Bob’s New Partner
part of the BobsWorld
universe
by Setcheti
Disclaimer:
I do not own Bob the Builder. I just
love him a whole lot and want him to be happy – isn’t that how fic usually happens?
About BobsWorld: The BobsWorld universe is based on the premise that the Bob the
Builder characters are real people, living in a real world. To find out more about BobsWorld,
please go here.
When Wendy first stepped off the ferry at Sol
Island, the first thing she thought
was, It’s so beautiful. The little port they’d landed at had a gray
cluster of utilitarian buildings in front of it, square little concrete
structures that wouldn’t have looked out of place on a nuclear test site, but
back of the buildings stretched an expanse of green as far as the eye could
see. Rolling hills, graceful trees, a clear blue sky.
“It’s beautiful,” she told the dark-haired dock master who was checking
off her luggage on his clipboard before seeing it loaded onto a waiting truck
to be taken to the train. “The sky looks
so clear…”
He smiled. “No
pollution,” he told her. An embroidered
tag on his coverall said his name was Don.
“Makes more of a difference than you’d think, doesn’t it?” He checked off the last box and handed the
clipboard over to Wendy to sign.
“Welcome to paradise, Miss Avery,” he told her. “You’re going to love Sunflower
Valley. And I think you’ll enjoy the train ride out
there too, there are some great views along the way.”
“Thank you,” Wendy told him, returning the smile and the
clipboard at the same time. She looked
over her shoulder to where several dockworkers were coaxing a blue-painted
crane toward the waiting train. “They
are going to put Lofty inside, aren’t they?
He’s afraid of heights, if the train goes over a bridge…”
“We were forewarned,” Don reassured her. “Lofty will be in a nice enclosed car, and
you’ll be able to get to him if he needs you.”
He flipped through pages on his clipboard and checked a pink copy. “He seems to have done all right on the ferry
crossing, I know they were worried about that. And the train ride might be pretty, but it
doesn’t take very long at all. He should
be fine.” He cocked his head at
her. “How about you? Nervous?”
Wendy blushed. “A
little,” she lied. A
lot, actually. “Have you ever…”
“I’ve been to the valley a few times,” Don told her. He waved a hand at the gray concrete
buildings behind them. “No bunkers like
we have, they don’t have to worry about coastal weather ripping their houses
up. It’s a pretty little village. Everyone’s very friendly. And you’ll like Bob, don’t worry.” Her startled look made him laugh. “It may be a big Project, Miss Avery, but
it’s a small island; we all know why you’re here. And Bob is a nice guy,
he couldn’t carry a grudge if his dumptruck offered
to do it for him. You’re not going to
have any problems once he gets used to the idea of you being there.”
“I hope you’re right,” Wendy replied, feeling just a little
bit better about the situation she was heading into. Not much, but a little bit. “You know…Bob?”
“Not very well, but I’ve met him – and
like I said, it’s a small island.”
Don shrugged. “Bob’s more of a
workhorse than a socializer, but he’s friendly enough
if you can get him to stand still long enough to talk to you. And he’s a little quirky, but since he spends
all his time with his machines a little quirk here and there is
understandable.” A long whistle sounded,
and he checked his watch. “Well, you’d
better get over there and settle in – train leaves in five minutes. Have a nice ride, Miss Avery.”
“Thank you,” Wendy said, waving to him as he walked back to
the dock before making her way to the small train and finding her place in the
single passenger car. She wished they’d
had more time; any information she could have gotten about the man she’d been
sent to work with would have been helpful in setting her mind at ease.
Don made himself busy until the
train pulled out, then went back to the office and met the questioning looks of
the other dockworkers with a grin. “She
wanted to know about Bob,” he told them, getting a cup of coffee for
himself. “Poor kid, she’s scared to
death. I told her he was a nice guy.”
One of the other men laughed. “He is that – too nice. How long do you think it’ll take him to
notice she’s a girl?”
“Longer than it would take me,” another man chimed in, not
looking up from the terminal he was typing details of the day’s ferry run
into. “That one was cute. Maybe I should stop doing my paperwork, I want a perky little blonde partner too.”
“You stop doing your
paperwork, you’ll be looking for a partner to help you scrape barnacles off the
dock,” Don told him, but he was grinning.
He sat down and opened up his e-mail program, sending off a message to Sunflower
Valley so they’d know the train was
running on schedule. That taken care of,
he settled back in his chair and put his feet up on the desk. “She was cute, though – and she’s supposed to
be almost as handy as he is. Maybe
someone up at Project headquarters is doing a little matchmaking, do you
think?”
“With the girl or the crane?” the ferry captain wanted to
know. He was smirking into his own cup
of coffee. “To hear the other women
about these parts talk, young Bob is the most clueless man on earth unless he’s
talking to a machine. That Mavis Keller,
the one who comes to sign for the mail?
She’s been working on him for months and still hasn’t gotten anywhere. Her last trip to the mainland, she complained
to her friends about it the whole way across.”
“Mavis is cute too,” the typing man put in. “The guy’s got to be blind.”
Don chuckled. “Not
everyone’s a ‘ladies man’ like you are, Steve.”
“Something I’m sure all the women on this island are
grateful for,” Captain Jess added, his gray-blue eyes twinkling. “Clueless is better than clumsy any day, you
know.”
Steve snorted and kept typing while the other men laughed,
but he was grinning. What with the
arrival of the perky blonde partner and all, maybe Mavis would need some
consolation the next time she came to get the mail…
The trip from Sol Island’s
southern dock to Sunflower Valley
took just over an hour by train, and Wendy had to admit she enjoyed it. The scenery rolling by only got lovelier the
farther inland they went, the few other passengers in the main car were
pleasant enough, and she only had to go check on Lofty twice. The little crane’s car was fully enclosed and
well-lit, but it had a window and the sight of the land and sky flowing past
had Lofty quaking on his wheels; on her second trip back to the machine car,
Wendy had ended up improvising a blindfold for him to keep him from panicking
and then sitting with him until the train pulled into the station at Sunflower
Valley.
