The Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy




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(c) 1984









The Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy


for


Jonny Brock and Clare Gorst


and all other Arlingtonians


for tea, sympathy, and a sofa




1




CHAPTER 1



1.1 Introduction


Far out in the uncharted backwaters of the unfashionable end of the
western spiral arm of the Galaxy lies a small unregarded yellow sun.

Orbiting this at a distance of roughly ninety-two million miles is an
utterly insignificant little blue green planet whose ape- descended life
forms are so amazingly primitive that they still think digital watches
are a pretty neat idea.

This planet has - or rather had - a problem, which was this: most of the
people on it were unhappy for pretty much of the time. Many solutions
were suggested for this problem, but most of these were largely concerned
with the movements of small green pieces of paper, which is odd because
on the whole it wasn't the small green pieces of paper that were unhappy.

And so the problem remained; lots of the people were mean, and most
of them were miserable, even the ones with digital watches.

Many were increasingly of the opinion that they'd all made a big mistake
in coming down from the trees in the first place. And some said that
even the trees had been a bad move, and that no one should ever have
left the oceans.

And then, one Thursday, nearly two thousand years after one man had
been nailed to a tree for saying how great it would be to be nice to people
for a change, one girl sitting on her own in a small cafe in Rickmansworth
suddenly realized what it was that had been going wrong all this time,
and she finally knew how the world could be made a good and happy
place. This time it was right, it would work, and no one would have to
get nailed to anything.

Sadly, however, before she could get to a phone to tell anyone- about it,
a terribly stupid catastrophe occurred, and the idea was lost forever.

This is not her story.

But it is the story of that terrible stupid catastrophe and some of its
consequences.

It is also the story of a book, a book called The Hitch Hiker's Guide to
the Galaxy - not an Earth book, never published on Earth, and until the
terrible catastrophe occurred, never seen or heard of by any Earthman.

Nevertheless, a wholly remarkable book.

in fact it was probably the most remarkable book ever to come out of
the great publishing houses of Ursa Minor - of which no Earthman had
ever heard either.

Not only is it a wholly remarkable book, it is also a highly successful one
- more popular than the Celestial Home Care Omnibus, better selling
than Fifty More Things to do in Zero Gravity, and more controversial
than Oolon Colluphid's trilogy of philosophical blockbusters Where God




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Went Wrong, Some More of God's Greatest Mistakes and Who is this
God Person Anyway?

In many of the more relaxed civilizations on the Outer Eastern Rim of
the Galaxy, the Hitch Hiker's Guide has already supplanted the great
Encyclopedia Galactica as the standard repository of all knowledge and
wisdom, for though it has many omissions and contains much that is
apocryphal, or at least wildly inaccurate, it scores over the older, more
pedestrian work in two important respects.

First, it is slightly cheaper; and secondly it has the words Don't Panic
inscribed in large friendly letters on its cover.

But the story of this terrible, stupid Thursday, the story of its extraor-
dinary consequences, and the story of how these consequences are inex-
tricably intertwined with this remarkable book begins very simply.

It begins with a house.



CHAPTER 2



The house stood on a slight rise just on the edge of the village. It stood
on its own and looked over a broad spread of West Country farmland.
Not a remarkable house by any means - it was about thirty years old,
squattish, squarish, made of brick, and had four windows set in the front
of a size and proportion which more or less exactly failed to please the
eye.

The only person for whom the house was in any way special was Arthur
Dent, and that was only because it happened to be the one he lived
in. He had lived in it for about three years, ever since he had moved
out of London because it made him nervous and irritable. He was about
thirty as well, dark haired and never- quite at ease with himself. The
thing that used to worry him most was the fact that people always used
to ask him what he was looking so worried about. He worked in local
radio which he always used to tell his friends was a lot more interesting
than they probably thought. It was, too - most of his friends worked in
advertising.

It hadn't properly registered with Arthur that the council wanted to
knock down his house and build an bypass instead.

At eight o'clock on Thursday morning Arthur didn't feel very good. He
woke up blearily, got up, wandered blearily round his room, opened a
window, saw a bulldozer, found his slippers, and stomped off to the
bathroom to wash.

Toothpaste on the brush - so. Scrub.

Shaving mirror - pointing at the ceiling. He adjusted it. For a moment
it reflected a second bulldozer through the bathroom window. Properly
adjusted, it reflected Arthur Dent's bristles. He shaved them off, washed,




3




dried, and stomped off to the kitchen to find something pleasant to put
in his mouth.

Kettle, plug, fridge, milk, coffee. Yawn.

The word bulldozer wandered through his mind for a moment in search
of something to connect with.

The bulldozer outside the kitchen window was quite a big one.

He stared at it.

"Yellow," he thought and stomped off back to his bedroom to get dressed.

Passing the bathroom he stopped to drink a large glass of water, and
another. He began to suspect that he was hung over. Why was he hung
over? Had he been drinking the night before? He supposed that he must
have been. He caught a glint in the shaving mirror. "Yellow," he thought
and stomped on to the bedroom.

He stood and thought. The pub, he thought. Oh dear, the pub. He
vaguely remembered being angry, angry about something that seemed
important. He'd been telling people about it, telling people about it at
great length, he rather suspected: his clearest visual recollection was of
glazed looks on other people's faces. Something about a new bypass he
had just found out about. It had been in the pipeline for months only
no one seemed to have known about it. Ridiculous. He took a swig of
water. It would sort itself out, he'd decided, no one wanted a bypass,
the council didn't have a leg to stand on. It would sort itself out.

God what a terrible hangover it had earned him though. He looked
at himself in the wardrobe mirror. He stuck out his tongue. "Yellow,"
he thought. The word yellow wandered through his mind in search of
something to connect with.

Fifteen seconds later he was out of the house and lying in front of a big
yellow bulldozer that was advancing up his garden path. Mr L Prosser
was, as they say, only human. In other words he was a carbon-based
life form descended from an ape. More specifically he was forty, fat and
shabby and worked for the local council. Curiously enough, though he
didn't know it, he was also a direct male-line descendant of Genghis
Khan, though intervening generations and racial mixing had so juggled
his genes that he had no discernible Mongoloid characteristics, and the
only vestiges left in Mr L Prosser of his mighty ancestry were a pro-
nounced stoutness about the tum and a predilection for little fur hats.

He was by no means a great warrior: in fact he was a nervous worried
man. Today he was particularly nervous and worried because something
had gone seriously wrong with his job - which was to see that Arthur
Dent's house got cleared out of the way before the day was out.

"Come off it, Mr Dent,", he said, "you can't win you know. You can't
lie in front of the bulldozer indefinitely." He tried to make his eyes blaze
fiercely but they just wouldn't do it.

Arthur lay in the mud and squelched at him.




4




"I'm game," he said, "we'll see who rusts first."

"I'm afraid you're going to have to accept it," said Mr Prosser gripping
his fur hat and rolling it round the top of his head, "this bypass has got
to be built and it's going to be built!"

"First I've heard of it," said Arthur, "why's it going to be built?"

Mr Prosser shook his finger at him for a bit, then stopped and put it
away again.

"What do you mean, why's it got to be built?" he said. "It's a bypass.
You've got to build bypasses."

Bypasses are devices which allow some people to drive from point A
to point B very fast whilst other people dash from point B to point A
very fast. People living at point C, being a point directly in between,
are often given to wonder what's so great about point A that so many
people of point B are so keen to get there, and what's so great about
point B that so many people of point A are so keen to get there. They
often wish that people would just once and for all work out where the
hell they wanted to be.

Mr Prosser wanted to be at point D. Point D wasn't anywhere in par-
ticular, it was just any convenient point a very long way from points A,
B and C. He would have a nice little cottage at point D, with axes over
the door, and spend a pleasant amount of time at point E, which would
be the nearest pub to point D. His wife of course wanted climbing roses,
but he wanted axes. He didn't know why - he just liked axes. He flushed
hotly under the derisive grins of the bulldozer drivers.

He shifted his weight from foot to foot, but it was equally uncomfortable
on each. Obviously somebody had been appallingly incompetent and he
hoped to God it wasn't him.

Mr Prosser said: "You were quite entitled to make any suggestions or
protests at the appropriate time you know."

"Appropriate time?" hooted Arthur. "Appropriate time? The first I
knew about it was when a workman arrived at my home yesterday. I
asked him if he'd come to clean the windows and he said no he'd come
to demolish the house. He didn't tell me straight away of course. Oh no.
First he wiped a couple of windows and charged me a fiver. Then he
told me."

"But Mr Dent, the plans have been available in the local planning office
for the last nine month."

"Oh yes, well as soon as I heard I went straight round to see them,
yesterday afternoon. You hadn't exactly gone out of your way to call
attention to them had you? I mean like actually telling anybody or
anything."

"But the plans were on display ..."

"On display? I eventually had to go down to the cellar to find them."




5




"That's the display department."

"With a torch."

"Ah, well the lights had probably gone."

"So had the stairs."

"But look, you found the notice didn't you?"

"Yes," said Arthur, "yes I did. It was on display in the bottom of a
locked filing cabinet stuck in a disused lavatory with a sign on the door
saying Beware of the Leopard."

A cloud passed overhead. It cast a shadow over Arthur Dent as he lay
propped up on his elbow in the cold mud. It cast a shadow over Arthur
Dent's house. Mr Prosser frowned at it.

"It's not as if it's a particularly nice house," he said.

"I'm sorry, but I happen to like it."

"You'll like the bypass."

"Oh shut up," said Arthur Dent. "Shut up and go away, and take your
bloody bypass with you. You haven't got a leg to stand on and you know
it."

Mr Prosser's mouth opened and closed a couple of times while his mind
was for a moment filled with inexplicable but terribly attractive visions
of Arthur Dent's house being consumed with fire and Arthur himself
running screaming from the blazing ruin with at least three hefty spears
protruding from his back. Mr Prosser was often bothered with visions like
these and they made him feel very nervous. He stuttered for a moment
and then pulled himself together.

"Mr Dent," he said.

"Hello? Yes?" said Arthur.

"Some factual information for you. Have you any idea how much damage
that bulldozer would suffer if I just let it roll straight over you?"

"How much?" said Arthur.

"None at all," said Mr Prosser, and stormed nervously off wondering
why his brain was filled with a thousand hairy horsemen all shouting at
him.

By a curious coincidence, None at all is exactly how much suspicion
the ape-descendant Arthur Dent had that one of his closest friends was
not descended from an ape, but was in fact from a small planet in the
vicinity of Betelgeuse and not from Guildford as he usually claimed.

Arthur Dent had never, ever suspected this.

This friend of his had first arrived on the planet some fifteen Earth years
previously, and he had worked hard to blend himself into Earth society
- with, it must be said, some success. For instance he had spent those




6




fifteen years pretending to be an out of work actor, which was plausible
enough.

He had made one careless blunder though, because he had skimped a bit
on his preparatory research. The information he had gathered had led
him to choose the name "Ford Prefect" as being nicely inconspicuous.

He was not conspicuously tall, his features were striking but not con-
spicuously handsome. His hair was wiry and gingerish and brushed back-
wards from the temples. His skin seemed to be pulled backwards from
the nose. There was something very slightly odd about him, but it was
difficult to say what it was. Perhaps it was that his eyes didn't blink
often enough and when you talked to him for any length of time your
eyes began involuntarily to water on his behalf. Perhaps it was that he
smiled slightly too broadly and gave people the unnerving impression
that he was about to go for their neck.

He struck most of the friends he had made on Earth as an eccentric, but
a harmless one - an unruly boozer with some oddish habits. For instance
he would often gatecrash university parties, get badly drunk and start
making fun of any astrophysicist he could find till he got thrown out.

Sometimes he would get seized with oddly distracted moods and stare
into the sky as if hypnotized until someone asked him what he was
doing. Then he would start guiltily for a moment, relax and grin. "Oh,
just looking for flying saucers," he would joke and everyone would laugh
and ask him what sort of flying saucers he was looking for.

"Green ones!" he would reply with a wicked grin, laugh wildly for a mo-
ment and then suddenly lunge for the nearest bar and buy an enormous
round of drinks.

Evenings like this usually ended badly. Ford would get out of his skull on
whisky, huddle into a corner with some girl and explain to her in slurred
phrases that honestly the colour of the flying saucers didn't matter that
much really.

Thereafter, staggering semi-paralytic down the night streets he would
often ask passing policemen if they knew the way to Betelgeuse. The
policemen would usually say something like, "Don't you think it's about
time you went off home sir?"

"I'm trying to baby, I'm trying to," is what Ford invariably replied on
these occasions.

In fact what he was really looking out for when he stared distractedly
into the night sky was any kind of flying saucer at all. The reason he said
green was that green was the traditional space livery of the Betelgeuse
trading scouts.

Ford Prefect was desperate that any flying saucer at all would arrive
soon because fifteen years was a long time to get stranded anywhere,
particularly somewhere as mindboggingly dull as the Earth.




7




Ford wished that a flying saucer would arrive soon because he knew how
to flag flying saucers down and get lifts from them. He knew how to see
the Marvels of the Universe for less than thirty Altairan dollars a day.

In fact, Ford Prefect was a roving researcher for that wholly remarkable
book The Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy.

Human beings are great adaptors, and by lunchtime life in the environs
of Arthur's house had settled into a steady routine. It was Arthur's
accepted role to lie squelching in the mud making occasional demands
to see his lawyer, his mother or a good book; it was Mr Prosser's accepted
role to tackle Arthur with the occasional new ploy such as the For the
Public Good talk, the March of Progress talk, the They Knocked My
House Down Once You Know, Never Looked Back talk and various other
cajoleries and threats; and it was the bulldozer drivers' accepted role to
sit around drinking coffee and experimenting with union regulations to
see how they could turn the situation to their financial advantage.

The Earth moved slowly in its diurnal course.

The sun was beginning to dry out the mud Arthur lay in.

A shadow moved across him again.

"Hello Arthur," said the shadow. Arthur looked up and squinting into
the sun was startled to see Ford Prefect standing above him.

"Ford! Hello, how are you?"

"Fine," said Ford, "look, are you busy?"

"Am I busy?" exclaimed Arthur. "Well, I've just got all these bulldozers
and things to lie in front of because they'll knock my house down if I
don't, but other than that ... well, no not especially, why?"

They don't have sarcasm on Betelgeuse, and Ford Prefect often failed to
notice it unless he was concentrating. He said, "Good, is there anywhere
we can talk?"

"What?" said Arthur Dent.

For a few seconds Ford seemed to ignore him, and stared fixedly into
the sky like a rabbit trying to get run over by a car. Then suddenly he
squatted down beside Arthur.

"We've got to talk," he said urgently.

"Fine," said Arthur, "talk."

"And drink," said Ford. "It's vitally important that we talk and drink.
Now. We'll go to the pub in the village."

He looked into the sky again, nervous, expectant.

"Look, don't you understand?" shouted Arthur. He pointed at Prosser.
"That man wants to knock my house down!"

Ford glanced at him, puzzled.

"Well he can do it while you're away can't he?" he asked.




8




"But I don't want him to!"

"Ah."

"Look, what's the matter with you Ford?" said Arthur.

"Nothing. Nothing's the matter. Listen to me - I've got to tell you the
most important thing you've ever heard. I've got to tell you now, and
I've got to tell you in the saloon bar of the Horse and Groom."

"But why?"

"Because you are going to need a very stiff drink."

Ford stared at Arthur, and Arthur was astonished to find that his will
was beginning to weaken. He didn't realize that this was because of an
old drinking game that Ford learned to play in the hyperspace ports that
served the madranite mining belts in the star system of Orion Beta. The
game was not unlike the Earth game called Indian Wrestling, and was
played like this:

Two contestants would sit either side of a table, with a glass in front of
each of them.

Between them would be placed a bottle of Janx Spirit (as immortalized
in that ancient Orion mining song "Oh don't give me none more of that
Old Janx Spirit/ No, don't you give me none more of that Old Janx
Spirit/ For my head will fly, my tongue will lie, my eyes will fry and I
may die/ Won't you pour me one more of that sinful Old Janx Spirit").

Each of the two contestants would then concentrate their will on the
bottle and attempt to tip it and pour spirit into the glass of his opponent
- who would then have to drink it.

The bottle would then be refilled. The game would be played again. And
again.

Once you started to lose you would probably keep losing, because one
of the effects of Janx spirit is to depress telepsychic power.

As soon as a predetermined quantity had been consumed, the final loser
would have to perform a forfeit, which was usually obscenely biological.

Ford Prefect usually played to lose.

Ford stared at Arthur, who began to think that perhaps he did want to
go to the Horse and Groom after all.

"But what about my house ...?" he asked plaintively.

Ford looked across to Mr Prosser, and suddenly a wicked thought struck
him.

"He wants to knock your house down?"

"Yes, he wants to build ..."

"And he can't because you're lying in front of the bulldozers?"

"Yes, and ..."




9




"I'm sure we can come to some arrangement," said Ford. "Excuse me!"
he shouted.

Mr Prosser (who was arguing with a spokesman for the bulldozer drivers
about whether or not Arthur Dent constituted a mental health hazard,
and how much they should get paid if he did) looked around. He was
surprised and slightly alarmed to find that Arthur had company.

"Yes? Hello?" he called. "Has Mr Dent come to his senses yet?"

"Can we for the moment," called Ford, "assume that he hasn't?" "Well?"
sighed Mr Prosser.

"And can we also assume," said Ford, "that he's going to be staying
here all day?"

"So?"

"So all your men are going to be standing around all day doing nothing?"

"Could be, could be ..."

"Well, if you're resigned to doing that anyway, you don't actually need
him to lie here all the time do you?"

"What?"

"You don't," said Ford patiently, "actually need him here."

Mr Prosser thought about this.

"Well no, not as such...", he said, "not exactly need ..." Prosser was
worried. He thought that one of them wasn't making a lot of sense.

Ford said, "So if you would just like to take it as read that he's actually
here, then he and I could slip off down to the pub for half an hour. How
does that sound?"

Mr Prosser thought it sounded perfectly potty.

"That sounds perfectly reasonable," he said in a reassuring tone of voice,
wondering who he was trying to reassure.

"And if you want to pop off for a quick one yourself later on," said Ford,
"we can always cover up for you in return."

"Thank you very much," said Mr Prosser who no longer knew how to
play this at all, "thank you very much, yes, that's very kind ..." He
frowned, then smiled, then tried to do both at once, failed, grasped hold
of his fur hat and rolled it fitfully round the top of his head. He could
only assume that he had just won.

"So," continued Ford Prefect, "if you would just like to come over here
and lie down ..."

"What?" said Mr Prosser.

"Ah, I'm sorry," said Ford, "perhaps I hadn't made myself fully clear.
Somebody's got to lie in front of the bulldozers haven't they? Or there
won't be anything to stop them driving into Mr Dent's house will there?"

"What?" said Mr Prosser again.




10




"It's very simple," said Ford, "my client, Mr Dent, says that he will
stop lying here in the mud on the sole condition that you come and take
over from him." "What are you talking about?" said Arthur, but Ford
nudged him with his shoe to be quiet.

"You want me," said Mr Prosser, spelling out this new thought to him-
self, "to come and lie there ..."

"Yes."

"In front of the bulldozer?"

"Yes."

"Instead of Mr Dent."

"Yes."

"In the mud."

"In, as you say it, the mud."

As soon as Mr Prosser realized that he was substantially the loser after
all, it was as if a weight lifted itself off his shoulders: this was more like
the world as he knew it. He sighed.

"In return for which you will take Mr Dent with you down to the pub?"

"That's it," said Ford. "That's it exactly."

Mr Prosser took a few nervous steps forward and stopped.

"Promise?"

"Promise," said Ford. He turned to Arthur.

"Come on," he said to him, "get up and let the man lie down."

Arthur stood up, feeling as if he was in a dream.

Ford beckoned to Prosser who sadly, awkwardly, sat down in the mud.
He felt that his whole life was some kind of dream and he sometimes
wondered whose it was and whether they were enjoying it. The mud
folded itself round his bottom and his arms and oozed into his shoes.

Ford looked at him severely.

"And no sneaky knocking down Mr Dent's house whilst he's away, al-
right?" he said.

"The mere thought," growled Mr Prosser, "hadn't even begun to specu-
late," he continued, settling himself back, "about the merest possibility
of crossing my mind."

He saw the bulldozer driver's union representative approaching and let
his head sink back and closed his eyes. He was trying to marshal his
arguments for proving that he did not now constitute a mental health
hazard himself. He was far from certain about this - his mind seemed
to be full of noise, horses, smoke, and the stench of blood. This always
happened when he felt miserable and put upon, and he had never been
able to explain it to himself. In a high dimension of which we know noth-
ing the mighty Khan bellowed with rage, but Mr Prosser only trembled




11




slightly and whimpered. He began to fell little pricks of water behind the
eyelids. Bureaucratic cock-ups, angry men lying in the mud, indecipher-
able strangers handing out inexplicable humiliations and an unidentified
army of horsemen laughing at him in his head - what a day.

What a day. Ford Prefect knew that it didn't matter a pair of dingo's
kidneys whether Arthur's house got knocked down or not now.

Arthur remained very worried.

"But can we trust him?" he said.

"Myself I'd trust him to the end of the Earth," said Ford.

"Oh yes," said Arthur, "and how far's that?"

"About twelve minutes away," said Ford, "come on, I need a drink."



CHAPTER 3



Here's what the Encyclopedia Galactica has to say about alcohol. It says
that alcohol is a colourless volatile liquid formed by the fermentation of
sugars and also notes its intoxicating effect on certain carbon-based life
forms.

The Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy also mentions alcohol. It says
that the best drink in existence is the Pan Galactic Gargle Blaster.

It says that the effect of a Pan Galactic Gargle Blaster is like having
your brains smashed out by a slice of lemon wrapped round a large gold
brick.

The Guide also tells you on which planets the best Pan Galactic Gargle
Blasters are mixed, how much you can expect to pay for one and what
voluntary organizations exist to help you rehabilitate afterwards.

The Guide even tells you how you can mix one yourself.

Take the juice from one bottle of that Ol' Janx Spirit, it says.

Pour into it one measure of water from the seas of Santraginus V - Oh
that Santraginean sea water, it says. Oh those Santraginean fish!!!

Allow three cubes of Arcturan Mega-gin to melt into the mixture (it
must be properly iced or the benzine is lost).

Allow four litres of Fallian marsh gas to bubble through it, in memory
of all those happy Hikers who have died of pleasure in the Marshes of
Fallia.

Over the back of a silver spoon float a measure of Qualactin Hypermint
extract, redolent of all the heady odours of the dark Qualactin Zones,
subtle sweet and mystic.

Drop in the tooth of an Algolian Suntiger. Watch it dissolve, spreading
the fires of the Algolian Suns deep into the heart of the drink.

Sprinkle Zamphuor.




12




Add an olive.

Drink ... but ... very carefully ...

The Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy sells rather better than the En-
cyclopedia Galactica.

"Six pints of bitter," said Ford Prefect to the barman of the Horse and
Groom. "And quickly please, the world's about to end."

The barman of the Horse and Groom didn't deserve this sort of treat-
ment, he was a dignified old man. He pushed his glasses up his nose and
blinked at Ford Prefect. Ford ignored him and stared out of the win-
dow, so the barman looked instead at Arthur who shrugged helplessly
and said nothing.

So the barman said, "Oh yes sir? Nice weather for it," and started pulling
pints.

He tried again.

"Going to watch the match this afternoon then?"

Ford glanced round at him.

"No, no point," he said, and looked back out of the window.

"What's that, foregone conclusion then you reckon sir?" said the bar-
man. "Arsenal without a chance?"

"No, no," said Ford, "it's just that the world's about to end."

"Oh yes sir, so you said," said the barman, looking over his glasses this
time at Arthur. "Lucky escape for Arsenal if it did."

Ford looked back at him, genuinely surprised.

"No, not really," he said. He frowned.

The barman breathed in heavily. "There you are sir, six pints," he said.

Arthur smiled at him wanly and shrugged again. He turned and smiled
wanly at the rest of the pub just in case any of them had heard what
was going on. None of them had, and none of them could understand
what he was smiling at them for.

A man sitting next to Ford at the bar looked at the two men, looked
at the six pints, did a swift burst of mental arithmetic, arrived at an
answer he liked and grinned a stupid hopeful grin at them.

"Get off," said Ford, "They're ours," giving him a look that would have
an Algolian Suntiger get on with what it was doing.

Ford slapped a five-pound note on the bar. He said, "Keep the change."

"What, from a fiver? Thank you sir."

"You've got ten minutes left to spend it."

The barman simply decided to walk away for a bit.

"Ford," said Arthur, "would you please tell me what the hell is going
on?"




13




"Drink up," said Ford, "you've got three pints to get through."

"Three pints?" said Arthur. "At lunchtime?"

The man next to ford grinned and nodded happily. Ford ignored him.
He said, "Time is an illusion. Lunchtime doubly so."

"Very deep," said Arthur, "you should send that in to the Reader's
Digest. They've got a page for people like you."

"Drink up."

"Why three pints all of a sudden?"

"Muscle relaxant, you'll need it."

"Muscle relaxant?"

"Muscle relaxant."

Arthur stared into his beer.

"Did I do anything wrong today," he said, "or has the world always been
like this and I've been too wrapped up in myself to notice?"

"Alright," said Ford, "I'll try to explain. How long have we known each
other?"

"How long?" Arthur thought. "Er, about five years, maybe six," he said.
"Most of it seemed to make some sense at the time."

"Alright," said Ford. "How would you react if I said that I'm not from
Guildford after all, but from a small planet somewhere in the vicinity of
Betelgeuse?" Arthur shrugged in a so-so sort of way.

"I don't know," he said, taking a pull of beer. "Why - do you think it's
the sort of thing you're likely to say?"

Ford gave up. It really wasn't worth bothering at the moment, what
with the world being about to end. He just said:

"Drink up."

He added, perfectly factually:

"The world's about to end."

Arthur gave the rest of the pub another wan smile. The rest of the pub
frowned at him. A man waved at him to stop smiling at them and mind
his own business.

"This must be Thursday," said Arthur musing to himself, sinking low
over his beer, "I never could get the hang of Thursdays."



CHAPTER 4



On this particular Thursday, something was moving quietly through the
ionosphere many miles above the surface of the planet; several some-
things in fact, several dozen huge yellow chunky slablike somethings,
huge as office buildings, silent as birds. They soared with ease, basking




14




in electromagnetic rays from the star Sol, biding their time, grouping,
preparing.

The planet beneath them was almost perfectly oblivious of their pres-
ence, which was just how they wanted it for the moment. The huge
yellow somethings went unnoticed at Goonhilly, they passed over Cape
Canaveral without a blip, Woomera and Jodrell Bank looked straight
through them - which was a pity because it was exactly the sort of thing
they'd been looking for all these years.

The only place they registered at all was on a small black device called
a Sub-Etha Sens-O-Matic which winked away quietly to itself. It nes-
tled in the darkness inside a leather satchel which Ford Prefect wore
habitually round his neck. The contents of Ford Prefect's satchel were
quite interesting in fact and would have made any Earth physicist's eyes
pop out of his head, which is why he always concealed them by keeping
a couple of dog-eared scripts for plays he pretended he was audition-
ing for stuffed in the top. Besides the Sub-Etha Sens-O-Matic and the
scripts he had an Electronic Thumb - a short squat black rod, smooth
and matt with a couple of flat switches and dials at one end; he also had
a device which looked rather like a largish electronic calculator. This
had about a hundred tiny flat press buttons and a screen about four
inches square on which any one of a million "pages" could be summoned
at a moment's notice. It looked insanely complicated, and this was one
of the reasons why the snug plastic cover it fitted into had the words
Don't Panic printed on it in large friendly letters. The other reason was
that this device was in fact that most remarkable of all books ever to
come out of the great publishing corporations of Ursa Minor - The Hitch
Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy. The reason why it was published in the
form of a micro sub meson electronic component is that if it were printed
in normal book form, an interstellar hitch hiker would require several
inconveniently large buildings to carry it around in.

Beneath that in Ford Prefect's satchel were a few biros, a notepad, and
a largish bath towel from Marks and Spencer.

The Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy has a few things to say on the
subject of towels.

A towel, it says, is about the most massively useful thing an interstel-
lar hitch hiker can have. Partly it has great practical value - you can
wrap it around you for warmth as you bound across the cold moons of
Jaglan Beta; you can lie on it on the brilliant marble-sanded beaches of
Santraginus V, inhaling the heady sea vapours; you can sleep under it
beneath the stars which shine so redly on the desert world of Kakrafoon;
use it to sail a mini raft down the slow heavy river Moth; wet it for use
in hand-to- hand-combat; wrap it round your head to ward off noxious
fumes or to avoid the gaze of the Ravenous Bugblatter Beast of Traal
(a mindboggingly stupid animal, it assumes that if you can't see it, it
can't see you - daft as a bush, but very ravenous); you can wave your
towel in emergencies as a distress signal, and of course dry yourself off




15




with it if it still seems to be clean enough.

