The Universe Builders: Bernie and the Putty (44 page)

BOOK: The Universe Builders: Bernie and the Putty
10.02Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Would you like to see some of my universes?”

“Oh, yes. Very much,” said Alcandor with eagerness. “I’ve been amazed by everything I’ve seen today.”

“Alcandor seems especially interested in the animals. I never got around to putting any on his world,” Bernie reminded Lenny.

“It is hard to imagine such a variety of creatures. Each of them is so different. My favorite, so far, are the lookies.”

“Well, I have some animals that will blow them away.” Lenny led them to his wall of viewing windows.

“No carnivores, please, Lenny,” Bernie said. Lenny, who had stopped in front of one window, pouted as he led them to a different window.

“Okay, but you’re missing some of my best work.”

Alcandor was eager to see everything. No matter what Lenny talked about or showed him, Alcandor wanted more. Two hours later, Lenny showed no sign of slowing as he dragged Alcandor from one room to another, showing him treasure after treasure. No matter what Lenny talked about, Alcandor was interested, asking questions and making relevant comments. Lenny treated him to a display of universes with stars so thick they looked like clouds, worlds where the animals looked like rocks, a flying machine from his Off World Technology Collection, and even the star-crossed tawalla seeds he had used to capture Candi’s attention. They were having such a good time, Bernie hated to interrupt them.

Finally, Bernie said, “We’re going to have to leave now or we’ll be late meeting Suzie at The Museum.”

The disappointment on Lenny’s face was a memory Bernie would relish all day.

 

 

Time to End It

 

Billy had grown frustrated, and very angry. His street cred had been questioned.

At lunch last week, Donald had the impudence to ask, “What’s taking so long to get rid of Bernie?”

It was a fair question. Billy had asked it himself often enough. Uncle Shemal had never hesitated to pull the trigger before. The formula was simple. Plant evidence of the person’s incompetence, and Shemal’s quality assurance systems would find it right away. It never took long for Shemal to throw them out. It had been easier to get Ronny and Chrissy fired, and they’d had excellent work records until he decided to go after them.

What was different now? Maybe Shemal was influenced by Bernie’s big-time dad and giving Bernie the benefit of the doubt. Maybe Suzie had influence in the Personnel Department and was doing something to keep him around. Whatever it was, it was frustrating. Billy had done enough to Bernie’s universe that no one should see anything there except gross incompetence.

That was when it hit him. Bernie was different. He wasn’t part of the quality assurance system. His work, unlike everyone else’s, wasn’t being measured and recorded every day. If Bernie messed up, it didn’t show up on Shemal’s production record at all.

Billy growled. He was being entirely too subtle. If Uncle needed to see he was wasting his time on Bernie, then it was time to take things to a new level. No more little mistakes and minor disasters, it was time to demonstrate how inept Bernie really was. It was time to unleash an apocalypse. And, as everyone knew, a good apocalypse had to be done with style. Just blinking something out wasn’t good enough. When you do an End of the World, it was a lot more fun if everything went out in screaming pain.

And that became his plan.

 

 

The Museum

 

Suzie was waiting outside The Museum when Bernie arrived with Lenny and Alcandor. “I’m sorry we’re late. Alcandor had to stop and see everything along the way. I think he’s enjoying himself.”

“That is quite an understatement.” Alcandor grinned at Suzie. “How are you, my dear?”

“Fine, thanks.” Suzie returned Alcandor’s grin with a hug.

“Get ready to be amazed,” Bernie said in anticipation of Alcandor’s response to The Museum.

“I don’t know how I can be more amazed than I am already.”

“Everything in here has won an award. Each new winner has been judged better than the last winner in that category,” said Lenny. “You can’t get into The Museum without being extraordinary.”

“I would think there would be fewer new winners each year,” Alcandor said.

“You would think so, wouldn’t you?” said Suzie. “But people keep rising to the challenge. Each year they average fifty winners from over a thousand submissions.”

Alcandor was indefatigable. He asked questions about everything. Bernie and Lenny, both trained in Building Sciences, and Suzie, who minored in History of Building, did their best to answer his questions.

