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Authors: Robert A Heinlein

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BOOK: Job: A Comedy of Justice
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“Alec, I will always take all the time for you that you need.”

“All right. You go down and eat, and I’ll go down and touch base at least—get Inga off my neck—and I’ll meet you here after you turn down beds. All right?”

She looked thoughtful. “All right. Alec—Will you kiss me again?”

That’s how I knew she believed me. Or wanted to believe me. I quit worrying. I even ate a good dinner, although I hurried.

She was waiting for me when I returned, and stood up as I came in. I took her in my arms, pecked her on the nose, picked her up by her elbows and sat her on my bunk; then I sat down in the only chair. “Dear one, do you think I’m crazy?”

“Alec, I don’t know what to tink.” (Yes, she said “tink.” Once in a long while, under stress of emotion, Margrethe would lose the use of the theta sound. Otherwise her English accent was far better than my tall-corn accent, harsh as a rusty saw.)

“I know,” I agreed. “I had the same problem. Only two ways to look at it. Either something incredible did happen when I walked through the fire, something that changed my whole world. Or I’m as crazy as a pet ’coon. I’ve spent days checking the facts…and the world
has
changed. Not just airships. Kaiser Wilhelm the Fourth is missing and some silly president named ‘Schmidt’ is in his place. Things like that.”

“I would not call Herr Schmidt ‘silly.’ He is quite a good president as German presidents go.”

“That’s my point, dear. To me, any German president looks silly, as Germany is—in
my
world—one of the last western monarchies effectively unlimited. Even the Tsar is not as powerful.”

“And that has to be my point, too, Alec. There is no Kaiser and there is no Tsar. The Grand Duke of Muscovy is a constitutional monarch and no longer claims to be suzerain over other Slavic states.”

“Margrethe, we’re both saying the same thing. The world I grew up in is gone. I’m having to learn about a different world. Not a totally different world. Geography does not seem to have changed, and not all of history. The two worlds seem to be the same almost up to the beginning of the twentieth century. Call it eighteen-ninety. About a hundred years back something strange happened and the two worlds split apart…and about twelve days ago something equally strange happened to me and I got bounced into this world.” I smiled at her. “But I’m not sorry. Do you know why? Because
you
are in this world.”

“Thank you. It is important to me that you are in it, too.”

“Then you do believe me. Just as I have been forced to believe it. So much so that I’ve quit worrying about it. Just one thing really bothers me—What became of Alec Graham? Is he filling my place in my world? Or what?”

She did not answer at once, and when she did, her answer did not seem responsive. “Alec, will you please take down your trousers?”

“What did you say, Margrethe?”

“Please. I am not making a joke and I am not trying to entice you. I must see something. Please lower your trousers.”

“I don’t see—All right.” I shut up and did as she asked—not easy in evening dress. I had to take off my mess jacket, then my cummerbund, before I was peeled enough to let me slide the braces off my shoulders.

Then, reluctantly, I started unbuttoning my fly. (Another shortcoming of this retarded world—no zippers. I did not appreciate zippers until I no longer had them.)

I took a deep breath, then lowered my trousers a few inches. “Is that enough?”

“A little more, please—and will you please turn your back to me?”

I did as she asked. Then I felt her hands, gentle and not invasive, at my right rear. She lifted a shirttail and pulled down the top of my underwear pants on the right.

A moment later she restored both garments. “That’s enough. Thank you.”

I tucked in my shirttails and buttoned up my fly, reshouldered the braces and reached for the cummerbund. She said, “Just a moment, Alec.”

“Eh? I thought you were through.”

“I am. But there is no need to get back into those formal clothes; let me get out casual trousers for you. And shirt. Unless you are going back to the lounge?”

“No. Not if you will stay.”

“I will stay; we must talk.” Quickly she took out casual trousers and a sports shirt for me, laid them on the bed. “Excuse me, please.” She went into the bath.

I don’t know whether she needed to use it or not, but she knew that I could change more comfortably in the stateroom than in that cramped shipboard bathroom.

