<h2>XI</h2>
<p class="cap">THE Stretts' fuel-supply
line had been cut long
since. Many Strett cargo-carriers
had been destroyed.
The enemy would of course
have a very heavy reserve of
fuel on hand. But there was
no way of knowing how
large it was, how many warships
it could supply, or how
long it would last.</p>
<p>Two facts were, however,
unquestionable. First, the
Stretts were building a fleet
that in their minds would be
invincible. Second, they
would attack Ardane as soon
as that fleet could be made
ready. The unanswerable
question was: how long
would that take?</p>
<p>"So we want to get every
ship we have. How many?
Five thousand? Ten? Fifteen?
We want them converted
to maximum possible power
as soon as we possibly
can," Sawtelle said. "And I
want to get out there with
my boys to handle things."</p>
<p>"You aren't going to. Neither
you nor your boys
are expendable. Particularly
you." Jaw hard-set, Hilton
studied the situation for
minutes. "No. What we'll do
is take your Oman, Kedy.
We'll re-set the Guide to
drive into him everything
you and the military Masters
ever knew about arms, armament,
strategy, tactics and so
on. And we'll add everything
I know of coordination, synthesis,
and perception. That
ought to make him at least
a junior-grade military genius."</p>
<p>"You can play <i>that</i> in
spades. I wish you could do
it to me."</p>
<p>"I can—if you'll take
the full Oman transformation.
Nothing else can stand
the punishment."</p>
<p>"I know. No, I don't want
to be a genius that badly."</p>
<p>"Check. And we'll take the
resultant Kedy and make
nine duplicates of him. Each
one will learn from and profit
by the mistakes made by
preceding numbers and will
assume command the instant
his preceding number is
killed."</p>
<p>"Oh, you expect, then...?"</p>
<p>"Expect? No. I know it
damn well, and so do you.
That's why we Ardans will
all stay aground. Why the
Kedys' first job will be to
make the heavy stuff in and
around Ardane as heavy as it
can be made. Why it'll all be
on twenty-four-hour alert.
Then they can put as
many thousands of Omans as
you please to work at modernizing
all the Oman ships
you want and doing anything
else you say. Check?"</p>
<p>Sawtelle thought for a
couple of minutes. "A few
details, is all. But that can be
ironed out as we go along."</p>
<p>Both men worked then, almost
unremittingly for six
solid days; at the end of
which time both drew tremendous
sighs of relief.
They had done everything
possible for them to do. The
defense of Ardvor was now
rolling at fullest speed toward
its gigantic objective.</p>
<p>Then captain and director,
in two Oman ships with fifty
men and a thousand Omans,
leaped the world-girdling
ocean to the mining operation
of the Stretts. There
they found business strictly
as usual. The strippers still
stripped; the mining mechs
still roared and snarled their
inchwise ways along their
geometrically perfect terraces;
the little carriers still
skittered busily between the
various miners and the storage
silos. The fact that there
was enough concentrate on
hand to last a world for a
hundred years made no difference
at all to these automatics;
a crew of erector-mechs
was building new silos
as fast as existing ones were
being filled.</p>
<p>Since the men now understood
everything that was going
on, it was a simple matter
for them to stop the whole
Strett operation in its tracks.
Then every man and every
Oman leaped to his assigned
job. Three days later, all the
mechs went back to work.
Now, however, they were
working for the Ardans.</p>
<p>The miners, instead of
concentrate, now emitted
vastly larger streams of
Navy-Standard pelleted uranexite.
The carriers, instead
of one-gallon cans, carried
five-ton drums. The silos
were immensely larger—thirty
feet in diameter and
towering two hundred feet
into the air. The silos were
not, however, being used as
yet. One of the two Oman
ships had been converted into
a fuel-tanker and its yawning
holds were being filled first.</p>
<p>The <i>Orion</i> went back to
Ardane and an eight-day wait
began. For the first time in
over seven months Hilton
found time actually to loaf;
and he and Temple, lolling
on the beach or hiking in the
mountains, enjoyed themselves
and each other to the
full.</p>
<p>All too soon, however, the
heavily laden tanker appeared
in the sky over Ardane.
