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The Lighter Side By Keith Laumer

The man stretched out his hand to the girl. There was a candy bar in it.

“Have a Welch’s,” he said.

“They had me fooled,” Barnaby said, stepping out. He went over to the couple, plucked the candy bar from the girl’s fingers. They paid no attention.

“I hope this isn’t one of those awful marshmallow centers,” he said, offering a bite to Gigi. He patted the imitation man’s pockets, ” . . . rich, creamy goodness,” the fellow was saying.

“Damn. No cigarettes,” Barnaby said.

“Yes, and with Welch’s, quality comes first,” the female said softly, baring her teeth and taking a bite of empty air.

Barnaby and Gigi resumed their stealthy progress, emerged from between trees onto a graveled drive that swept in a graceful curve before a white-columned mansion. Half a dozen rich-looking people clustered around a small, cheap, but very shiny car.

“Say, that’s an idea,” Barnaby said. “We can cover ground quicker in that.”

They crossed the lawn to the group.

” . . . luxurious cardboard interior,” a gorgeous red-head purred.

“And so economical, too,” a trim-moustached ambassadorial type said.

“It’s what’s under the hood that sells ME,” an effeminate-looking undergraduate offered, raising the hood to look wonderingly at the tiny engine.

Barnaby toppled him, slammed the hood down. He helped Gigi in, then slid into the driver’s seat, started up, gunned down the drive, swept through an open gate and out into a wide avenue.

The street was crowded. Barnaby slowed. A stream of traffic crowded toward a red light suspended over the street ahead. He looked curiously at the cars. They were immense, wide, low, plastered with great strips and shapes of bright chrome work, rusty at the edges.

“I never saw cars like those before,” Barnaby said. “They don’t seem to be made for humans.”

“They’re the new ’73 models,” Gigi said. “I saw pictures in this week’s Ogle.”

“I guess the fire has jammed traffic,” Barnaby said. “We don’t want to be stuck here if it spreads . . . ” He backed, gunned forward, squeaked between two cars with a screech of metal, swerved to avoid a hurtling fire engine.

The cars ahead jammed the street solidly. A policeman blew a whistle, held up a hand as Barnaby bore down on him. He turned his back, motioned an opposing stream across the car’s path.

“I’ve got to beat them!” Barnaby accelerated, bounced the cop aside, sent two dummy pedestrians high in the air; the on-rushing car clipped the midget car’s rear bumper; Barnaby cut the wheel hard, humped up onto the sidewalk. Imitation pedestrians went down, bounced aside, spun against the aluminum walls, smiling and chatting. Barnaby shifted to second. A heap of pleased-looking dummies ground along in front of the car, piling higher. The little car’s wheels spun, shifted down. The car groaned under the weight of its burden. Barnaby reversed, tried again.

“Look!” Gigi screamed. A three-foot wall of water surged down on them from the street ahead, bearing on its crest paper, TV sets, empty bottles, more paper . . .

The tide swirled around the sides of the car.

“All that water they’re pumping—and the drains are clogged with paper!” he looked down. Playing cards, prayer books, horoscopes, racing forms, greeting cards, ticker tape, efficiency reports, tax forms . . .

“They use a lot of paper here,” he said. Nixon floated past. “The free peoples . . . ” he said, “the free peoples . . . ”

“If the water gets much deeper, we’ve had it!” Barnaby called.

A swirl of smoke drifted across the street. A tongue of flame leaped high. Sparks shot skyward in a bright column as a building collapsed.

Barnaby gunned the car; it jittered forward. Water boiled up over the wheels, surged higher, seeped in under the doors.

“The upholstery is dissolving!” Gigi called over the roar of water and fire. “We’ll have to get inside a building, up on an upper floor!”

“And burn alive? I’d rather drown—”

A small aluminum rowboat appeared, riding the flood.

“Catch it, Barnaby!” Gigi squealed. He flung the car door open, scrambled on the hood. As the boat whirled past, he lunged, caught the rope trailing from the bow.

“Get in, Gigi!” The girl scrambled over the thwart; Barnaby jumped, tossed overboard the sign reading be the neighborhood outdoor man! keep a boat in your backyard!

