emptiness in his heart.” Suddenly she perked up.

“Here, let me show you, Ivan.”

She bustled into the next room and returned with a heavy old-fashioned photo album.

I looked at my watch at once, but Aunt Vaina did not take any notice, and sitting herself down at my side, opened the album at the very first page.

“Here is the major general.”

The major general looked quite the eagle. He had a narrow bony face and translucent eyes. His long body was spangled with medals. The biggest, a multi-pointed starburst framed in a laurel wreath, sparkled in the region of the appendix. In his left hand the general tightly pressed a pair of gloves, and his right hand rested on the hilt of a ceremonial poniard. A high collar with gold embroidery propped up his lower jaw.

“And here is the major general on maneuvers.”

Here again the general looked the eagle. He was issuing instructions to his officers, who were bent over a map spread on the frontal armor of a gigantic tank. By the shape of the treads and the streamlined appearance of the turret, I recognized it as one of the Mammoth heavy storm vehicles, which were designed for pushing through nuclear strike zones and now are successfully employed by deep-sea exploration teams.

“And here is the general on his fiftieth birthday.”

Here too, the general looked the eagle. He stood by a well-set table with a wineglass in his hand, listening to a toast in his honor. The lower left corner was occupied by a halo of light from a shiny pate; and to his side, gazing up at him with admiration, sat a very young and very pretty Aunt Vaina. I tried surreptitiously to gauge the thickness of the album by feel.

“Ah, here is the general on vacation.”

Even on vacation, the general remained an eagle. With his feet planted well apart, he stood an the beach sporting tiger-stripe trunks, as he scanned the misty horizon through a pair of binoculars. At his feet a child of three or four was digging in the sand. The general was wiry and muscular.

Croutons and cream did not spoil his figure. I started to wind my watch noisily.

“And here…” began Aunt Vaina, turning the page, but at this point, a short portly man entered the room without knocking. His face and in particular his dress seemed strangely familiar.

“Good morning,” he enunciated, bending his smooth smiling face slightly sideways.

It was my erstwhile customs man, still in the same white uniform with the silver buttons and the silver braid on the shoulders.

“Ah! Pete!” said Aunt Vaina. “Here you are already. Please, let me introduce you. Ivan, this is Pete, a friend of the family.”

The customs man turned toward me without recognition, briefly inclined his head, and clicked his heels. Aunt Vaina laid the album in my lap and got up.

“Have a seat, Pete,” she said. “I will bring some cream.”

Pete clicked his heels once more and sat down by me.

“This should interest you,” I said, transferring the album to his lap. “Here is Major General Tuur. In mufti.” A strange expression appeared on the face of the customs man. “And here is the major general on maneuvers. You see? And here -”

“Thank you,” said the customs man raggedly. “Don’t exert yourself, because -”

Aunt Vaina returned with cream and croutons. From as far back as the doorway, she said, “How nice to see a man in uniform! Isn’t that right, Ivan?”

The cream for Pete was in a special cup with the monogram “T” surrounded by four stars.

“It rained last night, so it must have been cloudy. I know, because I woke up, and now there is not a cloud in the sky. Another cup, Ivan?”

I got up.

“Thank you, I’m quite full. If you’ll excuse me, I must take my leave. I have a business appointment.”

Carefully closing the door behind me, I heard the widow say, “Don’t you find an extraordinary resemblance between him and Staff Major Polom?”

In the bedroom, I unpacked the suitcase and transferred the clothing to the wall closet, and again rang Rimeyer. Again no one answered. So I sat down at the desk and set to exploring the drawers. One contained a portable typewriter, another a set of writing paper and an empty bottle of grease for arrhythmic motors. The rest was empty, if you didn’t count bundles of crumpled receipts, a broken fountain pen, and a carelessly folded sheet of paper, decorated with doodled faces. I unfolded the sheet. Apparently it was the draft of a telegram.

“Green died while with the Fishers receive body Sunday with condolences Hugger Martha boys.” I read the writing twice, turned the sheet over and studied the faces, and read for the third time. Obviously Hugger and Martha were not informed that normal people notifying of death first of all tell how and why a person died and not whom he was with when he died. I would have written, “Green drowned while fishing.” Probably in a drunken stupor. By the way, what address did I have now?

I returned to the hall. A small boy in short pants squatted in the doorway to the landlord’s half. Clamping a long silvery tube under an armpit, he was panting and wheezing and hurriedly unwinding a tangle of string. I went up to him and said, “Hi.”

My reflexes are not what they used to be, but still I managed to duck a long black stream which whizzed by my ear and splashed against the wall. I regarded the boy with astonishment while he stared at me, lying on his side and holding the tube in front of him. His face was damp and his mouth twisted and open. I turned to look at the wall. The stuff was oozing down.

I looked at the boy again. He was getting up slowly, without lowering the tube.

“Well, well, brother, you are nervous!” said I.

“Stand where you are,” said the boy in a hoarse voice.” I did not say your name.”

“To say the least,” said I. “You did not even mention yours, and you fire at me like I was a dummy.”

“Stand where you are,” repeated the boy, “and don’t move.”

He backed and suddenly blurted in rapid fire, “Hence from my hair, hence from my bones, hence from my flesh.”

“I cannot,” I said. I was still trying to understand whether he was playing or was really afraid of me.

“Why not?” said the boy. “I am saying everything right.”

“I can’t go without moving,” I said. “I am standing where I am.”

His mouth fell open again.

“Hugger: I say to you — Hugger — begone!” he said uncertainly.

“Why Hugger?” I said. “My name is Ivan; you confuse me with somebody else.”

The boy closed his eyes and advanced upon me, holding the tube in front of him.

“I surrender,” I warned. “Be careful not to fire.”

When the tube dented my midriff he stopped and, dropping it, suddenly went limp, letting his hands fall. I bent over and looked him in the face. Now he was brick-red. I picked up the tube. It was something like a toy rifle, with a convenient checkered grip and a flat rectangular flask which was inserted from below, like a clip.

“What kind of gadget is this?” I asked.

“A splotcher,” he said gloomily. “Give it back.”

I gave him back the toy.

“A splotcher,” I said, “with which you splotch. And what if you had hit me?” I looked at the wall. “Fine thing. Now you won’t get it off inside of a year. You’ll have to get the wall changed.”

The boy looked up at me suspiciously. “But it’s Splotchy,” he said.

“Really — and I thought it was lemonade.”

His face finally acquired a normal hue and demonstrated an obvious resemblance to the manly features of Major General Tuur.

“No, no, it’s Splotchy.”

“So?”

“It will dry up.”

“And then it’s really hopeless?”

“Of course not. There will simply be nothing left.”

“Hmm,” said I, with reservation. “However, you know best. Let us hope so. But I am still glad that there will

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