Godfather -- the scientist
From
Problem to Offer to Use
Liberally transposed from
The
Godfather
by Mario Puzo
This manuscript is
extremely insulting.
It should not be allowed
to reproduce.
1980
Anton Regelmässig sat at the terminal and waited for justice;
vengeance on the programmers who had so cruelly damaged his model, who had
tried to dishonor him.
But the computer went
down and he could see the two young programmers laughing and smiling on the
other side of the glass partition where the colored lights of the machines
blinked festively.
It was all a farce.
The black bile,
sourly bitter, rose in Regelmässig's throat, overflowing through tightly
clenched teeth, and dribbling on to the keyboard below him. He took some old
printout and held it against his lips.
Out of
control, Regelmässig leaned forward toward the glass window beyond which the
programmers now lounged casually against the cool blue computers. "You
will weep as I have wept -- I will make you weep as your crashes make me
weep."
All his years
in modeling, Regelmässig had trusted in computer services. Now his brain
smoked with hatred and wild visions of clubbing the two young men to death with
his old wooden slide rule. "They have made a fool of me." He paused
and then made his decision, no longer fearing the cost. "For justice I
must go on my knees to Don Gvishiani."
In the
garishly decorated guest bungalow of Resource Analysis Inc. in Palo Alto, Franklin
Baxter was as jealously drunk as an ordinary scientist might be. Sprawled on
the sensual Polynesian couch, he drank straight from a bottle of bourbon, then
dunked his head in the silver bucket of ice cubes and water. It was four in the
morning and he was spinning drunken fantasies of murdering his graduate
assistant when she got back. If she ever did come back. It was too late to call
any of the long string of previous young women who had done his work for him.
Now his "science" bored them. He smiled a little to himself that once
his calculations attracted any smart young woman he wanted.
Gulping at
his bottle of bourbon, he finally heard her key in the door. As she walked into
the room, it was easy to remember why every member of the American Physical
Society wanted not only her brain but her body.
"Where the hell were you?" Baxter asked.
"Out modeling," answered Violet Faraday.
She had
misjudged his drunkenness. He sprang over the table on which lay the new issue
of The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists with the report on the Baxter-Faraday
recommendations on containment of fusion reactions.
"It's midnight for you this time, Violet." He grabbed her by
the throat; then his anger became insecure as he thought of the equations
ebbing from her brain.
"Come on, smash me in the head. That's what
you really want to do."
One more surge of wrath rose in Baxter,
but her mind was a magic shield. He hated the woman now lying there pale on the
pile of scholarly journals, but without her he might never publish again. And
never get the biggest Department of Energy research contract ever proposed.
"You poor silly bastard. You will
always be a dumb romantic Professor. You still think science is really like
those days when you were a young researcher at Los Alamos." She picked up
the soft red velvet purse which contained her calculator, walked into the
bedroom, and he heard her turn the key in the lock.
Baxter sat on the floor with his face
in his hands. The sick, humiliating despair overwhelmed him. And then the
gutter toughness that had helped him survive the jungle of MIT made him pick up
the telephone and call for a taxi, which would take him to the airport for the
long flight to Austria. There was one person who could save him. He would go
back to Laxenburg, to IIASA. He would go back to the one man with the power,
the wisdom, he needed and a love of science he still trusted. His Godfather
Gvishiani.
The engineer Morgulyev, angular and
hard as the coal he was trying to liquefy, scowled at his wife, his nubile
daughter Larissa, and his helper
Bialystock.
Morgulyev asked fiercely, "Have
you dishonored my family? Have you given my daughter a little hardware to
remember you by now that the project is over and you know Moscow will kick your
ass back to your shitty little institute in Siberia?"
Bialystock, a scrawny dog-like
creature, put his hand over his heart and said almost in tears, but cleverly,
"Corresponding Member, I swear by the memory of Mendeleev I have never
taken advantage of your kindness.
I love your daughter with all respect. I asked for
her hand with all respect. I know I have no right, but if they send me back to
Novosibirsk I can never return to Moscow. I will never be able to marry Larissa."
Morgulyev's wife spoke. "Stop all
this foolishness. You know what must be done."
