Anyone can make an error, but the higher
the
society ... the more disastrous the mistake!
Half an hour before, while she had
been engrossed in the current soap opera and Harry
Junior was screaming in his crib, Melinda would naturally
have slammed the front door in the little man’s
face. However, when the bell rang, she was wearing
her new Chinese red housecoat, had just lustered her
nails to a blinding scarlet, and Harry Junior was
sleeping like an angel.
Yawning, Melinda answered the door
and the little man said, beaming, “Excellent
day. I have geegaws for information.”
Melinda did not quite recoil.
He was perhaps five feet tall, with a gleaming hairless
scalp and a young-old face. He wore a plain gray
tunic, and a peddler’s tray hung from his thin
shoulders.
“Don’t want any,” Melinda stated
flatly.
“Please.” He had
great, beseeching amber eyes. “They all
say that. I haven’t much time. I must
be back at the University by noon.”
“You working your way through college?”
He brightened. “Yes.
I suppose you could call it that. Alien anthropology
major.”
Melinda softened. The initiations
those frats pulled nowadays shaving the
poor guy’s head, eating goldfish it
was criminal.
“Well?” she asked grudgingly. “What’s
in the tray?”
“Flanglers,” said the
little man eagerly. “Oscilloscopes.
Portable force-field generators. A neural distorter.”
Melinda’s face was blank. The little man
frowned. “You use them, of course?
This is a Class IV culture?” Melinda
essayed a weak shrug and the little man sighed with
relief. His eyes fled past her to the blank screen
of the TV set. “Ah, a monitor.”
He smiled. “For a moment I was afraid May
I come in?”
Melinda shrugged, opened the door.
This might be interesting, like a vacuum-cleaner salesman
who had cleaned her drapes last week for free.
And Kitty Kyle Battles Life wouldn’t be on for
almost an hour.
“My name is Porteous,”
said the little man with an eager smile. “I’m
doing a thematic on Class IV cultures.”
He whipped out a stylus, began jotting down notes.
The TV set fascinated him.
“It’s turned off right now,” Melinda
said.
Porteous’s eyes widened impossibly.
“You mean,” he whispered in horror, “that
you’re exercising Class V privileges? This
is terribly confusing. I get doors slammed in
my face, when Class Fours are supposed to have a splendid
gregarian quotient you do have atomic
power, don’t you?”
“Oh, sure,” said Melinda
uncomfortably. This wasn’t going to be much
fun.
“Space travel?” The little face was intent,
sharp.
“Well,” Melinda yawned,
looking at the blank screen, “they’ve got
Space Patrol, Space Cadet, Tales of Tomorrow ...”
“Excellent. Rocket ships
or force-fields?” Melinda blinked. “Does
your husband own one?” Melinda shook her blonde
head helplessly. “What are your economic
circumstances?”
Melinda took a deep rasping breath,
said, “Listen, mister, is this a demonstration
or a quiz program?”
“Oh, my excuse. Demonstration,
certainly. You will not mind the questions?”
“Questions?” There was
an ominous glint in Melinda’s blue eyes.
“Your delightful primitive customs,
art-forms, personal habits ”
“Look,” Melinda said,
crimsoning. “This is a respectable neighborhood,
and I’m not answering any Kinsey report, understand?”
The little man nodded, scribbling.
“Personal habits are tabu? I so regret.
The demonstration.” He waved grandly at
the tray. “Anti-grav sandals? A portable
solar converter? Apologizing for this miserable
selection, but on Capella they told me ”
He followed Melinda’s entranced gaze, selected
a tiny green vial. “This is merely a regenerative
solution. You appear to have no cuts or bruises.”
“Oh,” said Melinda nastily.
“Cures warts, cancer, grows hair, I suppose.”
Porteous brightened. “Of
course. I see you can scan. Amazing.”
He scribbled further with his stylus, glanced up,
blinked at the obvious scorn on Melinda’s face.
“Here. Try it.”
“You try it.” Now watch him squirm!
Porteous hesitated. “Would you like me
to grow an extra finger, hair ”
“Grow some hair.” Melinda tried not
to smile.
The little man unstopped the vial,
poured a shimmering green drop on his wrist, frowning.
“Must concentrate,” he
said. “Thorium base, suspended solution.
Really jolts the endocrines, complete control
... see?”
Melinda’s jaw dropped.
She stared at the tiny tuft of hair which had sprouted
on that bare wrist. She was thinking abruptly,
unhappily, about that chignon she had bought yesterday.