She’d only left him long enough to get her things from the
main car, but when she got back the doors were open and a brown-haired man in a
blue work coverall was crouched in front of the now un-blindfolded crane while
a yellow backhoe peered in cautiously from the platform outside. “I bet that was scary, since you’d never been
on a train before,” the man was saying in a cheerful yet understanding
tenor. “But it looks like you did just
fine. Are you ready to come out now? Scoop would really like to meet you, and then
we’ll all go home together.”
He moved out of the way to give the crane a good view of the
watching backhoe, and that was when he spotted Wendy standing in the
doorway. He smiled at her, although she
thought he looked a little wary. “Hi,
you must be Wendy. Lofty was just
telling us about you.”
“Wendy!” She immediately
had the crane’s full attention. “I was sc-scared! Someone opened the b-big door, and I didn’t
know what was going on, and you w-weren’t here.
But then Bob came and took my blindfold off.” The crane arm swung, gesturing
dangerously. “This is Bob.”
“Bob the Builder,” the backhoe outside corrected. He was looking at her with interest. “Hi Wendy, Lofty was just telling us about
you.”
“This is Scoop,” Bob said, an amused twinkle showing in his
brown eyes. He hadn’t ducked when the
crane arm swung in his direction, Wendy noticed – but of course, he was also
wearing a hardhat. “We came to pick you
and Lofty up.”
Wendy came the rest of the way into
the car, but kept Lofty between herself and the man whose business she was
supposed to help run. “You’re Mr…”
“Just Bob,” he cut her off quickly, blushing
a little. “Or Bob the Builder, of Bob’s
Building Yard. Anything else
just…confuses people.” He gestured
toward the large open door. “Well, shall
we go see your new house? Scoop, would
you please go get Wendy’s things?”
The backhoe’s bucket bobbed a nod. “No prob, Bob,” he
said, grinning, and then reversed himself and rolled
away.
Lofty had obviously had enough of the train car; his engine
was revving up and down impatiently.
Wendy moved to lift out the ramp for him, but Bob beat her to it. “No, no,” he told her good-naturedly. “You’re all dressed up,
you don’t want to get dirty. Let me do
it.”
He kicked out the latches securing the ramp and then hopped
out of the car and pulled it out. Then
he expertly directed Lofty down the extended ramp and out onto the platform,
patting the trembling blue frame before circling around to push the ramp back
in. “You did just fine, Lofty,” he
called over his shoulder. “It’s always a
little scary to try something new.”
“O-okay, Bob.” Wendy
had already jumped down out of the car, and he rolled over to her. “I don’t like the train, Wendy.”
“I know you don’t, Lofty,” she told him, patting his frame
and suppressing a surge of irritation that ‘Bob the Builder’ had just done the
same thing as though it were the most natural thing in the world; it had taken
her two weeks of working with Lofty to gain the nervous crane’s trust, and he
thought he could do it in five minutes?
“Don’t worry, you won’t have to get on the
train again. This is home now.”
“I’m glad we’re home,” Lofty said. He was looking around, still trembling. “But this is sc-scary too.”
“It won’t be for long.”
Bob was done with the ramp, and wiping his hands on his coverall. “Because once you get used to it, it won’t be
new anymore. Right?”
Lofty thought about that, then blinked. “I…I think so.”
Bob nodded. “Thinking
is good,” he said. “Well, let’s take
Wendy to her new house. You just follow
Scoop and I, okay?”
More blinking. “I…think I can do that.”
“Good.” Scoop had
come rolling up, his bucket full of Wendy’s luggage. Bob checked the load to make sure it was
secure, then swung up onto the riding platform on the
side of the backhoe’s cab. “Okay, let’s
go!”
Wendy stepped up onto Lofty’s
platform, and was irritated all over again when the crane took off after Bob
and Scoop with barely a shudder.
Ruthlessly, she pushed the feeling down and did her best to stamp it
out. She’d known before she’d come here
that Bob was really good with the machines; everyone at the mainland training
center seemed to have mentioned it at least once. And since Lofty was going to be living in the
yard, which was also where Bob lived, him trusting Bob
already was not a bad thing.
She was still a little jealous, though. Bob seemed to be the kind of guy, nice or
not, who was used to just jumping in and doing things however and whenever he
wanted. Wendy had to wonder if the
paperwork was something he hadn’t wanted to do, and had therefore only done
when he’d absolutely had to. Which was a situation she was going to change as soon as possible. She was here to help run the business, not to
be his secretary.
It didn’t take them long to reach the house, which Wendy had
pretty much bought sight unseen from the Project – about the same way she’d
bought her half of Bob’s Building Yard.
It would have been more convenient to live at the yard, but she couldn’t
because one, there wasn’t room, and two, the decency
clause in their contracts wouldn’t allow it.
The machines weren’t children but they were child-like and therefore
impressionable, so Project personnel who worked closely with the machines had
certain restrictions placed on their behavior above and beyond those of the
other residents – not that most people objected, because there were some things
you just didn’t want to have to explain to a piece of heavy equipment. Hence Wendy’s new home being a few blocks
from the yard instead of inside it.
The little house was, to her relief, nice. The back yard was a mess, but the inside was
clean and well kept and plenty big enough for one person. Bob carried in her luggage without being
asked, let her know that the stationmaster would see to it that her boxes were
delivered, and then proceeded to tell her all about the house in what sounded
like a single breath before promising to come back the next morning so he could
show her how to get to the building yard.
And then in the next breath he was excusing himself and disappearing
with the two machines, supposedly off to do a job that couldn’t wait.
