C. M. Kornbluth - Ms Found In A Chinese Fortune Cookie.pdf

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MS. Found in a Chinese Fortune Cookie
C. M. Kornbluth
MS. Found in a Chinese Fortune Cookie
They say I am mad, but I am not mad-damn it, I've written and sold two million words of fiction and I
know better than to start a story like that, but this isn't a story and they do say I'm mad-catatonic
schizophrenia with assaultive episodes-and I'm not. [This is clearly the first of the Corwin Papers. Like all
the others it is written on a Riz-La cigarette paper with a ball point pen. Like all the others it is headed:
Urgent, Finder please send to C. M. Kornbluth,Wantagh, N. Y. Reward! / might comment that this is
typical of Corwin's generosity with his friends' time and money, though his attitude is at least this once
justified by his desperate plight. As his longtime friend and, indeed, literary executor, I was clearly the
person to turn to. CMK] I have to convince you, Cyril, that I am both sane and the victim of an
enormous conspiracy -and that you are too, and that everybody is. A tall order, but I am going to try to
fill it by writing an orderly account of the events leading up to my present situation. [Here ends the first
paper. To keep the record clear I should state that it was forwarded to me by a Mr. L. Wilmot Shaw^
who found it in a fortune cookie he ordered for dessert at the Great China Republic Restaurant in San
Francisco. Mr. Shaw suspected it was "a publicity gag"
but sent it to me nonetheless, and receivefrby return mail my thanks and my check for one dollar. I had
not realized that Corwin and his wife had disappeared from their home at Painted Post; I was merely
 
aware that it had been weeks since I'd heard from him. We visited infrequently. To be blunt, he was
easier to take via mail than face to face. For the balance of this account I shall attempt to avoid tedium by
omitting the provenance of each paper, except when noteworthy, and its length. The first is typical-a little
over a hundred words. I have, of course, kept on file all correspondence relating to the papers, and am
eager to display it to the authorities. It is hoped that publication of this account will nudge them out of the
apathy with which they have so far greeted my attempts to engage them. CMK]
OnSunday, May 13, 1956, at about12:30 P.M., I learned The Answer. I was stiff and aching because
all Saturday my wife and I had been putting in young fruit trees. I like to dig, but I was badly out of
condition from an unusually long and idle winter. Creatively, I felt fine. I'd been stale for months, but
when spring came the sap began to run in me too. I was bursting with story ideas; scenes and stretches of
dialog were jostling one another in my mind; all I had to do was let them flow onto paper.
When The Answer popped into my head I thought at first it was an idea for a story-a very good story. I
was going to go downstairs and bounce it off my wife a few times to test it, but I heard the sewing
machine buzzing and remembered she had said she was way behind on her mending. Instead, I put my
feet up, stared blankly through the window at the pasture-and-wooded-hills View we'd bought the old
place for, and fondled the idea.
What about, I thought, using the idea to develop a messy little local situation, the case of Mrs. Clonford?
Mrs. C. is a neighbor, animal-happy, land-poor and unintentionally a fearsome oppressor of her husband
and children. Mr. C. is a retired brakeman with a pension and his wife insists on his making like a farmer
hi all weathers and every year he gets pneumonia and is pulled through with
antibiotics. All he wants is to sell the damned farm and retire with his wife to a little apartment in town.
All she wants is to mess around with her cows and horses and sub-marginal acreage.
I got to thinking that if you noised the story around with a comment based on The Answer, the situation
would automatically untangle. They'd get their apartment, sell the farm and everybody would be happy,
including Mrs. C. It would be interesting to write, I thought idly, and then I thought not so idly that it
would be interesting to try-and then I sat up sharply with a dry mouth and a systemful of adrenalin. //
would work. The Answer would work.
I ran rapidly down a list of other problems, ranging from the town drunk to the guided-missile race. The
Answer worked. Every tune.
I was quite sure I had turned paranoid, because I've seen so much of that kind of thing in science fiction.
Anybody can name a dozen writers, editors and fans who have suddenly seen the light and determined to
lead the human race onward and upward out of the old slough. Of course The Answer looked logical
and unassailable, but so no doubt did poor Charlie McGandress' project to unite mankind through
science fiction fandom, at least to him. So, no doubt, did [/ have here omitted several briefly sketched
case histories of science fiction personalities as yet uncommitted. The reason will be obvious to anyone
familiar with the law of libel. Suffice it to say that Corwin argues that science fiction attracts an unstable
type of mind and sometimes insidiously undermines its foundations on reality. CMK]
But I couldn't just throw it away without a test. I considered the wording carefully, picked up the
extension phone on my desk and dialed Jim Hewlett, the appliance dealer in town. He answered.
"Corwin, Jim," I told him. "I have an idea-oops! The samovar's boiling over. Call me back in a minute,
will you?" I hung up.
He called me back in a minute; I let our combination- two shorts and a long-ring three times before I
 
