A shower of tiny Quilchiks shot from the other side of the heavy glass sheet. Lucifer barely skidded aside in time to avoid it, went dashing around the room, barking furiously at the tiny creatures crouched behind every chair and table leg, squeezing in behind filing cabinets, cowering under ashtrays.
“Lucifer, stop!” Curlene squealed. “Oh, aren’t they darling!” She went to her knees, scooped up an inch-high manikin. It squatted on her palm, trembling, its head between its knees.
“By Jimini,” Dimpleby said. “It went through a diffraction grating, and came out centuplets!”
5
“The situation is deteriorating,” Lucifer groaned, scooping up another miniature imp, and dumping it back inside the reactivated trap. “It was bad enough dealing with one star-sprite. Now we have a hundred. And if any one of them escapes . . . ”
“Don’t look now,” Dimpleby said behind his hand to the Devil, now back in human form and properly clad, “but I have an unch-hay the magnetic ield-fay won’t old-hay em-they.”
“Eye-way ott-nay?” Lucifer inquired.
“Ecause-bay . . . ” Dimpleby broke off. “Well, it has to do with distribution of polarity. You see the way the field works—”
“Don’t bother explaining,” Lucifer said. “I wouldn’t understand anyway. The real question is—what do we do now?”
“Our choice seems limited. We either gather up all these little fellows and dump them back where they came from, and then hunt down the others and do likewise, which is impossible, or we forget the whole thing, which is unthinkable.”
“In any event,” Lucifer said, “we have to act fast before the situation gets entirely out of hand.”
“We could turn the problem over to the so-called authorities,” Dimpleby said, “but that seems unwise, somehow.”
Lucifer shuddered. “I can see the headlines now: devil loose on college campus!”
“Oh, they’ve already worked that one to death,” Curlene said. “It would probably be more like: prof and mate in three way sex romp.”
“Sex romp?”
“Well, Mr. Lucifer did reappear in the nude.” Curlene smiled. “And a very nice physique, too, Mr. Lucifer.”
Lucifer blushed. “Well, Professor, what do we do?” he asked hastily.
“I’ll flip a coin,” Curlene suggested. “heads, we report the whole thing, tails, we keep it to ourselves and do the best we can.”
“All right. Best two out of three.”
Curlene rummaged in her purse and produced one of the counterfeit quarters in current production from the Denver mint. She tossed it up, caught it, slapped it against her forearm, lifted her hand.
“Tails,” she said in a pleased tone.
“Maybe we’d better report it anyway,” Dimpleby said, nibbling a fingernail and eyeing the tiny creatures sitting disconsolately inside the circle of magnets.
“Two out of three,” Curlene said. She flipped the coin again.
“Tails again,” she announced.
“Well, I suppose that settles it . . . ”
Curlene tossed the coin up idly. “I guess it’s definite,” she said. “Tails three times in a row.”
Dimpleby looked at her absently. “Eh?”
“Four times in a row,” Curlene said. Lucifer looked at her as if about to speak. Curlene flipped the coin high.
“Five,” she said. Dimpleby and Lucifer drew closer.
“Six . . . ”
“Seven . . . ”
“Eight . . . ”
“Oh-oh,” Dimpleby said. He grabbed for the desk drawer, pulled out a dog-eared deck of cards, hastily shuffled and dealt two hands. Cautiously, he peeked at his cards. He groaned.
“Four aces,” he said.
“Four kings here,” Curlene said.
“Here we go again,” he said. “Now no one will be safe!”
“But Johnny,” Curlene said. “There’s one difference . . . ”
“What?”
“The odds are all mixed up, true—but now they’re in our favor!”
6
“It’s quite simple, really,” Dimpleby said, waving a sheet of calculations. “When Quilchik went through the grating, he was broken up into a set of harmonics. Those harmonics, being of another order of size, resonate at another frequency. Ergo, he consumes a different type of energetic pseudo-particle. Instead of draining off the positive, ah, R-charges, he now subsists on negative entropy.”
“And instead of practical jokes, we have miraculous cures, spontaneous remissions, and fantastic runs with the cards!” Curlene cried happily.
“Not only that,” Dimpleby added, “but I think we can solve their food-supply problem. They’ve exhausted the supply of plus entropy back on their own level—but the original endowment of minus R remains untapped. There should be enough for another few billion years.”
Lucifer explained this to the Quilchiks via the same form of instantaneous telepathy he had employed for the earlier interrogation.