More importantly, a towel has immense psychological value. For some
reason, if a strag (strag: non-hitch hiker) discovers that a hitch hiker
has his towel with him, he will automatically assume that he is also in
possession of a toothbrush, face flannel, soap, tin of biscuits, flask, com-
pass, map, ball of string, gnat spray, wet weather gear, space suit etc.,
etc. Furthermore, the strag will then happily lend the hitch hiker any
of these or a dozen other items that the hitch hiker might accidentally
have "lost". What the strag will think is that any man who can hitch
the length and breadth of the galaxy, rough it, slum it, struggle against
terrible odds, win through, and still knows where his towel is is clearly
a man to be reckoned with.

Hence a phrase which has passed into hitch hiking slang, as in "Hey, you
sass that hoopy Ford Prefect? There's a frood who really knows where
his towel is." (Sass: know, be aware of, meet, have sex with; hoopy: really
together guy; frood: really amazingly together guy.)

Nestling quietly on top of the towel in Ford Prefect's satchel, the Sub-
Etha Sens-O-Matic began to wink more quickly. Miles above the surface
of the planet the huge yellow somethings began to fan out. At Jodrell
Bank, someone decided it was time for a nice relaxing cup of tea.

"You got a towel with you?" said Ford Prefect suddenly to Arthur.

Arthur, struggling through his third pint, looked round at him.

"Why? What, no ... should I have?" He had given up being surprised,
there didn't seem to be any point any longer.

Ford clicked his tongue in irritation.

"Drink up," he urged.

At that moment the dull sound of a rumbling crash from outside filtered
through the low murmur of the pub, through the sound of the jukebox,
through the sound of the man next to Ford hiccupping over the whisky
Ford had eventually bought him.

Arthur choked on his beer, leapt to his feet.

"What's that?" he yelped.

"Don't worry," said Ford, "they haven't started yet."

"Thank God for that," said Arthur and relaxed.

"It's probably just your house being knocked down," said Ford, drowning
his last pint.

"What?" shouted Arthur. Suddenly Ford's spell was broken. Arthur
looked wildly around him and ran to the window.

"My God they are! They're knocking my house down. What the hell am
I doing in the pub, Ford?"

"It hardly makes any difference at this stage," said Ford, "let them have
their fun."




16




"Fun?" yelped Arthur. "Fun!" He quickly checked out of the window
again that they were talking about the same thing.

"Damn their fun!" he hooted and ran out of the pub furiously waving
a nearly empty beer glass. He made no friends at all in the pub that
lunchtime.

"Stop, you vandals! You home wreckers!" bawled Arthur. "You half
crazed Visigoths, stop will you!"

Ford would have to go after him. Turning quickly to the barman he
asked for four packets of peanuts.

"There you are sir," said the barman, slapping the packets on the bar,
"twenty-eight pence if you'd be so kind."

Ford was very kind - he gave the barman another five-pound note and
told him to keep the change. The barman looked at it and then looked
at Ford. He suddenly shivered: he experienced a momentary sensation
that he didn't understand because no one on Earth had ever experienced
it before. In moments of great stress, every life form that exists gives
out a tiny sublimal signal. This signal simply communicates an exact
and almost pathetic sense of how far that being is from the place of his
birth. On Earth it is never possible to be further than sixteen thousand
miles from your birthplace, which really isn't very far, so such signals
are too minute to be noticed. Ford Prefect was at this moment under
great stress, and he was born 600 light years away in the near vicinity
of Betelgeuse.

The barman reeled for a moment, hit by a shocking, incomprehensible
sense of distance. He didn't know what it meant, but he looked at Ford
Prefect with a new sense of respect, almost awe.

"Are you serious, sir?" he said in a small whisper which had the effect
of silencing the pub. "You think the world's going to end?"

"Yes," said Ford.

"But, this afternoon?"

Ford had recovered himself. He was at his flippest.

"Yes," he said gaily, "in less than two minutes I would estimate."

The barman couldn't believe the conversation he was having, but he
couldn't believe the sensation he had just had either.

"Isn't there anything we can do about it then?" he said.

"No, nothing," said Ford, stuffing the peanuts into his pockets.

Someone in the hushed bar suddenly laughed raucously at how stupid
everyone had become.

The man sitting next to Ford was a bit sozzled by now. His eyes waved
their way up to Ford.

"I thought," he said, "that if the world was going to end we were meant
to lie down or put a paper bag over our head or something."




17




"If you like, yes," said Ford.

"That's what they told us in the army," said the man, and his eyes began
the long trek back down to his whisky.

"Will that help?" asked the barman.

"No," said Ford and gave him a friendly smile. "Excuse me," he said,
"I've got to go." With a wave, he left.

The pub was silent for a moment longer, and then, embarrassingly
enough, the man with the raucous laugh did it again. The girl he had
dragged along to the pub with him had grown to loathe him dearly over
the last hour or so, and it would probably have been a great satisfaction
to her to know that in a minute and a half or so he would suddenly
evaporate into a whiff of hydrogen, ozone and carbon monoxide. How-
ever, when the moment came she would be too busy evaporating herself
to notice it.

The barman cleared his throat. He heard himself say:

"Last orders, please." The huge yellow machines began to sink downward
and to move faster.

Ford knew they were there. This wasn't the way he had wanted it.

Running up the lane, Arthur had nearly reached his house. He didn't
notice how cold it had suddenly become, he didn't notice the wind,
he didn't notice the sudden irrational squall of rain. He didn't notice
anything but the caterpillar bulldozers crawling over the rubble that
had been his home.

"You barbarians!" he yelled. "I'll sue the council for every penny it's
got! I'll have you hung, drawn and quartered! And whipped! And boiled
... until ... until ... until you've had enough."

Ford was running after him very fast. Very very fast.

"And then I'll do it again!" yelled Arthur. "And when I've finished I will
take all the little bits, and I will jump on them!"

Arthur didn't notice that the men were running from the bulldozers; he
didn't notice that Mr Prosser was staring hectically into the sky. What
Mr Prosser had noticed was that huge yellow somethings were screaming
through the clouds. Impossibly huge yellow somethings.

"And I will carry on jumping on them," yelled Arthur, still running,
"until I get blisters, or I can think of anything even more unpleasant to
do, and then ..."

Arthur tripped, and fell headlong, rolled and landed flat on his back. At
last he noticed that something was going on. His finger shot upwards.

"What the hell's that?" he shrieked.

Whatever it was raced across the sky in monstrous yellowness, tore the
sky apart with mind-buggering noise and leapt off into the distance
leaving the gaping air to shut behind it with a bang that drove your
ears six feet into your skull.




18




Another one followed and did the same thing only louder.

It's difficult to say exactly what the people on the surface of the planet
were doing now, because they didn't really know what they were doing
themselves. None of it made a lot of sense - running into houses, running
out of houses, howling noiselessly at the noise. All around the world city
streets exploded with people, cars slewed into each other as the noise
fell on them and then rolled off like a tidal wave over hills and valleys,
deserts and oceans, seeming to flatten everything it hit.

Only one man stood and watched the sky, stood with terrible sadness
in his eyes and rubber bungs in his ears. He knew exactly what was
happening and had known ever since his Sub-Etha Sens-O- Matic had
started winking in the dead of night beside his pillar and woken him
with a start. It was what he had waited for all these years, but when he
had deciphered the signal pattern sitting alone in his small dark room
a coldness had gripped him and squeezed his heart. Of all the races in
all of the Galaxy who could have come and said a big hello to planet
Earth, he thought, didn't it just have to be the Vogons.

Still he knew what he had to do. As the Vogon craft screamed through
the air high above him he opened his satchel. He threw away a copy of
Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, he threw away a copy
of Godspell: He wouldn't need them where he was going. Everything was
ready, everything was prepared.

He knew where his towel was.

A sudden silence hit the Earth. If anything it was worse than the noise.
For a while nothing happened.

The great ships hung motionless in the air, over every nation on Earth.
Motionless they hung, huge, heavy, steady in the sky, a blasphemy
against nature. Many people went straight into shock as their minds
tried to encompass what they were looking at. The ships hung in the
sky in much the same way that bricks don't.

And still nothing happened.

Then there was a slight whisper, a sudden spacious whisper of open
ambient sound. Every hi fi set in the world, every radio, every television,
every cassette recorder, every woofer, every tweeter, every mid-range
driver in the world quietly turned itself on.

Every tin can, every dust bin, every window, every car, every wine glass,
every sheet of rusty metal became activated as an acoustically perfect
sounding board.

Before the Earth passed away it was going to be treated to the very
ultimate in sound reproduction, the greatest public address system ever
built. But there was no concert, no music, no fanfare, just a simple
message.

"People of Earth, your attention please," a voice said, and it was won-
derful. Wonderful perfect quadrophonic sound with distortion levels so
low as to make a brave man weep.




19




"This is Prostetnic Vogon Jeltz of the Galactic Hyperspace Planning
Council," the voice continued. "As you will no doubt be aware, the
plans for development of the outlying regions of the Galaxy require the
building of a hyperspatial express route through your star system, and
regrettably your planet is one of those scheduled for demolition. The
process will take slightly less that two of your Earth minutes. Thank
you."

The PA died away.

Uncomprehending terror settled on the watching people of Earth. The
terror moved slowly through the gathered crowds as if they were iron
fillings on a sheet of board and a magnet was moving beneath them.
Panic sprouted again, desperate fleeing panic, but there was nowhere to
flee to. Observing this, the Vogons turned on their PA again. It said:

"There's no point in acting all surprised about it. All the planning charts
and demolition orders have been on display in your local planning de-
partment on Alpha Centauri for fifty of your Earth years, so you've had
plenty of time to lodge any formal complaint and it's far too late to start
making a fuss about it now."

The PA fell silent again and its echo drifted off across the land. The
huge ships turned slowly in the sky with easy power. On the underside
of each a hatchway opened, an empty black space.

By this time somebody somewhere must have manned a radio transmit-
ter, located a wavelength and broadcasted a message back to the Vogon
ships, to plead on behalf of the planet. Nobody ever heard what they
said, they only heard the reply. The PA slammed back into life again.
The voice was annoyed. It said:

"What do you mean you've never been to Alpha Centauri? For heaven's
sake mankind, it's only four light years away you know. I'm sorry, but
if you can't be bothered to take an interest in local affairs that's your
own lookout.

"Energize the demolition beams."

Light poured out into the hatchways.

"I don't know," said the voice on the PA, "apathetic bloody planet, I've
no sympathy at all." It cut off.

There was a terrible ghastly silence.

There was a terrible ghastly noise.

There was a terrible ghastly silence.

The Vogon Constructor fleet coasted away into the inky starry void.



CHAPTER 5



Far away on the opposite spiral arm of the Galaxy, five hundred thou-
sand light years from the star Sol, Zaphod Beeblebrox, President of the




20




Imperial Galactic Government, sped across the seas of Damogran, his
ion drive delta boat winking and flashing in the Damogran sun.

Damogran the hot; Damogran the remote; Damogran the almost totally
unheard of.

Damogran, secret home of the Heart of Gold.

The boat sped on across the water. It would be some time before it
reached its destination because Damogran is such an inconveniently ar-
ranged planet. It consists of nothing but middling to large desert islands
separated by very pretty but annoyingly wide stretches of ocean.

The boat sped on.

Because of this topological awkwardness Damogran has always remained
a deserted planet. This is why the Imperial Galactic Government chose
Damogran for the Heart of Gold project, because it was so deserted and
the Heart of Gold was so secret.

The boat zipped and skipped across the sea, the sea that lay between
the main islands of the only archipelago of any useful size on the whole
planet. Zaphod Beeblebrox was on his way from the tiny spaceport on
Easter Island (the name was an entirely meaningless coincidence - in
Galacticspeke, easter means small flat and light brown) to the Heart
of Gold island, which by another meaningless coincidence was called
France.

One of the side effects of work on the Heart of Gold was a whole string
of pretty meaningless coincidences.

But it was not in any way a coincidence that today, the day of culmi-
nation of the project, the great day of unveiling, the day that the Heart
of Gold was finally to be introduced to a marvelling Galaxy, was also
a great day of culmination for Zaphod Beeblebrox. It was for the sake
of this day that he had first decided to run for the Presidency, a de-
cision which had sent waves of astonishment throughout the Imperial
Galaxy - Zaphod Beeblebrox? President? Not the Zaphod Beeblebrox?
Not the President? Many had seen it as a clinching proof that the whole
of known creation had finally gone bananas.

Zaphod grinned and gave the boat an extra kick of speed.

Zaphod Beeblebrox, adventurer, ex-hippy, good timer, (crook? quite pos-
sibly), manic self-publicist, terribly bad at personal relationships, often
thought to be completely out to lunch.

President?

No one had gone bananas, not in that way at least.

Only six people in the entire Galaxy understood the principle on which
the Galaxy was governed, and they knew that once Zaphod Beeblebrox
had announced his intention to run as President it was more or less a
fait accompli: he was the ideal Presidency fodder.




21




What they completely failed to understand was why Zaphod was doing
it.

He banked sharply, shooting a wild wall of water at the sun.

Today was the day; today was the day when they would realize what
Zaphod had been up to. Today was what Zaphod Beeblebrox's Presi-
dency was all about. Today was also his two hundredth birthday, but
that was just another meaningless coincidence.

As he skipped his boat across the seas of Damogran he smiled quietly
to himself about what a wonderful exciting day it was going to be. He
relaxed and spread his two arms lazily across the seat back. He steered
with an extra arm he'd recently fitted just beneath his right one to help
improve his ski-boxing.

"Hey," he cooed to himself, "you're a real cool boy you." But his nerves
sang a song shriller than a dog whistle.

The island of France was about twenty miles long, five miles across the
middle, sandy and crescent shaped. In fact it seemed to exist not so
much as an island in its own right as simply a means of defining the
sweep and curve of a huge bay. This impression was heightened by the
fact that the inner coastline of the crescent consisted almost entirely of
steep cliffs. From the top of the cliff the land sloped slowly down five
miles to the opposite shore.

On top of the cliffs stood a reception committee.

It consisted in large part of the engineers and researchers who had built
the Heart of Gold - mostly humanoid, but here and there were a few
reptiloid atomineers, two or three green slyph-like maximegalacticans,
an octopoid physucturalist or two and a Hooloovoo (a Hooloovoo is a
super-intelligent shade of the color blue). All except the Hooloovoo were
resplendent in their multi- colored ceremonial lab coats; the Hooloovoo
had been temporarily refracted into a free standing prism for the occa-
sion.

There was a mood of immense excitement thrilling through all of them.
Together and between them they had gone to and beyond the furthest
limits of physical laws, restructured the fundamental fabric of matter,
strained, twisted and broken the laws of possibility and impossibility,
but still the greatest excitement of all seemed to be to meet a man with
an orange sash round his neck. (An orange sash was what the President
of the Galaxy traditionally wore.) It might not even have made much
difference to them if they'd known exactly how much power the President
of the Galaxy actually wielded: none at all. Only six people in the Galaxy
knew that the job of the Galactic President was not to wield power but
to attract attention away from it.

Zaphod Beeblebrox was amazingly good at his job.

The crowd gasped, dazzled by sun and seemanship, as the Presidential
speedboat zipped round the headland into the bay. It flashed and shone
as it came skating over the sea in wide skidding turns.




22




In fact it didn't need to touch the water at all, because it was supported
on a hazy cushion of ionized atoms - but just for effect it was fitted
with thin finblades which could be lowered into the water. They slashed
sheets of water hissing into the air, carved deep gashes into the sea which
swayed crazily and sank back foaming into the boat's wake as it careered
across the bay.

Zaphod loved effect: it was what he was best at.

He twisted the wheel sharply, the boat slewed round in a wild scything
skid beneath the cliff face and dropped to rest lightly on the rocking
waves.

Within seconds he ran out onto the deck and waved and grinned at over
three billion people. The three billion people weren't actually there, but
they watched his every gesture through the eyes of a small robot tri-D
camera which hovered obsequiously in the air nearby. The antics of the
President always made amazingly popular tri-D; that's what they were
for.

He grinned again. Three billion and six people didn't know it, but today
would be a bigger antic than anyone had bargained for.

The robot camera homed in for a close up on the more popular of his
two heads and he waved again. He was roughly humanoid in appearance
except for the extra head and third arm. His fair tousled hair stuck out
in random directions, his blue eyes glinted with something completely
unidentifiable, and his chins were almost always unshaven.

A twenty-foot-high transparent globe floated next to his boat, rolling
and bobbing, glistening in the brilliant sun. Inside it floated a wide
semi-circular sofa upholstered in glorious red leather: the more the globe
bobbed and rolled, the more the sofa stayed perfectly still, steady as an
upholstered rock. Again, all done for effect as much as anything.

Zaphod stepped through the wall of the globe and relaxed on the sofa.
He spread his two arms lazily along the back and with the third brushed
some dust off his knee. His heads looked about, smiling; he put his feet
up. At any moment, he thought, he might scream.

Water boiled up beneath the bubble, it seethed and spouted. The bubble
surged into the air, bobbing and rolling on the water spout. Up, up it
climbed, throwing stilts of light at the cliff. Up it surged on the jet, the
water falling from beneath it, crashing back into the sea hundreds of feet
below.

Zaphod smiled, picturing himself.

A thoroughly ridiculous form of transport, but a thoroughly beautiful
one.

At the top of the cliff the globe wavered for a moment, tipped on to a
railed ramp, rolled down it to a small concave platform and riddled to
a halt.




23




To tremendous applause Zaphod Beeblebrox stepped out of the bubble,
his orange sash blazing in the light.

The President of the Galaxy had arrived.

He waited for the applause to die down, then raised his hands in greeting.

"Hi," he said.

A government spider sidled up to him and attempted to press a copy of
his prepared speech into his hands. Pages three to seven of the original
version were at the moment floating soggily on the Damogran sea some
five miles out from the bay. Pages one and two had been salvaged by a
Damogran Frond Crested Eagle and had already become incorporated
into an extraordinary new form of nest which the eagle had invented. It
was constructed largely of papier m@ch@ and it was virtually impossible
for a newly hatched baby eagle to break out of it. The Damogran Frond
Crested Eagle had heard of the notion of survival of the species but
wanted no truck with it.

Zaphod Beeblebrox would not be needing his set speech and he gently
deflected the one being offered him by the spider.

"Hi," he said again.

Everyone beamed at him, or, at least, nearly everyone. He singled out
Trillian from the crowd. Trillian was a gird that Zaphod had picked up
recently whilst visiting a planet, just for fun, incognito. She was slim,
darkish, humanoid, with long waves of black hair, a full mouth, an odd
little nob of a nose and ridiculously brown eyes. With her red head scarf
knotted in that particular way and her long flowing silky brown dress
she looked vaguely Arabic. Not that anyone there had ever heard of
an Arab of course. The Arabs had very recently ceased to exist, and
even when they had existed they were five hundred thousand light years
from Damogran. Trillian wasn't anybody in particular, or so Zaphod
claimed. She just went around with him rather a lot and told him what
she thought of him.

"Hi honey," he said to her.

She flashed him a quick tight smile and looked away. Then she looked
back for a moment and smiled more warmly - but by this time he was
looking at something else.

"Hi," he said to a small knot of creatures from the press who were
standing nearby wishing that he would stop saying Hi and get on with
the quotes. He grinned at them particularly because he knew that in a
few moments he would be giving them one hell of a quote.

The next thing he said though was not a lot of use to them. One of
the officials of the party had irritably decided that the President was
clearly not in a mood to read the deliciously turned speech that had
been written for him, and had flipped the switch on the remote control
device in his pocket. Away in front of them a huge white dome that
bulged against the sky cracked down in the middle, split, and slowly




24




folded itself down into the ground. Everyone gasped although they had
known perfectly well it was going to do that because they had built it
that way.

Beneath it lay uncovered a huge starship, one hundred and fifty metres
long, shaped like a sleek running shoe, perfectly white and mindbog-
gingly beautiful. At the heart of it, unseen, lay a small gold box which
carried within it the most brain-wretching device ever conceived, a device
which made this starship unique in the history of the galaxy, a device
after which the ship had been named - The Heart of Gold. "Wow", said
Zaphod Beeblebrox to the Heart of Gold. There wasn't much else he
could say.

He said it again because he knew it would annoy the press.

"Wow."

The crowd turned their faces back towards him expectantly. He winked
at Trillian who raised her eyebrows and widened her eyes at him. She
knew what he was about to say and thought him a terrible showoff.

"That is really amazing," he said. "That really is truly amazing. That
is so amazingly amazing I think I'd like to steal it."

A marvellous Presidential quote, absolutely true to form. The crowd
laughed appreciatively, the newsmen gleefully punched buttons on their
Sub-Etha News-Matics and the President grinned.

As he grinned his heart screamed unbearably and he fingered the small
Paralyso-Matic bomb that nestled quietly in his pocket.

Finally he could bear it no more. He lifted his heads up to the sky, let
out a wild whoop in major thirds, threw the bomb to the ground and
ran forward through the sea of suddenly frozen smiles.



CHAPTER 6



Prostetnic Vogon Jeltz was not a pleasant sight, even for other Vogons.
His highly domed nose rose high above a small piggy forehead. His dark
green rubbery skin was thick enough for him to play the game of Vogon
Civil Service politics, and play it well, and waterproof enough for him
to survive indefinitely at sea depths of up to a thousand feet with no ill
effects.

Not that he ever went swimming of course. His busy schedule would not
allow it. He was the way he was because billions of years ago when the
Vogons had first crawled out of the sluggish primeval seas of Vogsphere,
and had lain panting and heaving on the planet's virgin shores... when
the first rays of the bright young Vogsol sun had shone across them that
morning, it was as if the forces of evolution ad simply given up on them
there and then, had turned aside in disgust and written them off as an
ugly and unfortunate mistake. They never evolved again; they should
never have survived.




25




The fact that they did is some kind of tribute to the thick- willed slug-
brained stubbornness of these creatures. Evolution? they said to them-
selves, Who needs it?, and what nature refused to do for them they sim-
ply did without until such time as they were able to rectify the grosser
anatomical inconveniences with surgery.

Meanwhile, the natural forces on the planet Vogsphere had been working
overtime to make up for their earlier blunder. They brought forth scin-
tillating jewelled scuttling crabs, which the Vogons ate, smashing their
shells with iron mallets; tall aspiring trees with breathtaking slenderness
and colour which the Vogons cut down and burned the crab meat with;
elegant gazelle- like creatures with silken coats and dewy eyes which the
Vogons would catch and sit on. They were no use as transport because
their backs would snap instantly, but the Vogons sat on them anyway.

Thus the planet Vogsphere whiled away the unhappy millennia until the
Vogons suddenly discovered the principles of interstellar travel. Within
a few short Vog years every last Vogon had migrated to the Megabrantis
cluster, the political hub of the Galaxy and now formed the immensely
powerful backbone of the Galactic Civil Service. They have attempted
to acquire learning, they have attempted to acquire style and social
grace, but in most respects the modern Vogon is little different from
his primitive forebears. Every year they import twenty-seven thousand
scintillating jewelled scuttling crabs from their native planet and while
away a happy drunken night smashing them to bits with iron mallets.

Prostetnic Vogon Jeltz was a fairly typical Vogon in that he was thor-
oughly vile. Also, he did not like hitch hikers.

Somewhere in a small dark cabin buried deep in the intestines of Prostet-
nic Vogon Jeltz's flagship, a small match flared nervously. The owner of
the match was not a Vogon, but he knew all about them and was right
to be nervous. His name was Ford Prefect.

He looked about the cabin but could see very little; strange monstrous
shadows loomed and leaped with the tiny flickering flame, but all was
quiet. He breathed a silent thank you to the Dentrassis. The Dentrassis
are an unruly tribe of gourmands, a wild but pleasant bunch whom the
Vogons had recently taken to employing as catering staff on their long
haul fleets, on the strict understanding that they keep themselves very
much to themselves.

This suited the Dentrassis fine, because they loved Vogon money, which
is one of the hardest currencies in space, but loathed the Vogons them-
selves. The only sort of Vogon a Dentrassi liked to see was an annoyed
Vogon.

It was because of this tiny piece of information that Ford Prefect was
not now a whiff of hydrogen, ozone and carbon monoxide.

He heard a slight groan. By the light of the match he saw a heavy shape
moving slightly on the floor. Quickly he shook the match out, reached in
his pocket, found what he was looking for and took it out. He crouched




26




on the floor. The shape moved again.

Ford Prefect said: "I bought some peanuts."

Arthur Dent moved, and groaned again, muttering incoherently.

"Here, have some," urged Ford, shaking the packet again, "if you've
never been through a matter transference beam before you've probably
lost some salt and protein. The beer you had should have cushioned your
system a bit." "Whhhrrrr..." said Arthur Dent. He opened his eyes.

"It's dark," he said.

"Yes," said Ford Prefect, "it's dark."

"No light," said Arthur Dent. "Dark, no light."

One of the things Ford Prefect had always found hardest to understand
about human beings was their habit of continually stating and repeating
the obvious, as in It's a nice day, or You're very tall, or Oh dear you seem
to have fallen down a thirty-foot well, are you alright? At first Ford had
formed a theory to account for this strange behaviour. If human beings
don't keep exercising their lips, he thought, their mouths probably seize
up. After a few months' consideration and observation he abandoned
this theory in favour of a new one. If they don't keep on exercising their
lips, he thought, their brains start working. After a while he abandoned
this one as well as being obstructively cynical and decided he quite
liked human beings after all, but he always remained desperately worried
about the terrible number of things they didn't know about.

"Yes," he agreed with Arthur, "no light." He helped Arthur to some
peanuts. "How do you feel?" he asked.

"Like a military academy," said Arthur, "bits of me keep on passing
out."

Ford stared at him blankly in the darkness.

"If I asked you where the hell we were," said Arthur weakly, "would I
regret it?"

Ford stood up. "We're safe," he said.

"Oh good," said Arthur.

"We're in a small galley cabin," said Ford, "in one of the spaceships of
the Vogon Constructor Fleet."

"Ah," said Arthur, "this is obviously some strange usage of the word
safe that I wasn't previously aware of."

Ford struck another match to help him search for a light switch. Mon-
strous shadows leaped and loomed again. Arthur struggled to his feet and
hugged himself apprehensively. Hideous alien shapes seemed to throng
about him, the air was thick with musty smells which sidled into his
lungs without identifying themselves, and a low irritating hum kept his
brain from focusing.

"How did we get here?" he asked, shivering slightly.




27




"We hitched a lift," said Ford.

"Excuse me?" said Arthur. "Are you trying to tell me that we just stuck
out our thumbs and some green bug-eyed monster stuck his head out
and said, Hi fellas, hop right in. I can take you as far as the Basingstoke
roundabout?"

"Well," said Ford, "the Thumb's an electronic sub-etha signalling device,
the roundabout's at Barnard's Star six light years away, but otherwise,
that's more or less right."

"And the bug-eyed monster?"

"Is green, yes."

"Fine," said Arthur, "when can I get home?"

"You can't," said Ford Prefect, and found the light switch.

"Shade your eyes ..." he said, and turned it on.

Even Ford was surprised.

"Good grief," said Arthur, "is this really the interior of a flying saucer?"

Prostetnic Vogon Jeltz heaved his unpleasant green body round the con-
trol bridge. He always felt vaguely irritable after demolishing populated
planets. He wished that someone would come and tell him that it was
all wrong so that he could shout at them and feel better. He flopped as
heavily as he could on to his control seat in the hope that it would break
and give him something to be genuinely angry about, but it only gave a
complaining sort of creak.

"Go away!" he shouted at a young Vogon guard who entered the bridge
at that moment. The guard vanished immediately, feeling rather relieved.
He was glad it wouldn't now be him who delivered the report they'd just
received. The report was an official release which said that a wonderful
new form of spaceship drive was at this moment being unveiled at a
government research base on Damogran which would henceforth make
all hyperspatial express routes unnecessary.

Another door slid open, but this time the Vogon captain didn't shout
because it was the door from the galley quarters where the Dentrassis
prepared his meals. A meal would be most welcome.

A huge furry creature bounded through the door with his lunch tray. It
was grinning like a maniac.

Prostetnic Vogon Jeltz was delighted. He knew that when a Dentrassi
looked that pleased with itself there was something going on somewhere
on the ship that he could get very angry indeed about.

Ford and Arthur stared about them.

"Well, what do you think?" said Ford.

"It's a bit squalid, isn't it?"

Ford frowned at the grubby mattress, unwashed cups and unidentifiable
bits of smelly alien underwear that lay around the cramped cabin.




28




"Well, this is a working ship, you see," said Ford. "These are the Den-
trassi sleeping quarters."

"I thought you said they were called Vogons or something."

"Yes," said Ford, "the Vogons run the ship, the Dentrassis are the cooks,
they let us on board."

"I'm confused," said Arthur.

"Here, have a look at this," said Ford. He sat down on one of the mat-
tresses and rummaged about in his satchel. Arthur prodded the mattress
nervously and then sat on it himself: in fact he had very little to be
nervous about, because all mattresses grown in the swamps of Squorn-
shellous Zeta are very thoroughly killed and dried before being put to
service. Very few have ever come to life again.

Ford handed the book to Arthur.

"What is it?" asked Arthur.

"The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. It's a sort of electronic book. It
tells you everything you need to know about anything. That's its job."

Arthur turned it over nervously in his hands.

"I like the cover," he said. "Don't Panic. It's the first helpful or intelli-
gible thing anybody's said to me all day."