The <i>Orion</i> joined it;
and the two ships slipped into
sub-space for Earth.</p>
<hr style='width: 25%;' />
<p class="cap">THREE days out, Hilton
used his sense of perception
to release the thought-controlled
blocks that had
been holding all the controls
of the <i>Perseus</i> in neutral. He
informed her officers—by releasing
a public-address tape—that
they were now free to
return to Terra.</p>
<p>Three days later, one day
short of Sol, Sawtelle got
Five-Jet Admiral Gordon's
office on the sub-space radio.
An officious underling tried
to block him, of course.</p>
<p>"Shut up, Perkins, and listen,"
Sawtelle said, bruskly.
"Tell Gordon I'm bringing in
one hundred twenty thousand
two hundred forty-five metric
tons of pelleted uranexite.
And if he isn't on this
beam in sixty seconds he'll
never get a gram of it."</p>
<p>The admiral, outraged almost
to the point of apoplexy,
came in. "Sawtelle, report
yourself for court-martial
at ..."</p>
<p>"Keep still, Gordon," the
captain snapped. In sheer astonishment
old Five-Jets
obeyed. "I am no longer Terran
Navy; no longer subject
to your orders. As a matter
of cold fact, I am no longer
human. For reasons which I
will explain later to the full
Advisory Board, some of the
personnel of Project Theta
Orionis underwent transformation
into a form of life
able to live in an environment
of radioactivity so intense as
to kill any human being in
ten seconds. Under certain
conditions we will supply,
free of charge, FOB Terra
or Luna, all the uranexite the
Solar System can use. The
conditions are these," and he
gave them. "Do you accept
these conditions or not?"</p>
<p>"I ... I would vote to accept
them, Captain. But that
weight! One hundred twenty
thousand <i>metric tons</i>—incredible!
Are you <i>sure</i> of
that figure?"</p>
<p>"Definitely. And that is
minimum. The error is plus,
not minus."</p>
<p>"This crippling power-shortage
would really be
over?" For the first time
since Sawtelle had known
him, Gordon showed that he
was not quite solid Navy
brass.</p>
<p>"It's over. Definitely. For
good."</p>
<p>"I'd not only agree; I'd
raise you a monument. While
I can't speak for the Board,
I'm sure they'll agree."</p>
<p>"So am I. In any event,
your cooperation is all that's
required for this first load."
The chips had vanished from
Sawtelle's shoulders. "Where
do you want it, Admiral?
Aristarchus or White
Sands?"</p>
<p>"White Sands, please.
While there may be some delay
in releasing it to industry ..."</p>
<p>"While they figure out
how much they can tax it?"
Sawtelle asked, sardonically.</p>
<p>"Well, if they don't tax it
it'll be the first thing in history
that isn't. Have you any
objections to releasing all this
to the press?"</p>
<p>"None at all. The harder
they hit it and the wider they
spread it, the better. Will you
have this beam switched to
Astrogation, please?"</p>
<p>"Of course. And thanks,
Captain. I'll see you at White
Sands."</p>
<p>Then, as the now positively
glowing Gordon faded away,
Sawtelle turned to his own
staff. "Fenway—Snowden—take
over. Better double-check
micro-timing with Astro.
Put us into a twenty-four-hour
orbit over White
Sands and hold us there. We
won't go down. Let the load
down on remote, wherever
they want it."</p>
<hr style='width: 25%;' />
<p class="cap">THE arrival of the Ardvorian
superdreadnought <i>Orion</i>
and the <i>UC-1</i> (Uranexite
Carrier Number One) was
one of the most sensational
events old Earth had ever
known. Air and space craft
went clear out to Emergence
Volume Ninety to meet them.
