ESTHER M. FRIESNER
TRUE BELIEVER
"A spoonful of sugar," sang Mary Poppins, "helps the
medicine go down." But
while it's rare, there are occasions when perhaps it's better not to
take the
medicine, such as the following case of an eight-year-old boy who doesn't know
what
his pharmacist has in store for him....
Esther Friesner is the very funny author of sixty
short stories and two dozen
novels. She lives in Connecticut and clearly knows a thing or
two about rodents
and children.
"AW, MOMMMMM, DO I haaaaaave to?" Jimmy Hanson screwed his
mouth shut and made a
prune-face, prunes being the only thing he hated more than medicine.
(He had
even told his parents that prunes were an alien plot by the Toad-Men of Skraax
to
take over the minds of Earthlings before the invasion, human minds being just
so much Silly
Putty to the aforesaid Toad-Men, or so the latest issue of Captain
Hamster and the Frenzies
said. For some reason his parents remained
unconvinced.)
Mrs. Hanson stood at her son's
bedside, calmly pouring out a dose of thick
cola-colored glop into a tablespoon. "Yes, you
have to," she said. She placed
the open bottle on Jimmy's nightstand and gave him a
nononsense-now look. The
spoon of doom swooped down to the boy's lips. "So open up."
It was
the direct approach, and Mrs. Hanson knew it was doomed to fail. Still,
every time the hour
struck for Jimmy's medication, she went through this little
charade for form's sake. It was
rather like the way Mr. Hanson suggested a
just-the-two-of-us trip to the movies on nights
when he wanted a conjugal right
or two.
In point of fact, Jimmy not only did not open up, he
clamped both hands over his
mouth and glared at his mother. Mrs. Hanson shook her head: Why
did she even
bother? Time for a little bribery. "Jimmy, darling, while I was out I bought
you
a nice present. You can have it just as soon as you take your medicine."
"Whi'zit?"
Jimmy inquired suspiciously from behind his self-imposed gag.
"It's the very newest issue
of your favorite comic book, that's what."
Slowly the hands lowered. Jimmy sat up a little
straighter in bed and declared,
"Huh-uh. Can't be. I already got the May issue of Captain
Hamster and the
Frenzies." To prove his point, he snatched up one of the two dozen comic
books
bestrewing the counterpane and held it so that his mother might see its garish
cover
and know herself to be caught and shamed in a lie. It was no mere
coincidence that he
likewise held the book so that it effectively blocked his
mouth against any sneak attacks
of the maternal spoon.
"Yes dear, I know, but that's not the one I bought for you." Mrs.
Hanson was
beginning to lose patience. She had not been as gently raised as Jimmy and it
was an effort for her to maintain an air of sweet reason when all her instincts
clamored to
drop negotiations and simply scream Look, you spoiled little yard
ape, I've already missed
ten minutes of General Hospital. If you don't want to
wind up doing a guest shot there, you
swallow this stuff now!
However, Mrs. Hanson's whole experience of marriage and maternity
had been the
triumph of pop-psych and theory-of-the-moment over instinct and gut-reaction.
Therefore when a skeptical Jimmy demanded to see proof that his mother had
indeed purchased
a newer edition of Captain Hamster, she complied without demur.
Setting the filled spoon
down carefully atop Jimmy's chest of drawers on her way
out of the room, she returned in
jig time with the comic in question. "See?" she
said from the doorway.
"That doesn't look
like Captain Hamster," Jimmy challenged. "Anyway, Daddy just
brought me this issue last
night."
"Daddy buys you all your comics at the newsstand across from his office
downtown.
Maybe they don't have the latest issue."
"Oh yeah? He said he bought this one at CVS in the
mall!"
"Darling, it says Captain Hamster and the Frenzies right here on the cover, and
it
says June too. Maybe they changed artists. Besides, I didn't buy this at a
newsstand or
CVS. I bought it at a genuine comic book store."
"The kind you won't let me go in." Jimmy's
brow was knit with the pain of past
civil wrongs done him in the name of parental judgment
calls. At eight years old
he couldn't spell censorship but he could tell it when he saw it,
all right.
"The kind you don't go in either. How come you did?"
Mrs. Hanson sighed and
patiently explained, "When I went out to fill your
prescription, my car broke down before I
got to the mall. I just barely made it
into a service station. You know I don't like
leaving you home alone for long
when you're sick, so I asked the nice man if there was a
pharmacy nearby. Well,
there was -- a real old-fashioned drug store with a soda fountain
and everything
-- and the comic book store was only a block before it. I got your medicine
and
your present while my car was being fixed. See how Mommy's always thinking of
you? Now
you just open up for Mommy and --"
"I will if you lemme hold Captain Hamster," Jimmy
replied. He looked angelic
enough to be packing a shiv.
Motherhood works havoc on
perception. Mrs. Hanson heard surrender in her baby's
voice when what she should have heard
was the sound of butter firming up
rock-hard in his mouth. She offered him the comic with
one hand and closed in
with the filled spoon in the other.
In a breathtaking exhibition of
speed and dexterity, Jimmy contrived to slap the
new issue of Captain Hamster into the Back
off, Jack! position across his mouth
while at the same time flinging the old one aside so
that it knocked over the
open bottle on his nightstand. As the last dribble of medicine
oozed its way
into the shag carpet, Mrs. Hanson's last drop of patience went the way of the
dodo. The neighbors who heard her scream only stopped short of calling 911
because they
didn't want to be a bother.
Little Jimmy took the one remaining dose of his wasted medicine
without further
ado, in rightful fear for his life.
Mrs. Hanson went downstairs to the
kitchen to call Jimmy's pediatrician, Dr.
Beeman, and ask for a refill on the prescription.
She had just hung up the phone
when she felt something heavy fall on her shoulder. She
turned to find herself
staring into a pair of slightly buggy, definitely beady black eyes
set in a
hairy brown face. A teensy, triangular nose framed by bristling whiskers
twitched
furiously at her.
"What's this we hear about you yelling at your son?" the giant hamster
demanded.
"Yah! Yah! Lemme at 'er! Lemme pound 'er! That'll learn 'er!" Something vaguely
human was bouncing wildly up and down behind the hamster, its mop of untamed
hair flying.
It beat disproportionately large hands rhythmically on the kitchen
walls, the counters,
even the ceiling, like hell's (or possibly Bedlam's) answer
to Gene Krupa.
"Easy, Bongo."
The hamster held up one dainty pink paw. From a great distance
away, figuratively speaking,
Mrs. Hanson noted that the roly-poly beast was clad
in a blue jumpsuit, complete with
yellow cape. She'd never known there was that
much Spandex in the universe.
"Aw c'mon, Cap,
let Bongo do a number on her." A fresh voice butted in. For some
reason it seemed to be
coming from the oversized hummingbird zipping around the
hamster's head. On second glance,
Mrs. Hanson saw that it was no hummingbird but
a winged girl in a spangled pink thong
leotard. Despite her small size, she
flaunted a pair of mammaries that simply had to be an
aerodynamic disadvantage.
"Do it! Do it!"
"Be silent, Laggi, Girl of the Starways," said a
fourth voice. "It is not always
Bongo's turn to deal with our foes. Sometimes they
belong...to me." Those warm,
sinister, seductive tones put Mrs. Hanson in mind of dark
places where
unspeakable secrets murmured siren songs, luring the unsuspecting ever closer
to
a hideous doom. She realized it had been much too long since she'd last cleaned
out the
bathtub drain.