picked
up the phone. "What was that about a samovar?" he asked, baffled.
"Just kidding," I said. "Listen Jim, why don't you try a short story for a change of pace? Knock off the
novel for a while-" He's hopefully writing a big historical about the Sullivan Campaign of 1779, which is
our local chunk of the Revolutionary War; I'm helping him a little with advice. Anybody who wants as
badly as he does to get out of the appliance business is entitled to some help.
"Gee, I don't know," he said. As he spoke the volume of his voice dropped slightly but definitely, three
times. That meant we had an average quota of party line snoopers listening in. "What would I write
about?"
"Well, we have this situation with a neighbor, Mrs. Clonford," I began. I went through the problem and
made my comment based on The Answer. I heard one of the snoopers gasp. Jim said when I was
finished: "I don't really think it's for me, Cecil. Of course it was nice of you to call, but-"
Eventually a customer came into the store and he had to break off.
I went through an anxious crabby twenty-four hours.
On Monday afternoon the paper woman drove past our place and shot the rolled-up copy of the Pott
Hill Evening Times into the orange-painted tube beside our mailbox. I raced for it, yanked it open to the
seventh page and read:
FARMSALE
Owing to 111 Health and Age Mr. & Mrs. Ronald Clonford Will sell their Entire Farm, All Machinery
and Furnishings and All Live Stock at Auction Saturday May 1912:30 P.M.Rain or Shine, Terms Cash
Day of Sale, George Pfennig,
Auctioneer.
[This is one of the few things in the Corwin Papers which can be independently verified. I looked up the
paper and found that the ad was run about as quoted. Further,
I interviewed Mrs. Clonford in her town apartment. She told me she "just got tired of farmin', / guess.
Kind of hated to give up my ponies, but people was beginning to say it was too hard of a life for Ronnie
and I guess they was right." CMK]
Coincidence? Perhaps. I went upstairs with the paper and put my feet up again. I could try a hundred
more piddling tests if I wished, but why waste time? If there was anything to it, I could type out The
Answer in about two hundred words, drive to town, tack it on the bulletin board outside the firehouse
and-snowball. Avalanche!
I didn't do it, of course-for the same reason I haven't put down the two hundred words of The Answer
yet on a couple of these cigarette papers. It's rather dreadful- isn't it-that I haven't done so, that a simple
feasible plan to ensure peace, progress and equality of opportunity among all mankind, may be lost to the
world if, say, a big meteorite hits the asylum in the next couple of minutes. But-I'm a writer. There's a
touch of intellectual sadism in us. We like to dominate the reader as a matador dominates the bull; we like
to tease and mystify and at last show what great souls we are by generously flipping up the shade and
 