I changed and felt better. A cummerbund and a boiled shirt are better than a strait jacket but not much. She came out, at once hung up the clothes I had taken off, all but the shirt and collar. She removed studs and collar buttons from these, put them away, and put shirt and collar into my laundry bag. I wondered what Abigail would think if she could see these wifely attentions. Abigail did not believe in spoiling me—and did not.

“What was that all about, Margrethe?”

“I had to see something. Alec, you were wondering what had become of Alec Graham. I now know the answer.”

“Yes?”

“He’s right here. You are he.”

At last I said, “That, just from looking at a few square inches on my behind? What did you find, Margrethe? The strawberry mark that identifies the missing heir?”

“No, Alec. Your ‘Southern Cross.’”

“My what?”

“Please, Alec. I had hoped that it would restore your memory. I saw it the first night we—” She hesitated, then looked me square in the eye. “—made love. You turned on the light, then turned over on your belly to see what time it was. That was when I noticed the moles on your right buttock cheek. I commented on the pattern they made, and we joked about it. You said that it was your Southern Cross and it let you know which end was up.”

Margrethe turned slightly pink but continued to look me firmly in the eye. “And I showed you some moles on my body. Alec, I am sorry that you do not remember it but please believe me: By then we were well enough acquainted that we could be playful about such things without my being forward or rude.”

“Margrethe, I don’t think you could ever be forward or rude. But you’re putting too much importance on a chance arrangement of moles. I’ve got moles all over me; it doesn’t surprise me that some of them, back where I can’t see easily, are arranged in a cross shape. Or that Graham had some that were somewhat similar.”

“Not ‘similar.’ Exactly the same.”

“Well—There is a much better way to check. In the desk there in my wallet. Graham’s wallet, actually. Driver’s license. His. His thumbprint on it. I haven’t checked it because I have never had the slightest doubt that he was Graham and that I am Hergensheimer and that we are not the same man. But we
can
check. Get it out, dear. Check it yourself. I’ll put a thumbprint on the mirror in the bath. Compare them. Then you will know.”

“Alec, I do know. You are the one who doesn’t believe it; you check it.”

“Well—” Margrethe’s counterproposal was reasonable; I agreed to it.

I got out Graham’s driver’s license, then placed a print on the bath mirror by first rubbing my thumb over my nose for the nose’s natural oil, so much greater than that of the pad of the thumb. I found that I could not see the pattern on the glass too well, so I shook a little talcum onto my palm, blew it toward the mirror.

Worse. The powder that detectives use must be much finer than shaving talcum. Or perhaps I don’t know how to use it. I placed another print without powder, looked at both prints, at my right thumb, at the print on the driver’s license, then checked to see that the license did indeed designate print of right thumb. It did. “Margrethe! Will you come look, please?”

She joined me in the bath. “Look at this,” I said. “Look at all four—my thumb and three prints. The pattern in all four is basically an arch—but that simply trims it down to half the thumbprints in the world. I’ll bet you even money that your own thumbprints have an arch pattern. Honest, can you tell whether or not the thumbprint on that card was made by
this
thumb? Or by my left thumb; they might have made a mistake.”

“I cannot tell, Alec. I have no skill in this.”

“Well—I don’t think even an expert could tell in this light. We’ll have to put it off till morning; we need bright sunlight out on deck. We also need glossy white paper, stamp-pad ink, and a magnifying glass…and I’ll bet Mr. Henderson will have all three. Will tomorrow do?”

“Certainly. This test is not for me, Alec; I already know in my heart. And by seeing your ‘Southern Cross.’ Something has happened to your memory but you are still you…and someday we will find your memory again.”

“It’s not that easy, dear. I
know
that I am not Graham. Margrethe, do you have any idea what business he was in? Or why he was on this trip?”

“Must I say ‘him’? I did not ask your business, Alec. And you never offered to tell me.”

“Yes, I think you must say ‘him,’ at least until we check that thumbprint. Was he married?”

“Again, he did not say and I did not ask.”

“But you implied—No, you flatly stated that you had ‘made love’ with this man whom you believe to be me, and that you have been in bed with him.”

“Alec, are you reproaching me?”

“Oh, no, no, no!” (But I was, and she knew it.) “Whom you go to bed with is your business. But I must tell you that
I
am married.”

She shut her face against me. “Alec, I did not try to seduce you into marriage.”

