"That is an ocean," said Bliss soothingly. "It is a very large mass of water."
"Why does it not dry up?"
Bliss looked at Trevize, who said, "There"s too much water for it to dry up."
Fallom said in a half-choked manner, "I don"t want all that water. Let us go away." And then she shrieked, thinly, as the Far Star moved through a patch of storm clouds so that the viewscreen turned milky and was streaked with the mark of raindrops.
The lights in the pilot-room dimmed and the ship"s motion became slightly jerky.
Trevize looked up in surprise and cried out. "Bliss, your Fallom is old enough to transduce. She"s using electric power to try to manipulate the controls. Stop her!"
Bliss put her arms about Fallom, and hugged her tightly, "It"s all right, Fallom, it"s all right. There"s nothing to be afraid of. It"s just another world, that"s all. There are many like this."
Fallom relaxed somewhat but continued to tremble.
Bliss said to Trevize, "The child has never seen an ocean, and perhaps, for all I know, never experienced fog or rain. Can"t you be sympathetic?"
"Not if she tampers with the ship. She"s a danger to all of us,then. Take her into your room and calm her down."
Bliss nodded curtly.
Pelorat said, "I"ll come with you, Bliss."
"No, no, Pel," she responded. "You stay here. I"ll soothe Fallom and you soothe Trevize." And she left.
"I don"t need soothing," growled Trevize to Pelorat. "I"m sorry if I flew off the handle, but we can"t have a child playing with the controls,can we?"
"Of course we can"t," said Pelorat, "but Bliss was caught by surprise. She can control Fallom, who is really remarkably well behaved for a child taken from her home and her her robot, and thrown,willy-nilly, into a life she doesn"t understand."
"I know. It wasn"t I who wanted to take her along, remember. It was Bliss"s idea."
"Yes, but the child would have been killed, if we hadn"t taken her."
"Well, I"ll apologize to Bliss later on. To the child, too."
But he was still frowning, and Pelorat said gently, "Golan, old chap,is there anything else bothering you?"
"The ocean," said Trevize. They had long emerged from the rain storm,but the clouds persisted.
"What"s wrong with it?" asked Pelorat.
"There"s too much of it, that"s all."
Pelorat looked blank, and Trevize said, with a snap, "No land. We haven"t seen any land. The atmosphere is perfectly normal, oxygen and nitrogen in decent proportions, so the planet has to be engineered,and there has to be plant life to maintain the oxygen level. In the natural state, such atmospheres do not occur except, presumably,on Earth, where it developed, who knows how. But, then, on engineered planets there are always reasonable amounts of dry land, up to one third of the whole, and never less than a fifth. So how can this planet be engineered, and lack land?"
Pelorat said, "Perhaps, since this planet is part of a binary system, it is completely atypical. Maybe it wasn"t engineered, but evolved an atmosphere in ways that never prevail on planets about single stars. Perhaps life developed independently here, as it once did on Earth,but only sea life."
"Even if we were to admit that," said Trevize, "it would do us no good. There"s no way life in the sea can develop a technology. Technology is always based on fire, and fire is impossible in the sea. A life-bearing planet without technology is not what we"re looking for."
"I realize that, but I"m only considering ideas. After all, as far as we know, technology only developed once on Earth. Everywhere else,the Settlers brought it with them. You can"t say technology is `always" anything, if you only have one case to study."
"Travel through the sea requires streamlining. Sea life cannot have irregular outlines and appendages such as hands."
"Squids have tentacles."
Trevize said, "I admit we are allowed to speculate, but if you"re thinking of intelligent squid-like creatures evolving independently somewhere in the Galaxy, and developing a technology not based on fire,you"re supposing something not at all likely, in my opinion."
"In your opinion ," said Pelorat gently.
Suddenly, Trevize laughed. "Very well, Janov. I see you"re logic-chopping in order to get even with me for speaking harshly to Bliss, and you"re doing a good job. I promise you that if we find no land, we will examine the sea as best we can to see if we can find your civilized squids."
As he spoke, the ship plunged into the night-shadow again, and the viewscreen turned black.
Pelorat winced. "I keep wondering," he said. "Is this safe?"
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