letting the sunshine in. Don't worry. Read on. You will come to The Answer in the proper artistic place
for it. [At this point I wish fervently to dissociate myself from the attitudes Corwin attributes to our
profession. He had-has, I hope-his eccentricities, and I consider it inexcusable of him to tar us all with his
personal brush. I could point out, for example, that he once laboriously cultivated a 16th Century
handwriting which was utterly illegible to the modern reader. The only reason apparent for this, as for so
many of his traits, seemed to be a wish to annoy as many people as possible. CMK]
Yes; I am a writer. A matador does not show up in the bull ring with a tommy gun and a writer doesn't
do things the simple, direct way. He makes the people writhe a little first. So I called Fred Greenwald.
Fred had been after me for a while to speak at one of the Thursday Rotary meet-
ings and I'd been reluctant to set a date. I have a little speech for such occasions, "The Business of Being
a Writer"-all about the archaic royalty system of payment, the difficulty of proving business expenses, the
Margaret Mitchell tax law and how it badly needs improvement, what copyright is and isn't. I pass a few
galley sheets down the table and generally get a good laugh by holding up a Doubleday book contract,
silently turning it over so they can see how the fine print goes on and on, and then flipping it open so they
see there's twice as much fine print as they thought there was. I had done my stuff for Oswego Rotary,
Horseheads Rotary and Cannon Hole Rotary; now Fred wanted me to do it for Painted Post Rotary.
So I phoned him and said I'd be willing to speak this coming Thursday. Good, he said. On a discovery
I'd made about the philosophy and technique of administration and interpersonal relationships, I said. He
sort of choked up and said well, we're broadminded here.
I've got to start cutting this. I have several packs of cigarette papers left but not enough to cover the high
spots if I'm to do them justice. Let's just say the announcement of my speech was run hi the Tuesday
paper [It was. CMK] and skip to Wednesday, my place, about 7:30 P.M. Dinner was just over and my
wife and I were going to walk out and see how [At this point I wish to insert a special note concerning
some difficulty I had in obtaining the next four papers. They got somehow into the hands of a certain
literary agent who is famous for a sort of "finders-keepers" attitude more appropriate to the eighth grade
than to the law of literary property. In disregard of the fact that Corwin retained physical ownership of
the papers and literary rights thereto, and that I as the addressee possessed all other rights, he was
blandly endeavoring to sell them to various magazines as "curious fragments from Corwin's desk". Like
most people, I abhor lawsuits; that's the fact this agent lives on. I met his outrageous price of five cents a
word "plus postage (!)." I should add that I have not heard of any attempt by this gentleman to locate
Corwin or his
heirs in order to turn over the proceeds of the sale, less commission. CMK] the new fruit trees were
doing fine when a car came bumping down our road and stopped at our garden fence gate.
"See what they want and shove them on their way," said my wife. "We haven't got much daylight left."
She peered through the kitchen window at the car, blinked, rubbed her eyes and peered again. She said
uncertainly: "It looks like-no! Can't be." I went out to the car.
"Anything I can do for you?" I asked the two men hi the front seat. Then I recognized them. One of them
was about my age, a why lad in a T-shirt. The other man was plump and graying and ministerial, but jolly.
They were unmistakable; they had looked out at me-one scowling, the other smiling-from a hundred
book ads. It was almost incredible that they knew each other, but there they were sharing a car.
I greeted them by name and said: "This is odd. I happen to be a writer myself. I've never shared the
bestseller list with you two, but-"
 
The plump ministerial man tut-tutted. "You are thinking negatively," he chided me. "Think of what you
have accomplished. You own this lovely home, the valuation of which has just been raised two thousand
dollars due entirely to the hard work and frugality of you and your lovely wife; you give innocent pleasure
to thousands with your clever novels; you help to keep the good local merchants going with your
patronage. Not least, you have fought for your country hi the wars and you support it with your taxes."
The man in the T-shirt said raspily: "Even if you din't have the dough to settle hi full on April 15 and will
have to pay six per cent per month interest on the unpaid balance when and if you ever do pay it, you
poor shnook."
The plump man said, distressed: "Please, Michael- you are not thinking positively. This is neither the tune
nor the place-"
"What's going on?" I demanded. Because I hadn't even
told my wife I'd been a little short on the '55 federal tax.
"Let's go inna house," said the T-shirtfed man. He got out of the car, brushed my gate open and walked
coolly down the path to the kitchen door. The plump man followed, sniffing our rose-scented garden air
appreciatively, and I came last of all, on wobbly legs.
When we filed in my wife said: "My God. It is them."
The man in the T-shirt said: "Hiya, babe," and stared at her breasts. The plump man said: "May I
compliment you, my dear, for a splendid rose garden. Quite unusual for this altitude."
"Thanks," she said faintly, beginning to rally. "But it's quite easy when your neighbors keep horses."
"Haw!" snorted the man in the T-shirt. "That's the stuff, babe. You grow roses like I write books. Give
'em plenty of-"
"Michael!" said the plump man.
"Look, you," my wife said to me. "Would you mind telling me what this is all about? I never knew you
knew Dr.-"
"I don't," I said helplessly. "They seem to want to talk to me."
"Let us adjourn to your sanctum sanctorum," said the plump man archly, and we went upstairs. The
T-shirted man sat on the couch, the plump fellow sat in the club chair and I collapsed on the swivel chair
in front of the typewriter. "Drink, anybody?" I asked, wanting one myself. "Sherry, brandy, rye, straight
angostura?"
"Never touch the stinking stuff," grunted the man hi the T-shirt.
"I would enjoy a nip of brandy," said the big man. We each had one straight, no chasers, and he got
down to business with: "I suppose you have discovered The Diagonal Relationship?"
I thought about The Answer, and decided that The Diagonal Relationship would be a very good name
for it, too. "Yes," I said. "I guess I have. Have you?"
 
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