"I'll show you how it works," said Ford. He snatched it from Arthur who
was still holding it as if it was a two-week-dead lark and pulled it out of
its cover.

"You press this button here you see and the screen lights up giving you
the index."

A screen, about three inches by four, lit up and characters began to
flicker across the surface.

"You want to know about Vogons, so I enter that name so." His fingers
tapped some more keys. "And there we are."

The words Vogon Constructor Fleets flared in green across the screen.

Ford pressed a large red button at the bottom of the screen and words
began to undulate across it. At the same time, the book began to speak
the entry as well in a still quiet measured voice. This is what the book
said.

"Vogon Constructor Fleets. Here is what to do if you want to get a lift
from a Vogon: forget it. They are one of the most unpleasant races in
the Galaxy - not actually evil, but bad tempered, bureaucratic, officious
and callous. They wouldn't even lift a finger to save their own grand-
mothers from the Ravenous Bugblatter Beast of Traal without orders
signed in triplicate, sent in, sent back, queried, lost, found, subjected to
public inquiry, lost again, and finally buried in soft peat and recycled as
firelighters.




29




"The best way to get a drink out of a Vogon is to stick your finger down
his throat, and the best way to irritate him is to feed his grandmother
to the Ravenous Bugblatter Beast of Traal.

"On no account allow a Vogon to read poetry at you."

Arthur blinked at it.

"What a strange book. How did we get a lift then?"

"That's the point, it's out of date now," said Ford, sliding the book
back into its cover. "I'm doing the field research for the New Revised
Edition, and one of the things I'll have to include is a bit about how the
Vogons now employ Dentrassi cooks which gives us a rather useful little
loophole."

A pained expression crossed Arthur's face. "But who are the Dentrassi?"
he said.

"Great guys," said Ford. "They're the best cooks and the best drink
mixers and they don't give a wet slap about anything else. And they'll
always help hitch hikers aboard, partly because they like the company,
but mostly because it annoys the Vogons. Which is exactly the sort of
thing you need to know if you're an impoverished hitch hiker trying to
see the marvels of the Universe for less than thirty Altairan Dollars a
day. And that's my job. Fun, isn't it?"

Arthur looked lost.

"It's amazing," he said and frowned at one of the other mattresses.

"Unfortunately I got stuck on the Earth for rather longer than I in-
tended," said Ford. "I came for a week and got stuck for fifteen years."

"But how did you get there in the first place then?"

"Easy, I got a lift with a teaser."

"A teaser?"

"Yeah."

"Er, what is ..."

"A teaser? Teasers are usually rich kids with nothing to do. They cruise
around looking for planets which haven't made interstellar contact yet
and buzz them."

"Buzz them?" Arthur began to feel that Ford was enjoying making life
difficult for him. "Yeah", said Ford, "they buzz them. They find some
isolated spot with very few people around, then land right by some poor
soul whom no one's ever going to believe and then strut up and down in
front of him wearing silly antennae on their heads and making beep beep
noises. Rather childish really." Ford leant back on the mattress with his
hands behind his head and looked infuriatingly pleased with himself.

"Ford," insisted Arthur, "I don't know if this sounds like a silly question,
but what am I doing here?"

"Well you know that," said Ford. "I rescued you from the Earth."




30




"And what's happened to the Earth?"

"Ah. It's been demolished."

"Has it," said Arthur levelly.

"Yes. It just boiled away into space."

"Look," said Arthur, "I'm a bit upset about that."

Ford frowned to himself and seemed to roll the thought around his mind.

"Yes, I can understand that," he said at last.

"Understand that!" shouted Arthur. "Understand that!"

Ford sprang up.

"Keep looking at the book!" he hissed urgently.

"What?"

"Don't Panic."

"I'm not panicking!"

"Yes you are."

"Alright so I'm panicking, what else is there to do?"

"You just come along with me and have a good time. The Galaxy's a
fun place. You'll need to have this fish in your ear."

"I beg your pardon?" asked Arthur, rather politely he thought.

Ford was holding up a small glass jar which quite clearly had a small
yellow fish wriggling around in it. Arthur blinked at him. He wished
there was something simple and recognizable he could grasp hold of. He
would have felt safe if alongside the Dentrassi underwear, the piles of
Squornshellous mattresses and the man from Betelgeuse holding up a
small yellow fish and offering to put it in his ear he had been able to see
just a small packet of corn flakes. He couldn't, and he didn't feel safe.

Suddenly a violent noise leapt at them from no source that he could
identify. He gasped in terror at what sounded like a man trying to gargle
whilst fighting off a pack of wolves.

"Shush!" said Ford. "Listen, it might be important."

"Im ... important?"

"It's the Vogon captain making an announcement on the T'annoy."

"You mean that's how the Vogons talk?"

"Listen!"

"But I can't speak Vogon!"

"You don't need to. Just put that fish in your ear."

Ford, with a lightning movement, clapped his hand to Arthur's ear, and
he had the sudden sickening sensation of the fish slithering deep into his
aural tract. Gasping with horror he scrabbled at his ear for a second or
so, but then slowly turned goggle-eyed with wonder. He was experiencing




31




the aural equivalent of looking at a picture of two black silhouetted faces
and suddenly seeing it as a picture of a white candlestick. Or of looking
at a lot of coloured dots on a piece of paper which suddenly resolve
themselves into the figure six and mean that your optician is going to
charge you a lot of money for a new pair of glasses.

He was still listening to the howling gargles, he knew that, only now it
had taken on the semblance of perfectly straightforward English.

This is what he heard ...



CHAPTER 7



"Howl howl gargle howl gargle howl howl howl gargle howl gargle howl
howl gargle gargle howl gargle gargle gargle howl slurrp uuuurgh should
have a good time. Message repeats. This is your captain speaking, so
stop whatever you're doing and pay attention. First of all I see from our
instruments that we have a couple of hitchhikers aboard. Hello wherever
you are. I just want to make it totally clear that you are not at all
welcome. I worked hard to get where I am today, and I didn't become
captain of a Vogon constructor ship simply so I could turn it into a
taxi service for a load of degenerate freeloaders. I have sent out a search
party, and as soon that they find you I will put you off the ship. If you're
very lucky I might read you some of my poetry first.

"Secondly, we are about to jump into hyperspace for the journey to
Barnard's Star. On arrival we will stay in dock for a seventy-two hour
refit, and no one's to leave the ship during that time. I repeat, all planet
leave is cancelled. I've just had an unhappy love affair, so I don't see
why anybody else should have a good time. Message ends." The noise
stopped.

Arthur discovered to his embarrassment that he was lying curled up in a
small ball on the floor with his arms wrapped round his head. He smiled
weakly.

"Charming man," he said. "I wish I had a daughter so I could forbid her
to marry one ..."

"You wouldn't need to," said Ford. "They've got as much sex appeal as
a road accident. No, don't move," he added as Arthur began to uncurl
himself, "you'd better be prepared for the jump into hyperspace. It's
unpleasantly like being drunk."

"What's so unpleasant about being drunk?"

"You ask a glass of water."

Arthur thought about this.

"Ford," he said.

"Yeah?"

"What's this fish doing in my ear?"




32




"It's translating for you. It's a Babel fish. Look it up in the book if you
like."

He tossed over The Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy and then curled
himself up into a foetal ball to prepare himself for the jump.

At that moment the bottom fell out of Arthur's mind.

His eyes turned inside out. His feet began to leak out of the top of his
head.

The room folded flat about him, spun around, shifted out of existence
and left him sliding into his own navel.

They were passing through hyperspace.

"The Babel fish," said The Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy quietly,
"is small, yellow and leech-like, and probably the oddest thing in the
Universe. It feeds on brainwave energy not from its carrier but from
those around it. It absorbs all unconscious mental frequencies from this
brainwave energy to nourish itself with. It then excretes into the mind
of its carrier a telepathic matrix formed by combining the conscious
thought frequencies with nerve signals picked up from the speech centres
of the brain which has supplied them. The practical upshot of all this is
that if you stick a Babel fish in your ear you can instantly understand
anything said to you in any form of language. The speech patterns you
actually hear decode the brainwave matrix which has been fed into your
mind by your Babel fish.

"Now it is such a bizarrely improbable coincidence that anything so
mindboggingly useful could have evolved purely by chance that some
thinkers have chosen to see it as the final and clinching proof of the
non-existence of God.

"The argument goes something like this: `I refuse to prove that I exist,'
says God, `for proof denies faith, and without faith I am nothing.'

"`But,' says Man, `The Babel fish is a dead giveaway, isn't it? It could
not have evolved by chance. It proves you exist, and so therefore, by
your own arguments, you don't. QED.'

"`Oh dear,' says God, `I hadn't thought of that,' and promptly vanished
in a puff of logic.

"`Oh, that was easy,' says Man, and for an encore goes on to prove that
black is white and gets himself killed on the next zebra crossing.

"Most leading theologians claim that this argument is a load of dingo's
kidneys, but that didn't stop Oolon Colluphid making a small fortune
when he used it as the central theme of his best- selling book Well That
About Wraps It Up For God.

"Meanwhile, the poor Babel fish, by effectively removing all barriers to
communication between different races and cultures, has caused more
and bloddier wars than anything else in the history of creation."




33




Arthur let out a low groan. He was horrified to discover that the kick
through hyperspace hadn't killed him. He was now six light years from
the place that the Earth would have been if it still existed.

The Earth.

Visions of it swam sickeningly through his nauseated mind. There was
no way his imagination could feel the impact of the whole Earth having
gone, it was too big. He prodded his feelings by thinking that his parents
and his sister had gone. No reaction. He thought of all the people he had
been close to. No reaction. Then he thought of a complete stranger he
had been standing behind in the queue at the supermarket before and
felt a sudden stab - the supermarket was gone, everything in it was gone.
Nelson's Column had gone! Nelson's Column had gone and there would
be no outcry, because there was no one left to make an outcry. From now
on Nelson's Column only existed in his mind. England only existed in
his mind - his mind, stuck here in this dank smelly steel-lined spaceship.
A wave of claustrophobia closed in on him.

England no longer existed. He'd got that - somehow he'd got it. He
tried again. America, he thought, has gone. He couldn't grasp it. He
decided to start smaller again. New York has gone. No reaction. He'd
never seriously believed it existed anyway. The dollar, he thought, had
sunk for ever. Slight tremor there. Every Bogart movie has been wiped,
he said to himself, and that gave him a nasty knock. McDonalds, he
thought. There is no longer any such thing as a McDonald's hamburger.
He passed out. When he came round a second later he found he was
sobbing for his mother.

He jerked himself violently to his feet.

"Ford!"

Ford looked up from where he was sitting in a corner humming to him-
self. He always found the actual travelling-through-space part of space
travel rather trying.

"Yeah?" he said.

"If you're a researcher on this book thing and you were on Earth, you
must have been gathering material on it."

"Well, I was able to extend the original entry a bit, yes."

"Let me see what it says in this edition then, I've got to see it."

"Yeah OK." He passed it over again.

Arthur grabbed hold of it and tried to stop his hands shaking. He pressed
the entry for the relevant page. The screen flashed and swirled and re-
solved into a page of print. Arthur stared at it.

"It doesn't have an entry!" he burst out.

Ford looked over his shoulder.

"Yes it does," he said, "down there, see at the bottom of the screen, just
under Eccentrica Gallumbits, the triple-breasted whore of Eroticon 6."




34




Arthur followed Ford's finger, and saw where it was pointing. For a
moment it still didn't register, then his mind nearly blew up.

"What? Harmless? Is that all it's got to say? Harmless! One word!"

Ford shrugged.

"Well, there are a hundred billion stars in the Galaxy, and only a limited
amount of space in the book's microprocessors," he said, "and no one
knew much about the Earth of course."

"Well for God's sake I hope you managed to rectify that a bit."

"Oh yes, well I managed to transmit a new entry off to the editor. He
had to trim it a bit, but it's still an improvement."

"And what does it say now?" asked Arthur.

"Mostly harmless," admitted Ford with a slightly embarrassed cough.

"Mostly harmless!" shouted Arthur. "What was that noise?" hissed
Ford.

"It was me shouting," shouted Arthur.

"No! Shut up!" said Ford. I think we're in trouble."

"You think we're in trouble!"

Outside the door were the sounds of marching feet.

"The Dentrassi?" whispered Arthur.

"No, those are steel tipped boots," said Ford.

There was a sharp ringing rap on the door.

"Then who is it?" said Arthur.

"Well," said Ford, "if we're lucky it's just the Vogons come to throw us
in to space."

"And if we're unlucky?"

"If we're unlucky," said Ford grimly, "the captain might be serious in
his threat that he's going to read us some of his poetry first ..."



CHAPTER 8



Vogon poetry is of course the third worst in the Universe.

The second worst is that of the Azagoths of Kria. During a recitation by
their Poet Master Grunthos the Flatulent of his poem "Ode To A Small
Lump of Green Putty I Found In My Armpit One Midsummer Morning"
four of his audience died of internal haemorrhaging, and the President
of the Mid-Galactic Arts Nobbling Council survived by gnawing one
of his own legs off. Grunthos is reported to have been "disappointed"
by the poem's reception, and was about to embark on a reading of his
twelve- book epic entitled My Favourite Bathtime Gurgles when his own




35




major intestine, in a desperate attempt to save life and civilization, leapt
straight up through his neck and throttled his brain.

The very worst poetry of all perished along with its creator Paula Nancy
Millstone Jennings of Greenbridge, Essex, England in the destruction of
the planet Earth.

Prostetnic Vogon Jeltz smiled very slowly. This was done not so much
for effect as because he was trying to remember the sequence of muscle
movements. He had had a terribly therapeutic yell at his prisoners and
was now feeling quite relaxed and ready for a little callousness.

The prisoners sat in Poetry Appreciation Chairs -strapped in. Vogons
suffered no illusions as to the regard their works were generally held in.
Their early attempts at composition had been part of bludgeoning insis-
tence that they be accepted as a properly evolved and cultured race, but
now the only thing that kept them going was sheer bloodymindedness.

The sweat stood out cold on Ford Prefect's brow, and slid round the
electrodes strapped to his temples. These were attached to a battery of
electronic equipment - imagery intensifiers, rhythmic modulators, allit-
erative residulators and simile dumpers - all designed to heighten the
experience of the poem and make sure that not a single nuance of the
poet's thought was lost.

Arthur Dent sat and quivered. He had no idea what he was in for, but
he knew that he hadn't liked anything that had happened so far and
didn't think things were likely to change.

The Vogon began to read - a fetid little passage of his own devising.

"Oh frettled gruntbuggly ..." he began. Spasms wracked Ford's body -
this was worse than ever he'd been prepared for.

"... thy micturations are to me _ As plurdled gabbleblotchits on a lurgid
bee."

"Aaaaaaarggggghhhhhh!" went Ford Prefect, wrenching his head back
as lumps of pain thumped through it. He could dimly see beside him
Arthur lolling and rolling in his seat. He clenched his teeth.

"Groop I implore thee," continued the merciless Vogon, "my foonting
turlingdromes."

His voice was rising to a horrible pitch of impassioned stridency. "And
hooptiously drangle me with crinkly bindlewurdles,_ Or I will rend thee
in the gobberwarts with my blurglecruncheon, see if I don't!"

"Nnnnnnnnnnyyyyyyyuuuuuuurrrrrrrggggggghhhhh!" cried Ford Pre-
fect and threw one final spasm as the electronic enhancement of the
last line caught him full blast across the temples. He went limp.

Arthur lolled.

"Now Earthlings ..." whirred the Vogon (he didn't know that Ford Pre-
fect was in fact from a small planet in the vicinity of Betelgeuse, and
wouldn't have cared if he had) "I present you with a simple choice!




36




Either die in the vacuum of space, or ..." he paused for melodramatic
effect, "tell me how good you thought my poem was!"

He threw himself backwards into a huge leathery bat-shaped seat and
watched them. He did the smile again.

Ford was rasping for breath. He rolled his dusty tongue round his parched
mouth and moaned.

Arthur said brightly: "Actually I quite liked it."

Ford turned and gaped. Here was an approach that had quite simply
not occurred to him.

The Vogon raised a surprised eyebrow that effectively obscured his nose
and was therefore no bad thing.

"Oh good ..." he whirred, in considerable astonishment.

"Oh yes," said Arthur, "I thought that some of the metaphysical imagery
was really particularly effective."

Ford continued to stare at him, slowly organizing his thoughts around
this totally new concept. Were they really going to be able to bareface
their way out of this?

"Yes, do continue ..." invited the Vogon.

"Oh ... and er ... interesting rhythmic devices too," continued Arthur,
"which seemed to counterpoint the ... er ... er ..." He floundered.

Ford leaped to his rescue, hazarding "counterpoint the surrealism of the
underlying metaphor of the ... er ..." He floundered too, but Arthur was
ready again.

"... humanity of the ..."

"Vogonity," Ford hissed at him.

"Ah yes, Vogonity (sorry) of the poet's compassionate soul," Arthur felt
he was on a home stretch now, "which contrives through the medium
of the verse structure to sublimate this, transcend that, and come to
terms with the fundamental dichotomies of the other," (he was reaching
a triumphant crescendo ...) "and one is left with a profound and vivid
insight into ... into ... er ..." (... which suddenly gave out on him.) Ford
leaped in with the coup de gr@ce:

"Into whatever it was the poem was about!" he yelled. Out of the corner
of his mouth: "Well done, Arthur, that was very good."

The Vogon perused them. For a moment his embittered racial soul had
been touched, but he thought no - too little too late. His voice took on
the quality of a cat snagging brushed nylon.

"So what you're saying is that I write poetry because underneath my
mean callous heartless exterior I really just want to be loved," he said.
He paused. "Is that right?"

Ford laughed a nervous laugh. "Well I mean yes," he said, "don't we all,
deep down, you know ... er ..."




37




The Vogon stood up.

"No, well you're completely wrong," he said, "I just write poetry to
throw my mean callous heartless exterior into sharp relief. I'm going to
throw you off the ship anyway. Guard! Take the prisoners to number
three airlock and throw them out!"

"What?" shouted Ford. A huge young Vogon guard stepped forward and
yanked them out of their straps with his huge blubbery arms.

"You can't throw us into space," yelled Ford, "we're trying to write a
book."

"Resistance is useless!" shouted the Vogon guard back at him. It was
the first phrase he'd learnt when he joined the Vogon Guard Corps.

The captain watched with detached amusement and then turned away.

Arthur stared round him wildly.

"I don't want to die now!" he yelled. "I've still got a headache! I don't
want to go to heaven with a headache, I'd be all cross and wouldn't
enjoy it!"

The guard grasped them both firmly round the neck, and bowing defer-
entially towards his captain's back, hoiked them both protesting out of
the bridge. A steel door closed and the captain was on his own again.
He hummed quietly and mused to himself, lightly fingering his notebook
of verses.

"Hmmmm," he said, "counterpoint the surrealism of the underlying
metaphor ..." He considered this for a moment, and then closed the
book with a grim smile.

"Death's too good for them," he said.

The long steel-lined corridor echoed to the feeble struggles of the two
humanoids clamped firmly under rubbery Vogon armpits.

"This is great," spluttered Arthur, "this is really terrific. Let go of me
you brute!"

The Vogon guard dragged them on.

"Don't you worry," said Ford, "I'll think of something." He didn't sound
hopeful.

"Resistance is useless!" bellowed the guard.

"Just don't say things like that," stammered Ford. "How can anyone
maintain a positive mental attitude if you're saying things like that?"

"My God," complained Arthur, "you're talking about a positive mental
attitude and you haven't even had your planet demolished today. I woke
up this morning and thought I'd have a nice relaxed day, do a bit of
reading, brush the dog ... It's now just after four in the afternoon and
I'm already thrown out of an alien spaceship six light years from the
smoking remains of the Earth!" He spluttered and gurgled as the Vogon
tightened his grip.




38




"Alright," said Ford, "just stop panicking."

"Who said anything about panicking?" snapped Arthur. "This is still
just the culture shock. You wait till I've settled down into the situation
and found my bearings. Then I'll start panicking."

"Arthur you're getting hysterical. Shut up!" Ford tried desperately to
think, but was interrupted by the guard shouting again.

"Resistance is useless!"

"And you can shut up as well!" snapped Ford.

"Resistance is useless!"

"Oh give it a rest," said Ford. He twisted his head till he was looking
straight up into his captor's face. A thought struck him.

"Do you really enjoy this sort of thing?" he asked suddenly.

The Vogon stopped dead and a look of immense stupidity seeped slowly
over his face.

"Enjoy?" he boomed. "What do you mean?"

"What I mean," said Ford, "is does it give you a full satisfying life?
Stomping around, shouting, pushing people out of spaceships ..."

The Vogon stared up at the low steel ceiling and his eyebrows almost
rolled over each other. His mouth slacked. Finally he said, "Well the
hours are good ..."

"They'd have to be," agreed Ford.

Arthur twisted his head to look at Ford.

"Ford, what are you doing?" he asked in an amazed whisper.

"Oh, just trying to take an interest in the world around me, OK?" he
said. "So the hours are pretty good then?" he resumed.

The Vogon stared down at him as sluggish thoughts moiled around in
the murky depths.

"Yeah," he said, "but now you come to mention it, most of the actual
minutes are pretty lousy. Except ..." he thought again, which required
looking at the ceiling - "except some of the shouting I quite like." He
filled his lungs and bellowed, "Resistance is ..."

"Sure, yes," interrupted Ford hurriedly, "you're good at that, I can tell.
But if it's mostly lousy," he said, slowly giving the words time to reach
their mark, "then why do you do it? What is it? The girls? The leather?
The machismo? Or do you just find that coming to terms with the
mindless tedium of it all presents an interesting challenge?"

"Er ..." said the guard, "er ... er ... I dunno. I think I just sort of ...
do it really. My aunt said that spaceship guard was a good career for a
young Vogon - you know, the uniform, the low- slung stun ray holster,
the mindless tedium ..."




39




"There you are Arthur," said Ford with the air of someone reaching the
conclusion of his argument, "you think you've got problems."

Arthur rather thought he had. Apart from the unpleasant business with
his home planet the Vogon guard had half-throttled him already and he
didn't like the sound of being thrown into space very much.

"Try and understand his problem," insisted Ford. "Here he is poor lad,
his entire life's work is stamping around, throwing people off spaceships
..."

"And shouting," added the guard.

"And shouting, sure," said Ford patting the blubbery arm clamped
round his neck in friendly condescension, "... and he doesn't even know
why he's doing it!"

Arthur agreed this was very sad. He did this with a small feeble gesture,
because he was too asphyxicated to speak.

Deep rumblings of bemusement came from the guard.

"Well. Now you put it like that I suppose ..."

"Good lad!" encouraged Ford.

"But alright," went on the rumblings, "so what's the alternative?"

"Well," said Ford, brightly but slowly, "stop doing it of course! Tell
them," he went on, "you're not going to do it anymore." He felt he had
to add something to that, but for the moment the guard seemed to have
his mind occupied pondering that much.

"Eerrrrrrmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm ..." said the guard,
"erm, well that doesn't sound that great to me."

Ford suddenly felt the moment slipping away.

"Now wait a minute," he said, "that's just the start you see, there's
more to it than that you see ..."

But at that moment the guard renewed his grip and continued his orig-
inal purpose of lugging his prisoners to the airlock. He was obviously
quite touched.

"No, I think if it's all the same to you," he said, "I'd better get you both
shoved into this airlock and then go and get on with some other bits of
shouting I've got to do."

It wasn't all the same to Ford Prefect after all.

"Come on now ... but look!" he said, less slowly, less brightly. "Huhhh-
hgggggggnnnnnnn ..." said Arthur without any clear inflection.

"But hang on," pursued Ford, "there's music and art and things to tell
you about yet! Arrrggghhh!"

"Resistance is useless," bellowed the guard, and then added, "You see if I
keep it up I can eventually get promoted to Senior Shouting Officer, and




40




there aren't usually many vacancies for non-shouting and non-pushing-
people-about officers, so I think I'd better stick to what I know."

They had now reached the airlock - a large circular steel hatchway of
massive strength and weight let into the inner skin of the craft. The
guard operated a control and the hatchway swung smoothly open.

"But thanks for taking an interest," said the Vogon guard. "Bye now."
He flung Ford and Arthur through the hatchway into the small chamber
within. Arthur lay panting for breath. Ford scrambled round and flung
his shoulder uselessly against the reclosing hatchway.

"But listen," he shouted to the guard, "there's a whole world you don't
know anything about ... here how about this?" Desperately he grabbed
for the only bit of culture he knew offhand - he hummed the first bar of
Beethoven's Fifth.

"Da da da dum! Doesn't that stir anything in you?"

"No," said the guard, "not really. But I'll mention it to my aunt."

If he said anything further after that it was lost. The hatchway sealed
itself tight, and all sound was lost but the faint distant hum of the ship's
engines.

They were in a brightly polished cylindrical chamber about six feet in
diameter and ten feet long.

"Potentially bright lad I thought," he said and slumped against the
curved wall.

Arthur was still lying in the curve of the floor where he had fallen. He
didn't look up. He just lay panting.

"We're trapped now aren't we?"

"Yes," said Ford, "we're trapped."

"Well didn't you think of anything? I thought you said you were going
to think of something. Perhaps you thought of something and didn't
notice."

"Oh yes, I thought of something," panted Ford. Arthur looked up ex-
pectantly.

"But unfortunately," continued Ford, "it rather involved being on the
other side of this airtight hatchway." He kicked the hatch they'd just
been through.

"But it was a good idea was it?"

"Oh yes, very neat."

"What was it?"

"Well I hadn't worked out the details yet. Not much point now is there?"

"So ... er, what happens next?"

"Oh, er, well the hatchway in front of us will open automatically in
a few moments and we will shoot out into deep space I expect and




41




asphyxicate. If you take a lungful of air with you you can last for up
to thirty seconds of course ..." said Ford. He stuck his hands behind his
back, raised his eyebrows and started to hum an old Betelgeusian battle
hymn. To Arthur's eyes he suddenly looked very alien.

"So this is it," said Arthur, "we're going to die."

"Yes," said Ford, "except ... no! Wait a minute!" he suddenly lunged
across the chamber at something behind Arthur's line of vision. "What's
this switch?" he cried.

"What? Where?" cried Arthur twisting round.

"No, I was only fooling," said Ford, "we are going to die after all."

He slumped against the wall again and carried on the tune from where
he left off.

"You know," said Arthur, "it's at times like this, when I'm trapped
in a Vogon airlock with a man from Betelgeuse, and about to die of
asphyxication in deep space that I really wish I'd listened to what my
mother told me when I was young."

"Why, what did she tell you?"

"I don't know, I didn't listen."

"Oh." Ford carried on humming.

"This is terrific," Arthur thought to himself, "Nelson's Column has gone,
McDonald's have gone, all that's left is me and the words Mostly Harm-
less. Any second now all that will be left is Mostly Harmless. And yes-
terday the planet seemed to be going so well."

A motor whirred.

A slight hiss built into a deafening roar of rushing air as the outer
hatchway opened on to an empty blackness studded with tiny impossibly
bright points of light. Ford and Arthur popped into outer space like corks
from a toy gun.



CHAPTER 9



The Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy is a wholly remarkable book. It
has been compiled and recompiled many times over many years and un-
der many different editorships. It contains contributions from countless
numbers of travellers and researchers.

The introduction begins like this:

"Space," it says, "is big. Really big. You just won't believe how vastly
hugely mindboggingly big it is. I mean you may think it's a long way
down the road to the chemist, but that's just peanuts to space. Listen
..." and so on.

(After a while the style settles down a bit and it begins to tell you
things you really need to know, like the fact that the fabulously beautiful




42




planet Bethselamin is now so worried about the cumulative erosion by
ten billion visiting tourists a year that any net imbalance between the
amount you eat and the amount you excrete whilst on the planet is
surgically removed from your bodyweight when you leave: so every time
you go to the lavatory it is vitally important to get a receipt.)

To be fair though, when confronted by the sheer enormity of distances
between the stars, better minds than the one responsible for the Guide's
introduction have faltered. Some invite you to consider for a moment a
peanut in reading and a small walnut in Johannesburg, and other such
dizzying concepts.

The simple truth is that interstellar distances will not fit into the human
imagination.

Even light, which travels so fast that it takes most races thousands of
years to realize that it travels at all, takes time to journey between the
stars. It takes eight minutes from the star Sol to the place where the
Earth used to be, and four years more to arrive at Sol's nearest stellar
neighbour, Alpha Proxima.

For light to reach the other side of the Galaxy, for it to reach Damogran
for instance, takes rather longer: five hundred thousand years.

The record for hitch hiking this distance is just under five years, but you
don't get to see much on the way.

The Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy says that if you hold a lungful
of air you can survive in the total vacuum of space for about thirty
seconds. However it goes on to say that what with space being the mind
boggling size it is the chances of getting picked up by another ship within
those thirty seconds are two to the power of two hundred and sixty-seven
thousand seven hundred and nine to one against.

By a totally staggering coincidence that is also the telephone number
of an Islington flat where Arthur once went to a very good party and
met a very nice girl whom he totally failed to get off with - she went
off with a gatecrasher. Though the planet Earth, the Islington flat and
the telephone have all now been demolished, it is comforting to reflect
that they are all in some small way commemorated by the fact that
twenty-nine seconds later Ford and Arthur were rescued.



