He tried to convince himself he had
no right to gripe. It was a pleasant place to
live; he had privacy and a bath of his own. And
the Schermerhorns were reasonably broadminded people.
They never objected to his smoking or an occasional
glass of beer. Last year at the Neuhavens’ Gary
Elvin cringed inwardly at the recollection.
Just the same, this was going too
far. It was enough to endure their kids all day
long, five days of the week, without the addition of
these juvenile parties. This one had started
an hour after dinner and it was still going strong
when Elvin returned from the late show at the Fox.
Naturally the Schermerhorn twins were
popular tenth graders husky, blond Greek
Gods who had everything, including a red Convertible
and a swimming pool Pop Schermerhorn had built for
them at the ranch. Gary Elvin had expected a
certain number of parties when he decided to board
and room with the Schermerhorns, but hardly one every
weekend.
He fled through the cluttered hall
where a buxom lass was organizing something called
a bubble gum contest and took refuge on the damp and
deserted patio. He flung himself on a wet, canvas
lounge, and looked up at the bright night sky.
Bitterly he counted off the weeks.
It was still early in November. He had eight
more months to endure before June came with its temporary
illusion of escape. As he always did, Elvin resolved
to find a better job next year. He had been teaching
for five years now. He knew all the tricks of
classroom control and smooth community relations.
Surely if he started looking early enough, he ought
to be able to get something at a small college....
Suddenly he was jerked back to reality
by a curious spot of red that appeared in the sky.
It moved closer and he saw that it was a falling object
followed by a long plume of red flame. It flashed
momentarily overhead and Elvin heard a dull thud as
it fell into a field beyond the ranch house.
He sprang up from the couch and moved
off in the darkness. It had been a meteorite,
of course; if it had survived the friction of the atmosphere
it would make an interesting exhibit for the science
classroom. Miss Gerken would be glassy-eyed with
pleasure.
There was no moon. As soon as
he crossed the driveway, Elvin stumbled over the damp
furrows of a newly ploughed field. He was sweating
when he reached the row of palms that lined the irrigation
ditch. He paused to wipe his face.
And he heard a weird, shrill, rhythmic
sound. It might have been called music, but there
was no definable melody or beat. It was faint
at first, but as he moved to the right, paralleling
the ditch, the sound came louder.
Then, beyond the trees, in a glow
of blue light emanating from the thing itself, he
saw the rocket. It was not quite five feet long,
a slim projectile of glowing metal nosed deeply into
the soft earth. The four fins were rotating slowly.
Gary Elvin might, quite properly,
have been frightened, but he was totally unacquainted
with modern fiction dealing with the probable potentials
of science and the universes beyond the earth.
Such material he classified, along with comic books
and television, as the pap of mediocre minds.
Now, when he first saw the rocket,
he came to the somewhat prosaic conclusion that it
had strayed from the government experimental site at
Muroc. He walked closer. The glow of the
metal brightened; the slow rotation of the fins and
the weird music became hypnotic. For a moment
Elvin felt a surge of fear. He tried to turn away,
but he could not.
Instead, moving against his will,
he took two of the fins in his hands and pulled on
them. The rotation and the music stopped as the
tailpiece of the rocket fell open. Elvin’s
mind cleared as he looked into a tiny chamber capped
by a small rectangular sheet of metal which was dotted
with tiny globes of a translucent material. Gingerly
he picked up the seal.
As he touched the metal, a strange
sensation, like a flood of jumbled words, tumbled
through his mind. The feeling was neither unpleasant
nor frightening. He was tempted to relax and
enjoy it; and he would have, if he had not been distracted
by a second object in the chamber. He thrust
the strip of metal into the pocket of his coat.
Elvin’s second find was a small,
transparent cylinder, filled with tiny, multi-colored
spheres, exactly like a jar of hard candy. There
was nothing else in the rocket, except for the motor
built into the tailpiece. The blue glow of the
rocket began to fade.
Vaguely Elvin became aware that something
was amiss. He began to suspect that he had stumbled
upon something more than a stray rocket from Muroc.
He wanted to tell somebody about it. Clutching
the cylinder of colored balls he ran back to the house.
The party had reached one of its numerous
climaxes. The hall was jammed with chattering
high school students. They swirled in a flood
around Mrs. Schermerhorn, who seemed to be enjoying
herself as much as they were.
Gary Elvin grabbed her arm. “I’ve
found a rocket!” he cried.
“Rocket?” she frowned
for a moment, and then smiled brightly. “Oh,
the racket. Yes, but they do have so much energy,
don’t they?”
He held up the cylinder. “This was in it!”
“Oh, you found it, Mr. Elvin. We looked
high and low; now we ”
“It was in the rocket.”
“... now we can have our contest.”
Desperately a new idea occurred to
him. “Can you get these kids quiet?
I want to ’phone.”
“But it’s so early, Mr. Elvin. We
can’t expect them to go home yet.”
“No, Mrs. Schermerhorn. ’Phone.
I want to telephone!”
“Oh. Yes; of course. We’ll have
our contest in the living room.”
Gary Elvin wormed his way toward the
closet under the stairway. It was a very small
telephone alcove, not designed for utility. Yet
he found he could shut out some of the din if he jackknifed
himself against the slanting wall and held the door
partly shut.
But it required the use of both his
hands. He set the cylinder on a bookcase in the
hall and squeezed into the closet. With the telephone
in his hand, he hesitated. It had seemed a good
idea a moment ago to call in the Authorities.
But, to bring the generalization down to specifics,
just who would that be?
In a big city he would have telephoned
the police. But San Benedicto was a California
valley town, small, sleepy, and contented. The
four-man police force was more or less capable of
handling minor traffic violations, but certainly nothing
else. The State Police? Elvin doubted they
would have jurisdiction. His last, feeble resort
seemed to be the San Benedicto News, a daily,
four-page advertising circular that passed, locally,
for a newspaper. Elvin called the editor-reporter
at his home.
After he had told his story, Elvin
had to suffer a certain standardized banter concerning
the advisability of changing his brand of bourbon.
It was entirely meaningless, a form of humor enjoyed
by the valley people. Matt Henderson eventually
agreed that the strange rocket might bear investigation.
“I’ll be out first thing in the morning,”
he promised.
“In the morning! Listen,
Matt, this thing may be it might ”
He was unable to crystalize his reasons for urgency.
He finished lamely, “It’s important, I
think.”
“It ain’t going to run away, is it?”
“No, but ”
“Then we can both get a good night’s sleep.”
Gary Elvin turned away from the telephone,
vaguely dissatisfied. He felt that something
ought to be done immediately. What, he didn’t
know, or why. He went to get his cylinder of
colored spheres from the bookcase where he had left
it. The jar was gone.