It just so happened that drain was an unfortunate thought to have right
then,
for the fourth voice belonged to a female whose unnerving smile revealed a
formidable
pair of fangs. She shunned the Spandex togs of her companions,
favoring instead what
resembled a full-body covering of black seaweed. Like
Laggi (Girl of the Starways) she was
a prime candidate for severe lower back
pain after the age of thirty.
She took one of Mrs.
Hanson's hands in both of her own and with a look only
slightly less intense than a coiled
cobra's said, "I am Lexa. I walk the night.
And I hunger."
Mrs. Hanson couldn't quite make
up her mind whether or not to tell this person
that it was only three o'clock and that she
was walking the mid-afternoon. She
decided against it. Some people didn't appreciate having
their mistakes pointed
out to them by total strangers.
Before Lexa could pursue the
conversation, the caped hamster stepped between the
two ladies. "First we allow her to
explain her shameful treatment of our pal,
Jimmy. Then we extract the full measure of
justice." The tiny eyes, aglow with
righteous indignation, fixed themselves on Mrs. Hanson.
"We11? "
"Thank you very much for the opportunity," said Mrs. Hanson, and fainted.
Mrs.
Hanson's belief in the curative powers of fainting spells was based
entirely on her
experience watching soap operas. In that happy realm, it was
generally the case that if the
heroine found herself facing the unfaceable,
she'd faint, subsequently to come to her
senses and be handed the happy
information that It Had All Been Just a Horrid Dream.
(Unless, of course,
faltering ratings demanded that she come out of the faint only to pass
into
either full amnesia or a coma, depending on the state of contract negotiations
at the
time.)
Such was not the case for Mrs. Hanson. She revived to find that her uninvited
callers
were still there, that they had contrived to transport her unconscious
form upstairs to her
own bed, and that Captain Hamster had rooted through her
drawers and soaked her best
WonderBra in water to make a cold compress for her
forehead.
She rose up squawking
inarticulate protests, one black, lace-trimmed B-cup
slipping down over her eye. Little
Jimmy stood by her bedside, holding Lexa's
pallid hand and snickering. "Gee, Mom, you look
like a pirate," he declared,
delighted.
"A sissy pirate," said Bongo, then added, "Arrrh."
Before Mrs. Hanson could respond, Captain Hamster spoke up: "Mrs. Hanson, we beg
your
pardon. Our pal Jimmy has explained that you were only trying to make him
take his
medicine. Although we do not approve of your methods, we are willing to
overlook minor
maternal thuggery in the interests of the boy's health. We feel
quite comfortable leaving
him in your capable hands once more."
"Leaving....?" Mrs. Hanson could not believe the
sweet words she was hearing.
She didn't know whence this gang of refugees from a nightmare
had come, but she
no longer questioned their reality vis-a-vis her sanity. Illusions did
not tote
full-grown women up an entire flight of stairs, as a rule. And since they were
real,
she didn't so much care where they'd come from as when they were going to
get the hell
gone.
"Of course, dear lady. The Frenzies never stay where they are not wanted. I
promise
you, we will be out of your house and your hair anon." "And my underwear
drawer," Mrs.
Hanson specified.
Captain Hamster raised one paw and crossed his heart with the other.
"Superhero's
honor."
One week later, Mrs. Hanson's opinion of superhero's honor was not a thing
lawful to
be uttered, but at least it was somewhat less incendiary than her
opinion of some of the
other lifeforms infesting her home. Unfortunately, she
couldn't call the exterminator to
get rid of them either: They came from the
government and they were there to help. They
said so. And they showed their IDs
and badges and guns to any who dared disagree.
One of
these lifeforms was Dr. Lorenzo Oglethorpe, Ph.D., who had neither badge
nor gun, but whose
unarmed tongue was a hideous implement of destruction
nonetheless. It was a vast and
terrible pity that he was off limits to
exterminators everywhere, for in his own modest way
he embodied their
professional Grail: He looked exactly like the world's biggest cockroach.
"There's really a very simple explanation for what's happened to your son," said
Dr.
Oglethorpe.
"Sure there is," said Mr. Hanson, settling back in his favorite armchair.
Although
it was a weekday, he was at home, on leave with pay until further
notice. His employer had
proved to be quite understanding of the extraordinary
situation chez Hanson, especially
after a visit from the government. Now the
lucky man took a pull at his beer and frowned to
find the bottle empty. "Be a
pal?" he said to the FBI agent at his elbow, brandishing the
longneck in his
face.
"I'll get that, dear." Mrs. Hanson sprang from her seat, closely
followed by the
agent assigned to her. She snatched the bottle from her husband's hand and
hurried into the kitchen. Behind her, Dr. Oglethorpe was expanding upon Jimmy's
condition,
although he had yet to examine the subject in person. The
government-appointed man of
science had arrived at the Hanson household that
very morning, just after Jimmy's departure
for school, yet his lack of firsthand
data did not bother Dr. Oglethorpe for an instant. As
he himself had said when
accepting the Nobel, "Formulate an elegant enough hypothesis and
you can always
persuade the facts to fall into line."
In Jimmy's case, Dr. Oglethorpe's
hypothesis had something to do with Chaos
Theory and cough syrup. Mrs. Hanson didn't need
to hear it. She didn't want to
hear it. Whenever a professional nerd like Dr. Oglethorpe
promised you a "very
simple explanation" it was never simple, except to another herd. Wayne
Hanson
didn't have the scientific know-how to program the VCR, but at least he could
fake
interest and comprehension while the good doctor droned on.
"Better him than me," she
muttered, flipping the lids off a pair of longnecks.
"You say something, ma'am?" asked Mrs.
Hanson's personal G-man.
"I was just wondering if you'd like one too," she replied
brightly.
"Thank you, ma'am; not on duty."
"Okay." She shrugged and sucked down half a
bottle, then belched and giggled.
"Ma'am, are you all right?" The agent seemed to be
sincerely concerned.
"No." Mrs. Hanson absorbed the remainder of the beer with a second
gargantuan
swallow. "Now I am."
There was a sharp humming in her ears. "Did anyone ever tell
you that chug-a-lug
contests were what brought down the exquisite galaxyspanning
civilization of the
Form?" It was Laggi, Girl of the Starways, and not the abrupt attack of
some
beer-fueled illusion. The minuscule heroine hovered in front of Mrs. Hanson's
eyes, a
blur of wings. "Captain Hamster wants me to tell you that there's to be
no more alcohol in
this house. It sets a bad example for little Jimmy."
"Little Jimmy is in school right now,
along with a bodyguard of seven --count
'em, seven -- FBI agents, and you can tell Captain
Hamster from me that if he'd
spend less time running my life and more time eating those
pesky Jehovah's
Witnesses, he might do some actual good around here," Mrs. Hanson snarled.
"Hmph!" Laggi's weensy lips curled with scorn. "In the first place, Captain
Hamster does
not eat Jehovah's Witnesses or any other religious proselytes; he
only stuffs them in his
mighty cheek pouches of steel until they've learned the
error of their importunate ways.