Long before Alcandor ran out of questions, The Museum staff told them it was closing time. The afternoon had gone so quickly no one had noticed.

“But there’s so much more to see,” Alcandor protested.

Bernie laughed. “They have less than one percent of the universes on display. We could spend years here.”

As they were ushered out of the museum, Alcandor asked a final question. “To save your job and to save my world, your universe has to be judged worthy of a place in that museum?”

The question remained unanswered, and they walked home in silence.

 

 

Billy Destroys the World

 

Hovering high above the planet, Billy shook his head. “This time, I’m going to give Shemal enough proof of Bernie’s incompetence that he won’t be able to ignore it anymore. Look at this stupid planet! It’s a builder’s nightmare. Everything about it is messed up. When I’m done tonight, Uncle, you won’t have any choice but to fire Bernie.”

Bernie’s planet rotated slowly as it continued its journey around the sun. The sausage-shaped continent, lush with its green plants and central mountain range, could be easily seen. The two lab zones on the equator waited for the next spark of life. The deep blue ocean sent gentle waves to lap the shores. North of the continent was a deep ocean trench that circled the world. This world showed signs of great suffering.

Billy barely glanced at the world. It wasn’t the planet’s surface that concerned him. Instead, he moved deep into the inner core of the planet. It was there, in the very center, that he did his work.

He visualized a network of fibers extending from the inner core to the upper mantle just below the planet’s hard surface. Billy concentrated as he made the twisting and turning fibers a reality. He then began another network with more fibers that twisted and turned near and around the fibers of the first network. But the elements with which he constructed his fibers were never meant to coexist. If they touched, the result would be catastrophic. Just as he wanted it to be. And then he made more. He riddled the interior of the planet with his network of deadly threads. There could be only one outcome.

Finally, Billy knew he had created sufficient destructive force to accomplish his plan. He paused to admire his handiwork. The planet’s own forces would take it on a suicidal path to an unalterable outcome. The planet’s molten core would bring the elements of Billy’s deadly network together, mingling the elements that must never touch, and igniting his galactic fuse. Moments later, it began.

This time, he would not leave before it was finished. He would not return the next day to find Bernie had somehow found a way to minimize or undo the damage. No. This time, he would see it through. This time he would watch everything to the bitter end. And he did.

Billy rose above the planet in time to see a section of its outer shell outlined by the light from an explosion deep below. The highlighted section included a third of the sausage continent. The detonation unleashed a force so colossal the land was thrust upward, breaking it into multiple pieces with such force that some fragments would never return to the planet. The rest slowed as gravity overcame inertia and the shattered crust fell back into the open pit of red molten lava below.

The lava pit churned as it consumed everything that had fallen back. Lava that was not red hot was white hot. The pieces of land did not float long. One by one, they were dissolved by the red-white hot fluid. Along the edge, waters from the ocean cascaded into the pit, turning momentarily into steam before disappearing altogether. Nothing survived. Everything that had ever lived on that land died instantly.

Could a planet survive such a blow? Could it heal from such an open wound? Billy knew the answer. He had planned too well.

The oceans went first. They were drained into that unquenchable cauldron as the world’s water was turned into scalding steam. The planet was enveloped by thick clouds. The polar ice from the southern pole vaporized as it hastened to follow the path of the oceans.

Billy had no trouble seeing the destruction he caused, for nothing can be hidden from a god with the will to see. He watched the wall of hot steam as it raced across the world, boiling the life that had been lucky enough to escape the first blow.

Then came the fires, consuming anything that could burn.

The crust of the world was cracked like an eggshell from the first horrific explosion. Now Billy watched as the ultra-hot magma seeped through the cracks, widening them as it ate away at the remaining surface of the world. The floating pieces melted one by one in the searing heat.

Finally, nothing was left except the molten mass of a once-living world.

Billy looked at what he had done. And he was pleased.

 

 

Damn You!

 

Bernie was still on a high from the terrific weekend he’d spent with Alcandor. Their time together was everything he had hoped. Even Lenny had been impressed. Actually, everyone had been impressed—even his mom. None of this was a big surprise to Bernie, who had been impressed with Alcandor ever since they’d met. The only disappointment was when the weekend ended, and he had to return Alcandor to his world.