“He’s delighted,” the Devil reported, as the tiny creatures leaped up, joined hands, and began capering and jigging in a manner expressive of joy. “There’s just one thing . . . ” A lone manikin stood at the edge of the table, looking shyly at Curlene.
“Quilchik Seventy-eight has a request,” Lucifer said.
“Well, what does snookums-ookums want?” Curlene cooed, bending over to purse her lips at the tiny figure.
“He wants to stay,” Lucifer said embarrassedly.
“Oh, Johnny, can I have him?”
“Well—if you’ll put some pants on him—”
“And he’d like to live in a bottle. Preferably a bourbon bottle, one of the miniatures. Preferably still full of bourbon,” Lucifer added. “But he’ll come out to play whenever you like.”
“I wonder,” Dimpleby said thoughtfully, “what effect having him around would have on our regular Saturday night card game with those sharpies from the engineering faculty?”
“You’ve already seen a sample,” Lucifer said. “But I can ask him to fast at such times.”
“Oh, no, no,” Dimpleby protested. “Hate to see the little fellow go hungry.”
“Mr. Lucifer,” Curlene asked. “I hope I’m not being nosy—but how did you get the scar on your side that I saw when you had your shirt off?”
“Oh, ah, that?” Lucifer blushed purple. “Well, it, ah—”
“Probably a liver operation, judging from the location, eh, Lucifer?” Dimpleby said.
“You might call it that,” Lucifer said.
“But you shouldn’t embarrass people by asking personal questions, Curl,” Dimpleby said sternly.
“Yes, dear,” Curl said. “Lucifer—I’ve been wanting to ask you: What did a nice fellow like you do to get kicked out of Heaven?”
“Well, I, uh,” Lucifer swallowed.
“It was for doing something nice, wasn’t it?”
“Well—frankly, I thought it wasn’t fair,” Lucifer blurted. “I felt sorry for the poor humans, squatting in those damp caves . . . ”
“So you brought them fire,” Curlene said. “That’s why you’re called Lucifer.”
“You’re mixed up, Curl,” Dimpleby said. “That was Prometheus. For his pains, he was chained to a rock, and every day a vulture tore out his liver, and every night it grew back . . . ”
“But it left a scar,” Curlene said, looking meltingly at Lucifer.
The Devil blushed a deep magenta. “I . . . I’d better be rushing off now,” he said.
“Not before we share a stirrup cup,” Dimpleby said, holding up the Old Crow bottle from the desk drawer. Inside, Quilchik, floating on his back with his hands folded on his paunch, waved merrily, and blew a string of bubbles.
“Luckily, I have a reserve stock,” Dimpleby muttered, heading for the filing cabinet.
“Er, Lucifer, how can we ever thank you?” Curlene sighed, cradling the flask.
“Just by, uh, having all the fun you can,” Lucifer said. “And I’ll, er, be looking forward to seeing you in Hell, some day.”
“I’ll drink to that,” Dimpleby said. He poured. Smiling, they clicked glasses and drank.
THE EXTERMINATOR
Judge Carter Gates of the Third Circuit Court finished his chicken salad on whole wheat, thoughtfully crumpled the waxed paper bag and turned to drop it in the wastebasket behind his chair—and sat transfixed.
Through his second-floor office window, he saw a forty-foot flower-petal shape of pale turquoise settling gently between the well-tended petunia beds on the courthouse lawn. On the upper, or stem end of the vessel, a translucent pink panel popped up and a slender, graceful form not unlike a large violet caterpillar undulated into view.
Judge Gates whirled to the telephone. Half an hour later, he put it to the officials gathered with him in a tight group on the lawn.
“Boys, this thing is intelligent; any fool can see that. It’s putting together what my boy assures me is some kind of talking machine, and any minute now it’s going to start communicating. It’s been twenty minutes since I notified Washington on this thing. It won’t be long before somebody back there decides this is top secret and slaps a freeze on us here that will make the Manhattan Project look like a publicity campaign. Now, I say this is the biggest thing that ever happened to Plum County—but if we don’t aim to be put right out of the picture, we’d better move fast.”
“What you got in mind, Jedge?”
“I propose we hold an open hearing right here in the courthouse, the minute that thing gets its gear to working. We’ll put it on the air—Tom Clembers from the radio station’s already stringing wires, I see. Too bad we’ve got no TV equipment, but Jody Hurd has a movie camera. We’ll put Willow Grove on the map bigger’n Cape Kennedy ever was.”