Besides, he doesn't stuff all of them; just the
ones who can't take a hint. Second, he says
that last batch wasn't Jehovah's
Witnesses, they were video journalists from HardCopy.
Third, he wants to know
why your house is under constant siege by these people, and fourth
--" She
zipped over to perch provocatively on the FBI agent's shoulder and croon in his
ear,
"-- has anyone ever told you you look like David Duchovny?"
Mrs. Hanson snatched up the
little alien and squeezed her with enough force to
crush a full beer can. The assault had
no ill effect, for -as Jimmy could have
told his mother in a moment -- Laggi's body was
strong enough to withstand the
whole gamut of cosmic forces from Asteroids to Zeta Rays.
(Lucky for Laggi that
Mrs. Hanson didn't know her only weakness was a severe allergy to
dairy
products, or the put-upon housewife would've dunked the Girl of the Starways in
moo
juice like an alien Oreo.)
"Now you listen to me, you twerp!" she bellowed. "You go back
and tell Super
Rodent that he's the reason we're combing paparazzi out of the privet
hedges;
him and the rest of you. When you idiots showed up, you could've just left this
house
and us in peace, but no: You had to hang around until the neighbors
noticed. You had to
stay put until the cops came, and the press, and the
government!"
"I don't see how it's any
of our doing," Laggi replied in the same tone of voice
Mrs. Hanson generally used on Jimmy,
five parts condescension to one part
long-suffering patience. "Our purpose is to right
wrongs find fight crime. How
could we do either until we found out where the wrongs and the
crimes were
happening? So we had to wait for the six o'clock news, except by that time we
were the six o'clock news. You know, some people aren't too cheap to spring for
cable so
they can get CNN."
"You don't get cable?" The FBI man was appalled.
Just then, there was a
loud riff on the door leading from the kitchen to the
back yard, then a FLAM! that blew it
off its hinges, aided and abetted by the
battered body of another federal agent. Bongo
stepped into the room, grinning
ear to ear.
He was promptly followed by Captain Hamster, who
scurried through the ravaged
portal and stared down at the bruised and bleeding man. He
turned to Bongo and
peevishly demanded, "Once, just once, couldn't you simply knock?"
"What
can I say?" Bongo shrugged. "I got rhythm." His devil-maycare attitude
evaporated when he
saw what Mrs. Hanson had clutched in her hand. "Hey! Wottcha
doin' to Laggi, Girl of the
Starways?"
Before Mrs. Hanson could reply, a slender white hand materialized out of thin
air, its blood red nails tracing the length of her ribcage, tickling without
mercy.
Helpless laughter shook her; she released the alien adventuress just as
her assailant,
Lexa, became fully visible.
"Dear God, how did you do that?" the G-man blurted.
"How?" Lexa
echoed in tones favored by better sepulchres everywhere. "Does it
truly matter, the how? In
the vast, shadowed realm that is eternity, so little
truly matters. I know this, for I am
Lexa. I walk the night. And I hunger." She
lowered smoky eyelids and drew nearer, adding as
she closed in on him, "Also, do
you know you look like David Duchovny?"
He blushed
becomingly. "Well, I have been told that I --"
"Shall we find out if you taste like him
too?"
"I saw him first, you breathing-impaired bimbo!"
Mr. Hanson, Dr. Oglethorpe, and the
spare FBI agents walked in just in time to
help break up the cat fight between the winged
alien and the vampire.
Mr. Hanson quickly decided to leave the peace-keeping violence to
the
professionals. Taking his wife by the arm, he drew her off into a DMZ corner of
the
kitchen. "Honey?" he said in his patented just-the-two-of us-movie-hotcha
wheedle.
"Darling? Uh...Do you think you could maybe remember where that
drugstore was where you got
Jimmy's prescription filled ?"
"I already told you, I don't remember," Mrs. Hanson snarled.
"I only went there
because I happened to get stuck in the neighborhood. I never intended to
go
back, so I didn't pay attention to where it was, just like I told you and the
journalists,
and the FBI and that chinless geek Oglethorpe. And I'm getting
damned sick and tired of
being badgered about this. Dr. Beeman can give you all
the copies of Jimmy's prescription
you want, so why bug me?"
"Because it is not the prescription per se which is important,"
said the
aforementioned chinless geek. Dr. Oglethorpe too had opted to retire from the
field
of battle. He was presently cleansing the left lens of his eyeglasses with
a pristine white
pocket handkerchief. (Laggi, Girl of the Starways, was a fierce
fighter, but not the
world's most accurate shot with spit.) "You see, Mrs.
Hanson, the original medicine which
your son took is a simple compound meant to
relieve heavy otolaryngological congestion."
"Well of course it is," said Mrs. Hanson blandly while inside she was screaming
He's going
to make me listen to his simple explanation! Damn gun control anyway!
She cast about for
the nearest escape hatch, but all exits from the kitchen were
blocked by the squabbling
forces of Law and Order versus Truth and Justice.
"Ordinarily, it would have done nothing
more to your boy than relieve symptoms
of stuffy ear, nose, and throat," the doctor went
on. "It is a readily
available, frequently prescribed, and constantly stocked pediatric
medicament.
However, it is my theory that at the drug store where you purchased one
particular
bottle of this elixir, the pharmacist was, er, less than punctilious
in the execution of
his professional duties and--"
"He stored the stuff wrong and it went funny on him," Mr.
Hanson put in.
Dr. Oglethorpe sniffed. "Hmph! I see nothing humorous about a
molecular-level
change brought on by undetermined environmental factors. Nor the effect it
has
had on your son."
"Oh no?" Mr. Hanson folded his arms. "Anything that kid wants to be
real gets
real! He wants to see a giant rat in tights, whammo!, he gets a giant rat in
tights.
And as soon as the little woman remembers where she bought the stuff,
I'm going over there,
buy a bottle, suck it down, and start doing a little
wanting of my own. You don't think
that's funny, just wait'll you hear me
laughing on board my own private yacht!"
"Uh, Mr.
Hanson, sir?" It was the agent whose resemblance to David Duchovny had
set off the
Lexa/Laggi donnybrook. Having successfully reduced that brawl to an
exchange of nasty
personal remarks (with Bongo as the gleeful refereel, he was
at liberty to turn his
professional attention elsewhere. "Sir, it's not that
simple."
"I should say not!" Dr.
Oglethorpe agreed. "The medicine in question is not sold
over-the-counter. You would need a
prescription to --"
"Besides," the agent put in, "if your wife does happen to recall the
location of
the drugstore where she purchased the cough syrup in question, we'll have to
confiscate all remaining supplies for reasons of national security."
Mr. Hanson took
umbrage and launched into a spirited rant against Big
Government. It was one of his
standard rants, an old favorite that his wife had
heard many times before. While Wayne
inveighed against jackbooted thugs (though
he couldn't tell jackboots from jack squat) she
ignored him with a clear
conscience and gave herself up to one surprising thought:
I
actually understood Dr. Oglethorpe's explanation! Wow. And after all those
years of More
telling me that real girls can't handle science.
Yes, it had all come together for her in
one vast Unified Geek Theory. However,
there were still a few details bothering her. Seeing
as how the squabble between
Laggi and Lexa had run out of steam, she sidled over to the
presently unoccupied
cosmic quartet of wrong-righters to doublecheck her conclusions.