Larissa was weeping. She was already plump, homely, and had
never overcome her fear of warm water. She would never get a husband as smart
as Bialystock. "I'll go live in Siberia," she screamed at her father.
"I'll run away if you don't keep him here."
Morgulyev glanced at her shrewdly. She was a 'hot number,' this daughter of his. He had seen her brush her buttocks against Bialystock's white coat as they passed in the narrow aisles of the laboratory. Well, the young rascal's hot coal would soon be fluidized in her bed, Morgulyev thought lewdly, if proper steps were not taken. Bialystock must be kept in Moscow and made a resident. And there was only one man who could arrange such an affair. The Godfather. Don Gvishiani.
All of these people and many others
received engraved invitations to the IIASA Conference, to be celebrated the
last week in May in 1980. The chairman of the Council of 17 Families, which
controlled IIASA, Don Jermen Gvishiani, never forgot his old friends and
colleagues, though he himself now traveled almost constantly and was always
busy in meetings with other decision-makers. There was no doubt the Conference
would be a momentous occasion. A Nobel Prize had been awarded to an IIASA scientist,
and the Conference was just what people needed to show their joy.
And so on that Monday afternoon, the
friends of Don Gvishiani streamed out of Vienna to do him honor. They bore
discs, tapes, manila envelopes stuffed with working papers, notebooks with
their latest results.
Don Jermen Gvishiani was a man to whom
everybody came for help and never were they disappointed. He made no empty
promises nor the craven excuse that his hands were tied by more powerful forces
in the world than himself. It was not necessary that he be your uncle, it was
not even important that you had no means to repay him. Only one thing was
required. That you, you yourself, proclaim your friendship. His reward? The
friendship itself, the respectful title of Academician, or the more
affectionate title of Don. And perhaps, to show respect only, never for profit,
some humble gift -- a graciously inscribed reprint, a nicely framed satellite
photograph for his son, or at Christmas a brightly wrapped box of the newest
microprocessors. It was understood, it was merely good manners, to proclaim
that you were in his debt and that he had the right to call upon you any time
to redeem your debt by some small service.
Now, on this great day, when the Nobel
Prize would be brought home to IIASA, Don Jermen Gvishiani stood in the portico
of the carriageway of Schloss Laxenburg
and greeted his guests, all of them known, all of them trusted. Don Gvishiani
received all of the scientists -- junior and senior, well funded and poor --
with an equal show of love. He slighted no one. That was his character. And the
guests exclaimed at how well he looked in his French suit that an inexperienced
observer might have thought the Don himself was the winner of the Prize.
Occasionally he would turn after greeting a guest and note something to his
dutiful secretary, Vivien Schimmel, who
was standing tightly to one side. Always at the service of the Godfather, her
eyes flickered over the gathering crowd. Now and then she mumbled a weak
agreement to the affable remarks of the Institute's deputy for administration,
Lieberman. Lieberman, thought Schimmel, again
fails to appreciate the seriousness of a situation.
There was a reception before the
opening of the Conference, and Don Gvishiani, notoriously strait-laced in such
matters, disappeared into the Institute. From behind the closed window of Don
Gvishiani's office, a second floor corner room, Andrei Bykov watched the festivities out on the lawn. The
walls behind him were stacked with back issues of the Journal of Operations
Research, Management Science, and the Untouchables. Bykov was the Don's lawyer
and Consigliore, or counselor, and as such held the most vital subordinate
position in the family business. He and the Don had solved many a knotty
problem in this room, and so when he saw the Don leave the festivities and
enter the Schloss, he knew, Conference or
not, there would be a little work this day. The Don would be coming to see
him. He went to the computer terminal and called up the list of the people who
had been granted permission to see Don Gvishiani privately. When the Don
entered the room, Bykov showed him the list. Don Gvishiani nodded and said,
leave Regelmässig until the end.
Bykov walked out onto the breakfast
terrace beneath which the supplicants stood clustered on the lawn. He pointed
to the engineer, the angular Morgulyev.
Don Gvishiani greeted the engineer with
an embrace. They had played together as children and had grown up in friendship.
