It was the darnedest traffic jam I’d
ever seen in White Plains. For two blocks ahead
of me, Main Street was gutter to gutter with stalled
cars, trucks and buses.
If I hadn’t been in such a hurry
to get back to the shop, I might have paid more attention.
I might have noticed nobody was leaning on his horn.
Or that at least a quarter of the drivers were out
peering under their hoods.
But at the time it didn’t register.
I gave the tie-up a passing glance and was turning
up the side street toward Biltom Electronics Bill-Tom,
get it? when I saw Marge threading her way
to the curb. She was leading a small blonde girl
of about eight, who clutched a child-size hatbox in
her hand. Marge was hot and exasperated, but small
fry was as cool and composed as a vanilla cone.
I waited. Even flushed and disheveled,
Marge is a treat to look at. She is tall and
slender, with brown eyes that match her hair, a smile
that first crinkles around her eyes, then sneaks down
and becomes a full-fledged grin
But I’m getting off the subject.
“Honestly, Bill!” Marge
said as she saw me. “The traffic nowadays!
We’ve been tied up for fifteen minutes.
I finally decided to get off the bus and walk, even
though it is about a hundred in the shade.”
“Come along to the shop,”
I suggested. “The reception room is air-conditioned
and you can watch the world’s first baseball
game telecast in color. The Giants versus the
Dodgers, Carl Erskine pitching.”
Marge brightened. “That’ll
be more fun than shopping, won’t it, Doreen?”
she asked, looking down at the kid. “Bill,
this is Doreen. She lives across the street from
me. Her mother’s at the dentist and I said
I’d look after her for the day.”
“Hello, Doreen,” I said.
“What have you in the hatbox? Doll clothes?”
Doreen gave me a look of faint disgust.
“No,” she piped, in a high treble.
“An unhappy genii.”
“An unhappy ”
I did a double take. “Oh, an unhappy genii?
Maybe he’s unhappy because you won’t let
him out, ha ha.” Even to myself, I sounded
idiotic.
Doreen looked at me pityingly.
“It’s not a he, it’s a thing.
Elmer made it.”
I knew when I was losing, so I quit.
I hurried Marge and Doreen along toward
our little two-story building. Once we got into
the air-conditioned reception room, Marge sank down
gratefully onto the settee and I switched on the television
set with the big 24-inch tube Tom had built.
Biltom Electronics makes TV components,
computer parts, things like that. Tom Kennedy
is the brains. Me, Bill Rawlins, I do the legwork,
and tend to the business details.
“It’s uncanny the way
all those cars suddenly stopped when our bus broke
down,” Marge said as we waited for the picture
to come on. “Any day now this civilization
of ours will get so complicated a bus breaking down
someplace will bring the whole thing to a halt.
Then where will we be?”
“Elmer says silly-zation is
doomed!” Doreen put in happily.
The way she rolled the word out made me stare at her.
Marge only nodded. “That’s
what Elmer says, all right,” she agreed, a trifle
grim.
“Why does Elmer say silly-zation
is doomed?” I asked Doreen.
“Because it’s getting
hotter.” The kid gave it to me straight.
“All the ice at the North Pole is gonna melt.
The ocean is gonna rise two hundred feet. Then
everybody who doesn’t live on a hill is gonna
be drownded. That’s what Elmer says and
Elmer isn’t ever wrong.”
Doreen they called her! Why not
Cassandra? The stuff kids spout these days!
I gave her a foolish grin. I
wanted Marge to get the idea I was really a family
man at heart. “That’s very interesting,
Doreen. Now look, there’s the baseball
game. Let’s watch, shall we?”
We weren’t very late after all.
It was the top half of the second inning, the score
one to one, Erskine in trouble with two men on and
only one down. The colors were beautiful.
Marge and I were just settling back to watch when
Doreen wrinkled her nose.
“I saw that game yesterday!” she announced.
“You couldn’t have, sweetheart,”
I told her. “Because it’s only being
played today. The world’s first ball game
ever broadcast in color.”
“There was a game on Elmer’s
TV,” Doreen insisted. “The picture
was bigger and the colors prettier, too.”
“Absolutely impossible.”
I was a little sore. I hate kids who tell fibs.
“There never was a game broadcast in color before.
And, anyway, you won’t find a color tube this
big any place outside of a laboratory.”
“But it’s true, Bill.”
Marge looked at me, wide-eyed. “Elmer only
has a little seven-inch black and white set his uncle
gave him. But he’s rigged up some kind
of lens in front of it, and it projects a big color
picture on a white screen.”