"Let
me see if I've got this straight: Jimmy always wanted you to be real, so as
soon as he took
that screwed-up cough syrup you became real?" "Quod erat
demostrandum," said Captain
Hamster.
"Uh-huh," said Mrs. Hanson, as if a Latin-spouting rodent were an everyday
occurrence.
"Well, that accounts for it.""For what?"
"For why we've been attracting sects and violence
like free gin attracts
Republicans. Why our front steps are hip-deep in pamphlets from
Buddhists,
Bahais, Baptists, Brahmans --"
Captain Hamster raised a staying paw. "I get the
picture. I do read the
newspapers before I shred them for bedding, you know. I get out of
my giant
nuclear-powered exercise wheel sometimes."
It was no use: Mrs. Hanson was on a
roll, and she didn't even need a giant
nuclear-powered exercise wheel to keep going. "--
Muslims, Methodists,
Manichaeans --" She paused, took a deep breath, and concluded: "--
Jews, Jains
and heaven-help-us gymnosophists! They're all after Jimmy because if Jimmy
wants
something, it's so. Including what he wants about God, the universe, and -- and
--"
She spread her hands. "--and the cough syrup did it?"
The hamster nodded. "More or less."
"And if I can remember where I bought the cough syrup, maybe the pharmacist has
some more,
and then the government can go confiscate it, analyze it, duplicate
it, and use it only in
the best interests of national security?"
"Um..." Captain Hamster never could tell a lie.
"It will make the government
very happy if you can remember where you bought it, yes."
"And
once the government's got it, maybe we can sic these religious noodniks on
them, for a
change?"
"Well, I suppose..." The hamster shrugged very expressively for a creature with
no shoulders worth the name.
"Oh, well if that's all -- !" Mrs. Hanson had one of those
bell-like laughs
singular in its power to annoy. "I charged my car repair on Visa and I
gave my
husband the receipt. It's got the garage address on it. Find the garage and
you'll
find the drug store, find the drug store and you'll find the--"
"-- boy's been kidnapped!"
shouted the bloody and bedraggled FBI agent who
lurched into the kitchen and collapsed into
Captain Hamster's outstretched paws.
Less than one hour later, the kitchen was virtually
deserted. The wounded agent
had barely gasped out half his tale before Captain Hamster and
the Frenzies as
one shouted their copyrighted battlecry, "Duck and cover, here comes
Justice!"
and charged off. The other G-men did their comrade the courtesy of letting him
tell the full story: How a suicidal band of men (and possibly women) in
ninja-knockoff
black p.j.s and face masks had stormed the P.S. 187 lunchroom;
how Jimmy's bodyguards had
been unable to use their firearms, for fear of
hitting the children; how in the fierce
hand-to-hand combat that followed, the
masked invaders had defied both the agents' kung-fu
and the lunch-ladies'
auxiliary attacks with iron ladles, Formica trays, and Swedish
meatballs.
A gallant defense, to no avail: The invaders glommed Jimmy and were gone.
Luckily
-- if the word could be applied to such a parlous situation -- as they
were making their
escape, one of their number slipped on a Swedish meatball,
fell, and was captured. Under
questioning he revealed all, including where his
confederates were taking the boy. He even
gave the FBI agents a business card
with the address of the zealots' hideout on it.
"How did
you get so much out of him so fast?" asked the agent who really did
look a lot like David
Duchovny. "I mean, the regulations say we're not allowed
to torture suspects, but --"
"I
used my fake IRS badge," the battered agent replied. "He sang like
Streisand." He then
passed around the tattle-tale business card.
That was all the remaining G-men needed. They
lit out without a backward glance,
leaving Dr. Oglethorpe to accompany their injured
comrade to the hospital and
the Hansons to stand in the midst of their halfwrecked kitchen
looking like
idiots.
Mrs. Hanson broke down into wild sobs and clung to her husband while he
did his
poor best to comfort her. "Look, honey, it's not like they don't know where
Jimmy
is. The worst is over. Now the only thing we've got to do is wait here and
--"
"The worst is
over?" Mrs. Hanson was no superbeing, but she had powers of
ridicule and sarcasm far beyond
those of mortal men. "And I suppose an armed
hostage situation with our son in the middle
of it is just a little walk in the
park?"
"Depends on the park," Mr. Hanson replied, trying
to lighten the mood. "Ow,"he
added when his bride wordlessly expressed her desire that he
stop playing the
fool. She would have added a dollop of harsh words to accompany her
patented
instep-stomp, but tears overcame her once more.
Her husband held her close,
whispered soft words that were the usual nonsense
most people intone when trying to soothe
the distraught. His assurances had as
much footing in reality as a politician's promises,
and were similarly based on
what he thought his audience wanted to hear.
Mrs. Hanson had
spent enough years in the company of Mr. Hanson to recognize yet
another load of his
patented bushwah when she heard it. He meant well this time,
but he had snowed her once too
often in the past for far less noble reasons, one
of them named Donna and the other Tawni.
In ordinary circumstances she would
have snapped, "Oh, clam it, Wayne. If someone blew up
the whole damn world you'd
still try telling me that everything was going to be all right.
I believe you
about as far as I can shotput Newt Gingrich. Grow up, would you?" Then she
would
have resumed bawling even louder, just to show him who was boss.
These were not
ordinary circumstances.
To her own silent astonishment and completely against her will,
Mrs. Hanson
found herself becoming less hysterical. The longer her husband rattled on about
how the SWAT teams would never do anything to endanger Jimmy and how the FBI had
the
situation under complete control, the more she became convinced that he was
right. The
sensation was at once comforting and terrifying. One tiny spark of
self-determination
flared up in the back of her mind, demanding What the frap is
going on here? What's
happening to me?
She caught herself saying, "Yes, darling, of course you're right." Her
vision
flickered. She realized she was actually batting her eyelashes at the goofball
she'd
married, and that words were escaping her lips bathed in the richest tones
of unconditional
faith and adoration. The last ort of her former contempt for
Mr. Hanson stuck around until
it heard her say, "I'm not afraid of anything bad
happening so long as you're here to
protect us." Then it went belly-up beyond
hope of resurrection.
"How right you are, my
angel," said Mr. Hanson. (Was it a trick of the light, or
was his jaw squarer than before?
And where had that manly cleft in his chin
sprung from?) "There's no need to fear so long
as I am here to make everything
all right. And I will. But why do we waste our time,
waiting for others, less
worthy, to do what only I have the power to accomplish?" He
thumped his chest.
"But you were the one who said we should wait here, my beloved," she
replied,
running her fingers through his flowing locks. The erosions of time had been
miraculously
reversed -- better than reversed, for Mr. Hanson had suddenly
sprouted a mane of hair that
could only be described as lush and -- could it be?
-- heroic.
"Would I suggest so craven a
course of action? Forbid it, almighty God! Our
little boy needs us. Our place is with
Jimmy!" he declaimed, and he swept Mrs.
Hanson up in arms gone inexplicably muscular and
bore her out to the car.
It was a cow-crap brown Toyota when he popped her into it. By the
time he drove
through the fifth red light, it had transformed into a sleek, midnight-black
vehicle one-third Porsche, one-third Batmobile, and one third robo-panther. He
drove at
speeds only seen in Spielberg movies, had no accidents, got no tickets,
and wore no safety
belt. As for Mrs. Hanson, the only sounds she seemed capable
of making were alternately
"Eek!" and "Oooh!"
