Something Will Turn Up
David Mason
Er...maybe it had to do with this being a non-Parity universe, perhaps? Some things can’t be simply inverted, after
all...
“You Mr. Rapp?”
Stanley Rapp blinked, considering
the matter. He always thought over everything very carefully. Of course, some
questions were easier to answer than others. This one, for instance. He had
very few doubts about his name.
“Uh,” Stanley Rapp said. “Yes.
Yes.”
He stared at the bearded young
man. Living in the Village, even on the better side of it, one saw beards every
day, all shapes and sizes of beard. This one was not a psychoanalyst beard, or
a folk singer beard; not even an actor beard. This was the scraggly variety,
almost certainly a poet beard. Mr. Rapp, while holding no particular prejudice
against poets, had not sent for one, he was sure of that.
Then he noticed the tool-case in
the bearded young man’s hand, lettered large LIGHTNING SERVICE, TV, HI-FI.
“Oh,” Stanley said, nodding. “You’re
the man to fix the TV set.”
“You know it, Dad,” the young man
said, coming in. He shut the door behind him, and stared around the apartment. “What
a wild pad. Where the idiot box, hey?”
The pleasantly furnished, neat
little apartment was not what Mr. Rapp had ever thought of as a ‘wild pad.’ But
the Village had odd standards, Mr. Rapp knew. Chacun a son gout, he had said, on moving into the apartment ten
years ago. Not aloud, of course, because he had only taken one year of French,
and would never have trusted his accent.
But chacun a son gout, anyway.
“The television set,” Mr. Rapp
said, translating. “Oh, yes.” He went to the closet door and opened it.
Reaching inside, he brought out an imposingly large TV set, mounted on a
wheeled table. The bearded repairman whistled.
“In the closet,” the repairman
said, admiringly. “Crazy. You go in there to watch it, or you let it talk to
itself?”
“Oh. Well, I don’t exactly watch
it at all,” Mr. Rapp said, a little sadly. “I mean, I can’t. That’s why I
called you.”
“Lightning’s here, have no fear,”
the bearded one said, approaching the set with a professional air. “Like, in
the closet, hey.” He bent over the set, appraisingly. “I thought you were a
square, Pops, but I can see you’re...hey, this is like too much. Man, I don’t
want to pry, but why is this box upside down?”
“I wish I knew,” Mr. Rapp said.
He sat down, and leaned back, sighing.
This was going to be difficult,
he knew. He had already had to explain it to the last three repairmen, and he
was getting tired of explaining. Although he thought, somehow, that this young
man might understand it a little more quickly than the others had.
“I’ve had a couple of other
repairmen look it over,” Mr. Rapp told the bearded one. “They...well, they gave
up.”
“Dilettantes,” commented the
beard.
“Oh, no,” Mr. Rapp said. “One of
them was from the company that made it. But they couldn’t do anything.”
“Let’s try it,” the repairman
said, plugging the cord into a wall socket. He returned to the set, and
switched it on, without changing its upside down position. The big screen lit
almost at once; a pained face appeared, with a large silhouetted hammer
striking the image’s forehead in a rhythmic beat.
“...immediate relief from
headache,” a bland voice said, as the pictured face broke into a broad smile.
The repairman shuddered, and turned down the sound, staring at the image with
widened eyes as he did so.
“Dad, I don’t want to bug you,”
the repairman said, his eyes still on the screen. “Only, look. The set is
upside down, right?”
“Right,” said Mr. Rapp.
“Only the picture—” the repairman
paused, trying to find the right phrase. “I mean, the picture’s flipped. Like,
it’s wrong side up, too. Only, right side up, now.”
“Exactly,” said Mr. Rapp. “You
see, that’s the trouble. I put the set upside down because of that.”
“Cool,” the repairman said,
watching the picture. “I mean, so why worry? You got a picture, right? You want
me to turn the picture around? I can do that with a little fiddling around
inside the set...uh-oh. Dad, something’s happening.”
***
The repairman bent closer,
staring at the picture. It was now showing a busty young woman singer, her
mouth opened, but silent, since the sound was turned down. She was slowly
rotating as Rapp and the bearded repairman watched, turning until her face,
still mouthing silent song, hung upside down on the screen.
“It always does that,” Rapp said.
“No matter which way I put the set, the picture’s always upside down.”
“No, man,” the repairman said,
pleadingly. “Look, I took a course. I mean, the best school, you dig? It don’t
work that way. It just can’t.”
“It does, though,” Rapp pointed
out. “And that’s what the other repair people said, too. They took it out, and
brought it back, and it still did it. Not when they had it in their shops, but
the minute it came back here, the picture went upside down again.”
“Wow,” the repairman said,
backing slowly away from the set, but watching it with the tense gaze of a man
who expected trouble. After a minute he moved toward it again, and took hold of
the cabinet sides, lifting.
“I don’t want to put you down,
Pops,” he said, grunting. “Only, I got to see this. Over she goes.” He set it
down again, right side up. The picture, still the singer’s face, remained in a
relatively upright position for another moment, and then slowly rolled over,
upside down again.
“You see,” Mr. Rapp said,
shrugging. “I guess I’ll have to buy another set. Except I’d hate to have it
happen again, and this one did cost quite a lot.”
“You couldn’t trade it in,
either,” the repairman agreed. “Not to me, anyway.” Suddenly he snapped his
fingers. “Hey now. Sideways?”
“You mean on its side?”
“Just for kicks...” the repairman
gripped the set again. “On the side...”
He set the cabinet down, on one
side, and stepped back, to regard the picture again.
Slowly, the picture turned once
more, and once again, relative to the usual directions of up and down, the
picture was stubbornly, completely inverted.