Her boxes arrived shortly thereafter, and soon after that a
neighbor showed up to welcome her to Sunflower
Valley. Mrs. Lykins lived
two doors down and brought with her cookies, a pot of tea, and all the gossip
Wendy could absorb and then some. None
of it was about Bob, unfortunately, although Mrs. Lykins
did cluck over him once and mention that she thought they were ‘working that
poor boy to death’ and everyone was so glad Wendy had been sent to help
him. Wendy had to bite her tongue to
keep from telling Mrs. Lykins that he hadn’t looked
overworked to her at all.
And the next morning, she was very glad she hadn’t. Bob showed up at the crack of dawn – and he
had cake and coffee with him, which he called a late breakfast in spite of the
fact that half the sky outside still had stars showing in it. It was good cake too, and he’d blushed when
she told him so; apparently he’d made it himself before coming over to get her. Then they’d walked the two and a half blocks
to the yard, which was in the center of town.
Bob’s house, Wendy saw immediately, was nowhere near as nice
as hers, although it did look a lot sturdier.
It sat near the back of the square walled yard, with a workshop nearby
and the machine shed on the other side of that.
Part of the shed arrangement looked new, the part closest to the
workshop, and Lofty was inside it. “I
thought he’d be more comfortable if he was on the inside, not the outside,” Bob
explained as the machines came out to greet them. A small orange cement mixer whizzed past, and
he called out, “Whoa, Dizzy, be careful!
Wendy isn’t wearing steel-toed boots.”
“She isn’t?” The
mixer flipped back over to them and peered at Wendy’s feet, then looked up at
Bob. “I thought she belonged here. Is she a guest?”
“She does belong here, and she’s not a guest,” he
corrected. “But people who work indoors
don’t wear steel-toed boots, so you’re going to have to be just as careful now
all the time as you are when we have visitors.
Understand?”
“Got it, Bob.” The mixer looked Wendy over and smiled. “I’m Dizzy!”
Wendy smiled back; Dizzy, she knew from the information
she’d been given before her arrival, was the youngest of the machines
here. “It’s nice to meet you,
Dizzy. I’m Wendy Av…”
“She’s Wendy,” Bob jumped in immediately, much as he had the
day before when Wendy had tried to use his last name. “Wendy, Dizzy.”
“Wendy,” Dizzy repeated dutifully, before spinning away to
dance around the other, larger machines.
“Wendy is here! Wendy is here!”
Bob didn’t quite sigh.
“I’ll explain it to you later,” he said in a low voice. “Let’s just say you don’t want them to get
started on your last name.” He waved a
hand at the other approaching machines.
“You’ve already met Scoop, and this is Muck, the dumptruck,
and Roley, the steamroller. Say hello to Wendy, everyone! She’s our new partner.”
He didn’t sound resentful, and Wendy forced herself to relax
as she greeted the two new machines and then Lofty, who had come up behind
them. “How did it go last night, Lofty?”
she asked. “I thought about you.”
“I…think I like it here,” the crane stammered out. “Everyone is really nice. Why can’t you stay here
too, Wendy?”
“Because there isn’t enough room in the yard for another
house, Lofty,” Bob answered for her.
“And my house is too small. But
Wendy will be here every day, remember?” The crane arm bobbed a nod, and Bob
smiled. “Maybe today Roley
can show you around some other places, would you like that? I shouldn’t need either of you today, so you
can take your time and explore.”
Lofty shivered a little.
“Exploring s-sounds sc-scary.”
“I’ll be with you, Lofty,” Roley
reassured him. “We’ll have fun! And if it gets too scary for you, we’ll come
back to the yard and play with Bird, okay?”
“I – I think so.”
Lofty sounded uncertain, but then that was pretty much the way he always
sounded. He looked up at Bob with one
large eye. “Th-thinking
is g-good, right Bob?”
“Right, Lofty,” Bob told him. “Okay, Scoop and Muck, I’m just going to show
Wendy the office and then we’ll get off to our first job. Dizzy,” he addressed the mixer, “I’d like you
to stay here with Wendy, please. We
don’t want to leave her alone in the yard on her first day. Is that all right with you?”
“I think it’s brilliant!” the little mixer squeaked, rearing
up on her back wheels and clapping her front ones together in delight. “I can show her evvvrything!”
“Just be careful of where your wheels are,” Bob warned, and
then returned his attention to Wendy.
“Can I show you the office now?
Sorry I can’t stick around longer, but we’re already late for our first
job.”
“You are?” But he was
already ushering her toward the house, beating her there to hold open a door on
the smaller end of it; Wendy mentally reduced living space inside the house by
a third, realizing the house and the office were the same building. No wonder he’d said his house was small! The walls were thick too; thick enough, she
supposed, to keep an accidental run-in with one of the machines from doing more
than exterior cosmetic damage.
The inside of the office surprised her even more. It wasn’t a mess – or at least, it wasn’t as
much of a mess as she’d expected, and what mess was there wasn’t a dirty
one. There were boxes stacked in the
corners and piles of papers and work orders and receipts on every available
flat surface, but except for one pile that was obviously a recent casualty none
of them were on the floor. The cause of
the floor-pile raised its striped gray head and gave her an inscrutable look,
and Bob immediately started scolding. “Pilchard! Look at
the mess you made!”
The cat yawned at him and curled back up, unimpressed. Bob circled around Wendy and scooped up the
cat, placing it carefully on the floor before quickly gathering up the papers
and stacking them back on the corner of the desk. Pilchard watched him stack, obviously
gathering herself to leap back up as soon as he was done, but Bob intercepted
the leap and held her against his chest.
“Sorry about that, Wendy,” he said.
“Pilchard likes to sleep right there, but she doesn’t like to lay on top of papers.”