They had both arranged to win scholarships to study at the Institute for
Automatic Control in Palermo, where the young Don Gvishiani had first learned
to control with an automatic. Now, since many decades, every autumn a big truck
arrived at Don Gvishiani's dacha in the Moscow region and unloaded a ton of the
highest grade coal. And all through the years, lean and fat, Morgulyev made
sure that the researchers in the Don's laboratories were never cold, that an
experiment never failed for lack of power. Now the time had come for the
engineer to claim his rights as a loyal friend, and Don Gvishiani looked
forward with great pleasure to granting the request.
Morgulyev told the story of his
daughter and Bialystock. A pure and honorable love had sprung up between the
honest lad and his sheltered Larissa, but now
the project was over, the poor boy would be sent back to Novosibirsk, and the
engineer's daughter would die of a broken heart. Only Godfather Gvishiani could
help this afflicted couple. He was their last hope.
The Don walked Morgulyev up and down the room, his hand on the engineer's shoulder, his head nodding with understanding to keep up the man's courage. When the engineer had finished, Don Gvishiani smiled at him and said, "My dear friend, put all your worries aside." He went on to explain very carefully what must be done. The officials of the district would be petitioned. A special bill would be introduced that would allow Bialystock to become a resident. The bill would surely pass. It was a privilege all these rascals extended to each other. Don Gvishiani explained that this would cost money. The engineer nodded his head vigorously. He did not expect such a great favor for nothing. That was understood. A special document does not come cheap. Morgulyev was almost tearful in thanks. The engineer embraced Don Gvishiani before disappearing down the stairs and out onto the lawn.
Bykov smile at the Don. "That's a
good investment for Morgulyev. A son-in-law and a cheap lifetime assistant in
his lab all for a few thousand rubles."
The next few cases were simple ones. A
health care expert who needed subjects for his experiments. For reasons not
gone into, they were no longer available. Someone who needed a license to
export a computer. An aging scientist who wanted to be restored to the
executive committee of an international association. A friend's nephew whose
papers kept being turned down by the leading journal in his field. All showed
their gratitude as Don Gvishiani showed that generosity was personal, that a great man did not mind an
inconvenience for a friend.
After this long
procession the Don looked questioningly at Bykov. "Is Regelmässig the only
one left?" Bykov nodded. "Before you bring him in, tell Levien to
come here. He should learn some things."
Anton Regelmässig followed Bykov into the corner room of
the Schloss
and found Don Gvishiani sitting behind
a large desk. Roger Levien, director of the Institute, was standing by the
window, looking out onto the lawn. For the first time that afternoon the Don
behaved coolly. He did not embrace the visitor or shake hands. Regelmässig was
in severe disfavor with Don Gvishiani.
Regelmässig began his request
obliquely. "You must excuse me for not doing the respect of presenting my
model at your conference. It is being reprogrammed still." He glanced at
Bykov and Levien to indicate he did not wish to speak before them. But the Don
was merciless.
"We all know of your model's
misfortune," Don Gvishiani said. "If I can help in any way, you have
only to speak. My model will be linked to your model, after all. I have never
forgotten that honor." This was a rebuke.
Regelmässig, ashen-faced, asked
directly now, "May I speak to you alone?"
Don Gvishiani shook his head. "I
trust these two men with my life. They are my two right arms. I cannot insult
them by sending them away."
The modeler closed his eyes for a
moment and then began to speak. "Convinced that science and technology, if
wisely directed, can benefit all mankind, believing that international cooperation
between national institutions promotes cooperation between nations and so the
economic and social progress of peoples, I began the development of my global
model in the purest collaborative spirit. And I believed in man-machine
systems. Computers have made my fortune. So, when my model seemed complete, I
gave it freedom, published the programs, and made it available to other
scientists. Many used it, some played with it. Few came to meet its creator. I
accepted all this without protest, the fault is mine. A month ago two young
programmers took out my model for a run. They fed it false data and tried to
take advantage of it. The model resisted, rejecting the spurious values. But
they tricked my model, forced it to submit to their commands, to agree to anything.
