The Goblin Reservation by Clifford D. Simak

The Goblin Reservation by Clifford D. Simak

Author:Clifford D. Simak
Language: eng
Format: mobi, epub
Tags: Science Fiction, General, Fiction
ISBN: 9780881848977
Publisher: Orion
Published: 1993-02-15T08:00:00+00:00


15

Maxwell found a secluded corner, a couple of chairs screened by a huge flowering plant of some sort, planted in a marble

tub of generous proportions. There was no one there and he sat down.

Out beyond the corner where he sat, the party was drawing to its close, beginning to dwindle down. Some people had left

and those who still were there seemed to be less noisy. And if one more person asked him what had happened to him,

Maxwell told himself, he'd belt them in the jaw.

I'll explain, he had told Carol when she had asked the night before-I'll explain over and over again. And that was what

he'd done, not entirely truthfully, and no one had believed him. They'd looked at him with glassy eyes and they had figured that either he was drunk or was making fools of them.

And he, he realized, had really been the one who had been made a fool. He had been invited to the party, but not by

Nancy Clayton. Nancy had not sent him clothes to wear and had not sent the car that had let him out at the back door to

walk down the hall, past the door where the Wheeler waited. And ten to one, the dogs had not been Nancy's either, although he had not thought to ask her.

Someone, he realized, had gone to a lot of trouble in a very awkward and involved manner to make sure the Wheeler had

a chance to talk with him. It was all so melodramatic, stinking so of cloak and dagger, that it was ridiculous. Except that, somehow, he couldn't quite bring himself to think of it as ridiculous.

He coddled his drink with both his hands and listened to the clatter of the dying party.

He peered out around the greenery of the plant roosting in the tub and he could not see the Wheeler, although the Wheeler had been around for a good part of the evening.

He passed the drink, absentmindedly, from one hand to the other, and he knew he didn't want it, that he'd had a touch too much to drink-not so much, perhaps, too much to drink, as the wrong place to be drinking it, not with a warm, tight group of friends in a friendly room, but with too many people who were either strangers or only slightly known, and in a room that was too large and too impersonal. He was tired, more weary than he'd known. In just a little while, he'd get up on his feet and say good night to Nancy, if she were around, and stumble back to Oop's shack, the best way that he could.

And tomorrow? he asked himself. Tomorrow there were things that he should do. But he'd not think of them tonight; he'd

wait until tomorrow.

He lifted the drink over the rim of the marble tub and poured it on the soil.

"Cheers," he told the plant.

Carefully, bending slowly so as not to loose his balance, he set the glass upon the floor.

"Sylvester," asked a voice, "do



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