He rubbed the cat’s head and set it down again, and it made a show of
turning its back on him as it stalked out of the office through a different
door, tail in the air. Bob was looking a
worried question at her. “You don’t mind
cats, do you?”
“I like cats,” Wendy told him, wondering if collecting cats
was one of the quirks Don at the dockyard had mentioned. “How many do you have?”
“Only Pilchard,” Bob assured her quickly. “She just wandered into the yard one day, I
sort of adopted her. She also likes to
sleep next to the phone, but if it rings she’ll knock it off the desk.” He looked embarrassed again. “She’s a pretty well-behaved cat everywhere else, she’s just hard on the office. I can close the door…”
“No, that’s okay.”
Wendy thought she could probably handle one cat, and she also thought it
would probably yowl and cry all day if the door were closed. Which would be more
disturbing than having the cat underfoot, since it would eventually get tired
of being pushed off the desk and find another place to sleep. Other than piles of papers, the desk also
held the aforementioned phone, an old-fashioned answering machine with a
cassette tape in it, and a computer that was on but in standby mode. On a small table nearby sat a fax machine
with about two feet of paper dangling from it toward the floor. Wendy went over to it and carefully tore the
paper off, noticing as she did that the red message light on the answering
machine was blinking. “It looks like
you’ve got some calls. Did you forget to
check your messages last night?”
“Um, no, those would be from people trying to catch me this
morning before I left the yard – that fax would be too.” Bob made a face and held out his hand for the
paper. “I suppose I can add it to
today’s list, but I try not to do that.
What I normally do is get all the messages
together when I get home in the evening and then put them on the next day’s
list, then I print the list out on the computer to take with me so I don’t
forget anything.” He pulled a flattened
roll of perforated printer paper out of his back pocket and wrapped the sheet
Wendy handed him around it, only briefly glancing at the contents. “Now I really have to go. There’s coffee in the kitchen, or tea if you
want it, just make yourself at home. I
don’t think there’s any food in there except eggs and milk, though, sorry about
that. Dizzy can show you how to get to
the café and back. I’ll try to be home
before dark, if I can, and then we can talk about the business. Okay?”
Wendy didn’t know what else to do; she nodded. Bob looked relieved and bolted out the door,
and seconds later he was perched on Scoop’s riding platform, a battered red
toolbox resting in the machine’s front bucket as they rolled out of the yard
and away. She checked her watch, saw the
time and winced. He was already
late? Wendy shook her head. Maybe it was a special job, something that
had to be done early; she’d check the list on the computer later. What she was going to do right now, though,
was have a look around and maybe fix a pot of water for tea.
Bob’s kitchen was accessible either from the front door next
to the main office door or around the inside through a little living room that
was clean and cozy and filled with comfortably worn furniture. Pilchard was curled up in a large overstuffed
armchair with a footstool in front of it, and from the position of the small
television and the remote on the table next to it, Wendy was reasonably certain
that the chair was Bob’s. Other than
that, though, she couldn’t deduce much of anything about the man from the
room. There were no pictures anywhere,
few books, and the only magazines were all about architecture, renovation and
home improvement.
In contrast to the coziness of the living room, Bob’s
kitchen was all white and as cleanly bare as a bleached bone. A mixing bowl and a few utensils were
air-drying in a rack beside the sink, and a pot beside the stove had obviously
been the source of the morning’s coffee.
A teakettle was hanging from a hook nearby, and Wendy filled it with
water from the tap and put it on the stove to boil. Bob’s icebox was as empty as he’d said it was,
holding just five eggs in a wire basket next to a half-empty glass bottle of
milk on the top shelf. Wendy made up her
mind that she was having lunch out at the same time she wondered what Bob was
planning to eat when he came home. Maybe
he picked up his dinner from someplace on his way back to the yard, and that
was why he didn’t have much food on hand; he was a bachelor, it would make
sense. Or maybe, being a bachelor, he
hadn’t planned at all and would end up eating the other half of the cake he’d
made that morning and which was currently sitting in the breadbox.
Wendy found tea and sugar and a clean mug and set them out,
then went back to the office. Another
fax had come in while she’d been in the kitchen, and remembering what Bob had
said about his usual procedure she took the sheets and used them to start a new
pile. She couldn’t find anything to mark
the pile with, however, and while she was still shaking her head over the
complete lack of standard supplies in the office the kettle whistled and she
went back to the kitchen to get her tea.
When she came back, another fax had appeared. Wendy put that one in the new pile and sat
down at the desk. First she was going to
look at the list of jobs for the day, and then she’d start going through the piles
of things all over the office. The
blinking red light on the answering machine got her attention, and she decided
to take care of those messages first.
Three more jobs landed on the pile, scrawled on printer
paper because Bob had obviously never heard of any other kind. Out of curiosity, Wendy rolled back the tape
to listen to his message: “Hi, you’ve
reached Bob’s Building Yard. I’m not
here, but if you’ll leave me a message I’ll get back to you tomorrow – or if you happen to see me around,
just stop me and tell me what you need and I’ll get to it as quickly as I
can. Thanks!”
Wendy sat and stared at the machine for a full minute, then
went back to the computer. The starfield screen saver obligingly turned off when she moved
the mouse, and she found herself looking at a mostly bare default-blue desktop
with a document titled list.doc in the center of it. Double-clicking brought up a page of numbered
names, no addresses, each with an accompanying shorthand description of the job
to be done and sometimes a note about what supplies and equipment would be
needed. The jobs varied from simple
(cleaning out a rain gutter for Mrs. Potts) to labor intensive (building a new
small corral for Farmer Pickles) to just plain weird (what was a ‘Spud hole’,
and why were two of them in the middle of Carver Road?).
There were eight of them on the list, three of which were
starred for no reason she could figure out.
Eight jobs – nine, if you counted the fax he’d taken with him – and they
were all for today. And she already had
five in the pile for tomorrow, and it was only…she looked at the clock and made
a face. It was early.
