Outside their apartment they acquired the Specials again. Hari felt they were unnecessary; Dors was quite enough. But he could scarcely explain that to Imperial officials. There were other Specials on the floors above and below as well, a full-volume defense screen. Hari waved to friends he saw on the way across the Streeling campus, but the presence of the Specials held them at too great a distance to speak.
He had a lot of Mathist Department business to tend to, but he followed his instinct and put his calculations first. Briskly he re trieved his ideas from the bedside notepad and stared at them, doodling absently in air, stirring symbols like a pot of soup, for over an hour.
When he was a teenager the rigid drills of schooling had made him think that mathematics was just felicity with a particular kind of minutiae, knowing things, a sort of high-grade coin collecting. You learned relations and theorems and put them together.
Only slowly did he glimpse the soaring structures above each discipline. Great spans joined the vistas of topology to the infinites imal intricacies of differentials, or the plodding styles of number theory to the shifting sands of group analysis. Only then did he see mathematics as a landscape, a territory of the mind to rove and scout.
To traverse those expanses he worked in mind time—long stretches of uninterrupted flow when he could concentrate utterly on problems, fixing them like flies in timeless amber, turning them this way and that to his inspecting light, until they yielded their secrets.
Phones, people, politics—all these transpired in real time, snip ping his thought train, killing mind time. So he let Yugo and Dors and others fend off the world throughout the morning.
But today Yugo himself snipped his concentration. “Just a mo,” he said, slipping through the crackling door field. “This paper look right?”
He and Yugo had developed a plausible cover for the psychohis tory project. They regularly published research on the nonlinear analysis of “social nuggets and knots,” a subfield with an honorable and dull history. Their analysis applied to subgroups and factions in Trantor, and occasionally on other worlds.
The research was in fact useful to psychohistory, serving as a subset of equations to what Yugo insisted on calling the full “Seldon Equations.” Hari had given up being irked at this term, even though he wished to keep a personal distance from the theory.
Though scarcely a waking hour passed without his thinking about psychohistory, he did not want it to be a template for his own worldview. Nothing rooted in a particular personality could hope to describe the horde of saints and rascals revealed by human his tory. One had to take the longest view possible.
“See,” Yugo said, making lines of print and symbols coalesce on Hari’s holo. “I got all the analysis of the Dahlite crisis. Neat as you please, huh?”
“Um, what’s the Dahlite crisis?”
Yugo’s surprise was profound. “We’re not bein’ represented!”
“You live in Streeling.”
“Once a Dahlan, you’re always one. Just like you, from Helical.”
“Helicon. I see, you don’t have enough delegates in the Low Council?”
“Or the High!”
“The Codes allow—”
“They’re out of date.”
“Dahlites get a proportional share—”
“And our neighbors, the Ratannanahs and the Quippons, they’re schemin’ against us.”
“How so?”
“There’re Dahlans in plenty other Sectors. They don’t get repres ented.”
“You’re spoken for by our Streeling—”
“Look, Hari, you’re a Helical. Wouldn’t understand. Plenty Sec tors, they’re just places to sleep. Dahl is a people.”
“The Codes set forth rules for accommodating separate subcul tures, ethnicities—”
“They’re not workin’.”
Hari saw from Yugo’s jutting jaw that this was not a point for graceful debate. He did know something of the slowly gathering constitutional crisis. The Codes had maintained a balance of forces for millennia, but only by innovative adaptation. Little of that seemed available now. “We agree on that. So how does our research bear upon Dahl?”
“See, I took the socio-factor analysis and—”
Yugo had an intuitive grasp of nonlinear equations. It was always a pleasure to watch his big hands cut the air, slicing through points and pounding objections to pulp. And the calculations were good, if a bit simple.
The nuggets-and-knots work attracted little attention. It had made some in mathematics write him off as a promising young man who had never risen to his potential. This was perfectly all right with Hari. Some mathists guessed that his true core research went unpublished; these he treated kindly but gave no hint of confirmation.
“—so there’s a pressure-nugget buildin’ in Dahl, you bet,” Yugo finished.
“Of course, glancing at the news holos shows that.”
“Well, yeah—but I’ve proved it’s justified.”
Hari kept his face composed; Yugo was really worked up about this. “You’ve shown one of the factors. But there are others in the knot equations.”
“Well, sure, but everybody knows—”
“What everybody knows doesn’t need much proof. Unless, of course, it’s wrong.”
Yugo’s face showed a rush of emotions: surprise, concern, anger, hurt, puzzlement. “You don’t support Dahl, Hari?”
“Of course I do, Yugo.” Actually, the truth was that Hari didn’t care. But that was too bald a point to make, with Yugo seeming wounded. “Look, the paper is fine. Publish.”
“The three basic knot equations, they’re yours.”
“No need to call them that.”
“Sure, just like before. But your name goes on the paper.”
Something tickled Hari’s mind, but he saw the right answer now was to reassure Yugo. “If you like.”
Yugo went on about details of publication, and Hari let his eyes drift over the equations. Terms for representation in models of Trantorian democracy, value tables for social pressures, the whole apparatus. A bit stuffy. But reassuring to those who suspected that he was hiding his major results—as he was, of course.