+his big convertible into his reserved
+space in the Company parking
+lot with a flourish. A bright
+California sun drove its early
+brightness down on him as he
+strode toward the square, four-story
+brick building which said
+<i>Cutter Products, Inc.</i> over its front
+door. A two-ton truck was grinding
+backward, toward the loading
+doors, the thick-shouldered driver
+craning his neck. Cutter moved
+briskly forward, a thick-shouldered
+man himself, though not very tall.
+A glint of light appeared in his
+eyes, as he saw Kurt, the truck
+driver, fitting the truck's rear end
+into the tight opening.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Get that junk out of the way!&rdquo;
+he yelled, and his voice roared over
+the noise of the truck's engine.</p>
+
+<p>Kurt snapped his head around,
+his blue eyes thinning, then recognition
+spread humor crinkles
+around his eyes and mouth. &ldquo;All
+right, sir,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Just a second
+while I jump out, and I'll lift it
+out of your way.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;With bare hands?&rdquo; Cutter said.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;With bare hands,<!-- Transcriber's note:
+ original has period -->&rdquo; Kurt said.</p>
+
+<p>Cutter's laugh boomed, and as
+he rounded the front of the truck,
+he struck the right front fender
+with his fist. Kurt roared back from
+the cab with his own laughter.</p>
+
+<p>He liked joking harshly with
+Kurt and with the rest of the truck
+drivers. They were simple, and they
+didn't have his mental strength.
+But they had another kind of
+strength. They had muscle and
+energy, and most important, they
+had guts. Twenty years before Cutter
+had driven a truck himself. The
+drivers knew that, and there was a
+bond between them, the drivers
+and himself, that seldom existed
+between employer and employee.</p>
+
+<p>The guard at the door came to
+a reflex attention, and Cutter
+bobbed his head curtly. Then, instead
+of taking the stairway that
+led up the front to the second
+floor and his office, he strode down
+the hallway to the left, angling
+through the shop on the first floor.
+He always walked through the
+shop. He liked the heavy driving
+sound of the machines in his ears,
+and the muscled look of the men,
+in their coarse work shirts and
+heavy-soled shoes. Here again was
+strength, in the machines and in
+the men.</p>
+
+<p><img class="fltright" src="images/illo-037.png" width="236" height="263"
+ alt="Confidet on a chair" title="" />And here again too, the bond between
+Cutter and his employees
+was a thing as real as the whir and
+grind and thump of the machines,
+as real as the spray of metal dust,
+spitting away from a spinning saw
+blade. He was able to drive himself
+through to them, through the
+hard wall of unions and prejudices
+against business suits and white
+collars and soft clean hands,
+<a name="png.003" id="png.003" href="#png.003"><span class="ns">[</span><span
+ class="pgmark">38</span><span class="ns">]
+ </span></a>because they knew that at one time
+he had also been a machinist and
+then tool and die operator and
+then a shop foreman. He got
+through to them, and they respected
+him. They were even inspired
+by him, Cutter knew, by his energy
+and alertness and steel confidence.
+It was one good reason why their
+production continually skimmed
+along near the top level of efficiency.</p>
+
+<p>Cutter turned abruptly and
+started up the metal-lipped concrete
+steps to the second floor. He
+went up quickly, his square, almost
+chunky figure moving smoothly,
+and there was not the faintest
+shortening in his breath when he
+reached the level of his own office.</p>
+
+<p>Coming up the back steps required
+him to cross the entire administration
+office which contained
+the combined personnel of Production
+Control, Procurement, and
+Purchasing. And here, the sharp
+edge of elation, whetted by the
+walk past the loading dock and
+the truck drivers and the machine
+shop and the machinists, was
+dulled slightly.</p>
+
+<p>On either side of him as he
+paced rapidly across the room,
+were the rows of light-oak desks
+which contained the kind of men
+he did not like: fragile men,
+whether thin or fat, fragile just
+the same, in the eyes and mouth,
+and pale with their fragility. They
+affected steel postures behind those
+desks, but Cutter knew that the
+steel was synthetic, that there was
+nothing in that mimicked look of
+alertness and virility but posing.
+They were a breed he did not understand,
+because he had never
+been a part of them, and so this
+time, the invisible but very real
+quality of employer-employee relationship
+turned coldly brittle, like
+frozen cellophane.</p>
+
+<p>The sounds now, the clicking of
+typewriters, the sliding of file
+drawers, the squeak of adjusted
+swivel chairs&mdash;all of it&mdash;irritated
+him, rather than giving him inspiration,
+and so he hurried his
+way, especially when he passed that
+one fellow with the sad, frightened
+eyes, who touched his slim hands
+at the papers on his desk, like a
+cautious fawn testing the soundness
+of the earth in front of him.
+What was his name? Linden? God,
+Cutter thought, the epitome of the
+breed, this man: sallow and slow
+and so hesitant that he appeared
+to be about to leap from his chair
+at the slightest alarm.</p>
+
+<p>Cutter broke his aloofness long
+enough to glare at the man, and
+Linden turned his frightened eyes
+quickly to his desk and began shuffling
+his papers nervously. Some
+day, Cutter promised himself, he
+was going to stop in front of the
+man and shout, &ldquo;Booo!&rdquo; and scare
+the poor devil to hell and back.</p>
+
+<p>He pushed the glass doors that
+led to his own offices, and moving
+into Lucile's ante-room restored
+his humor. Lucile, matronly yet
+quick and youthfully spirited,
+smiled at him and met his eyes directly.
+Here was some strength
+again, and he felt the full energy
+of his early-morning drive returning
+fully. Lucile, behind her desk
+in this plain but expensive reception
+room, reminded him of fast,
+hard efficiency, the quality of accomplishment
+that he had dedicated
+himself to.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Goddamned sweet morning, eh,
+<a name="png.004" id="png.004" href="#png.004"><span class="ns">[</span><span
+ class="pgmark">39</span><span class="ns">]
+ </span></a>Lucy?&rdquo; he called.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Beautiful, George,&rdquo; she said. She
+had called him by his first name for
+years. He didn't mind, from her.
+Not many could do it, but those
+who could, successfully, he respected.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What's up first?&rdquo; he asked, and
+she followed him into his own
+office. It was a high-ceilinged room,
+with walls bare except for a picture
+of Alexander Hamilton on one
+wall, and an award plaque from the
+State Chamber of Commerce on
+the opposite side of the room. He
+spun his leather-cushioned swivel
+chair toward him and sat down and
+placed his thick hands against the
+surface of the desk. Lucile took the
+only other chair in the office, to
+the side of the desk, and flipped
+open her appointment pad.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Quay wants to see you right
+away. Says it's important.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Cutter nodded slightly and closed
+his eyes. Lucile went on, calling his
+appointments for the day with
+clicking precision. He stored the
+information, leaning back in his
+chair, adjusting his mind to each,
+so that there would be no energy
+wasted during the hard, swift day.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That's it,&rdquo; Lucile said. &ldquo;Do you
+want to see Quay?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Send him in,&rdquo; Cutter said, and
+he was already leaning into his
+desk, signing his name to the first
+of a dozen letters which he had
+dictated into the machine during
+the last ten minutes of the preceding
+day.</p>
+
+<p>Lucile disappeared, and three
+minutes later Robert Quay took her
+place in the chair beside Cutter's
+desk. He was a taller man than
+Cutter, and thinner. Still, there
+was an athletic grace about him, a
+sureness of step and facial expression,
+that made it obvious that he
+was physically fit. He was single
+and only thirty-five, twelve years
+younger than Cutter, but he had
+been with Cutter Products, Inc. for
+thirteen years. In college he had
+been a Phi Beta Kappa and lettered
+three years on the varsity as a
+quarterback. He was the kind of
+rare combination that Cutter liked,
+and Cutter had offered him more
+than the Chicago Cardinals to get
+him at graduation.</p>
+
+<p>Cutter felt Quay's presence, without
+looking up at him. &ldquo;Goddamned
+sweet morning, eh, Bob?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It really is, George,&rdquo; Quay said.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What's up?&rdquo; Cutter stopped
+signing, having finished the entire
+job, and he stared directly into
+Quay's eyes. Quay met the stare
+unflinchingly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I've got a report from Sid Perry
+at Adacam Research.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Your under-cover agent again,
+eh?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Quay grinned. Adacam Research
+conducted industrial experimentation
+which included government
+work. The only way to find out
+what really went on there, Cutter
+had found out, was to find a key
+man who didn't mind talking for a
+certain amount of compensation,
+regardless of sworn oaths and signatures
+to government statements.
+You could always get somebody,
+Cutter knew, and Quay had been
+able to get a young chemist, Sidney
+Perry.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Okay,&rdquo; Cutter said. &ldquo;What are
+they doing over there?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;There's a fellow who's offered
+Adacam his project for testing.
+They're highly interested, but
+they're not going to handle it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><a name="png.005" id="png.005" href="#png.005"><span class="ns">[</span><span
+ class="pgmark">40</span><span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></a>&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Quay shrugged. &ldquo;Too touchy. It's
+a device that's based on electronics&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What the hell is touchy about
+electronics?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;This deals with the human personality,&rdquo;
+Quay said, as though that
+were explanation enough.</p>
+
+<p>Cutter understood. He snorted.
+&ldquo;Christ, anything that deals with
+the human personality scares them
+over there, doesn't it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Quay spread his hands.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;All right,&rdquo; Cutter said. &ldquo;What's
+this device supposed to do?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The theory behind it is to produce
+energy units which reach a
+plane of intensity great enough to
+affect<!-- Transcriber's note:
+ original reads "effect" --> the function of the human
+ego.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Will it?&rdquo; Cutter never wasted
+time on surprise or curiosity or
+theory. His mind acted directly.
