practical, appearance. How about the other side of the sheet; what have you accomplished?”
“It is difficult to access actual lives saved, my lady. We have distributed approximately 100,000 tons of supplies to the needy, we have moved 128,000 people from dangerous situations to places of relative safety, and we have interrupted 2,654 1/2 incidents of assault.”
“How do you get a half of an assault?” Patricia asked.
“There was a situation which was difficult to assess, my lady.” Dirk explained what had happened to Saber that afternoon.
“It sounds pretty sick to me,” Patricia said.
“There was no indication of disease, my lady.”
“She means that when it conies to things sexual, humans can get pretty kinky, Dirk,” Mona said. “Understanding here is pretty difficult. Suffice it to say that Saber’s actions were correct. In a similar situation, I would expect him to repeat his actions. However, this particular couple should be left alone in the future, providing that they don’t harm anyone else.”
“Saber is grateful for your approval, my lady. He has been quite anxious about the incident. Human sexual practices are very confusing to asexual beings.”
“They’re pretty confusing to humans, too,” Patricia said.
“Is this what’s been bothering you today?” Mona asked. “I mean, you’ve been in the dumps about something closer to home than the refugees.”
“Uh, it’s something like that, Mona. What would you do if you were going insane?”
“Something crazy, I suppose. But you’re not showing any of the usual symptoms of psychosis.”
“But I am! I mean, when things change around you, when something looks different from one moment to the next… Oh! I don’t know.” Patricia began to cry.
“Easy, girl, easy. What things are changing?”
“Martin.”
“You mean sometimes he acts like a different person?”
“No. I mean sometimes he
“I never heard of anything like it,” Mona said. “But I don’t think it’s psychosis.”
“My lady, isn’t it written that ‘love is blind’?” Dirk said.
“Stay out of this, Dirk,” Mona whispered.
“Well, it’s
“Tell me,” Mona said, “what does Uncle Martin look like when he looks different? I mean, describe him.”
“Uh, he’s short, very short. And incredibly fat. And he looks maybe a hundred years old.”
“Go on,” Mona said.
“He’s got a wart on the left side of his nose and a triple chin. His hair, what there is of it, is all white and he has a ridiculous mustache.”
“I see,” Mona said. This was, of course, a fairly accurate description of Martin Guibedo. “Now describe what Uncle Martin looks like normally.”
“Well, you know what he looks like!”
“Humor me,” Mona said.
“Oh, okay. Well, he’s got black hair graying at the temples, a neat mustache, and clear blue eyes. He’s about six one. Rather wide shouldered with a wiry body. Sort of a swimmer’s build, you know.”
“Of course.” Mona was beginning to think that Dirk was right. Perhaps love
‘Thanks, Mona.” Patricia put her hand on Mona’s as an arrow lodged itself halfway through Winnie’s body, with the flint arrowhead stopping directly between their faces.
“OOWW!” Winnie yelled.
Dirk was out the door in an instant. Liebchen woke up and stuck her grinning head out the window, eager not to miss anything.
“Down, girl,” Mona said, pulling Liebchen to the floor beside herself and Patricia. “Dirk can take care of it without you.”
A Gamma unit in Utah took an interest in the affair.
Groping with his huge arms in the dark, Winnie managed to catch the last of the intruders. He was vigorously bouncing this screaming unfortunate on the sand, occasionally switching hands to demonstrate his versatility, when Dirk told him to stop.
“Aw, gee, Dirk. I was only spanking him a little,” Winnie said.
“From here it looks like you’ve broken both of his arms and at least one leg. Next time leave this sort of thing to me! Now put him—gently—on the bed inside.” Dirk dropped two unconscious boys on the sand. “And get me some rope to tie these guys up.”
Mona efficiently bound the unconscious boys as Dirk brought them in. In twenty minutes there were casts on all four limbs of the one Winnie had gotten hold of, and Winnie’s side had been bandaged.
“Ridiculous, my ladies,” Dirk said. “According to my brother Tomahawk, who’s up on Indian lore, this group is the most incredible hodge-podge imaginable. The one on the end, for example. His moccasins are maybe Crow, the leggings are Shawnee, his bow Cree, and the arrows are Seminole. The war bonnet is Sioux, his scalp lock is Iroquois, and the war paint looks more Zulu than anything else. Yet judging from their facial features, this bunch are Zuni.”
“They’ve just been watching too many movies, Dirk,” Mona said. The boys were starting to come around.
“Perhaps, my lady. A more important question is what to do with them. We can’t have them running around shooting people, but I would prefer not to kill them,” Dirk said.
“Neither would I.” Mona turned to the boy on the end. “Why did you shoot at us?”
The boy was silent. Liebchen slipped back into Winnie.
Dirk prodded the boy. “Come, come, now. The lady is speaking to you.”
“I’ll never talk, paleface,” the boy said in perfect English.
“Lacking, among other things, a face, I hardly qualify as a paleface. Winnie, bring out the first one from inside, the one who wouldn’t talk.”
The boys’ eyes widened as the huge hand placed the bandaged boy in front of them.
“Gee, Dirk, can I spank another one?”
“Perhaps. Now then, son. Why did you shot at us?”
“Well, for one thing, we didn’t know your house—trailer was alive.”
“That’s hardly an excuse for shooting at people,” Mona said.
“You’re on our land!” the boy in the middle said.
“Gee, the map said this was a state park.” Winnie hoped he hadn’t made a mistake.
“No! I mean this whole country is our land. You stole it from us and now we’re taking it back.”
“You’re welcome to all the land you can use,” Mona said, “but you’re not entitled to kill people.”
“We have a right to take what’s ours.”
“It’s not yours. The land belongs to everyone. There’s plenty enough to share. The time of stealing and killing is over. Soon, for the first time in history, there will be enough of everything for everyone. Why be stuck on the past when you can be part of the future?”
“Paleface.”
Liebchen came out of Winnie with a glassful of something that looked like a mixture of milk and pink grapefruit juice. “This will fix everything, my lady.”
“What’s that?” Mona asked.