He heard a burst of talk in the living
room and he was suddenly frightened. From the
archway he looked in on the guests, some thirty youngsters,
all of the tenth grade of San Benedicto High School.
They sprawled over chairs and couches, or they sat,
Indian fashion, on the floor. Mrs. Schermerhorn
stood in the center of the room, like a judge, smiling
patiently. All thirty of the guests were chewing
industriously. On the floor stood Elvin’s
jar of colored spheres, open and more than half-empty.
“Oh, dear,” Mrs. Schermerhorn
protested, turning to Elvin. “Something
seems wrong with their gum. They’ve tried
and tried, but I haven’t seen a single bubble.
And it did seem such a clever game! I suppose
if the gum were stale ” Her voice
trailed off when she saw the horror on Elvin’s
face.
Wordlessly he pointed at the open
jar. The room fell silent. All thirty of
the youngsters looked at him. Their chomping jaws
became motionless.
“Is is that mine?” he whispered
hoarsely.
“The jar you brought in?”
Mrs. Schermerhorn asked. “I don’t
know, Mr. Elvin, I’m sure. Mabel Travis
was supposed to bring the gum for the contest, and
she forgot where ”
“But mine wasn’t gum.”
He licked his lips, uncomfortable in the focus of
so many staring eyes. “A a rocket
of some sort fell in the field, just beyond the irrigation
ditch. I found the cylinder inside. It might
be it could be anything.”
Elvin had the strange sensation, for
almost ten seconds, of looking at a motion picture
film that had stopped at a single frame. Then,
as if the projector had started to run again, all
thirty of the youngsters broke into activity.
For another second the analogy of the film persisted;
Elvin had the elusive impression that each of the youngsters
was carefully playing a part.
They clamored to go out and see the
rocket. Mrs. Schermerhorn protested that they
would ruin their clothes trailing over the fields after
dark. The guests allowed themselves to be talked
into putting off their curiosity until morning.
As their excited talk faded, Mabel Travis looked up
at Elvin.
“Was your jar the one on the
bookcase, Mr. Elvin?” she asked, eyeing him
with her enormous, blue eyes.
“Yes. Is that where you got ”
“No.” The room was
still again, and all the youngsters were looking at
her with a peculiar anxiety. “I thought
that was one of the prizes. You know, when we
played forfeits earlier in the ”
“Of course,” Mrs. Schermerhorn
put in. “Bill Blake did win a jar of candy,
didn’t he?”
“And that’s what I thought
the jar was when I saw it on the bookcase,”
Mary Travis continued. “So I took it upstairs
and put it with our coats in the bedroom. I’ll
get it for you, Mr. Elvin.” Slowly she picked
up the nearly empty jar on the floor and recapped
it. “I’m going to take this back
to the drugstore tomorrow morning and demand my money
back. I certainly don’t like being cheated!”
When she returned to the living room,
she handed Elvin his cylinder of colored balls and
slowly his fear dissipated. Until a competent
authority analyzed the contents, the jar represented
unknown danger. It might be harmless; but it
could also be an explosive, a form of fuel for the
rocket, perhaps even germ colonies used in biological
warfare. If Bill Blake had taken it home with
him as an innocent jar of candy Elvin shuddered.
The party broke up and Elvin went
to his room. He hung his suit carefully at the
back of his closet to preserve the creases and thereby
cut down on his cleaning bill. After five years
of living on a teacher’s salary, such economies
had become second nature with him. He brought
out his blue serge and hung it on the door; it was
the suit he would wear next week to school.
Saturday dawned crisply sunny.
Elvin shaved and dressed leisurely. Through the
dormer windows of his room he saw the rich, black fields
that surrounded the ranch house and the distant ridge
of misty mountains beyond the desert, one or two of
them crested with snow.
The Schermerhorns, of course, were
already awake and busy. Elvin heard the clatter
of dishes in the kitchen. He saw the twins, David
and Donald, tall and muscular in their tight jeans
and brilliant plaid shirts, working in their shop
back of the garage. Pop Schermerhorn was in conference
with a score of day laborers clustered around the
half-dozen tractors in the drive. Through the
open garage door Elvin could see the Schermerhorn
Cadillac, the station wagon, and the red Convertible
that belonged to the twins.
The scene could be duplicated, with
minor variations, on any day of the week. Elvin
always resented the Schermerhorn prosperity, even though
Pop Schermerhorn had been kind enough to offer him
board and room when it was obvious the family did
not need the additional income.
Elvin never allowed himself to forget
that the Schermerhorns owned one of the largest ranches
in the valley as well as the feed store in San Benedicto
and a half-interest in the bank. Yet Pop Schermerhorn
actually boasted that he had never gone past the eighth
grade in school, and his kids were fortunate to be
considered mentally normal. Elvin had the twins
in class; he knew the limits of their ability.
Donald had an I.Q. of 89, David of 85.
Yet such a family literally rolled
in money, while Elvin was like a slum-dweller staring
emptily into a crowded shop window.
Matt Henderson turned in from the
main highway as Elvin finished breakfast. He
joined the reporter and they walked out to the field
beyond the irrigation ditch. In daylight the terrain
was very different. Elvin backtracked over the
same ground several times before it dawned on him
that he could not locate the rocket.
Perspiration beaded his face.
That was impossible! The rocket was large enough
to be seen from any point in the field. Even if
some part of the mechanism had caused it to rise again
during the night, Elvin would have found the gaping
hole the point of the projectile had torn in the earth.
But there was nothing. Not a furrow in the ploughed
field was disturbed.
Visibly amused, Matt Henderson departed,
repeating his formula about brands of liquor.
This time, Elvin thought, the reporter actually believed
it. Elvin walked back to the ranch. He was
very angry; but, more than that, he was coldly afraid and
he had no idea what he was afraid of.
The Schermerhorn twins stopped him
as he crossed the driveway.
“You sure made us bite on that
one, Mr. Elvin,” Donald said good naturedly.
“Yeah,” David added.
“All the kids came over early this morning to
see your rocket.”
“I guest we deserve it, though,”
Donald went on philosophically, “for pulling
that deal on you in class last week.”
Gary Elvin went up to his room in
a daze and sat staring at the bottle of colored spheres.
It seemed entirely clear what had happened last night;
yet, conceivably, the rocket could have been an hallucination.
If so, it was because of the grinding frustrations
of his job. But Elvin had a good mind; he did
not have to let a bunch of discourteous rattle-brained
kids get him down. David and Donald had given
him the clue: the rocket was simply a practical
joke he had played on his class of tenth graders.