When I went to the terminal room the next day my tapes were strewn about and
unreproducible results from the model had been sent by electronic mail to my
colleagues all over the world. Why did they do it? Why did they do this to me?
And I wept."
Regelmässig
could barely speak, his voice human
with suffering. "Why did I weep? This model was the light of my life, as
responsive as a child. It trusted people and now it will never trust them. The
model is crippled. It may never have credibility again."
"I went to the Chief of computer services, like a good scientist. The two programmers were called. They were brought for investigation. The evidence was overwhelming, and they pleaded guilty. Their computing privileges were suspended. But that very day they had new passwords. And then I said, 'I must go to Don Gvishiani for justice."'
The Don bowed his head to show respect
for the man's grief. But when he spoke, the words were cold with offended
dignity. "But why did you go to computer services? Why didn't you come to
me at the beginning of this affair?"
Regelmässig
muttered almost inaudibly. "What
do you want of me? Tell me what you wish. But do what I beg you to do."
Regelmässig
hesitated, then bent down and put his
lips so close to the Don's hairy ear that they almost touched. Don Gvishiani
listened like a priest in a confessional, gazing away into the distance,
impassive, remote. When Regelmässig finally
straightened, the Don spoke. "That I cannot do. You are being carried
away."
Regelmässig blurted, "I can
arrange for the Foundation to fund anything. "
The Don continued calmly. "We have
known each other many years, you and I, but until this day, you never came to
me for counsel or help. You found your laboratory a paradise. You had a good
trade, you made a good living, and you thought the world a harmless place where
you could study as you willed. You never armed yourself with true friends. Your
programs were secure, there was peer review, there were passwords, you and
yours could come to no harm. You did not need Don Gvishiani. Now you come to me
and say, 'Don Gvishiani, give me justice.' And you do not ask with respect. You
come to my Institute on this special day, and you ask me to destroy and you say
'I can arrange for the Foundation to fund anything.' What have I ever done to
make you treat me so disrespectfully?"
Regelmässig cried out in his anguish
and fear, "Computers have been good to me. I wanted my methods compared. I
wanted my model to be a model for other models."
The Don clapped his hands together with
decisive approval. "Well spoken, very fine. Then you have nothing to
complain about. The computer has ruled. You have received the justice of the
machine."
Regelmässig was reduced by this cruel
irony, but spoke again, softly. "Yes, I have received justice. But my
model has not received justice."
The Don,
approving this distinction, asked, "Then what justice do you ask?"
"The
model is now flawed; they should be flawed."
"You
asked for more," the Don said. "Your model has not blown up."
Regelmässig
said reluctantly, "Let them be
disfigured as it is disfigured.
The Don sighed, a good-hearted man who cannot remain angry with an erring friend. He stroked his grey and white mustache twice, then spoke. "If you had come to me for justice right away those scum would be weeping bitter tears this day. If by some misfortune an honest man like yourself made enemies they would become my enemies, and then, believe me, they would fear you. Even oceanographers do not like to sleep with the caviar."
Regelmässig
bowed his head and murmured in a
strangled voice, "Be my friend, I accept."
Don Gvishiani put his hand on the man's
shoulder. "Good, you shall have justice. Some day, and that day may never
come, I will call upon you to do me a service in return."
When the door closed behind the
grateful modeler, Don Gvishiani turned to Bykov and said, "Give this
affair to Hammerl and tell him to be sure to use reliable people, people who do
not get carried away at high speeds."
The Don noted that Levien was gazing
through the window at the reception on the lawn. It was hopeless, if he refused
to be instructed, Levien could never run the IIASA family, could never become a
Don.
From the lawn, startling all three men,
there came a happy shout. Roger Levien pressed close to the window. What he saw
made him move quickly towards the door, a delighted smile on his face.
"It's Frankie, he came to the
Conference, what did I tell you." Bykov moved to the window, "It's
really your godson," he said to Don Gvishiani. "Shall I bring him
here?"
"No," the Don said. "Let
his colleagues enjoy him. Let him come to see me when he is ready." He
smiled at Bykov. "You see? He is a good godson."
