Part 12 (1/2)

In order to find out what each number meant, Helmholtz would have had to use a decoding card, a card with holes punched in it, which was kept locked up in the princ.i.p.al's safe. By placing the decoding card over the file card, Helmholtz might have found out what all the numbers meant.

But he didn't need the decoding card to find out whose file card Selma had been copying from. The name of the individual was typed big as life at the top of the card.

George M. Helmholtz was startled to read the name.

The name was HELMHOLTZ, GEO. M HELMHOLTZ, GEO. M.

”What is this?” murmured Helmholtz, taking the card from the drawer. ”What's this doing with my name on it? What's this got to do with me?”

Selma burst into tears. ”Oh, Mr. Helmholtz,” she wailed, ”I didn't mean any harm. Please don't tell on me. I'll never do it again. Please don't tell.”

”What is there to tell?” said Helmholtz, completely at sea.

”I was looking up your I.Q.,” said Selma. ”I admit it. You caught me. And I suppose I could get thrown out of school for it. But I had a reason, Mr. Helmholtz-a very important reason.”

”I have no idea what my I.Q. is, Selma,” said Helmholtz, ”but you're certainly welcome to it, whatever it is.”

Selma's crying abated some. ”You won't report me?” she said.

”What's the crime?” said Helmholtz. ”If my I.Q. is so interesting, I'll paint it on my office door for all to see.”

Selma's eyes widened. ”You don't know what your I.Q. is?” she said.

”No,” said Helmholtz humbly. ”Very submedium, I'd guess,” he said.

Selma pointed to a number on the file card. ”There,” she said, ”that's your I.Q., Mr. Helmholtz.” She stepped back, as though she expected Helmholtz to collapse in astonishment. ”That's it,” she whispered.

Helmholtz studied the number. He pulled in his chin, creating a mult.i.tude of echoing chins beneath it. The number was 183. ”I know nothing about I.Q.s,” he said. ”Is that high or low?” He tried to remember when his I.Q. had last been tested. As nearly as he could recall, it hadn't been tested since he himself had been a student in Lincoln High.

”It's very, very, very high, Mr. Helmholtz,” said Selma earnestly. ”Mr. Helmholtz,” she said, ”don't you even know you're a genius?”

”What is is this card anyway?” said Helmholtz. this card anyway?” said Helmholtz.

”It's from when you were a student,” said Selma.

Helmholtz frowned at the card. He remembered fondly the sober, little, fat boy he'd been, and it offended him to see that boy reduced to numbers. ”I give you my word of honor, Selma,” he said, ”I was no genius then, and I am not a genius now. Why on earth did you look me up?”

”You're a teacher of Big Floyd's,” said Selma. At the mention of Big Floyd, she gained an inch in stature and became radiantly possessive. ”I knew you'd gone to school here, so I looked you up,” she said, ”to see if you were smart enough to realize how really smart Big Floyd is.”

Helmholtz c.o.c.ked his head quizzically. ”And just how smart do you think Big Floyd is?” said Helmholtz.

”Look him up, if you want to,” said Selma. She was becoming self-righteous now. ”I guess n.o.body ever bothered to look him up before I did.”

”You looked him up, too?” said Helmholtz.

”I got so sick of everybody saying how dumb Big Floyd was, and how smart that stupid Alvin Schroeder was,” said Selma. ”I had to find out for myself.”

”What did you find?” said Helmholtz.

”I found out Alvin Schroeder was a big bluffer,” said Selma, ”acting so smart all the time. He's actually dumb. And I found out Big Floyd wasn't dumb at all. Actually, he's a big loafer. Actually, he's a genius like you.”

”Um,” said Helmholtz. ”And you told them so?”

Selma hesitated. And then, so steeped in crime she could hardly worsen her case, she nodded. ”Yes-I told them,” she said. ”I told them for their own good.”

From three until four that afternoon, Helmholtz was in charge of an extracurricular activity, the Railsplitters, the glee club of Lincoln High. On this particular occasion, the sixty voices of the Railsplitters were augmented by a grand piano, a bra.s.s choir of three trumpets, two trombones, and a tuba, and the bright, sweet chimes of a glockenspiel.

The musicians who backed the glee club so richly had been recruited by Helmholtz since the lunch hour. Helmholtz had been frantically busy in his tiny office since lunch, making plans and sending off messengers like the commander of a battalion under fire.

When the clock on the wall of the rehearsal room stood at one minute until four, Helmholtz pinched off with his thumb and forefinger the almost insufferably beautiful final chord of the song the augmented glee club had been rehearsing.

When Helmholtz had pinched it off, he and the group looked stunned.

They had found the lost chord.

Never had there been such beauty.

The undamped voice of the glockenspiel was the last to die. The high song of the last chime struck on the glockenspiel faded into infinity, and it seemed to promise that it would be forever audible to anyone willing to listen hard enough.

”That's it-that's certainly it,” whispered Helmholtz raptly. ”Ladies and gentlemen-I can't thank you enough.”

The buzzer on the wall clock sounded. It was four o'clock.

Right on the dot of four, Schroeder, Selma, and Big Floyd came into the rehearsal room, just as Helmholtz had told them to do. Helmholtz stepped down from the podium, led the three into his office, and closed the door.

”I suppose you all know why I've asked you to come,” said Helmholtz.

”I don't,” said Schroeder.

”It's about I.Q.s, Schroeder,” said Helmholtz. And he told Schroeder about catching Selma in the file room. Schroeder shrugged listlessly.

”If any of you three talks about this to anybody,” said Helmholtz, ”it will get Selma into terrible trouble, and me, too. I haven't reported the very bad thing Selma's done, and that makes me an accessory.”

Selma paled.

”Selma,” said Helmholtz, ”what made you think that one particular number on the file cards was an I.Q.?”

”I-I read up on I.Q.s in the library,” said Selma, ”and then I looked myself up in the files, and I found the number on my card that was probably my I.Q.”

”Interesting,” said Helmholtz, ”and a tribute to your modesty. That number you thought was your I.Q., Selma-that was your weight. And when you looked up the rest of us here, all you found out was who was heavy and who was light. In my case, you discovered that I was once a very fat boy. Big Floyd and I are far from being geniuses, and small Schroeder here is far from being a moron.”

”Oh,” said Selma.

Big Floyd gave a sigh that sounded like a freight whistle. ”I told you I was dumb,” he said to Selma wretchedly. ”I told you I wasn't any genius.” He pointed helplessly at Schroeder. ”He's the genius. He's the one who's got it. He's the one who's got the brains to carry him right up into the stars or somewhere! I told you that!”

Big Floyd pressed the heels of his hands against his temples, as though to jar his brains into working better. ”Boy,” he said tragically, ”I sure proved how dumb I was, believing for even one minute I had something on the ball.”

”There's only one test to pay any attention to,” said Helmholtz, ”and that's the test of life. That's where you'll make the score that counts. That's true for Schroeder, for Selma, for you, Big Floyd, for me-for everybody.”