sired a dreamer. 'We rented one or two for the boy. Real old ones.'
Weill nodded. He said, 'Did you like them, Tommy?'
'They were sort of silly.'
'You think up better ones for yourself, do you?'
The grin that spread over the ten-year-old face had the effect of taking away some of the unreality of the slicked hair and washed face.
Weill went on gently, 'Would you like to make up a dream for me?'
Tommy was instantly embarrassed. 'I guess not.'
'It won't be hard. It's very easy. . . . Joe.'
Dooley moved a screen out of the way and rolled forward a dream recorder.
The youngster looked owlishly at it.
Weill lifted the helmet and brought it close to the boy. 'Do you know what this is?'
Tommy shrank away. 'No.'
'It's a thinker. That's what we call it because people think into it. You put it on your head and think anything you want.'
'Then what happens?'
'Nothing at all. It feels nice.'
'No,' said Tommy, 'I guess I'd rather not.'
His mother bent hurriedly toward him. 'It won't hurt, Tommy. You do what the man says.' There was an unmistakable edge to her voice.
Tommy stiffened, and looked as though he might cry but he didn't. Weill put the thinker on him.
He did it gently and slowly and let it remain there for some thirty seconds before speaking again, to let the boy assure himself it would do no harm, to let him get used to the insinuating touch of the fibrils against the sutures of his skull (penetrating the skin so finely as to be insensible almost), and finally to let him get used to the faint hum of the alternating field vortices.
Then he said, 'Now would you think for us?'
'About what?' Only the boy's nose and mouth showed.
'About anything you want. What's the best thing you would like to do when school is out?'
The boy thought a moment and said, with rising inflection, 'Go on a stratojet?'
'Why not? Sure thing. You go on a jet. It's taking off right now.' He gestured lightly to Dooley, who threw the freezer into circuit.
Weill kept the boy only five minutes and then let him and his mother be escorted from the office by Dooley. Tommy looked bewildered but undamaged by the ordeal.
Weill said to the father, 'Now, Mr. Slutsky, if your boy does well on this test, we'll be glad to pay you five hundred dollars each year until he finishes high school. In that time, all we'll ask is that he spend an hour a week some afternoon at our special school.'
'Do I have to sign a paper?' Slutsky's voice was a bit hoarse.
'Certainly. This is business, Mr. Slutsky.'
'Well, I don't know. Dreamers are hard to come by, I hear.'
'They are. They are. But your son, Mr. Slutsky, is not a dreamer yet. He might never be. Five hundred dollars a year is a gamble for us. It's not a gamble for you. When he's finished high school, it may turn out he's not a dreamer, yet you've lost nothing. You've gained maybe four thousand dollars altogether. If he is a dreamer, he'll make a nice living and you certainly haven't lost then.'
'He'll need special training, won't he?'
'Oh, yes, most intensive. But we don't have to worry about that till after he's finished high school. Then, after two years with us, he'll be developed. Rely on me, Mr. Slutsky.'
'Will you guarantee that special training?'
Weill, who had been shoving a paper across the desk at Slutsky, and punching a pen wrong-end-to at him, put the pen down and chuckled. 'A guarantee? No. How can we when we don't know for sure yet if he's a real talent? Still, the five hundred a year will stay yours.'
Slutsky pondered and shook his head. 'I tell you straight out, Mr. Weill . . . After your man arranged to have us come here, I called Luster-Think. They said they'll guarantee training.'
Weill sighed. 'Mr. Slutsky, I don't like to talk against a competitor. If they say they'll guarantee schooling, they'll do as they say, but they can't make a boy a dreamer if he hasn't got it in him, schooling or not. If they
t^ke a plain boy without the proper talent and put him through a development course, they'll ruin him. A dreamer he won't be, I guarantee you. And a normal human being, he won't be, either. Don't take the chance of doing it: to your son.
'Now Dreams, Inc., will be perfectly honest with you. If he can be a dreamer, we'll make him one. If not, we'll give him back to you without having tampered with him and say, 'Let him learn a trade.' He'll be better aind healthier that way. I tell you, Mr. Slutsky-I have sons and daughters aind grandchildren so I know what I say-I would not allow a child of mine t<o be pushed into dreaming if he's not ready for it. Not for a million dlollars.'
Slutsky wiped his mouth with the back of his hand and reached for the P*n. 'What does this say?'