“Graham, you mean. I was not there.”

“Very well. Graham. I did not entrap Alec Graham. For our mutual happiness we made love. Matrimony was not mentioned by either of us.”

“Look, I’m sorry I mentioned the matter! It seemed to have some bearing on the mystery; that’s all. Margrethe, will you believe that I would rather strike off my arm—or pluck out my eye and cast it from me—than hurt you, ever, in any way?”

“Thank you, Alec. I believe you.”

“All that Jesus ever said was: ‘Go, and sin no more.’ Surely you do not think I would ever set myself up as more severely judgmental than was Jesus? But I was not judging you; I was seeking information about Graham. His business, in particular. Uh, did you ever suspect that he might be engaged in something illegal?”

She gave a ghost of a smile. “Had I ever suspected anything of the sort, my loyalty to him is such that I would never express such suspicion. Since you insist that you are not he, then there it must stand.”


Touché!
” I grinned sheepishly. Could I tell her about the lockbox? Yes, I must. I had to be frank with her and had to persuade her that she was not being disloyal to Graham/me were she to be equally frank. “Margrethe, I was not asking idly and I was not prying where I had no business to pry. I have still more trouble and I need your advice.”

Her turn to be startled. “Alec… I do not often give advice. I do not like to.”

“May I tell you my trouble? You need not advise me…but perhaps you may be able to analyze it for me.”

I told her quickly about that truly damning million dollars. “Margrethe, can you think of any legitimate reason why an honest man would be carrying a million dollars in cash? Travelers checks, letters of credit, drafts for transferring monies, even bearer bonds—But
cash?
In that amount? I say that it is psychologically as unbelievable as what happened to me in the fire pit is physically unbelievable. Can you see any other way to look at it? For what
honest
reason would a man carry that much cash on a trip like this?”

“I will not pass judgment.”

“I do not ask you to judge; I ask you to stretch your imagination and tell me why a man would carry with him a million dollars in cash. Can you think of a reason? One as farfetched as you like…but a reason.”

“There could be many reasons.”

“Can you think of one?”

I waited; she remained silent. I sighed and said, “I can’t think of one, either. Plenty of criminal reasons, of course, as so-called ‘hot money’ almost always moves as cash. This is so common that most governments—all governments, I believe—assume that any large amount of cash being moved other than by a bank or by a government is indeed crime money until proved otherwise. Or counterfeit money, a still more depressing idea. The advice I need is this: Margrethe, what should I do with it? It’s not mine; I can’t take it off the ship. For the same reason I can’t abandon it. I can’t even throw it overboard. What
can
I do with it?”

My question was not rhetorical; I had to find an answer that would not cause me to wind up in jail for something Graham had done. So far, the only answer I could think of was to go to the only authority in the ship, the Captain, tell him all my troubles and ask him to take custody of that awkward million dollars.

Ridiculous. That would just give me a fresh set of bad answers, depending on whether or not the Captain believed me and on whether or not the Captain himself was honest—and possibly on other variables. But I could not see any outcome from telling the Captain that would not end in my being locked up, either in jail or in a mental hospital.

The simplest way to resolve the situation would be to throw the pesky stuff overboard!

I had moral objections to that. I’ve broken some of the Commandments and bent some others, but being financially honest has never been a problem to me. Granted, lately my moral fiber did not seem to be as strong as I had thought, but nevertheless I was not tempted to steal that million even to jettison it.

But there was a stronger objection: Do you know anyone who, having a million dollars in his hands, could bring himself to destroy it?

Maybe you do. I don’t. In a pinch I might turn it over to the Captain but I would not destroy it.

Smuggle it ashore? Alex, if you ever take it out of that lockbox, you have stolen it. Will you destroy your self-respect for a million dollars? For ten million? For five dollars?

“Well, Margrethe?”

“Alec, it seems to me that the solution is evident.”

“Eh?”

“But you have been trying to solve your problems in the wrong order. First you must regain your memory. Then you will know why you are carrying that money. It will turn out to be for some innocent and logical purpose.” She smiled. “I know you better than you know yourself. You are a good man, Alec; you are not a criminal.”

BOOK: Job: A Comedy of Justice
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