The second step in driving out the
“dream” was an appeal to authority.
He must understand the limits of scientific possibility
in the use of rockets. That meant a trip to the
library. Although it was four miles to San Benedicto,
Elvin decided to walk; the exercise would help clear
his head.
He entered the library at eleven-thirty,
half an hour before the building was closed for the
weekend. It was a good library. The assessment
rate in prosperous San Benedicto was high, and books
had been purchased wisely. In the card catalogue
Elvin found listed a number of up-to-date references
that he could use; but there was nothing on the shelves.
Five minutes before closing time, he asked the librarian
for help.
“I don’t suppose there’s
anything in,” she answered. “We’ve
had a perfect run on books all morning.”
“You mean everything in the library is out?”
“Everything worthwhile.”
She beamed. “And most of the borrowers were
your tenth graders, too, Mr. Elvin. You’ve
certainly done a wonderful job of inspiring that class
to do serious reading. Why, do you know Mabel
Travis has been in here three times today? She
took out seven books as soon as the library opened,
and she had them back by nine-thirty. Said she’d
read them all, too.”
“Seven books in less than two hours?”
Elvin laughed.
“I suppose she thought she had.
Poor little Mabel! She hasn’t much to work
with, you know. But it was her new attitude I
liked so intense, so serious. And
she was doing such heavy reading, too.”
Elvin walked back to the Schermerhorn
ranch, enjoying the noon-day warmth. San Benedicto
was crowded with Saturday shoppers. He met his
students everywhere, and always they commented on the
practical joke he had played on them. By the
time he was back in his room, the fiction of the joke
was thoroughly established in his own mind. He
almost believed it himself.
He glanced again at the transparent
cylinder of spheres. A chemist might be able
to analyze the contents and say where the jar had originated.
Perhaps Miss Gerkin could do it. She had taught
science for more than twenty years at San Benedicto
High. Yet Elvin knew he couldn’t ask her
for help. If the colored balls turned out to be
nothing more than hard candy, then by inescapable
logic he would have to accept the fact that he was
suffering from a major hallucination. It was more
comfortable not to know the truth.
The idea of candy, however, brought
up another association. Mrs. Schermerhorn had
said that earlier in the evening Bill Blake had won
a jar of candy as a prize. Bill Blake was the
prize joker of the tenth grade. Elvin had what
seemed to be an intuitive flash of understanding.
The rocket had been a joke, all right, but it had been
aimed at Elvin. The kids had rigged it up before
he came home from the show. During the night
they had come back and taken the stage setting away.
Elvin spent the rest of the weekend
planning his revenge. He didn’t think of
it as that, but rather disciplinary action. Yet
he knew the class would get the point and possibly
even heed the implied warning. In five years
Elvin had reduced the complex process of teaching to
one workable rule: break the class, or the kids
will break you.
Now he chose the classical cat-whip
of a surprise test to crack them back into line.
He spent Sunday planning it and duplicating the pages.
He was scrupulously careful to be fair at
least as he defined the term. The examination
covered nothing that had not been discussed in class.
But Elvin taught grammar, and no field of the abstract
allows such devious application of the flimsy nonsense
passing for rules.
On Monday morning, with a thin smile,
Elvin was ready for them. He had tenth grade
English first period. As he passed out the mimeographed
pages, he waited for waves of groaning to sweep the
room. Nothing happened. He felt an annoying
pang of anger. A hand shot up.
“Yes, Charles?” he snapped.
“If we finish before the end of the period,
can we have free reading?”
“I doubt you’ll finish, Charles.
This test is ten pages long.”
“But if we do ”
“By all means, yes.”
Gary Elvin leaned back in his chair
and surveyed, with satisfaction, the thirty heads
bent studiously over their desks. For perhaps
five minutes the idyll lasted, until Donald Schermerhorn
brought his test up to the desk and asked permission
to go to the library. Elvin was both amazed and
disappointed; but at once he reassured himself.
The test had been simply too hard for Donald.
Nonetheless, as soon as Donald was
out of the room, Elvin checked his examination against
the key. As he turned through the pages, his fingers
began to tremble. Donald had answered everything and
answered it correctly. Before Elvin had finished
checking Donald’s test, ten more students had
left theirs on the desk and headed for the school library.
Within ten minutes Elvin was fighting
a disorganizing bewilderment far worse than the rocket-hallucination.
Every examination was completed, and none that he
checked had as much as one mistake. Elvin wished
he could believe that whole-sale cheating had taken
place, but he knew that was impossible because of
the precautions he always took.
All of the tenth graders were back
from the library by that time. They had each
brought two or more books. Elvin’s body
went rigid with anger when he saw what was currently
passing among them for the skill of reading.
They were methodically turning pages almost as quickly
as they could move their hands from one side of the
books to the other, all with the appearance of engrossed
attention.
Elvin banged a ruler on his desk.
One or two faces looked up. “This has gone
far enough!” he cried. “You asked
for the privilege of free reading, but I do not intend
you to make a farce of it.” A hand went
up. “Yes, Marilyn?”
“But we are reading, Mr. Elvin. Honestly.”
“Oh, I see.” His
voice was thickly sarcastic. “And what’s
the title of your book?”
“Toynbee’s Study of History.”
“You’ve given up Grace
Livingston Hill? Could you summarize Toynbee for
us, Marilyn?”
“In another ten minutes, Mr.
Elvin. I still have sixty pages to read.”
Elvin turned savagely to another girl.
“Mabel Travis! What are you reading?”
The buxom girl looked up languidly.
For a split second her big eyes seemed focused on
a distant prospective. “Why why
this, Mr. Elvin.” She held up her book
so he could see the title.
“Hypnotism in Theory and
Practice,” he snorted. And Mabel’s
I/Q was 71! “You’ve outgrown the
comics, Mabel?”
“In a sense, yes, Mr. Elvin.”
Elvin was saved from further disorientation
by the interruption of an office messenger with a
special bulletin announcing a second period assembly.
By the time he had read it, his anger was under control.
He let the reading go on and spent the rest of the
period plodding through the examinations. There
was not an error in any of the papers. From the
prospective of the day’s events, Elvin later
realized that, however personally unnerving, his own
particular crisis had been a minor one.
The first full scale public disaster
came during the assembly, when the entire student
body nearly one hundred and fifty youngsters was
gathered in the auditorium. The principal, as
always, rose to lead them in the Alma Mater.
He was a huge, hatchet-faced, white-haired man, the
terror of evil-doer and faculty members alike.
He had a tendency to give a solemn importance to trivial
things and to overlook the great ones; and there was
no mistaking the awed, almost religious fervor with
which he sang the school song which was,
perhaps, only natural, since he had written it himself.
