the rockets.
Now, this very night, he stood half naked in the darkness, watching the fire fountains murmuring in the air. The rockets on their long wild way to Mars and Saturn and Venus!
âWell, well, Bodoni.â
Bodoni started.
On a milk crate, by the silent river, sat an old man who also watched the rockets through the midnight hush.
âOh, itâs you, Bramante!â
âDo you come out every night, Bodoni?â
âOnly for the air.â
âSo? I prefer the rockets myself,â said old Bramante. âI was a boy when they started. Eighty years ago, and Iâve never been on one yet.â
âI will ride up in one someday,â said Bodoni.
âFool!â cried Bramante. âYouâll never go. This is a rich manâs world.â He shook his gray head, remembering. âWhen I was young they wrote it in fiery letters: THE WORLD OF THE FUTURE ! Science, Comfort, and New Things for All! Ha! Eighty years. The Future becomes Now! Do we fly rockets? No! We live in shacks like our ancestors before us.â
âPerhaps my sons ââ said Bodoni.
âNo, nor their sons!â the old man shouted. âItâs the rich who have dreams and rockets!â
Bodoni hesitated. âOld man, Iâve saved three thousand dollars. It took me six years to save it. For my business, to invest in machinery. But every night for a month now Iâve been awake. I hear the rockets. I think. And tonight Iâve made up my mind. One of us will fly to Mars!â His eyes were shining and dark.
âIdiot,â snapped Bramante. âHow will you choose? Who will go? If you go, your wife will hate you, for you will be just a bit nearer God, in space. When you tell your amazing trip to her, over the years, wonât bitterness gnaw at her?â
âNo, no!â
âYes! And your children? Will their lives be filled with the memory of Papa, who flew to Mars while they stayed here? What a senseless task you will set your boys. They will think of the rocket all their lives. They will lie awake. They will be sick with wanting it. Just as you are sick now. They will want to die if they cannot go. Donât set that goal, I warn you. Let them be content with being poor. Turn their eyes down to their hands and to your junkyard, not up to the stars.â
âButââ
âSuppose your wife went? How would you feel, knowing she had seen and you had not? She would become holy. You would think of throwing her in the river. No, Bodoni, buy a new wrecking machine, which you need, and pull your dreams apart with it, and smash them to pieces.â
The old man subsided, gazing at the river in which, drowned, images of rockets burned down the sky.
âGood night,â said Bodoni.
âSleep well,â said the other.
When the toast jumped from its silver box, Bodoni almost screamed. The night had been sleepless. Among his nervous children, beside his mountainous wife, Bodoni had twisted and stared at nothing. Bramante was right. Better to invest the money. Why save it when only one of the family could ride the rocket, while the others remained to melt in frustration?
âFiorello, eat your toast,â said his wife, Maria.
âMy throat is shriveled,â said Bodoni.
The children rushed in, the three boys fighting over a toy rocket, the two girls carrying dolls which duplicated the inhabitants of Mars, Venus, and Neptune, green mannequins with three yellow eyes and twelve fingers.
âI saw the Venus rocket!â cried Paolo.
âIt took off, whoosh !â hissed Antonello.
âChildren!â shouted Bodoni, hands to his ears.
They stared at him. He seldom shouted.
Bodoni arose. âListen, all of you,â he said. âI have enough money to take one of us on the Mars rocket.â
Everyone yelled.
âYou understand?â he asked. âOnly one of us. Who?â
âMe, me, me!â cried the