‘Peewee.’ “
“Oh. I never meant to go there. I meant to land in New Jersey, in Princeton if possible, because I had to find Daddy.”
“Well, you sure missed your aim.”
“Can you do better? I would have done all right but I had my elbow joggled. Those things aren’t hard to fly; you just aim and push for where you want to go, not like the complicated things they do about rocket ships. And I had the Mother Thing to coach me. But I had to slow down going into the atmosphere and compensate for Earth’s spin and I didn’t know quite how. I found myself too far west and they were chasing me and I didn’t know what to do ... and then I heard you on the space-operations band and thought everything was all right-and there I was.” She spread her hands. “I’m sorry, Kip.”
“Well, you landed it. They say any landing you walk away from is a good one.”
“But I’m sorry I got you mixed up in it.”
“Uh . . . don’t worry about that. It looks like somebody has to get mixed up in it. Peewee . . . what’s he up to?”
“They, you mean.”
“Huh? I don’t think the other two amount to anything. He is the one.”
“I didn’t mean Tim and Jock-they’re just people gone bad. I meant them-him and others like him.”
I wasn’t at my sharpest-I had been knocked out three times and was shy a night’s sleep and more confusing things had happened than in all my life. but until Peewee pointed it out I hadn’t considered that there could be more than one like him-one seemed more than enough.
But if there was one, then there were thousands-maybe millions or billions. I felt my stomach twist and wanted to hide. “You’ve seen others?”
“No. Just him. But the Mother Thing told me.”
“Ugh! Peewee . . . what are they up to?”
“Haven’t you guessed? They’re moving in on us.”
My collar felt tight, even though it was open. “How?”
“I don’t know.”
“You mean they’re going to kill us off and take over Earth?”
She hesitated. “It might not be anything that nice.”
“Uh . . . make slaves of us?”
“You’re getting warmer. Kip-I think they eat meat.”
I swallowed. “You have the jolliest ideas, for a little girl.”
“You think I like it? That’s why I had to tell Daddy.”
There didn’t seem to be anything to say. It was an old, old fear for human beings. Dad had told me about an invasion-from-Mars radio broadcast when he was a kid-pure fiction but it had scared people silly. But people didn’t believe in it now; ever since we got to the Moon and circled Mars and Venus everybody seemed to agree that we weren’t going to find life anywhere.
Now here it was, in our laps. “Peewee? Are these things Martians? Or from Venus?”
She shook her head. “They’re not from anywhere close. The Mother Thing tried to tell me, but we ran into a difficulty of understanding.”
“Inside the Solar System?”
“That was part of the difficulty. Both yes and no.”
“It can’t be both.”
“You ask her.”
“I’d like to.” I hesitated, then blurted, “I don’t care where they’re from -we can shoot them down ... if we don’t have to look at them!”
“Oh, I hope so!”
“It figures. You say these are flying saucers . . . real saucer sightings, I mean; not weather balloons. If so, they have been scouting us for years. Therefore they aren’t sure of themselves, even if they do look horrible enough to curdle milk. Otherwise they would have moved in at once the way we would on a bunch of animals. But they haven’t. That means we can kill them-if we go about it right.”
She nodded eagerly. “I hope so. I hoped Daddy would see a way. But-“ She frowned. “-we don’t know much about them . . . and Daddy always warned me not to be cocksure when data was incomplete. ‘Don’t make so much stew from one oyster, Peewee,’ he always says.”
“But I’ll bet we’re right. Say, who is your Daddy? And what’s your full name?”
“Why, Daddy is Professor
Selena Kitt
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AMANDA MCCABE
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