They had let her buy that for eight dollars when with
this stuff she could have a natural one.
“How much?” she inquired cautiously.
“A half hour of your time only,” said
Porteous.
Melinda grasped the vial firmly, settled
down on the sofa with one leg tucked carefully under
her.
“Okay, shoot. But nothing personal.”
Porteous was delighted. He asked
a multitude of questions, most of them pointless,
some naïve, and Melinda dug into her infinitesimal
fund of knowledge and gave. The little man scribbled
furiously, clucking like a gravid hen.
“You mean,” he asked in
amazement, “that you live in these primitive
huts of your own volition?”
“It’s a G.I. housing project,” Melinda
said, ashamed.
“Astonishing.” He
wrote: Feudal anachronisms and atomic power,
side by side. Class Fours periodically “rough
it” in back-to-nature movements.
Harry Junior chose that moment to
begin screaming for his lunch. Porteous sat,
trembling. “Is that a Security Alarm?”
“My son,” said Melinda
despondently, and went into the nursery.
Porteous followed, and watched the
ululating child with some trepidation. “Newborn?”
“Eighteen months,” said
Melinda stiffly, changing diapers. “He’s
cutting teeth.”
Porteous shuddered. “What
a pity. Obviously atavistic. Wouldn’t
the creche accept him? You shouldn’t have
to keep him here.”
“I keep after Harry to get a
maid, but he says we can’t afford one.”
“Manifestly insecure,”
muttered the little man, studying Harry Junior.
“Definite paranoid tendencies.”
“He was two weeks premature,”
volunteered Melinda. “He’s real sensitive.”
“I know just the thing,”
Porteous said happily. “Here.”
He dipped into the glittering litter on the tray and
handed Harry Junior a translucent prism. “A
neural distorter. We use it to train regressives
on Rigel Two. It might be of assistance.”
Melinda eyed the thing doubtfully.
Harry Junior was peering into the shifting crystal
depths with a somewhat strained expression.
“Speeds up the neural flow,”
explained the little man proudly. “Helps
tap the unused eighty per cent. The pre-symptomatic
memory is unaffected, due to automatic cerebral lapse
in case of overload. I’m afraid it won’t
do much more than cube his present IQ, and an intelligent
idiot is still an idiot, but ”
“How dare you?” Melinda’s
eyes flashed. “My son is not an idiot!
You get out of here this minute and take your things
with you.” As she reached for the prism,
Harry Junior squalled. Melinda relented.
“Here,” she said angrily, fumbling with
her purse. “How much are they?”
“Medium of exchange?”
Porteous rubbed his bald skull. “Oh, I really
shouldn’t but it’ll make such
a wonderful addendum to the chapter on malignant primitives.
What is your smallest denomination?”
“Is a dollar okay?” Melinda was hopeful.
Porteous was pleased with the picture
of George Washington. He turned the bill over
and over in his fingers, at last bowed low and formally,
apologized for any tabu violations, and left via the
front door.
“Crazy fraternities,”
muttered Melinda, turning on the TV set.
Kitty Kyle was dull that morning.
At length Melinda used some of the liquid in the green
vial on her eyelashes, was quite pleased at the results,
and hid the rest in the medicine cabinet.
Harry Junior was a model of docility
the rest of that day. While Melinda watched TV
and munched chocolates, did and re-did her hair, Harry
Junior played quietly with the crystal prism.
Toward late afternoon, he crawled
over to the bookcase, wrestled down the encyclopedia
and pawed through it, gurgling with delight. He
definitely, Melinda decided, would make a fine lawyer
someday, not a useless putterer like Big Harry, who
worked all hours overtime in that damned lab.
She scowled as Harry Junior, bored with the encyclopedia,
began reaching for one of Big Harry’s tomes on
nuclear physics. One putterer in the family was
enough! But when she tried to take the book away
from him, Harry Junior howled so violently that she
let well enough alone.
At six-thirty, Big Harry called from
the lab, with the usual despondent message that he
would not be home for supper. Melinda said a few
resigned things about cheerless dinners eaten alone,
hinted darkly what lonesome wives sometimes did for
company, and Harry said he was very sorry, but this
might be it, and Melinda hung up on him in a
temper.
Precisely fifteen minutes later, the
doorbell rang. Melinda opened the front door
and gaped. This little man could have been Porteous’s
double, except for the black metallic tunic, the glacial
gray eyes.
“Mrs. Melinda Adams?” Even the voice was
frigid.