By lunchtime, Wendy had answered six phone calls, gotten two
more faxes, and plowed her way through a heap of invoices whose dates told her
that this really was an average day.
She’d also checked the yard’s books and found them in fairly good order,
although it looked like Bob had been using the invoices to keep track of his materials
usage. He’d even been filing them, by
date, in a big filing cabinet which was almost full even though he’d only been
in the Valley for six months. As far as
office supplies went, Bob had a heavy-duty stapler, some strapping tape, a few
pens, and a carpenter’s flat pencil that he’d obviously been sharpening with
the box cutter in the top desk drawer.
The fax machine/printer was feeding out of a box of perforated paper
that sat underneath it and was about half empty, and there was another unopened
box of the same standing beside it with two boxes of green hanging file folders
on top of that. The other desk drawers
held a weird assortment of mail, catalogues, and building material samples,
along with two half-used rolls of duct tape and an open plastic package of
recycled manila envelopes. The corner
next to the filing cabinet was full of neatly stacked parts boxes, which she
was guessing he reused when he could.
At noon, Wendy
walked out of the office into the sunshine, amazed that her day was only half
over. Dizzy rolled up to her like an
overexcited puppy, bucket spinning excitedly.
“Wendy! Are you ready to go get
lunch? Roley
and Lofty are out exploring, and I was bored.
Are you ready, can I show you now?”
“I’m ready, let’s go.”
The trip to the ‘downtown’ area of Sunflower
Valley turned out to be more
enlightening than Wendy had expected, and it took a lot longer too. There weren’t too many people out, even
though it was a beautiful day, but everyone she did meet seemed to know who she
was and why she was there – just like Don, the dockmaster,
had told her. And they all seemed very
happy about it, too. Apparently Bob was
well-liked in town, and it wasn’t only Mrs. Lykins
who thought he was overworked.
Wendy thought about that all the way back to the office.
There were two new messages blinking on the message machine
when she got back, but no new faxes; Wendy took that as a good sign. So far,
only seven jobs for the next day. She
wrote them down, then started a new list on the computer and went back through
the files to see what kind of supplies Bob might be needing
for each of them…which was how she figured out that not all of the jobs were
actually jobs. He was apparently setting
up the larger job requests as on-site consults so he could make a time and
materials estimate, and then he scheduled the actual work for another day. Bob was a lot more organized than she’d
thought he was.
He was also a lot better off than his house and his hours
might have led someone to believe, which Wendy had known after she’d tracked
through the yard’s books. Sunflower
Valley didn’t use money; all of the
inhabitants were on the Project payroll, yes, but that money was virtual, not
actual, and it was never used locally.
The barter system in place on the island was a service-for-service model
kept track of through a sophisticated computer network. The service provider logged in, input time
and materials used, and then the ‘transaction’ was approved by the recipient
and the computer figured out the exchange rate and calculated the amount of
credits involved. These records were up
to date – Wendy thought that was probably because they were logged into the
nearest terminal at the site of the actual job, and the ones done for the
township of Sunflower Valley were logged by the building inspector after he’d
checked Bob’s work.
She made another trip back to the filing cabinet, but the
inspection reports weren’t in the files.
That mystified her, until she took another look around the office and
realized that what few supplies Bob had were all recycled, even down to the
ubiquitous perforated printer paper. Wendy
went back to the computer and logged into the network, and there were the
reports. The inspector’s name was A. Bentley,
and his reports were absolutely exhaustive.
Which explained why Bob hadn’t printed them, of course; they were
available on the network, they were even searchable, so
printing them would have been a waste of paper.
Her eyes were again drawn to the stack of empty parts boxes in the
corner. It didn’t look like Bob was the
type to waste anything.
Wendy amended that thought; he wasn’t wasting anything in
the office, but construction supplies might be a different matter. All contractors had a certain percentage of
waste, you never used everything. Was
Bob keeping track of that? There was
nothing in the computer or in the files to show that he was. Maybe it was time to have a look around the
yard.
The sun was still fairly high in the sky, and Dizzy was
nowhere to be seen when Wendy went back out.
Neither were Roley or Lofty, although the
dirty red dumptruck, Muck, was back. Muck rolled up to Wendy with an eager smile. “Are we going out on a job, Wendy?”
“Not right now, I’m afraid.”
Wendy looked down at her straight skirt and ‘office’ shoes and shook her
head. “I’m not really dressed for
it. If we needed to go out, I’d have to
come to work dressed more like Bob was today.”
Muck gave a little rock on her heavy tracks that seemed to
be a shrug. “Bob is always dressed that way, or at least most of the time he is. You aren’t always ready for work?”
The question took Wendy aback for a moment, but she
understood almost immediately what the dumptruck was
asking. “There are different kinds of
work, Muck,” she said. “When I’m out
fixing something, I dress a lot like Bob does.
But if I’m going to be working indoors all day, I wear office clothes
like the ones I have on now.”
“You look pretty. You
wouldn’t want to get those clothes all dirty,” Muck agreed, her shovel bobbing
slightly in a nod. “And those shoes
aren’t safe for working outside. When we
have to work around ladies who have those kind of
shoes on, Bob makes them stay away from where we’re working or go back inside
their houses.”
“That’s very smart,” Wendy agreed, nodding herself. “You’re right, these kind
of shoes are just for looking pretty, they’re not safe to work in and I
wouldn’t want to get them dirty.” She
cocked her head at the dumptruck and smiled. “Could you show me around the yard,
Muck? I don’t know where everything is.”
“Oh sure!” Muck immediately reversed herself, paying
obvious and careful attention to Wendy’s location at all times. “You were just in the house, so I don’t need
to show you that. Over here is our shed,
that’s where we all sleep. Bob made it,
it’s really nice.”
