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«Sure!» cried the boy at last, beaming. «A Time Machine!»

''Bull's-eye!''

«When do you leave?» said the boy. «Where will you go to meet which person where? Alexander? Caesar? Napoleon! Hitler?!»

«No, no!»

The boy exploded his list. «Lincoln-«

«More like it.»

«General Grant! Roosevelt! Benjamin Franklin?»

«Franklin, yes!»

«Aren't you lucky?»

«Am I?» Stunned, Harrison Cooper found himself nodding. «Yes, by God, and suddenly-«

Suddenly he knew why he had wept at dawn. He grabbed the young lad's hand. «Much thanks. You're a catalyst-«

«Cat-?»

«A Rorschach test-making me draw my own list-now gently, swiftly-out! No offense.»

The door slammed. He ran for his library phone, punched numbers, waited, scanning the thousand books on the shelves.

«Yes, yes, he murmured, his eyes flicking over the gorgeous sun-bright titles. «Some of you. Two, three, maybe four. Hello! Sam? Samuel! Can you get here in five minutes, make it three? Dire emergency. Come!»

He slammed the phone, swiveled to reach out and touch.

«Shakespeare,» he murmured. «Willy-William, will it be-you?»

The laboratory door opened and Sam/Samuel stuck his head in and froze.

For there, seated in the midst of his great Mobius figure eight, leather jacket and boots shined, picnic lunch packed, was Harrison Cooper, arms flexed, elbows out, fingers alert to the computer controls.

«Where's your Lindbergh cap and goggles?» asked Samuel.

Harrison Cooper dug them out, put them on, smirking. «Raise the Titanic; then sink it!» Samuel strode to the lovely machine to confront its rather outre' occupant. «Well, Cooper, what?» he cried.

«I woke this morning in tears.»

«Sure. I read the phone book aloud last night. That did it!»

«No. You read me these!»

Cooper handed the books over.

«Sure! We gabbed till three, drunk as owls on English Lit!''

«To give me tears for answers!»

«To what?»

«To their loss. To the fact that they died unknown, unrecognized; to the grim fact that some were only truly recognized, republished, raved over from 1920 on!»

«Cut the cackle and move the buns,» said Samuel. «Did you call to sermonize or ask advice?»

Harrison Cooper leaped from his machine and elbowed Samuel into the library.

«You must map my trip for me!»

«Trip? Trip!»

«I go a-journeying, far-traveling, the Grand Literary Tour. A Salvation Army of one!»

«To save lives?»

«No, souls! What good is life if the soul's dead? Sit! Tell me all the authors we raved on by night to weep me at dawn. Here's brandy. Drink! Remember?»

«I do!»

«List them, then! The New England Melancholic first. Sad, recluse from land, should have drowned at sea, a lost soul of sixty! Now, what other sad geniuses did we maunder over-«

«God!» Samuel cried. «You're going to tour them? Oh, Harrison, Harry, I love you!»

«Shut up! Remember how you write jokes? Laugh and think backwards! So let us cry and leap up our tear ducts to the source. Weep for Whales to find minnows!»

«Last night I think I quoted-«

«Yes?»

«And then we spoke-«

«Go on-«

''Well.''

Samuel gulped his brandy. Fire burned his eyes.

«Write this down!»

They wrote and ran.

«What will you do when you get there, Librarian Doctor?»

Harrison Cooper, seated back in the shadow of the great hovering Mobius ribbon, laughed and nodded. «Yes! Harrison Cooper, L.M.D. Literary Meadow Doctor. Curer of fine old lions off their feed, in dire need of tender love, small applause, the wine of words, all in my heart, all on my tongue. Say 'Ah!' So long. Good-bye!»

«God bless!»

He slammed a lever, whirled a knob, and the machine, in a spiral of metal, a whisk of butterfly ribbon, very simply-vanished.

A moment later, the Mobius Machine gave a twist of its atoms and-returned.

«Voila!» cried Harrison Cooper, pink-faced and wild-eyed. 'It's done!»

«So soon?» exclaimed his friend Samuel «A minute here, but hours there!»

«Did you succeed?»

«Look! Proof positive.»

For tears dripped off his chin.

«What happened? what?!»

«This, and this … and …this

A gyroscope spun, a celebratory ribbon spiraled endlessly on itself, and the ghost of a massive window curtain haunted the air, exhaled, and then ceased.

As if fallen from a delivery-chute, the books arrived almost before the footfalls and then the half-seen feet and then the fog-wrapped legs and body and at last the head of a man who, as the ribbon spiraled itself back into emptiness, crouched over the volumes as if warming himself at a hearth.

He touched the books and listened to the air in the dim hallway where dinnertime voices drifted up from below and a door stood wide near his elbow, from which the faint scent of illness came and went, arrived and departed, with the stilted breathing of some patient within the room. Plates and silverware sounded from the world of evening and quiet good health downstairs. The hall and the sickroom were for a time deserted. In a moment, someone might ascend with a tray for the half-sleeping man in the intemperate room.

Harrison Cooper rose with stealth, checking the stairwell, and then, carrying a sweet burden of books, moved into the room, where candles lit both sides of a bed on which the dying man lay supine, arms straight at his sides, head weighting the pillow, eyes grimaced shut, mouth set as if daring the ceiling, mortality itself, to sink and extinguish him.

At the first touch of the books, now on one side, now on the other, of his bed, the old man's eyelids fluttered, his dry lips cracked; the air whistled from his nostrils:

«who's there?» he whispered. «what time is it?»

«whenever I find myself growing grim about the mouth, whenever it is a damp, drizzly November in my soul, then I account it high time to get to sea as soon as I can,» replied the traveler at the foot of the bed, quietly.

«what, what?» the old man in the bed whispered swiftly. «It is a way I have of driving off the spleen and regulating the circulation,» quoted the visitor, who now moved to place a book under each of the dying man's hands where his tremoring fingers could scratch, pull away, then touch, Braille-like, again.

One by one, the stranger held up book after book, to show the covers, then a page, and yet another title page where printed dates of this novel surfed up, adrift, but to stay forever on some far future shore.

The sick man's eyes lingered over the covers, the tides, the dates, and then fixed to his visitor's bright face. He exhaled, stunned. «My God, you have the look of a traveler. From where?»

«Do the years show?» Harrison Cooper leaned forward. «Well, then-I bring you an Annunciation.»

«Such things come to pass only with virgins,» whispered the old man. «No virgin lies here buried under his unread books.»

«I come to unbury you. I bring tidings from a far place.» The sick man's eyes moved to the books beneath his trembling hands.

«Mine?» he whispered.

The traveler nodded solemnly, but began to smile when the color in the old man's face grew warmer arid the expression in his eyes and on his mouth was suddenly eager.

«Is there hope. then?»

«There is!»