Stranger in a Strange Land(155)
By: Robert A. HeinleinDigby was not pleased with his promotion. The Man from Mars had interrupted him with his work half finished—and that stupid jackass Short was certain to louse it up. Foster listened to him with angelic patience until Digby ran down, then said, “Listen, junior, you’re an angel now—so forget it. Eternity is no time for recriminations. You too were a stupid jackass until you poisoned me. Afterwards you did well enough. Now that Short is Supreme Bishop he’ll do all right, too; he can’t help it. Same as with the Popes. Some of them were warts until they got promoted. Check with one of them, go ahead—there’s no professional jealousy here.”
Digby calmed down a little, but made one request.
Foster shook his halo in negation. “You can’t touch him. You shouldn’t have tried to touch him in the first place. Oh, you can submit a requisition for a miracle if you want to make a bloody fool of yourself. But, I’m telling you, it’ll be turned down—you simply don’t understand the System yet. The Martians have their own setup, different from ours, and as long as they need him, we can’t touch him. They run their own show their own way—the Universe has variety, something for everybody—a fact you field workers often miss.”
“You mean this punk can brush me aside and I’ve got to hold still for it?”
“I held still for the same thing, didn’t I? I’m helping you now, am I not? Now look, there’s work to be done and lots of it—before you can expect to be promoted again. The Boss wants performance, not gripes. If you need a Day off to get your nerve back, duck over to the Muslim Paradise and take it. Otherwise, straighten your halo, square your wings, and dig in. The sooner you start acting like an angel the quicker you’ll start feeling angelic. Get Happy, junior!”
Digby heaved a deep ethereal sigh. “Okay, I’m Happy. Where do I start?”
Jubal was not disturbed by Digby’s disappearance because he did not hear of it even as soon as it was announced, and, when he did hear, while he had a fleeting suspicion as to who had performed the miracle, he dismissed it from his mind; if Mike had had a finger in it, he had gotten away with it—and what happened to supreme bishops worried Jubal not at all as long as he didn’t have to be bothered with it.
More important, his own household had gone through a considerable upset. In this case Jubal knew what had happened but did not care to inquire. That is to say, Jubal guessed what had happened but did not know with whom—and didn’t want to know. A slight case of rape. Was “rape” the word? Well, “statutory rape.” No, not that, either; Mike was of legal age and presumed to be able to defend himself in the clinches. Anyhow, it was high time the boy was salted, no matter how it had happened.
Jubal couldn’t even reconstruct the crime from the way the girls behaved because their patterns kept shifting—sometimes ABC vs D, then BCD vs A . . . or AB vs CD, or AD vs CB, through all possible ways that four women can gang up on each other.
This continued for most of the week following that ill-starred trip to church, during which period Mike stayed in his room in a withdrawal trance so deep that Jubal would have pronounced him dead had he not seen it before. Jubal would not have minded it if the service around the place had not gone to hell in a bucket. The girls seemed to spend half their time tiptoeing in “to see if Mike was all right” and they were too preoccupied to cook properly, much less to be decent secretaries. Even rock-steady Anne—Hell, Anne was the worst of the lot! Absent-minded and subject to unexplained tears . . . and Jubal would have bet his life that if Anne were to witness the Second Coming, she would simply have memorized date, time, personae, events, and barometric pressure without batting her calm blue eyes.
Then late Thursday afternoon Mike woke himself up and suddenly it was ABCD in the service of Mike, “less than the dust beneath his chariot wheels.” Inasmuch as the girls now found time to give Jubal perfect service too, Jubal counted his blessings and let it lie . . . except for a wry and very private thought that, if he had demanded a showdown, Mike could easily quintuple their salaries simply by dropping a post card to Douglas—but that the girls would just as readily have supported Mike.
Once domestic tranquility was restored Jubal did not mind that his kingdom was now ruled by a mayor of the palace. Meals were on time and (if possible) better than ever; when he shouted “Front!” the girl who appeared was bright-eyed, happy, and efficient—such being the case, Jubal did not give a hoot who rated the most side boys. Or girls.
Besides, the change in Mike was as interesting to Jubal as the restoration of peace was pleasant. Before that week Mike had been docile in a fashion that Jubal classed as pathological; now he was so self-confident that Jubal would have described it as cocky had it not been that Mike continued to be unfailingly polite and considerate.