By the time the <i>UC-1</i> was
coming in on its remote-controlled
landing spiral the
press of small ships was so
great that all the police forces
available were in a lather
trying to control it.</p>
<p>This was exactly what Hilton
had wanted. It made possible
the completely unobserved
launching of several
dozen small craft from the
<i>Orion</i> herself.</p>
<p>One of these made a very
high and very fast flight to
Chicago. With all due formality
and under the aegis of
a perfectly authentic Registry
Number it landed on
O'Hare Field. Eleven deeply
tanned young men emerged
from it and made their way
to a taxi stand, where each
engaged a separate vehicle.</p>
<p>Sam Bryant stepped into
his cab, gave the driver a
number on Oakwood Avenue
in Des Plaines, and settled
back to scan. He was lucky.
He would have gone anywhere
she was, of course, but
the way things were, he could
give her a little warning to
soften the shock. She had
taken the baby out for an airing
down River Road, and
was on her way back. By having
the taxi kill ten minutes
or so he could arrive just after
she did. Wherefore he
stopped the cab at a public
communications booth and
dialed his home.</p>
<p>"Mrs. Bryant is not at
home, but she will return at
fifteen thirty," the instrument
said, crisply. "Would
you care to record a message
for her?"</p>
<p>He punched the RECORD
button. "This is Sam, Dolly
baby. I'm right behind you.
Turn around, why don't you,
and tell your ever-lovin' star-hoppin'
husband hello?"</p>
<p>The taxi pulled up at the
curb just as Doris closed the
front door; and Sam, after
handing the driver a five-dollar
bill, ran up the walk.</p>
<p>He waited just outside the
door, key in hand, while she
lowered the stroller handle,
took off her hat and by long-established
habit reached out
to flip the communicator's
switch. At the first word,
however, she stiffened rigidly—froze
solid.</p>
<p>Smiling, he opened the
door, walked in, and closed it
behind him. Nothing short of
a shotgun blast could have
taken Doris Bryant's attention
from that recorder then.</p>
<p>"That simply is not so," she
told the instrument firmly,
with both eyes resolutely
shut. "They made him stay on
the <i>Perseus</i>. He won't be in
for at least three days. This
is some cretin's idea of a
joke."</p>
<p>"Not this time, Dolly honey.
It's really me."</p>
<p>Her eyes popped open as
she whirled. "SAM!" she
shrieked, and hurled herself
at him with all the pent-up
ardor and longing of two
hundred thirty-four meticulously
counted, husbandless,
loveless days.</p>
<p>After an unknown length
of time Sam tipped her face
up by the chin, nodded at the
stroller, and said, "How about
introducing me to the little
stranger?"</p>
<p>"<i>What</i> a mother I turned
out to be! That was the first
thing I was going to rave
about, the very first thing I
saw you! Samuel Jay the
Fourth, seventy-six days old
today." And so on.</p>
<p>Eventually, however, the
proud young mother watched
the slightly apprehensive
young father carry their
first-born upstairs; where together,
they put him—still
sound asleep—to bed in his
crib. Then again they were in
each other's arms.</p>
<hr style='width: 25%;' />
<p class="cap">SOME time later, she twisted
around in the circle of
his arm and tried to dig her
fingers into the muscles of
his back. She then attacked
his biceps and, leaning backward,
eyed him intently.</p>
<p>"You're you, I know, but
you're different. No athlete
or any laborer could ever
possibly get the muscles you
have all over. To say nothing
of a space officer on duty.
And I know it isn't any kind
of a disease. You've been acting
all the time as though I
were fragile, made out of
glass or something—as
though you were afraid of
breaking me in two. So—what
is it, sweetheart?"</p>
<p>"I've been trying to figure
out an easy way of telling
you, but there isn't any. I am
different. I'm a hundred
times as strong as any man
ever was. Look." He upended
a chair, took one heavy hardwood
leg between finger and
thumb and made what looked
like a gentle effort to bend
it. The leg broke with a pistol-sharp
report and Doris
leaped backward in surprise.