Mr. Hanson finally brought his new vehicle to a shrieking, brakeburning
halt in
front of a comic book store in a strange section of town. As she climbed shakily
out of the car, Mrs. Hanson looked up and down the street, a sense of deja vu
heavy upon
her. She stared into the comic book shop window; a giant cardboard
cutout of Captain
Hamster stared back at her, his mighty cheek-pouches of steel
crammed with bad guys.
She
wanted to exclaim "Holy shit," but for some reason it came out of her mouth
as "Oh my
goodness me!" One block away, the street was a moil of prowl cars,
fire trucks, ambulances,
and assorted police transports. Yellow crime-scene tape
and sawhorse barricades cluttered
up the few feet of space not already occupied
by vehicles. All sorts of men with all sorts
of guns were swarming everywhere. A
dozen bullhorns contended for supremacy.
"Loud, isn't
it?" said Captain Hamster.
"Eek!" exclaimed Mrs. Hanson, jumping into her husband's arms.
In the past
thirty minutes she'd spent more time in his embrace than in the past thirty
months.
The caped critter waddled up to the comic shop window and studied his cardboard
alter-ego.
"They didn't get my good side," he opined. "Are my eyes really that
beady?" He made a sound
of disgust, then turned to the Hansons. "The hour has
struck," he intoned.
Mrs. Hanson said,
"Huh?" and checked her wristwatch.
"Not that hour," Captain Hamster told her. He stared Mr.
Hanson full in the
face, and for a heartbeat the two of them appeared to be the poster
children for
Significant Pauses everywhere. "Your hour," he said.
Mr. Hanson slapped the
giant rodent on the back, threw back his head, and gave
one of those exultant laughs sacred
only to heroes with prior script-approval
and a percentage of the gross. "Oh, this won't
take an hour," he said, and
strode straight for the nearest prowl car, his wife and the
mighty marmotoid
trailing in his valiant wake.
He was met by a pair of uniformed officers
who attempted to persuade him to turn
back, go home, move along and break it up. He chose
the latter most option.
He's not really picking up that car and holding it over his head,
Mrs. Hanson
told herself as she stared at her husband's new way of dealing with
less-than-helpful
policemen. It just looks that way. The prowl car went sailing
through the air and landed
one intersection down with a crump. It resembled
nothing so much as one of the abandoned
Concertinas of the Gods. This done, he
continued his onward march, heading right for the
storefront site where the
police and FBI had the kidnappers holed up.
His approach was
greeted by a hail of gunfire. He behaved as if the bullets were
no more than bumblebees. In
fact, he behaved better than that: In the past, Mr.
Hanson had been known to run into the
house, screaming like a schoolgirl,
whenever his stint at the barbecue grill was
interrupted by the appearance of
anything with a stinger or a nasty bite, from chiggers to
chipmunks.
Mrs. Hanson pressed her fists to her mouth and strangled a shriek as she watched
her now-beloved husband wade through the firefight. She heard herself gasp out
the words,
"Bullets won't stop him!" and then something heavy struck her from
behind, whomping the
breath from her body and sending her sprawling headfirst
into the side of one of the other
police cars. Pretty stars twinkled before her
eyes in a charming selection of decorator
shades, but she stubbornly refused to
slip into unconsciousness. Something deep within her
protested that it was bad
enough she was spouting cliches, she was damned if she was going
to live them
too. She hauled herself hand over hand back into the realm of full awareness
and
rested over the hood of the prowl car.
"Sorry 'bout that," came a sheepish voice behind
her.
She turned her head slightly to see Bongo toeing the ground, his face hot with
blushes.
"I told you and told you," Captain Hamster chided his redoubtable sidekick.
"Some of us
were never meant to give others an encouraging pat on the back."
"Well, I said I was
sorry," Bongo snapped, and slapped his hand down on the
cat's roof for emphasis. The
vehicle doubled up into a scrapmetal V, and its
complement of officers broke into prayers
of thanksgiving that they had not been
inside their mined car at the time.
Mrs. Hanson
shoved herself off the windshield and stood up. (She'd slid down the
hood the instant Bongo
smacked the car.) She rounded on Bongo and demanded,
"What are you waiting for? Why are you
just standing there while my poor
husband's facing a nest of ninjas singlehanded? You're a
super-hero; go help
him!"
Captain Hamster intervened. "I'm afraid he can't do that now, Mrs.
Hanson," he
said. "None of us can."
"Why the heeee -- Why not?" Just in time Mrs. Hanson
reminded herself of the
Frenzies' dislike for gutter language. She'd taken enough
upside-the-head
lessons for one day.
"Because little Jimmy believes that his daddy doesn't
need any help to save
him."
"I don't care what the kid wants, he's got his nerve making
Wayne go in there
and --"
"I didn't say that this is how Jimmy wants it, Mrs. Hanson,"
Captain Hamster
said softly. "I said this is how he believes it should be."
"Not what he
wants but what he...?" Mrs. Hanson spoke as one awakening from a
deep and discombobulating
dream. Two and two suddenly clicked together on the
abacus of her brain, even though the
same Mom who'd taught her that girls can't
handle science had said similar things about
math. In that moment, Mrs. Hanson
achieved a conclusion, a decision, and a plan of action
all at the same time.
Bullets were still flying but not so many as before. She shaded her
eyes and
tried to see what had become of Wayne. He was gone from sight, but the door to
the
kidnapper's lair was now no more than a tangle of twisted metal and
shattered glass.
She
knew that door. In happier days it had sported several lines of gold-trimmed
letters
informing the general public that Dolan's Drugstore was open from nine
to six weekdays,
nine to three Saturdays, with extended evening hours Thursday
and Closed all day Sunday.
The last gunshot sounded on the air and was stilled. The FBI agents exchanged
speculative
looks with the police until someone in authority (or with a lot of
nerve) announced, "Let's
move in, boys!" They plowed forward en masse, ready for
anything.
Anything but Wayne Hanson,
glorious in red-white-and-blue Spandex, his shoulders
wider than the mangled doorway. He
had little Jimmy perched on one shoulder and
in either hand he dragged an unconscious ninja
wannabe by the scruff. He
sidestepped into the street, then tossed his captives, one by
one, through the
gaping doors of the waiting paddywagon. The policemen stared, nonplussed.
"Where the hell did that thing come from?" asked one.
"Looks like something out of an old
gangster movie," said another. "Not like
anything we've got in the motor pool."
Mrs. Hanson
thought she could tell the nice men just where their newest vehicle
had sprung from, but
she had other fish to fry, and she was going to do them up
brown in magic cough syrup. She
dashed through the doorway while SuperWayne
fielded the plaudits of the crowd, his rescued
son grinning like a beaver at a
peg-legged pirates' convention.
Inside the drugstore, all
was still and a little sticky. Battered ninjas slumped
in puddles of strawberry sauce and
slowly cooling hot fudge. Mr. Dolan himself
was still tied up and stowed under the soda
fountain counter, just below the
taps that spouted Coke and Seven-Up and Dr. Pepper, a
piece of duct tape over
his mouth. Mrs. Hanson tore it off without preamble or ceremony,
indifferent to
the pharmacist's shriek of pain.