Bernie was full of energy when he arrived at work. The trip to The Museum had given him ideas for his planet. As Bernie settled in, he glanced at Billy’s cubicle. Billy seemed busy with his own tasks. Bernie had been so preoccupied with Alcandor’s visit, he hadn’t thought about Billy all weekend.

Bernie grasped the viewing window from its holder on his desk and began to lower it to its place beside his desk. He was proud of his little subterfuge. For over a week now, he’d been using his duplicate universe as a decoy. Why not? Zardok didn’t want it. Maybe it would be of some benefit after all. As he lowered the viewing window, he saw something he didn’t expect.

What he expected was a planet with green continents and blue oceans. What he saw was a mass of red and white-hot magma roiling and bubbling where his planet had once been. The planet had been destroyed. There was nothing left.
Nothing.
Bernie blinked in disbelief.

Maybe on another day, he would have handled it differently. But after all these months of torment, the special place where he put his anger was full. He could not shove any more in. He jumped to his feet and dashed into Billy’s cubicle. He grabbed him by the shoulder and spun him around.

“How dare you!” Bernie shouted, shattering the silence of the office. Immediately there was a sound of thunder and a flash of lightning, courtesy of an unseen cloud that was just as upset as Bernie.

Billy looked at him with feigned shock and surprise. “Why, Bernie, whatever are you talking about?” Billy made no attempt to conceal his evil smile.

Bernie, more than anything, wanted to hit Billy—like he had in school. He wanted Billy to suffer the way he was suffering. Billy’s smug smile represented everything Bernie was about to lose. But he couldn’t. He couldn’t risk another fight.

The only reason Bernie hadn’t lost everything was because Billy had attacked the wrong universe. Everything Bernie cared about was being destroyed by this evil, twisted boy who sat in front of him. The rage Bernie felt was rivaled only by what was happening on the surface of his destroyed world. He was dimly aware of thunder as it rumbled even more loudly, followed by the arc of electricity that came from nowhere to strike Billy’s desk.

“Damn you!” he said with a hatred that would have burned holes through anyone else. With Billy, it made him smile all the more.

“Did something happen to your little world, Bernie?” Billy asked with sickening sweetness.

“What’s going on here?” thundered the deep voice of Shemal.

“Gosh, I am not sure, Uncle. I think Bernie was expressing his disappointment over some ineptitude or other. I really have no idea,” Billy said with such innocence that Bernie wanted to hit him all over again.

“Well?” Shemal stared at Bernie.

“Nothing, sir,” Bernie said between tight lips.

“If it’s nothing, then I suggest you get back to work. The Universe Committee will be here in just a few days, you know.”

Back at his desk, Bernie reached down and picked up the window with his real universe. As he placed it in the cradle on his desk, he was relieved to see his world still intact. As he breathed a sigh of relief, he felt eyes on his back and turned in time to see Billy staring at his universe.

“I don’t know how you did that, Ber-Nerd, but you won’t fool me again,” came an angry whisper only Bernie could hear.

 

 

The Booby Trap

 

“But it’s getting worse all the time. He tried to destroy everything. I don’t know how I can stop him. Thousands of people have already died because of Billy. I can’t let this continue. I have to think of something.”

“Then it’s time to talk about my ideas,” Lenny proclaimed.

“I don’t like where this is heading,” Suzie said.

Lenny scowled. “Billy is playing mean and dirty. It’s time he was stopped.”

Bernie heard the animosity in Lenny’s voice. Perhaps it was justified. Billy wasn’t just hurting him. Lenny and Suzie had met Alcandor, and they had a better understanding now of the stakes. Plus, Lenny had an extra reason to hate Billy since he tried to break up his relationship with Candi.

Other books

Meet Me in Venice by Elizabeth Adler
Peeling the Onion by Wendy Orr
Holly's Wishes by Karen Pokras
A Gallant Gamble by Jackie Williams
Fair Game Inc (2010) by Bedwell-Grime, Stephanie
A Woman of Seville by Sallie Muirden
The Service Of Clouds by Susan Hill