CHAPTER 10



A computer chatted to itself in alarm as it noticed an airlock open and
close itself for no apparent reason.

This was because Reason was in fact out to lunch.

A hole had just appeared in the Galaxy. It was exactly a nothingth of a
second long, a nothingth of an inch wide, and quite a lot of million light
years from end to end.




43




As it closed up lots of paper hats and party balloons fell out of it and
drifted off through the universe. A team of seven three- foot-high market
analysts fell out of it and died, partly of asphyxication, partly of surprise.

Two hundred and thirty-nine thousand lightly fried eggs fell out of it
too, materializing in a large woobly heap on the famine- struck land of
Poghril in the Pansel system.

The whole Poghril tribe had died out from famine except for one last
man who died of cholesterol poisoning some weeks later.

The nothingth of a second for which the hole existed reverberated back-
wards and forwards through time in a most improbable fashion. Some-
where in the deeply remote past it seriously traumatized a small random
group of atoms drifting through the empty sterility of space and made
them cling together in the most extraordinarily unlikely patterns. These
patterns quickly learnt to copy themselves (this was part of what was so
extraordinary of the patterns) and went on to cause massive trouble on
every planet they drifted on to. That was how life began in the Universe.

Five wild Event Maelstroms swirled in vicious storms of unreason and
spewed up a pavement.

On the pavement lay Ford Prefect and Arthur Dent gulping like half-
spent fish.

"There you are," gasped Ford, scrabbling for a fingerhold on the pave-
ment as it raced through the Third Reach of the Unknown, "I told you
I'd think of something."

"Oh sure," said Arthur, "sure."

"Bright idea of mine," said Ford, "to find a passing spaceship and get
rescued by it."

The real universe arched sickeningly away beneath them. Various pre-
tend ones flitted silently by, like mountain goats. Primal light exploded,
splattering space-time as with gobbets of junket. Time blossomed, mat-
ter shrank away. The highest prime number coalesced quietly in a corner
and hid itself away for ever.

"Oh come off it," said Arthur, "the chances against it were astronomi-
cal."

"Don't knock it, it worked," said Ford.

"What sort of ship are we in?" asked Arthur as the pit of eternity yawned
beneath them.

"I don't know," said Ford, "I haven't opened my eyes yet."

"No, nor have I," said Arthur.

The Universe jumped, froze, quivered and splayed out in several unex-
pected directions.

Arthur and Ford opened their eyes and looked about in considerable
surprise.




44




"Good god," said Arthur, "it looks just like the sea front at Southend."

"Hell, I'm relieved to hear you say that," said Ford.

"Why?"

"Because I thought I must be going mad."

"Perhaps you are. Perhaps you only thought I said it."

Ford thought about this.

"Well, did you say it or didn't you?" he asked.

"I think so," said Arthur.

"Well, perhaps we're both going mad."

"Yes," said Arthur, "we'd be mad, all things considered, to think this
was Southend."

"Well, do you think this is Southend?"

"Oh yes."

"So do I."

"Therefore we must be mad."

"Nice day for it."

"Yes," said a passing maniac.

"Who was that?" asked Arthur

"Who - the man with the five heads and the elderberry bush full of
kippers?" "Yes."

"I don't know. Just someone."

"Ah."

They both sat on the pavement and watched with a certain unease as
huge children bounced heavily along the sand and wild horses thun-
dered through the sky taking fresh supplies of reinforced railings to the
Uncertain Areas.

"You know," said Arthur with a slight cough, "if this is Southend, there's
something very odd about it ..."

"You mean the way the sea stays steady and the buildings keep washing
up and down?" said Ford. "Yes I thought that was odd too. In fact,"
he continued as with a huge bang Southend split itself into six equal
segments which danced and span giddily round each other in lewd and
licentious formation, "there is something altogether very strange going
on."

Wild yowling noises of pipes and strings seared through the wind, hot
doughnuts popped out of the road for ten pence each, horrid fish stormed
out of the sky and Arthur and Ford decided to make a run for it.

They plunged through heavy walls of sound, mountains of archaic
thought, valleys of mood music, bad shoe sessions and footling bats and
suddenly heard a girl's voice.




45




It sounded quite a sensible voice, but it just said, "Two to the power of
one hundred thousand to one against and falling," and that was all.

Ford skidded down a beam of light and span round trying to find a
source for the voice but could see nothing he could seriously believe in.

"What was that voice?" shouted Arthur.

"I don't know," yelled Ford, "I don't know. It sounded like a measure-
ment of probability."

"Probability? What do you mean?"

"Probability. You know, like two to one, three to one, five to four against.
It said two to the power of one hundred thousand to one against. That's
pretty improbable you know."

A million-gallon vat of custard upended itself over them without warn-
ing.

"But what does it mean?" cried Arthur.

"What, the custard?"

"No, the measurement of probability!"

"I don't know. I don't know at all. I think we're on some kind of space-
ship."

"I can only assume," said Arthur, "that this is not the first- class com-
partment."

Bulges appeared in the fabric of space-time. Great ugly bulges.

"Haaaauuurrgghhh ..." said Arthur as he felt his body softening and
bending in unusual directions. "Southend seems to be melting away ...
the stars are swirling ... a dustbowl ... my legs are drifting off into the
sunset ... my left arm's come off too." A frightening thought struck him:
"Hell," he said, "how am I going to operate my digital watch now?" He
wound his eyes desperately around in Ford's direction.

"Ford," he said, "you're turning into a penguin. Stop it."

Again came the voice.

"Two to the power of seventy-five thousand to one against and falling."

Ford waddled around his pond in a furious circle.

"Hey, who are you," he quacked. "Where are you? What's going on and
is there any way of stopping it?"

"Please relax," said the voice pleasantly, like a stewardess in an airliner
with only one wing and two engines one of which is on fire, "you are
perfectly safe."

"But that's not the point!" raged Ford. "The point is that I am now a
perfectly save penguin, and my colleague here is rapidly running out of
limbs!"

"It's alright, I've got them back now," said Arthur.




46




"Two to the power of fifty thousand to one against and falling," said the
voice.

"Admittedly," said Arthur, "they're longer than I usually like them, but
..."

"Isn't there anything," squawked Ford in avian fury, "you feel you ought
to be telling us?"

The voice cleared its throat. A giant petit four lolloped off into the
distance.

"Welcome," the voice said, "to the Starship Heart of Gold."

The voice continued.

"Please do not be alarmed," it said, "by anything you see or hear around
you. You are bound to feel some initial ill effects as you have been
rescued from certain death at an improbability level of two to the power
of two hundred and seventy-six thousand to one against - possibly much
higher. We are now cruising at a level of two to the power of twenty-five
thousand to one against and falling, and we will be restoring normality
just as soon as we are sure what is normal anyway. Thank you. Two to
the power of twenty thousand to one against and falling."

The voice cut out.

Ford and Arthur were in a small luminous pink cubicle.

Ford was wildly excited.

"Arthur!" he said, "this is fantastic! We've been picked up by a ship
powered by the Infinite Improbability Drive! This is incredible! I heard
rumors about it before! They were all officially denied, but they must
have done it! They've built the Improbability Drive! Arthur, this is ...
Arthur? What's happening?"

Arthur had jammed himself against the door to the cubicle, trying to
hold it closed, but it was ill fitting. Tiny furry little hands were squeezing
themselves through the cracks, their fingers were inkstained; tiny voices
chattered insanely.

Arthur looked up.

"Ford!" he said, "there's an infinite number of monkeys outside who
want to talk to us about this script for Hamlet they've worked out."



CHAPTER 11



The Infinite Improbability Drive is a wonderful new method of crossing
vast interstellar distances in a mere nothingth of a second, without all
that tedious mucking about in hyperspace.

It was discovered by a lucky chance, and then developed into a govern-
able form of propulsion by the Galactic Government's research team on
Damogran.




47




This, briefly, is the story of its discovery.

The principle of generating small amounts of finite improbability by
simply hooking the logic circuits of a Bambleweeny 57 Sub- Meson Brain
to an atomic vector plotter suspended in a strong Brownian Motion
producer (say a nice hot cup of tea) were of course well understood -
and such generators were often used to break the ice at parties by making
all the molecules in the hostess's undergarments leap simultaneously one
foot to the left, in accordance with the Theory of Indeterminacy.

Many respectable physicists said that they weren't going to stand for
this - partly because it was a debasement of science, but mostly because
they didn't get invited to those sort of parties.

Another thing they couldn't stand was the perpetual failure they en-
countered in trying to construct a machine which could generate the
infinite improbability field needed to flip a spaceship across the mind-
paralysing distances between the furthest stars, and in the end they
grumpily announced that such a machine was virtually impossible.

Then, one day, a student who had been left to sweep up the lab after a
particularly unsuccessful party found himself reasoning this way:

If, he thought to himself, such a machine is a virtual impossibility, then
it must logically be a finite improbability. So all I have to do in order to
make one is to work out exactly how improbable it is, feed that figure
into the finite improbability generator, give it a fresh cup of really hot
tea ... and turn it on!

He did this, and was rather startled to discover that he had managed to
create the long sought after golden Infinite Improbability generator out
of thin air.

It startled him even more when just after he was awarded the Galactic
Institute's Prize for Extreme Cleverness he got lynched by a rampaging
mob of respectable physicists who had finally realized that the one thing
they really couldn't stand was a smartass.



CHAPTER 12



The Improbability-proof control cabin of the Heart of Gold looked like
a perfectly conventional spaceship except that it was perfectly clean
because it was so new. Some of the control seats hadn't had the plastic
wrapping taken off yet. The cabin was mostly white, oblong, and about
the size of a smallish restaurant. In fact it wasn't perfectly oblong: the
two long walls were raked round in a slight parallel curve, and all the
angles and corners were contoured in excitingly chunky shapes. The
truth of the matter is that it would have been a great deal simpler
and more practical to build the cabin as an ordinary three-dimensional
oblong rom, but then the designers would have got miserable. As it was
the cabin looked excitingly purposeful, with large video screens ranged




48




over the control and guidance system panels on the concave wall, and
long banks of computers set into the convex wall. In one corner a robot
sat humped, its gleaming brushed steel head hanging loosely between its
gleaming brushed steel knees. It too was fairly new, but though it was
beautifully constructed and polished it somehow looked as if the various
parts of its more or less humanoid body didn't quite fit properly. In fact
they fitted perfectly well, but something in its bearing suggested that
they might have fitted better.

Zaphod Beeblebrox paced nervously up and down the cabin, brushing his
hands over pieces of gleaming equipment and giggling with excitement.

Trillian sat hunched over a clump of instruments reading off figures. Her
voice was carried round the Tannoy system of the whole ship.

"Five to one against and falling ..." she said, "four to one against and
falling ... three to one ... two ... one ... probability factor of one to one
... we have normality, I repeat we have normality." She turned her mi-
crophone off - then turned it back on, with a slight smile and continued:
"Anything you still can't cope with is therefore your own problem. Please
relax. You will be sent for soon."

Zaphod burst out in annoyance: "Who are they Trillian?"

Trillian span her seat round to face him and shrugged.

"Just a couple of guys we seem to have picked up in open space," she
said. "Section ZZ9 Plural Z Alpha."

"Yeah, well that's a very sweet thought Trillian," complained Zaphod,
"but do you really think it's wise under the circumstances? I mean, here
we are on the run and everything, we must have the police of half the
Galaxy after us by now, and we stop to pick up hitch hikers. OK, so ten
out of ten for style, but minus several million for good thinking, yeah?"

He tapped irritably at a control panel. Trillian quietly moved his hand
before he tapped anything important. Whatever Zaphod's qualities of
mind might include - dash, bravado, conceit - he was mechanically inept
and could easily blow the ship up with an extravagant gesture. Trillian
had come to suspect that the main reason why he had had such a wild
and successful life that he never really understood the significance of
anything he did.

"Zaphod," she said patiently, "they were floating unprotected in open
space ... you wouldn't want them to have died would you?"

"Well, you know ... no. Not as such, but ..."

"Not as such? Not die as such? But?" Trillian cocked her head on one
side.

"Well, maybe someone else might have picked them up later."

"A second later and they would have been dead."

"Yeah, so if you'd taken the trouble to think about the problem a bit
longer it would have gone away."




49




"You'd been happy to let them die?"

"Well, you know, not happy as such, but ..."

"Anyway," said Trillian, turning back to the controls, "I didn't pick them
up."

"What do you mean? Who picked them up then?"

"The ship did."

"Huh?"

"The ship did. All by itself."

"Huh?" "Whilst we were in Improbability Drive."

"But that's incredible."

"No Zaphod. Just very very improbable."

"Er, yeah."

"Look Zaphod," she said, patting his arm, "don't worry about the aliens.
They're just a couple of guys I expect. I'll send the robot down to get
them and bring them up here. Hey Marvin!"

In the corner, the robot's head swung up sharply, but then wobbled
about imperceptibly. It pulled itself up to its feet as if it was about five
pounds heavier that it actually was, and made what an outside observer
would have thought was a heroic effort to cross the room. It stopped in
front of Trillian and seemed to stare through her left shoulder.

"I think you ought to know I'm feeling very depressed," it said. Its voice
was low and hopeless.

"Oh God," muttered Zaphod and slumped into a seat.

"Well," said Trillian in a bright compassionate tone, "here's something
to occupy you and keep your mind off things."

"It won't work," droned Marvin, "I have an exceptionally large mind."

"Marvin!" warned Trillian.

"Alright," said Marvin, "what do you want me to do?"

"Go down to number two entry bay and bring the two aliens up here
under surveillance."

With a microsecond pause, and a finely calculated micromodulation of
pitch and timbre - nothing you could actually take offence at - Marvin
managed to convey his utter contempt and horror of all things human.

"Just that?" he said.

"Yes," said Trillian firmly.

"I won't enjoy it," said Marvin.

Zaphod leaped out of his seat.

"She's not asking you to enjoy it," he shouted, "just do it will you?"




50




"Alright," said Marvin like the tolling of a great cracked bell, "I'll do
it."

"Good ..." snapped Zaphod, "great ... thank you ..."

Marvin turned and lifted his flat-topped triangular red eyes up towards
him.

"I'm not getting you down at all am I?" he said pathetically.

"No no Marvin," lilted Trillian, "that's just fine, really ..."

"I wouldn't like to think that I was getting you down."

"No, don't worry about that," the lilt continued, "you just act as comes
naturally and everything will be just fine."

"You're sure you don't mind?" probed Marvin.

"No no Marvin," lilted Trillian, "that's just fine, really ... just part of
life."

"Marvin flashed him an electronic look.

"Life," said Marvin, "don't talk to me about life."

He turned hopelessly on his heel and lugged himself out of the cabin.
With a satisfied hum and a click the door closed behind him

"I don't think I can stand that robot much longer Zaphod," growled
Trillian.

The Encyclopaedia Galactica defines a robot as a mechanical apparatus
designed to do the work of a man. The marketing division of the Sirius
Cybernetics Corporation defines a robot as "Your Plastic Pal Who's Fun
To Be With."

The Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy defines the marketing division of
the Sirius Cybernetics Corporation as "a bunch of mindless jerks who'll
be the first against the wall when the revolution comes," with a footnote
to the effect that the editors would welcome applications from anyone
interested in taking over the post of robotics correspondent.

Curiously enough, an edition of the Encyclopaedia Galactica that had
the good fortune to fall through a time warp from a thousand years
in the future defined the marketing division of the Sirius Cybernetics
Corporation as "a bunch of mindless jerks who were the first against the
wall when the revolution came."

The pink cubicle had winked out of existence, the monkeys had sunk
away to a better dimension. Ford and Arthur found themselves in the
embarkation area of the ship. It was rather smart.

"I think the ship's brand new," said Ford.

"How can you tell?" asked Arthur. "Have you got some exotic device for
measuring the age of metal?"

"No, I just found this sales brochure lying on the floor. It's a lot of `the
Universe can be yours' stuff. Ah! Look, I was right."




51




Ford jabbed at one of the pages and showed it to Arthur. "It says:
Sensational new breakthrough in Improbability Physics. As soon as the
ship's drive reaches Infinite Improbability it passes through every point
in the Universe. Be the envy of other major governments. Wow, this is
big league stuff."

Ford hunted excitedly through the technical specs of the ship, occa-
sionally gasping with astonishment at what he read - clearly Galactic
astrotechnology had moved ahead during the years of his exile.

Arthur listened for a short while, but being unable to understand the
vast majority of what Ford was saying he began to let his mind wander,
trailing his fingers along the edge of an incomprehensible computer bank,
he reached out and pressed an invitingly large red button on a nearby
panel. The panel lit up with the words Please do not press this button
again. He shook himself.

"Listen," said Ford, who was still engrossed in the sales brochure, "they
make a big thing of the ship's cybernetics. A new generation of Sir-
ius Cybernetics Corporation robots and computers, with the new GPP
feature."

"GPP feature?" said Arthur. "What's that?"

"Oh, it says Genuine People Personalities."

"Oh," said Arthur, "sounds ghastly."

A voice behind them said, "It is." The voice was low and hopeless and
accompanied by a slight clanking sound. They span round and saw an
abject steel man standing hunched in the doorway.

"What?" they said.

"Ghastly," continued Marvin, "it all is. Absolutely ghastly. Just don't
even talk about it. Look at this door," he said, stepping through it.
The irony circuits cut into his voice modulator as he mimicked the style
of the sales brochure. "All the doors in this spaceship have a cheerful
and sunny disposition. It is their pleasure to open for you, and their
satisfaction to close again with the knowledge of a job well done."

As the door closed behind them it became apparent that it did indeed
have a satisfied sigh-like quality to it. "Hummmmmmmyummmmmmm
ah!" it said.

Marvin regarded it with cold loathing whilst his logic circuits chattered
with disgust and tinkered with the concept of directing physical vio-
lence against it Further circuits cut in saying, Why bother? What's the
point? Nothing is worth getting involved in. Further circuits amused
themselves by analysing the molecular components of the door, and of
the humanoids' brain cells. For a quick encore they measured the level
of hydrogen emissions in the surrounding cubic parsec of space and then
shut down again in boredom. A spasm of despair shook the robot's body
as he turned.




52




"Come on," he droned, "I've been ordered to take you down to the
bridge. Here I am, brain the size of a planet and they ask me to take
you down to the bridge. Call that job satisfaction? 'Cos I don't."

He turned and walked back to the hated door.

"Er, excuse me," said Ford following after him, "which government owns
this ship?"

Marvin ignored him.

"You watch this door," he muttered, "it's about to open again. I can
tell by the intolerable air of smugness it suddenly generates."

With an ingratiating little whine the door slit open again and Marvin
stomped through.

"Come on," he said.

The others followed quickly and the door slit back into place with pleased
little clicks and whirrs.

"Thank you the marketing division of the Sirius Cybernetics Corpo-
ration," said Marvin and trudged desolately up the gleaming curved
corridor that stretched out before them. "Let's build robots with Gen-
uine People Personalities," they said. So they tried it out with me. I'm
a personality prototype. You can tell can't you?"

Ford and Arthur muttered embarrassed little disclaimers.

"I hate that door," continued Marvin. "I'm not getting you down at all
am I?"

"Which government ..." started Ford again.

"No government owns it," snapped the robot, "it's been stolen."

"Stolen?"

"Stolen?" mimicked Marvin.

"Who by?" asked Ford.

"Zaphod Beeblebrox."

Something extraordinary happened to Ford's face. At least five entirely
separate and distinct expressions of shock and amazement piled up on it
in a jumbled mess. His left leg, which was in mid stride, seemed to have
difficulty in finding the floor again. He stared at the robot and tried to
entangle some dartoid muscles.

"Zaphod Beeblebrox ...?" he said weakly.

"Sorry, did I say something wrong?" said Marvin, dragging himself on
regardless. "Pardon me for breathing, which I never do anyway so I don't
know why I bother to say it, oh God I'm so depressed. Here's another
of those self-satisfied door. Life! Don't talk to me about life." "No one
ever mentioned it," muttered Arthur irritably. "Ford, are you alright?"

Ford stared at him. "Did that robot say Zaphod Beeblebrox?" he said.




53




CHAPTER 13



A loud clatter of gunk music flooded through the Heart of Gold cabin
as Zaphod searched the sub-etha radio wavebands for news of himself.
The machine was rather difficult to operate. For years radios had been
operated by means of pressing buttons and turning dials; then as the
technology became more sophisticated the controls were made touch-
sensitive - you merely had to brush the panels with your fingers; now
all you had to do was wave your hand in the general direction of the
components and hope. It saved a lot of muscular expenditure of course,
but meant that you had to sit infuriatingly still if you wanted to keep
listening to the same programme.

Zaphod waved a hand and the channel switched again. More gunk music,
but this time it was a background to a news announcement. The news
was always heavily edited to fit the rhythms of the music.

"... and news brought to you here on the sub-etha wave band, broad-
casting around the galaxy around the clock," squawked a voice, "and
we'll be saying a big hello to all intelligent life forms everywhere ... and
to everyone else out there, the secret is to bang the rocks together, guys.
And of course, the big news story tonight is the sensational theft of the
new Improbability Drive prototype ship by none other than Galactic
President Zaphod Beeblebrox. And the question everyone's asking is ...
has the big Z finally flipped? Beeblebrox, the man who invented the
Pan Galactic Gargle Blaster, ex-confidence trickster, once described by
Eccentrica Gallumbits as the Best Bang since the Big One, and recently
voted the Wort Dressed Sentinent Being in the Known Universe for the
seventh time ... has he got an answer this time? We asked his private
brain care specialist Gag Halfrunt ..." The music swirled and dived for
a moment. Another voice broke in, presumably Halfrunt. He said: "Vell,
Zaphod's jist zis guy you know?" but got no further because an elec-
tric pencil flew across the cabin and through the radio's on/off sensitive
airspace. Zaphod turned and glared at Trillian - she had thrown the
pencil.

"Hey," he said, what do you do that for?"

Trillian was tapping her fingers on a screenful of figures.

"I've just thought of something," she said.

"Yeah? Worth interrupting a news bulletin about me for?"

"You hear enough about yourself as it is."

"I'm very insecure. We know that." "Can we drop your ego for a mo-
ment? This is important."

"If there's anything more important than my ego around, I want it
caught and shot now." Zaphod glared at her again, then laughed.

"Listen," she said, "we picked up those couple of guys ..."

"What couple of guys?"




54




"The couple of guys we picked up."

"Oh, yeah," said Zaphod, "those couple of guys."

"We picked them up in sector ZZ 9 Plural Z Alpha."

"Yeah?" said Zaphod and blinked.

Trillian said quietly, "Does that mean anything to you?"

"Mmmmm," said Zaphod, "ZZ 9 Plural Z Alpha. ZZ 9 Plural Z Alpha?"

"Well?" said Trillian.

"Er ... what does the Z mean?" said Zaphod.

"Which one?"

"Any one."

One of the major difficulties Trillian experienced in her relationship with
Zaphod was learning to distinguish between him pretending to be stupid
just to get people off their guard, pretending to be stupid because he
couldn't be bothered to think and wanted someone else to do it for him,
pretending to be outrageously stupid to hide the fact that he actually
didn't understand what was going on, and really being genuinely stupid.
He was renowned for being amazingly clever and quite clearly was so -
but not all the time, which obviously worried him, hence the act. He
proffered people to be puzzled rather than contemptuous. This above
all appeared to Trillian to be genuinely stupid, but she could no longer
be bothered to argue about it.

She sighed and punched up a star map on the visiscreen so she could
make it simple for him, whatever his reasons for wanting it to be that
way.

"There," she pointed, "right there."

"Hey ... Yeah!" said Zaphod.

"Well?" she said.

"Well what?"

Parts of the inside of her head screamed at other parts of the inside
of her head. She said, very calmly, "It's the same sector you originally
picked me up in."

He looked at her and then looked back at the screen. "Hey, yeah," he
said, "now that is wild. We should have zapped straight into the middle
of the Horsehead Nebula. How did we come to be there? I mean that's
nowhere."

She ignored this.

"Improbability Drive," she said patiently. "You explained it to me your-
self. We pass through every point in the Universe, you know that."

"Yeah, but that's one wild coincidence isn't it?"

"Yes."




55




"Picking someone up at that point? Out of the whole of the Universe to
choose from? That's just too ... I want to work this out. Computer!"

The Sirius Cybernetics Corporation Shipboard Computer which con-
trolled and permeated every particle of the ship switched into commu-
nication mode.

"Hi there!" it said brightly and simultaneously spewed out a tiny ribbon
of ticker tape just for the record. The ticker tape said, Hi there!

"Oh God," said Zaphod. He hadn't worked with this computer for long
but had already learned to loathe it.

The computer continued, brash and cheery as if it was selling detergent.

"I want you to know that whatever your problem, I am here to help you
solve it."

"Yeah yeah," said Zaphod. "Look, I think I'll just use a piece of paper."

"Sure thing," said the computer, spilling out its message into a waste
bin at the same time, "I understand. If you ever want ..."

"Shut up!" said Zaphod, and snatching up a pencil sat down next to
Trillian at the console.

"OK, OK ..." said the computer in a hurt tone of voice and closed down
its speech channel again.

Zaphod and Trillian pored over the figures that the Improbability flight
path scanner flashed silently up in front of them.

"Can we work out," said Zaphod, "from their point of view what the
Improbability of their rescue was?"

"Yes, that's a constant", said Trillian, "two to the power of two hundred
and seventy-six thousand seven hundred and nine to one against."

"That's high. They're two lucky lucky guys." "Yes."

"But relative to what we were doing when the ship picked them up ..."

Trillian punched up the figures. They showed tow-to-the power- of-
Infinity-minus-one (an irrational number that only has a conventional
meaning in Improbability physics).

"... it's pretty low," continued Zaphod with a slight whistle.

"Yes," agreed Trillian, and looked at him quizzically.

"That's one big whack of Improbability to be accounted for. Something
pretty improbable has got to show up on the balance sheet if it's all
going to add up into a pretty sum."

Zaphod scribbled a few sums, crossed them out and threw the pencil
away.

"Bat's dots, I can't work it out."

"Well?"

Zaphod knocked his two heads together in irritation and gritted his
teeth.




56




"OK," he said. "Computer!"

The voice circuits sprang to life again.

"Why hello there!" they said (ticker tape, ticker tape). "All I want to
do is make your day nicer and nicer and nicer ..."

"Yeah well shut up and work something out for me."

"Sure thing," chattered the computer, "you want a probability forecast
based on ..."

"Improbability data, yeah."

"OK," the computer continued. "Here's an interesting little notion. Did
you realize that most people's lives are governed by telephone numbers?"

A pained look crawled across one of Zaphod's faces and on to the other
one.

"Have you flipped?" he said.

"No, but you will when I tell you that ..."

Trillian gasped. She scrabbled at the buttons on the Improbability flight
path screen.

"Telephone number?" she said. "Did that thing say telephone number?"
Numbers flashed up on the screen.

The computer had paused politely, but now it continued.

"What I was about to say was that ..."

"Don't bother please," said Trillian.

"Look, what is this?" said Zaphod.

"I don't know," said Trillian, "but those aliens - they're on the way up
to the bridge with that wretched robot. Can we pick them up on any
monitor cameras?"



CHAPTER 14



Marvin trudged on down the corridor, still moaning.

"... and then of course I've got this terrible pain in all the diodes down
my left hand side ..."

"No?" said Arthur grimly as he walked along beside him. "Really?"

"Oh yes," said Marvin, "I mean I've asked for them to be replaced but
no one ever listens."

"I can imagine."

Vague whistling and humming noises were coming from Ford. "Well well
well," he kept saying to himself, "Zaphod Beeblebrox ..."

Suddenly Marvin stopped, and held up a hand.

"You know what's happened now of course?"




57




"No, what?" said Arthur, who didn't what to know.

"We've arrived at another of those doors."

There was a sliding door let into the side of the corridor. Marvin eyed
it suspiciously.

"Well?" said Ford impatiently. "Do we go through?"

"Do we go through?" mimicked Marvin. "Yes. This is the entrance to
the bridge. I was told to take you to the bridge. Probably the highest
demand that will be made on my intellectual capacities today I shouldn't
wonder."

Slowly, with great loathing, he stepped towards the door, like a hunter
stalking his prey. Suddenly it slid open.

"Thank you," it said, "for making a simple door very happy."

Deep in Marvin's thorax gears ground.

"Funny," he intoned funerally, "how just when you think life can't pos-
sibly get any worse it suddenly does." He heaved himself through the
door and left Ford and Arthur staring at each other and shrugging their
shoulders. From inside they heard Marvin's voice again.

"I suppose you want to see the aliens now," he said. "Do you want me
to sit in a corner and rust, or just fall apart where I'm standing?"

"Yeah, just show them in would you Marvin?" came another voice.

Arthur looked at Ford and was astonished to see him laughing.

"What's ...?"

"Shhh," said Ford, "come in."

He stepped through into the bridge.

Arthur followed him in nervously and was astonished to see a man lolling
back in a chair with his feet on a control console picking the teeth in
his right-hand head with his left hand. The right-hand head seemed to
be thoroughly preoccupied with this task, but the left-hand one was
grinning a broad, relaxed, nonchalant grin. The number of things that
Arthur couldn't believe he was seeing was fairly large. His jaw flapped
about at a loose end for a while.

