The Best of L Sprague De Camp Part 11
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Vining spoke up. "Oh, we're always glad to do the sporting thing. But I'm afraid the sea lion wasn't entered at the beginning of the meet as is required by the rules. We don't want to catch h.e.l.l from the Committee-"
"Oh, yes, she was," said Connaught. "See!" He pointed to one of Horwitz's sheets. "Her name's Alice Black, and there it is."
"But," protested Vining, "I thought that was Alice Black." He pointed to a slim dark girl in a bathing suit who was sitting on a window ledge.
"It is," grinned Connaught. "It's just a coincidence that they both got the same name."
"You don't expect us to believe that?"
"I don't care whether you believe it or not. It's so. Ain't the sea lion's name Alice Black?" He turned to the little fat man, who nodded.
"Let it pa.s.s," moaned Wambach. "We can't take time off to get this animal's birth certificate."
"WTeII, then," said Vining, "how about the regulation suit? Maybe you'd like to try to put a suit on your sea lion?"
"Don't have to. She's got one already. It grows on her. Yah, yah, yah, gotcha that time."
"I suppose," said Wambach, "that you could consider a natural sealskin pelt as equivalent to a bathing suit."
"Sure you could. That's the point. Anyway, the idea of suits is to be modest, and n.o.body gives a d.a.m.n about a sea lion's modesty."
Vining made a final point. "You refer to the animal as 'her,' but how do we know it's a female? Even Mr. Wambach wouldn't let you enter a male sea lion in a women's meet."
Wambach spoke: "How do you tell on a sea lion?"
Connaught looked at the little fat man. "Well, maybe we had better not go into that here. How would it be if I put up a ten-dollar bond that Alice is a female, and you checked on her s.e.x later?"
"That seems fair," said Wambach.
Vining and Laird looked at each other. "Shall we let 'em get away with that, Mark?" asked the latter.
Vining rocked on his heels for a few seconds. Then he said, "I think we might as well. Can I see you outside a minute, Herb? You people don't mind holding up the race a couple of minutes more, do you? We'll be right back."
Connaught started to protest about further delay but thought better of it. Laird presently reappeared, looking unwontedly cheerful.
"'Erbert!" said lantha.
"Yes?" he put his head down.
"I'm afraid-"
"You're afraid Alice might bite you in the water? Well, I wouldn't want that-"
"Oh, no, not afraid that way. Alice, poof! If she gets nasty I give her one with the tail. But I am afraid she can swim faster than me."
"Listen, lantha, you just go ahead and swim the best you can. Twelve legs, remember. And don't be surprised, no matter what happens."
"WThat you two saying?" asked Connaught suspiciously.
"None of your business, Louie. Whatcha got in that pail? Fish? I see how you're going to work this. Wanta give up and concede the meet now?"
Connaught merely snorted.
The only compet.i.tors in the 3oo-yard free-style race were Iantha Delfoiros and the sea lion, allegedly named Alice. The normal members of both clubs declared that nothing would induce them to get into the pooi with the animal. Not even the importance of collecting a third-place point would move them.
lantha got into her usual starting position. Beside her, the little round man maneuvered Alice, holding her by an improvised leash made of a length of rope. At the far end, Connaught had placed himself and one of the buckets.
Ritchey fired his gun; the little man slipped the leash and said: "Go get 'em, Alice!" Connaught took a fish out of his bucket and waved it. But Alice, frightened by the shot, set up a furious barking and stayed where she was. Not till lantha had almost reached the far end of the pool did Alice sight the fish at the other end. Then she slid off and shot down the water like a streak. Those who have seen sea lions merely loafing about a pool in a zoo or acquarium have no conception of how fast they can go when they try. Fast as the mermaid was, the sea lion was faster. She made two bucking jumps out of water before she arrived and oozed out onto the concrete. One gulp and the fish had vanished.
Alice spotted the bucket and tried to get her head into it. Connaught fended her off as best he could with his feet. At the starting end, the little round man had taken a fish out of the other bucket and was waving it, calling: "Here Alice!"
Alice did not get the idea until lantha had finished her second leg. Then she made up for lost time.
The same trouble occurred at the starting end of the pool; Alice failed to see why she should swim twenty-five yards for a fish when there were plenty of them a few feet away. The result was that, at the halfway-mark, lantha was two legs ahead. But then Alice caught on. She caught up with and pa.s.sed Iantha in the middle of her eighth leg, droozling out of the water at each end long enough to gulp a fish and then speeding down to the other end. In the middle of the tenth leg, she was ten yards ahead of the mermaid.