"Where do you keep the cough syrup?" she
demanded, waggling the tape in his
face. It now sported more than half of the gentleman's
former mustache and
looked like the world's biggest caterpillar.
"What? Why do you want --
?" Mr. Dolan winced. His upper lip was an angry red
and it obviously hurt to talk. "Look,
lady, if you'll just untie me--"
Mrs. Hanson ignored his request. Calmly she glanced about
the ruined drugstore
until her eyes lit on one of those ornamental glass vessels filled
with colored
water. She dumped out the water, smashed the glass, selected a good-sized
shard,
and held it to the still bound pharmacist's throat. "It's a prescription cough
syrup
for kids, you just dispensed me a bottle of it a couple of days ago, I
want some more, I
want it now, and I bet you five bucks that if I slit your
throat they'll blame it on the
ninjas."
Mr. Dolan pursed his lips. "They're not ninjas," he said sullenly. "They're
members
of the First Church of the Divine Harmony. If you kill me, you won't be
able to blame it on
them: They don't believe in violence."
Mrs. Hanson surveyed the wreckage. "Pardon me if I
die laughing," she said.
"They kidnap my son, they beat the crap out of a bunch of FBI
agents, they hole
up here, they bind and gag you, they hold off all comers in a hail of
gunfire,
and you tell me they don't believe in violence?"
"Except in the best interests of
protecting the Church and saving unbelievers
from burning in hell for all eternity," the
druggist clarified.
"Oh, well that sounds..." Reasonable didn't strike her as quite the
word she was
after. "...familiar."
The druggist sighed. "You want to talk sons, try talking
to mine. He joined
them, which is how they happened to pick my store for their hideout.
Even swiped
a bunch of my business cards! I tell you, kids today -- "
Mrs. Hanson didn't
have time for this. Any minute now the FBI and the cops would
come pouring in. "Okay, so
they won't blame the ninjas for it if I slit your
throat, but you'll still be dead, and all
because you wouldn't give me one lousy
bottle of cough syrup. Does that really seem like
something worth dying for?"
"Hell no," said Mr. Dolan, and to quote the
worse-for-ninja-wear FBI agent, he
sang like Streisand (the Early Years).
Following his
directions, Mrs. Hanson looked up Jimmy's old prescription in his
files, told him what she
found there, and with his continuing help located the
large dispenser bottle on the
shelves. Her eyes shone as she took it down and
unscrewed the cap.
The cap would not
unscrew. The cap was covered with a welter of taunting
heiroglyphics instructing the
would-be opener to turn cap while pressing down,
pushing in at the arrows, doing the
hokey-pokey, and sacrificing a red yearling
bull-calf without blemish to Aesculaepius.
"It's
child-safe!" Mrs. Hanson howled. "This miserable cap is childsafe and it's
not even on a
consumer-sized take-home bottle! Dear God, why?"
"New regulations," said Mr. Dolan. "I
could help you get it open if you untied
me." Mrs. Hanson's fingers flew over the knots
binding the druggist's wrists and
ankles. Sotto voce she cursed all Boy Scout leaders
everywhere. Didn't they
realize that statistics showed that thirty-one percent of all
Tenderfeet grew up
to be religious loonies-cum-ninjas?
Once free of his bonds, the
pharmacist sat there rubbing the circulation back
into his wrists. Mrs. Hanson squatted
before him, bouncing on her haunches in an
agony of impatience. "Come on, come on, put
wheels on it, get that bottle open,"
she whined.
"What's the rush?"
"Don't ask questions,
just do it." The glass shard flashed in his face, trimming
the hairs in his left nostril.
As she watched the druggist deal with the recalcitrant bottle, Mrs. Hanson's
thoughts
bubbled in joyful anticipation. Soon, oh soon! Money, mansions, movie
star lovers, my own
line of designer clothes at prices most women can afford, a
signature fragrance, everything
that I always believed should be mine --
"Hurry up," she snarled, making another feint at
Mr. Dolan's face with her
pickup dagger.
Just then she heard a gasp from somewhere behind
her. "Mom! What're you doing?"
came little Jimmy's plaintive cry.
The hand that held the
nasty, long, sharp pointy piece of glass went numb at the
sound. The shard dropped and
shattered. Mrs. Hanson turned to see her only child
standing in the doorway, backed by Dr.
Oglethorpe and a brace of FBI agents.
From outside came the hubbub of SuperWayne fielding a
host of questions from the
media.
Under Jimmy's horrified stare, Mrs. Hanson sensed a
bizarre conversion
overtaking her. It was as if somewhere deep inside her a hungry vortex
had
opened up and was now sucking away all vestiges of ruthless ambition. Every
Danielle
Steel novel she had ever read, replete with the interlaced sagas of
long-legged,
orgasm-enriched, strong-minded and ironthighed career women,
dwindled to so much mental
dross. They were replaced by the unmistakable urge to
bake chocolate chip cookies and a
celestial vision of Martha Stewart's face
illuminated beneath the legend In hoc bimbo
vinces. The cavern of her skull,
where once she had hosted the unslaked desire to be one of
the Rich and Famous,
now echoed with the alien thought: That's not how my Moro's supposed
to be!
It was a frightful experience, that invasion. For the first time in her life she
was
living up to someone else's expectations, willy-nilly. What about
self-determination? her
ego wailed. What about celebrating the abiding power of
me-ness?
As if you ever were
self-determined, came the sneered response from the one
reactionary morsel of her
much-beleaguered spirit. You got married because every
second article in the women's
magazines is about how to nab a man and every
third one's about how to hold him once you've
got him. You had Jimmy right off
the bat because your parents kept sending you newspaper
clippings about the
rising rate of infertility and the dangers of late-life pregnancies.
You've let
everyone else tell you what you're supposed to want so far, including Danielle
Steel. Why not let your son in on the act too? Trust me, it's easier than
thinking for
yourself. And with a sigh of relief it tied on an apron and started
hanging dimity curtains
all over Mrs. Hanson's soul.
She started toward her son on wobbly legs, hands outstretched.
"Oh, baby --" she
began.
Before anyone else could move, Dr. Oglethorpe crossed the wreckage
and was there
to support Mrs. Hanson, lest she fall. "There, there, dear lady, you've been
under some strain, but soon everything will be --"
"Who's that guy?" Jimmy wanted to know.
"It's all right, darling," Mrs. Hanson said, smiling weakly. "This is
Dr. Oglethorpe; you
never met him. He's a scientist who --"
"A scientist?" Jimmy's voice scaled upwards,
aghast.
"Well, yes dear," his mother said, puzzled by her boy's horrified reaction.
"What's
wrong with -- ?"
"Hey, lady!" Mr. Dolan called from behind. "You still want this?" He
wigwagged
the big bottle.
The air crackled. A hollow, hideous evil laugh rang out. "I'll
take that!" In
the blink of several eyes, Dr. Oglethorpe sprang upon Mr. Dolan like the
world's
biggest spider and snatched the bottle from the pharmacist's grasp. Madness had
transformed
his bland, geeky features into a writhing mask of power-hungry
ruthlessness seldom seen
outside a Jonny Quest cartoon. "Today the cough syrup,
tomorrow the world!" He threw back
his head and cackled, then drew a bulbous
purple raygun from the pocket of his chinos.