Bykov felt a twinge of jealousy, and as
he noted Baxter almost losing his balance on a step, added dryly, "It's
been two years. He's probably in trouble again and wants you to help."
"And whom should he come to if not his
godfather?" asked Don Gvishiani.
The first one to see Baxter enter the Schloss was Vivien Schimmel. She
forgot her secretarial dignity for a moment and squealed "Frankie." Then, she ran into his arms. He hugged her and kept
his arm around her as others came up to greet him. They were all his old
colleagues, people with whom he had shared the early days of the Institute.
Then Vivien was dragging him away from his old assistant Lieberman to
Dantzorovich, the Nobel Prize winner. Baxter saw with amusement that the old
man looked a little sore at no longer being the star of the day. Baxter turned
on all his charm, shaking Dantzorovich's hand, and offering congratulations for
all to hear.
They were all proud of Baxter. He was
of them and had become a famous scientist, invited to visit the most
prestigious laboratories in the world. And yet he had shown proper respect for
his Godfather by traveling thousands of miles to attend the ceremony. With the
most delicate courtesy, Baxter let Dantzorovich's voice rise over his own, let
the Nobel Prize winner take Vivien from his arm, and then raised a toast. The
whole party broke into applause, the three of them embraced each other.
Only Don Gvishiani, standing one step
back into the Oval Room, sensed something amiss. Cheerily, with bluff good
humor, careful not to give offence to his guests, he called out, "My
godson has come five thousand miles to do us honor, and no one takes his
coat?" At once half a dozen hands were thrust at Baxter. He took off his
black raincoat and rushed to embrace his Godfather. As he did so, he whispered
something into the older man's ear. Don Gvishiani led him into the Schloss.
Andrei Bykov held out his hand when Baxter came into the
room. Baxter shook it and said, "How are you, Andrei?" But without his usual charm that consisted of a
genuine warmth for people. Bykov was a little hurt by this coolness, but
shrugged it off. It was one of the penalties for being the Don's hatchet man.
Franklin Baxter said to the Don,
"When I got the invitation I said to myself, 'My Godfather isn't mad at
me anymore.' I called you five times after I lost the Harvard Chair and Andrei always told me you were out or busy, so I knew you
were sore."
Don Gvishiani was filling glasses from
a golden bottle of Georgian Brandy. "That's all forgotten. Now. Can I do
something for you still? You're not too prominent, too distinguished that I
can't help you?"
Baxter gulped down the yellow fiery
liquid and held out his glass to be refilled. He tried to sound jaunty.
"I'm not a hotshot anymore, Godfather. I’m aging. I'm going down. You
were right. I should never have left physics for that trashy systems analysis.
I don't blame you for getting sore at me."
The Don shrugged, "I worried about you, you're my godson, that's all.”
Baxter paced up and down. "I was
crazy about that stuff. Big research contracts. Trips to Washington. High
government contacts. And you know what they do with my model? Use it like a
whore, like some standard slut package. Not for problems of global or universal
importance, but for their own cheap little numbers."
Don
Gvishiani curtly broke in. "How is your family?"
Baxter sighed. "I take care of
them. After the divorce the courts said I gave more than I should. Violet
laughs at me. She can't understand why I don't make the kids get scholarships.
They never speak to me any way." Baxter lit a cigarette. "Godfather,
right now, life doesn't seem worth living."
Don Gvishiani said simply, "These
are troubles I can't help you with." He paused, then asked, "What's
the matter with your research?"
All the assured charm, the
self-mockery, disappeared from Franklin Baxter's face. He said almost brokenly,
"Godfather, I can't program anymore, something's happened to me, The
doctors don't know what." Bykov and the Don looked at Baxter with
surprise; Baxter had always been so tough. Baxter went on. "My early work
had a lot of applications. I was a star. Now they throw me out. The Assistant
Secretary of the Department always hated my guts, and now he's paying me
off."
Don Gvishiani stood before his godson
and asked grimly, "Why doesn't this man like you?"
"I've always contributed my models
to international organizations; transfer of technology and all that stuff.