At that point, Mark Vining appeared through the door, running. In each hand he held a bowl of goldfish by the edge. Behind him came Miss Havranek and Miss Tufts, also of the Knickerbockers, both similarly burdened. The guests of the Hotel Creston had been mildly curious when a dark, severe-looking young man and two girls in bathing suits had dashed into the lobby and made off with the six bowls. But they had been too well-bred to inquire directly about the rape of the goldfish.
Vining ran down the -side of the pool to a point near the far end. There he extended his arms and inverted the bowls. Water and fish cascaded into the pool. Miss Havranek and Miss Tufts did likewise at other points along the edge of the pool.
Results were immediate. The bowls had been large, and each had contained about six or eight fair-sized goldfish. The forty-odd brightcolored fish, terrified by their rough handling, darted hither and thither about the pool, or at least went as fast as their inefficient build would permit them.
Alice, in the middle of her ninth leg, angled off sharply. n.o.body saw her s.n.a.t.c.h the fish; one second it was there, and the next it was not. Alice doubled with a swirl of flippers and shot diagonally across the pool. Another fish vanished. Forgotten were her master and Louis Connaught and their buckets. This was much more fun. Meanwhile, Iantha finished her race, narrowly avoiding a collision with the sea lion on her last leg.
Connaught hurled the fish he was holding as far as he could. Alice snapped it up and went on hunting. Connaught ran toward the starting platform, yelling: "Foul! Foul! Protest! Protest! Foul! Foul!"
He arrived to find the timekeepers comparing watches on Jantha's swim, Laird and Vining doing a kind of war dance, and Ogden Wambach looking like the March Hare on the twenty-eighth of February.
"Stop!" cried the referee. "Stop, Louie! If you shout like that you'll drive me mad! I'm almost mad now! I know what you're going to say."
"Well . . . well . . . why don't you do something, then? Vhy don't you tell these crooks where to head in? Why don't you have 'em expelled from the Union? Why don't you-"
"Relax, Louie," said Vining. "We haven't done anything illegal."
"What? Why, you dirty-"
"Easy, easy." Vining looked speculatively at his fist. The little man followed his glance and quieted somewhat. "There's nothing in the rules about putting fish into a pool. Intelligent swimmers, like Miss Delfoiros, know enough to ignore them when they're swimming a race."
"But-what-why you-"
Vining walked off, leaving the two coaches and the referee to fight it out. He looked for lantha. She was sitting on the edge of the pool, paddling in the water with her flukes. Beside her were four feebly flopping goldfish laid out in a row on the tiles. As he approached, she picked one up and put the front end of it in her mouth. There was a flash of pearly teeth and a spasmodic flutter of the fish's tail, and the front half of the fish was gone. The other half followed immediately.
At that instant Alice spotted the three remaining fish. The sea lion had cleaned out the pool and was now slithering around on the concrete, barking and looking for more prey. She gallumped past Vining toward the mermaid.
Jantha saw her coming. The mermaid hoisted her tail out of the water, pivoted where she sat, swung the tail up in a curve, and brought the flukes down on the sea lion's head with a loud spat. Vining, who was twenty feet off, could have sworn he felt the wind of the blow.
Alice gave a squawk of pain and astonishment and slithered away, shaking her head. She darted past Vining again, and for reasons best known to herself hobbled over to the center of argument and bit Ogden Wambach in the leg. The referee screeched and climbed up on Horwitz's table.
"Hey," said the scorekeeper. "You're scattering my papers!"
"I still say they're publicity-hunting crooks!" yelled Connaught, waving his copy of the rule book at Wambach.
"Bunk!" bellowed Laird. "He's just sore because we can think up more stunts than he can. He started it, with his web-fingered woman." - "d.a.m.n your complaints!" screamed Wambach. "d.a.m.n your sea lions! d.a.m.n your papers! d.a.m.n your mermaids! d.a.m.n your webfingered women! d.a.m.n your swimming clubs! d.a.m.n all of you! I'm going mad! You hear? Mad, mad, mad! One more word out of either of you and I'll have you suspended from the Union!"
"Ow, ow, ow!" barked Alice.
Iantha had finished her fish. She started to pull the bathing suit down again; changed her mind, pulled it off over her head, rolled it up, and threw it across the pool. Halfway across it unfolded and floated down onto the water. The mermaid then cleared her throat, took a deep breath, and, in a clear ringing soprano, launched into the heart-wrenching strains of: "Rhein gold! Reines Gold, Wie lauter und h.e.l.l Leuchtest hold du uns! tim dich, du kiares-"
"lantha!"
"What is it, Markee?" she giggled.
"I said, it's getting time to go home!"
"Oh, but I do not want to go home. I am having much fun.
"Nun wir klagen!