One
of the FBI agents flanking Jimmy tried to shoot the hideously mutated
scientist, but a
single blast of Dr. Oglethorpe's ray turned him into a skink.
The second agent was a slow
learner, for which fault he too was soon scuttling
all over the floor on four scaly legs.
Grinning like a shark with lockjaw, Dr.
Oglethorpe rounded the gun on Mr. Dolan. The
pharmacist raised his hands in the
most peaceable of surrenders. Dr. Oglethorpe zapped him
just for the hell of it,
then filled the drugstore with maniacal tittering.
"Jimmy, get
Daddy!" Mrs. Hanson shouted, but to no avail. Jimmy gaped at the
three hapless
raygun-spawned lizards and flew into an unreasoning panic. He
uttered a wail of despair
and, in the best of Stupid Sci-Fi Movie traditions,
bolted in the wrong direction: Not out
the door and off to summon his suddenly
super-endowed father, but over the skinks and
straight into the arms of his mom.
Even as he did so, Dr. Oglethorpe was upon them, the
raygun's snout pressed to
Mrs. Hanson's temple.
"Don't try anything...foolish, my dear," he
hissed in her ear. He had acquired a
Mittel-European accent, heavily laced with the
overtones of the Orient, from the
same place he'd gotten that raygun. "It would be a shame
if the boy were to zee
you become a zalamander, ah so?"
Mrs. Hanson moistened her lips. They
had gone quite dry, despite a liberal
coating of Glossy Melon Surprise. Having a raygun
poking you in the side of the
head did things like that, the promises of the U.S. cosmetics
industry be
damned. "Jimmy dear, Mommy thinks this would be a very good time to wish the
naughty scientist faaaar, faaaar away," she said quietly.
"He can't wish him away," said
the familiar voice of Captain Hamster. The fluffy
avenger stood just within the doorway of
Dolan's Drugstore, backed by the
Frenzies and SuperWayne. Never had Mrs. Hanson seen so
grave a look in the
colossal creature's eyes. "No more than he can want or will or wink him
away. I
told you before: Jimmy has the power to change reality not according to what he
wants,
but according to what he believes."
"That's what I thought." Mrs. Hanson nodded as much as
Dr. Oglethorpe's raygun
would allow. "You know, you might've been more specific about it
earlier. You're
the one who said that if Jimmy wanted something--"
"No, madam, you used the
word 'want,' not I; you and the rest of the humans."
"This is a fine time to chop logic,"
the imperiled lady said. "You'd make a
great lawyer."
Captain Hamster looked hurt. "I'm only
a superhero," he said. "I'm usually too
busy advancing the plot to explain it."
"I, on zee
ozzer handt, am a zientist," Dr. Oglethorpe purred in her ear. "Und I
humbly beg to assure
Memsahib Hanson zat zere iss a verry zimple eggsblanation
for --"
"Stow it, Frankenstein!"
Bongo shouted, bouncing on the balls of his feet and
drumming out his frustration on the
soda fountain. The marble countertop snapped
and crumbled like a piece of Melba toast.
"Let
her go, you fiend!" SuperWayne bellowed from the doorway. He flexed his
biceps and the
concussion alone was enough to dislodge a fresh shower of plaster
from the battered
ceiling.
"So sorry, please not to come any closer." Dr. Oglethorpe's triggerfinger
twitched.
Mrs. Hanson heard a distinct click even though she was pretty damn
sure that no raygun
worth its salt would make a sound like a Colt .45 being
cocked.
But that's how Jimmy thinks
it should be? she realized. That's how he believes
it is, the same way he believes that his
daddy can rescue him from anything and
that I'm the perfect housewife and that giant
superhero hamsters really exist
and that all scientists are mad scientists and -- and --
and -- !
Her heart sank. She knew how great the difference was between wanting and
believing.
It was a gulf of meaning that had swallowed many faiths, marriages,
and Federal budgets. No
matter how much Jimmy might want to see his Morn rescued
from this ugly situation
(skinkifying raygun to temple), he didn't believe it
could be done in the existing
circumstances (skinkifying raygun to temple). Even
though he was only eight years old, he
no longer believed in Santa, the Easter
bunny, or a deus ex machina.
All of a sudden she
remembered one more thing that Jimmy did believe.
"Dr. Oglethorpe, why don't you put that
nasty o1' raygun down?" she wheedled.
"Vhy?" he echoed. "Ze mad zientist alvays needs zer
beautiful hostage to
guarantee his ezgape!"
"But it's soooo unnecessary. You've got what you
came for. Gulp down a big
swallow of that cough syrup and none of them will be able to stop
you from
walking out of here and taking over the world before dinnertime. That is what
you
have in mind, isn't it?"
The doctor stared at her as though she'd turned into a skink of
her own free
will. "You know, zat's right." He released his hold and scratched his balding
pate in thought. "It neffer occurred to me. You know vat zey say: Ven you are a
megalomaniac,
ze mind iss ze first zing to go, heh, heh. Veil --" He raised the
open bottle to his lips
"-- here's world domination in your eye."
"Oh, wait a minute, doctor darling." Mrs. Hanson
laid one soft, white hand on
the madman's arm. "That stuff does taste icky -- just you ask
Jimmy if you don't
believe me. Let me get you something to wash away the aftertaste, okay?"
She
used her dimples on him in ways forbidden by the Geneva Conventions. Jimmy
rolled his
eyes at his mother's kittenish excesses and made loud, pointed
gagging sounds, but since he
held fast to every eight-year-old boy's belief that
all girls are mushy, his powers didn't
impede Mrs. Hanson's use of full-bore
feminine wiles.
Dr. Oglethorpe regarded her
suspiciously. "Ah so, vhy are you beink zo nice to
me?"
"You're about to rule the world. Can
you blame a girl for wanting to get on your
good side? Besides, how could I hurt you?" She
brought the eyelashes into play.
"For zat zere iss a very zimple eggsblanation: You could
zlip somesink naughty
into zat drink."
Mrs. Hanson actually said the words, "Pish-tush,
silly man. You're going to be
drinking the cough syrup first: Whatever you believe will be
real. Do you
believe that a woman like me could outwit a man like you?"
"Ha!" Dr.
Oglethorpe's contemptuous response was pure reflex.
"Besides --" Mrs. Hanson suggestively
traced the curves of the madman's raygun
with one finger "-- don't you believe that a woman
like me could fall for a big,
strong, mad scientist like you?"
"You could?" His eyebrows
rose to new heights.
In answer, Mrs. Hanson leaned nearer and breathed in his ear, "A very
simple
explanation of Fermat's last theorem gets me sooooooo hot."
"Ah...ah...ah..." Dr.
Oglethorpe's forehead was shiny with sweat which he
ineffectually tried to wipe off with
the cough syrup bottle. "I zink I viii haf
zat drink, my little cherry blossom."
"Your wish
is my command," Mrs. Hanson murmured, and tripped gaily over to the
half-ruined soda
fountain to draw him a dark and foaming draught. None of the
assembled superheroes made a
move to interfere, for the evil Dr. Oglethorpe made
sure to keep his raygun trained on
little Jimmy the whole time as surety for
their good behavior.
"Undt now," he said when she
returned to his side, "again a toast: To me!" He
guzzled the contents of the cough syrup
bottle, then dropped the empty to the
floor and made a face.
"I told you it tasted icky,
pumpkin," said Mrs. Hanson, passing him the chaser.