I saw that she was serious. My
eyes bugged slightly. “Listen,” I
said, “who is this Elmer character? I want
to meet him!”
“He’s my cousin from South
America,” Doreen answered. “He thinks
grownups are stupid.” She turned to Marge.
“I have to go to the bathroom,” she said
primly.
“Through that door.” Marge pointed.
Doreen trotted out, clutching her hat box.
“Elmer thinks grownups are stupid?”
I howled. “Listen, how old is this character
who says silly-zation is doomed and can convert a black
and white broadcast into color?”
“He’s thirteen,”
Marge told me. I goggled at her. “Thirteen,”
she repeated. “His father is some South
American scientist. His mother died ten years
ago.”
I sat down beside her. I lit
a cigarette. My hands were shaking. “Tell
me about him. All about him.”
“Why, I don’t know very
much,” Marge said. “Last year Elmer
was sick, some tropic disease. His father sent
him up here to recuperate. Now Alice that’s
his aunt, Doreen’s mother is at her
wits’ end, he makes her so nervous.”
I lit another cigarette before I realized
I already had one. “And he invents things?
A boy genius? Young Tom Edison and all that?”
Marge frowned. “I suppose
you could say that,” she conceded. “He
has the garage full of stuff he’s made or bought
with the allowance his father sends him. And
if you come within ten feet of it without permission,
you get an electric shock right out of thin air.
But that’s only part of it. It ”
she gave a helpless gesture “it’s
Elmer’s effect on everybody. Everybody
over fifteen, that is. He sits there, a little,
dark, squinched-up kid wearing thick glasses and talking
about how climatic changes inside fifty years will
flood half the world, cause the collapse of civilization ”
“Wait a minute!” I cut
in. “Scientists seem to think that’s
possible in a few thousand years. Not fifty.”
“Elmer says fifty,” Marge
stated flatly. “From the way he talks, I
suspect he’s figured out a way to speed things
up and is going to try it some day just to see if
it works. Meanwhile he fools around out there
in the garage, sneering about the billions of dollars
spent to develop color TV. He says his lens will
turn any ordinary broadcast into color for about twenty-five
dollars. He says it’s typical of the muddled
thinking of our so-called scientists I’m
quoting now to do everything backward and
overlook fundamental principles.”
“Bro-ther!” I said.
Doreen came trotting back in then,
with her hat box. “I’m tired of that
game,” she said, giving the TV set a bored glance.
And as she said it the tube went dark. The sound
cut off.
“Damn!” I swore.
“Must be a power failure!” I grabbed the
phone and jiggled the hook. No dice. The
phone was dead, too.
“You’re funny,”
Doreen giggled. “It’s just the unhappy
genii. See?”
She flicked over the catch on the hatbox.
And the picture came back on.
The sound started up. “ swings and
misses for strike two!” The air conditioner
began to hum.
Marge and I stared. Mouths open. Wide.
“You did that, Doreen?”
I asked it very carefully. “You made the
television stop and start again?”
“The unhappy genii did,”
Doreen told me. “Like this.”
She flicked the catch back. The TV picture blacked
out. The sound stopped in the middle of a word.
The air conditioner whispered into silence.
Then she flipped the catch the other way.
“ fouls the second
ball into the screen,” the announcer said.
Picture okay. Air conditioner operating.
Everything normal except my pulse and respiration.
“Doreen, sweetheart ”
I took a step toward her “what’s
in that box? What is an unhappy genii?”
“Not unhappy.” You
know how scornful an eight-year-old can be? Well,
she was. “Unhap-pen. It makes
things unhappen. Anything that works by electracity,
it stops. Elmer calls it his unhappen genii.
Just for fun.”
“Oh, now I get it,” I
said brightly. “It makes electricity not
work unhappen. Like television sets
and air conditioners and automobiles and bus engines.”
Doreen giggled.
Marge sat bolt upright. “Doreen!
You caused that traffic jam? You and that that
gadget of Elmer’s?”
Doreen nodded. “It made
all the automobile engines stop, just like Elmer said.
Elmer’s never wrong.”
Marge looked at me. I looked at Marge.
“A field of some kind,”
I said. “A field that prevents an electric
current from flowing. Meaning no combustion motor
using an electric spark can operate. No electric
motors. No telephones. No radio or TV.”
“Is that important?” Marge asked.
“Important?” I yelled.
“Think of the possibilities just as a weapon!
