With Peewee and the Mother Thing around things couldn’t be too bad. Except- “Mother Thing, I can’t move my arms and legs.”
She put a tiny, warm hand on my forehead and leaned over me until her enormous, lemur-like eyes blanked out everything else. (“You have been damaged. Now you are growing well. Do not worry.”)
When the Mother Thing tells you not to worry, you don’t. I didn’t want to do handstands anyhow; I was satisfied to look into her eyes. You could sink into them, you could have dived in and swum around. “All right, Mother Thing.” I remembered something else. “Say . . . you were frozen? Weren’t you?”
(“Yes.”)
“But- Look, when water freezes it ruptures living cells. Or so they say.”
She answered primly, (“My body would never permit that!”).
“Well-” I thought about it. “Just don’t dunk me in liquid air! I’m not built for it.”
Again her song held roguish, indulgent humor. (“We shall endeavor not to hurt you.”) She straightened up and grew a little, swaying like a willow. (“I sense Peewee.”)
There was a knock-another discrepancy; it didn’t sound like a knock on a light-weight interior door-and Peewee called out, “May I come in?” She didn’t wait (I wondered if she ever did) but came on in. The bit I could see past her looked like our upper hall; they’d done a thorough job.
(“Come in, dear.”)
“Sure, Peewee. You are in.”
“Don’t be captious.”
“Look who’s talking. Hi, kid!”
“Hi yourself.”
The Mother Thing glided away. (“Don’t stay long, Peewee. You are not to tire him.”)
“I won’t, Mother Thing.”
(” ‘Bye, dears.”)
I said, “What are the visiting hours in this ward?”
“When she says, of course.” Peewee stood facing me, fists on hips. She was really clean for the first time in our acquaintance-cheeks pink with scrubbing, hair fluffy-maybe she would be pretty, in about ten years. She was dressed as always but her clothes were fresh, all buttons present, and tears invisibly mended.
“Well,” she said, letting out her breath, “I guess you’re going to be worth keeping, after all.”
“Me? I’m in the pink. How about yourself?”
She wrinkled her nose. “A little frost nip. Nothing. But you were a mess.”
“I was?”
“I can’t use adequate language without being what Mama calls ‘unladylike.’ ”
“Oh, we wouldn’t want you to be that.”
“Don’t be sarcastic. You don’t do it well.”
“You won’t let me practice on you?”
She started to make a Peewee retort, stopped suddenly, smiled and came close. For a nervous second I thought she was going to kiss me. But she just patted the bedclothes and said solemnly, “You bet you can, Kip. You can be sarcastic, or nasty, or mean, or scold me, or anything, and I won’t let out a peep. Why, I’ll bet you could even talk back to the Mother Thing.”
I couldn’t imagine wanting to. I said, “Take it easy, Peewee. Your halo is showing.”
“I’d have one if it weren’t for you. Or flunked my test for it, more likely.”
“So? I seem to remember somebody about your size lugging me indoors almost piggy-back. How about that?”
She wriggled. “That wasn’t anything. You set the beacon. That was everything.”
“Uh, each to his own opinion. It was cold out there.” I changed the subject; it was embarrassing us. Mention of the beacon reminded me of something else. “Peewee? Where are we?”
“Huh? In the Mother Thing’s home, of course.” She looked around and said, “Oh, I forgot. Kip, this isn’t really your-”
“I know,” I said impatiently. “It’s a fake. Anybody can see that.”
“They can?” She looked crestfallen. “I thought we had done a perfect job.”
“It’s an incredibly good job. I don’t see how you did it.”
“Oh, your memory is most detailed. You must have a camera eye.” -and I must have spilled my guts, too! I added to myself. I wondered what else I had said-with Peewee listening. I was afraid to ask; a fellow ought to have privacy.
“But it’s still a fake,” I went on. “I know we’re in the Mother Thing’s home. But where’s that?”
“Oh.” She looked round-eyed. “I told you. Maybe you don’t remember -you were sleepy.”