+Would it or wouldn't it? Performance
+versus non-performance. Efficiency
+versus inefficiency. Would it
+improve production of Cutter Products,
+Inc., or would it not?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Sid swears they're convinced it
+will. The factors, on paper, check
+out. But there's been no experimentation,
+because it involves the
+human personality. This thing,
+when used, is supposed to perform
+a definite personality change on the
+individual subjected.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;How?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;You know the theory of psychiatric
+therapy&mdash;the theory of
+shock treatment. The effect is some
+what similar, but a thousand times
+more effective.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What <em>is</em> the effect?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;A gradual dissolving of inferiority
+influences, or inhibitions, from
+the personality. A clear mind resulting.
+A healthy ego.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Confidence.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Cutter stared at Quay's eyes,
+assimilating the information.
+&ldquo;That's all very damned nice. Now
+where does it fit in with Cutter
+Products?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Quay drew a notebook from his
+coat pocket swiftly. &ldquo;You remember
+that efficiency check we had
+made two months ago&mdash;the rating
+of individual departments on comparable
+work produced?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Cutter nodded.</p>
+
+<p>Quay looked at his notebook.
+&ldquo;All administrative personnel departments
+showed an average of&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Thirty-six point eight less efficiency
+than the skilled and unskilled
+labor departments,&rdquo; Cutter finished.</p>
+
+<p>Quay smiled slightly. He snapped
+the notebook shut. &ldquo;Right. So that's
+our personnel efficiency bug.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Christ, I've known that for
+twenty years,&rdquo; Cutter snapped.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Okay,&rdquo; Quay said quickly, alerting
+himself back to the serious
+effort. &ldquo;Now then, you'll remember
+we submitted this efficiency report
+to Babcock and Steele for analysis,
+and their report offered no answer,
+because their experience showed
+that you <em>always</em> get that kind of
+ratio, because of personality differences.
+The administrative personnel
+show more inferiority<!-- Transcriber's note:
+ original reads "infieriority" --> influences
+per man, thus less confidence, thus
+less efficiency.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I remember all that,&rdquo; Cutter
+said.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Their report also pointed out
+that this inevitable loss of efficiency
+is leveled out, by proportionately
+smaller wage compensation. The
+administrative personnel gets
+<a name="png.006" id="png.006" href="#png.006"><span class="ns">[</span><span
+ class="pgmark">41</span><span class="ns">]
+ </span></a>approximately twenty-five percent less
+compensation than the skilled labor
+personnel, and the remaining eleven
+point eight percent loss of efficiency
+is made up by the more highly
+efficient unskilled labor receiving
+approximately the same compensation
+as the administrative personnel.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I remember all that nonsense,
+too,&rdquo; Cutter reddened faintly with
+a sudden anger. He did not believe
+the statistics were nonsense, only
+that you should expect to write off
+a thirty-six point eight efficiency loss
+on the basis of adjusted compensation.
+A thirty-six point eight efficiency
+loss was a comparable loss
+in profits. You never compensated
+a loss in profits, except by erasing
+that loss. &ldquo;And so this is supposed
+to fix it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Quay's head bobbed. &ldquo;It's worth
+a try, it seems to me. I've talked
+to Sid about it extensively, and he
+tells me that Bolen, who's developed
+this thing, would be willing to install
+enough units to cover the entire
+administrative force, from the
+department-head level down.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;How?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Quay motioned a hand. &ldquo;It's no
+larger than a slightly thick saucer.
+It could be put inside the chairs.&rdquo;
+Quay smiled faintly. &ldquo;They sit on
+it, you see, and&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Cutter was not amused. &ldquo;How
+much?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing,&rdquo; Quay said quickly.
+&ldquo;Absolutely nothing. Bolen wants
+actual tests badly, and the Institute
+wouldn't do it. Snap your fingers,
+and give him a hundred and fifty
+people to work on, and it's yours to
+use for nothing. He'll do the installing,
+and he <em>wants</em> to keep it secret.
+It's essential, he says, to get an accurate
+reaction from the subjects
+affected<!-- Transcriber's note:
+ original reads "effected" -->. For him it's perfect, because
+we're running a continuous
+efficiency check, and if this thing
+does the job like it's supposed to do
+it, we'll have gained the entire
+benefits for nothing. How can we
+lose?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Cutter stared at Quay for a moment,
+his mind working swiftly.
+&ldquo;Call Horner in on this, but nobody
+else. Absolutely nobody else.
+Tell Horner to write up a contract
+for this fellow to sign. Get a clause
+in there to the effect that this fellow,
+Bolen, assumes all responsibility
+for any effects not designated
+in the defining part of the contract.
+Fix it up so that he's entirely
+liable, then get it signed, and let's
+see what happens.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Quay smiled fully and stood up.
+&ldquo;Right, sir.&rdquo; He had done a good
+job, he knew. This was the sort of
+thing that would keep him solidly
+entrenched in Cutter's favor.
+&ldquo;Right, George,&rdquo; he said, remembering
+that he didn't need to call
+Cutter sir anymore, but he knew
+he wouldn't hear any more from
+Cutter, because Cutter was already
+looking over a blueprint, eyes thin
+and careful, mind completely adjusted
+to a new problem.</p>
+
+<p class="noindent tb"><br class="ns"
+ /><span class="drop">E</span><span class="uc">dward Bolen</span> called the
+saucer-sized disk, the Confidet.
+He was a thin, short, smiling man
+with fine brown hair which looked
+as though it had just been ruffled
+by a high wind, and he moved, Cutter
+noticed, with quick, but certain
+motions. The installing was done
+two nights after Cutter's lawyer,
+Horner, had written up the contract
+and gotten it signed by Bolen. Only
+<a name="png.007" id="png.007" href="#png.007"><span class="ns">[</span><span
+ class="pgmark">42</span><span class="ns">]
+ </span></a>Quay, Bolen, and Cutter were present.</p>
+
+<p>Bolen fitted the disks into the
+base of the plastic chair cushions,
+and he explained, as he inserted
+one, then another:</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The energy is inside each one,
+you see. The life of it is indefinite,
+and the amount of energy used is
+proportionate to the demand
+created.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What the hell do you mean by
+energy?&rdquo; Cutter demanded, watching
+the small man work.</p>
+
+<p>Bolen laughed contentedly, and
+Quay flushed with embarrassment
+over anyone laughing at a question
+out of Cutter's lips. But Cutter did
+not react, only looked at Bolen, as
+though he could see somehow, beneath
+that smallness and quietness,
+a certain strength. Quay had seen
+that look on Cutter's face before,
+and it meant simply that Cutter
+would wait, analyzing expertly in
+the meantime, until he found his
+advantage. Quay wondered, if this
+gadget worked, how long Bolen
+would own the rights to it.</p>
+
+<p class="tb"><br class="ns" />Cutter drove the Cadillac into
+Hallery Boulevard, as though the
+automobile were an English Austin,
+and just beyond the boundaries of
+the city, cut off into the hills, sliding
+into the night and the relative
+darkness of the exclusive, sparsely
+populated Green Oaks section.</p>
+
+<p>Ten minutes later, his house, a
+massive stone structure which
+looked as though it had been shifted
+intact from the center of some
+medieval moat, loomed up, gray
+and stony, and Capra, his handyman,
+took over the car and drove
+it into the garage, while Cutter
+strode up the wide steps to the
+door.</p>
+
+<p>Niels took his hat, and Mary was
+waiting for him in the library.</p>
+
+<p>She was a rather large woman,
+although not fat, and when she
+wore high heels&mdash;which she was
+not prone to do, because although
+Cutter would not have cared, she
+kept trying to project into other
+people's minds and trying, as she
+said, &ldquo;Not to do anything to them,
+that I wouldn't want them to do to
+me.&rdquo;&mdash;she rose a good inch above
+Cutter. She was pleasant humored,
+and cooperative, and the one great
+irritant about her that annoyed
+Cutter, was the fact that she was
+not capable of meeting life wholeheartedly
+and with strength.</p>
+
+<p>She steadily worried about other
+people's feelings and thoughts, so
+that Cutter wondered if she were
+capable of the slightest personal
+conviction. Yet that weakness was
+an advantage at the same time, to
+him, because she worked constantly
+toward making him happy. The
+house was run to his minutest liking,
+and the servants liked her, so
+that while she did not use a strong
+enough hand, they somehow got
+things done for her, and Cutter had
+no real complaint. Someday, he
+knew, he would be able to develop
+her into the full potential he knew
+she was capable of achieving, and
+then there wouldn't be even that
+one annoyance about her.</p>
+
+<p>He sat down in the large, worn,
+leather chair, and she handed him
+a Scotch and water, and kissed his
+cheek, and then sat down opposite
+him in a smaller striped-satin chair.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Did you have a nice day, dear?&rdquo;
+she asked.</p>
+
+<p>She was always pleasant and she
+always smiled at him, and she was
+<a name="png.008" id="png.008" href="#png.008"><span class="ns">[</span><span
+ class="pgmark">43</span><span class="ns">]
+ </span></a>indeed a handsome woman. They
+had been married but five years,
+and she was almost fifteen years
+younger than he, but they had a
+solid understanding. She respected
+his work, and she was careful with
+the money he allowed her, and she
+never forgot the Scotch and water.
+&ldquo;The day was all right,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;My goodness,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;you
+worked late. Do you want dinner
+right away?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I had some sandwiches at the
+office,&rdquo; he said, drinking slowly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That isn't enough,&rdquo; she said reproachfully,
+and he enjoyed her
+concern over him. &ldquo;You'd better
+have some nice roast beef that
+Andre did just perfectly. And
+there's some wonderful dressing
+that I made myself, for just a small
+salad.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He smiled finally. &ldquo;All right,&rdquo; he
+said. &ldquo;All right.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She got up and kissed him again,
+and he relaxed in the large chair,
+sipping contentedly at his drink, listening
+to her footsteps hurrying
+away, the sound another indication
+that she was doing something for
+him. He felt tired and easy. He let
+his mind relax with his body. The
+gadget, the Confidet; that was going
+to work, he knew. It would erase
+the last important bug in his operational
+efficiency, and then he might
+even expand, the way he had
+wanted to all along. He closed his
+eyes for a moment, tasting of his
+contentment, and then he heard the
+sound of his dinner being placed on
+the dining room table, and he stood
+up briskly and walked out of the
+library. He really was hungry, he
+realized. Not only hungry but, he
+thought, he might make love to
+Mary that evening.</p>
+
+<p class="noindent tb"><br class="ns"
+ /><span class="drop">T</span><span class="uc">he first</span> indication that the
+Confidet might be working,
+came three weeks later, when Quay
+handed Cutter the report showing
+an efficiency increase of 3.7 percent.