“It’s onto that, too,” the
repairman said, gloomily. He sat down on the floor, and assumed a kind of Yoga
posture, peering between his legs. “You could try it this way, Pops.”
“I’m pretty stiff,” Mr. Rapp told
him, shaking his head.
“Yeah,” the repairman said,
reinverting himself. For a long while he sat, pulling his beard thoughtfully, a
look of deep thought on his face.
The reversed singer faded out, to
give place to an earnestly grinning announcer who pointed emphatically to a
large, upside down sign bearing the name of a product.
“Watching it this way could get
to be a fad,” the repairman said, at last, almost inaudibly.
He fell silent again, and Mr.
Rapp, sadly, began to realize that even this bearded and confident young man
had apparently been stopped, like the others.
“The way I look at it, like,
there’s a place where science hangs up,” the bearded one spoke, finally.
“Like, I don’t want to put down
my old Guru at the Second Avenue School of Electronics,” he added, solemnly. “But
you got to admit that there are things not dreamed of in your philosophy,
Horatio. You dig?”
“My name isn’t Horatio,” Mr. Rapp
objected.
“I was quoting,” the repairman
told him. “I mean, this is a thing like, outside material means. Supernatural,
sort of. Did you cross up any witches lately, Pops?”
“Oh, dear,” Mr. Rapp said sadly.
He shook his head. “No, I haven’t...er, offended any witches. Not that I know
of.” He regarded the inverted picture for a moment. Then, as the repairman’s
words began to sink in, Mr. Rapp looked at him apprehensively.
“Witches?” Mr. Rapp asked. “But...I
mean, that’s all superstition, isn’t it? And anyway...well, television sets!”
“They used to dry up cows, but
who keeps cows?” the bearded one said ominously. “Why not television sets?
Like, I happen to be personally acquainted with several witches and like that.
The Village is full of them. However—” He rose, and stalked toward the set, his
eyes glittering in a peculiar way. “You’re a lucky one, Daddyo. Back in my square
days, I did some reading up on the hookups between poetry and magic. Now, I’m a
poet. Therefore, and to wit, I’m also a magician. On this hang-up, I’m going to
try magic. Electronics won’t work, that’s for sure.”
***
“But...” Mr. Rapp was not quite
sure why he disapproved, but he did. On the other hand, the repairman appeared
to be very definitely sure of what he was doing, as he peered into the back of
the television set.
“Have you ever tried...ah, this
method before?”
“Never ran into any hexed TV sets
before,” the repairman said, straightening up. “Don’t worry, though. I got the
touch, like with poetry. Same thing, in fact. All magic spells rhyme, see?
Well, I used to rhyme, back before I really started swinging. Anybody can
rhyme. And the rest is just instinct.”
He had been scribbling something
on a notepad, as he spoke. Now he bent down, to take another look at the back of
the set, and nodded with an air of assurance.
“The tube layout,” the repairman
told Mr. Rapp, exhibiting his notebook. “That, and Ohm’s Law, and a couple of
Hindu bits I picked up listening to the UN on the radio...makes a first-class
spell.”
Mr. Rapp backed away, nervously. “Look,
if it’s all the same to you...”
“Don’t flip.” The repairman
consulted his notebook, and moved to stand in front of the screen. The picture
showed a smiling newscaster, pointing to a map which indicated something
ominous.
“Cool, man,” the repairman said. “Here
we go.” He lifted his hands in an ecclesiastical gesture, and his voice became
a deep boom.
“6SN7, 6ac5, six and seven
millivolts are running down the line, E equals R times A, that’s the way it
goes, go round the other way, Subhas Chandra BOSE!”
Afterward, Mr. Rapp was never
quite sure exactly what happened. He had an impression of a flash of light, and
an odd, indefinite sound rather like the dropping of a cosmic garbage can lid.
But possibly neither the light nor the sound actually happened; at any rate,
there were no complaints from the neighbors later on. However, the lighted
screen was certainly doing something.
“Crazy!” the repairman said, in
awed tones.
Mr. Rapp, his view partly blocked
by the repairman, could not see exactly what was happening on the screen.
However, he caught a brief glimpse of the newscaster’s face. It was right side
up, but no longer smiling. Instead, the pictured face wore a look of profound
alarm, and the newsman was apparently leaning far forward, his face almost out
of focus because of its nearness to the lens. Just for a moment, Mr. Rapp could
have sworn he saw a chair floating up,
past the agonized expression on the screen.
Then the screen want gray, and a
panel of lettering appeared, shaking slightly.
OUR PICTURE HAS BEEN TEMPORARILY
INTERRUPTED. NORMAL SERVICE WILL BE RESTORED AS SOON AS POSSIBLE. PLEASE STAND
BY.
“I was going to give you a bill,”
the repairman said. “Only maybe we better just charge it up to customer
relations.”
The letters remained steady on
the screen, and Mr. Rapp studied them. They were right side up.
“You fixed it,” Mr. Rapp said, a
little uncertainly. “I mean, it’s working. I ought to pay...”
“I goofed,” the repairman said.
He picked up his tools, and moved toward the door. “Like, I won’t mention it to
anybody if you won’t. But I goofed, all right. Didn’t you see the picture?”
“But whatever you did...it
worked,” Mr. Rapp said. “The picture’s right side up.”
“I know,” the repairman said. “Only
somewhere...there’s a studio that’s upside down. I just goofed, Pops, that’s
all.”
He closed the door behind him,
leaving Mr. Rapp still staring at the immobile, right-side-up message on the
glowing screen.
End
The top image is public domain, the second image is a free wallpaper which the reader can get here.
Thank you for reading.
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