Sherkaner didn't answer immediately. Unnerby had the feeling that his attention was roaming around the top of the jungle gym, watching his two babies. This room was a truly bizarre combination of wealth, the old Underhill intellectual chaos, and the new Underhill paternity. Where the floor wasn't piled with books and knickknacks, he could see plush carpet. The wall covering was one of those superexpensive delusional patterns. The windows were quartz-paned, extending all the way to the high ceiling. They were cranked open now. The smell of ferns in the cool morning floated in past wrought-iron trellises. There were electric lamps by Underhill's desks and by the legholds of the bookcases, but they were all turned off now.

The only light was the green and near-red that filtered through the ferns. That was more than enough to read the titles on the nearest books. There were psychology, math, electronics, an occasional astronomy text—and lots of children's storybooks. The books were stacked in low piles, filling most of the space between toys and equipment. And it wasn't always clear which were Underhill's toys and which were the children's. Some of the stuff looked like travel souvenirs, perhaps from Victory's military postings: a Tiefer leg polisher, dried flowers that might have been an Islander garland. And over in the corner...it looked like a Mark 7 artillery rocket, for God's sake. The warhead hatch had been removed, and there was a dollhouse installed in place of the customary high explosives.

Finally Underhill said, "You're right, money alone won't make progress. It takes time to make the machines that make the machines, and so on. But we still have another twenty-five years or so, and the General tells me you are a genius at managing something this large."

Hrunkner felt an old pride in hearing that, more pride than for all the medals he had collected in the Great War; but if it hadn't been for Smith and Underhill, he never would have discovered he had such talents. He replied grumpily, careful not to give away how much such praise meant to him: "Thank you so much. But what I'm telling you is that none of that is enough. If you want this done in less than twenty years, I need something more."

"Yes, what?"

"You, damn it! Your insight! Since the first year of the project, you've been hidden away up here in Princeton, doing God knows what."

"Oh....Look Hrunkner, I'm sorry. The atomic power stuff just isn't very interesting to me anymore."

Knowing Underhill for all these years, Unnerby should not have been surprised by the comment. Nevertheless, it made him want to chew on his hands. Here was a fellow who abandoned fields of endeavor before others even knew they existed. If he were simply a crank, there'd be no problem. As it was, sometimes Unnerby would have cheerfully killed the cobber.

"Yes," continued Underhill, "you need more bright people. I'm working on that, you know; I have some things I want to show you. But even so," he said, obliviously pouring fuel on the fire, "my intuition is that atomic power will turn out to be relatively easy, compared to the other challenges."

"Such. As. What?"

Sherkaner laughed. "Such as raising children, for example." He pointed at the antique pendulum clock on the side wall. "I thought the other cobblies would be here by now; maybe I should show you the institute first." He got off his perch, began waving in that silly way parents do to small children. "Come down, come down. Rhapsa, stay off the clock!" Too late: the baby had scuttled off the gym, made a flying leap onto the pendulum, and slid all the way to the floor. "I've got so much junk here, I'm afraid something will fall on the babies and squash them." The two ran across the floor, hopped into their appointed places in their father's fur. They were scarcely bigger than woodsfairies.

Underhill had gotten his institute declared a division of Kingschool. The hillhouse contained a number of classrooms, each occupying an arc of the outside perimeter. And it wasn't Crown funds that paid for most of it, at least according to Underhill. Much of the research was simply proprietary, paid for by companies that had been very impressed by Underhill. "I could have hired away some of Kingschool's best, but we made a deal. Their people continue to teach and do research downtown, but they get time up here, with a percentage of our overhead getting fed back to Kingschool. And up here, what counts is results."

"No classes?"

When Sherkaner shrugged, the two little ones bobbed up and down on his back and made excited littlemeeping, sounds that probably meant, "Do it again, Daddy!"

"Yes, we have classes...sort of. The main thing is, people get to talk to other people, across many specialties. Students take a risk because things are so unstructured. I've got a few who are having a good time, but who aren't bright enough for this to work for them."

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