Except the receptionist was a dado.

Patrick stiffened and approached the desk cautiously. “Where’s the receptionist?” he asked suspiciously.

The dado looked exactly like all the other robots, except that he wore a white medical jacket. I now knew what Mark would look like if he were a medical professional. And a robot. The dado smiled pleasantly and said in a calm, soothing voice, “I am the regular receptionist, Mr. Mac.”

Mr. Mac. I’d never heard Patrick’s last name before. I’d also never heard a robot speak in Mark’s voice. Yes, the dado even sounded like Mark. I wondered if they’d programmed in the little stutter Mark had when he got nervous. Probably not. I didn’t think robots got nervous.

“You know me?” Patrick asked, his voice shaking.

The dado smiled kindly. “Of course,” answered the Mark robot. “You’ve been a patient of Dr. Shaw’s for nine years and four months. Your last examination was over two years ago. You are overdue.”

Whoa. This robot had the ability to instantly recall information based solely on a visual of Patrick. These dados were definitely more advanced than those goons on Quillan.

Patrick swallowed hard. “My friend is hurt. Is Dr. Shaw available to treat him?”

The dado looked at his computer screen, input something and looked back to Patrick. “Step right inside,” he answered cheerily.

Whoa. Again. That was easy. Every time I’d gotten banged up and had to go to the emergency room at home, we had to wait hours before a doctor could see us. This was another example of how things were better in Earth’s future. Mark-looking robots or not.

I looked at Courtney. “Maybe you should wait here.”

“Alone? With RoboNurse? No way. I’m coming too.”

“It’s okay,” Patrick said.

The dado called out, “I hope you feel better.”

I looked back at the Mark-like mechanical man. It was a twisted, creepy feeling. I was talking to Mark, but not.

Patrick led us through an inside door, down a corridor, and up to another door that opened into a clean, modern exam room. Waiting for us was another dado wearing medical whites. When we opened the door, he stood facing the wall, not moving. A second after we entered, he came to life, turned to us, and smiled. It seemed like by entering the room, we activated it. I guess if robots have nothing to do, they stand around staring at walls.

Courtney said, “Okay, that was odd.”

Patrick said to the dado, “We need to see Dr. Shaw.”

The dado approached me and gently took my arm. I pulled back at first, not sure I wanted to be handled by a robot whether he looked like Mark or not. The robot looked at me with kind eyes, as if to say, “Relax, I know what I’m doing.” I let him check me out. He first removed the strip of T-shirt we’d used to stop the bleeding.

“Ick” was Courtney’s comment.

The fabric was covered with crusty dry blood. It didn’t bother me. I was much more creeped out by the fact that the robot’s touch was cold. He looked and acted totally human, but he wasn’t. I guess mechanical men don’t need to have human-body temperatures.

“Shouldn’t you get Dr. Shaw?” Patrick asked.

“No need,” the dado said kindly. “This is a simple procedure.” He walked to a wall that was covered with silver drawers.

I looked at Patrick and asked, “Should I be nervous about this?”

Patrick shrugged. He didn’t know. Swell. The dado pulled out a device that looked like a thick, white pipe. It was about ten inches long and five inches in diameter. He reached inside and peeled back a clear piece of soft plastic wrap that was covering the entire inside surface of the tube, kind of like you’d pull off the backing of a Band-Aid.

Courtney stepped forward, standing between me and the dado protectively. “Why don’t you get the doctor now. Tin Man,” she said firmly.

“It’s okay,” Patrick assured her. “That’s the same treatment the doctor would use.”

The dado gave her a kind smile. Courtney wasn’t sure what to do. She stepped away, but reluctantly.

“Have I mentioned how creepy this whole Mark-robot thing is?” she muttered.

The dado held out his hand, gesturing for my injured arm. I held my breath and raised my arm. The dado gently slipped the white tube over my hand and positioned it over the wound. He gently grasped the tube and squeezed it. I felt the tube tighten and heat up. Just as I was about to complain, the tube released and the dado slipped it off. The wound on my arm had been sealed. What was in that tube? Antibiotic? Bactine? Super Glue? Whatever it was, it created a thin, clear seal that completely closed the wound. It didn’t hurt anymore either.

“That’s it?” I asked the dado.

“You are as good as healed,” he answered. “Tomorrow it will be completely gone.”

“Is this a new thing?” I asked Patrick.

“No,” he answered. “Medical science has come a long way since your day. I’m just not used to seeing robots administer it.”

We left the doctor’s office without ever seeing the doctor. I guess that’s not a bad thing, considering my wound was miraculously healed, and we didn’t even have to pay for it.

Patrick explained that medical care on Third Earth was paid for by the community as a whole. Nobody needed insurance or got hit with monster bills. Not bad.

The three of us got back into Patrick’s vehicle and drove downtown to our final destination on Third Earth: the public library. Getting to this library was the main reason Courtney and I had come to Third Earth. I learned when I was there the first time with Gunny that the database in the library held most every bit of information concerning the history of Earth from the beginning of recorded time. If you’ve read my Journal #11, you’ll know what I’m talking about. The computers didn’t just contain the usual information you could get from newspapers or books. Not even close. Data was collected from billions of sources throughout time to make a repository that was pretty much the complete history of Earth. Sound incredible? It is. I knew the best way to begin piecing together what might have happened on Second Earth was to go to the future in order to see the past.

“I don’t believe it!” Courtney exclaimed as we pulled up to the cement steps leading to the library. “It’s exactly the same as Second Earth!”

She was almost right. The steps were the same steps that led to the New York Public Library on Fifth Avenue, complete with the oversize stone lions guarding the door. Though the actual building was much smaller and more modern than the imposing library from Second Earth. In 5010 the people of Earth no longer used paper books that took up space. Sad, but true.

As a teacher and a librarian, Patrick had full access to the library computers. He knew how to dig deep. This was Patrick’s world. He now had a mission and looked much more confident. He led us up the wide cement steps into the large. marble-floored lobby of the library. It was exactly as I remembered it, with several rows of chairs where people read from computer screens. A corridor led deeper into the building and the computer rooms. There was only one difference from the last time I was there-a small one, but disturbing.

Courtney was the first to notice. “Where is it?”

“Where’s what?” I asked.

“The book. The display. You wrote that it was here in the lobby.”

She was right. There had been a single, old-fashioned book on display in the lobby. It was an important relic of the past, encased in glass for all to view. That book was Green Eggs and Ham by Dr. Seuss. It wasn’t there. I stood on the spot where it had been and glanced around.

“Did they move the display?” I asked Patrick.

Patrick looked grim. “No,” he said. “It was here yesterday.”

“Yeah,” Courtney added. “Before things changed.”

“It might not mean anything,” I offered hopefully.

Courtney added, “Or it might mean that not all the changes are for the better.”

The three of us stood for a moment, trying not to think about how different the world might actually be once we started digging below the surface.

“Let’s continue,” Patrick said, and strode quickly down the corridor.

We followed right behind him. Most of the doors were closed, which meant other teachers were using the

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