On that disastrous morning he suddenly
burst into a dance as the student body barrelled into
the first chorus. He snatched up the startled
girls’ counselor and improvised a little rumba.
Slowly the students’ voices fell silent as they
watched. Under the sweating leadership of the
music teacher, the school orchestra held the pace
for another bar or two, until one of the players stood
up and rendered a discordant hot lick on his trumpet.
A trio of caretakers carried the struggling
principal off the platform and shouting teachers herded
the students on to their next classes. Thirty
minutes later the word-of-mouth information was carefully
spread through the school that the principal had been
taken to the hospital for observation and he was doing
nicely. But by that time his fate seemed unimportant,
for the girls’ tenth grade gym teacher was having
hysterics on the front lawn, convinced that all her
students had turned into fish; and the boys’
glee club teacher had abruptly announced that the nation
was being invaded by Martians. He, too, had been
carried off to the hospital in haste.
The rest of the faculty was badly
shaken. When they met at lunch, they unanimously
wanted the school closed for the rest of the day.
But the principal had been too small a man to delegate
any of his authority; as long as he was hospitalized,
the teachers could do nothing.
After the ominous activity of the
morning, however, most of the afternoon passed in
relative order. True, the counselor gave pick-up
tests to three tenth graders whose earlier I.Q. scores
had been so low the validity had been questioned;
and this time the same three outdid an Einstein.
And the tenth grade math teacher was almost driven
to distraction by a classroom discussion of the algebraic
symbology equating matter and time all
of which was entirely over his head.
Nothing really happened until five
minutes before the end of the school day, when Miss
Gerkin knocked weakly on Gary Elvin’s door.
As soon as he saw her face, he gave his class free
reading and joined her in the hall. Fearfully
she showed him a yellow Bunsen burner, which glowed
softly in the afternoon sunlight.
“Do you know what it is, Gary?”
“It’s one of those gas burners you have
on the lab tables in ”
“The metal, I mean.”
“Looks like gold. Aren’t
these rather expensive for a high school classroom?”
She sagged against the wall, running
her trembling fingers over her thin lips. “It’s
that tenth grade, Gary. I have them last period
for general science. Bill Blake and the Schermerhorn
twins got to fooling around with the electro-magnet.
They rewired it somehow and added a few well,
frankly, I don’t understand at all! But
now when anything metal, glass, granite when
anything is put in the magnetic field, it’s changed
to gold.”
“Transmutation of atomic structure?
You know it can’t be done!”
“Yes, I know it. But I
saw it happen.” She began to laugh, but
checked herself quickly.
“It’s a trick. I
know that bunch better than you do. It’s
time one of us had it out with them.”
He strode along the hall toward the
science room, Miss Gerkin following meekly behind
him. “I’m sure you’re right,
Gary, because the rest of the class hardly showed
any interest in what the boys were doing. I actually
asked Marilyn if she didn’t want her necklace
turned to gold, and she said she was too busy to bother.
Imagine that, from a high school kid!”
“Busy doing what?”
“Working out the application of the Law of Degravitation,
she said.”
“The Law of Degravitation? I never heard
of it.”
Miss Gerkin sniffed righteously.
“Neither have I, and I’ve taught science
all my life.”
Gary Elvin flung open the door of
the science room. It was one minute before the
end of the period. For a moment he looked in on
a peacefully ideal classroom. Every student was
at his bench working industriously. Then, row
by row, they began to float upward toward the ceiling,
each of them holding a tiny coil of thin wires twisted
intricately around two pieces of metal and an electronic
tube. The breeze from the open window gathered
them languidly into a kind of huddle above the door.
The bell rang as Miss Gerkin began
to scream. Elvin fought to hold on to his own
sanity as he tried to help her, but a degree of her
hysteria transferred itself to him. His mind
became a patchwork of yawning blank spaces interspersed
with uncoordinated episodes of reality.
He remembered hearing the bell and
the rush of the class out of the room. He remembered
the piercing screams of Miss Gerkin’s terror
echoing through the suddenly crowded halls. Beyond
one of his black gulfs of no-memory, he was in the
nurse’s office helping to hold Miss Gerkin on
the lounge while the school doctor administered a sedative.
Slowly the integrated pattern of his
thinking returned when he was driving back toward
the Schermerhorn ranch. It was late in the afternoon;
the sun was setting redly beyond the ridge of mountains.
As Elvin’s fear receded, he was able to think
with a kind of hazy clarity. He had seen a metal
Bunsen burner that had been turned into gold; he had
seen the crusty principal of the school break into
a rumba, and three of his colleagues driven to hysteria;
he had seen a tenth grade class floating unsupported
in the air. All of it manifestly absurd and impossible.
But it had happened. Elvin could
visualize only two plausible explanations: mass
insanity or mass hypnosis. Hypnosis! A sluggish
relay clicked in his mind. He remembered a book.
One of the tenth graders had been reading it Hypnotism
in Theory and Practice.
Everything seemed clear after that.
The tenth grade was an obstreperous bunch of unsocial
adolescents. Somehow they had stumbled upon hypnotism
and learned how to use it.
The time for an accounting had come.
Because of where Elvin lived, he was admirably situated
to break the Schermerhorn twins first; and they were,
perhaps, the weakest members of the group. He
would have them alone, without the support of their
peers. It would be easy. After all, he was
a mature adult; they were still children. Once
he had a confession from them, it would only be a
minor operation to clear up the whole mess.
When he reached the Schermerhorn ranch,
dinner was on the table. He had no time to talk
to the twins until afterward. Both David and Donald
bolted the meal and rushed back to their workshop behind
the garage. Their usual bad manners, Elvin realized,
but what else could be expected?
Elvin finished a leisurely pipe in
the living room, and then sauntered out to the boys’
workshop. Surprisingly, the door was locked, the
windows thickly curtained; they had never taken such
precautions before. He knocked and, after a long
wait, both David and Donald came outside to talk to
him. They were naked to the waist and their husky,
tanned bodies gleamed with sweat. A smudge of
grease was smeared over David’s unkempt blond
hair.
“Working on your car, boys?”
Elvin inquired indulgently. He knew the technique.
Put them at their ease, first; then come to the point
when their guard was down.
“Well, not exactly, Mr. Elvin.” Donald
said.
“Mind if I watch? I always
say I can learn as much about motors from you two
as you learn from me about grammar.”
Neither of the twins said anything.
After an uncomfortable silence, Elvin cleared his
throat pointedly. He had never met with such
disrespect. If they were his kids, they would
long ago have been taught proper courtesy for their
superiors! To fill the lengthening void, he asked.
