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04.28.2003
"Hey, you feel like
going down to Corpus Christi for the Memorial Day weekend?"
"Sure! Oh, that'll
be nice. A beach trip! And we can see my sister. Do you want
me to book a flight at work tomorrow?"
"Nah. We'll just
use the transporter."
"Oh, Henry."
"What?"
"I don't know why
you have to make everything so complicated."
"What are you talking
about, complicated? A plane gets us down there in three hours,
plus two hours screwing around at airports. The transporter gets
us there in a third of a second."
"Don't be fatuous.
You know exactly what I mean."
"Plane fare will
cost us six hundred bucks. The transporter is free."
"It's not free!
It cost you seven hundred million dollars to build that ridiculous
thing!"
"It'll pay for itself
in no time. Car fare alone..."
"It won't pay for
itself if we live to be two hundred, Henry. Unless, God forbid,
you were to lower yourself to actually selling it."
"I didn't build it
to make money, Dolores."
"That's obvious.
You built it so you could use as much power as is generated by
an atomic bomb detonating just to save yourself the trouble of
walking to the 7-11 to buy cigarettes. You can be such a fool
sometimes."
"A...a fool! You're
calling me a fool!"
"You heard me, cowboy.
If the cap fits."
"Uh...well. How many
instantaneous molecular transporters have you built, dear?"
"That's not the point."
"Oh, of course not.
The point is never that one of us is capable of building incredible
scientific and technical devices, and the other one is a piano
teacher. What is the point, your majesty?"
"Don't get catty,
Henry. You know perfectly well what the point is. You build these
terribly complex, expensive, fantastic machines, and you just
waste them."
"I'm not wasting
them! I get a lot of use out of them. How am I wasting them?"
"You use that probability
estimator to pick football games. You don't even bet on them.
You only do it to win that ridiculous fantasy league of yours.
I suppose it would be too common to use it to play the stock
market."
"It wouldn't be common.
It would be illegal."
"The robotic exoskeleton
cost you almost a hundred million dollars and you use it to jack
the car up with. Goodness knows why you can't sell it to the
military, or industry, or something like that. Too busy working
on a weather control satellite that you'll use to grow us strawberries
in the winter."
"I thought you liked
strawberries. Besides, I don't remember you complaining when
you needed a jar opened."
"I'm not going to
Corpus Christi in the transporter. I'd rather drive."
"Drive? Are you crazy?
It's a two-day drive!"
"I'm well aware of
that."
"At least let me
finish up the water-to-gasoline transversion unit before we go."
"Oh, good grief.
I've had enough. I'm going running."
"Down at the lake?"
"Yes."
"Are you taking the
car?"
"I was planning on
it. Why?"
"Oh, no reason."
"Henry."
"Well, I wanted to
pick up some cat food."
"I can get it on
my way back."
"No, no, don't worry
about it. It's fine."
"You're going to
use the transporter, aren't you?"
"No!"
"You are. You're
going to teleport to the bodega across the street. You're going
to use a matter rebuilder that cost your whole family fortune
to buy a few cans of 9 Lives."
"I wasn't..."
"Could you at least
buy the cat food in Hawaii, or Paris, or something? Instead of
thirty yards away?"
"Would it make you
feel better?"
"Immensely."
"Anything for you,
darling."
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