“Who’s got a backyard?” Barnaby muttered, unshipping the oars. The boat whirled, steadied, shot into an alley. Barnaby plied the oars, steered around a flooded-out Dempster Dumpster.

“Barnaby, can’t you row us away from the fire?” Gigi quavered. Barnaby looked over his shoulder; the current was carrying the boat directly toward a dense pall of billowing black smoke.

“It’s all I can do to keep us head-on, so we don’t capsize,” he gasped.

“Ohhh, Barnaby, I’m scared!”

The smoke ahead was shot through with orange light now; a leaping tower of fire showed briefly at roof-top level. The current bubbled and frothed, smelling faintly of raspberry soda.

“Barnaby, maybe we’d better swim for it.”

“Stay in the boat—maybe I can maneuver it down a side street.”

Sparks whirled, settling over the boat. Gigi yelped and slapped at an ember. The water was up to door-top level along the street now, a furious torrent.

“Good-bye, Barnaby!” Gigi threw herself into his lap, her arms around his neck.

“Hey, Gigi—how can I row—”

A deafening boom! blanked off the crash of the flood. The light winked from the scene; abruptly, it was night, sparkling with blazing floodlights that showed a heaving surface of dirty water clotted with flotsam, a fallen wall, the dim bulks of massive machines.

“Gigi! We’re back!” Barnaby held on as the boat swept past the remnants of the control room at terrific speed, dashed for a wide, lighted doorway over which Barnaby caught a glimpse of the words goober enterprises blazoned in gold. Then with a rush the boat was past the portal, sliding down a wide corridor, rocking wildly as the subsiding flood surged around a corner, curled through an open door. The keel grounded with a soggy squeak; the last of the water soaked into the deep-pile carpet. From behind a massive desk, Harlow Goober glared, his electrolenses like tiny windows in a purple balloon. He opened his mouth and bellowed.

* * *

“It really wasn’t my fault,” Barnaby Quale said to his cellmate. “All I did was—”

“Yeah, I heard all about you, bub. Some caper. I seen the excitement on the tube. Like a kind of a bubble of force, the guy said, two blocks wide and gaining ten feet an hour. They couldn’t get inside for nothing. And power for the whole state was dimmed out for three hours!”

“There must have been some malfunction,” Barnaby said. “The field wasn’t supposed to expand. Of course, since it was a closed-space effect, no external force could have any influence on it. But as for power, how was I to know Goober was tapping the state power pile? That’s a Federal offense.”

“Maybe—but with his pull, who’s to care?”

There was a clank of feet from the corridor; a uniformed guard appeared at the barred door.

“Okay, you guys, on yer feet. You got a Very Important Visitor . . . ”

The massive, paunched figure of Harlowe Goober hove into view.

“There you are, Clune! Where you deserve to be!” He held out a hand and a small nervous man hovering at his heels placed a floral-patterned tissue in it. He mopped at his jowls. “After all Goober Industries has done for you, you turn on her and savage her! In your frenzy, you stooped to sabotage! You—”

“All I did was try out your Goobereality machine, Mr. Goober,” Barnaby said flatly. “And what I saw in there—”

“Ah—we’ll go into that later, Gerb; I came here this morning to offer you forgiveness. Yes, forgiveness, Creen; out of consideration of your past services—”

“You mean inventing all the things that you’ve made a fortune on? Think nothing of it, Mr. Goober; I enjoy my work. And after all, you were paying me union scale, and I wasn’t even a member.”

Goober shook his head. “Ever the lone wolf, eh, Deeb? But that’s enough gossiping; I’m in a hurry.” He held out a hand and the small courtier placed a document in it. Goober offered it through the bars.

“Just sign this contract, and I’ll overlook your running amok—”

“I didn’t run amok, Mr. Goober; I just wanted to see how my Environmental Simulator worked. Your engineers did a first-class job of building it. But the things I saw in there—”

“Shhh! Corporate secrets, Kerp! Just sign this and we can go along and have a quiet chat in my office.”

“I’m not signing anything, Mr. Goober. When I tell all I know—”

“A raise, Gorp! I think you deserve it. After all, a perfect attendance record during the six years you were with us—”

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Categories: Keith Laumer
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