Peewee put the Mother Thing on the floor in the same position I had last seen her, then undamped her helmet and bawled.
I couldn’t get up. My legs hurt too much. And my arms. “Peewee . . . please, honey. It doesn’t do any good.”
She raised her head. “I’m all through. I won’t cry any more.”
And she didn’t.
We sat there a long time. Peewee again offered to help me out of my suit, but when we tried it, I hurt so terribly, especially my hands and my feet, that I had to ask her to stop. She looked worried. “Kip … I’m afraid you froze them.”
“Maybe. But there’s nothing to do about it now.” I winced and changed the subject. “Where did you find your suit?”
“Oh!” She looked indignant, then almost gay. “You’d never guess. Inside Jock’s suit.”
“No, I guess I wouldn’t. The Purloined Letter.’ ”
“The what?”
“Nothing. I hadn’t realized that old Wormface had a sense of humor.”
Shortly after that we had another quake, a bad one. Chandeliers would have jounced if the place had had any and the floor heaved. Peewee squealed. “Oh! That was almost as bad as the last one.”
“A lot worse, I’d say. That first little one wasn’t anything.”
“No, I mean the one while you were outside.”
“Was there one then?”
“Didn’t you feel it?”
“No.” I tried to remember. “Maybe that was when I fell off in the snow.”
“You fell off? Kip!”
“It was all right. Oscar helped me.”
There was another ground shock. I wouldn’t have minded, only it shook me up and made me hurt worse. I finally came out of the fog enough to realize that I didn’t have to hurt.
Let’s see, medicine pills were on the right and the codeine dispenser was farthest back- “Peewee? Could I trouble you for some water again?”
“Of course!”
“I’m going to take codeine. It may make me sleep. Do you mind?”
“You ought to sleep if you can. You need it.”
“I suppose so. What time is it?”
She told me and I couldn’t believe it. “You mean it’s been more than twelve hours?”
“Huh? Since what?”
“Since this started.”
“I don’t understand, Kip.” She stared at her watch. “It has been exactly an hour and a half since I found you-not quite two hours since the Mother Thing set off the bombs.”
I couldn’t believe that, either. But Peewee insisted that she was right.
The codeine made me feel much better and I was beginning to be drowsy, when Peewee said, “Kip, do you smell anything?”
I sniffed. “Something like kitchen matches?”
“That’s what I mean. I think the pressure is dropping, too. Kip … I think I had better close your helmet-if you’re going to sleep.”
“All right. You close yours, too?”
“Yes. Uh, I don’t think this place is tight any longer.”
“You may be right.” Between explosions and quakes, I didn’t see how it could be. But, while I knew what that meant, I was too weary and sick- and getting too dreamy from the drug-to worry. Now, or a month from now-what did it matter? The Mother Thing had said everything was okay.
Peewee clamped us in, we checked radios, and she sat down facing me and the Mother Thing. She didn’t say anything for a long time. Then I heard: “Peewee to Junebug-”
“I read you, Peewee.”
“Kip? It’s been fun, mostly. Hasn’t it?”
“Huh?” I glanced up, saw that the dial said I had about four hours of air left. I had had to reduce pressure twice, since we closed up, to match falling pressure in the room. “Yes, Peewee, it’s been swell. I wouldn’t have missed it for the world.”
She sighed. “I just wanted to be sure you weren’t blaming me. Now go to sleep.”
I did almost go to sleep, when I saw Peewee jump up and my phones came to life. “Kip! Something’s coming in the door!”
I came wide awake, realized what it meant. Why couldn’t they have let us be? A few hours, anyhow? “Peewee. Don’t panic. Move to the far side of the door. You’ve got your blue-light gadget?”