"So you're right. I <i>am</i> afraid,
not only of breaking you in
two, but killing you. And if I
break any of your ribs or
arms or legs I'll never forgive
myself. So if I let myself go
for a second—I don't think I
will, but I might—don't wait
until you're really hurt to
start screaming. Promise?"</p>
<p>"I promise." Her eyes went
wide. "But <i>tell</i> me!"</p>
<p>He told her. She was in
turn surprised, amazed, apprehensive,
frightened and
finally eager; and she became
more and more eager
right up to the end.</p>
<p>"You mean that we ... that
I'll stay just as I am—for
thousands of <i>years</i>?"</p>
<p>"Just as you are. Or different,
if you like. If you really
mean any of this yelling
you've been doing about being
too big in the hips—I
think you're exactly right,
myself—you can rebuild
yourself any way you please.
Or change your shape every
hour on the hour. But you
haven't accepted my invitation
yet."</p>
<p>"Don't be silly." She went
into his arms again and nibbled
on his left ear. "I'd go
anywhere with you, of course,
any time, but <i>this</i>—but you're
positively <i>sure</i> Sammy Small
will be all right?"</p>
<p>"Positively sure."</p>
<p>"Okay, I'll call mother...."
Her face fell. "I <i>can't</i> tell her
that we'll never see them
again and that we'll live ..."</p>
<p>"You don't need to. She
and Pop—Fern and Sally,
too, and their boy-friends—are
on the list. Not this time,
but in a month or so, probably."</p>
<p>Doris brightened like a
sunburst. "And your folks,
too, of course?" she asked.</p>
<p>"Yes, all the close ones."</p>
<p>"Marvelous! How soon are
we leaving?"</p>
<hr style='width: 25%;' />
<p class="cap">AT six o'clock next morning,
two hundred thirty-five
days after leaving Earth,
Hilton and Sawtelle set out
to make the Ardans' official
call upon Terra's Advisory
Board. Both were wearing
prodigiously heavy lead armor,
the inside of which was
furiously radioactive. They
did not need it, of course. But
it would make all Ardans
monstrous in Terran eyes
and would conceal the fact
that any other Ardans were
landing.</p>
<p>Their gig was met at the
spaceport; not by a limousine,
but by a five-ton truck,
into which they were loaded
one at a time by a hydraulic
lift. Cameras clicked, reporters
scurried, and tri-di scanners
whirred. One of those
scanners, both men knew,
was reporting directly and
only to the Advisory Board—which,
of course, never
took anything either for
granted or at its face value.</p>
<p>Their first stop was at a
truck-scale, where each visitor
was weighed. Hilton tipped
the beam at four thousand six
hundred fifteen pounds;
Sawtelle, a smaller man,
weighed in at four thousand
one hundred ninety. Thence
to the Radiation Laboratory,
where it was ascertained and
reported that the armor did
not leak—which was reasonable
enough, since each was
lined with Masters' plastics.</p>
<p>Then into lead-lined testing
cells, where each opened
his face-plate briefly to a
sensing element. Whereupon
the indicating needles of two
meters in the main laboratory
went enthusiastically through
the full range of red and
held unwaveringly against
their stops.</p>
<p>Both Ardans felt the wave
of shocked, astonished, almost
unbelieving consternation
that swept through the
observing scientists and, in
slightly lesser measure (because
they knew less about
radiation) through the Advisory
Board itself in a big
room halfway across town.
And from the Radiation Laboratory
they were taken, via
truck and freight elevator, to
the Office of the Commandant,
where the Board was sitting.</p>
<p>The story, which had been
sent in to the Board the day
before on a scrambled beam,
was one upon which the Ardans
had labored for days.
Many facts could be withheld.