+&ldquo;I think that should tell the
+story,&rdquo; Quay said elatedly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Doesn't mean anything,&rdquo; Cutter
+said. &ldquo;Could be a thousand other
+factors besides that damned gimmick.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But we've never been able to
+show more than one point five
+variance on the administrative
+checks.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The trouble with you, Quay,&rdquo;
+Cutter said brusquely, &ldquo;is you keep
+looking for miracles. You think the
+way to get things in this world is
+to hope real hard. Nothing comes
+easy, and I've got half a notion
+to get those damned silly things
+jerked out.&rdquo; He bent over his work,
+obviously finished with Quay, and
+Quay, deflated, paced out of the
+office.</p>
+
+<p>Cutter smiled inside the empty
+office. He liked to see Quay's enthusiasm
+broken now and then. It
+took that, to mold a really good
+man, because that way he assumed
+real strength after a while. If he
+got knocked down and got up
+enough, he didn't fall apart when
+he hit a really tough obstacle. Cutter
+was not unhappy about the
+efficiency figures at all, and he
+knew as well as Quay that they were
+decisive.</p>
+
+<p>Give it another two weeks, he
+thought, and if the increase was
+comparable, then they might have
+a real improvement on their hands.
+Those limp, jumpy creatures on the
+desks out there might actually start
+earning their keep. He was thinking
+about that, what it would mean to
+<a name="png.009" id="png.009" href="#png.009"><span class="ns">[</span><span
+ class="pgmark">44</span><span class="ns">]
+ </span></a>the total profit, when Lucile opened
+his door and he caught a glimpse of
+the office outside, including the
+clerk with the sad, frightened eyes.
+Even you, Linden, Cutter thought,
+we might even improve you.</p>
+
+<p class="tb"><br class="ns" />The increase <em>was</em> comparable
+after another two weeks. In fact,
+the efficiency figure jumped to 8.9.
+Quay was too excited to be knocked
+down this time, and Cutter was
+unable to suppress his own pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;This is really it this time,
+George,&rdquo; Quay said. &ldquo;It really is.
+And here.&rdquo; He handed Cutter a set
+of figures. &ldquo;Here's what accounting
+estimates the profit to be on this
+eight-nine figure.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Cutter nodded, his eyes thinning
+the slightest bit. &ldquo;We won't see
+that for a while.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; Quay said, &ldquo;but we'll see
+it! We'll sure as hell see it! And if
+it goes much higher, we'll absolutely
+balance out!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What does Bolen figure the top
+to be?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ten percent.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why not thirty-six point eight?&rdquo;
+Cutter said, his eyes bright and
+narrow.</p>
+
+<p>Quay whistled. &ldquo;Even at ten, at
+the wage we're paying&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Never settle for quarters or
+thirds,&rdquo; Cutter said. &ldquo;Get the whole
+thing. Send for Bolen. I want to
+talk to him. And in the meantime,
+Bob, this is such a goddamned sweet
+morning, what do you say we go
+to lunch early?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Quay blinked only once, which
+proved his adaptability. Cutter had
+just asked him to lunch, as though
+it were their habit to lunch together
+regularly, when in reality,
+Quay had never once gone to lunch
+with Cutter before. Quay was quite
+nonchalant, however, and he said,
+&ldquo;Why, fine, George. I think that's
+a good idea.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p class="noindent tb"><br class="ns"
+ /><span class="drop">B</span><span class="uc">olen</span> appeared in Cutter's
+office the next morning, smiling,
+his eyes darting quickly about
+Cutter's desk and walls, so that
+Cutter felt,<!-- Transcriber's note:
+ comma invisible in original --> for a moment, that
+showing Bolen anything as personal
+as his office, was a little like letting
+the man look into his brain.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Quay tells me you've set ten
+percent as the top efficiency increase
+we can count on, Bolen.&rdquo;
+Cutter said it directly, to the point.</p>
+
+<p>Bolen smiled, examining Cutter's
+hands and suit and eyes. &ldquo;That's
+right, Mr. Cutter.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Bolen placed his small hands on
+his lap, looked at the tapered fingers,
+then up again at Cutter. He
+kept smiling. &ldquo;It's a matter of
+saturation.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;How in hell could ten percent
+more efficiency turn into saturation?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Not ten percent more efficiency,&rdquo;
+Bolen said quietly. &ldquo;Ten percent
+<em>effect</em> on the individual who
+<em>creates</em> the efficiency. Ten percent
+effect of that which <em>causes</em> him to
+be ten percent more efficient.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Cutter snorted. &ldquo;Whatever the
+hell that damned gimmick does, it
+creates confidence, drive, strength,
+doesn't it? Isn't that what you
+said?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Bolen said politely. &ldquo;Approximately.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Can you explain to me then,
+how ten percent more confidence
+in a man is saturation?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><a name="png.010" id="png.010" href="#png.010"><span class="ns">[</span><span
+ class="pgmark">45</span><span class="ns">]<br
+ /></span></a>Bolen studied what he was going
+to say carefully, smiling all the
+while. &ldquo;Some men,&rdquo; he said very
+slowly, &ldquo;are different than others,
+Mr. Cutter. Some men will react
+to personality changes as abrupt as
+this in different ways than others.
+You aren't too concerned, are you,
+with what those changes might already
+have done to any of the individuals
+affected?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Hell, no,&rdquo; Cutter said loudly.
+&ldquo;Why should I be? All I'm interested
+in is efficiency. Tell me
+about efficiency, and I'll know what
+you're talking about.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;All right,&rdquo; Bolen said. &ldquo;We have
+no way of knowing right now which
+men have been affected more than
+others. All we have is an average.
+The average right now is eight and
+nine-tenths percent. But perhaps
+you have some workers who do not
+react, because they really do not
+suffer the lacks or compulsions or
+inhibitions that the Confidet is concerned
+with. Perhaps they are working
+at top efficiency right now, and
+no amount of further subjection to
+the Confidet will change them.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;All right then,&rdquo; Cutter said
+quickly, &ldquo;we'll ferret that kind of
+deadwood out, and replace them!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;How will you know which are
+deadwood?&rdquo; Bolen asked pleasantly.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Individual checks, of course!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Bolen shook his head, looking
+back at his tapering fingers. &ldquo;It
+won't necessarily work. You see,
+the work that these men are concerned
+with is not particularly demanding
+work, is it? And that
+means you want to strike a balance
+between capability and demand.
+It's the unbalance of these things
+that creates trouble, and in your
+case, the demand outweighed the
+capability. Now, if you get a total
+ten-percent increase, then you're
+balanced. If you go over that, you'll
+break the balance all over again,
+except that you'll have, in certain
+cases, capability outweighing the
+demand of the work.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Good,&rdquo; Cutter said. &ldquo;Any man
+whose<!-- Transcriber's note:
+ original reads "who's" --> capability outweighs the work
+he's doing will simply keep increasing
+his efficiency.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Bolen shook his head. &ldquo;No. He'll
+react quite the other way. He'll lose
+interest, because the work will no
+longer be a challenge, and then the
+efficiency will drop.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Cutter's jaw hardened. &ldquo;All right
+then. I'll move that man up, and
+fill his place with someone else.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Bolen looked at Cutter's eyes,
+examined them curiously. &ldquo;Some
+men have a great deal of latent
+talent, Mr. Cutter. This talent released&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Cutter frowned, studying Bolen
+carefully. Then he laughed suddenly.
+&ldquo;You think I might not be able
+to handle it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Well, let's say that you've got
+a stable of gentle, quiet mares, and
+you turn them suddenly into thoroughbreds.
+You have to make allowances
+for that, Mr. Cutter. The
+same stalls, the same railings, the
+same stable boys might not be able
+to do the job anymore.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Cutter said, smiling without
+humor, &ldquo;but the <em>owner</em> has
+nothing to do with stalls and railings
+and stable boys, only in the
+sense that they are subsidiary. The
+owner is the owner, and if he has
+to make a few subsidiary changes,
+all right. But nothing really affects
+the owner, no matter whether
+you've got gentle mares or
+<a name="png.011" id="png.011" href="#png.011"><span class="ns">[</span><span
+ class="pgmark">46</span><span class="ns">]
+ </span></a>thoroughbreds.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Bolen nodded, as though he had
+expected that exact answer. &ldquo;You
+are a very certain man, aren't you,
+Mr. Cutter?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Would I be here, in this office,
+heading this company, if I weren't,
+Bolen?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Bolen smiled.</p>
+
+<p>Cutter straightened in his chair.
+&ldquo;All right, do we go on? Do we
+shoot for the limit?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Bolen chose his words carefully.
+&ldquo;I am interested in testing my Confidet,
+Mr. Cutter. This is the most
+important thing in the world to me.
+I don't recommend what you want
+to do. But, as long as you'll give
+me accurate reports on the effects
+of the Confidet, I'll go along with
+you. Providing you grant me one
+concession.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Cutter frowned.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I want our written contract
+dissolved.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Cutter reddened faintly. Nobody
+ever demanded anything of him
+and got it easily, but his mind
+turned over rapidly, judging the
+increase in efficiency, the increase
+in profits. He would not necessarily
+have to stop with administrative
+personnel. There were other departments,
+too, that could stand a
+little sharpening. Finally he
+nodded, reluctantly. &ldquo;All right,
+Bolen.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Bolen smiled and left quickly,
+and Cutter stared at his desk for a
+moment, tense. Then, he relaxed
+and the hard sternness of his face
+softened a bit. He put his finger
+on his desk calendar, and looked at
+a date Lucile had circled for him.
