could Mrs. Delmarre have carried a weapon and returned in time to assume unconsciousness?”
“She might have destroyed it in a disposer unit.”
“The disposer unit was investigated, according to the report, and the residual gamma-ray activity was quite low. Nothing sizable had been destroyed in it for twenty-four hours.”
“I know that,” said Gruer. “I simply present it as an example of what might have been done.”
“True,” said Baley, “but there may be a very simple explanation. I suppose the robots belonging tothe Delmarre household have been checked and all were accounted for.”
“Oh yes.”
“And all in reasonable working order?”
“Yes.”
“Could any of those have carried away the weapon, perhaps without being aware of what it was?”
“Not one of them had removed anything from the scene of the crime. Or touched anything, for that matter.”
“That’s not so. They certainly removed the body and prepared it for cremation.”
“Well, yes, of course, but that scarcely counts. You would expect them to do that.”
“Jehoshaphat!” muttered Baley. He had to struggle to keep calm.
He said, “Now suppose someone else had been on the scene.”
“Impossible,” said Gruer. “How could someone invade Dr. Delmarre’s personal presence?”
“Suppose!” cried Baley. “Now there was never any thought in the robots’ minds that an intruder might have been present. I don’t suppose any of them made an immediate search of the grounds about the house. It wasn’t mentioned in the report.”
“There was no search till we looked for the weapon, but that was a considerable time afterward.”
“Nor any search for signs of a ground-car or an air vehicle on the grounds?”
“No.”
“Then if someone had nerved himself to invade Dr. Delmarre’s personal presence, as you put it, he could have killed him and then walked away leisurely. No one would have stopped him or even seenhim. Afterward, he could rely on everyone being sure no one could have been there.”
“And no one could,” said Gruer positively.
Baley said, “One more thing. Just one more. There was a robot involved. A robot was at the scene.”
Daneel interposed for the first time. “The robot was not at the scene. Had it been there, the crime would not have been committed.”
Baley turned his head sharply. And Gruer, who had lifted his glass a second time as though about to drink, put it down again to stare at Daneel.
“Is that not so?” asked Daneel.
“Quite so,” said Gruer. “A robot would have stopped one person from harming another. First Law.”
“All right,” said Baley. “Granted. But it must have been close. It was on the scene when the other robots arrived. Say it was in the next room. The murderer is advancing on Delmarre and Delmarre cries out, ‘You’re going to kill me.’ The robots of the household did not hear those words; at most they heard a cry, so, unsummoned, they did not come. But this particular robot heard the words and First Law made it come unsummoned. It was too late. Probably, it actually saw the murder committed.”
“It must have seen the last stages of the murder,” agreed Gruer. “That is what disordered it. Witnessing harm to a human without having prevented it is a violation of the First Law and, depending upon circumstances, more or less damage to the positronic brain is induced. In this case, it was a great deal of damage.”
Gruer stared at his fingertips as he turned the glass of liquid to and fro, to and fro.
Baley said, “Then the robot was a witness. Was it questioned?”
“What use? He was disordered. It could only say ‘You’re going to kill me.’ I agree with your reconstruction that far. They were probably Delmarre’s last words burned into the robot’s consciousness when everything else was destroyed.”
“But I’m told Solaria specializes in robots. Was there no way in which the robot could be repaired? No way in which its circuits could be
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