However, every man
aboard the <i>Perseus</i> would
agree on some things. Indeed,
the Earthship's communications
officers had undoubtedly
radioed in already about
longevity and perfect health
and Oman service and many
other matters. Hence all such
things would have to be admitted
and countered.</p>
<p>Thus the report, while it
was air-tight, perfectly logical,
perfectly consistent, and
apparently complete, did not
please the Board at all. It
wasn't intended to.</p>
<hr style='width: 25%;' />
<p class="cap">"WE cannot and do not
approve of such unwarranted
favoritism," the
Chairman of the Board said.
"Longevity has always been
man's prime goal. Every human
being has the inalienable
right to ..."</p>
<p>"Flapdoodle!" Hilton snorted.
"This is not being broadcast
and this room is proofed,
so please climb down off your
soapbox. You don't need to
talk like a politician here.
Didn't you read paragraph
12-A-2, one of the many
marked 'Top Secret'?"</p>
<p>"Of course. But we do not
understand how purely mental
qualities can possibly have
any effect upon purely physical
transformations. Thus it
does not seem reasonable that
any except rigorously
screened personnel would die
in the process. That is, of
course, unless you contemplate
deliberate, cold-blooded
murder."</p>
<p>That stopped Hilton in his
tracks, for it was too close for
comfort to the truth. But it
did not hold the captain for
an instant. He was used to
death, in many of its grisliest
forms.</p>
<p>"There are a lot of things
no Terran ever will understand,"
Sawtelle replied instantly.
"Reasonable, or not,
that's exactly what will happen.
And, reasonable or not,
it'll be suicide, not murder.
There isn't a thing that either
Hilton or I can do about it."</p>
<p>Hilton broke the ensuing
silence. "You can say with
equal truth that every human
being has the <i>right</i> to run a
four-minute mile or to compose
a great symphony. It
isn't a matter of right at all,
but of ability. In this case the
mental qualities are even
more necessary than the
physical. You as a Board did
a very fine job of selecting
the BuSci personnel for Project
Theta Orionis. Almost
eighty per cent of them
proved able to withstand the
Ardan conversion. On the
other hand, only a very small
percentage of the Navy personnel
did so."</p>
<p>"Your report said that the
remaining personnel of the
Project were not informed as
to the death aspect of the
transformation," Admiral
Gordon said. "Why not?"</p>
<p>"That should be self-explanatory,"
Hilton said, flatly.
"They are still human and
still Terrans. We did not and
will not encroach upon either
the duties or the privileges of
Terra's Advisory Board.
What you tell all Terrans,
and how much, and how, must
be decided by yourselves.
This also applies, of course,
to the other 'Top Secret'
paragraphs of the report,
none of which are known to
any Terran outside the
Board."</p>
<p>"But you haven't said anything
about the method of selection,"
another Advisor
complained. "Why, that will
take all the psychologists of
the world, working full time;
continuously."</p>
<p>"We said we would do the
selecting. We meant just
that," Hilton said, coldly.
"No one except the very few
selectees will know anything
about it. Even if it were an
unmixed blessing—which it
very definitely is <i>not</i>—do you
want all humanity thrown
into such an uproar as that
would cause? Or the quite
possible racial inferiority
complex it might set up? To
say nothing of the question
of how much of Terra's best
blood do you want to drain
off, irreversibly and permanently?
No. What we suggest
is that you paint the picture
so black, using Sawtelle and
me and what all humanity
has just seen as horrible examples,
that nobody would
take it as a gift. Make them
shun it like the plague. Hell,
I don't have to tell you what
your propaganda machines
can do."</p>
<hr style='width: 25%;' />
<p class="cap">THE Chairman of the
Board again mounted his
invisible rostrum. "Do you
mean to intimate that we are
to falsify the record?" he declaimed.
"To try to make liars
out of hundreds of eyewitnesses?