The peculiar man waved a lazy wave at Ford and with an appalling
affectation of nonchalance said, "Ford, hi, how are you? Glad you could
drop in."

Ford was not going to be outcooled.

"Zaphod," he drawled, "great to see you, you're looking well, the extra
arm suits you. Nice ship you've stolen."

Arthur goggled at him.

"You mean you know this guy?" he said, waving a wild finger at Zaphod.

"Know him!" exclaimed Ford, "he's ..." he paused, and decided to do
the introductions the other way round.




58




"Oh, Zaphod, this is a friend of mine, Arthur Dent," he said, "I saved
him when his planet blew up."

"Oh sure," said Zaphod, "hi Arthur, glad you could make it." His right-
hand head looked round casually, said "hi" and went back to having his
teeth picked.

Ford carried on. "And Arthur," he said, "this is my semi-cousin Zaphod
Beeb ..."

"We've met," said Arthur sharply.

When you're cruising down the road in the fast lane and you lazily sail
past a few hard driving cars and are feeling pretty pleased with yourself
and then accidentally change down from fourth to first instead of third
thus making your engine leap out of your bonnet in a rather ugly mess,
it tends to throw you off your stride in much the same way that this
remark threw Ford Prefect off his.

"Err ... what?"

"I said we've met."

Zaphod gave an awkward start of surprise and jabbed a gum sharply.

"Hey ... er, have we? Hey ... er ..."

Ford rounded on Arthur with an angry flash in his eyes. Now he felt he
was back on home ground he suddenly began to resent having lumbered
himself with this ignorant primitive who knew as much about the affairs
of the Galaxy as an Ilford-based gnat knew about life in Peking.

"What do you mean you've met?" he demanded. "This is Zaphod Bee-
blebrox from Betelgeuse Five you know, not bloody Martin Smith from
Croydon."

"I don't care," said Arthur coldly. We've met, haven't we Zaphod Bee-
blebrox - or should I say ... Phil?"

"What!" shouted Ford.

"You'll have to remind me," said Zaphod. "I've a terrible memory for
species."

"It was at a party," pursued Arthur.

"Yeah, well I doubt that," said Zaphod.

"Cool it will you Arthur!" demanded Ford.

Arthur would not be deterred. "A party six months ago. On Earth ...
England ..."

Zaphod shook his head with a tight-lipped smile.

"London," insisted Arthur, "Islington."

"Oh," said Zaphod with a guilty start, "that party."

This wasn't fair on Ford at all. He looked backwards and forwards be-
tween Arthur and Zaphod. "What?" he said to Zaphod. "You don't
mean to say you've been on that miserable planet as well do you?"




59




"No, of course not," said Zaphod breezily. "Well, I may have just dropped
in briefly, you know, on my way somewhere ..."

"But I was stuck there for fifteen years!"

"Well I didn't know that did I?" "But what were you doing there?"

"Looking about, you know."

"He gatecrashed a party," persisted Arthur, trembling with anger, "a
fancy dress party ..."

"It would have to be, wouldn't it?" said Ford.

"At this party," persisted Arthur, "was a girl ... oh well, look it doesn't
matter now. The whole place has gone up in smoke anyway ..."

"I wish you'd stop sulking about that bloody planet," said Ford. "Who
was the lady?"

"Oh just somebody. Well alright, I wasn't doing very well with her.
I'd been trying all evening. Hell, she was something though. Beautiful,
charming, devastatingly intelligent, at last I'd got her to myself for a bit
and was plying her with a bit of talk when this friend of yours barges
up and says Hey doll, is this guy boring you? Why don't you talk to me
instead? I'm from a different planet." I never saw her again."

"Zaphod?" exclaimed Ford.

"Yes," said Arthur, glaring at him and trying not to feel foolish. "He
only had the two arms and the one head and he called himself Phil, but
..."

"But you must admit he did turn out to be from another planet," said
Trillian wandering into sight at the other end of the bridge. She gave
Arthur a pleasant smile which settled on him like a ton of bricks and
then turned her attention to the ship's controls again.

There was silence for a few seconds, and then out of the scrambled mess
of Arthur's brain crawled some words.

"Tricia McMillian?" he said. "What are you doing here?"

"Same as you," she said, "I hitched a lift. After all with a degree in
Maths and another in astrophysics what else was there to do? It was
either that or the dole queue again on Monday."

"Infinity minus one," chattered the computer, "Improbability sum now
complete."

Zaphod looked about him, at Ford, at Arthur, and then at Trillian.

"Trillian," he said, "is this sort of thing going to happen every time we
use the Improbability drive?"

"Very probably, I'm afraid," she said.




60




CHAPTER 15



The Heart of Gold fled on silently through the night of space, now on
conventional photon drive. Its crew of four were ill at ease knowing that
they had been brought together not of their own volition or by simple
coincidence, but by some curious principle of physics - as if relationships
between people were susceptible to the same laws that governed the
relationships between atoms and molecules.

As the ship's artificial night closed in they were each grateful to retire
to separate cabins and try to rationalize their thoughts.

Trillian couldn't sleep. She sat on a couch and stared at a small cage
which contained her last and only links with Earth - two white mice
that she had insisted Zaphod let her bring. She had expected not to see
the planet again, but she was disturbed by her negative reaction to the
planet's destruction. It seemed remote and unreal and she could find no
thoughts to think about it. She watched the mice scurrying round the
cage and running furiously in their little plastic treadwheels till they
occupied her whole attention. Suddenly she shook herself and went back
to the bridge to watch over the tiny flashing lights and figures that
charted the ship's progress through the void. She wished she knew what
it was she was trying not to think about.

Zaphod couldn't sleep. He also wished he knew what it was that he
wouldn't let himself think about. For as long as he could remember he'd
suffered from a vague nagging feeling of being not all there. Most of the
time he was able to put this thought aside and not worry about it, but it
had been re-awakened by the sudden inexplicable arrival of Ford Prefect
and Arthur Dent. Somehow it seemed to conform to a pattern that he
couldn't see.

Ford couldn't sleep. He was too excited about being back on the road
again. Fifteen years of virtual imprisonment were over, just as he was
finally beginning to give up hope. Knocking about with Zaphod for a bit
promised to be a lot of fun, though there seemed to be something faintly
odd about his semi-cousin that he couldn't put his finger on. The fact
that he had become President of the Galaxy was frankly astonishing, as
was the manner of his leaving the post. Was there a reason behind it?
There would be no point in asking Zaphod, he never appeared to have
a reason for anything he did at all: he had turned unfathomably into an
art form. He attacked everything in life with a mixture of extraordinary
genius and naive incompetence and it was often difficult to tell which
was which.

Arthur slept: he was terribly tired.

There was a tap at Zaphod's door. It slid open.

"Zaphod ...?"

"Yeah?"

"I think we just found what you came to look for."




61




"Hey, yeah?" Ford gave up the attempt to sleep. In the corner of his
cabin was a small computer screen and keyboard. He sat at it for a
while and tried to compose a new entry for the Guide on the subject of
Vogons but couldn't think of anything vitriolic enough so he gave that
up too, wrapped a robe round himself and went for a walk to the bridge.

As he entered he was surprised to see two figures hunched excitedly over
the instruments.

"See? The ship's about to move into orbit," Trillian was saying. "There's
a planet out there. It's at the exact coordinates you predicted."

Zaphod heard a noise and looked up.

"Ford!" he hissed. "Hey, come and take a look at this."

Ford went and had a look at it. It was a series of figures flashing over a
screen.

"You recognize those Galactic coordinates?" said Zaphod.

"No."

"I'll give you a clue. Computer!"

"Hi gang!" enthused the computer. "This is getting real sociable isn't
it?"

"Shut up," said Zaphod, "and show up the screens."

Light on the bridge sank. Pinpoints of light played across the consoles
and reflected in four pairs of eyes that stared up at the external monitor
screens.

There was absolutely nothing on them.

"Recognize that?" whispered Zaphod.

Ford frowned.

"Er, no," he said.

"What do you see?"

"Nothing."

"Recognize it?"

"What are you talking about?"

"We're in the Horsehead Nebula. One whole vast dark cloud."

"And I was meant to recognize that from a blank screen?"

"Inside a dark nebula is the only place in the Galaxy you'd see a dark
screen." "Very good."

Zaphod laughed. He was clearly very excited about something, almost
childishly so.

"Hey, this is really terrific, this is just far too much!"

"What's so great about being stuck in a dust cloud?" said Ford.

"What would you reckon to find here?" urged Zaphod.




62




"Nothing."

"No stars? No planets?"

"No."

"Computer!" shouted Zaphod, "rotate angle of vision through one- eighty
degrees and don't talk about it!"

For a moment it seemed that nothing was happening, then a brightness
glowed at the edge of the huge screen. A red star the size of a small plate
crept across it followed quickly by another one - a binary system. Then
a vast crescent sliced into the corner of the picture - a red glare shading
away into the deep black, the night side of the planet.

"I've found it!" cried Zaphod, thumping the console. "I've found it!"

Ford stared at it in astonishment.

"What is it?" he said.

"That ..." said Zaphod, "is the most improbable planet that ever ex-
isted."



CHAPTER 16



(Excerpt from The Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy, Page 634784,
Section 5a, Entry: Magrathea)

Far back in the mists of ancient time, in the great and glorious days of
the former Galactic Empire, life was wild, rich and largely tax free.

Mighty starships plied their way between exotic suns, seeking adventure
and reward amongst the furthest reaches of Galactic space. In those
days spirits were brave, the stakes were high, men were real men, women
were real women, and small furry creatures from Alpha Centauri were
real small furry creatures from Alpha Centauri. And all dared to brave
unknown terrors, to do mighty deeds, to boldly split infinitives that no
man had split before - and thus was the Empire forged.

Many men of course became extremely rich, but this was perfectly nat-
ural and nothing to be ashamed of because no one was really poor - at
least no one worth speaking of. And for all the richest and most suc-
cessful merchants life inevitably became rather dull and niggly, and they
began to imagine that this was therefore the fault of the worlds they'd
settled on - none of them was entirely satisfactory: either the climate
wasn't quite right in the later part of the afternoon, or the day was half
an hour too long, or the sea was exactly the wrong shade of pink.

And thus were created the conditions for a staggering new form of spe-
cialist industry: custom-made luxury planet building. The home of this
industry was the planet Magrathea, where hyperspatial engineers sucked
matter through white holes in space to form it into dream planets - gold
planets, platinum planets, soft rubber planets with lots of earthquakes




63




- all lovingly made to meet the exacting standards that the Galaxy's
richest men naturally came to expect.

But so successful was this venture that Magrathea itself soon became
the richest planet of all time and the rest of the Galaxy was reduced to
abject poverty. And so the system broke down, the Empire collapsed,
and a long sullen silence settled over a billion worlds, disturbed only by
the pen scratchings of scholars as they laboured into the night over smug
little treaties on the value of a planned political economy.

Magrathea itself disappeared and its memory soon passed into the ob-
scurity of legend.

In these enlightened days of course, no one believes a word of it.



CHAPTER 17



Arthur awoke to the sound of argument and went to the bridge. Ford
was waving his arms about.

"You're crazy, Zaphod," he was saying, "Magrathea is a myth, a fairy
story, it's what parents tell their kids about at night if they want them
to grow up to become economists, it's ..."

"And that's what we are currently in orbit around," insisted Zaphod.

"Look, I can't help what you may personally be in orbit around," said
Ford, "but this ship ..."

"Computer!" shouted Zaphod.

"Oh no ..."

"Hi there! This is Eddie your shipboard computer, and I'm feeling just
great guys, and I know I'm just going to get a bundle of kicks out of any
programme you care to run through me."

Arthur looked inquiringly at Trillian. She motioned him to come on in
but keep quiet.

"Computer," said Zaphod, "tell us again what our present trajectory
is." "A real pleasure feller," it burbled, "we are currently in orbit at
an altitude of three hundred miles around the legendary planet of Ma-
grathea."

"Proving nothing," said Ford. "I wouldn't trust that computer to speak
my weight."

"I can do that for you, sure," enthused the computer, punching out more
tickertape. "I can even work out you personality problems to ten decimal
places if it will help."

Trillian interrupted.

"Zaphod," she said, "any minute now we will be swinging round to the
daylight side of this planet," adding, "whatever it turns out to be."




64




"Hey, what do you mean by that? The planet's where I predicted it
would be isn't it?"

"Yes, I know there's a planet there. I'm not arguing with anyone, it's
just that I wouldn't know Magrathea from any other lump of cold rock.
Dawn's coming up if you want it."

"OK, OK," muttered Zaphod, "let's at least give our eyes a good time.
Computer!"

"Hi there! What can I ..."

"Just shut up and give us a view of the planet again."

A dark featureless mass once more filled the screens - the planet rolling
away beneath them.

They watched for a moment in silence, but Zaphod was fidgety with
excitement.

"We are now traversing the night side ..." he said in a hushed voice. The
planet rolled on.

"The surface of the planet is now three hundred miles beneath us ..." he
continued. He was trying to restore a sense of occasion to what he felt
should have been a great moment. Magrathea! He was piqued by Ford's
sceptical reaction. Magrathea!

"In a few seconds," he continued, "we should see ... there!"

The moment carried itself. Even the most seasoned star tramp can't
help but shiver at the spectacular drama of a sunrise seen from space,
but a binary sunrise is one of the marvels of the Galaxy.

Out of the utter blackness stabbed a sudden point of blinding light. It
crept up by slight degrees and spread sideways in a thin crescent blade,
and within seconds two suns were visible, furnaces of light, searing the
black edge of the horizon with white fire. Fierce shafts of colour streaked
through the thin atmosphere beneath them. "The fires of dawn ... !"
breathed Zaphod. "The twin suns of Soulianis and Rahm ... !"

"Or whatever," said Ford quietly.

"Soulianis and Rahm!" insisted Zaphod.

The suns blazed into the pitch of space and a low ghostly music floated
through the bridge: Marvin was humming ironically because he hated
humans so much.

As Ford gazed at the spectacle of light before them excitement burnt
inside him, but only the excitement of seeing a strange new planet, it was
enough for him to see it as it was. It faintly irritated him that Zaphod
had to impose some ludicrous fantasy on to the scene to make it work
for him. All this Magrathea nonsense seemed juvenile. Isn't it enough to
see that a garden is beautiful without having to believe that there are
fairies at the bottom of it too?

All this Magrathea business seemed totally incomprehensible to Arthur.
He edged up to Trillian and asked her what was going on.




65




"I only know what Zaphod's told me," she whispered. "Apparently Ma-
grathea is some kind of legend from way back which no one seriously
believes in. Bit like Atlantis on Earth, except that the legends say the
Magratheans used to manufacture planets."

Arthur blinked at the screens and felt he was missing something impor-
tant. Suddenly he realized what it was.

"Is there any tea on this spaceship?" he asked.

More of the planet was unfolding beneath them as the Heart of Gold
streaked along its orbital path. The suns now stood high in the black
sky, the pyrotechnics of dawn were over, and the surface of the planet
appeared bleak and forbidding in the common light of day - grey, dusty
and only dimly contoured. It looked dead and cold as a crypt. From time
to time promising features would appear on the distant horizon - ravines,
maybe mountains, maybe even cities - but as they approached the lines
would soften and blur into anonymity and nothing would transpire. The
planet's surface was blurred by time, by the slow movement of the thin
stagnant air that had crept across it for century upon century.

Clearly, it was very very old.

A moment of doubt came to Ford as he watched the grey landscape
move beneath them. The immensity of time worried him, he could feel
it as a presence. He cleared his throat.

"Well, even supposing it is ..."

"It is," said Zaphod.

"Which it isn't," continued Ford. "What do you want with it anyway?
There's nothing there." "Not on the surface," said Zaphod.

"Alright, just supposing there's something. I take it you're not here for
the sheer industrial archaeology of it all. What are you after?"

One of Zaphod's heads looked away. The other one looked round to see
what the first was looking at, but it wasn't looking at anything very
much.

"Well," said Zaphod airily, "it's partly the curiosity, partly a sense of
adventure, but mostly I think it's the fame and the money ..."

Ford glanced at him sharply. He got a very strong impression that Za-
phod hadn't the faintest idea why he was there at all.

"You know I don't like the look of that planet at all," said Trillian
shivering.

"Ah, take no notice," said Zaphod, "with half the wealth of the former
Galactic Empire stored on it somewhere it can afford to look frumpy."

Bullshit, thought Ford. Even supposing this was the home of some an-
cient civilization now gone to dust, even supposing a number of exceed-
ingly unlikely things, there was no way that vast treasures of wealth
were going to be stored there in any form that would still have meaning
now. He shrugged.




66




"I think it's just a dead planet," he said.

"The suspense is killing me," said Arthur testily.

Stress and nervous tension are now serious social problems in all parts of
the Galaxy, and it is in order that this situation should not in any way
be exacerbated that the following facts will now be revealed in advance.

The planet in question is in fact the legendary Magrathea.

The deadly missile attack shortly to be launched by an ancient automatic
defence system will result merely in the breakage of three coffee cups
and a micecage, the bruising of somebody's upper arm, and the untimely
creation and sudden demise of a bowl of petunias and an innocent sperm
whale.

In order that some sense of mystery should still be preserved, no revela-
tion will yet be made concerning whose upper arm sustained the bruise.
This fact may safely be made the subject of suspense since it is of no
significance whatsoever.



CHAPTER 18



After a fairly shaky start to the day, Arthur's mind was beginning to
reassemble itself from the shellshocked fragments the previous day had
left him with. He had found a Nutri-Matic machine which had provided
him with a plastic cup filled with a liquid that was almost, but not quite,
entirely unlike tea. The way it functioned was very interesting. When
the Drink button was pressed it made an instant but highly detailed
examination of the subject's taste buds, a spectroscopic analysis of the
subject's metabolism and then sent tiny experimental signals down the
neural pathways to the taste centres of the subject's brain to see what
was likely to go down well. However, no one knew quite why it did this
because it invariably delivered a cupful of liquid that was almost, butquite, entirely unlike tea. The Nutri-Matic was designed and man-
ufactured by the Sirius Cybernetics Corporation whose complaints de-
partment now covers all the major land masses of the first three planets
in the Sirius Tau Star system.

Arthur drank the liquid and found it reviving. He glanced up at the
screens again and watched a few more hundred miles of barren greyness
slide past. It suddenly occurred to him to ask a question which had been
bothering him.

"Is it safe?" he said.

"Magrathea's been dead for five million years," said Zaphod, "of course
it's safe. Even the ghosts will have settled down and raised families by
now." At which point a strange and inexplicable sound thrilled suddenly
through the bridge - a noise as of a distant fanfare; a hollow, reedy,
insubstantial sound. It preceded a voice that was equally hollow, reedy
and insubstantial. The voice said "Greetings to you ..."




67




Someone from the dead planet was talking to them.

"Computer!" shouted Zaphod.

"Hi there!"

"What the photon is it?"

"Oh, just some five-million-year-old tape that's being broadcast at us."

"A what? A recording?"

"Shush!" said Ford. "It's carrying on."

The voice was old, courteous, almost charming, but was underscored
with quite unmistakable menace.

"This is a recorded announcement," it said, "as I'm afraid we're all out
at the moment. The commercial council of Magrathea thanks you for
your esteemed visit ..."

("A voice from ancient Magrathea!" shouted Zaphod. "OK, OK," said
Ford.)

"... but regrets," continued the voice, "that the entire planet is tem-
porarily closed for business. Thank you. If you would care to leave your
name and the address of a planet where you can be contacted, kindly
speak when you hear the tone." A short buzz followed, then silence.

"They want to get rid of us," said Trillian nervously. "What do we do?"

"It's just a recording," said Zaphod. "We keep going. Got that, com-
puter?"

"I got it," said the computer and gave the ship an extra kick of speed.

They waited.

After a second or so came the fanfare once again, and then the voice.

"We would like to assure you that as soon as our business is resumed
announcements will be made in all fashionable magazines and colour
supplements, when our clients will once again be able to select from
all that's best in contemporary geography." The menace in the voice
took on a sharper edge. "Meanwhile we thank our clients for their kind
interest and would ask them to leave. Now."

Arthur looked round the nervous faces of his companions.

"Well, I suppose we'd better be going then, hadn't we?" he suggested.

"Shhh!" said Zaphod. "There's absolutely nothing to be worried about."

"Then why's everyone so tense?"

"They're just interested!" shouted Zaphod. "Computer, start a descent
into the atmosphere and prepare for landing."

This time the fanfare was quite perfunctory, the voice distinctly cold.

"It is most gratifying," it said, "that your enthusiasm for our planet
continues unabated, and so we would like to assure you that the guided
missiles currently converging with your ship are part of a special service




68




we extend to all of our most enthusiastic clients, and the fully armed
nuclear warheads are of course merely a courtesy detail. We look forward
to your custom in future lives ... thank you."

The voice snapped off.

"Oh," said Trillian.

"Er ..." said Arthur.

"Well?" said Ford.

"Look," said Zaphod, "will you get it into your heads? That's just a
recorded message. It's millions of years old. It doesn't apply to us, get
it?" "What," said Trillian quietly, "about the missiles?"

"Missiles? Don't make me laugh."

Ford tapped Zaphod on the shoulder and pointed at the rear screen.
Clear in the distance behind them two silver darts were climbing through
the atmosphere towards the ship. A quick change of magnification brought
them into close focus - two massively real rockets thundering through
the sky. The suddenness of it was shocking.

"I think they're going to have a very good try at applying to us," said
Ford.

Zaphod stared at them in astonishment.

"Hey this is terrific!" he said. "Someone down there is trying to kill us!"

"Terrific," said Arthur.

"But don't you see what this means?"

"Yes. We're going to die."

"Yes, but apart from that."

"Apart from that?"

"It means we must be on to something!"

"How soon can we get off it?"

Second by second the image of the missiles on the screen became larger.
They had swung round now on to a direct homing course so that all that
could be seen of them now was the warheads, head on.

"As a matter of interest," said Trillian, "what are we going to do?"

"Just keep cool," said Zaphod.

"Is that all?" shouted Arthur.

"No, we're also going to ... er ... take evasive action!" said Zaphod with
a sudden access of panic. "Computer, what evasive action can we take?"

"Er, none I'm afraid, guys," said the computer.

"... or something," said Zaphod, "... er ..." he said.

"There seems to be something jamming my guidance system," explained
the computer brightly, "impact minus forty-five seconds. Please call me
Eddie if it will help you to relax."




69




Zaphod tried to run in several equally decisive directions simultaneously.
"Right!" he said. "Er ... we've got to get manual control of this ship."

"Can you fly her?" asked Ford pleasantly.

"No, can you?"

"No."

"Trillian, can you?"

"No."

"Fine," said Zaphod, relaxing. "We'll do it together."

"I can't either," said Arthur, who felt it was time he began to assert
himself.

"I'd guessed that," said Zaphod. "OK computer, I want full manual
control now."

"You got it," said the computer.

Several large desk panels slid open and banks of control consoles sprang
up out of them, showering the crew with bits of expanded polystyrene
packaging and balls of rolled-up cellophane: these controls had never
been used before.

Zaphod stared at them wildly.

"OK, Ford," he said, "full retro thrust and ten degrees starboard. Or
something ..."

"Good luck guys," chirped the computer, "impact minus thirty seconds
..."

Ford leapt to the controls - only a few of them made any immediate sense
to him so he pulled those. The ship shook and screamed as its guidance
rocked jets tried to push it every which way simultaneously. He released
half of them and the ship span round in a tight arc and headed back the
way it had come, straight towards the oncoming missiles.

Air cushions ballooned out of the walls in an instant as everyone was
thrown against them. For a few seconds the inertial forces held them
flattened and squirming for breath, unable to move. Zaphod struggled
and pushed in manic desperation and finally managed a savage kick at
a small lever that formed part of the guidance system.

The lever snapped off. The ship twisted sharply and rocketed upwards.
The crew were hurled violently back across the cabin. Ford's copy of
The Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy smashed into another section of
the control console with the combined result that the guide started to
explain to anyone who cared to listen about the best ways of smuggling
Antarean parakeet glands out of Antares (an Antarean parakeet gland
stuck on a small stick is a revolting but much sought after cocktail
delicacy and very large sums of money are often paid for them by very
rich idiots who want to impress other very rich idiots), and the ship
suddenly dropped out of the sky like a stone.




70




It was of course more or less at this moment that one of the crew sus-
tained a nasty bruise to the upper arm. This should be emphasized be-
cause, as had already been revealed, they escape otherwise completely
unharmed and the deadly nuclear missiles do not eventually hit the ship.
The safety of the crew is absolutely assured.

"Impact minus twenty seconds, guys ..." said the computer.

"Then turn the bloody engines back on!" bawled Zaphod.

"OK, sure thing, guys," said the computer. With a subtle roar the en-
gines cut back in, the ship smoothly flattened out of its dive and headed
back towards the missiles again.

The computer started to sing.

"When you walk through the storm ..." it whined nasally, "hold your
head up high ..."

Zaphod screamed at it to shut up, but his voice was lost in the din of
what they quite naturally assumed was approaching destruction.

"And don't ... be afraid ... of the dark!" Eddie wailed.

The ship, in flattening out had in fact flattened out upside down and
lying on the ceiling as they were it was now totally impossible for any
of the crew to reach the guidance systems.

"At the end of the storm ..." crooned Eddie.

The two missiles loomed massively on the screens as they thundered
towards the ship.

"... is a golden sky ..."

But by an extraordinarily lucky chance they had not yet fully corrected
their flight paths to that of the erratically weaving ship, and they passed
right under it.

"And the sweet silver songs of the lark ... Revised impact time fifteen
seconds fellas ... Walk on through the wind ..."

The missiles banked round in a screeching arc and plunged back into
pursuit.

"This is it," said Arthur watching them. "We are now quite definitely
going to die aren't we?"

"I wish you'd stop saying that," shouted Ford.

"Well we are aren't we?"

"Yes." "Walk on through the rain ..." sang Eddie.

A thought struck Arthur. He struggled to his feet.

"Why doesn't anyone turn on this Improbability Drive thing?" he said.
"We could probably reach that."

"What are you crazy?" said Zaphod. "Without proper programming
anything could happen."




71




"Does that matter at this stage?" shouted Arthur.

"Though your dreams be tossed and blown ..." sand Eddie.

Arthur scrambled up on to one end of the excitingly chunky pieces of
moulded contouring where the curve of the wall met the ceiling.

"Walk on, walk on, with hope in your heart ..."

"Does anyone know why Arthur can't turn on the Improbability Drive?"
shouted Trillian.

"And you'll never walk alone ... Impact minus five seconds, it's been
great knowing you guys, God bless ... You'll ne ... ver ... walk ... alone!"

"I said," yelled Trillian, "does anyone know ..."

The next thing that happened was a mid-mangling explosion of noise
and light.



CHAPTER 19



And the next thing that happened after that was that the Heart of
Gold continued on its way perfectly normally with a rather fetchingly
redesigned interior. It was somewhat larger, and done out in delicate
pastel shades of green and blue. In the centre a spiral staircase, leading
nowhere in particular, stood in a spray of ferns and yellow flowers and
next to it a stone sundial pedestal housed the main computer terminal.
Cunningly deployed lighting and mirrors created the illusion of standing
in a conservatory overlooking a wide stretch of exquisitely manicured
garden. Around the periphery of the conservatory area stood marble-
topped tables on intricately beautiful wrought-iron legs. As you gazed
into the polished surface of the marble the vague forms of instruments
became visible, and as you touched them the instruments materialized
instantly under your hands. Looked at from the correct angles the mir-
rors appeared to reflect all the required data readouts, though it was far
from clear where they were reflected from. It was in fact sensationally
beautiful.

Relaxing in a wickerwork sun chair, Zaphod Beeblebrox said, "What the
hell happened?"

"Well I was just saying," said Arthur lounging by a small fish pool,
"there's this Improbability Drive switch over here ..." he waved at where
it had been. There was a potted plant there now. "But where are we?"
said Ford who was sitting on the spiral staircase, a nicely chilled Pan
Galactic Gargle Blaster in his hand.

"Exactly where we were, I think ..." said Trillian, as all about them the
mirrors showed them an image of the blighted landscape of Magrathea
which still scooted along beneath them.

Zaphod leapt out of his seat.

"Then what's happened to the missiles?" he said.




72




A new and astounding image appeared in the mirrors.

"They would appear," said Ford doubtfully, "to have turned into a bowl
of petunias and a very surprised looking whale ..."

"At an Improbability Factor," cut in Eddie, who hadn't changed a bit,
"of eight million seven hundred and sixty-seven thousand one hundred
and twenty-eight to one against."

Zaphod stared at Arthur.

"Did you think of that, Earthman?" he demanded.

"Well," said Arthur, "all I did was ..."

"That's very good thinking you know. Turn on the Improbability Drive
for a second without first activating the proofing screens. Hey kid you
just saved our lives, you know that?"

"Oh," said Arthur, "well, it was nothing really ..."

"Was it?" said Zaphod. "Oh well, forget it then. OK, computer, take us
in to land."

"But ..."

"I said forget it."

Another thing that got forgotten was the fact that against all probability
a sperm whale had suddenly been called into existence several miles
above the surface of an alien planet.