+He grinned, and picked up the telephone,
+and dialed.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;This is George H. Cutter,&rdquo; he
+said to the man who answered. &ldquo;My
+wife's birthday is next Saturday.
+Do you remember that antique desk
+I bought her last year? Good. Well,
+the truth is, she uses it all the time,
+so this year I'd like a good chair
+to match it. She's just using an occasional
+chair right now, and&nbsp;&hellip;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p class="noindent tb"><br class="ns"
+ /><span class="drop">L</span><span class="uc">ike everything</span> he gave
+her, Mary liked his gift extremely
+well, and night after night,
+after the birthday, he came home
+to find her at the desk, using the
+chair, captaining her house and her
+servant staff. And the improvement
+was noticeable in her, almost from
+the first day. Within a month, he
+could detect a remarkable change,
+and for the first time, since they
+had been married, Mary gave a
+dinner for thirty people without
+crying just before it started.</p>
+
+<p>There were other changes.</p>
+
+<p>Quay brought in efficiency report
+after efficiency report, and by the
+end of three months, they had hit
+eighteen and seven-tenths percent
+increase. The administrative office
+was no longer the dull, listless place
+it had been; now it thrived and
+hummed like the shop below. Cutter
+could see the difference with
+his own eyes, and he could particularly
+see the differences in certain
+individuals.</p>
+
+<p>Brown and Kennedy showed remarkable
+improvement, but it was
+really Harry Linden who astonished
+Cutter. An individual check showed
+a sixty-percent increase by Linden,
+and there was a definite change in
+the man's looks. He walked differently,
+with a quick, virile step,
+and the look of his face and eyes
+had become strong and alive. He
+<a name="png.012" id="png.012" href="#png.012"><span class="ns">[</span><span
+ class="pgmark">47</span><span class="ns">]
+ </span></a>began appearing early in the morning,
+ahead of the starting hour, and
+working late, and the only time he
+missed any work hours, was one
+afternoon, during which, Lucile informed
+Cutter, he had appeared in
+court for his divorce trial.</p>
+
+<p>Within a month, Cutter had
+fired Stole and Lackter and Grant,
+as department heads, and replaced
+them with Brown, Kennedy, and
+Linden. He had formulated plans
+for installation of the Confidets in
+the drafting department and the
+supply department, and already the
+profits of increased efficiency were
+beginning to show in the records.
+Cutter was full of new enthusiasm
+and ambition, and there was only
+one thorn in the entire development.</p>
+
+<p>Quay had resigned.</p>
+
+<p>Cutter had been startled and
+extremely angry, but Quay had
+been unperturbed and stubborn.
+&ldquo;I've enjoyed working with you
+immensely, George, but my mind
+is made up. No hard feelings?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Cutter had not even shaken his
+hand.</p>
+
+<p>It had bothered him for days,
+and he checked every industrial
+company in the area, to see where
+Quay had found a better position.
+He was highly surprised, when he
+learned, finally, that Quay had
+purchased a small boat and was
+earning his living by carrying fishermen
+out onto the Bay. Quay had
+also married, four days after his
+resignation, and Cutter pushed the
+entire thing out of his mind, checking
+it off to partial insanity.</p>
+
+<p>By February of the next year, he
+had promoted Harry Linden to
+Quay's old job, gotten rid of the
+deadwood that showed up so plainly
+on the individual checks, and the
+total efficiency average had reached
+thirty-three percent. His and Mary's
+anniversary was on the fourth of
+March, and when that day arrived,
+he was certain that he had reached
+that point where he could expand
+to another plant.</p>
+
+<p>He was about to order her a
+mink stole in celebration, but it was
+also that day that he was informed
+that she was suing him for divorce.
+He rushed home, furious, but she
+was gone. She had taken her clothes
+and jewelry and the second Cadillac.
+In fact, all that she had left
+of her personal possessions were the
+antique desk and chair. When the
+trial was over, months later, she
+had won enough support to take
+her to France, where, he learned,
+she purchased a chateau at Cannes.</p>
+
+<p>He tried to lose himself in his
+work, but for the first time in his
+life, he had begun to get faintly
+worried. It was only a sliver of
+worry, but it kept him from going
+on with the expansion. Stocks in
+the company had turned over at an
+amazingly rapid rate, and while it
+was still nothing more than intuition
+on his part, he began to tighten
+up, readying himself to meet
+anything.</p>
+
+<p>The explosion came in July.</p>
+
+<p>Drindor Products had picked up
+forty-nine percent of the stock on
+the market, by using secondary
+buyers. There had been a leak
+somewhere, Cutter realized, that
+had told his competitor, Drindor,
+the kind of profit he was making.
+He knew who it had been instantly,
+but before he could fire Harry
+Linden, all of his walls crashed
+down. Four months before, to put
+more <i lang="fr">esprit de corps</i> into Linden,
+<a name="png.013" id="png.013" href="#png.013"><span class="ns">[</span><span
+ class="pgmark">48</span><span class="ns">]
+ </span></a>he had allowed Linden eight shares
+of his own stock, intending to pick
+it up later from the market. Linden
+had coerced with Drindor. Cutter
+lost control.</p>
+
+<p>A board of directors was elected
+by Drindor, and Drindor assumed
+the presidency by proxy. Harry Linden
+took over Cutter's office, as
+Vice President In Charge.</p>
+
+<p>Cutter had wildly ordered Edward
+Bolen to remove the Confidets
+one week before, but even then he
+had known that it was too late, and
+the smiling, knowing look on
+Bolen's face had infuriated him to
+a screaming rage. Bolen remained
+undisturbed, and quietly carried
+the disks away. Cutter, when he
+left his office that final day, moved
+slowly, very slowly.</p>
+
+<p class="noindent tb"><br class="ns"
+ /><span class="drop">H</span><span class="uc">e brooded</span> for many long
+days after that, searching his
+mind for a way to counterattack.
+He still had enough stock to keep
+him comfortable if he lived another
+hundred years. But he no longer
+had the power, and he thirsted for
+that. He turned it around and
+around in his brain, trying to figure
+out how he could do it, and the one
+thing he finally knew, the one certain
+thing, was that if he used
+enough drive, enough strength, then
+he would regain control of the company
+he had built with his own
+hands and mind.</p>
+
+<p>He paced the library and the
+long living room and the dining
+room, and his eyes were lost, until
+he saw, through the doorway of the
+sewing room, that desk and that
+chair, and he remembered he
+hadn't done anything about that.</p>
+
+<p>He paused only briefly, because
+he had not lost an ounce of his
+ability to make a sudden decision,
+and then he removed that disk and
+carried it to the library and fitted it
+under the cushion of the large,
+worn, leather chair.</p>
+
+<p class="tb"><br class="ns" />By fall, he had done nothing to
+regain control, and he was less
+certain of how he should act than
+he had been months before. He
+kept driving by the plant and looking
+at it, but he did so carefully, so
+that no one would see him, and he
+was surprised to find that, above
+all, he didn't want to face Harry
+Linden. The memory of the man's
+firm look, the sharp, bold eyes,
+frightened him, and the knowledge
+of his fright crushed him inside. He
+wished desperately that Mary were
+back with him, and he even wrote
+her letters, pleading letters, but they
+came back, unopened.</p>
+
+<p>Finally he went to see Robert
+Quay, because Quay was the only
+man in his memory whom he somehow
+didn't fear talking to. He
+found Quay in a small cottage near
+the beach. There was a six-day old
+infant in a crib in the bedroom,
+and Quay's wife was a sparkling-eyed
+girl with a smile that made
+Cutter feel relatively at ease for the
+first time in weeks.</p>
+
+<p>She politely left them alone, and
+Cutter sat there, embarrassed faintly,
+but glad to be in Quay's home
+and presence. They talked of how
+it had been, when Quay was with
+the company, and finally Cutter
+pushed himself into asking about
+it:</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I've often wondered, Bob, why
+you left?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Quay blushed slightly, then
+grinned. &ldquo;I might as well admit it.
+<a name="png.014" id="png.014" href="#png.014"><span class="ns">[</span><span
+ class="pgmark">49</span><span class="ns">]
+ </span></a>I got one of those things from
+Bolen, and had it installed in my
+own chair.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Cutter thought about it, surprised.
+He cleared his throat. &ldquo;And
+then you quit?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Sure,&rdquo; Quay said. &ldquo;All my life,
+I'd wanted to do just what I'm doing.
+But things just came easy to
+me, and the opportunities were always
+there, and I just never had
+the guts to pass anything by. Finally
+I did.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Quay smiled at him, and Cutter
+shifted in his chair. &ldquo;The Confidet
+did that.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Cutter nodded.</p>
+
+<p>It came to him suddenly, something
+he'd never suspected until
+that moment. There was something
+very definitely wrong with what had
+happened to him. The Confidet
+had affected<!-- Transcriber's note:
+ original reads "effected" --> everyone but him;
+there must have been something
+wrong with the one he had been
+using. It had worked with Mary,
+but hadn't Bolen said something
+about the energy being used in
+proportion to the demand? Mary
+had certainly created a demand.
+Bolen said the life of it was indefinite,
+but couldn't the energy
+have been used up?</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; he said carefully, smiling,
+to Quay. &ldquo;You wouldn't have it
+around, would you? That Confidet
+of yours?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, hell, no,&rdquo; Quay said. &ldquo;I
+gave it to Bolen a long time ago.
+He came around for it, in fact.