Wendy dutifully admired the shed, which was very well built
although more than a bit battered. She
could see a soccer ball in one corner.
“Did someone kick that over the wall?
I can toss it back…”
“Oh don’t do that, that’s our new ball!” the dumptruck informed her.
“We like to play soccer.”
That was interesting; Wendy never would have thought of the
machines playing soccer, much less having their own ball. “Did Bob teach you that?”
“Yeah. Bob likes to play too, but he doesn’t get to
play with us very much.” Muck sounded
unhappy about that, but then she brightened.
“Do you like to play soccer?”
“Sometimes. In different shoes,” she added quickly,
seeing how hopeful the machine looked at her answer, and conveniently not
mentioning the fact that she hadn’t played soccer since grade school. “Do you play anything else?”
Muck rocked on her tracks again. “We tried volleyball, but Bob said it was
dangerous because the ball went too high.”
Wendy mentally pictured the ball being whacked through the
air by a hydraulically powered steel bucket and winced. “I think he was right about that,” she
agreed.
“Bob is mostly always right,” Muck told her. “Do you want to see the rest of the yard?”
“Yes, I do.” The
‘mostly always right’ comment had startled her, but Wendy wasn’t going to
discuss that with Muck. She probably
wasn’t going to discuss it with Bob either, but she did file it away to think
about later. “Where does Bob keep his
building supplies?”
“Oh, we don’t keep those here.” The dumptruck
wiggled its shovel in a clear negative.
“When we need something for a job, we get it from JJ.”
“JJ?”
“At the lumber yard. That’s where Trix
lives. She’s a forklift,” Muck
said. “Trix, not JJ.
When Bob needs something to do a job, he calls JJ and then we go get it
once it’s ready.”
Getting closer. “What about the supplies you have left once a
job is done?” Wendy asked. “Where do
those go? Does Bob keep them here?”
“There usually isn’t anything left,” Muck told her. “Bob is mostly always right. Or do you mean the things that are left over
after we take something apart? Because
most of that goes to the recycling center, unless it’s something Bob thinks we
can use here and then he puts it up.”
The big red shovel gestured toward the other side of the yard, and Wendy
saw a small, neat tarp stretched over an equally small pile of something
against the far wall. “That’s some old
bricks. Bob wants to use them to make a
flower bed that sits against the wall.
He has a plan all drawn out for it, but we haven’t had time to build it
yet.” A large eye angled in Wendy’s
direction. “Maybe you can help us?”
Wendy allowed that she might be able to do that, and agreed
to ask Bob about the flowerbed plan when he got back. She looked inside the workshop, which was
neatly cluttered with stacked paint cans, power tools,
a well-used table saw, a small portable generator, and racks of other
specialized tools hanging on the walls. He
also had spools of various gauges of wire, a thick coil of steel cable, utility
lights, and a weatherproof bin attached to the outside of the shed wall that
was full of smallish pieces of scrap wood.
Muck told her that Bob used those ‘just all over the place’. “It doesn’t make sense to cut up new wood
when you just need a little piece,” the dumptruck
quoted.
All right, Wendy was convinced: Bob apparently didn’t waste anything on the
job, either. She stayed out in the yard
for a little while longer, talking to Muck, and then went back inside the
office and got back on the network; she had paperwork to find and finish. Paperwork had been the reason, or so she’d
been told, that the Project had decided to sell its half of the building yard
and set Bob McKinney up with a partner he hadn’t asked for.
That was his name, whether he was able to use it in Sunflower
Valley or not; Wendy had known some
things about him. Robert J. McKinney,
college-educated civil engineer with a background in contracting and a talent
for relating to the AI machines. In his early
thirties, unmarried, no family on the island.
And now she also knew that he was well-liked in town and so far seemed
to be pretty good at managing his business.
Not to mention that he could bake good coffee cake, had pretty obviously
spoiled his cat rotten, and had taught the AI machines to play soccer.
Add all of that to the day’s job list and the almost-full
filing cabinet…and Wendy was starting to see why the Project’s ‘extra’
paperwork might have fallen by the wayside.
Even though she still hadn’t completely ruled out the idea that Bob just
hadn’t wanted to do it, she was willing to entertain the idea that he could
have also just assigned paperwork a low priority in the face of all the other
things he was doing. They could settle
that later. For now, she pulled up the
reports that headquarters wanted filled out and started completing what she
could with information gleaned from the file cabinet. Weekly job summaries. Materials usage reports. Structural maintenance
assessments.
Wendy finished and submitted as much as she could, if not as
much as she’d hoped to, by the time five o’clock
rolled around. She cleaned up what
little mess there had been in the kitchen – one mug and a spoon – and then sat
down in the office to wait for Bob.
Surely he would be home soon.
Five-thirty came and went. Wendy
checked list.doc again, wondering if he was on the last one or if the
list order even meant anything, or if maybe the addition of the ninth job that
morning, almost ten hours ago, had possibly thrown his day’s schedule off by a
few hours. He had said that he didn’t
like to add new morning-arrived jobs to the day’s list, maybe
that was why.
It was starting to get dark by the time Bob and Scoop showed
back up at the yard. All of the other
machines were already there, settled into their shed for the night, and the
backhoe joined them once Bob had taken his toolbox out of its bucket. He was still putting the tools away when
Wendy came out, and he greeted her with an apologetic smile that crinkled the
corners of his tired brown eyes. “Sorry
I didn’t make it back sooner,” he said.
“But you know how it is – start late, finish later.” He hauled the red toolbox out of Scoop’s
bucket and carried it over to his workshop, and Wendy thought she heard him
groan under his breath when he straightened up from setting it under the table
saw. “I have to clean everything up and
get the machines settled for the night,” he told her when he emerged. “If you want, you can go have dinner and then
come back. That should give me time to
get everything taken care of here, and then we can talk about the business,
okay?”