You could blank out a whole nation’s transportation,
its communications, its industry ”
I got hold of myself. I smiled
my best I-love-children smile. “Doreen,”
I said, “let me look at Elmer’s unhappen
genii.”
The kid clutched the box.
“Elmer told me not to let anybody
look at it. He said he’d statuefy me if
I did. He said nobody would understand it anyway.
He said he might show it to Mr. Einstein, but not
anybody else.”
“That’s Elmer, all right,” Marge
muttered.
I found myself breathing hard.
I edged toward Doreen and put my hand on the hatbox.
“Just one quick look, Doreen,” I said.
“No one will ever know.”
She didn’t answer. Just pulled the box
away.
I pulled it back.
She pulled.
I pulled.
“Bill ” Marge
called warningly. Too late. The lid of the
hatbox came off in my hands.
There was a bright flash, the smell
of insulation burning, and the unhappen genii fell
out and scattered all over the floor.
Doreen looked smug. “Now
Elmer will be angry at you. Maybe he’ll
disintegrate you. Or paralalize you and statuefy
you. Forever.”
“He might at that, Bill,”
Marge shuddered. “I wouldn’t put anything
past him.”
I wasn’t listening. I was
scrambling after the mess of tubes, condensers and
power packs scattered over the rug. Some of them
were still wired together, but most of them had broken
loose. Elmer was certainly one heck of a sloppy
workman. Hadn’t even soldered the connections.
Just twisted the wires together.
I looked at the stuff in my hands.
It made as much sense as a radio run over by a truck.
“We’ll take it back to
Elmer,” I told Doreen, speaking very carefully.
“I’ll give him lots of money to build another.
He can come down here and use our shop. We have
lots of nice equipment he’d like.”
Doreen tossed her head. “I
don’t think he’ll wanta. He’ll
be mad at you. Anyway, Elmer is busy working
on aggravation now.”
“That’s for sure!” Marge said in
heartfelt tones.
“Aggravation, eh?” I grinned
like an idiot. “Well, well! I’ll
bet he’s good at it. But let’s go
see him right away.”
“Bill!” Marge signaled
me to one side. “Maybe you’d better
not try to see Elmer,” she whispered. “I
mean, if he can build a thing like this in his garage,
maybe he can build a disintegrator or a paralysis
ray or something. There’s no use taking
chances.”
“You read too many comics,”
I laughed it off. “He’s only a kid,
isn’t he? What do you think he is?
A superman?”
“Yes,” Marge said flatly.
“Look, Marge!” I said
in feverish excitement. “I’ve got
to talk to Elmer! I’ve got to get the rights
to that TV color lens and this electricity interruptor
and anything else he may have developed!”
Marge kept trying to protest, but
I simply grabbed her and Doreen and hustled them out
to my car. Doreen lived in a wooded, hilly section
a little north of White Plains. I made it in
ten minutes.
Marge had said Elmer worked in the
garage. I kept going up the driveway, swung sharp
around the big house and slammed on the
brakes.
Marge screamed.
We skidded to a stop with our front
end hanging over what looked like a bomb crater in
the middle of the driveway.
I swallowed my heart down again, while
I backed away fast.
We had almost plunged into a hole
forty feet across and twenty feet deep in the middle.
The hole was perfectly round, like a half section of
a grapefruit.
“What’s this?” I asked. “Where’s
the garage?”
“That’s where the garage
should be.” Marge looked dazed. “But
it’s gone!”
I took another look at that hole scooped
out with geometrical precision, and turned to Doreen.
“What did you say Elmer was working on?”
“Agg ” she
sobbed, “agg agg aggravation.”
She began to bawl in earnest. “Now he’s
gone. He’s mad. He won’t ever
come back, I betcha.”
“That’s a fact,”
I muttered. “He may not have been mad, but
he certainly was aggravated. Marge, listen!
This is a mystery. We’ve just got to let
it stay a mystery. We don’t know anything,
understand? The cops will finally decide Elmer
blew himself up, and we’ll leave it at that.
One thing I’m pretty sure about he’s
not coming back.”
So that’s how it was. Tom
Kennedy keeps trying and trying to put Elmer’s
unhappen genii back together again. And every
time he fails he takes it out on me because I didn’t
get to Elmer sooner. But you can see perfectly
well he’s way off base, trying to make out I
could have done a thing to prevent what happened.
Is it my fault if the dumb kid didn’t
know enough to take the proper precautions when he
decided to develop anti-gravitation and
got shot off, garage and all, someplace into outer
space?
What do they teach kids nowadays, anyway?
RobertArthur