'This is just an option. We pay you a hundred dollars in cash right now. No strings attached. We study the boy's reverie. If we feel it's worth follow-iing up, we'll call you in again and make the five-hundred-dollar-a-year deaj. Leave yourself in my hands, Mr. Slutsky, and don't worry. You won't be S'orry.'
Slutsky signed.
Weill passed the document through the file slot and handed an envelope t'o Slutsky.
Five minutes later, alone in the office, he placed the unfreezer over his Qwn head and absorbed the boy's reverie intently. It was a typically childish (Saydream. First Person was at the controls of the plane, which looked like a Compound of illustrations out of the filmed thrillers that still circulated among those who lacked the time, desire or money for dream cylinders.
When he removed the unfreezer, he found Dooley looking at him.
'Well, Mr. Weill, what do you think?' said Dooley, with an eager and proprietary air.
'Could be, Joe. Could be. He has the overtones and, for a ten-year-old boy without a scrap of training, it's hopeful. When the plane went through aj cloud, there was a distinct sensation of pillows. Also the smell of clean Sheets, which was an amusing touch. We can go with him a ways, Joe.'
'Good.'
'But I tell you, Joe, what we really need is to catch them still sooner. And svhy not? Someday, Joe, every child will be tested at birth. A difference in tthe brain there positively must be and it should be found. Then we could Separate the dreamers at the very beginning.'
'Hell, Mr. Weill,' said Dooley, looking hurt. 'What would happen to my jjob, then?'
Weill laughed. 'No cause to worry yet, Joe. It won't happen in our life-ttimes. In mine, certainly not. We'll be depending on good talent scouts like 5you for many years. You just watch the playgrounds and the streets'- Mfeill's gnarled hand dropped to Dooley's shoulder with a gentle, approving
pressure-'and find us a few more Hillarys and Janows and Luster-Think won't ever catch us. ... Now get out. I want lunch and then I'll be ready for my two o'clock appointment. The government, Joe, the government.' And he winked portentously.
Jesse Weill's two o'clock appointment was with a young man, apple-cheeked, spectacled, sandy-haired and glowing with the intensity of a man with a mission. He presented his credentials across Weill's desk and revealed himself to be John J. Byrne, an agent of the Department of Arts and Sciences.
'Good afternoon, Mr. Byrne,' said Weill. 'In what way can I be of service?'
'Are we private here?' asked the agent. He had an unexpected baritone.
'Quite private.'
'Then, if you don't mind, I'll ask you to absorb this.' Byrne produced a small and battered cylinder and held it out between thumb and forefinger.
Weill took it, hefted it, turned it this way and that and said with a denture-revealing smile, 'Not the product of Dreams, Inc., Mr. Byrne.'
'I didn't think it was,' said the agent. 'I'd still like you to absorb it. I'd set the automatic cutoff for about a minute, though.'
'That's all that can be endured?' Weill pulled the receiver to his desk and placed the cylinder into the unfreeze compartment. He removed it, polished either end of the cylinder with his handkerchief and tried again. 'It doesn't make good contact,' he said. 'An amateurish job.'
He placed the cushioned unfreeze helmet over his skull and adjusted the temple contacts, then set the automatic cutoff. He leaned back and clasped his hands over his chest and began absorbing.
His fingers grew rigid and clutched at his jacket. After the cutoff had brought absorption to an end, he removed the unfreezer and looked faintly angry. 'A raw piece,' he said. 'It's lucky I'm an old man so that such things no longer bother me.'
Byrne said stiffly, 'It's not the worst we've found. And the fad is increasing.'
Weill shrugged. 'Pornographic dreamies. It's a logical development, I suppose.'
The government man said, 'Logical or not, it represents a deadly danger for the moral fiber of the nation.'
'The moral fiber,' said Weill, 'can take a lot of beating. Erotica of one form or another have been circulated all through history.'
'Not like this, sir. A direct mind-to-mind stimulation is much more effective than smoking room stories or filthy pictures. Those must be filtered through the senses and lose some of their effect in that way.'
Weill could scarcely argue that point. He said, 'What would you have me do?' ,
'Can you suggest a possible source for this cylinder?'
'Mr. Byrne, I'm not a policeman.'
'No, no, I'm not asking you to do our work for us. The Department is quite capable of conducting its own investigations. Can you help us, I mean, from your own specialized knowledge? You say your company did not put out that filth. Who did?'
'No reputable dream distributor. I'm sure of that. It's too cheaply made.'
'That could have been done on purpose.'
'And no professional dreamer originated it.'