Wendy wondered again just what he was planning to eat
for dinner, but she didn’t really feel like she knew him well enough to
ask. “All right,” she said. “I’ll be back in…an hour?”
He smiled. “That’ll
work. See you in an hour!”
Not knowing what else to do, Wendy left the yard and went
back downtown to the restaurant she’d eaten at for lunch – actually, it was the
only restaurant in Sunflower Valley,
a tiny little business called Luigi’s Café.
The owner, a tall, fair-haired man wearing a chef’s white coat, greeted
her with a friendly smile. Wendy smiled
back; he’d introduced himself at lunchtime as Lucas Lewis, which wasn’t what
the machines called him, and he’d explained that ‘Mr. Luigi’ had been an old
friend of the family. It was at that
point that nearly everyone else in the restaurant had jumped in to make sure
Wendy fully understood the quirk the machines had with names – the one you were
introduced with was the one the machines identified with you from that point
forward. Forever, because new knowledge
was permanently engraved into the AI ‘brain’ and couldn’t be changed. Which also meant that using
a different name for someone than the one the machines knew confused and
frustrated them, which was something everyone wanted to avoid if at all
possible.
‘Bob the Builder’ and his refusal to let her call him
anything else had made a lot more sense to Wendy after that.
She stretched dinner out as long as she could, which didn’t
quite come to an hour, then headed back to the yard. Bob was sitting on his front porch step nursing
a cup of coffee when she got there, obviously fresh from the shower and wearing
worn khaki pants and a faded red-checked flannel shirt open over a loose red
t-shirt. He looked smaller without the
bulky coverall, broad-shouldered but not nearly as stocky. He also looked desperately tired, but he
still greeted her with a smile. “Long day, huh?”
Wendy shook her head.
“Not as long as yours, I’d guess.
It’s always this busy?”
Bob shrugged. “My
days go pretty fast, there’s always a lot to do around here and only one of me
to do it – until now, anyway.” He pushed
himself to his feet and held open the office door; once inside, he left the
desk chair for her and leaned against the wall.
“Thanks for catching up so much of the paperwork. I hope no one gave you the idea that you had
to do it. You’re half-owner of the
building yard, not my secretary.” Wendy
was hard pressed to keep her mouth from falling open, but Bob didn’t appear to notice
her surprise. “I’m afraid they didn’t
tell me very much about you, except that you knew the business and you were
good with the machines. There’s
definitely enough work for both of us, but if you’d rather not go out…”
“I grew up in the construction business, my father was a carpenter,”
Wendy told him. “I have every intention
of working my share of the jobs that come in – and I’ll be expecting you to
keep up your part of the paperwork from now on, too.”
The words came out a little more harshly than she’d
intended, but Bob just nodded and glanced down at her feet. “I know, I need to
do better. And you’re going to need
steel-toed boots. The machines try to be
careful, but it just isn’t safe to wear normal shoes in the yard, or even
regular work boots. Seven and a half,
right? I can order you some.”
Wendy was starting to think she wasn’t going to get any
arguments out of him. Or maybe he was
just too tired to argue? Then the rest
of what he’d said hit her. “How did you
know my shoe size?”
“Oh, I…sorry.” He chuckled self-consciously, blushing. “I taught myself to eyeball measurements when
I was a kid, and it kind of spread out from lumber to
everything else as I got older. I still
double-check the measurements when it’s something that needs to be absolutely
precise,” he assured her. “But for
regular stuff, my first estimate is the one I go with.”
Bob is mostly always right, Wendy heard Muck saying,
and understood; the dumptruck had been talking about
measuring, not about everything in general.
Maybe. Hopefully. “That’s
useful,” was what she said. “I bet that
saves a lot of time on the job.”
Bob shrugged. “I
guess – it’s the way I’ve always done it, so I don’t really think too much
about it.” He sighed, shifting his
weight, and that was when Wendy realized there wasn’t another chair in the
office for him to sit on. “I can only
imagine what you must think – what the Project must think, what they’ve told
you,” he said. “But I do try to keep
up. I was hoping that this winter I’d
have a little more time to devote to catching up on the non-urgent stuff.”
Wendy had to wonder if that actually would have happened
–she was also wondering what the Project had told him, or not told him,
as the case may be. And she was getting
the idea that she and Bob had gotten off on the wrong foot, possibly before
she’d even arrived in the Valley. Wendy
had expected to be taking over half of the business from a slacker who only did
what he wanted to do…what had Bob expected?
Someone who’d been sent to take his business away from him? Someone who’d been told by the Project that
he hadn’t been doing his job?
If Wendy had learned one thing during her first full day in Sunflower
Valley, a large part of which she’d
spent digging through the building yard’s files, it was that Bob most
definitely was doing his job. In
fact, he was doing more than his job.
The invoices showed that he worked seven days a week. There hadn’t been any complaints from the
residents of Sunflower Valley
that she knew of, except for those people who thought Bob was working too hard. No, he hadn’t been doing the incidental
reports – or at least, he hadn’t been getting them done on time – but the A.I.
progress reports were up to date and always had been. Wendy hadn’t had time to read them, but she
had a feeling those files (on the network and searchable, just like A. Bentley’s
inspection reports) were thorough and complete.
Because that’s what she would expect from a man who worked
from sun-up to sun-down every day…and still made time to teach his machines to
play soccer. Wendy gave in to the urge
to offer reassurance to her new partner.
“No one at the Project had any complaints about the job you’re doing
here,” she told him. “All they told me
was that the paperwork wasn’t getting done.
They thought you needed help, and they’d decided that having the Sol
Foundation as half-owner of the yard wasn’t getting it for you.”
Bob smiled. “Well,
that was true. No one at
headquarters…well, let’s just say I kind of started working before I ever got
on the ferry to come to the island.” He
shifted his weight again. “They told me
my new business partner was named Wendy Avery, from Peterborough,
Ontario.