+Said he had to keep track of all of
+them.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Cutter left hurriedly, with Quay
+and his wife following him to his
+car. He drove straight to Bolen's
+house.</p>
+
+<p>Fury built inside of him. All this
+time, Bolen had kept track of his
+Confidet, the one that Mary had
+used, and all this time, he had
+known Cutter still had it. Cutter
+was furious over the realization that
+Bolen had been using him for experimentation,
+and also because the
+Confidet that he had tried to use
+had turned worthless.</p>
+
+<p>All his hatred, all his anger
+churned inside of him like the
+heat from shaken coals, but when
+he walked up the path to Bolen's
+small house, he did so quietly, with
+extreme care.</p>
+
+<p>When he saw Bolen's face in the
+doorway, he wanted to strike the
+man, but he kept his hands quietly
+at his sides; and though he hated
+himself for it, he even smiled a
+little at the man.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Come in,&rdquo; Bolen smiled, and
+he spoke softly, and at the same
+time he examined Cutter with
+quick, penetrating eyes. &ldquo;Come in,
+Mr. Cutter.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Cutter wanted to stand there and
+demand another Confidet, a good
+one, and not walk inside, politely,
+like he did. And he wished that his
+voice would come out, quickly, with
+the power and hate in it that he
+had once been capable of. But for
+some reason, he couldn't say a
+word.</p>
+
+<p>Bolen was extremely polite.
+&ldquo;You've been using that Confidet,
+haven't you?&rdquo; He spoke gently, almost
+as though he were speaking
+to a frightened child.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Cutter managed to say.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;And what you expected to happen,
+didn't. That's what you want
+to tell me, isn't it?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Cutter's insides quivered with
+rage, but he was able only to nod.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Would you like to know why?&rdquo;
+<a name="png.015" id="png.015" href="#png.015"><span class="ns">[</span><span
+ class="pgmark">50</span><span class="ns">]
+ </span></a>Bolen said.</p>
+
+<p>Cutter rubbed his damp palms
+over his knees. He nodded.</p>
+
+<p>Bolen smiled, his eyes sparkling.
+&ldquo;Very simple really. It wasn't the
+fault of the Confidet so much, Mr.
+Cutter, as you. You see, you are a
+rare exception. What you are, or
+possibly I should say, what you
+were, was a complete super ego.
+There are very few of those, Mr.
+Cutter, in this world, but you happened
+to be one of them. A really
+absolute, complete super ego, and
+the Confidet's effect was simply the
+reverse of what it would have been
+with anyone else.&rdquo; Bolen shook his
+head, sympathetically, but he didn't
+stop smiling, and his eyes didn't
+stop their infuriating exploration
+of Cutter's face and eyes and hands.
+&ldquo;It's really a shame, because I was
+almost certain you were a super
+ego, Mr. Cutter. And when you
+didn't return that last Confidet, I
+somehow felt that you might use
+it, after all that nasty business at
+the company and all.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;But while I was fairly certain of
+the effects, Mr. Cutter, I wasn't
+absolutely <em>sure</em>, you see, and so like
+the rest of the experiments, I had
+to forget my conscience. I'm really
+very sorry.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The anger was a wild thing inside
+Cutter now, and it made his
+hands tremble and sweat, and his
+mouth quiver, and he hated the
+man in front of him, the man who
+was responsible for what had happened
+to him, the smiling man with
+the soft voice and exploring eyes.
+But he didn't say anything, not a
+word. He didn't show his anger or
+his frustration or his resentment. He
+didn't indicate to Bolen a particle
+of his inner wildness.</p>
+
+<p>He didn't have the nerve.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class="pg" />
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Confidence Game, by James McKimmey
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+</body>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Confidence Game, by James McKimmey
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Confidence Game
+
+Author: James McKimmey
+
+Release Date: May 4, 2010 [EBook #32243]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CONFIDENCE GAME ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Greg Weeks, David Wilson and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | Transcriber's note: |
+ | |
+ | This story was published in _If: Worlds of Science Fiction_, |
+ | September, 1954. Extensive research did not uncover any |
+ | evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was |
+ | renewed. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+_Illustrated by Ed Emsh_
+
+
+
+
+CONFIDENCE GAME
+
+ _Cutter demanded more and more and more efficiency--and got it! But,
+ as in anything, enough is enough, and too much is..._
+
+By JAMES McKIMMEY, JR.
+
+
+
+
+George H. Cutter wheeled his big convertible into his reserved space in
+the Company parking lot with a flourish. A bright California sun drove
+its early brightness down on him as he strode toward the square,
+four-story brick building which said _Cutter Products, Inc._ over its
+front door. A two-ton truck was grinding backward, toward the loading
+doors, the thick-shouldered driver craning his neck. Cutter moved
+briskly forward, a thick-shouldered man himself, though not very tall. A
+glint of light appeared in his eyes, as he saw Kurt, the truck driver,
+fitting the truck's rear end into the tight opening.
+
+"Get that junk out of the way!" he yelled, and his voice roared over the
+noise of the truck's engine.
+
+Kurt snapped his head around, his blue eyes thinning, then recognition
+spread humor crinkles around his eyes and mouth. "All right, sir," he
+said. "Just a second while I jump out, and I'll lift it out of your
+way."
+
+"With bare hands?" Cutter said.
+
+"With bare hands," Kurt said.
+
+Cutter's laugh boomed, and as he rounded the front of the truck, he
+struck the right front fender with his fist. Kurt roared back from the
+cab with his own laughter.
+
+He liked joking harshly with Kurt and with the rest of the truck
+drivers. They were simple, and they didn't have his mental strength. But
+they had another kind of strength. They had muscle and energy, and most
+important, they had guts. Twenty years before Cutter had driven a truck
+himself. The drivers knew that, and there was a bond between them, the
+drivers and himself, that seldom existed between employer and employee.
+
+The guard at the door came to a reflex attention, and Cutter bobbed his
+head curtly. Then, instead of taking the stairway that led up the front
+to the second floor and his office, he strode down the hallway to the
+left, angling through the shop on the first floor. He always walked
+through the shop. He liked the heavy driving sound of the machines in
+his ears, and the muscled look of the men, in their coarse work shirts
+and heavy-soled shoes. Here again was strength, in the machines and in
+the men.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+And here again too, the bond between Cutter and his employees was a
+thing as real as the whir and grind and thump of the machines, as real
+as the spray of metal dust, spitting away from a spinning saw blade. He
+was able to drive himself through to them, through the hard wall of
+unions and prejudices against business suits and white collars and soft
+clean hands, because they knew that at one time he had also been a
+machinist and then tool and die operator and then a shop foreman. He got
+through to them, and they respected him. They were even inspired by him,
+Cutter knew, by his energy and alertness and steel confidence. It was
+one good reason why their production continually skimmed along near the
+top level of efficiency.
+
+Cutter turned abruptly and started up the metal-lipped concrete steps to
+the second floor. He went up quickly, his square, almost chunky figure
+moving smoothly, and there was not the faintest shortening in his breath
+when he reached the level of his own office.
+
+Coming up the back steps required him to cross the entire administration
+office which contained the combined personnel of Production Control,
+Procurement, and Purchasing. And here, the sharp edge of elation,
+whetted by the walk past the loading dock and the truck drivers and the
+machine shop and the machinists, was dulled slightly.
+
+On either side of him as he paced rapidly across the room, were the rows
+of light-oak desks which contained the kind of men he did not like:
+fragile men, whether thin or fat, fragile just the same, in the eyes and
+mouth, and pale with their fragility. They affected steel postures
+behind those desks, but Cutter knew that the steel was synthetic, that
+there was nothing in that mimicked look of alertness and virility but
+posing. They were a breed he did not understand, because he had never
+been a part of them, and so this time, the invisible but very real
+quality of employer-employee relationship turned coldly brittle, like
+frozen cellophane.
+
+The sounds now, the clicking of typewriters, the sliding of file
+drawers, the squeak of adjusted swivel chairs--all of it--irritated him,
+rather than giving him inspiration, and so he hurried his way,
+especially when he passed that one fellow with the sad, frightened eyes,
+who touched his slim hands at the papers on his desk, like a cautious
+fawn testing the soundness of the earth in front of him. What was his
+name? Linden? God, Cutter thought, the epitome of the breed, this man:
+sallow and slow and so hesitant that he appeared to be about to leap
+from his chair at the slightest alarm.
+
+Cutter broke his aloofness long enough to glare at the man, and Linden
+turned his frightened eyes quickly to his desk and began shuffling his
+papers nervously. Some day, Cutter promised himself, he was going to
+stop in front of the man and shout, "Booo!" and scare the poor devil to
+hell and back.
+
+He pushed the glass doors that led to his own offices, and moving into
+Lucile's ante-room restored his humor. Lucile, matronly yet quick and
+youthfully spirited, smiled at him and met his eyes directly. Here was
+some strength again, and he felt the full energy of his early-morning
+drive returning fully. Lucile, behind her desk in this plain but
+expensive reception room, reminded him of fast, hard efficiency, the
+quality of accomplishment that he had dedicated himself to.
+
+"Goddamned sweet morning, eh, Lucy?" he called.
+
+"Beautiful, George," she said. She had called him by his first name for
+years. He didn't mind, from her. Not many could do it, but those who
+could, successfully, he respected.
+
+"What's up first?" he asked, and she followed him into his own office.
+It was a high-ceilinged room, with walls bare except for a picture of
+Alexander Hamilton on one wall, and an award plaque from the State
+Chamber of Commerce on the opposite side of the room. He spun his
+leather-cushioned swivel chair toward him and sat down and placed his
+thick hands against the surface of the desk. Lucile took the only other
+chair in the office, to the side of the desk, and flipped open her
+appointment pad.
+
+"Quay wants to see you right away. Says it's important."
+
+Cutter nodded slightly and closed his eyes. Lucile went on, calling his
+appointments for the day with clicking precision. He stored the
+information, leaning back in his chair, adjusting his mind to each, so
+that there would be no energy wasted during the hard, swift day.
+
+"That's it," Lucile said. "Do you want to see Quay?"
