En route they passed a couple of dozen of the - the four-handed people, the new model workers, Tony’s folk, whatever they
were called - did they have an official designation, Leo wondered? He stared covertly, breaking off his gaze whenever one looked
back, which was often; they stared openly at him, and whispered among themselves.
He could see why Van Atta dubbed them chimps. They were thin-hipped, lacking the powerful gluteal locomotor muscles of
people with legs. The lower set of arms tended to be more muscular than the uppers in both males and females, power-grippers,
and thus appeared falsely short by comparison to the uppers; bow-legged, if he squinted them to a blur.
They were dressed mostly in the sort of comfortable, practical T-shirt and shorts that Tony wore, evidently color-coded, for
Leo passed a cluster of them all in yellow hovering intently around a normal human in GalacTech coveralls who had a pump unit
half-apart, lecturing on its function and repair. Leo thought of a flock of canaries, of flying squirrels, of monkeys, of spiders, of
swift bright lizards of the sort that run straight up walls.
They made him want to scream, almost to weep; and yet it wasn’t the arms, or the quick, too-many hands. He had almost
reached Hydroponics before he was able to analyze his intense unease. It was their faces that bothered him so, Leo realized. They
were the faces of children...
A door marked “Hydroponics D” slid aside to reveal an antechamber and a large airy end chamber extending some fifteen
meters beyond. Filtered windows on the sun side, and an array of mirrors on the dark side, filled the volume with brilliant light,
softened by green plants that grew from a carefully-arranged set of grow tubes. The air was pungent with chemicals and
vegetation.
A pair of the four-armed young women, both in blue, were at work in the antechamber. A plexiplastic grow tube three meters
long was braced in place, and they floated along its length carefully transplanting tiny seedlings from a germination box into a
spiral series of holes along the tube, one plant per hole, fixing them in place with flexible sealant around each tender stalk. The
roots would grow inward, becoming a tangled mat to absorb the nutritive hydroponic mist pumped through the tube, and the
leaves and stems would bush out in the sunlight and eventually bear whatever fruit was their genetic destiny. In this place,
probably apples with antlers, thought Leo in mild hysteria, or potatoes with eyes that really winked at you.
The dark-haired girl paused to adjust a bundle under her arm... Leo’s mind ground to a complete halt. The bundle was a baby.
A live baby - of course it was alive, what did he expect? Leo gibbered inwardly. It peered around its - mother’s? - torso to
glower suspiciously at Leo-the-stranger, and tightened its four-handed clutch on home base, taking a squishy defensive grip on
one of the girl’s breasts as if in fear of competition. “Ackle,” it remarked aggressively.
“Ow!” The dark-haired girl laughed, and spared a lower hand to pry the little fat fingers loose without missing a beat of her
upper hands parting sealant in place around a stem. She finished with a quick squirt of fixative from a tube floating conveniently
beside her, just out of the infant’s reach.
The girl was slim, and elvish, and wonderfully weird to Leo’s unaccustomed eyes. Her short, fine hair clung close to her head,
framing her face, shaped to a point at the nape of her neck. It was so thick it reminded Leo of cat fur: one might stroke it, and be
soothed.
The other girl was blonde, and babyless. She looked up first, and smiled. “Company, Claire.” The dark-haired girl’s face lit
with pleasure. Leo flushed in the heat of it. “Tony!” she cried happily, and Leo realized he had merely received an accidental
dose, as it were, of that beam of delight, as it swept over him to its true target.
The baby released three hands and waved them urgently. “Ah, ah!” The girl turned in air to face the visitors. “Ah, ah, ah!” the
baby repeated.
“Oh, all right,” she laughed. “You want to fly to Daddy, hm?” She unhooked a short tether from a sort of soft harness on the
baby’s torso to a belt around her own waist, and held the infant out. “Fly to Daddy, Andy? Fly to Daddy?”
The baby indicated enthusiasm for the proposal by waving all four hands vigorously about and squealing eagerly. She
launched him toward Tony with considerably more velocity than Leo would have dared to impart. Tony, grinning cheerfully,
caught him - handily, Leo thought in blitzed inanity.
“Fly to Mommy?” Tony inquired in turn. “Ah, ah,” the baby agreed, and Tony hung him in air, gently pulling his arms out -
like straightening out a starfish, Leo thought - and imparting a spin rolled him through the air for all the world like a wheel. The
baby pulled his hands in, clenching his face in sympathetic effort, and spun faster, and gurgled with laughter at the success of his
effort. Conservation of angular momentum, thought Leo. Naturally...
Claire tossed the infant back one more time to his father - mind-boggling, to think of that blond boy as a father of anything -
and followed herself to brake to a halt hand-to-hand against Tony, who proffered an automatic helping grasp for that purpose.
That they continued to hold hands was clearly more than a courteous anchoring.
“Claire, this is Mr. Graf,” Tony did not so much introduce as display him, like a prize. “He’s going to be my advanced
welding techniques teacher. Mr. Graf, this is Claire, and this is our son Andy.” Andy had clambered headward on his father, and
was wrapping one hand in Tony’s blond hair and another around one ear, blinking owlishly at Leo. Tony gently rescued the ear
and re-directed the clutch to the fabric of his red T-shirt. “Claire was picked to be the very first natural mother of us,” Tony went
on proudly.
“Me and four other girls,” Claire corrected modestly.
“Claire used to be in Welding and Joining too, but she can’t do Outside work any more,” Tony explained. “She’s been in
Housekeeping, Nutrition Technology, and Hydroponics since Andy was born.”
“Dr. Yei said I was a very important experiment, to see which sorts of productivity were least compromised by my taking care
of Andy at the same time,” explained Claire. “I sort of miss going Outside - it was exciting - but I like this, too. More variety.”
GalacTech re-invents Women’s Work? thought Leo bemusedly. Are we about to put an R&D group to work on the
applications of fire, too? But oh, you are certainly an experiment... His thought was unreflected in his bland, closed face. “Happy
to meet you, Claire,” he said gravely.
Claire nudged Tony, and nodded toward her blonde co-worker, who had drifted over to join the group.
“Oh - and this is Silver,” Tony went on obediently. “She works in Hydroponics most of the time.” Silver nodded. Her
medium-short hair drifted in soft platinum waves, and Leo wondered if it was the source of her nickname. She had the sort of
strong facial bones that are sharp and unhappily awkward at thirteen, arrestingly elegant at thirty-five, now not quite halfway