And since this is not a naturally tenable position for a whale, this poor
innocent creature had very little time to come to terms with its identity
as a whale before it then had to come to terms with not being a whale
any more.

This is a complete record of its thoughts from the moment it began its
life till the moment it ended it.

Ah ... ! What's happening? it thought.

Er, excuse me, who am I?

Hello? Why am I here? What's my purpose in life?

What do I mean by who am I?

Calm down, get a grip now ... oh! this is an interesting sensation, what
is it? It's a sort of ... yawning, tingling sensation in my ... my ... well I
suppose I'd better start finding names for things if I want to make any
headway in what for the sake of what I shall call an argument I shall
call the world, so let's call it my stomach.

Good. Ooooh, it's getting quite strong. And hey, what's about this
whistling roaring sound going past what I'm suddenly going to call my
head? Perhaps I can call that ... wind! Is that a good name? It'll do ...
perhaps I can find a better name for it later when I've found out what
it's for. It must be something very important because there certainly
seems to be a hell of a lot of it. Hey! What's this thing? This ... let's




73




call it a tail - yeah, tail. Hey! I can can really thrash it about pretty
good can't I? Wow! Wow! That feels great! Doesn't seem to achieve very
much but I'll probably find out what it's for later on. Now - have I built
up any coherent picture of things yet?

No. Never mind, hey, this is really exciting, so much to find out about, so
much to look forward to, I'm quite dizzy with anticipation ... Or
is it the wind?

There really is a lot of that now isn't it?

And wow! Hey! What's this thing suddenly coming towards me very
fast? Very very fast. So big and flat and round, it needs a big wide
sounding name like ... ow ... ound ... round ... ground! That's it! That's
a good name - ground!

I wonder if it will be friends with me?

And the rest, after a sudden wet thud, was silence.

Curiously enough, the only thing that went through the mind of the bowl
of petunias as it fell was Oh no, not again. Many people have speculated
that if we knew exactly why the bowl of petunias had thought that we
would know a lot more about the nature of the universe than we do now.



CHAPTER 20



"Are we taking this robot with us?" said Ford, looking with distaste at
Marvin who was standing in an awkward hunched posture in the corner
under a small palm tree.

Zaphod glanced away from the mirror screens which presented a pano-
ramic view of the blighted landscape on which the Heart of Gold had
now landed.

"Oh, the Paranoid Android," he said. "Yeah, we'll take him."

"But what are supposed to do with a manically depressed robot?"

"You think you've got problems," said Marvin as if he was addressing
a newly occupied coffin, "what are you supposed to do if you are a
manically depressed robot? No, don't bother to answer that, I'm fifty
thousand times more intelligent than you and even I don't know the
answer. It gives me a headache just trying to think down to your level."

Trillian burst in through the door from her cabin.

"My white mice have escaped!" she said.

An expression of deep worry and concern failed to cross either of Za-
phod's faces.

"Nuts to your white mice," he said.

Trillian glared an upset glare at him, and disappeared again.

It is possible that her remark would have commanded greater attention
had it been generally realized that human beings were only the third




74




most intelligent life form present on the planet Earth, instead of (as was
generally thought by most independent observers) the second.

"Good afternoon boys."

The voice was oddly familiar, but oddly different. It had a matriarchal
twang. It announced itself to the crew as they arrived at the airlock
hatchway that would let them out on the planet surface.

They looked at each other in puzzlement.

"It's the computer," explained Zaphod. "I discovered it had an emer-
gency back-up personality that I thought might work out better."

"Now this is going to be your first day out on a strange new planet,"
continued Eddie's new voice, "so I want you all wrapped up snug and
warm, and no playing with any naughty bug-eyed monsters."

Zaphod tapped impatiently on the hatch.

"I'm sorry," he said, "I think we might be better off with a slide rule."

"Right!" snapped the computer. "Who said that?"

"Will you open the exit hatch please, computer?" said Zaphod trying
not to get angry.

"Not until whoever said that owns up," urged the computer, stamping a
few synapses closed. "Oh God," muttered Ford, slumped against a bulk-
head and started to count to ten. He was desperately worried that one
day sentinent life forms would forget how to do this. Only by counting
could humans demonstrate their independence of computers.

"Come on," said Eddie sternly.

"Computer ..." began Zaphod ...

"I'm waiting," interrupted Eddie. "I can wait all day if necessary ..."

"Computer ..." said Zaphod again, who had been trying to think of
some subtle piece of reasoning to put the computer down with, and had
decided not to bother competing with it on its own ground, "if you don't
open that exit hatch this moment I shall zap straight off to your major
data banks and reprogram you with a very large axe, got that?"

Eddie, shocked, paused and considered this.

Ford carried on counting quietly. This is about the most aggressive thing
you can do to a computer, the equivalent of going up to a human being
and saying Blood ... blood ... blood ... blood ...

Finally Eddie said quietly, "I can see this relationship is something we're
all going to have to work at," and the hatchway opened.

An icy wind ripped into them, they hugged themselves warmly and
stepped down the ramp on to the barren dust of Magrathea.

"It'll all end in tears, I know it," shouted Eddie after them and closed
the hatchway again.

A few minutes later he opened and closed the hatchway again in response
to a command that caught him entirely by surprise.




75




CHAPTER 21



Five figures wandered slowly over the blighted land. Bits of it were
dullish grey, bits of it dullish brown, the rest of it rather less interesting
to look at. It was like a dried-out marsh, now barren of all vegetation
and covered with a layer of dust about an inch thick. It was very cold.

Zaphod was clearly rather depressed about it. He stalked off by himself
and was soon lost to sight behind a slight rise in the ground.

The wind stung Arthur's eyes and ears, and the stale thin air clasped
his throat. However, the thing stung most was his mind.

"It's fantastic ..." he said, and his own voice rattled his ears. Sound car-
ried badly in this thin atmosphere. "Desolate hole if you ask me," said
Ford. "I could have more fun in a cat litter." He felt a mounting irrita-
tion. Of all the planets in all the star systems of all the Galaxy - didn't
he just have to turn up at a dump like this after fifteen years of being
a castaway? Not even a hot dog stand in evidence. He stooped down
and picked up a cold clot of earth, but there was nothing underneath it
worth crossing thousands of light years to look at.

"No," insisted Arthur, "don't you understand, this is the first time I've
actually stood on the surface of another planet ... a whole alien world
...! Pity it's such a dump though."

Trillian hugged herself, shivered and frowned. She could have sworn she
saw a slight and unexpected movement out of the corner of her eye, but
when she glanced in that direction all she could see was the ship, still
and silent, a hundred yards or so behind them.

She was relieved when a second or so later they caught sight of Zaphod
standing on top of the ridge of ground and waving to them to come and
join him.

He seemed to be excited, but they couldn't clearly hear what he was
saying because of the thinnish atmosphere and the wind.

As they approached the ridge of higher ground they became aware that
it seemed to be circular - a crater about a hundred and fifty yards wide.
Round the outside of the crater the sloping ground was spattered with
black and red lumps. They stopped and looked at a piece. It was wet.
It was rubbery.

With horror they suddenly realized that it was fresh whalemeat.

At the top of the crater's lip they met Zaphod.

"Look," he said, pointing into the crater.

In the centre lay the exploded carcass of a lonely sperm whale that
hadn't lived long enough to be disappointed with its lot. The silence
was only disturbed by the slight involuntary spasms of Trillian's throat.

"I suppose there's no point in trying to bury it?" murmured Arthur, and
then wished he hadn't.




76




"Come," said Zaphod and started back down into the crater.

"What, down there?" said Trillian with severe distaste.

"Yeah," said Zaphod, "come on, I've got something to show you."

"We can see it," said Trillian.

"Not that," said Zaphod, "something else. Come on."

They all hesitated.

"Come on," insisted Zaphod, "I've found a way in." "In?" said Arthur
in horror.

"Into the interior of the planet! An underground passage. The force of
the whale's impact cracked it open, and that's where we have to go.
Where no man has trod these five million years, into the very depths of
time itself ..."

Marvin started his ironical humming again.

Zaphod hit him and he shut up.

With little shudders of disgust they all followed Zaphod down the incline
into the crater, trying very hard not to look at its unfortunate creator.

"Life," said Marvin dolefully, "loathe it or ignore it, you can't like it."

The ground had caved in where the whale had hit it revealing a network
of galleries and passages, now largely obstructed by collapsed rubble and
entrails. Zaphod had made a start clearing a way into one of them, but
Marvin was able to do it rather faster. Dank air wafted out of its dark
recesses, and as Zaphod shone a torch into it, little was visible in the
dusty gloom.

"According to the legends," he said, "the Magratheans lived most of
their lives underground."

"Why's that?" said Arthur. "Did the surface become too polluted or
overpopulated?"

"No, I don't think so," said Zaphod. "I think they just didn't like it very
much."

"Are you sure you know what you're doing?" said Trillian peering ner-
vously into the darkness. "We've been attacked once already you know."

"Look kid, I promise you the live population of this planet is nil plus
the four of us, so come on, let's get on in there. Er, hey Earthman ..."

"Arthur," said Arthur.

"Yeah could you just sort of keep this robot with you and guard this
end of the passageway. OK?"

"Guard?" said Arthur. "What from? You just said there's no one here."

"Yeah, well, just for safety, OK?" said Zaphod.

"Whose? Yours or mine?"

"Good lad. OK, here we go."




77




Zaphod scrambled down into the passage, followed by Trillian and Ford.
"Well I hope you all have a really miserable time," complained Arthur.

"Don't worry," Marvin assured him, "they will."

In a few seconds they had disappeared from view.

Arthur stamped around in a huff, and then decided that a whale's grave-
yard is not on the whole a good place to stamp around in.

Marvin eyed him balefully for a moment, and then turned himself off.

Zaphod marched quickly down the passageway, nervous as hell, but try-
ing to hide it by striding purposefully. He flung the torch beam around.
The walls were covered in dark tiles and were cold to the touch, the air
thick with decay.

"There, what did I tell you?" he said. "An inhabited planet. Magrathea,"
and he strode on through the dirt and debris that littered the tile floor.

Trillian was reminded unavoidably of the London Underground, though
it was less thoroughly squalid.

At intervals along the walls the tiles gave way to large mosaics - simple
angular patterns in bright colours. Trillian stopped and studied one of
them but could not interpret any sense in them. She called to Zaphod.

"Hey, have you any idea what these strange symbols are?"

"I think they're just strange symbols of some kind," said Zaphod, hardly
glancing back.

Trillian shrugged and hurried after him.

>From time to time a doorway led either to the left or right into smallish
chambers which Ford discovered to be full of derelict computer equip-
ment. He dragged Zaphod into one to have a look. Trillian followed.

"Look," said Ford, "you reckon this is Magrathea ..."

"Yeah," said Zaphod, "and we heard the voice, right?"

"OK, so I've bought the fact that it's Magrathea - for the moment. What
you have so far said nothing about is how in the Galaxy you found it.
You didn't just look it up in a star atlas, that's for sure."

"Research. Government archives. Detective work. Few lucky guesses.
Easy."

"And then you stole the Heart of Gold to come and look for it with?"

"I stole it to look for a lot of things." "A lot of things?" said Ford in
surprise. "Like what?"

"I don't know."

"What?"

"I don't know what I'm looking for."

"Why not?"




78




"Because ... because ... I think it might be because if I knew I wouldn't
be able to look for them."

"What, are you crazy?"

"It's a possibility I haven't ruled out yet," said Zaphod quietly. "I only
know as much about myself as my mind can work out under its current
conditions. And its current conditions are not good."

For a long time nobody said anything as Ford gazed at Zaphod with a
mind suddenly full of worry.

"Listen old friend, if you want to ..." started Ford eventually.

"No, wait ... I'll tell you something," said Zaphod. "I freewheel a lot.
I get an idea to do something, and, hey, why not, I do it. I reckon I'll
become President of the Galaxy, and it just happens, it's easy. I decide
to steal this ship. I decide to look for Magrathea, and it all just happens.
Yeah, I work out how it can best be done, right, but it always works
out. It's like having a Galacticredit card which keeps on working though
you never send off the cheques. And then whenever I stop and think -
why did I want to do something? - how did I work out how to do it? - I
get a very strong desire just to stop thinking about it. Like I have now.
It's a big effort to talk about it."

Zaphod paused for a while. For a while there was silence. Then he
frowned and said, "Last night I was worrying about this again. About
the fact that part of my mind just didn't seem to work properly. Then it
occurred to me that the way it seemed was that someone else was using
my mind to have good ideas with, without telling me about it. I put the
two ideas together and decided that maybe that somebody had locked
off part of my mind for that purpose, which was why I couldn't use it.
I wondered if there was a way I could check.

"I went to the ship's medical bay and plugged myself into the enceph-
elographic screen. I went through every major screening test on both
my heads - all the tests I had to go through under government medical
officers before my nomination for Presidency could be properly ratified.
They showed up nothing. Nothing unexpected at least. They showed
that I was clever, imaginative, irresponsible, untrustworthy, extrovert,
nothing you couldn't have guessed. And no other anomalies. So I started
inventing further tests, completely at random. Nothing. Then I tried su-
perimposing the results from one head on top of the results from the
other head. Still nothing. Finally I got silly, because I'd given it all up
as nothing more than an attack of paranoia. Last thing I did before I
packed it in was take the superimposed picture and look at it through
a green filter. You remember I was always superstitious about the color
green when I was a kid? I always wanted to be a pilot on one of the
trading scouts?"

Ford nodded.

"And there it was," said Zaphod, "clear as day. A whole section in the
middle of both brains that related only to each other and not to anything




79




else around them. Some bastard had cauterized all the synapses and
electronically traumatised those two lumps of cerebellum."

Ford stared at him, aghast. Trillian had turned white.

"Somebody did that to you?" whispered Ford.

"Yeah."

"But have you any idea who? Or why?"

"Why? I can only guess. But I do know who the bastard was."

"You know? How do you know?"

"Because they left their initials burnt into the cauterized synapses. They
left them there for me to see."

Ford stared at him in horror and felt his skin begin to crawl.

"Initials? Burnt into your brain?"

"Yeah."

"Well, what were they, for God's sake?"

Zaphod looked at him in silence again for a moment. Then he looked
away.

"Z.B.," he said.

At that moment a steel shutter slammed down behind them and gas
started to pour into the chamber.

"I'll tell you about it later," choked Zaphod as all three passed out.



CHAPTER 22



On the surface of Magrathea Arthur wandered about moodily.

Ford had thoughtfully left him his copy of The Hitch Hiker's Guide to
the Galaxy to while away the time with. He pushed a few buttons at
random.

The Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy is a very unevenly edited book
and contains many passages that simply seemed to its editors like a good
idea at the time.

One of these (the one Arthur now came across) supposedly relates the
experiences of one Veet Voojagig, a quiet young student at the Univer-
sity of Maximegalon, who pursued a brilliant academic career studying
ancient philology, transformational ethics and the wave harmonic theory
of historical perception, and then, after a night of drinking Pan Galactic
Gargle Blasters with Zaphod Beeblebrox, became increasingly obsessed
with the problem of what had happened to all the biros he'd bought
over the past few years.

There followed a long period of painstaking research during which he
visited all the major centres of biro loss throughout the galaxy and




80




eventually came up with a quaint little theory which quite caught the
public imagination at the time. Somewhere in the cosmos, he said, along
with all the planets inhabited by humanoids, reptiloids, fishoids, walking
treeoids and superintelligent shades of the colour blue, there was also a
planet entirely given over to biro life forms. And it was to this planet that
unattended biros would make their way, slipping away quietly through
wormholes in space to a world where they knew they could enjoy a
uniquely biroid lifestyle, responding to highly biro-oriented stimuli, and
generally leading the biro equivalent of the good life.

And as theories go this was all very fine and pleasant until Veet Voojagig
suddenly claimed to have found this planet, and to have worked there
for a while driving a limousine for a family of cheap green retractables,
whereupon he was taken away, locked up, wrote a book, and was finally
sent into tax exile, which is the usual fate reserved for those who are
determined to make a fool of themselves in public.

When one day an expedition was sent to the spatial coordinates that
Voojagig had claimed for this planet they discovered only a small aster-
oid inhabited by a solitary old man who claimed repeatedly that nothing
was true, though he was later discovered to be lying.

There did, however, remain the question of both the mysterious 60,000
Altairan dollars paid yearly into his Brantisvogan bank account, and of
course Zaphod Beeblebrox's highly profitable second-hand biro business.

Arthur read this, and put the book down.

The robot still sat there, completely inert.

Arthur got up and walked to the top of the crater. He walked around
the crater. He watched two suns set magnificently over Magrathea.

He went back down into the crater. He woke the robot up because even
a manically depressed robot is better to talk to than nobody.

"Night's falling," he said. "Look robot, the stars are coming out." >From
the heart of a dark nebula it is possible to see very few stars, and only
very faintly, but they were there to be seen.

The robot obediently looked at them, then looked back.

"I know," he said. "Wretched isn't it?"

"But that sunset! I've never seen anything like it in my wildest dreams
... the two suns! It was like mountains of fire boiling into space."

"I've seen it," said Marvin. "It's rubbish."

"We only ever had the one sun at home," persevered Arthur, "I came
from a planet called Earth you know."

"I know," said Marvin, "you keep going on about it. It sounds awful."

"Ah no, it was a beautiful place."

"Did it have oceans?"

"Oh yes," said Arthur with a sigh, "great wide rolling blue oceans ..."




81




"Can't bear oceans," said Marvin.

"Tell me," inquired Arthur, "do you get on well with other robots?"

"Hate them," said Marvin. "Where are you going?"

Arthur couldn't bear any more. He had got up again.

"I think I'll just take another walk," he said.

"Don't blame you," said Marvin and counted five hundred and ninety-
seven thousand million sheep before falling asleep again a second later.

Arthur slapped his arms about himself to try and get his circulation a
little more enthusiastic about its job. He trudged back up the wall of
the crater.

Because the atmosphere was so thin and because there was no moon,
nightfall was very rapid and it was by now very dark. Because of this,
Arthur practically walked into the old man before he noticed him.



CHAPTER 23



He was standing with his back to Arthur watching the very last glimmers
of light sink into blackness behind the horizon. He was tallish, elderly
and dressed in a single long grey robe. When he turned his face was thin
and distinguished, careworn but not unkind, the sort of face you would
happily bank with. But he didn't turn yet, not even to react to Arthur's
yelp of surprise.

Eventually the last rays of the sun had vanished completely, and he
turned. His face was still illuminated from somewhere, and when Arthur
looked for the source of the light he saw that a few yards away stood a
small craft of some kind - a small hovercraft, Arthur guessed. It shed a
dim pool of light around it.

The man looked at Arthur, sadly it seemed.

"You choose a cold night to visit our dead planet," he said.

"Who ... who are you?" stammered Arthur.

The man looked away. Again a kind of sadness seemed to cross his face.

"My name is not important," he said.

He seemed to have something on his mind. Conversation was clearly
something he felt he didn't have to rush at. Arthur felt awkward.

"I ... er ... you startled me ..." he said, lamely.

The man looked round to him again and slightly raised his eyebrows.

"Hmmmm?" he said.

"I said you startled me."

"Do not be alarmed, I will not harm you."




82




Arthur frowned at him. "But you shot at us! There were missiles ..." he
said.

The man chuckled slightly.

"An automatic system," he said and gave a small sigh. "Ancient com-
puters ranged in the bowels of the planet tick away the dark millennia,
and the ages hang heavy on their dusty data banks. I think they take
the occasional pot shot to relieve the monotony."

He looked gravely at Arthur and said, "I'm a great fan of science you
know."

"Oh ... er, really?" said Arthur, who was beginning to find the man's
curious, kindly manner disconcerting.

"Oh, yes," said the old man, and simply stopped talking again.

"Ah," said Arthur, "er ..." He had an odd felling of being like a man in
the act of adultery who is surprised when the woman's husband wanders
into the room, changes his trousers, passes a few idle remarks about the
weather and leaves again.

"You seem ill at ease," said the old man with polite concern.

"Er, no ... well, yes. Actually you see, we weren't really expecting to
find anybody about in fact. I sort of gathered that you were all dead or
something ..."

"Dead?" said the old man. "Good gracious no, we have but slept."

"Slept?" said Arthur incredulously.

"Yes, through the economic recession you see," said the old man, ap-
parently unconcerned about whether Arthur understood a word he was
talking about or not.

"Er, economic recession?"

"Well you see, five million years ago the Galactic economy collapsed, and
seeing that custom-made planets are something of a luxury commodity
you see ..."

He paused and looked at Arthur.

"You know we built planets do you?" he asked solemnly.

"Well yes," said Arthur, "I'd sort of gathered ..."

"Fascinating trade," said the old man, and a wistful look came into his
eyes, "doing the coastlines was always my favourite. Used to have endless
fun doing the little bits in fjords ... so anyway," he said trying to find his
thread again, "the recession came and we decided it would save us a lot
of bother if we just slept through it. So we programmed the computers
to revive us when it was all over."

The man stifled a very slight yawn and continued.

"The computers were index linked to the Galactic stock market prices
you see, so that we'd all be revived when everybody else had rebuilt the
economy enough to afford our rather expensive services."




83




Arthur, a regular Guardian reader, was deeply shocked at this.

"That's a pretty unpleasant way to behave isn't it?"

"Is it?" asked the old man mildly. "I'm sorry, I'm a bit out of touch."

He pointed down into the crater.

"Is that robot yours?" he said.

"No," came a thin metallic voice from the crater, "I'm mine."

"If you'd call it a robot," muttered Arthur. "It's more a sort of electronic
sulking machine."

"Bring it," said the old man. Arthur was quite surprised to hear a note
of decision suddenly present in the old man's voice. He called to Marvin
who crawled up the slope making a big show of being lame, which he
wasn't. "On second thoughts," said the old man, "leave it here. You
must come with me. Great things are afoot." He turned towards his craft
which, though no apparent signal had been given, now drifted quietly
towards them through the dark.

Arthur looked down at Marvin, who now made an equally big show of
turning round laboriously and trudging off down into the crater again
muttering sour nothings to himself.

"Come," called the old man, "come now or you will be late."

"Late?" said Arthur. "What for?"

"What is your name, human?"
"Dent. Arthur Dent," said Arthur.

"Late, as in the late Dentarthurdent," said the old man, sternly. "It's
a sort of threat you see." Another wistful look came into his tired old
eyes. "I've never been very good at them myself, but I'm told they can
be very effective."

Arthur blinked at him.

"What an extraordinary person," he muttered to himself.

"I beg your pardon?" said the old man.

"Oh nothing, I'm sorry," said Arthur in embarrassment. "Alright, where
do we go?"

"In my aircar," said the old man motioning Arthur to get into the craft
which had settled silently next to them. "We are going deep into the
bowels of the planet where even now our race is being revived from its
five-million-year slumber. Magrathea awakes."

Arthur shivered involuntarily as he seated himself next to the old man.
The strangeness of it, the silent bobbing movement of the craft as it
soared into the night sky quite unsettled him.

He looked at the old man, his face illuminated by the dull glow of tiny
lights on the instrument panel.

"Excuse me," he said to him, "what is your name by the way?"




84




"My name?" said the old man, and the same distant sadness came into
his face again. He paused. "My name," he said, "... is Slartibartfast."

Arthur practically choked.

"I beg your pardon?" he spluttered.

"Slartibartfast," repeated the old man quietly.

"Slartibartfast?"

The old man looked at him gravely. "I said it wasn't important," he
said.

The aircar sailed through the night.



CHAPTER 24



It is an important and popular fact that things are not always what
they seem. For instance, on the planet Earth, man had always assumed
that he was more intelligent than dolphins because he had achieved so
much - the wheel, New York, wars and so on - whilst all the dolphins
had ever done was muck about in the water having a good time. But
conversely, the dolphins had always believed that they were far more
intelligent than man - for precisely the same reasons.

Curiously enough, the dolphins had long known of the impending de-
struction of the planet Earth and had made many attempts to alert
mankind of the danger; but most of their communications were misin-
terpreted as amusing attempts to punch footballs or whistle for tidbits,
so they eventually gave up and left the Earth by their own means shortly
before the Vogons arrived.

The last ever dolphin message was misinterpreted as a surprisingly so-
phisticated attempt to do a double-backwards- somersault through a
hoop whilst whistling the "Star Sprangled Banner", but in fact the mes-
sage was this: So long and thanks for all the fish.

In fact there was only one species on the planet more intelligent than
dolphins, and they spent a lot of their time in behavioural research
laboratories running round inside wheels and conducting frighteningly
elegant and subtle experiments on man.

The fact that once again man completely misinterpreted this relationship
was entirely according to these creatures' plans.



CHAPTER 25



Silently the aircar coasted through the cold darkness, a single soft glow
of light that was utterly alone in the deep Magrathean night. It sped
swiftly. Arthur's companion seemed sunk in his own thoughts, and when
Arthur tried on a couple of occasions to engage him in conversation again




85




he would simply reply by asking if he was comfortable enough, and then
left it at that.

Arthur tried to gauge the speed at which they were travelling, but the
blackness outside was absolute and he was denied any reference points.
The sense of motion was so soft and slight he could almost believe they
were hardly moving at all.

Then a tiny glow of light appeared in the far distance and within seconds
had grown so much in size that Arthur realized it was travelling towards
them at a colossal speed, and he tried to make out what sort of craft it
might be. He peered at it, but was unable to discern any clear shape,
and suddenly gasped in alarm as the aircraft dipped sharply and headed
downwards in what seemed certain to be a collision course. Their rela-
tive velocity seemed unbelievable, and Arthur had hardly time to draw
breath before it was all over. The next thing he was aware of was an
insane silver blur that seemed to surround him. He twisted his head
sharply round and saw a small black point dwindling rapidly in the dis-
tance behind them, and it took him several seconds to realize what had
happened.

They had plunged into a tunnel in the ground. The colossal speed had
been their own relative to the glow of light which was a stationary hole
in the ground, the mouth of the tunnel. The insane blur of silver was the
circular wall of the tunnel down which they were shooting, apparently
at several hundred miles an hour.

He closed his eyes in terror.

After a length of time which he made no attempt to judge, he sensed a
slight subsidence in their speed and some while later became aware that
they were gradually gliding to a gentle halt.

He opened his eyes again. They were still in the silver tunnel, threading
and weaving their way through what appeared to be a crisscross war-
ren of converging tunnels. When they finally stopped it was in a small
chamber of curved steel. Several tunnels also had their terminus here,
and at the farther end of the chamber Arthur could see a large circle of
dim irritating light. It was irritating because it played tricks with the
eyes, it was impossible to focus on it properly or tell how near or far it
was. Arthur guessed (quite wrongly) that it might be ultra violet.

Slartibartfast turned and regarded Arthur with his solemn old eyes.

"Earthman," he said, "we are now deep in the heart of Magrathea."

"How did you know I was an Earthman?" demanded Arthur.

"These things will become clear to you," said the old man gently, "at
least," he added with slight doubt in his voice, "clearer than they are at
the moment."

He continued: "I should warn you that the chamber we are about to pass
into does not literally exist within our planet. It is a little too ... large.




86




We are about to pass through a gateway into a vast tract of hyperspace.
It may disturb you."

Arthur made nervous noises.

Slartibartfast touched a button and added, not entirely reassuringly. "It
scares the willies out of me. Hold tight."

The car shot forward straight into the circle of light, and suddenly Arthur
had a fairly clear idea of what infinity looked like.

It wasn't infinity in fact. Infinity itself looks flat and uninteresting. Look-
ing up into the night sky is looking into infinity - distance is incompre-
hensible and therefore meaningless. The chamber into which the aircar
emerged was anything but infinite, it was just very very big, so that it
gave the impression of infinity far better than infinity itself.

Arthur's senses bobbed and span, as, travelling at the immense speed
he knew the aircar attained, they climbed slowly through the open air
leaving the gateway through which they had passed an invisible pinprick
in the shimmering wall behind them.

The wall.

The wall defied the imagination - seduced it and defeated it. The wall
was so paralysingly vast and sheer that its top, bottom and sides passed
away beyond the reach of sight. The mere shock of vertigo could kill a
man.

The wall appeared perfectly flat. It would take the finest laser measur-
ing equipment to detect that as it climbed, apparently to infinity, as
it dropped dizzily away, as it planed out to either side, it also curved.
It met itself again thirteen light seconds away. In other words the wall
formed the inside of a hollow sphere, a sphere over three million miles
across and flooded with unimaginable light.

"Welcome," said Slartibartfast as the tiny speck that was the aircar,
travelling now at three times the speed of sound, crept imperceptibly
forward into the mindboggling space, "welcome," he said, "to our factory."

Arthur stared about him in a kind of wonderful horror. Ranged away
before them, at distances he could neither judge nor even guess at, were
a series of curious suspensions, delicate traceries of metal and light hung
about shadowy spherical shapes that hung in the space.

"This," said Slartibartfast, "is where we make most of our planets you
see."

"You mean," said Arthur, trying to form the words, "you mean you're
starting it all up again now?"

"No no, good heavens no," exclaimed the old man, "no, the Galaxy
isn't nearly rich enough to support us yet. No, we've been awakened
to perform just one extraordinary commission for very ... special clients
from another dimension. It may interest you ... there in the distance in
front of us."