You ask us to distort
the truth, to connive at ..."</p>
<p>"We aren't asking you to
do <i>anything</i>!" Hilton
snapped. "We don't give a
damn what you do. Just study
that record, with all that it
implies. Read between the
lines. As for those on the
<i>Perseus</i>, no two of them will
tell the same story and not
one of them has even the remotest
idea of what the real
story is. I, personally, not
only did not want to become
a monster, but would have
given everything I had to
stay human. My wife felt the
same way. Neither of us
would have converted if
there'd been any other way
in God's universe of getting
the uranexite and doing some
other things that simply <i>must</i>
be done."</p>
<p>"What other things?" Gordon
demanded.</p>
<p>"You'll never know," Hilton
answered, quietly.
"Things no Terran ever will
know. We hope. Things that
would drive any Terran stark
mad. Some of them are hinted
at—as much as we dared—between
the lines of the report."</p>
<p>The report had not mentioned
the Stretts. Nor were
they to be mentioned now. If
the Ardans could stop them,
no Terran need ever know
anything about them.</p>
<p>If not, no Terran should
know anything about them
except what he would learn
for himself just before the
end. For Terra would never
be able to do anything to defend
herself against the
Stretts.</p>
<p>"Nothing whatever can
drive <i>me</i> mad," Gordon declared,
"and I want to know
all about it—right now!"</p>
<p>"You can do one of two
things, Gordon," Sawtelle
said in disgust. His sneer was
plainly visible through the
six-ply, plastic-backed lead
glass of his face-plate. "Either
shut up or accept my
personal invitation to come to
Ardvor and try to go through
the wringer. That's an invitation
to your own funeral."
Five-Jet Admiral Gordon,
torn inwardly to ribbons,
made no reply.</p>
<p>"I repeat," Hilton went on,
"we are not asking you to do
anything whatever. We are
offering to give you; free of
charge but under certain conditions,
all the power your
humanity can possibly use.
We set no limitation whatever
as to quantity and with
no foreseeable limit as to
time. The only point at issue
is whether or not you accept
the conditions. If you do not
accept them we'll leave now—and
the offer will not be repeated."</p>
<p>"And you would, I presume,
take the <i>UC-1</i> back
with you?"</p>
<p>"Of course not, sir. Terra
needs power too badly. You
are perfectly welcome to that
one load of uranexite, no
matter what is decided here."</p>
<p>"That's one way of putting
it," Gordon sneered. "But the
truth is that you know
damned well I'll blow both of
your ships out of space if you
so much as ..."</p>
<p>"Oh, chip-chop the jaw-flapping,
Gordon!" Hilton
snapped. Then, as the admiral
began to bellow orders
into his microphone, he went
on: "You want it the hard
way, eh? Watch what happens,
all of you!"</p>
<hr style='width: 25%;' />
<p class="cap">THE <i>UC-1</i> shot vertically
into the air. Through its
shallow dense layer and into
and through the stratosphere.
Earth's fleet, already on full
alert and poised to strike,
rushed to the attack. But the
carrier had reached the <i>Orion</i>
and both Ardvorian ships had
been waiting, motionless, for
a good half minute before the
Terran warships arrived and
began to blast with everything
they had.</p>
<p>"Flashlights and firecrackers,"
Sawtelle said, calmly.
"You aren't even warming up
our screens. As soon as you
quit making a damned fool of
yourself by wasting energy
that way, we'll set the <i>UC-1</i>
back down where she was
and get on with our business
here."</p>
<p>"You will order a cease-fire
at once, Admiral," the chairman
said, "or the rest of us
will, as of now, remove you
from the Board." Gordon
gritted his teeth in rage, but
gave the order.</p>
<p>"If he hasn't had enough
yet to convince him," Hilton
suggested, "he might send up
a drone. We don't want to
kill anybody, you know. One
with the heaviest screening
he's got—just to see what
happens to it."</p>
<p>"He's had enough. The rest
of us have had more than
enough. That exhibition was
not only uncalled-for and
disgusting—it was outrageous!"</p>
<p>The meeting settled down,
then, from argument to constructive
discussion, and
many topics were gone over.