“Y-Yes. Why ”
“Major Nord, Galactic Security.”
The little man bowed. “You were visited
early this morning by one Porteous.” He
spoke the name with a certain disgust. “He
left a neural distorter here. Correct?”
Melinda’s nod was tremulous.
Major Nord came quietly into the living room, shut
the door behind him. “My apologies, madam,
for the intrusion. Porteous mistook your world
for a Class IV culture, instead of a Class VII.
Here ” He handed her the crumpled
dollar bill. “You may check the serial
number. The distorter, please.”
Melinda shrunk limply onto the sofa.
“I don’t understand,” she said painfully.
“Was he a thief?”
“He was careless
about his spatial coordinates.” Major Nord’s
teeth showed in the faintest of smiles. “He
has been corrected. Where is it?”
“Now look,” said Melinda
with some asperity. “That thing’s
kept Harry Junior quiet all day. I bought it
in good faith, and it’s not my fault say,
have you got a warrant?”
“Madam,” said the Major
with dignity, “I dislike violating local tabus,
but must I explain the impact of a neural distorter
on a backwater culture? What if your Neanderthal
had been given atomic blasters? Where would you
have been today? Swinging through trees, no doubt.
What if your Hitler had force-fields?” He exhaled.
“Where is your son?”
In the nursery, Harry Junior was contentedly
playing with his blocks. The prism lay glinting
in the corner.
Major Nord picked it up carefully,
scrutinized Harry Junior. His voice was very
soft.
“You said he was playing with it?”
Some vestigial maternal instinct prompted
Melinda to shake her head vigorously. The little
man stared hard at Harry Junior, who began whimpering.
Trembling, Melinda scooped up Harry Junior.
“Is that all you have
to do run around frightening women and
children? Take your old distorter and get out.
Leave decent people alone!”
Major Nord frowned. If only he
could be sure. He peered stonily at Harry Junior,
murmured, “Definite egomania. It doesn’t
seem to have affected him. Strange.”
“Do you want me to scream?” Melinda demanded.
Major Nord sighed. He bowed to
Melinda, went out, closed the door, touched a tiny
stud on his tunic, and vanished.
“The manners of some people,”
Melinda said to Harry Junior. She was relieved
that the Major had not asked for the green vial.
Harry Junior also looked relieved,
although for quite a different reason.
Big Harry arrived home a little after
eleven. There were small worry creases about
his mouth and forehead, and the leaden cast of defeat
in his eyes. He went into the bedroom and Melinda
sleepily told him about the little man working his
way through college by peddling silly goods, and about
that rude cop named Nord, and Harry said that was simply
astonishing and Melinda said, “Harry, you had
a drink!”
“I had two drinks,” Harry
told her owlishly. “You married a failure,
dear. Part of the experimental model vaporized,
wooosh, just like that. On paper it looked
so good ”
Melinda had heard it all before.
She asked him to see if Harry Junior was covered,
and Big Harry went unsteadily into the nursery, sat
down by his son’s crib.
“Poor little guy,” he
mused. “Your old man’s a bum, a useless
tinker. He thought he could send Man to the stars
on a string of helium nuclei. Oh, he was smart.
Thought of everything. Auxiliary jets to kick
off the negative charge, bigger mercury vapor banks a
fine straight thrust of positive Alpha particles.”
He hiccuped, put his face in his hands.
“Didn’t you ever stop
to think that a few air molecules could defocus the
stream? Try a vacuum, stupid.”
Big Harry stood up.
“Did you say something, son?”
“Gurfle,” said Harry Junior.
Big Harry reeled into the living room like a somnambulist.
He got pencil and paper, began jotting
frantic formulae. Presently he called a cab and
raced back to the laboratory.
Melinda was dreaming about little
bald men with diamond-studded trays. They were
chasing her, they kept pelting her with rubies and
emeralds, all they wanted was to ask questions, but
she kept running, Harry Junior clasped tightly in
her arms. Now they were ringing alarm bells.
The bells kept ringing and she groaned, sat up in
bed, and seized the telephone.
“Darling.” Big Harry’s
voice shook. “I’ve got it! More
auxiliary shielding plus a vacuum. We’ll
be rich!”
“That’s just fine,”
said Melinda crossly. “You woke the baby.”
Harry Junior was sobbing bitterly
into his pillow. He was sick with disappointment.
Even the most favorable extrapolation showed it would
take him nineteen years to become master of the world.
An eternity. Nineteen years!