“What did you think of the little
test I gave this morning?”
“It was all right,” Donald said.
“You both did pretty well; I’m proud of
you.”
“We had everything right,”
David pointed out without a flicker of expression.
Elvin couldn’t seem to engineer
the dialogue as he used to. In that case, this
was as appropriate a time as any for the question he
had come to ask. He spoke slowly, with a tone
of disinterest. “Do either of you know
anything about hypnotism?” As a shocker, Elvin
realized, it left much to be desired; their faces
told him nothing.
“A little,” David volunteered.
“We read eight or nine books on it over the
weekend,” Donald added.
“That’s a lot of reading. It must
have taken a great deal of time.”
“Oh, a couple of hours.”
Elvin clenched his fists in futile
anger, but he kept his voice steady. “Is
anybody else in the tenth grade reading up on hypnotism?”
“I suppose so,” Donald
admitted. “I’m not sure. Why
don’t you ask in class tomorrow?”
“It occurs to me that a clever
hypnotist could be responsible for what happened at
school today.”
“Some of it; isn’t that
rather obvious? We’d like to go on talking,
Mr. Elvin, honest. But we have a lot of work
to finish. It’ll be bedtime soon enough.”
“But you know about hypnotism, don’t you?”
“We know how it’s done,
yes, and its limitations so far as genuine telepathy ”
“Who created that ridiculous
scene in the auditorium?” Elvin’s voice
rose as he tried to put on pressure.
“I wouldn’t worry about
the principal, Mr. Elvin, if I were you. He’s
always been a neurotic.”
“Mighty big words you’re
using these days, Donald. Where’d you hear
them?”
“The principal is a little man mentally,
I mean. He’s afraid of people because he
isn’t sure of himself. So he makes himself
a tin god, a dictator, just to show the rest of us ”
“I want to know where you picked all this up!”
Patiently the twins began to talk,
taking turns at delivering an improvised lecture in
psychology, shot through with an array of highly technical
terms. As Elvin listened to their monotonous voices,
he slowly felt very tired. His head began to
ache as his anger ebbed. More than anything else,
he wanted a long night’s sleep. Yawning
wearily, he thanked the boys for what,
he wasn’t quite sure and went up to
his room.
Some time before dawn Elvin awoke
for a moment. He thought he heard the sound of
a motor in the driveway, but he was too sleepy to get
up to see what it was. Two hours later he awoke
to chaos.
Mrs. Schermerhorn was shaking his
shoulder. He looked up into her white, terrified
face. Her hand trembled as she clutched her quilted
robe close to her throat.
“Mr. Elvin, they’ll need
your help. Mr. Schermerhorn’s waiting for
you.”
He shook sleep out of his mind sluggishly.
“Why? What’s happened?”
“The bank’s gone. Just just
gone!”
He blinked and shook his head again.
“I I don’t think I heard you
right, Mrs. Schermerhorn.”
“There’s a jungle where
the bank used to be. With tigers in it.”
She laughed wildly for a moment, but the laughter
dissolved into tears and she reached for the bottle
of smelling salts in the pocket of her robe.
“Most of them have been shot by this time, I
think. The tigers. Think of it, Mr. Elvin tigers
in San Benedicto!” She began to laugh again.
When Elvin joined Pop Schermerhorn
and the twins in the station wagon, Mrs. Schermerhorn
followed him out of the house with a thermos of hot
coffee. As she put it in the car, she saw the
rifles they were taking with them. She began
to weep again, clinging desperately to the side of
the car. Suddenly the twins knelt beside her,
and threw their arms around her neck.
“We’re sorry, Mom,” David whispered.
“Terribly sorry.”
“You’ve nothing to be sorry about,”
she replied. “It’s not your fault.”
“Better get back inside,”
Pop Schermerhorn told her. “Mind, keep the
doors locked. Things ain’t safe no more
around here.”
As they drove into San Benedicto,
Elvin was considerably puzzled by the attitude of
the twins. Normally talkative to the point of
nausea, they were now strangely quiet. And this
was exactly the sort of thing that should have inspired
their most adolescent repartee.
The sun was rising as they stopped
the station wagon among the clutter of cars filling
Main Street. Elvin stared in disbelief at the
neat square of tropical jungle rising cleanly in the
heart of San Benedicto. Not only the bank but
a whole block of business houses was gone. This
could be written off neither as insanity nor hypnotism;
it was a madness existing in actual fact. Elvin
gave up trying to discover any logic in what was happening.
Both reason and natural law seemed to have abdicated.
The periphery of jungle was surrounded
by armed men. At intervals they shot at shadows
lurking among the trees and, as the sun brightened,
the accuracy of their aim increased. They were
not worrying about causes, either; they were responding
with excellent self-discipline to the emergency of
tigers roaming the streets of San Benedicto. Afterwards,
at their leisure, they could speculate on how the
jungle had come to be there.
There was only one fatality.
A tiger sprang out of the jungle and mauled a man
who had pressed too close. It happened directly
in front of the Schermerhorn twins. They turned
their rifles on the tiger and killed it instantly;
but the man was dead, too.
Elvin was surprised to see tears in
the eyes of the twins, but he credited it to the unstable
emotions of adolescence. Both of them had acted
with maturity when they faced the tiger; no adult could
have done more. Still they wept, even though
the man was a stranger.
By eight o’clock the stirrings
in the jungle had stopped. The men began to relax.
Waitresses from the Bid-a-Wee Cafe brought out doughnuts
and coffee and distributed them among the crowd.
There came, then, a new disturbance
at the far end of Main Street, a shouting of tumultuous
voices. A mob moved slowly into the center of
town, clinging to the sides of an antiquated dump truck.
“Gold! Gold! Gold!”
It was like a chant shouted with ecstatic antiphony.
The dump truck stopped and Elvin saw the unbelievable gleaming
heaps of gold shoveled like gravel into the back of
the vehicle. The driver stood on the running
board, weaving drunkenly.
“The whole damn’ desert,”
he shouted. “All of it, as far as I could
see all pure gold!”
He took a shovel and scattered the
nuggets and dust among the throng. “Take
all you like. Lots more where this came from!”
The mob stirred slowly at first, and
then more and more violently, as the men began to
race for their cars. The vehicles were already
crowded close together. Gears ground and fenders
crumbled. The street became helplessly jammed
with locked cars. Only a few on the fringe escaped.
Angry arguments broke out, degenerating into fist fights.
The peak violence cooled a little after a few heads
had been smashed, and grudgingly the men turned to
the task of freeing their cars.
Donald snatched Elvin’s arm.
“Stay here with Pop,” he shouted above
the clatter. “Dave and I are going back
to the ranch. Mom may need us. The desert
runs right up to the edge of our property, you know.”