Certain matters were, however,
so self-evident that they
were not even mentioned.</p>
<p>Thus, it was a self-evident
fact that no Terran could ever
visit Ardvor; for the instrument-readings
agreed with
the report's statements as to
the violence of the Ardvorian
environment, and no Terran
could possibly walk around in
two tons of lead. Conversely,
it was self-apparent to the
Terrans that no Ardan could
ever visit Earth without being
recognized instantly for
what he was. Wearing such
armor made its necessity
starkly plain. No one from
the <i>Perseus</i> could say that
any Ardan, after having lived
on the furiously radiant surface
of Ardvor, would not be
as furiously radioactive as
the laboratory's calibrated instruments
had shown Hilton
and Sawtelle actually to be.</p>
<p>Wherefore the conference
went on, quietly and cooperatively,
to its planned end.</p>
<p>One minute after the Terran
battleship <i>Perseus</i>
emerged into normal space,
the <i>Orion</i> went into sub-space
for her long trip back
to Ardvor.</p>
<hr style='width: 25%;' />
<p class="cap">THE last two days of that
seven-day trip were the
longest-seeming that either
Hilton or Sawtelle had ever
known. The sub-space radio
was on continuously and
Kedy-One reported to Sawtelle
every five minutes.
Even though Hilton knew
that the Oman commander-in-chief
was exactly as good
at perceiving as he himself
was, he found himself scanning
the thoroughly screened
Strett world forty or fifty
times an hour.</p>
<p>However, in spite of worry
and apprehension, time wore
eventlessly on. The <i>Orion</i>
emerged, went to Ardvor and
landed on Ardane Field.</p>
<p>Hilton, after greeting properly
and reporting to his
wife, went to his office.
There he found that Sandra
had everything well in hand
except for a few tapes that
only he could handle. Sawtelle
and his officers went to
the new Command Central,
where everything was rolling
smoothly and very much faster
than Sawtelle had dared
hope.</p>
<p>The Terran immigrants had
to live in the <i>Orion</i>, of
course, until conversion into
Ardans. Almost equally of
course—since the Bryant infant
was the only young baby
in the lot—Doris and her
Sammy Small were, by popular
acclaim, in the first batch
to be converted. For little
Sammy had taken the entire
feminine contingent by
storm. No Oman female had
a chance to act as nurse as
long as any of the girls were
around. Which was practically
all the time. Especially
the platinum-blonde twins;
for several months, now, Bernadine
Braden and Hermione
Felger.</p>
<p>"And you said they were so
hard-boiled," Doris said accusingly
to Sam, nodding at
the twins. On hands and
knees on the floor, head to
head with Sammy Small between
them, they were growling
deep-throated at each
other and nuzzling at the
baby, who was having the
time of his young life. "You
couldn't have been any
wronger, my sweet, if you'd
had the whole Octagon helping
you go astray. They're
just as nice as they can be,
both of them."</p>
<p>Sam shrugged and grinned.
His wife strode purposefully
across the room to the playful
pair and lifted their pretended
prey out from between
them.</p>
<p>"Quit it, you two," she directed,
swinging the baby up
and depositing him a-straddle
her left hip. "You're just
simply spoiling him rotten."</p>
<p>"You think so, Dolly? Uh-uh,
far be it from such." Bernadine
came lithely to her
feet. She glanced at her own
taut, trim abdomen; upon
which a micrometrically-precise
topographical mapping
job might have revealed an
otherwise imperceptible bulge.
"Just you wait until Junior
arrives and I'll show you
how to <i>really</i> spoil a baby.
Besides, what's the hurry?"</p>
<p>"He needs his supper. Vitamins
and minerals and hard
radiations and things, and
then he's going to bed. I don't
approve of this no-sleep business.
So run along, both of
you, until tomorrow."</p>
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