+
+"Send him in," Cutter said, and he was already leaning into his desk,
+signing his name to the first of a dozen letters which he had dictated
+into the machine during the last ten minutes of the preceding day.
+
+Lucile disappeared, and three minutes later Robert Quay took her place
+in the chair beside Cutter's desk. He was a taller man than Cutter, and
+thinner. Still, there was an athletic grace about him, a sureness of
+step and facial expression, that made it obvious that he was physically
+fit. He was single and only thirty-five, twelve years younger than
+Cutter, but he had been with Cutter Products, Inc. for thirteen years.
+In college he had been a Phi Beta Kappa and lettered three years on the
+varsity as a quarterback. He was the kind of rare combination that
+Cutter liked, and Cutter had offered him more than the Chicago Cardinals
+to get him at graduation.
+
+Cutter felt Quay's presence, without looking up at him. "Goddamned sweet
+morning, eh, Bob?"
+
+"It really is, George," Quay said.
+
+"What's up?" Cutter stopped signing, having finished the entire job, and
+he stared directly into Quay's eyes. Quay met the stare unflinchingly.
+
+"I've got a report from Sid Perry at Adacam Research."
+
+"Your under-cover agent again, eh?"
+
+Quay grinned. Adacam Research conducted industrial experimentation which
+included government work. The only way to find out what really went on
+there, Cutter had found out, was to find a key man who didn't mind
+talking for a certain amount of compensation, regardless of sworn oaths
+and signatures to government statements. You could always get somebody,
+Cutter knew, and Quay had been able to get a young chemist, Sidney
+Perry.
+
+"Okay," Cutter said. "What are they doing over there?"
+
+"There's a fellow who's offered Adacam his project for testing. They're
+highly interested, but they're not going to handle it."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+Quay shrugged. "Too touchy. It's a device that's based on electronics--"
+
+"What the hell is touchy about electronics?"
+
+"This deals with the human personality," Quay said, as though that were
+explanation enough.
+
+Cutter understood. He snorted. "Christ, anything that deals with the
+human personality scares them over there, doesn't it?"
+
+Quay spread his hands.
+
+"All right," Cutter said. "What's this device supposed to do?"
+
+"The theory behind it is to produce energy units which reach a plane of
+intensity great enough to affect the function of the human ego."
+
+"Will it?" Cutter never wasted time on surprise or curiosity or theory.
+His mind acted directly. Would it or wouldn't it? Performance versus
+non-performance. Efficiency versus inefficiency. Would it improve
+production of Cutter Products, Inc., or would it not?
+
+"Sid swears they're convinced it will. The factors, on paper, check out.
+But there's been no experimentation, because it involves the human
+personality. This thing, when used, is supposed to perform a definite
+personality change on the individual subjected."
+
+"How?"
+
+"You know the theory of psychiatric therapy--the theory of shock
+treatment. The effect is some what similar, but a thousand times more
+effective."
+
+"What _is_ the effect?"
+
+"A gradual dissolving of inferiority influences, or inhibitions, from
+the personality. A clear mind resulting. A healthy ego."
+
+"And?"
+
+"Confidence."
+
+Cutter stared at Quay's eyes, assimilating the information. "That's all
+very damned nice. Now where does it fit in with Cutter Products?"
+
+Quay drew a notebook from his coat pocket swiftly. "You remember that
+efficiency check we had made two months ago--the rating of individual
+departments on comparable work produced?"
+
+Cutter nodded.
+
+Quay looked at his notebook. "All administrative personnel departments
+showed an average of--"
+
+"Thirty-six point eight less efficiency than the skilled and unskilled
+labor departments," Cutter finished.
+
+Quay smiled slightly. He snapped the notebook shut. "Right. So that's
+our personnel efficiency bug."
+
+"Christ, I've known that for twenty years," Cutter snapped.
+
+"Okay," Quay said quickly, alerting himself back to the serious effort.
+"Now then, you'll remember we submitted this efficiency report to
+Babcock and Steele for analysis, and their report offered no answer,
+because their experience showed that you _always_ get that kind of
+ratio, because of personality differences. The administrative personnel
+show more inferiority influences per man, thus less confidence, thus
+less efficiency."
+
+"I remember all that," Cutter said.
+
+"Their report also pointed out that this inevitable loss of efficiency
+is leveled out, by proportionately smaller wage compensation. The
+administrative personnel gets approximately twenty-five percent less
+compensation than the skilled labor personnel, and the remaining eleven
+point eight percent loss of efficiency is made up by the more highly
+efficient unskilled labor receiving approximately the same compensation
+as the administrative personnel."
+
+"I remember all that nonsense, too," Cutter reddened faintly with a
+sudden anger. He did not believe the statistics were nonsense, only that
+you should expect to write off a thirty-six point eight efficiency loss
+on the basis of adjusted compensation. A thirty-six point eight
+efficiency loss was a comparable loss in profits. You never compensated
+a loss in profits, except by erasing that loss. "And so this is supposed
+to fix it?"
+
+Quay's head bobbed. "It's worth a try, it seems to me. I've talked to
+Sid about it extensively, and he tells me that Bolen, who's developed
+this thing, would be willing to install enough units to cover the entire
+administrative force, from the department-head level down."
+
+"How?"
+
+Quay motioned a hand. "It's no larger than a slightly thick saucer. It
+could be put inside the chairs." Quay smiled faintly. "They sit on it,
+you see, and--"
+
+Cutter was not amused. "How much?"
+
+"Nothing," Quay said quickly. "Absolutely nothing. Bolen wants actual
+tests badly, and the Institute wouldn't do it. Snap your fingers, and
+give him a hundred and fifty people to work on, and it's yours to use
+for nothing. He'll do the installing, and he _wants_ to keep it secret.
+It's essential, he says, to get an accurate reaction from the subjects
+affected. For him it's perfect, because we're running a continuous
+efficiency check, and if this thing does the job like it's supposed to
+do it, we'll have gained the entire benefits for nothing. How can we
+lose?"
+
+Cutter stared at Quay for a moment, his mind working swiftly. "Call
+Horner in on this, but nobody else. Absolutely nobody else. Tell Horner
+to write up a contract for this fellow to sign. Get a clause in there to
+the effect that this fellow, Bolen, assumes all responsibility for any
+effects not designated in the defining part of the contract. Fix it up
+so that he's entirely liable, then get it signed, and let's see what
+happens."
+
+Quay smiled fully and stood up. "Right, sir." He had done a good job, he
+knew. This was the sort of thing that would keep him solidly entrenched
+in Cutter's favor. "Right, George," he said, remembering that he didn't
+need to call Cutter sir anymore, but he knew he wouldn't hear any more
+from Cutter, because Cutter was already looking over a blueprint, eyes
+thin and careful, mind completely adjusted to a new problem.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Edward Bolen called the saucer-sized disk, the Confidet. He was a thin,
+short, smiling man with fine brown hair which looked as though it had
+just been ruffled by a high wind, and he moved, Cutter noticed, with
+quick, but certain motions. The installing was done two nights after
+Cutter's lawyer, Horner, had written up the contract and gotten it
+signed by Bolen. Only Quay, Bolen, and Cutter were present.
+
+Bolen fitted the disks into the base of the plastic chair cushions, and
+he explained, as he inserted one, then another:
+
+"The energy is inside each one, you see. The life of it is indefinite,
+and the amount of energy used is proportionate to the demand created."
+
+"What the hell do you mean by energy?" Cutter demanded, watching the
+small man work.
+
+Bolen laughed contentedly, and Quay flushed with embarrassment over
+anyone laughing at a question out of Cutter's lips. But Cutter did not
+react, only looked at Bolen, as though he could see somehow, beneath
+that smallness and quietness, a certain strength. Quay had seen that
+look on Cutter's face before, and it meant simply that Cutter would
+wait, analyzing expertly in the meantime, until he found his advantage.
+Quay wondered, if this gadget worked, how long Bolen would own the
+rights to it.
+
+
+Cutter drove the Cadillac into Hallery Boulevard, as though the
+automobile were an English Austin, and just beyond the boundaries of the
+city, cut off into the hills, sliding into the night and the relative
+darkness of the exclusive, sparsely populated Green Oaks section.
+
+Ten minutes later, his house, a massive stone structure which looked as
+though it had been shifted intact from the center of some medieval moat,
+loomed up, gray and stony, and Capra, his handyman, took over the car
+and drove it into the garage, while Cutter strode up the wide steps to
+the door.
+
+Niels took his hat, and Mary was waiting for him in the library.
+
+She was a rather large woman, although not fat, and when she wore high
+heels--which she was not prone to do, because although Cutter would not
+have cared, she kept trying to project into other people's minds and
+trying, as she said, "Not to do anything to them, that I wouldn't want
+them to do to me."--she rose a good inch above Cutter. She was pleasant
+humored, and cooperative, and the one great irritant about her that
+annoyed Cutter, was the fact that she was not capable of meeting life
+wholeheartedly and with strength.
+
+She steadily worried about other people's feelings and thoughts, so that
+Cutter wondered if she were capable of the slightest personal
+conviction. Yet that weakness was an advantage at the same time, to him,
+because she worked constantly toward making him happy. The house was run
+to his minutest liking, and the servants liked her, so that while she
+did not use a strong enough hand, they somehow got things done for her,
+and Cutter had no real complaint. Someday, he knew, he would be able to
+develop her into the full potential he knew she was capable of
+achieving, and then there wouldn't be even that one annoyance about her.
+
+He sat down in the large, worn, leather chair, and she handed him a
+Scotch and water, and kissed his cheek, and then sat down opposite him
+in a smaller striped-satin chair.
+
+"Did you have a nice day, dear?" she asked.
+
+She was always pleasant and she always smiled at him, and she was
+indeed a handsome woman. They had been married but five years, and she
+was almost fifteen years younger than he, but they had a solid
+understanding. She respected his work, and she was careful with the
+money he allowed her, and she never forgot the Scotch and water. "The
+day was all right," he said.