Gebt uris das Gold-"
"No, really, Iantha, we've got to go." He laid a hand on her shoulder. The touch made his blood tingle. At the same time, it was plain that the remains of lantha's carefully husbanded sobriety had gone. That last race in fresh water - had been like three oversized Manhattans. Through Vining's head ran a paraphrase of an old song:
"What shall we do with a drunken mermaid At three o'clock in the morning?"
"Oh, Markee, always you are so serious when people are 'aving fun. But if you say please I will come."
"Very well, please come. Here, put your arm around my neck, and I'll carry you to your chair."
Such, indeed was Mark Vining's intention. He got one hand around her waist and another under her tail. Then he tried to straighten up. He had forgotten that lantha's tail was a good deal heavier than it looked. In fact, that long and powerful structure of bone, muscle, and cartilage ran the mermaid's total weight up to the surprising figure of over two hundred and fifty pounds. The result of his attempt was to send himself and his burden headlong into the pool. To the spectators it looked as though he had picked Iantha up and then deliberately dived in with her.
He came up and shook the water out of his head. lantha popped up in front of him.
"So!" she gurgled. "You are 'aving fun with lantha! I think you are serious, but you want to play games! All right, I show you!" She brought her palm down smartly, filling Vining's mouth and nose with water. He struck out blindly for the edge of.the pool. He was a powerful swimmer, but his street clothes hampered him. Another splash cascaded over his luckless head. He got his eyes clear in time to see Iantha's head go down and her flukes up.
"Markeeee!" The voice was behind him. He turned, and saw Lantha holding a large black block of soft rubber. This object was a plaything for users of the Hotel Creston's pool, and it had been left lying on the bottom during the meet.
"Catch!" cried Iantha gaily, and let drive. The block took Vining neatly between the eyes.
The next thing he knew, he was lying on the wet concrete. He sat up and sneezed. His head seemed to be full of ammonia. Louis Connaught put away the smelling-salts bottle, and Laird shoved a gla.s.s containing a snort of whiskey at him. Beside him was lantha, sitting on her curled tail. She was actually crying.
"Oh, Markee, you are not dead? You are all right? Oh, I am so sorry! I did not mean to 'it you."
"I'm all right, I guess," he said thickly. "Just an accident. Don't worry."
"Oh, I am so glad!" She grabbed his neck and gave it a hug that made its vertebrae creak alarmingly.
"Now," he said, "if I could dry out my clothes. Louie, could you- "Sure," said Connaught, helping him up. "We'll put your clothes on the radiator in the men's shower room, and I can lend you a pair of pants and a sweats.h.i.+rt while they're drying."
When Vining came out in his borrowed garments, he had to push his way through the throng that crowded the starting end of the pool room. He was relieved to note that Alice had disappeared. In the crowd, lantha was holding court in her wheel chair. In front of her stood a large man in a dinner jacket and a black cloak, with his back to the pooi.
"Permit me," he was saying. "I am Joseph Clement. Under my management, nothing you wished in the way of a dramatic or musical career would be beyond you. I heard you sing, and I know that with but little training, even the doors of the Metropolitan would fly open at your approach."
"No, Mr. Clement. It would be nice, but tomorrow I 'ave to leave for 'ome." She giggled.
"But my dear Miss Delfoiros-where is your home, if I may presume to ask?"
"Cyprus."
"Cyprus? Hm-m-m-let's see, where's that?"
"You do not know where Cyprus is? You are not a nice man. I do not like you. Go away."
"Oh, but my dear, dear Miss Del-"
"Go away, I said. Scram."
"But-"
lantha's tail came up and lashed out, catching the cloaked man in the solar plexus.
Little Miss Havranek looked at her teammate Miss Tufts, as she prepared to make her third rescue of the evening. "Poisonally," she said, "I am getting d.a.m.n sick of pulling dopes out of this pool."
The sky was just turning gray the next morning when Laird drove his huge old limousine out into the driveway of his house in the Bronx. The wind was driving a heavy rain almost horizontally.
He got out and helped Vining carry lantha into the car. Vining got in the back with the mermaid. He spoke into the voice tube: "Jones Beach, Chauncey."
"Aye, aye, sir," came the reply. "Listen, Mark, you sure we remembered everything?"
"I made a list and checked it." He yawned. "I could have done with some more sleep last night. Are you sure you won't fall asleep at the wheel?"
"Listen, Mark, with all the coffee I got slos.h.i.+ng around in me, I won't get to sleep for a week."
"We certainly picked a nice time to leave."
"I know we did. In a coupla hours, the place'll be covered six deep with reporters. If it weren't for the weather, they might be arriving now. When they do, they'll find the horse has stolen the stable door -that isn't what I mean, but you get the idea. Listen, you better pull down some of those curtains until we get out on Long Island."
"Righto, Herb."
The Best of L Sprague De Camp Part 11
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The Best of L Sprague De Camp Part 11 summary
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