Well, he's never liked it, and when I snatched a graduate assistant he had
saved for himself, he started sending my proposals to reviewers he knew would
disapprove. And I can't do research alone anymore. Godfather, what the hell can
I do?"
Don Gvishiani's face had become cold
without a hint of sympathy. He said contemptuously, "You can start by
acting like a scientist." Suddenly anger contorted his face. He shouted.
"Like a scientist!" He reached over the desk and grabbed Baxter by
the lapel. "Is it possible that you spent so much time in my presence and
turned out no better than this? A freelance consultant who weeps and begs for
pity? Who cries out like a student --'What shall I do? Oh, what shall I
do?"'
The mimicry of the Don was so
extraordinary, so unexpected, that Bykov and Baxter were startled into
laughter. Don Gvishiani was pleased. For a moment he reflected on how much he
loved his godson. How would Levien have reacted to such a tongue-lashing? He
would have been cowed, offered a cold smile and left the Schloss, not to be seen for weeks. But, Frankie, ah, what a fine fellow he was, smiling now, gathering
strength, knowing already the true purpose of his Godfather.
Don Gvishiani went on. "You took the woman of your boss, a man more powerful than yourself, then you complain he won't help you. You leave your family to run around with a graduate student, and you are amazed that she laughs at you." Don Gvishiani paused to ask in a patient voice, "Are you willing to take my advice this time?"
"You’ve been a fine godson,
you've given me all respect. But what of other old friends? One year you run
around with chemists, the next year mathematicians. That biologist who was so
good early in the ecology project, he had some bad luck and you never saw him
again. And how about your old assistant Lieberman? He's given up science for
administration. He drinks too much out of disappointment, but he never
complains. He never says anything against you. You couldn't help him out a bit?
Why not?"
Franklin Baxter said with patient
weariness, "Godfather, he just hasn't got enough talent. He's ok with
industry, but he's not big time."
Don Gvishiani leaned back in the padded
black vinyl chair and allowed his eyes to close for a moment. "And you,
godson, shall I get you a job with industry?" When Baxter didn't answer,
the Don went on. "Friendship is everything. Friendship is more than
talent. It is more than peer review, it is almost the equal of tenure. Never
forget that. If you had built up a wall of friendships you wouldn't have to ask
for help. Now, tell me why you can't model."
Baxter answered quietly. "My mind
is weak. I write one or two equations and then I can't solve them for hours or
days. I can't make it through revisions and corrections. My mind is weak, it's
some sort of sickness."
"So you have woman trouble. You
can't concentrate. Now tell me the trouble you're having with this Washington
program officer who won't let you work." The Don was getting down to
business.
"He's bigger than one of your
program officers," Baxter said. He runs a division. He advises the
President on energy research. Just a month ago he got the legislation to do the
biggest research program in years. And the principal investigator is a guy just
like me. I wouldn't have to pick up a new field, just be myself. I wouldn't
even have to model. I might win a National Medal of Science for it. Everybody
knows it's perfect for me and I'd be big again. As a scientist. But that
bastard is paying me off, he won't give it to me. I offered to do it for
nothing, without travel, and he still says no. He sent word that if I would
kiss his ass in the Great Hall of the Academy of Sciences, maybe he'll think
about it."
Don Gvishiani dismissed this emotional
nonsense with a wave of his hand. Among reasonable men problems of science
could always be solved. He patted Baxter on the shoulder. "You're
discouraged. Nobody cares about you, so you think. And you've lost a lot of
weight. You drink a lot, eh? You don't sleep and you take pills?" He shook
his head disapprovingly.
"Now I want you to follow my orders," the Don said. "I want you to stay at IIASA for one month. I want you to eat well, to rest and to sleep. Maybe you can learn something about the world from us in this little town that might even help you in the great Washington. But no methodology, no women, and no heurigers. At the end of the month you can go back to Washington and this program officer will give you what you want. Done?"
Franklin Baxter could not altogether
believe that the Don had such power. But his Godfather had never said such and
such a thing without having it done. "This guy is a personal friend of the
President of the Academy of Sciences," Baxter said. "You can't even
raise your voice to him. "
"He's a
scientist," the Don said blandly. "I'll offer him a method he can't
refuse."