“Hey, hey, LBJ,” chanted their father in his cracked old voice. “How many kids did you kill today?” “Really, Caldwell,” protested Mrs. Bunger. “That’s enough. Stop this nonsense and let the children eat.”
“Great food, Mom,” said young Caldwell, taking another baked potato. “Isn’t Mom a good cook, Conrad?” “Shore is,” agreed Conrad. This was reality, too. One way or another, these were his people. “I’ve been toNew York, and to Paris, France, and I ain’t never et vittles the like of these.” “Did you know Conrad’s getting married, Mom?”
Mrs. Bunger stopped eating and put on her glasses. She looked quizzical and excited. “Is that true, Conrad? You’re going to marry Audrey?” “Caldwell, I’m going to kill you.” Caldwell’s eyes were squeezed into happy slits. He loved putting his little brother on the spot.
“Have you thought about getting anengagement ring ?” continued Mrs. Bunger. “You should cash in your savings bonds.” “Slow down,” cried Conrad. “Is there such a rush to get rid of me?” “Of course not,” said Mr. Bunger. “But if you do want to marry Audrey after college, we certainly won’t stand in your way.”
“What does this Audrey look like anyway?” asked Caldwell, stunned by the success of his gambit.
“She’s very nice,” said Mrs. Bunger. “She came here for Easter.”
“Can’t we talk about something else?” said Conrad. This was agony. Even if he did come from a flying saucer, the Bungers sure knew how to act like relatives.
“Why don’t we talk about how Caldwell got kicked out of college?”
“Now, Conrad.”
“Which of you boys wants more roast beef?”
Lying in bed that night, Conrad mulled over the day’s revelations. The picture of the flying saucer. The memory flash of how he’d come into the Bungers’ lives. Subconsciously, he must have known it all along.
Why else would he have always talked so much about UFOs? Why else would he have gone around saying he came from a flying saucer? But up till today, he’d never suspected it might actually be true. I am an alien.Conrad felt his chest and legs, his face and genitals. Sick horror filled him as he imagined his body splitting open to disgorge a bug-eyed squid-creature from Dimension Z.
But that wasn’t what the aliens—what Conrad—really looked like. Those dreams of the flame-people, those were true dreams. They were creatures of energy, beings of light. That much seemed certain.
Why did they send me here?Could it be a kind of punishment? But life was—on the whole—sweet. It was fun to be human: to think, and fuck, and drink, and do things—it was fun to be alive. This was no punishment. But why else would they have sent him here?
The secret of life. The secret ofhuman life. Conrad considered his years-long obsession with this notion.
For some reason the flame-people were unwilling—or unable—to appear directly on Earth. What they knew of humanity would be gleaned from radio and TV. It was probably the spreading shell of Earth’s old broadcasts that had attracted the flame-people in the first place.
They’d sent Conrad to find out what it’s like. They’d equipped him with his strange powers—flight, shrinking, and maybe others—to make sure that he would be here a good long time. Sooner or later they would come get him. He would remember the old language of the energy-dance and tell them just how it felt to be human. He would tell them the deeper truths that never get mentioned on TV. Fine. But this left one question.
How much longer do I have?
Conrad drifted into uneasy sleep. He dreamed his old flame-person dream, and then he dreamed of the mysterious crystal that Cornelius Skelton kept on his mantel.
Chapter 18:
Thursday, August 4, 1966 “Let’s you and me drive to Louisville tomorrow, Conrad.”
“What for?”
“Kicks, man. Kicks.”
Caldwell had to shout to make himself heard over the hot, beating wind. They were speeding along in his new green MG convertible, on their way back from an evening’s drinking in D.C. Caldwell had managed to get the car for $700 down, and con man that he was, he hadn’t even actually paid the $700 yet.
“That’s what I always want to ask Pop,” Caldwell was shouting now. “Sure Jesus is great,but what did he do for kicks? ”
“I wouldn’t mind going to Louisville,” said Conrad, still thinking about Caldwell’s proposal. “Maybe we could get some nooky there. And it’d be great to see Hank. I could probably sleep at his house. But where wouldyou stay?”
“Don’t worry about me, I’m the one with all the rich friends. I’ll find a place for both of us, if you like.
It’ll be fun, huh, bro?”
For the last few days, Conrad had been waiting for Caldwell to ask why he’d grabbed the flying-wing picture. But Caldwell seemed to have forgotten all about it. He just seemed glad that Conrad was finally old enough to really talk to.
Mr. and Mrs. Bunger—Caldwell referred to them as “the ancients”—gave the trip their grudging blessing. Mrs. Bunger told the boys to be sure to look up this or that old family friend; and Mr. Bunger gave them each $100.
“You don’t have to spend itall , you know.”
“Don’t worry, Pop. We’ll be good.”
“Just be sure to come back in one piece.”
They took Route 50 through West Virginia, and picked up Route 42 in Cincinnati. Taking turns at the wheel, they made it straight through in fourteen hours ... which meant they hit Louisville a little after midnight Friday night. Somehow they hadn’t gotten around to calling ahead.
“Where are we going to sleep, Caldwell? Which one of your rich friends’ parents do you want to wake up?” “I thought you said we could stay at Larsen’s.”
As chance would have it, Hank was still up, playing with his shortwave radio. Over the years, he’d packed a whole wallful of equipment into his bedroom. His greatest score to date was the time he’d picked up a transmission from a ship in McMurdo Sound, Antarctica. Conrad tapped on his window, and Hank hurried to the door.
“Why, come on in! It’s the rompin’, stompin’ Bunger boys! How you been, Caldwell, you get out of the army all right?”
“Well, they told me if I reenlisted I’d get a promotion, and seven dollars twenty cents a week extra ...”
“But you passed it up. Wise move. Conrad, good to see you, buddy. Louisville’s been dead without you. Hey ... you know who else is back in town?”
“Who?”
“Dee Decca.” Hank grinned and rolled his eyes for emphasis. “She’s been askin’ about you, Conrad; she’s hot to trot.” “Iremember her,” put in Caldwell. “A dark-haired girl who wore sweatshirts? Smoked a lot? Not too good-looking?”
“That’sthe one,” said Hank. “Only now she’s smokin’ pot.”
“This sounds better all the time,” said Conrad. “Any chance of a beer?”
“My birthday’s not till next week, but Caldwell here’s over twenty-one, and the liquor store up at the shopping center’s open till three. I see no obstacle to an efficacious implementation.”
“Let’s rock and roll.”
They picked up three sixes of Falls City and went cruising with the MG’s top down. Caldwell drove, Hank took the passenger seat, and Conrad squeezed into the jump seat with the beer. At one in the morning, it was still seventy-five degrees.
“Where’s Dee staying?” Conrad wanted to know.
“AtSue Pohlboggen’s .”
“I’m not going there,” said Caldwell flatly. “I want to see somereal women , not these hippie-dippie chicks Conrad hangs out with. You know of any parties tonight, Hank?”