87




Arthur followed the old man's finger, till he was able to pick out the
floating structure he was pointing out. It was indeed the only one of
the many structures that betrayed any sign of activity about it, though
this was more a sublimal impression than anything one could put one's
finger on.

At the moment however a flash of light arced through the structure
and revealed in stark relief the patterns that were formed on the dark
sphere within. Patterns that Arthur knew, rough blobby shapes that
were as familiar to him as the shapes of words, part of the furniture
of his mind. For a few seconds he sat in stunned silence as the images
rushed around his mind and tried to find somewhere to settle down and
make sense. Part of his brain told him that he knew perfectly well what
he was looking at and what the shapes represented whilst another quite
sensibly refused to countenance the idea and abdicated responsibility for
any further thinking in that direction.

The flash came again, and this time there could be no doubt.

"The Earth ..." whispered Arthur.

"Well, the Earth Mark Two in fact," said Slartibartfast cheery. "We're
making a copy from our original blueprints."

There was a pause.

"Are you trying to tell me," said Arthur, slowly and with control, "that
you originally ... made the Earth?"

"Oh yes," said Slartibartfast. "Did you ever go to a place ... I think it
was called Norway?"

"No," said Arthur, "no, I didn't."

"Pity," said Slartibartfast, "that was one of mine. Won an award you
know. Lovely crinkly edges. I was most upset to hear about its destruc-
tion."

"You were upset!"

"Yes. Five minutes later and it wouldn't have mattered so much. It was
a quite shocking cock-up."

"Huh?" said Arthur.

"The mice were furious."

"The mice were furious?"

"Oh yes," said the old man mildly.

"Yes well so I expect were the dogs and cats and duckbilled platypuses,
but ..."

"Ah, but they hadn't paid for it you see, had they?"

"Look," said Arthur, "would it save you a lot of time if I just gave up
and went mad now?"

For a while the aircar flew on in awkward silence. Then the old man
tried patiently to explain.




88




"Earthman, the planet you lived on was commissioned, paid for, and
run by mice. It was destroyed five minutes before the completion of the
purpose for which it was built, and we've got to build another one."

Only one word registered with Arthur.

"Mice?" he said. "Indeed Earthman."

"Look, sorry - are we talking about the little white furry things with the
cheese fixation and women standing on tables screaming in early sixties
sit coms?"

Slartibartfast coughed politely.

"Earthman," he said, "it is sometimes hard to follow your mode of
speech. Remember I have been asleep inside this planet of Magrathea for
five million years and know little of these early sixties sit coms of which
you speak. These creatures you call mice, you see, they are not quite as
they appear. They are merely the protrusion into our dimension of vast
hyperintelligent pan- dimensional beings. The whole business with the
cheese and the squeaking is just a front."

The old man paused, and with a sympathetic frown continued.

"They've been experimenting on you I'm afraid."

Arthur thought about this for a second, and then his face cleared.

"Ah no," he said, "I see the source of the misunderstanding now. No,
look you see, what happened was that we used to do experiments on
them. They were often used in behavioural research, Pavlov and all that
sort of stuff. So what happened was hat the mice would be set all sorts
of tests, learning to ring bells, run around mazes and things so that
the whole nature of the learning process could be examined. From our
observations of their behaviour we were able to learn all sorts of things
about our own ..."

Arthur's voice tailed off.

"Such subtlety ..." said Slartibartfast, "one has to admire it."

"What?" said Arthur.

"How better to disguise their real natures, and how better to guide your
thinking. Suddenly running down a maze the wrong way, eating the
wrong bit of cheese, unexpectedly dropping dead of myxomatosis, - if
it's finely calculated the cumulative effect is enormous."

He paused for effect.

"You see, Earthman, they really are particularly clever hyperintelligent
pan-dimensional beings. Your planet and people have formed the matrix
of an organic computer running a ten- million-year research programme
...

"Let me tell you the whole story. It'll take a little time."

"Time," said Arthur weakly, "is not currently one of my problems."




89




CHAPTER 26



There are of course many problems connected with life, of which some
of the most popular are Why are people born? Why do they die? Why
do they want to spend so much of the intervening time wearing digital
watches?

Many many millions of years ago a race of hyperintelligent pan- dimen-
sional beings (whose physical manifestation in their own pan-dimensional
universe is not dissimilar to our own) got so fed up with the con-
stant bickering about the meaning of life which used to interrupt their
favourite pastime of Brockian Ultra Cricket (a curious game which in-
volved suddenly hitting people for no readily apparent reason and then
running away) that they decided to sit down and solve their problems
once and for all.

And to this end they built themselves a stupendous super computer
which was so amazingly intelligent that even before the data banks had
been connected up it had started from I think therefore I am and got
as far as the existence of rice pudding and income tax before anyone
managed to turn it off.

It was the size of a small city.

Its main console was installed in a specially designed executive office,
mounted on an enormous executive desk of finest ultramahagony topped
with rich ultrared leather. The dark carpeting was discreetly sumptuous,
exotic pot plants and tastefully engraved prints of the principal computer
programmers and their families were deployed liberally about the room,
and stately windows looked out upon a tree-lined public square.

On the day of the Great On-Turning two soberly dressed programmers
with brief cases arrived and were shown discreetly into the office. They
were aware that this day they would represent their entire race in its
greatest moment, but they conducted themselves calmly and quietly as
they seated themselves deferentially before the desk, opened their brief
cases and took out their leather-bound notebooks.

Their names were Lunkwill and Fook.

For a few moments they sat in respectful silence, then, after exchanging
a quiet glance with Fook, Lunkwill leaned forward and touched a small
black panel.

The subtlest of hums indicated that the massive computer was now in
total active mode. After a pause it spoke to them in a voice rich resonant
and deep.

It said: "What is this great task for which I, Deep Thought, the second
greatest computer in the Universe of Time and Space have been called
into existence?"

Lunkwill and Fook glanced at each other in surprise.




90




"Your task, O Computer ..." began Fook. "No, wait a minute, this isn't
right," said Lunkwill, worried. "We distinctly designed this computer to
be the greatest one ever and we're not making do with second best. Deep
Thought," he addressed the computer, "are you not as we designed you
to be, the greatest most powerful computer in all time?"

"I described myself as the second greatest," intoned Deep Thought, "and
such I am."

Another worried look passed between the two programmers. Lunkwill
cleared his throat.

"There must be some mistake," he said, "are you not a greatest computer
than the Milliard Gargantubrain which can count all the atoms in a star
in a millisecond?"

"The Milliard Gargantubrain?" said Deep Thought with unconcealed
contempt. "A mere abacus - mention it not."

"And are you not," said Fook leaning anxiously forward, "a greater
analyst than the Googleplex Star Thinker in the Seventh Galaxy of
Light and Ingenuity which can calculate the trajectory of every single
dust particle throughout a five-week Dangrabad Beta sand blizzard?"

"A five-week sand blizzard?" said Deep Thought haughtily. "You ask
this of me who have contemplated the very vectors of the atoms in the
Big Bang itself? Molest me not with this pocket calculator stuff."

The two programmers sat in uncomfortable silence for a moment. Then
Lunkwill leaned forward again.

"But are you not," he said, "a more fiendish disputant than the Great
Hyperlobic Omni-Cognate Neutron Wrangler of Ciceronicus 12, the Magic
and Indefatigable?"

"The Great Hyperlobic Omni-Cognate Neutron Wrangler," said Deep
Thought thoroughly rolling the r's, "could talk all four legs off an Arc-
turan MegaDonkey - but only I could persuade it to go for a walk after-
wards."

"Then what," asked Fook, "is the problem?"

"There is no problem," said Deep Thought with magnificent ringing
tones. "I am simply the second greatest computer in the Universe of
Space and Time."

"But the second?" insisted Lunkwill. "Why do you keep saying the sec-
ond? You're surely not thinking of the Multicorticoid Perspicutron Titan
Muller are you? Or the Pondermatic? Or the ..."

Contemptuous lights flashed across the computer's console.

"I spare not a single unit of thought on these cybernetic simpletons!" he
boomed. "I speak of none but the computer that is to come after me!"
Fook was losing patience. He pushed his notebook aside and muttered,
"I think this is getting needlessly messianic."




91




"You know nothing of future time," pronounced Deep Thought, "and
yet in my teeming circuitry I can navigate the infinite delta streams of
future probability and see that there must one day come a computer
whose merest operational parameters I am not worthy to calculate, but
which it will be my fate eventually to design."

Fook sighed heavily and glanced across to Lunkwill.

"Can we get on and ask the question?" he said.

Lunkwill motioned him to wait.

"What computer is this of which you speak?" he asked.

"I will speak of it no further in this present time," said Deep Thought.
"Now. Ask what else of me you will that I may function. Speak."

They shrugged at each other. Fook composed himself.

"O Deep Thought Computer," he said, "the task we have designed you
to perform is this. We want you to tell us ..." he paused, "... the Answer!"

"The answer?" said Deep Thought. "The answer to what?"

"Life!" urged Fook.

"The Universe!" said Lunkwill.

"Everything!" they said in chorus.

Deep Thought paused for a moment's reflection.

"Tricky," he said finally.

"But can you do it?"

Again, a significant pause.

"Yes," said Deep Thought, "I can do it."

"There is an answer?" said Fook with breathless excitement."

"A simple answer?" added Lunkwill.

"Yes," said Deep Thought. "Life, the Universe, and Everything. There
is an answer. But," he added, "I'll have to think about it."

A sudden commotion destroyed the moment: the door flew open and
two angry men wearing the coarse faded-blue robes and belts of the
Cruxwan University burst into the room, thrusting aside the ineffectual
flunkies who tried to bar their way. "We demand admission!" shouted
the younger of the two men elbowing a pretty young secretary in the
throat.

"Come on," shouted the older one, "you can't keep us out!" He pushed
a junior programmer back through the door.

"We demand that you can't keep us out!" bawled the younger one,
though he was now firmly inside the room and no further attempts were
being made to stop him.

"Who are you?" said Lunkwill, rising angrily from his seat. "What do
you want?"




92




"I am Majikthise!" announced the older one.

"And I demand that I am Vroomfondel!" shouted the younger one.

Majikthise turned on Vroomfondel. "It's alright," he explained angrily,
"you don't need to demand that."

"Alright!" bawled Vroomfondel banging on an nearby desk. "I am Vroom-
fondel, and that is not a demand, that is a solid fact! What we demand
is solid facts!"

"No we don't!" exclaimed Majikthise in irritation. "That is precisely
what we don't demand!"

Scarcely pausing for breath, Vroomfondel shouted, "We don't demand
solid facts! What we demand is a total absence of solid facts. I demand
that I may or may not be Vroomfondel!"

"But who the devil are you?" exclaimed an outraged Fook.

"We," said Majikthise, "are Philosophers."

"Though we may not be," said Vroomfondel waving a warning finger at
the programmers.

"Yes we are," insisted Majikthise. "We are quite definitely here as repre-
sentatives of the Amalgamated Union of Philosophers, Sages, Luminaries
and Other Thinking Persons, and we want this machine off, and we want
it off now!"

"What's the problem?" said Lunkwill.

"I'll tell you what the problem is mate," said Majikthise, "demarcation,
that's the problem!"

"We demand," yelled Vroomfondel, "that demarcation may or may not
be the problem!"

"You just let the machines get on with the adding up," warned Majik-
thise, "and we'll take care of the eternal verities thank you very much.
You want to check your legal position you do mate. Under law the Quest
for Ultimate Truth is quite clearly the inalienable prerogative of your
working thinkers. Any bloody machine goes and actually finds it and
we're straight out of a job aren't we? I mean what's the use of our sit-
ting up half the night arguing that there may or may not be a God if
this machine only goes and gives us his bleeding phone number the next
morning?"

"That's right!" shouted Vroomfondel, "we demand rigidly defined areas
of doubt and uncertainty!"

Suddenly a stentorian voice boomed across the room.

"Might I make an observation at this point?" inquired Deep Thought.

"We'll go on strike!" yelled Vroomfondel.

"That's right!" agreed Majikthise. "You'll have a national Philosopher's
strike on your hands!"




93




The hum level in the room suddenly increased as several ancillary bass
driver units, mounted in sedately carved and varnished cabinet speakers
around the room, cut in to give Deep Thought's voice a little more
power.

"All I wanted to say," bellowed the computer, "is that my circuits are
now irrevocably committed to calculating the answer to the Ultimate
Question of Life, the Universe, and Everything -" he paused and satisfied
himself that he now had everyone's attention, before continuing more
quietly, "but the programme will take me a little while to run."

Fook glanced impatiently at his watch.

"How long?" he said.

"Seven and a half million years," said Deep Thought.

Lunkwill and Fook blinked at each other.

"Seven and a half million years ...!" they cried in chorus.

"Yes," declaimed Deep Thought, "I said I'd have to think about it, didn't
I? And it occurs to me that running a programme like this is bound
to create an enormous amount of popular publicity for the whole area
of philosophy in general. Everyone's going to have their own theories
about what answer I'm eventually to come up with, and who better
to capitalize on that media market than you yourself? So long as you
can keep disagreeing with each other violently enough and slagging each
other off in the popular press, you can keep yourself on the gravy train
for life. How does that sound?"

The two philosophers gaped at him.

"Bloody hell," said Majikthise, "now that is what I call thinking. Here
Vroomfondel, why do we never think of things like that?"

"Dunno," said Vroomfondel in an awed whisper, "think our brains must
be too highly trained Majikthise."

So saying, they turned on their heels and walked out of the door and
into a lifestyle beyond their wildest dreams.



CHAPTER 27



"Yes, very salutary," said Arthur, after Slartibartfast had related the
salient points of the story to him, "but I don't understand what all this
has got to do with the Earth and mice and things."

"That is but the first half of the story Earthman," said the old man.
"If you would care to discover what happened seven and a half millions
later, on the great day of the Answer, allow me to invite you to my
study where you can experience the events yourself on our Sens-O-Tape
records. That is unless you would care to take a quick stroll on the
surface of New Earth. It's only half completed I'm afraid - we haven't
even finished burying the artificial dinosaur skeletons in the crust yet,




94




then we have the Tertiary and Quarternary Periods of the Cenozoic Era
to lay down, and ..."

"No thank you," said Arthur, "it wouldn't be quite the same."

"No," said Slartibartfast, "it won't be," and he turned the aircar round
and headed back towards the mind-numbing wall.



CHAPTER 28



Slartibartfast's study was a total mess, like the results of an explosion
in a public library. The old man frowned as they stepped in.

"Terribly unfortunate," he said, "a diode blew in one of the life-support
computers. When we tried to revive our cleaning staff we discovered
they'd been dead for nearly thirty thousand years. Who's going to clear
away the bodies, that's what I want to know. Look why don't you sit
yourself down over there and let me plug you in?"

He gestured Arthur towards a chair which looked as if it had been made
out of the rib cage of a stegosaurus.

"It was made out of the rib cage of a stegosaurus," explained the old
man as he pottered about fishing bits of wire out from under tottering
piles of paper and drawing instruments. "Here," he said, "hold these,"
and passed a couple of stripped wire end to Arthur.

The instant he took hold of them a bird flew straight through him.

He was suspended in mid-air and totally invisible to himself. Beneath
him was a pretty treelined city square, and all around it as far as the
eye could see were white concrete buildings of airy spacious design but
somewhat the worse for wear - many were cracked and stained with
rain. Today however the sun was shining, a fresh breeze danced lightly
through the trees, and the odd sensation that all the buildings were
quietly humming was probably caused by the fact that the square and
all the streets around it were thronged with cheerful excited people.
Somewhere a band was playing, brightly coloured flags were fluttering
in the breeze and the spirit of carnival was in the air.

Arthur felt extraordinarily lonely stuck up in the air above it all without
so much as a body to his name, but before he had time to reflect on this
a voice rang out across the square and called for everyone's attention.

A man standing on a brightly dressed dais before the building which
clearly dominated the square was addressing the crowd over a Tannoy.

"O people waiting in the Shadow of Deep Thought!" he cried out. "Hon-
oured Descendants of Vroomfondel and Majikthise, the Greatest and
Most Truly Interesting Pundits the Universe has ever known ... The
Time of Waiting is over!"

Wild cheers broke out amongst the crowd. Flags, streamers and wolf
whistles sailed through the air. The narrower streets looked rather like




95




centipedes rolled over on their backs and frantically waving their legs in
the air.

"Seven and a half million years our race has waited for this Great and
Hopefully Enlightening Day!" cried the cheer leader. "The Day of the
Answer!"

Hurrahs burst from the ecstatic crowd.

"Never again," cried the man, "never again will we wake up in the morn-
ing and think Who am I? What is my purpose in life? Does it really,
cosmically speaking, matter if I don't get up and go to work? For today
we will finally learn once and for all the plain and simple answer to all
these nagging little problems of Life, the Universe and Everything!"

As the crowd erupted once again, Arthur found himself gliding through
the air and down towards one of the large stately windows on the first
floor of the building behind the dais from which the speaker was ad-
dressing the crowd.

He experienced a moment's panic as he sailed straight through towards
the window, which passed when a second or so later he found he had
gone right through the solid glass without apparently touching it.

No one in the room remarked on his peculiar arrival, which is hardly
surprising as he wasn't there. He began to realize that the whole experi-
ence was merely a recorded projection which knocked six-track seventy-
millimetre into a cocked hat.

The room was much as Slartibartfast had described it. In seven and a
half million years it had been well looked after and cleaned regularly
every century or so. The ultramahagony desk was worn at the edges,
the carpet a little faded now, but the large computer terminal sat in
sparkling glory on the desk's leather top, as bright as if it had been
constructed yesterday. Two severely dressed men sat respectfully before
the terminal and waited.

"The time is nearly upon us," said one, and Arthur was surprised to see a
word suddenly materialize in thin air just by the man's neck. The word
was Loonquawl, and it flashed a couple of times and the disappeared
again. Before Arthur was able to assimilate this the other man spoke
and the word Phouchg appeared by his neck.

"Seventy-five thousand generations ago, our ancestors set this program
in motion," the second man said, "and in all that time we will be the
first to hear the computer speak."

"An awesome prospect, Phouchg," agreed the first man, and Arthur
suddenly realized that he was watching a recording with subtitles.

"We are the ones who will hear," said Phouchg, "the answer to the great
question of Life ...!"

"The Universe ...!" said Loonquawl.

"And Everything ...!"




96




"Shhh," said Loonquawl with a slight gesture, "I think Deep Thought
is preparing to speak!"

There was a moment's expectant pause whilst panels slowly came to life
on the front of the console. Lights flashed on and off experimentally and
settled down into a businesslike pattern. A soft low hum came from the
communication channel.

"Good morning," said Deep Thought at last.

"Er ... Good morning, O Deep Thought," said Loonquawl nervously, "do
you have ... er, that is ..."

"An answer for you?" interrupted Deep Thought majestically. "Yes. I
have."

The two men shivered with expectancy. Their waiting had not been in
vain.

"There really is one?" breathed Phouchg.

"There really is one," confirmed Deep Thought.

"To Everything? To the great Question of Life, the Universe and Every-
thing?"

"Yes."

Both of the men had been trained for this moment, their lives had been
a preparation for it, they had been selected at birth as those who would
witness the answer, but even so they found themselves gasping and
squirming like excited children.

"And you're ready to give it to us?" urged Loonquawl. "I am."

"Now?"

"Now," said Deep Thought.

They both licked their dry lips.

"Though I don't think," added Deep Thought, "that you're going to like
it."

"Doesn't matter!" said Phouchg. "We must know it! Now!"

"Now?" inquired Deep Thought.

"Yes! Now ..."

"Alright," said the computer and settled into silence again. The two men
fidgeted. The tension was unbearable.

"You're really not going to like it," observed Deep Thought.

"Tell us!"

"Alright," said Deep Thought. "The Answer to the Great Question ..."

"Yes ...!"

"Of Life, the Universe and Everything ..." said Deep Thought.

"Yes ...!"




97




"Is ..." said Deep Thought, and paused.

"Yes ...!"

"Is ..."

"Yes ...!!!...?"

"Forty-two," said Deep Thought, with infinite majesty and calm.



CHAPTER 29



It was a long time before anyone spoke.

Out of the corner of his eye Phouchg could see the sea of tense expectant
faces down in the square outside.

"We're going to get lynched aren't we?" he whispered.

"It was a tough assignment," said Deep Thought mildly.

"Forty-two!" yelled Loonquawl. "Is that all you've got to show for seven
and a half million years' work?" "I checked it very thoroughly," said the
computer, "and that quite definitely is the answer. I think the problem,
to be quite honest with you, is that you've never actually known what
the question is."

"But it was the Great Question! The Ultimate Question of Life, the
Universe and Everything!" howled Loonquawl.

"Yes," said Deep Thought with the air of one who suffers fools gladly,
"but what actually is it?"

A slow stupefied silence crept over the men as they stared at the com-
puter and then at each other.

"Well, you know, it's just Everything ... Everything ..." offered Phouchg
weakly.

"Exactly!" said Deep Thought. "So once you do know what the question
actually is, you'll know what the answer means."

"Oh terrific," muttered Phouchg flinging aside his notebook and wiping
away a tiny tear.

"Look, alright, alright," said Loonquawl, "can you just please tell us the
Question?"

"The Ultimate Question?"

"Yes!"

"Of Life, the Universe, and Everything?"

"Yes!"

Deep Thought pondered this for a moment.

"Tricky," he said.

"But can you do it?" cried Loonquawl.




98




Deep Thought pondered this for another long moment.

Finally: "No," he said firmly.

Both men collapsed on to their chairs in despair.

"But I'll tell you who can," said Deep Thought.

They both looked up sharply.

"Who?" "Tell us!"

Suddenly Arthur began to feel his apparently non-existent scalp begin to
crawl as he found himself moving slowly but inexorably forward towards
the console, but it was only a dramatic zoom on the part of whoever
had made the recording he assumed.

"I speak of none other than the computer that is to come after me,"
intoned Deep Thought, his voice regaining its accustomed declamatory
tones. "A computer whose merest operational parameters I am not wor-
thy to calculate - and yet I will design it for you. A computer which can
calculate the Question to the Ultimate Answer, a computer of such in-
finite and subtle complexity that organic life itself shall form part of its
operational matrix. And you yourselves shall take on new forms and go
down into the computer to navigate its ten-million-year program! Yes!
I shall design this computer for you. And I shall name it also unto you.
And it shall be called ... The Earth."

Phouchg gaped at Deep Thought.

"What a dull name," he said and great incisions appeared down the
length of his body. Loonquawl too suddenly sustained horrific gashed
from nowhere. The Computer console blotched and cracked, the walls
flickered and crumbled and the room crashed upwards into its own ceiling
...

Slartibartfast was standing in front of Arthur holding the two wires.

"End of the tape," he explained.



CHAPTER 30



"Zaphod! Wake up!"

"Mmmmmwwwwwerrrrr?"

"Hey come on, wake up."

"Just let me stick to what I'm good at, yeah?" muttered Zaphod and
rolled away from the voice back to sleep.

"Do you want me to kick you?" said Ford.

"Would it give you a lot of pleasure?" said Zaphod, blearily.

"No."

"Nor me. So what's the point? Stop bugging me." Zaphod curled himself
up.




99




"He got a double dose of the gas," said Trillian looking down at him,
"two windpipes."

"And stop talking," said Zaphod, "it's hard enough trying to sleep any-
way. What's the matter with the ground? It's all cold and hard."

"It's gold," said Ford.

With an amazingly balletic movement Zaphod was standing and scan-
ning the horizon, because that was how far the gold ground stretched
in every direction, perfectly smooth and solid. It gleamed like ... it's
impossible to say what it gleamed like because nothing in the Universe
gleams in quite the same way that a planet of solid gold does. "Who put
all that there?" yelped Zaphod, goggle-eyed.

"Don't get excited," said Ford, "it's only a catalogue."

"A who?"

"A catalogue," said Trillian, "an illusion."

"How can you say that?" cried Zaphod, falling to his hands and knees
and staring at the ground. He poked it and prodded it with his fingernail.
It was very heavy and very slightly soft - he could mark it with his
fingernail. It was very yellow and very shiny, and when he breathed on
it his breath evaporated off it in that very peculiar and special way that
breath evaporates off solid gold.

"Trillian and I came round a while ago," said Ford. "We shouted and
yelled till somebody came and then carried on shouting and yelling till
they got fed up and put us in their planet catalogue to keep us busy till
they were ready to deal with us. This is all Sens-O-Tape."

Zaphod stared at him bitterly.

"Ah, shit," he said, "you wake me up from my own perfectly good dream
to show me somebody else's." He sat down in a huff.

"What's that series of valleys over there?" he said.

"Hallmark," said Ford. "We had a look."

"We didn't wake you earlier," said Trillian. "The last planet was knee
deep in fish."

"Fish?"

"Some people like the oddest things."

"And before that," said Ford, "we had platinum. Bit dull. We thought
you'd like to see this one though."

Seas of light glared at them in one solid blaze wherever they looked.

"Very pretty," said Zaphod petulantly.

In the sky a huge green catalogue number appeared. It flickered and
changed, and when they looked around again so had the land.

As with one voice they all went, "Yuch."




100




The sea was purple. The beach they were on was composed of tiny yellow
and green pebbles - presumably terribly precious stones. The mountains
in the distance seemed soft and undulating with red peaks. Nearby stood
a solid silver beach table with a frilly mauve parasol and silver tassles.

In the sky a huge sign appeared, replacing the catalogue number. It said,
Whatever your tastes, Magrathea can cater for you. We are not proud.

And five hundred entirely naked women dropped out of the sky on
parachutes.

In a moment the scene vanished and left them in a springtime meadow
full of cows.

"Ow!" said Zaphod. "My brains!"

"You want to talk about it?" said Ford.

"Yeah, OK," said Zaphod, and all three sat down and ignored the scenes
that came and went around them.

"I figure this," said Zaphod. "Whatever happened to my mind, I did it.
And I did it in such a way that it wouldn't be detected by the government
screening tests. And I wasn't to know anything about it myself. Pretty
crazy, right?"

The other two nodded in agreement.

"So I reckon, what's so secret that I can't let anybody know I know
it, not the Galactic Government, not even myself? And the answer is I
don't know. Obviously. But I put a few things together and I can begin
to guess. When did I decide to run for President? Shortly after the death
of President Yooden Vranx. You remember Yooden, Ford?"

"Yeah," said Ford, "he was that guy we met when we were kids, the
Arcturan captain. He was a gas. He gave us conkers when you bust your
way into his megafreighter. Said you were the most amazing kid he'd
ever met."

"What's all this?" said Trillian.

"Ancient history," said Ford, "when we were kids together on Betel-
geuse. The Arcturan megafreighters used to carry most of the bulky
trade between the Galactic Centre and the outlying regions The Betel-
geuse trading scouts used to find the markets and the Arcturans would
supply them. There was a lot of trouble with space pirates before they
were wiped out in the Dordellis wars, and the megafreighters had to be
equipped with the most fantastic defence shields known to Galactic sci-
ence. They were real brutes of ships, and huge. In orbit round a planet
they would eclipse the sun.

"One day, young Zaphod here decides to raid one. On a tri-jet scooter
designed for stratosphere work, a mere kid. I mean forget it, it was
crazier than a mad monkey. I went along for the ride because I'd got
some very safe money on him not doing it, and didn't want him coming
back with fake evidence. So what happens? We got in his tri-jet which




101




he had souped up into something totally other, crossed three parsecs
in a matter of weeks, bust our way into a megafreighter I still don't
know how, marched on to the bridge waving toy pistols and demanded
conkers. A wilder thing I have not known. Lost me a year's pocket money.
For what? Conkers." "The captain was this really amazing guy, Yooden
Vranx," said Zaphod. "He gave us food, booze - stuff from really weird
parts of the Galaxy - lots of conkers of course, and we had just the most
incredible time. Then he teleported us back. Into the maximum security
wing of Betelgeuse state prison. He was a cool guy. Went on to become
President of the Galaxy."

Zaphod paused.

The scene around them was currently plunged into gloom. Dark mists
swirled round them and elephantine shapes lurked indistinctly in the
shadows. The air was occasionally rent with the sounds of illusory beings
murdering other illusory beings. Presumably enough people must have
liked this sort of thing to make it a paying proposition.

"Ford," said Zaphod quietly.

"Yeah?"

"Just before Yooden died he came to see me."

"What? You never told me."

"No."

"What did he say? What did he come to see you about?"

"He told me about the Heart of Gold. It was his idea that I should steal
it."

"His idea?"

"Yeah," said Zaphod, "and the only possible way of stealing it was to
be at the launching ceremony."

Ford gaped at him in astonishment for a moment, and then roared with
laughter.

"Are you telling me," he said, "that you set yourself up to become Pres-
ident of the Galaxy just to steal that ship?"

"That's it," said Zaphod with the sort of grin that would get most people
locked away in a room with soft walls.

"But why?" said Ford. "What's so important about having it?"

"Dunno," said Zaphod, "I think if I'd consciously known what was so
important about it and what I would need it for it would have showed
up on the brain screening tests and I would never have passed. I think
Yooden told me a lot of things that are still locked away."

"So you think you went and mucked about inside your own brain as a
result of Yooden talking to you?"