He looked good for guzzling that too,
but partway through he paused, lowered the
glass, and stared into it. "Zis iss not zer
pause zat refreshes!" he accused.
"No, it's Dr. Pepper," Mrs. Hanson told him.
"Dr. Pepper?"
Jimmy echoed. "Ewwwwww! Prune soda!"
Calmly and casually, Mrs. Hanson said, "Sweetie,
Mommy's told you over and over,
Dr. Pepper is very nice and very tasty and Daddy likes it
and it is not made
from --"
"It is too made from prunes!" Jimmy insisted.
"Do not contradict
your mama-san, unworthy offspring," Dr. Oglethorpe snarled.
"If she says it is not made
from prunes, zen you viii agree or..." He aimed his
raygun at the child meaningly.
"But it
is so too! It is!" the boy cried with all the fervor of an early
Christian opting for the
lions. "It tastes like it is, so it is, and if you eat
prunes or drink 'era then everyone
knows what hap --"
"Eat hot skink, miserable worm!" the mad doctor shrieked, and squeezed
the
trigger.
A large, green, webbed hand knocked the raygun to the floor, deflecting its
beam
neatly. "Don't move, earthling," said the warty, pop-eyed alien who had suddenly
appeared.
Yellow squiggles of pure mental energy shot from his eyes to Dr.
Oglethorpe's, buzzing like
a hive full of asthmatic bees.
Immediately the deranged scientist froze in place, his eyes
glazing over. "Yes,
Master," he intoned. As Jimmy could have told him in an instant, if
he'd been in
any state to listen, not even the awesome powers conferred by the mutated
cough
syrup could stand against the psychic might of the Toad-Men of Skraax.
Two more
Toad-Men materialized in a haze of twinkly lights to slap the helpless
human into Salvador
Dali's idea of a straight-jacket. "Good work, Commander!"
said one. "Close study of this
specimen will do much to aid, abet, and hasten
our inevitable conquest of this puny planet,
mwahahaha* croak.*" The lights
twinkled all around them again and they vanished, taking Dr.
Oglethorpe with
them.
Bongo leaped forward. "Pulsing percussion, Captain Hamster, we can't
just let
them beat it like that! He may have been a power-hungry maniac, but he was also
a citizen of Earth."
"We can't let them get away with this," agreed Laggi, Girl of the
Starways.
"Give the Toad-Men of Skraax an inch and they'll take a parsec."
"He was evil, but
he was AB-Negative," Lexa chimed in. "My favorite flavor!"
Captain Hamster sighed. "You're
right. The twenty-four hour automated teller
window of Justice never sleeps. Laggi, summon
the Hamstarship!"
The little alien pressed her fingertips to her temples and assumed that
constipated look which indicates mental telepathy (as opposed to the other kind)
in action.
A loud humming overhead made the drugstore shudder as a circular
section of roof melted
away to reveal a hovering spacecraft. A hole irised open
in its light-encrusted underbelly
and two incredibly long ropes dropped to the
ground. While Lexa merely dematerialized and
Laggi soared into the ship under
her own power, Bongo and Captain Hamster shinnied up
hand-over-hand and
paw-over-paw in less time than it would take to please the most
autocratic of
seventh-grade gym teachers. Then the ropes were sucked back into the
spacecraft
like so much spaghetti, the hole closed, and the mighty Hamstarship spun off
into
the cosmos.
Mrs. Hanson watched Captain Hamster and the Frenzies go, petulance creasing her
brow. "Great, just great," she muttered. "Now who's going to clean up this
mess?" And when
she said mess, she wasn't thinking of the wrecked drugstore or
the forever-lost cough syrup
or the fact that Wayne couldn't possibly sell
insurance dressed in a caped leotard and
tights. She was thinking of Jimmy.
Jimmy, who in five short years would be a teenager.
Jimmy, who would then be
ripe for believing any stupid thing his stupid friends told him.
Jimmy, who
would believe with all his omnipotent heart that his parents were reactionary
troglodytes with the brains of cole slaw.
Mrs. Hanson didn't like cole slaw. Something had
to be done.
Jimmy was still staring after the vanished Hamstarship when his mother tapped
him lightly on the shoulder to reclaim his attention. "Didja see it, Mom?" he
exclaimed,
whirling around. "Didja see it? Gee, I wish I could've gone with
them."
"You can, darling,"
Mrs. Hanson said.
"Huh ?"
"I said yes, you can go with Captain Hamster and the Frenzies to
fight the
Toad-Men of Skraax."
"I can?" This from the woman who wouldn't let him bicycle
around the block by
himself? That guarded look of juvenile skepticism was back on Jimmy's
face full
force. Mrs. Hanson smiled inwardly. Perfect.
"Sure, you can," she pressed. "It's
all up to you. You see, anything you want to
happen will happen. Now don't give me that
look, dear, there's a very simple
explanation: It's all because that cough syrup I fed you
a couple of days ago
gave you the power to --"
"It did?" Jimmy scowled. Mrs. Hanson could
almost see his thought processes at
work: Magic cough syrup, yeah, right, what does she
think I am, a kid? She's
just saying this so next time I'll swallow that yucky gunk without
holding out
for a new Captain Hamster comic. Well, she can't fool me! With a smug look of
complete triumph Jimmy shouted, "That cough syrup didn't do anything to me! I
don't believe
it!" And he meant it, too.
The universe went *poik*, a comprehensive sound-effect that
included a lot of
retroactive reality-adjustments.
"Did you hear that?" asked Wayne, his old
self once more.
"Sounded like a backfire," replied one of the restored FBI agents.
"Since
when do backfires go *poik*?" a rehumanized Mr. Dolan wanted to know.
"I'm sorry, sir,"
said the other former skink. "You're not cleared to receive
that information."
Mrs. Hanson
surveyed the results of her ploy and was satisfied. She breathed a
great sigh of relief and
turned to her son. "Come along, Jimmy, we're going home
now."
"Aw, Mommmm, do I haaaaave
to?" Jimmy dodged her outstretched hand and dashed
behind the smashed-up soda fountain.
Mrs. Hanson shook her head over her
headstrong child and gave chase.
The chase was cut short
when she stepped on something round and her ankle
twisted out from under her. Cursing
merrily, she picked up the offending object
and was about to hurl it against the farthest
wall when she noticed what it was.
It was the discarded cough syrup bottle. A single drop
of the fabulous contents
glistened on the rim. Dr. Oglethorpe had done his best to drain it
dry, but he
was a man, not a vacuum pump. Mrs. Hanson caught the drop on her fingertip
before
it fell and popped it into her mouth.
The structure of DNA unscrolled before her like a
runaway sheet of shelf paper.
Differential equations rattled through her mind as easily as
nursery rhymes. She
never had believed what her mother said about girls and math and
science. And
that was only the beginning. As for some of those women's magazine articles
she'd swallowed whole, and those allwise parenting gurus she'd obeyed without
question, and
those three or four or fifty-some-odd gentlemen in Foggy Bottom
who kept preaching that
equal pay was the first step that inevitably led to
devouring your young...
For the first
time in her life, Mrs. Hanson knew exactly what she believed.
Somewhere in the universe the
cry rang out: "Duck and cover, boys, here comes
Justice. And man, is she ever pissed!"