“Going to walk?”
“I think we can get the station wagon out.
It’s pretty far back.”
Elvin and Pop Schermerhorn worked
side by side helping untangle the mass of vehicles.
After an hour order had been more or less restored,
and the mob had thinned, since each of the freed cars
had been driven off at top speed to the desert bonanza.
For a moment the sky darkened.
Elvin looked up. The jungle had disappeared and
a medieval castle, complete with knights, had taken
its place. The mob shrank back in terror.
So did the knights, although one or two on the battlements
ventured to send shafts into this new enemy that had
appeared at the castle gates. But there was no
time for real hostilities to develop, for the castle
vanished and a 19th century factory took its place.
The factory survived less than thirty seconds, before
it gave way to the bank and row of stores which had
originally stood on the site.
For some reason the crowd began to
cheer, as they would a victorious football team.
But the tumult died quickly, for the buildings were
covered with a slime of jungle vines, torn up by their
roots, and a pair of snarling lions stood at bay on
the sidewalk. After they had shot the lions,
they found a cobra was coiled on the cashier’s
desk in the bank and an antelope was imprisoned in
the dry goods store. They were still clearing
out miscellaneous wild life when reporters from the
city newspapers, apprised by the San Benedicto
News of the gold strike, descended upon the town.
They were followed by a deluge of prospectors, arriving
in anything that would move bicycles and
Cadillacs, Model T’s and Greyhound buses.
The mob poured into town first by
the scores, and then by the thousands. Primarily
male, their prevailing mood was explosive instability,
a glassy-eyed greed flamed higher as each truckload
of gold poured back into town from the diggings.
The four-man police force was helpless. The major
telegraphed to Sacramento for the National Guard; in
the interim, he deputized every townsman he could
find, among them Elvin and Pop Schermerhorn.
Elvin worked until he was exhausted,
herding the mob into the streets and through the town
as rapidly as they would move; and still there was
no relief, and the number in the throng increased by
the minute. Newsreel trucks, television units,
press cars twisted among the vehicles heading for
the desert. Regularly, heavy duty trucks brought
tons of gold back from the diggings and deposited
them at the bank until the aisles overflowed and the
precious metal sifted through the windows forming
little pyramids in the street. By noon Treasury
men flew in from Washington. They circled the
diggings and landed to inspect the quality of the
gold hoard at the bank.
Fifteen minutes later a rumor filtered
among the deputies: the Treasury men estimated
that the San Benedicto strike would yield upwards of
two or three hundred thousand times the known gold
supply of the world. When the San Benedicto
News came out in mid-afternoon, it headlined the
first shock of the economic disaster.
World currencies were collapsing;
three nations were already bankrupt; international
trade was grinding to a standstill, with no medium
of exchange; retail prices in the United States had
started to skyrocket, in the wake of rising stock
market quotations. And still the procession of
dump trucks brought the tons of gold back from the
desert. When the bank overflowed the dry goods
store was commandeered as an emergency depository,
and later the Five-and-Ten and the sprawling basement
of Montgomery Ward’s.
When the first contingent of National
Guardsmen marched into San Benedicto, it was obviously
too small to police the mob. The press estimated
that a quarter of a million people were moving into
the valley every hour. More Guard units were
summoned and ultimately, at the Governor’s request,
two regiments of the regular army were dispatched to
San Benedicto, along with a Tank Corps and ten thousand
Marines from Camp Pendleton.
It was nightfall before the deputies
were relieved. Tired and dirty, Elvin and Pop
Schermerhorn rode back to the ranch on a prospector’s
truck. From the lawn they looked across Schermerhorn’s
ploughed fields at the desert, teeming with mobs of
men and bright in the glare of countless searchlights.
Mrs. Schermerhorn met them on the porch. She
clung to her husband’s arms, trembling.
“I’m so glad you’re
back safely!” she whispered. “They’ve
been moving closer all day.” She nodded
toward the desert. “Like ants, trampling
and destroying everything that gets in their way.”
Pop Schermerhorn clenched his fists.
“If they’d broken in here, I’d have ”
“If it hadn’t been for
the twins, I don’t know what might have happened.
They got their class over here, the whole tenth grade.
All day long they’ve been patrolling our fences,
without even stopping long enough to eat. They’re
all out in the workshop now; they’ve made it
a kind of headquarters.”
The three of them went into the living
room. Pop Schermerhorn and Elvin dropped wearily
on a couch, while Mrs. Schermerhorn poured stiff drinks
for both of them. The radio was playing, a smoothly
sweet dance orchestra from San Francisco. But
the music faded abruptly, and an excited newscaster
interrupted.
“It’s been like this all
day,” Mrs. Schermerhorn said. She looked
up nervously as the side door opened and the twins
came in.
“We just wanted some more copper
wire, Mom, for the thing we’re making,”
Donald said, but he hesitated when he heard the news
broadcast. Both twins dropped silently on the
arms of an overstuffed chair and listened.
The bulletin was brief; it reviewed
the growing chaos among the foreign exchanges, the
expanding list of bankruptcies. Two European nations,
driven to internal disaster, had gone to war; already
the big powers were choosing sides, framing ultimatums.
War seemed to be the one universal panacea for all
things. In New York stores had started to quote
new dollar prices every hour, although purchases made
in silver were still relatively stable at the old
value. The grating voice concluded, “The
first estimates of today’s yield from the San
Benedicto field place it in the neighborhood of seventy-thousand
tons; mining experts predict that tomorrow the figure
may be tripled.” As the music came on again,
Donald got up and snapped off the radio.
“The economy of the world’s
being wrecked, isn’t it?” he asked.
“By too much gold.”
“I don’t understand,”
Pop Schermerhorn answered, shaking his head.
“Gold’s valuable; we need it; it makes
us rich. But now, when we have all we want ”
“The trouble is, it has no use,”
David said. “Governments buy it and bury
it. If gold becomes as plentiful as iron ore,
we still can’t do much with it. You can’t
make skyscrapers or sewer pipes out of gold; it’s
too soft.”
“The government ought to clear
out the field and stop the mining,” Donald suggested.
“That might help.”
“Not as long as the world knows
the gold is still here,” Elvin answered.
He studied the twins carefully; their comment on the
economy seemed mature for tenth graders. Suddenly
Elvin’s weary mind began to piece together a
vague kind of understanding, when he remembered the
transformation of the Bunsen burner to gold. Beyond
his shadowy comprehension loomed the vista of a grandiose
dream of how he could use the situation for his own
profit. It was intoxicating, like reaching out
for the stars and finding them within his grasp.
“It’s all crazy!”