+
+"My goodness," she said, "you worked late. Do you want dinner right
+away?"
+
+"I had some sandwiches at the office," he said, drinking slowly.
+
+"That isn't enough," she said reproachfully, and he enjoyed her concern
+over him. "You'd better have some nice roast beef that Andre did just
+perfectly. And there's some wonderful dressing that I made myself, for
+just a small salad."
+
+He smiled finally. "All right," he said. "All right."
+
+She got up and kissed him again, and he relaxed in the large chair,
+sipping contentedly at his drink, listening to her footsteps hurrying
+away, the sound another indication that she was doing something for him.
+He felt tired and easy. He let his mind relax with his body. The gadget,
+the Confidet; that was going to work, he knew. It would erase the last
+important bug in his operational efficiency, and then he might even
+expand, the way he had wanted to all along. He closed his eyes for a
+moment, tasting of his contentment, and then he heard the sound of his
+dinner being placed on the dining room table, and he stood up briskly
+and walked out of the library. He really was hungry, he realized. Not
+only hungry but, he thought, he might make love to Mary that evening.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The first indication that the Confidet might be working, came three
+weeks later, when Quay handed Cutter the report showing an efficiency
+increase of 3.7 percent. "I think that should tell the story," Quay said
+elatedly.
+
+"Doesn't mean anything," Cutter said. "Could be a thousand other factors
+besides that damned gimmick."
+
+"But we've never been able to show more than one point five variance on
+the administrative checks."
+
+"The trouble with you, Quay," Cutter said brusquely, "is you keep
+looking for miracles. You think the way to get things in this world is
+to hope real hard. Nothing comes easy, and I've got half a notion to get
+those damned silly things jerked out." He bent over his work, obviously
+finished with Quay, and Quay, deflated, paced out of the office.
+
+Cutter smiled inside the empty office. He liked to see Quay's enthusiasm
+broken now and then. It took that, to mold a really good man, because
+that way he assumed real strength after a while. If he got knocked down
+and got up enough, he didn't fall apart when he hit a really tough
+obstacle. Cutter was not unhappy about the efficiency figures at all,
+and he knew as well as Quay that they were decisive.
+
+Give it another two weeks, he thought, and if the increase was
+comparable, then they might have a real improvement on their hands.
+Those limp, jumpy creatures on the desks out there might actually start
+earning their keep. He was thinking about that, what it would mean to
+the total profit, when Lucile opened his door and he caught a glimpse of
+the office outside, including the clerk with the sad, frightened eyes.
+Even you, Linden, Cutter thought, we might even improve you.
+
+
+The increase _was_ comparable after another two weeks. In fact, the
+efficiency figure jumped to 8.9. Quay was too excited to be knocked down
+this time, and Cutter was unable to suppress his own pleasure.
+
+"This is really it this time, George," Quay said. "It really is. And
+here." He handed Cutter a set of figures. "Here's what accounting
+estimates the profit to be on this eight-nine figure."
+
+Cutter nodded, his eyes thinning the slightest bit. "We won't see that
+for a while."
+
+"No," Quay said, "but we'll see it! We'll sure as hell see it! And if it
+goes much higher, we'll absolutely balance out!"
+
+"What does Bolen figure the top to be?"
+
+"Ten percent."
+
+"Why not thirty-six point eight?" Cutter said, his eyes bright and
+narrow.
+
+Quay whistled. "Even at ten, at the wage we're paying--"
+
+"Never settle for quarters or thirds," Cutter said. "Get the whole
+thing. Send for Bolen. I want to talk to him. And in the meantime, Bob,
+this is such a goddamned sweet morning, what do you say we go to lunch
+early?"
+
+Quay blinked only once, which proved his adaptability. Cutter had just
+asked him to lunch, as though it were their habit to lunch together
+regularly, when in reality, Quay had never once gone to lunch with
+Cutter before. Quay was quite nonchalant, however, and he said, "Why,
+fine, George. I think that's a good idea."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Bolen appeared in Cutter's office the next morning, smiling, his eyes
+darting quickly about Cutter's desk and walls, so that Cutter felt, for
+a moment, that showing Bolen anything as personal as his office, was a
+little like letting the man look into his brain.
+
+"Quay tells me you've set ten percent as the top efficiency increase we
+can count on, Bolen." Cutter said it directly, to the point.
+
+Bolen smiled, examining Cutter's hands and suit and eyes. "That's right,
+Mr. Cutter."
+
+"Why?"
+
+Bolen placed his small hands on his lap, looked at the tapered fingers,
+then up again at Cutter. He kept smiling. "It's a matter of saturation."
+
+"How in hell could ten percent more efficiency turn into saturation?"
+
+"Not ten percent more efficiency," Bolen said quietly. "Ten percent
+_effect_ on the individual who _creates_ the efficiency. Ten percent
+effect of that which _causes_ him to be ten percent more efficient."
+
+Cutter snorted. "Whatever the hell that damned gimmick does, it creates
+confidence, drive, strength, doesn't it? Isn't that what you said?"
+
+"Yes," Bolen said politely. "Approximately."
+
+"Can you explain to me then, how ten percent more confidence in a man is
+saturation?"
+
+Bolen studied what he was going to say carefully, smiling all the while.
+"Some men," he said very slowly, "are different than others, Mr. Cutter.
+Some men will react to personality changes as abrupt as this in
+different ways than others. You aren't too concerned, are you, with what
+those changes might already have done to any of the individuals
+affected?"
+
+"Hell, no," Cutter said loudly. "Why should I be? All I'm interested in
+is efficiency. Tell me about efficiency, and I'll know what you're
+talking about."
+
+"All right," Bolen said. "We have no way of knowing right now which men
+have been affected more than others. All we have is an average. The
+average right now is eight and nine-tenths percent. But perhaps you have
+some workers who do not react, because they really do not suffer the
+lacks or compulsions or inhibitions that the Confidet is concerned with.
+Perhaps they are working at top efficiency right now, and no amount of
+further subjection to the Confidet will change them."
+
+"All right then," Cutter said quickly, "we'll ferret that kind of
+deadwood out, and replace them!"
+
+"How will you know which are deadwood?" Bolen asked pleasantly.
+
+"Individual checks, of course!"
+
+Bolen shook his head, looking back at his tapering fingers. "It won't
+necessarily work. You see, the work that these men are concerned with is
+not particularly demanding work, is it? And that means you want to
+strike a balance between capability and demand. It's the unbalance of
+these things that creates trouble, and in your case, the demand
+outweighed the capability. Now, if you get a total ten-percent increase,
+then you're balanced. If you go over that, you'll break the balance all
+over again, except that you'll have, in certain cases, capability
+outweighing the demand of the work."
+
+"Good," Cutter said. "Any man whose capability outweighs the work he's
+doing will simply keep increasing his efficiency."
+
+Bolen shook his head. "No. He'll react quite the other way. He'll lose
+interest, because the work will no longer be a challenge, and then the
+efficiency will drop."
+
+Cutter's jaw hardened. "All right then. I'll move that man up, and fill
+his place with someone else."
+
+Bolen looked at Cutter's eyes, examined them curiously. "Some men have a
+great deal of latent talent, Mr. Cutter. This talent released--"
+
+Cutter frowned, studying Bolen carefully. Then he laughed suddenly. "You
+think I might not be able to handle it?"
+
+"Well, let's say that you've got a stable of gentle, quiet mares, and
+you turn them suddenly into thoroughbreds. You have to make allowances
+for that, Mr. Cutter. The same stalls, the same railings, the same
+stable boys might not be able to do the job anymore."
+
+"Yes," Cutter said, smiling without humor, "but the _owner_ has nothing
+to do with stalls and railings and stable boys, only in the sense that
+they are subsidiary. The owner is the owner, and if he has to make a few
+subsidiary changes, all right. But nothing really affects the owner, no
+matter whether you've got gentle mares or thoroughbreds."
+
+Bolen nodded, as though he had expected that exact answer. "You are a
+very certain man, aren't you, Mr. Cutter?"
+
+"Would I be here, in this office, heading this company, if I weren't,
+Bolen?"
+
+Bolen smiled.
+
+Cutter straightened in his chair. "All right, do we go on? Do we shoot
+for the limit?"
+
+Bolen chose his words carefully. "I am interested in testing my
+Confidet, Mr. Cutter. This is the most important thing in the world to
+me. I don't recommend what you want to do. But, as long as you'll give
+me accurate reports on the effects of the Confidet, I'll go along with
+you. Providing you grant me one concession."
+
+Cutter frowned.
+
+"I want our written contract dissolved."
+
+Cutter reddened faintly. Nobody ever demanded anything of him and got it
+easily, but his mind turned over rapidly, judging the increase in
+efficiency, the increase in profits. He would not necessarily have to
+stop with administrative personnel. There were other departments, too,
+that could stand a little sharpening. Finally he nodded, reluctantly.
+"All right, Bolen."
+
+Bolen smiled and left quickly, and Cutter stared at his desk for a
+moment, tense. Then, he relaxed and the hard sternness of his face
+softened a bit. He put his finger on his desk calendar, and looked at a
+date Lucile had circled for him. He grinned, and picked up the
+telephone, and dialed.
+
+"This is George H. Cutter," he said to the man who answered. "My wife's
+birthday is next Saturday. Do you remember that antique desk I bought
+her last year? Good. Well, the truth is, she uses it all the time, so
+this year I'd like a good chair to match it. She's just using an
+occasional chair right now, and..."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Like everything he gave her, Mary liked his gift extremely well, and
+night after night, after the birthday, he came home to find her at the
+desk, using the chair, captaining her house and her servant staff. And
+the improvement was noticeable in her, almost from the first day. Within
+a month, he could detect a remarkable change, and for the first time,
+since they had been married, Mary gave a dinner for thirty people
+without crying just before it started.
+
+There were other changes.