"He was a hell of a talker." "Yeah, but Zaphod old mate, you want to
look after yourself you know."




102




Zaphod shrugged.

"I mean, don't you have any inkling of the reasons for all this?" asked
Ford.

Zaphod thought hard about this and doubts seemed to cross his minds.

"No," he said at last, "I don't seem to be letting myself into any of my
secrets. Still," he added on further reflection, "I can understand that. I
wouldn't trust myself further than I could spit a rat."

A moment later, the last planet in the catalogue vanished from beneath
them and the solid world resolved itself again.

They were sitting in a plush waiting room full of glass-top tables and
design awards.

A tall Magrathean man was standing in front of them.

"The mice will see you now," he said.



CHAPTER 31



"So there you have it," said Slartibartfast, making a feeble and perfunc-
tory attempt to clear away some of the appalling mess of his study. He
picked up a paper from the top of a pile, but then couldn't think of
anywhere else to put it, so he but it back on top of the original pile
which promptly fell over. "Deep Thought designed the Earth, we built
it and you lived on it."

"And the Vogons came and destroyed it five minutes before the program
was completed," added Arthur, not unbitterly.

"Yes," said the old man, pausing to gaze hopelessly round the room.
"Ten million years of planning and work gone just like that. Ten million
years, Earthman ... can you conceive of that kind of time span? A galactic
civilization could grow from a single worm five times over in that time.
Gone." He paused.

"Well that's bureaucracy for you," he added.

"You know," said Arthur thoughtfully, "all this explains a lot of things.
All through my life I've had this strange unaccountable feeling that
something was going on in the world, something big, even sinister, and
no one would tell me what it was."

"No," said the old man, "that's just perfectly normal paranoia. Everyone
in the Universe has that."

"Everyone?" said Arthur. "Well, if everyone has that perhaps it means
something! Perhaps somewhere outside the Universe we know ..." "Maybe.
Who cares?" said Slartibartfast before Arthur got too excited. "Perhaps
I'm old and tired," he continued, "but I always think that the chances
of finding out what really is going on are so absurdly remote that the
only thing to do is to say hang the sense of it and just keep yourself
occupied. Look at me: I design coastlines. I got an award for Norway."




103




He rummaged around in a pile of debris and pulled out a large perspex
block with his name on it and a model of Norway moulded into it.

"Where's the sense in that?" he said. "None that I've been able to make
out. I've been doing fjords in all my life. For a fleeting moment they
become fashionable and I get a major award."

He turned it over in his hands with a shrug and tossed it aside carelessly,
but not so carelessly that it didn't land on something soft.

"In this replacement Earth we're building they've given me Africa to
do and of course I'm doing it with all fjords again because I happen to
like them, and I'm old fashioned enough to think that they give a lovely
baroque feel to a continent. And they tell me it's not equatorial enough.
Equatorial!" He gave a hollow laugh. "What does it matter? Science has
achieved some wonderful things of course, but I'd far rather be happy
than right any day."

"And are you?"

"No. That's where it all falls down of course."

"Pity," said Arthur with sympathy. "It sounded like quite a good lifestyle
otherwise."

Somewhere on the wall a small white light flashed.

"Come," said Slartibartfast, "you are to meet the mice. Your arrival
on the planet has caused considerable excitement. It has already been
hailed, so I gather, as the third most improbable event in the history of
the Universe."

"What were the first two?"

"Oh, probably just coincidences," said Slartibartfast carelessly. He opened
the door and stood waiting for Arthur to follow.

Arthur glanced around him once more, and then down at himself, at the
sweaty dishevelled clothes he had been lying in the mud in on Thursday
morning.

"I seem to be having tremendous difficulty with my lifestyle," he mut-
tered to himself.

"I beg your pardon?" said the old man mildly.

"Oh nothing," said Arthur, "only joking."



CHAPTER 32



It is of course well known that careless talk costs lives, but the full scale
of the problem is not always appreciated.

For instance, at the very moment that Arthur said "I seem to be having
tremendous difficulty with my lifestyle," a freak wormhole opened up
in the fabric of the space-time continuum and carried his words far far
back in time across almost infinite reaches of space to a distant Galaxy




104




where strange and warlike beings were poised on the brink of frightful
interstellar battle.

The two opposing leaders were meeting for the last time.

A dreadful silence fell across the conference table as the commander of
the Vl'hurgs, resplendent in his black jewelled battle shorts, gazed lev-
elly at the G'Gugvuntt leader squatting opposite him in a cloud of green
sweet-smelling steam, and, with a million sleek and horribly beweaponed
star cruisers poised to unleash electric death at his single word of com-
mand, challenged the vile creature to take back what it had said about
his mother.

The creature stirred in his sickly broiling vapour, and at that very mo-
ment the words I seem to be having tremendous difficulty with my
lifestyle drifted across the conference table.

Unfortunately, in the Vl'hurg tongue this was the most dreadful insult
imaginable, and there was nothing for it but to wage terrible war for
centuries.

Eventually of course, after their Galaxy had been decimated over a few
thousand years, it was realized that the whole thing had been a ghastly
mistake, and so the two opposing battle fleets settled their few remaining
differences in order to launch a joint attack on our own Galaxy - now
positively identified as the source of the offending remark.

For thousands more years the mighty ships tore across the empty wastes
of space and finally dived screaming on to the first planet they came
across - which happened to be the Earth - where due to a terrible mis-
calculation of scale the entire battle fleet was accidentally swallowed by
a small dog.

Those who study the complex interplay of cause and effect in the history
of the Universe say that this sort of thing is going on all the time, but
that we are powerless to prevent it.

"It's just life," they say.

A short aircar trip brought Arthur and the old Magrathean to a doorway.
They left the car and went through the door into a waiting room full
of glass-topped tables and perspex awards. Almost immediately, a light
flashed above the door at the other side of the room and they entered.

"Arthur! You're safe!" a voice cried.

"Am I?" said Arthur, rather startled. "Oh good."

The lighting was rather subdued and it took him a moment or so to see
Ford, Trillian and Zaphod sitting round a large table beautifully decked
out with exotic dishes, strange sweetmeats and bizarre fruits. They were
stuffing their faces.

"What happened to you?" demanded Arthur.

"Well," said Zaphod, attacking a boneful of grilled muscle, "our guests
here have been gassing us and zapping our minds and being generally




105




weird and have now given us a rather nice meal to make it up to us.
Here," he said hoiking out a lump of evil smelling meat from a bowl,
"have some Vegan Rhino's cutlet. It's delicious if you happen to like that
sort of thing."

"Hosts?" said Arthur. "What hosts? I don't see any ..."

A small voice said, "Welcome to lunch, Earth creature."

Arthur glanced around and suddenly yelped.

"Ugh!" he said. "There are mice on the table!"

There was an awkward silence as everyone looked pointedly at Arthur.

He was busy staring at two white mice sitting in what looked like whisky
glasses on the table. He heard the silence and glanced around at every-
one.

"Oh!" he said, with sudden realization. "Oh, I'm sorry, I wasn't quite
prepared for ..."

"Let me introduce you," said Trillian. "Arthur this is Benji mouse."

"Hi," said one of the mice. His whiskers stroked what must have been a
touch sensitive panel on the inside of the whisky-glass like affair, and it
moved forward slightly.

"And this is Frankie mouse."

The other mouse said, "Pleased to meet you," and did likewise.

Arthur gaped.

"But aren't they ..."

"Yes," said Trillian, "they are the mice I brought with me from the
Earth."

She looked him in the eye and Arthur thought he detected the tiniest
resigned shrug.

"Could you pass me that bowl of grated Arcturan Megadonkey?" she
said.

Slartibartfast coughed politely.

"Er, excuse me," he said. "Yes, thank you Slartibartfast," said Benji
mouse sharply, "you may go."

"What? Oh ... er, very well," said the old man, slightly taken aback,
"I'll just go and get on with some of my fjords then."

"Ah, well in fact that won't be necessary," said Frankie mouse. "It looks
very much as if we won't be needing the new Earth any longer." He
swivelled his pink little eyes. "Not now that we have found a native of
the planet who was there seconds before it was destroyed."

"What?" cried Slartibartfast, aghast. "You can't mean that! I've got a
thousand glaciers poised and ready to roll over Africa!"

"Well perhaps you can take a quick skiing holiday before you dismantle
them," said Frankie, acidly.




106




"Skiing holiday!" cried the old man. "Those glaciers are works of art!
Elegantly sculptured contours, soaring pinnacles of ice, deep majestic
ravines! It would be sacrilege to go skiing on high art!"

"Thank you Slartibartfast," said Benji firmly. "That will be all."

"Yes sir," said the old man coldly, "thank you very much. Well, goodbye
Earthman," he said to Arthur, "hope the lifestyle comes together."

With a brief nod to the rest of the company he turned and walked sadly
out of the room.

Arthur stared after him not knowing what to say.

"Now," said Benji mouse, "to business."

Ford and Zaphod clinked their glasses together.

"To business!" they said.

"I beg your pardon?" said Benji.

Ford looked round.

"Sorry, I thought you were proposing a toast," he said.

The two mice scuttled impatiently around in their glass transports. Fi-
nally they composed themselves, and Benji moved forward to address
Arthur.

"Now, Earth creature," he said, "the situation we have in effect is this.
We have, as you know, been more or less running your planet for the last
ten million years in order to find this wretched thing called the Ultimate
Question."

"Why?" said Arthur, sharply.

"No - we already thought of that one," said Frankie interrupting, "but
it doesn't fit the answer. Why? - Forty-Two ... you see, it doesn't work."

"No," said Arthur, "I mean why have you been doing it?"

"Oh, I see," said Frankie. "Well, eventually just habit I think, to be
brutally honest. And this is more or less the point - we're sick to the
teeth with the whole thing, and the prospect of doing it all over again
on account of those whinnet-ridden Vogons quite frankly gives me the
screaming heeby jeebies, you know what I mean? It was by the merest
lucky chance that Benji and I finished our particular job and left the
planet early for a quick holiday, and have since manipulated our way
back to Magrathea by the good offices of your friends."

"Magrathea is a gateway back to our own dimension," put in Benji.

"Since when," continued his murine colleague, "we have had an offer
of a quite enormously fat contract to do the 5D chat show and lecture
circuit back in our own dimensional neck of the woods, and we're very
much inclined to take it."

"I would, wouldn't you Ford?" said Zaphod promptingly.

"Oh yes," said Ford, "jump at it, like a shot."




107




Arthur glanced at them, wondering what all this was leading up to.

"But we've got to have a product you see," said Frankie, "I mean ideally
we still need the Ultimate Question in some form or other."

Zaphod leaned forward to Arthur.

"You see," he said, "if they're just sitting there in the studio looking
very relaxed and, you know, just mentioning that they happen to know
the Answer to Life, the Universe and Everything, and then eventually
have to admit that in fact it's Forty-two, then the show's probably quite
short. No follow-up, you see."

"We have to have something that sounds good," said Benji.

"Something that sounds good?" exclaimed Arthur. "An Ultimate Ques-
tion that sounds good? From a couple of mice?"

The mice bristled.

"Well, I mean, yes idealism, yes the dignity of pure research, yes the
pursuit of truth in all its forms, but there comes a point I'm afraid where
you begin to suspect that if there's any real truth, it's that the entire
multi-dimensional infinity of the Universe is almost certainly being run
by a bunch of maniacs. And if it comes to a choice between spending
yet another ten million years finding that out, and on the other hand
just taking the money and running, then I for one could do with the
exercise," said Frankie.

"But ..." started Arthur, hopelessly. "Hey, will you get this, Earthman,"
interrupted Zaphod. "You are a last generation product of that computer
matrix, right, and you were there right up to the moment your planet
got the finger, yeah?"

"Er ..."

"So your brain was an organic part of the penultimate configuration of
the computer programme," said Ford, rather lucidly he thought.

"Right?" said Zaphod.

"Well," said Arthur doubtfully. He wasn't aware of ever having felt an
organic part of anything. He had always seen this as one of his problems.

"In other words," said Benji, steering his curious little vehicle right over
to Arthur, "there's a good chance that the structure of the question is
encoded in the structure of your brain - so we want to buy it off you."

"What, the question?" said Arthur.

"Yes," said Ford and Trillian.

"For lots of money," said Zaphod.

"No, no," said Frankie, "it's the brain we want to buy."

"What!"

"I thought you said you could just read his brain electronically," protes-
ted Ford.




108




"Oh yes," said Frankie, "but we'd have to get it out first. It's got to be
prepared."

"Treated," said Benji.

"Diced."

"Thank you," shouted Arthur, tipping up his chair and backing away
from the table in horror.

"It could always be replaced," said Benji reasonably, "if you think it's
important."

"Yes, an electronic brain," said Frankie, "a simple one would suffice."

"A simple one!" wailed Arthur.

"Yeah," said Zaphod with a sudden evil grin, "you'd just have to pro-
gram it to say What? and I don't understand and Where's the tea? -
who'd know the difference?"

"What?" cried Arthur, backing away still further. "See what I mean?"
said Zaphod and howled with pain because of something that Trillian
did at that moment.

"I'd notice the difference," said Arthur.

"No you wouldn't," said Frankie mouse, "you'd be programmed not to."

Ford made for the door.

"Look, I'm sorry, mice old lads," he said. "I don't think we've got a
deal."

"I rather think we have to have a deal," said the mice in chorus, all
the charm vanishing fro their piping little voices in an instant. With
a tiny whining shriek their two glass transports lifted themselves off
the table, and swung through the air towards Arthur, who stumbled
further backwards into a blind corner, utterly unable to cope or think
of anything.

Trillian grabbed him desperately by the arm and tried to drag him
towards the door, which Ford and Zaphod were struggling to open, but
Arthur was dead weight - he seemed hypnotized by the airborne rodents
swooping towards him.

She screamed at him, but he just gaped.

With one more yank, Ford and Zaphod got the door open. On the other
side of it was a small pack of rather ugly men who they could only assume
were the heavy mob of Magrathea. Not only were they ugly themselves,
but the medical equipment they carried with them was also far from
pretty. They charged.

So - Arthur was about to have his head cut open, Trillian was unable to
help him, and Ford and Zaphod were about to be set upon by several
thugs a great deal heavier and more sharply armed than they were.

All in all it was extremely fortunate that at that moment every alarm
on the planet burst into an earsplitting din.




109




CHAPTER 33



"Emergency! Emergency!" blared the klaxons throughout Magrathea.
"Hostile ship has landed on planet. Armed intruders in section 8A. De-
fence stations, defence stations!"

The two mice sniffed irritably round the fragments of their glass trans-
ports where they lay shattered on the floor.

"Damnation," muttered Frankie mouse, "all that fuss over two pounds
of Earthling brain." He scuttled round and about, his pink eyes flashing,
his fine white coat bristling with static.

"The only thing we can do now," said Benji, crouching and stroking
his whiskers in thought, "is to try and fake a question, invent one that
will sound plausible." "Difficult," said Frankie. He thought. "How about
What's yellow and dangerous?"

Benji considered this for a moment.

"No, no good," he said. "Doesn't fit the answer."

They sank into silence for a few seconds.

"Alright," said Benji. "What do you get if you multiply six by seven?"

"No, no, too literal, too factual," said Frankie, "wouldn't sustain the
punters' interest."

Again they thought.

Then Frankie said: "Here's a thought. How many roads must a man walk
down?"

"Ah," said Benji. "Aha, now that does sound promising!" He rolled the
phrase around a little. "Yes," he said, "that's excellent! Sounds very
significant without actually tying you down to meaning anything at all.
How many roads must a man walk down? Forty-two. Excellent, excellent,
that'll fox 'em. Frankie baby, we are made!"

They performed a scampering dance in their excitement.

Near them on the floor lay several rather ugly men who had been hit
about the head with some heavy design awards.

Half a mile away, four figures pounded up a corridor looking for a way
out. They emerged into a wide open-plan computer bay. They glanced
about wildly.

"Which way do you reckon Zaphod?" said Ford.

"At a wild guess, I'd say down here," said Zaphod, running off down to
the right between a computer bank and the wall. As the others started
after him he was brought up short by a Kill-O-Zap energy bolt that
cracked through the air inches in front of him and fried a small section
of adjacent wall.

A voice on a loud hailer said, "OK Beeblebrox, hold it right there. We've
got you covered."




110




"Cops!" hissed Zaphod, and span around in a crouch. "You want to try
a guess at all, Ford?"

"OK, this way," said Ford, and the four of them ran down a gangway
between two computer banks.

At the end of the gangway appeared a heavily armoured and space-
suited figure waving a vicious Kill-O-Zap gun.

"We don't want to shoot you, Beeblebrox!" shouted the figure. "Suits
me fine!" shouted Zaphod back and dived down a wide gap between two
data process units.

The others swerved in behind him.

"There are two of them," said Trillian. "We're cornered."

They squeezed themselves down in an angle between a large computer
data bank and the wall.

They held their breath and waited.

Suddenly the air exploded with energy bolts as both the cops opened
fire on them simultaneously.

"Hey, they're shooting at us," said Arthur, crouching in a tight ball, "I
thought they said they didn't want to do that."

"Yeah, I thought they said that," agreed Ford.

Zaphod stuck a head up for a dangerous moment.

"Hey," he said, "I thought you said you didn't want to shoot us!" and
ducked again.

They waited.

After a moment a voice replied, "It isn't easy being a cop!"

"What did he say?" whispered Ford in astonishment.

"He said it isn't easy being a cop."

"Well surely that's his problem isn't it?"

"I'd have thought so."

Ford shouted out, "Hey listen! I think we've got enough problems on
our own having you shooting at us, so if you could avoid laying your
problems on us as well, I think we'd all find it easier to cope!"

Another pause, and then the loud hailer again.

"Now see here, guy," said the voice on the loud hailer, "you're not dealing
with any dumb two-bit trigger-pumping morons with low hairlines, little
piggy eyes and no conversation, we're a couple of intelligent caring guys
that you'd probably quite like if you met us socially! I don't go around
gratuitously shooting people and then bragging about it afterwards in
seedy space-rangers bars, like some cops I could mention! I go around
shooting people gratuitously and then I agonize about it afterwards for
hours to my girlfriend!"




111




"And I write novels!" chimed in the other cop. "Though I haven't had
any of them published yet, so I better warn you, I'm in a meeeean mood!"

Ford's eyes popped halfway out of their sockets. "Who are these guys?"
he said.

"Dunno," said Zaphod, "I think I preferred it when they were shooting."

"So are you going to come quietly," shouted one of the cops again, "or
are you going to let us blast you out?"

"Which would you prefer?" shouted Ford.

A millisecond later the air about them started to fry again, as bolt after
bolt of Kill-O-Zap hurled itself into the computer bank in front of them.

The fusillade continued for several seconds at unbearable intensity.

When it stopped, there were a few seconds of near quietness ad the
echoes died away.

"You still there?" called one of the cops.

"Yes," they called back.

"We didn't enjoy doing that at all," shouted the other cop.

"We could tell," shouted Ford.

"Now, listen to this, Beeblebrox, and you better listen good!"

"Why?" shouted Back Zaphod.

"Because," shouted the cop, "it's going to be very intelligent, and quite
interesting and humane! Now either you all give yourselves up now and
let us beat you up a bit, though not very much of course because we
are firmly opposed to needless violence, or we blow up this entire planet
and possibly one or two others we noticed on our way out here!"

"But that's crazy!" cried Trillian. "You wouldn't do that!"

"Oh yes we would," shouted the cop, "wouldn't we?" he asked the other
one.

"Oh yes, we'd have to, no question," the other one called back.

"But why?" demanded Trillian.

"Because there are some things you have to do even if you are an en-
lightened liberal cop who knows all about sensitivity and everything!"

"I just don't believe these guys," muttered Ford, shaking his head.

One cop shouted to the other, "Shall we shoot them again for a bit?"

"Yeah, why not?" They let fly another electric barrage.

The heat and noise was quite fantastic. Slowly, the computer bank was
beginning to disintegrate. The front had almost all melted away, and
thick rivulets of molten metal were winding their way back towards
where they were squatting. They huddled further back and waited for
the end.




112




CHAPTER 34



But the end never came, at least not then.

Quite suddenly the barrage stopped, and the sudden silence afterwards
was punctuated by a couple of strangled gurgles and thuds.

The four stared at each other.

"What happened?" said Arthur.

"They stopped," said Zaphod with a shrug.

"Why?"

"Dunno, do you want to go and ask them?"

"No."

They waited.

"Hello?" called out Ford.

No answer.

"That's odd."

"Perhaps it's a trap."

"They haven't the wit."

"What were those thuds?"

"Dunno."

They waited for a few more seconds.

"Right," said Ford, "I'm going to have a look."

He glanced round at the others.

"Is no one going to say, No you can't possibly, let me go instead?"

They all shook their heads.

"Oh well," he said, and stood up. For a moment, nothing happened.

Then, after a second or so, nothing continued to happen. Ford peered
through the thick smoke that was billowing out of the burning computer.

Cautiously he stepped out into the open.

Still nothing happened.

Twenty yards away he could dimly see through the smoke the space-
suited figure of one of the cops. He was lying in a crumpled heap on the
ground. Twenty yards in the other direction lay the second man. No one
else was anywhere to be seen.

This struck Ford as being extremely odd.

Slowly, nervously, he walked towards the first one. The body lay reas-
suringly still as he approached it, and continued to lie reassuringly still
as he reached it and put his foot down on the Kill-O-Zap gun that still
dangled from its limp fingers.




113




He reached down and picked it up, meeting no resistance.

The cop was quite clearly dead.

A quick examination revealed him to be from Blagulon Kappa - he was
a methane-breathing life form, dependent on his space suit for survival
in the thin oxygen atmosphere of Magrathea.

The tiny life-support system computer on his backpack appeared unex-
pectedly to have blown up.

Ford poked around in it in considerable astonishment. These miniature
suit computers usually had the full back-up of the main computer back
on the ship, with which they were directly linked through the sub-etha.
Such a system was fail-safe in all circumstances other than total feedback
malfunction, which was unheard of.

He hurried over to the other prone figure, and discovered that exactly the
same impossible thing had happened to him, presumably simultaneously.

He called the others over to look. They came, shared his astonishment,
but not his curiosity.

"Let's get shot out of this hole," said Zaphod. "If whatever I'm supposed
to be looking for is here, I don't want it." He grabbed the second Kill-O-
Zap gun, blasted a perfectly harmless accounting computer and rushed
out into the corridor, followed by the others. He very nearly blasted hell
out of an aircar that stood waiting for them a few yards away.

The aircar was empty, but Arthur recognized it as belonging to Slart-
ibartfast.

It had a note from him pinned to part of its sparse instrument panel.
The note had an arrow drawn on it, pointing at one of the controls.

It said, This is probably the best button to press.



CHAPTER 35



The aircar rocketed them at speeds in excess of R17 through the steel
tunnels that lead out onto the appalling surface of the planet which
was now in the grip of yet another drear morning twilight. Ghastly grey
lights congealed on the land.

R is a velocity measure, defined as a reasonable speed of travel that
is consistent with health, mental wellbeing and not being more than
say five minutes late. It is therefore clearly an almost infinitely variable
figure according to circumstances, since the first two factors vary not
only with speed taken as an absolute, but also with awareness of the
third factor. Unless handled with tranquility this equation can result in
considerable stress, ulcers and even death.

R17 is not a fixed velocity, but it is clearly far too fast.

The aircar flung itself through the air at R17 and above, deposited them
next to the Heart of Gold which stood starkly on the frozen ground like a




114




bleached bone, and then precipitately hurled itself back in the direction
whence they had come, presumably on important business of its own.

Shivering, the four of them stood and looked at the ship.

Beside it stood another one.

It was the Blagulon Kappa policecraft, a bulbous sharklike affair, slate
green in colour and smothered with black stencilled letters of varying
degrees of size and unfriendliness. The letters informed anyone who cared
to read them as to where the ship was from, what section of the police
it was assigned to, and where the power feeds should be connected.

It seemed somehow unnaturally dark and silent, even for a ship whose
two-man crew was at that moment lying asphyxicated in a smoke-filled
chamber several miles beneath the ground. It is one of those curious
things that is impossible to explain or define, but one can sense when a
ship is completely dead.

Ford could sense it and found it most mysterious - a ship and two po-
licemen seemed to have gone spontaneously dead. In his experience the
Universe simply didn't work like that.

The other three could sense it too, but they could sense the bitter cold
even more and hurried back into the Heart of Gold suffering from an
acute attack of no curiosity.

Ford stayed, and went to examine the Blagulon ship. As he walked, he
nearly tripped over an inert steel figure lying face down in the cold dust.

"Marvin!" he exclaimed. "What are you doing?" "Don't feel you have
to take any notice of me, please," came a muffled drone.

"But how are you, metalman?" said Ford.

"Very depressed."

"What's up?"

"I don't know," said Marvin, "I've never been there."

"Why," said Ford squatting down beside him and shivering, "are you
lying face down in the dust?"

"It's a very effective way of being wretched," said Marvin. "Don't pre-
tend you want to talk to me, I know you hate me."

"No I don't."

"Yes you do, everybody does. It's part of the shape of the Universe. I
only have to talk to somebody and they begin to hate me. Even robots
hate me. If you just ignore me I expect I shall probably go away."

He jacked himself up to his feet and stood resolutely facing the opposite
direction.

"That ship hated me," he said dejectedly, indicating the policecraft.

"That ship?" said Ford in sudden excitement. "What happened to it?
Do you know?"




115




"It hated me because I talked to it."

"You talked to it?" exclaimed Ford. "What do you mean you talked to
it?"

"Simple. I got very bored and depressed, so I went and plugged myself
in to its external computer feed. I talked to the computer at great length
and explained my view of the Universe to it," said Marvin.

"And what happened?" pressed Ford.

"It committed suicide," said Marvin and stalked off back to the Heart
of Gold.



CHAPTER 36



That night, as the Heart of Gold was busy putting a few light years
between itself and the Horsehead Nebula, Zaphod lounged under the
small palm tree on the bridge trying to bang his brain into shape with
massive Pan Galactic Gargle Blasters; Ford and Trillian sat in a corner
discussing life and matters arising from it; and Arthur took to his bed
to flip through Ford's copy of The Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy.
Since he was going to live in the place, he reasoned, he'd better start
finding out something about it.

He came across this entry.

It said: 'The History of every major Galactic Civilization tends to pass
through three distinct and recognizable phases, those of Survival, In-
quiry and Sophistication, otherwise known as the How, Why and Where
phases.

"For instance, the first phase is characterized by the question How can
we eat? the second by the question Why do we eat? and the third by
the question Where shall we have lunch?"

He got no further before the ship's intercom buzzed into life.

"Hey Earthman? You hungry kid?" said Zaphod's voice.

"Er, well yes, a little peckish I suppose," said Arthur.

"OK baby, hold tight," said Zaphod. "We'll take in a quick bite at the
Restaurant at the End of the Universe."



CHAPTER 37



37.1 What's President?


President: full title President of the Imperial Galactic Government.



The term Imperial is kept though it is now an anachronism. The hered-
itary Emperor is nearly dead and has been so for many centuries. In the




116




last moments of his dying coma he was locked in a statis field which
keeps him in a state of perpetual unchangingness. All his heirs are now
long dead, and this means that without any drastic political upheaval,
power has simply and effectively moved a rung or two down the lad-
der, and is now seen to be vested in a body which used to act simply
as advisers to the Emperor - an elected Governmental assembly headed
by a President elected by that assembly. In fact it vests in no such place.



The President in particular is very much a figurehead - he wields no
real power whatsoever. He is apparently chosen by the government, but
the qualities he is required to display are not those of leadership but
those of finely judged outrage. For this reason the President is always a
controversial choice, always an infuriating but fascinating character. His
job is not to wield power but to draw attention away from it. On those
criteria Zaphod Beeblebrox is one of the most successful Presidents the
Galaxy has ever had - he has already spent two of his ten Presidential
years in prison for fraud. Very very few people realize that the President
and the Government have virtually no power at all, and of these very few
people only six know whence ultimate political power is wielded. Most
of the others secretly believe that the ultimate decision-making process
is handled by a computer. They couldn't be more wrong.



37.2 About Ford Perfect


Ford Prefect's original name is only pronuncible in an obscure Betel-
geusian dialect, now virtually extinct since the Great Collapsing Hrung
Disaster of Gal./Sid./Year 03758 which wiped out all the old Praxibetel
communities on Betelgeuse Seven. Ford's father was the only man on
the entire planet to survive the Great Collapsing Hrung disaster, by
an extraordinary coincidence that he was never able satisfactorily to
explain. The whole episode is shrouded in deep mystery: in fact no one
ever knew what a Hrung was nor why it had chosen to collapse on Betel-
geuse Seven particularly. Ford's father, magnanimously waving aside the
clouds of suspicion that had inevitably settled around him, came to live
on Betelgeuse Five where he both fathered and uncled Ford; in memory
of his now dead race he christened him in the ancient Praxibetel tongue.



Because Ford never learned to say his original name, his father even-
tually died of shame, which is still a terminal disease in some parts of
the Galaxy. The other kids at school nicknamed him Ix, which in the
language of Betelgeuse Five translates as "boy who is not able satisfac-
torily to explain what a Hrung is, nor why it should choose to collapse
on Betelgeuse Seven".




117