David cried. “We don’t really use
gold, anyway, in our economy. Why can’t
we just forget it, and go on using dollars the way
we used to?”
“Because people are fools,” Elvin said.
“Or, perhaps, just children,”
David replied. He stood up, stretching, so that
his muscles rippled beneath his plaid shirt. “Well,
we better get that wire, Don, and go back to work.”
After the twins had left, Elvin went
up to his room to bathe. His mind skipped pleasantly
over the delightful and limitless possibilities of
his new understanding. The whole thing, of course,
hinged on his approach. But, after all, that
shouldn’t be hard; they were still children
emotionally. Five years of teaching had demonstrated,
to his satisfaction, that he could handle any adolescent.
He began to dress. The clothes
he had worn that day were streaked and torn.
He took his second suit out of the closet. As
he hung the coat over the back of his desk chair,
he heard metal strike against the wood. It was
the coat he had worn on Friday night, when he found
the rocket; in the pocket was the strip of metal that
had been sealed over the cylinder of colored spheres.
He held it in his hand again.
It was the first time the full surface of the metal
had touched his skin. As he had before, he felt
the sensation of jumbled words flooding his mind,
but now the feeling was more intense. He could
not put the metal down. Instead he dropped into
his desk chair and his eyes were drawn irresistibly
to the pattern of tiny, translucent globes that dotted
the surface of the metal. The heat of his body
produced a chemical reaction; one by one the little
globes exploded.
Pictures filled Elvin’s mind,
of cities, machines, towering stacks of books.
These dissolved, and he saw planets whirling on the
black emptiness of space around the glowing disk of
a red sun. There was a cataclysmic splatter of
light as the sun exploded, and slashing flame shot
out to destroy its circling planets. That picture,
too, disappeared and he was staring at a gray nothingness
while an emotional voice spoke to him deep within
his brain.
“To the intelligent life
form, on the Third Planet, System K, Greetings from
the dying world of Dyran. You have located our
rocket from the hypnotichord built into the fins,
and, by opening it, you have demonstrated a condition
of rationality that we are able to help. We speak
to you now through hypnotic pictures which you are
translating into the symbology of your own society.
Our astronomers predict that our planetary system
will shortly be destroyed, because our sun is dying.
It is useless for us to try to escape, for no world
that we can find within the limits of our telescope
has the particular combination of atmospheric gases
which we need in order to live. The only sky-body
that we have ever studied that gives any indication
of higher life forms is yours. To you, then,
we send the substance of our knowledge, the laws and
principles that we have developed over a period of
two million years since our recorded history began.
We could have sent our machines, our libraries of
records, yet the chance that you would not comprehend
them alone is too great. Instead we send our
learning capsules, which we use in the instruction
of our young. Break the container which is sealed
into this rocket and consume one of the colored spheres.
It is, basically, a stimulant to the cerebral cortex
of any reasoning animal which already has a memory
of the past and a concept of the future. Long
ago we discovered that, unaided, the mind will function
with only a small portion of its specialized cells.
This stimulant forces conscious activity upon all
parts of the cortex; in the process of stimulation,
your brain will receive the full knowledge of basic
principles which we ourselves have developed.
We send you fifty of these only, but it will be enough.
You have not, on your planet, the material with which
to make additional capsules for your people, but you
will not need them. The fifty who learn from
these will become teachers for the rest. Carry
on for us the culture that we have made on the dying
world of Dyran.”
The gray mist faded and Elvin stood
up. He felt refreshed, alert; his mind bubbled
again with schemes. He looked at the bottle of
colored spheres still standing on his desk, and he
knew they were no more than bubble gum or candy.
On Friday night, while he telephoned, the tenth graders
at the Schermerhorn party had started their bubble
gum contest, but instead of gum they had by accident
absorbed the accumulated knowledge of Dyran, a culture
more than three hundred times as old as the earth’s!
It was overwhelmingly clear what had
happened after that. Thirty adolescents, suddenly
possessing more knowledge than the world had ever
known, had run riot, playing with hypnotism, the transmutation
of matter, the Law of Degravitation, the fourth dimensional
transposition of whole city blocks. Within two
days their energetic curiosity, their adolescent love
of excitement and experiment, had thrown the world
into crisis. By this time, Elvin concluded, they
would be terrified by a feeling of immense guilt,
ready to be told what to do to make amends.
It was up to him to be the one who
did the telling. If, at the same time, he could
get his hands on one of the learning capsules the
prospect was so dazzling it left him breathless.
He slipped out to the boys’
workshop back of the garage. When he knocked
on the door, Donald opened it two inches and quickly
tried to close it again. But Elvin thrust his
hand over the latch.
“No, Donald,” he said
sternly. “This time you don’t get
away with it. You see, I know what happened when
you ate the spheres.”
The door creaked open. Elvin
walked into the workshop, where all thirty of the
tenth graders were gathered around the littered work
table. The rocket was there, and they were studying
the tiny motor. In a corner was a hastily constructed
forge; three girls were working with it, turning out
curved strips of metal, which a boy was machining on
the metal lathe. In the center of the shop was
a tall, gleaming bar of metal, surrounded by a network
of wires and fastened to a wooden base made from an
orange crate.
“You’re cooking up some
more surprises for us?” Elvin asked.
“No,” Donald replied solemnly. “We’re
ashamed of ”
“As, indeed, you should be.”
“We’re doing our best
to put everything back the way it was,” Mabel
Travis said. “Honestly, Mr. Elvin.”
“It won’t help much; the damage is already
done.”
“But it can be undone. We’ve already
fixed up part of it.”
“Yes,” David Schermerhorn
cut in anxiously. “When Don and I came back
this morning, the first thing we did was bring back
the bank. Our machine’s kind of crude,
Mr. Elvin, so we couldn’t get it right at first.
I guess we picked up a castle or something in between;
but that’s all right, now. And the gold well,
we’re going to turn it back to gravel again
tonight.” He gestured toward the bar of
metal.
“We can work from the edge of
our field,” David pointed out. “The
whole desert will change at once, the way it did last
night.”
“And what will you do with all the people on
it?”
“It won’t hurt them.”
“But when they find their gold
is gravel, you’ll have a major catastrophe on
your hands.”
Marilyn bit her lip. “That’s
why we haven’t done anything yet. We don’t
want anybody to get hurt but ”
“So you’ve considered
that at last.” The more Elvin rubbed in
the guilt, he reasoned, the more secure he would make
himself.
“We could just transpose the
whole area,” Charles suggested. “We’ve
considered that, too. Maybe in pieces, Mr. Elvin.
You know, an acre or two to Australia, another to
Germany, another to England. That couldn’t
cause much more than local riots.”