+
+Quay brought in efficiency report after efficiency report, and by the
+end of three months, they had hit eighteen and seven-tenths percent
+increase. The administrative office was no longer the dull, listless
+place it had been; now it thrived and hummed like the shop below. Cutter
+could see the difference with his own eyes, and he could particularly
+see the differences in certain individuals.
+
+Brown and Kennedy showed remarkable improvement, but it was really Harry
+Linden who astonished Cutter. An individual check showed a sixty-percent
+increase by Linden, and there was a definite change in the man's looks.
+He walked differently, with a quick, virile step, and the look of his
+face and eyes had become strong and alive. He began appearing early in
+the morning, ahead of the starting hour, and working late, and the only
+time he missed any work hours, was one afternoon, during which, Lucile
+informed Cutter, he had appeared in court for his divorce trial.
+
+Within a month, Cutter had fired Stole and Lackter and Grant, as
+department heads, and replaced them with Brown, Kennedy, and Linden. He
+had formulated plans for installation of the Confidets in the drafting
+department and the supply department, and already the profits of
+increased efficiency were beginning to show in the records. Cutter was
+full of new enthusiasm and ambition, and there was only one thorn in the
+entire development.
+
+Quay had resigned.
+
+Cutter had been startled and extremely angry, but Quay had been
+unperturbed and stubborn. "I've enjoyed working with you immensely,
+George, but my mind is made up. No hard feelings?"
+
+Cutter had not even shaken his hand.
+
+It had bothered him for days, and he checked every industrial company in
+the area, to see where Quay had found a better position. He was highly
+surprised, when he learned, finally, that Quay had purchased a small
+boat and was earning his living by carrying fishermen out onto the Bay.
+Quay had also married, four days after his resignation, and Cutter
+pushed the entire thing out of his mind, checking it off to partial
+insanity.
+
+By February of the next year, he had promoted Harry Linden to Quay's old
+job, gotten rid of the deadwood that showed up so plainly on the
+individual checks, and the total efficiency average had reached
+thirty-three percent. His and Mary's anniversary was on the fourth of
+March, and when that day arrived, he was certain that he had reached
+that point where he could expand to another plant.
+
+He was about to order her a mink stole in celebration, but it was also
+that day that he was informed that she was suing him for divorce. He
+rushed home, furious, but she was gone. She had taken her clothes and
+jewelry and the second Cadillac. In fact, all that she had left of her
+personal possessions were the antique desk and chair. When the trial was
+over, months later, she had won enough support to take her to France,
+where, he learned, she purchased a chateau at Cannes.
+
+He tried to lose himself in his work, but for the first time in his
+life, he had begun to get faintly worried. It was only a sliver of
+worry, but it kept him from going on with the expansion. Stocks in the
+company had turned over at an amazingly rapid rate, and while it was
+still nothing more than intuition on his part, he began to tighten up,
+readying himself to meet anything.
+
+The explosion came in July.
+
+Drindor Products had picked up forty-nine percent of the stock on the
+market, by using secondary buyers. There had been a leak somewhere,
+Cutter realized, that had told his competitor, Drindor, the kind of
+profit he was making. He knew who it had been instantly, but before he
+could fire Harry Linden, all of his walls crashed down. Four months
+before, to put more _esprit de corps_ into Linden, he had allowed
+Linden eight shares of his own stock, intending to pick it up later from
+the market. Linden had coerced with Drindor. Cutter lost control.
+
+A board of directors was elected by Drindor, and Drindor assumed the
+presidency by proxy. Harry Linden took over Cutter's office, as Vice
+President In Charge.
+
+Cutter had wildly ordered Edward Bolen to remove the Confidets one week
+before, but even then he had known that it was too late, and the
+smiling, knowing look on Bolen's face had infuriated him to a screaming
+rage. Bolen remained undisturbed, and quietly carried the disks away.
+Cutter, when he left his office that final day, moved slowly, very
+slowly.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He brooded for many long days after that, searching his mind for a way
+to counterattack. He still had enough stock to keep him comfortable if
+he lived another hundred years. But he no longer had the power, and he
+thirsted for that. He turned it around and around in his brain, trying
+to figure out how he could do it, and the one thing he finally knew, the
+one certain thing, was that if he used enough drive, enough strength,
+then he would regain control of the company he had built with his own
+hands and mind.
+
+He paced the library and the long living room and the dining room, and
+his eyes were lost, until he saw, through the doorway of the sewing
+room, that desk and that chair, and he remembered he hadn't done
+anything about that.
+
+He paused only briefly, because he had not lost an ounce of his ability
+to make a sudden decision, and then he removed that disk and carried it
+to the library and fitted it under the cushion of the large, worn,
+leather chair.
+
+
+By fall, he had done nothing to regain control, and he was less certain
+of how he should act than he had been months before. He kept driving by
+the plant and looking at it, but he did so carefully, so that no one
+would see him, and he was surprised to find that, above all, he didn't
+want to face Harry Linden. The memory of the man's firm look, the sharp,
+bold eyes, frightened him, and the knowledge of his fright crushed him
+inside. He wished desperately that Mary were back with him, and he even
+wrote her letters, pleading letters, but they came back, unopened.
+
+Finally he went to see Robert Quay, because Quay was the only man in his
+memory whom he somehow didn't fear talking to. He found Quay in a small
+cottage near the beach. There was a six-day old infant in a crib in the
+bedroom, and Quay's wife was a sparkling-eyed girl with a smile that
+made Cutter feel relatively at ease for the first time in weeks.
+
+She politely left them alone, and Cutter sat there, embarrassed faintly,
+but glad to be in Quay's home and presence. They talked of how it had
+been, when Quay was with the company, and finally Cutter pushed himself
+into asking about it:
+
+"I've often wondered, Bob, why you left?"
+
+Quay blushed slightly, then grinned. "I might as well admit it. I got
+one of those things from Bolen, and had it installed in my own chair."
+
+Cutter thought about it, surprised. He cleared his throat. "And then you
+quit?"
+
+"Sure," Quay said. "All my life, I'd wanted to do just what I'm doing.
+But things just came easy to me, and the opportunities were always
+there, and I just never had the guts to pass anything by. Finally I
+did."
+
+Quay smiled at him, and Cutter shifted in his chair. "The Confidet did
+that."
+
+Cutter nodded.
+
+It came to him suddenly, something he'd never suspected until that
+moment. There was something very definitely wrong with what had happened
+to him. The Confidet had affected everyone but him; there must have been
+something wrong with the one he had been using. It had worked with Mary,
+but hadn't Bolen said something about the energy being used in
+proportion to the demand? Mary had certainly created a demand. Bolen
+said the life of it was indefinite, but couldn't the energy have been
+used up?
+
+"Ah," he said carefully, smiling, to Quay. "You wouldn't have it around,
+would you? That Confidet of yours?"
+
+"Oh, hell, no," Quay said. "I gave it to Bolen a long time ago. He came
+around for it, in fact. Said he had to keep track of all of them."
+
+Cutter left hurriedly, with Quay and his wife following him to his car.
+He drove straight to Bolen's house.
+
+Fury built inside of him. All this time, Bolen had kept track of his
+Confidet, the one that Mary had used, and all this time, he had known
+Cutter still had it. Cutter was furious over the realization that Bolen
+had been using him for experimentation, and also because the Confidet
+that he had tried to use had turned worthless.
+
+All his hatred, all his anger churned inside of him like the heat from
+shaken coals, but when he walked up the path to Bolen's small house, he
+did so quietly, with extreme care.
+
+When he saw Bolen's face in the doorway, he wanted to strike the man,
+but he kept his hands quietly at his sides; and though he hated himself
+for it, he even smiled a little at the man.
+
+"Come in," Bolen smiled, and he spoke softly, and at the same time he
+examined Cutter with quick, penetrating eyes. "Come in, Mr. Cutter."
+
+Cutter wanted to stand there and demand another Confidet, a good one,
+and not walk inside, politely, like he did. And he wished that his voice
+would come out, quickly, with the power and hate in it that he had once
+been capable of. But for some reason, he couldn't say a word.
+
+Bolen was extremely polite. "You've been using that Confidet, haven't
+you?" He spoke gently, almost as though he were speaking to a frightened
+child.
+
+"Yes," Cutter managed to say.
+
+"And what you expected to happen, didn't. That's what you want to tell
+me, isn't it?"
+
+Cutter's insides quivered with rage, but he was able only to nod.
+
+"Would you like to know why?" Bolen said.
+
+Cutter rubbed his damp palms over his knees. He nodded.
+
+Bolen smiled, his eyes sparkling. "Very simple really. It wasn't the
+fault of the Confidet so much, Mr. Cutter, as you. You see, you are a
+rare exception. What you are, or possibly I should say, what you were,
+was a complete super ego. There are very few of those, Mr. Cutter, in
+this world, but you happened to be one of them. A really absolute,
+complete super ego, and the Confidet's effect was simply the reverse of
+what it would have been with anyone else." Bolen shook his head,
+sympathetically, but he didn't stop smiling, and his eyes didn't stop
+their infuriating exploration of Cutter's face and eyes and hands. "It's
+really a shame, because I was almost certain you were a super ego, Mr.
+Cutter. And when you didn't return that last Confidet, I somehow felt
+that you might use it, after all that nasty business at the company and
+all.
+
+"But while I was fairly certain of the effects, Mr. Cutter, I wasn't
+absolutely _sure_, you see, and so like the rest of the experiments, I
+had to forget my conscience. I'm really very sorry."
+
+The anger was a wild thing inside Cutter now, and it made his hands
+tremble and sweat, and his mouth quiver, and he hated the man in front
+of him, the man who was responsible for what had happened to him, the
+smiling man with the soft voice and exploring eyes. But he didn't say
+anything, not a word. He didn't show his anger or his frustration or his
+resentment. He didn't indicate to Bolen a particle of his inner
+wildness.
+
+He didn't have the nerve.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Confidence Game, by James McKimmey
+
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