“Star, when I first saw you, I guessed eighteen. You turned around and I upped the ante a little. Now, looking closely and not giving you any breaks–not over twenty-five. And that is because your features seem mature. When you laugh, you’re a teen-ager; when you wheedle, or look awestruck, or suddenly delighted with a puppy or kitten or something, you’re about twelve. From the chin up, I mean; from the chin down you can’t pass for less than eighteen.”
“A buxom eighteen,” she added. “Twenty-five Earth years–by rates of growth on Earth–is right on the mark I was shooting at. The age when a woman stops growing and starts aging. Oscar, your apparent age under Long-Life is a matter of choice. Take my Uncle Joseph–the one who sometimes calls himself ‘Count Cagliostro.’ He set himself at thirty-five, because he says that anything younger is a boy. Rufo prefers to look older. He says it gets him respectful treatment, keeps him out of brawls with lounger men–and still lets him give a younger man a shock if one does pick a fight because, as you know, Rufo’s older age is mostly from chin up.”
“Or the shock he can give younger women,” I suggested.
“With Rufo one never knows. Dearest, I didn’t finish telling you. Part of it is teaching the body to repair itself. Your language lessons here–there hasn’t been a one but what a hypno-therapist was waiting to give your body a lesson through your sleeping mind, after your language lesson. Part of apparent age is cosmetic therapy–Rufo need not be bald–but more is controlled by the mind. When you decide what age you like, they can start imprinting it.”
“I’ll think about it. I don’t want to look too much older than you.”
Star looked delighted. “Thank you, dear! You see how selfish I’ve been.”
“How? I missed that point.”
She put a hand over mine. “I didn’t want you to grow old–and die! –while I stayed young.”
I blinked at her. “Gosh, lady, that was selfish of you, wasn’t it? But you could varnish me and keep me in the bedroom. Like your aunt.”
She made a face. “You’re a nasty man. She didn’t varnish them.”
“Star, I haven’t seen any of those keepsake corpses around here.”
She looked surprised. “But that’s on the planet where I was born. This universe, another star. Very pretty place. Didn’t I ever say?”
“Star, my darling, mostly you’ve never said.”
“I’m sorry. Oscar, I don’t want to hand you surprises. Ask me. Tonight. Anything.”
I considered it. One thing I had wondered about, a certain lack. Or perhaps the women of her part of the race had another rhythm. But I had been stopped by the fact that I had married a grandmother–how old? “Star, are you pregnant?”
“Why, no, dear. Oh! Do you want me to be? You want us to have children?”
I stumbled, trying to explain that I hadn’t been sure it was possible–or maybe she was. Star looked troubled. “I’m going to upset you again. I had best tell it all. Oscar, I was no more brought up to luxury than you were. A pleasant childhood, my people were ranchers. I married young and was a simple mathematics teacher, with a hobby research in conjectural and optional geometries. Magic, I mean. Three children. My husband and I got along well . . . until I was nominated. Not selected, just named for examination and possible training. He knew I was a genetic candidate when he married me–but so many millions are. It didn’t seem important.
“He wanted me to refuse. I almost did. But when I accepted, he–well, he ‘tossed my shoes.’ We do it formally there; he published a notice that I was no longer his wife.”
“He did, eh? Mind if I look him up and break his arms?”
“Dear, dear! That was many years ago and far away; he is long dead. It doesn’t matter.”
“In any case he’s dead. Your three kids–one of them is Rufo’s father? Or mother?”
“Oh, no! That was later.”
“Well?”
Star took a deep breath. “Oscar, I have about fifty children.”
That did it. Too many shocks and I guess I showed it, for Star’s face reflected deep concern. She rushed through the explanation.