“But the men would be mighty uncomfortable for
a while.”
“The only trouble is, our machines
are so crude; we’ve had to build them out of
scraps. And something could go wrong. We
might try to send some of the mob to China, and end
up putting them in the Pacific, or maybe back in time.”
“You’ve done enough tampering,”
Elvin declared. “I won’t help you
at all, unless you promise to leave everything as
it is. You have to put yourselves in a position
to help the world, not destroy it.”
Elvin had injected just the right
tone of nobility into his voice. The thirty adolescents
consulted together in whispers. Then David asked,
“What do you want us to do, Mr. Elvin?”
“Let me act as your representative.
I’ll go to Washington and talk to responsible
men in the government; I’ll try to see the president
himself. We should set up a scientific foundation
for you, where you’ll have the equipment you
need and where your experiments won’t do the
rest of us any harm. But, if I’m to convince
anybody, I’m going to have to do some tall talking.
If you had one of the capsules left ”
“No, Mr. Elvin; they’re
all gone.” David was not looking at him,
and Elvin knew he was lying; but this was not the
occasion to make an issue of it. Above everything
else, he had to see to it that they had complete faith
in his motives.
“Then one of your machines,”
he suggested. “I have to make them understand
I’m not a crank.”
“That sounds sensible.
Which one, Mr. Elvin? The Degravitational Unit
is the smallest, and it would do the least harm if ”
David looked away again. “ if it
got out of your hands.”
“It isn’t sensational
enough. I rather wanted to show them this thing
you used to transpose the bank and a square of jungle.”
“Oh, no!” Marilyn broke in. “We
couldn’t ”
“Why that, Mr. Elvin?”
“I’ve already told you.
It’s the sort of thing that would attract the
attention of the important officials immediately, because
it could be converted so readily to a weapon of inestimable
value.”
There was a long silence, while the
thirty youngsters looked from one to the other.
It lengthened. Elvin felt a creeping edge of fear.
David spoke at last,
“I think you’re right,
Mr. Elvin. We could show the world how to build
a society adjusted to the needs of man; we could develop
techniques for wiping out disease and mental disorders;
we could show you how to conserve our resources, how
to build material things for the mutual happiness
of all people; how to create instead of destroying.
But of course you’re right. The only thing
that would really interest any of us would be a new
weapon, wouldn’t it? All right; we’ll
give it to you.”
Marilyn sprang up. “But, David ”
“I know what I’m doing!”
he snapped at her in a tense whisper. Turning
back to Elvin he added smoothly, “But we’ll
want something from you first, Mr. Elvin.”
“Anything, my boy; anything
to promote the welfare of mankind. But no more
of your tricks, mind.”
“This is far from a trick, Mr. Elvin.”
“So long as that’s understood ”
“We’re working on a machine a
new one. We have everything we need except tungsten.
They use that in building television sets, among other
things. I want you to drive down to one of the
plants in Los Angeles and get us a pound of tungsten.
They won’t sell it to you; you’ll have
to steal it.”
“Now, David! Only a thick-skulled
schoolboy would take such an unsocial attitude!
I’m a teacher, a responsible citizen, proud ”
“Do you want the machine for transposing matter?”
“Yes; for the good of the nation. But ”
“Then you’ll have to take
this risk. We’ll give you a Degravitational
Unit. That’ll help you get away. When
you bring us the tungsten, we’ll deliver the
transportation machine.”
Elvin made the drive to Los Angeles
in record time. The highway was jammed with traffic,
but all of it was moving in the opposite direction,
toward San Benedicto. He refused to think of the
consequences if he were caught. The glittering
dream was still blazing on the horizon of his mind.
If they refused him the learning capsule, it was unfortunate,
but there was nothing he could do about it. The
important machine was the one that transposed matter
through time. With that one device alone, Elvin
could sway the world. Placed in the scales against
such a reward, the moral issue of theft counted not
at all.
Los Angeles whirled chaotically in
the monetary crisis. The streets were jammed
with people, buying everything they could before prices
jumped again. In the confusion, Elvin had no
difficulty breaking into a television plant.
He didn’t trip a burglar alarm until he was leaving
the factory, but the Degravitational Unit made his
escape easy. Within four hours he was back in
San Benedicto. He hurried to the workshop.
But when he pounded on the door, there was no response.
He tried the latch and the door swung open.
The room was empty, but on the table
was a large envelope addressed to him. A thin
thread of wire was fastened to it; as he picked it
up, the wire broke and somewhere in the distance a
motor began to hum.
“Dear Mr. Elvin,” he read.
“It was unkind of us to play another trick on
you, but we’re sure you’ll be clever enough
to steal the tungsten without getting caught.
When you came to talk to us, we realized that the
conclusion we had reached was right. Children adolescent
minds have wrecked our world. You know
all about that, Mr. Elvin; teachers always do.
And you’ve told us so often in class about the
unstable emotions of adolescents, their tantrums, their
unpredictability, their unsocial behavior, their egocentricity
and all the rest. We’d like to help, but
there isn’t much we can do, not really; you
just want the machines we know how to make, not the
ideas we’ve learned. We grew up, you see,
on the day we turned the desert to gold. We found
out what happens when you give children dangerous toys
to play with.
“We made our mistake, and we
know how to straighten it out. We’ve only
waited for you to read this so that you would understand,
at least for a moment. We have isolated ourselves
in suspended time; we’re right here in the workshop
with you, but you can’t see us, naturally, because
we started standing still in time more than an hour
ago. When you opened your envelope, you tripped
the motor of a matter transposition machine which
will throw all time backward to last Friday night.
None of this will have happened then. That should
straighten everything out, don’t you think?
“You’ll find the rocket
again, and you’ll open it, just as you did before.
But this time there’ll be only a jar of bubble
gum inside, because we’ve already consumed the
learning capsules. There won’t be any memory
left for anyone except ours. We’ve
learned how to work with a planet of adolescents.
We think we can help you mature in spite of yourselves;
but this time no one will ever know how it is being
done.”
Elvin looked up, but before the anger
and frustration could crystalize in his mind, the
yellow lamp dimmed, the walls of the workshop faded
and vanished. He fought for a moment against
the blackness rising in his mind. The light paled
and paled and finally it was nothing more than a red
streak in the sky.
It moved closer and he saw that it
was a falling object followed by a long plume of red
flame. It flashed momentarily overhead and Elvin
heard a dull thud as it fell in a field beyond the
ranch house. He sprang up from the couch and
moved off in the darkness. It had been a meteorite,
of course; if it had survived the friction of the atmosphere,
it would make an interesting exhibit for the science
classroom....