Waldo by Robert Heinlein

Stevens showed up one day, let himself in, and found Waldo alone in the living room, listening to a stereo show. ‘Hello, Mr Jones.

‘Oh – hello, Dr Stevens.’ Waldo reached down hastily, fumbled for his shoes, zipped them on. ‘Uncle Gus says I should wear them all the time,’ he explained. ‘Everybody does. But you caught me unawares.

‘Oh, that’s no matter. You don’t have to wear them in the house. Where’s Doc?

‘Gone for the day. Don’t you, really? Seems to me my nurses always wore shoes.

‘Oh yes, everybody does – but there’s no law to make you.

‘Then I’ll wear them. But I can’t say that I like them. They feel dead, like a pair of disconnected waldoes. But I want to learn how.

‘How to wear shoes?

‘How to act like people act. It’s really quite difficult,’ he said seriously

Stevens felt a sudden insight, a welling of sympathy for this man with no background and no friends. It must be odd and strange to him. He felt an impulse to confess something which had been on his mind with respect to Waldo. ‘You really are strong now, aren’t you?

Waldo grinned happily. ‘Getting stronger every day. I gripped two hundred pounds this morning. And see how much fat I’ve worked off.

‘You’re looking fit, all right. Here’s a funny thing. Ever since I first met you I’ve wished to high heaven that you were as strong as an ordinary man.

‘You really did? Why?

‘Well . .. I think you will admit that you used some pretty poisonous language to me, one time and another. You had me riled up all the time. I wanted you to get strong so that I could just beat the hell out of you.

Waldo had been walking up and down, getting used to his shoes. He stopped and faced Stevens. He seemed considerably startled. ‘You mean you wanted to fist-fight me?

‘Exactly. You used language to me that a man ought not to use unless he is prepared to back it up with his fists. If you had not been an invalid I would have pasted you one, oh, any number of times.

Waldo seemed to be struggling with a new concept. ‘I think I see,’ he said slowly. ‘Well – all right.’ On the last word he delivered a roundhouse swipe with plenty of power behind it. Stevens was not in the least expecting it; it happened to catch him on the button. He went down. out cold

When he came to he found himself in a chair. Waldo was shaking him. ‘Wasn’t that right?’ he said anxiously

‘What did you hit me with?

‘My hand. Wasn’t that right? Wasn’t that what you wanted?

‘Wasn’t that what I-’ He still had little bright lights float­ing in front of his eyes, but the situation began to tickle him. ‘Look here – is that your idea of the proper way to start a fight?

‘Isn’t it?

Stevens tried to explain to him the etiquette of fisticuffs, contemporary American. Waldo seemed puzzled, but finally he nodded. ‘I get it. You have to give the other man warning. All right – get up, and we’ll do it over.

‘Easy, easy! Wait a minute. You never did give me a chance to finish what I was saying. I was sore at you, but I’m not any more. That is what I was trying to tell you. Oh, you were utterly poisonous; there is no doubt about that. But you couldn’t help being.

‘I don’t mean to be poisonous,’ Waldo said seriously

‘I know you don’t, and you’re not. I rather like you now -now that you’re strong.

‘Do you really?

‘Yes, I do. But don’t practise any more of those punches on me.

‘I won’t. But I didn’t understand. But, do you know, Dr Stevens, it’s-

‘Call inc Jim.

‘Jim. It’s a very hard thing to know just what people do expect. There is so little pattern to it. Take belching; I didn’t know it was forbidden to burp when other people are around. It seems obviously necessary to me. But Uncle Gus says not.

Stevens tried to clear up the matter for him – not too well, as he found that Waldo was almost totally lacking in any notion, even theoretical, of social conduct. Not even from fic­tion had he derived a concept of the intricacies of mores, as he bad read almost no fiction. He had ceased reading stories in his early boyhood, because he lacked the background of experi­ence necessary to appreciate fiction

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