it.
“Well — anytime she works up the nerve to say what she’s thinking, I’ll be ready to hear her out.” A look of schoolboyish truculence passed over John’s square face, and Jack realized his own instincts had been right all along. No man would ever willingly give up a prize like Kate. The only solution to the triangle problem lay in two pieces of machinery — the pistol hidden upstairs in his room, and the matter disrupter drill along the Silverstream highway.
“Is it important for you to get Kate to make the first move?”
“If you don’t analyze me, I won’t analyze you,” John said significantly.
Jack smiled at him, calmly. The reference to analysis made him think of John’s body converted to micro-dust, completely anonymous, defying any kind of investigation.
When John had returned to the office, Jack waited hungrily for Kate to come downstairs to him, but she appeared dressed in a tweed suit with tied belt and a high fur collar.
“Going out?” He tried to mask his disappointment.
“Shopping,” she said in a businesslike voice which hurt him in some obscure fashion.
“Don’t go.
“But we still have to eat.” Her voice carried what he recognized as a trace of antagonism, and he suddenly realized she had been virtually avoiding him since their single physical encounter. The idea that she might be feeling guilt — and associating him with it — filled Breton with an unreasoning panic.
“John’s talking about pulling out.” He was unable to prevent himself blurting the lie like a love-sick adolescent, in spite of his awareness of the need to prepare her mind for John’s disappearance more carefully than he had ever done anything in his entire life. Kate hesitated between him and the door. The down on her cheekbones caught the light like frost, and he seemed to see the mortuary drawer supporting her on its efficient cantilever. He became afraid.
“John’s entitled to leave if he wants,” she said finally, and went out. A minute later he heard her MG booming in the garage. He waited at the window to see her go by, but the car was fitted with its hardtop and Kate’s face was an impersonal blur behind the chiseled sky-fragments of the windows.
Breton turned away from the window, suddenly filled with a sense of outrage. Both his creations — the people he had brought into being as surely as if he had stalked the Earth amid Biblical lightnings, putting breath into inert clay — had lived independently of him for nine years. Now, in spite of what they had learned, they were insisting on pursuing their courses, ignoring him when necessary, leaving him alone in a house where he hated to be alone. Breton moved with clenched fists through the silences of the empty rooms. He had been prepared to wait a week, but things had changed and were still doing so. It would be necessary to act more quickly, more decisively.
From a rear window he glimpsed the silvery dome of the observatory beyond the beech trees, and felt a grudging curiosity about its construction. Right from the moment of his arrival there had been a tacit, instinctive agreement that nobody outside the house should get any clue about the existence of the two Bretons — so he could not justify going outside. But the rear garden was well shielded from the neighboring houses, and it would take him only a few seconds to reach the observatory and get inside.
He went down into the kitchen, peered through the curtained door and went out onto the roofed patio. The lemon-tinted sunlight of an October afternoon streamed through the trees in slowly merging beams, and from the distance came the patient, regular sound of a lawn mower. Breton walked towards the observatory.
“Ho there! Not working today?”
Breton spun as the voice came from behind him. The speaker was a tall, fit-looking man of about forty who had just come around the side of the house. He was dressed in neat sport clothes, worn the way other men wear business suits, and his tightly-waved hair was grayed at the temples. His face was broad and sunburned, with a tiny nose which made scarcely any division between widely-spaced blue eyes.
Breton experienced a thrill of almost superstitious dread as he recognized Lieutenant Convery — the man who, in another time-stream, had come to tell him of Kate’s death — but he remained in perfect control of his reactions.
“Not today,” he said, smiling. “A man has to relax every now and then.”
“I didn’t know you felt that way, John.”
“But I do, I do — I don’t make a habit of it, that’s all.” Breton noticed the other man’s use of his Christian name, and tried unsuccessfully to think of Convery’s. This is incredible, he thought. How can a man
Convery smiled, showing very white teeth made even more brilliant in places by slight fluoride mottling. “I’m glad to hear you don’t work all the time, John — it makes me feel less of a slob.”
John again, Breton thought. I can’t call him Lieutenant if we’re on first-name terms. “Well, what brings you out this way?”
“Nothing much — a couple of routine calls in the area.” Convery reached into his pocket. “So I brought this.” He brought out a brown pebble-like object and handed it to Breton.
“Oh, yes.” Breton inspected the object, noting its segmented, spiral construction. “Oh, yes?”
“Yeah. My boy got it from another kid at school. I told him I’d get you to…” He let his voice trail away, and stood waiting.
Breton stared down at the coiled stone, mind racing desperately. He remembered Kate saying that Convery sometimes called to drink coffee with John and talk about fossils. Presumably this was because John had some professional knowledge of geology. Did it include fossils? He tried to send his mind back more than nine years to the time when he too had been interested in the rock-embalmed time travelers.
“This is a reasonably fair ammonite,” he said, praying that Convery merely wanted a simple identification.
Convery nodded. “Age?”
“About two hundred and fifty million years — hard to say for sure without knowing where it was found.”
“Thanks.” Convery took the fossil back and dropped it in his pocket. His intelligent blue eyes flickered momentarily and Breton suddenly knew that his relationship with the other Breton was a complex and uneasy thing. “Say, John?”
“Uh-huh?” Why, Breton wondered, did he insist on using the first name so much?
“You’re losing some weight, aren’t you?”
“It’s nice of you to notice it. A fellow can get discouraged if he goes on dieting for weeks without any obvious result.”
“I’d say you’ve lost seven or eight pounds.”
“That’s about right — and I really feel better for it.”
“I think you looked better the way you were, John,” Convery said thoughtfully. “You look tired.”
“I am tired — that’s why I took the afternoon off.” Breton laughed, and Convery joined in.
Breton remembered the coffee. “Do you feel like risking a cup of coffee brewed with my own hand? Kate’s out shopping.”
“Where’s Mrs. Fitz?”
Breton’s mind went numb, then be recalled that Mrs. Fitz was the cook-housekeeper. “We gave her a few days off,” he said easily. “She has to rest too, you know.”
“I guess I’ll just have to risk your coffee then, John.”
Convery pushed open the kitchen door and ushered Breton inside. While Breton was preparing the coffee he considered the problem of the fact that they were supposed to know each other’s preferences about cream and sugar, and circumvented it by setting both on the kitchen table in advance. He found the familiar domestic activity relaxing, realizing he had been needlessly alarmed over Convery’s visit. Kate had said the policeman sometimes dropped by to talk about fossils and drink coffee — and that was exactly what was happening. Even if Kate were to return right then there would be nothing to arouse Convery’s curiosity, and John Breton was not expected for at least three hours.
Breton took his coffee black and so hot that flat gray films of vapor crazed its surface. Convery took cream but no sugar, and sipped it with evident appreciation. While he drank he raised the subject of the meteor bombardments which were turning the night skies into firework displays. Pleased at finding the conversation turning to something which placed him on an equal footing with any other inhabitant of the Time B universe, Breton