Still, both Gokna and Junior still had very young-sounding voices. Eventually, someone had overcome their faith in the goodness of all radio broadcasts, and realized that serious perversion was being flaunted across the public's maw. But Princeton Radio was privately owned, and more important, it owned its patch of spectrum and had interference easements on nearby bands. The owners were Generation 58 cobbers who were still counting their money. Unless the Church of the Dark could make an effective listener boycott, Princeton Radio was going to keep "The Children's Hour." Hence this debate.
"Ah, Dr. Underhill, such apleasure !" Madame Subtrime came sweeping out of her cubicle. The station manager was all legs and pointy hands, with a body scarcely bigger than her head. Gokna and Viki got plenty of laughs imitating her. "You won't believe the interest this debate has generated. We are forwarding to the East Coast, and copies will be on the shortwave. I tell you without exaggeration, we have listeners from justall over!"
I tell you without exaggeration...Hidden from the manager, Gokna waggled her mouth parts in time with the words. Viki kept her own aspect prim, and pretended not to notice.
Daddy tipped his head to the manager. "I'm glad to be so popular, Madame."
"Oh, yes, indeed! We've got sponsors killing each other for the slots in this time. Simplykilling each other!" She smiled down at the children. "I've arranged that you can watch from our engineer's loft."
They all knew where that was, but they followed obediently along, listening to her unending gush. None of them really knew what Madame Subtrime thought of them. Jirlib claimed that she was no fool, that under all the words lurked a cold counter of cash. "She knows to the tenth-penny how much she can earn for the old cobbers by outraging the public." Maybe, but Viki liked her even so, and even forgave her shrill and foolish talk. Too many people were so stuck on their beliefs that nothing would bend them.
"Didi's on duty this hour. You know her." Madame Subtrime stopped at the entrance to the engineer's loft. For the first time she seemed to notice the babies peeking out of Sherkaner Underhill's fur. "My, you do have all ages, don't you? I...will they be safe with your children? I don't know who else could take care of them."
"Quite all right, Madame. I intend to introduce Rhapsa and Little Hrunk to the representative of the Church."
Madam Subtrime froze. For a full second, all the fidgety legs and hands were simultaneously motionless. It was the first time Viki had seen her really,really taken aback. Then her body relaxed into a slow, broad smile. "Dr. Underhill! Has anyone ever told you you're a genius?"
Daddy grinned back. "Never with such good reason....Jirlib, make sure everyone stays in the room with Didi. If I want you to come out, you'll know it."
The cobblies climbed into the engineering loft. Didire Ultmot was slouched on her usual perch overlooking the controls. A thick glass wall separated the room from the soundstage itself. It was soundproof, and darned hard to see through, too. The children edged close to the glass. There was someone already perched on the stage.
Didire waved a hand at them. "That's the Church's rep out there. The cobber came an hour early." Didi was her usual, faintly impatient, self. She was a very good-looking twenty-one-year-old. Didi wasn't as smart as some of Daddy's students, but she was bright. She was Princeton Radio's chief technician. At fourteen she had been a prime-time operator, and knew as much about electrical engineering as Jirlib. In fact, she wanted to become an electrical engineer. All that had come across the first time Jirlib and Brent met her, back when they started on the show. Viki remembered the strange way Jirlib had acted when he told them about that meeting; he seemed almost in awe of the Didire creature. She was nineteen then, and Jirlib was twelve...but big for his age. It took her two shows to realize that Jirlib was out-of-phase. She had taken the surprise as an intentional, personal insult. Poor Jirlib walked around like his legs were broken for a few days. He got over it—after all, there would be worse rejections in the future.
Didire more or less got over it, too. As long as Jirlib kept his distance, she was civil. And sometimes, when she forgot herself, Didi was more fun than any current-generation person that Viki knew. When they weren't onstage, she would let Viki and Gokna sit by her perch and watch her tweak the dozens of controls. Didire was very proud of her control panel. In fact—except that the frame was furniture wood and not sheet metal—it looked almost as scientific as some of the gear at Hill House.
"So what's this church cobber like?" asked Gokna. She and Viki had pressed their main eyes flat against the glass wall. The glass was so thick that lots of colors could not penetrate. The stranger perched onstage could have been dead for all the far-red you could see of her.