And they said you’d done really well with Lofty.” He made a face. “His A.I. profile says his stutter and fear
of heights manifested after being tipped over when his hook caught on a rail
and the fall tore off his crane arm.”
“Yes, that was it.”
Wendy hadn’t been there at the training center when it happened, but
she’d seen the video footage. “He’s more
than a little paranoid. Lifting anything
with his crane arm makes him nervous – in fact, pretty much everything makes
him nervous.”
“Yeah, I’d noticed that.”
Bob ran a hand through his wavy dark hair, pushing it back off his
forehead. “I think we can help him best
just by not treating him any differently from the other machines. From what I saw yesterday and today, that
should be enough about three-quarters of the time – if we’re confident he can
do it, he’ll think he can too. And if he
expresses doubt in himself, we can use positive verbal reinforcement and then
walk him through whatever it is he needs to do.
What do you think?”
Wendy nodded, understanding now why he’d jumped right in
with the nervous crane the way he had the day before. “I think you’re right. Do you know how he did today with Roley?”
“I checked on them once or twice. Lofty was just fine. And I had Farmer Pickles keep Spud close to
home today.” Bob saw her look of
confusion and explained, “You probably heard of him at headquarters. Spud is the A.I. scarecrow.”
Wendy’s mouth dropped open.
“But I thought that project…”
“Didn’t work? It
didn’t – or rather, he didn’t.” Another sigh. “Spud
lives up at the farm. Fred Pickles – that’s
Farmer Pickles, to the machines – is in charge of him. Spud leveled off developmentally much faster
and at a lower level than the regular machines.
To all intents and purposes, he’s developmentally disabled.” Bob grimaced.
“He can follow directions up to a point, but he can’t process cause and
effect relationships. I could explain to
him that he shouldn’t try to scare Lofty, but he wouldn’t remember it for more
than a few hours at most. And he’d never
be able to understand why he shouldn’t do it.”
“Then what are we going to do?”
“Just keep an eye out for Spud when Lofty is around, at
least for the next month or so,” Bob told her.
“Farmer Pickles already told Travis, his tractor, and I talked to Scoop
and Muck today after we left the yard.
They’ll run interference until Lofty gets his wheels under him around
here, so to speak. But I don’t want to
give you the wrong idea about Spud,” he added quickly. “He’s just like the machines as far as not
being able to intentionally hurt people, and even though he’s mischievous and
causes a lot of trouble, it isn’t malicious.
He will do whatever you tell him, or at least he’ll try, so don’t
worry about that.”
Wendy cocked her head at him. “Do you worry about it?”
He shook his head. “Sometimes, not all the time. I worry about the effect Spud has on the
machines’ development, because of the coping mechanisms I see them developing
to deal with him. Spud complains a lot,
tells tall tales, and makes excuses for everything,” he clarified. “He tries to get the machines to go along
with whatever he’s doing, sometimes he tries to get them to blow off work…they’ve
learned to distrust him. Not to mention that they’ve had to learn when to tell on him and
when not to.” That surprised
Wendy, and Bob chuckled tiredly, shaking his head again. “Well, we learned it, right? When you’re a kid, you learn which secrets
are okay to keep and which ones aren’t.
It’s a pretty normal thing, developmentally.”
“That’s subjective reasoning, though…” Then she got it. “Spud forced them to develop faster than they
were expected to, didn’t he?”
“Yeah, pretty much.”
Bob shifted, sighed. “No one was
even sure they could develop that kind of subjective reasoning
capability. But they did. And that threw off all of the developmental
projections the Project had come up with for the A.I. matrices. Which means that from that
point forward...well, we’re pretty sure they’ll still level off at the 10-year
mark, but other than that all bets are off.”
Wendy nodded slowly, processing that. The A.I. ‘brain’ had limitations, one of
which was in the area of emotional development; no A.I. machine would ever mature
emotionally beyond the level of a 10-year-old human child. That didn’t limit their ability to learn,
however, or retard the functioning of the complicated logic processors that
made them capable of independent thought.
“I’ll have to read through your A.I. progress reports tomorrow. I don’t want to contradict anything you’ve already
been doing, the machines need consistency.”
She noticed that her words released a certain tension in her
new partner, and his sudden bright smile erased many of the tired lines on his face
and lit up his brown eyes. “We can start
dividing up the job list when you’re done catching up on the reports, then,” he
told her, straightening up out of his slouch against the wall. “I know today has been a long day for you, and
then you had to wait for me to get back…we can talk some more later, if you’d
like for me to take you home now.”
“You want to walk me home?”
She raised an eyebrow. “You look
like all you want to do is slide down that wall and go to sleep.”
To her surprise, he blushed.
“I…um…well, yeah, I am pretty tired.
It just felt rude to send you off into the night alone after your first
day at work. But it’s not like there’s
any crime or anything to worry about, Sunflower
Valley is perfectly safe day or
night.” He held back a yawn with one
hand. “Remind me to introduce you to
Constable Rickey, he can tell you all about just how much crime we don’t have
and why you can’t ever let the RCMP know how easy his job here is.”
Wendy smiled. “I
don’t think that’s a bad thing. I won’t
tell on him.” She stood up, and Bob
immediately moved to hold open the office door for her. “What time are you starting tomorrow?”
Bob shook his head.
“You don’t have to
keep the same hours I do.
Come in at eight or nine, that way you can stop at the café for
breakfast. I know you haven’t had a
chance to go grocery shopping yet.”
“If you leave me a list, I’ll do that tomorrow and pick up
whatever you need too,” she told him, following up quickly with, “After all,
you’re going to be doing my share of the work so I can get caught up. The least I could do is run your errands
while I’m running mine.”
Her new partner blushed again. “That would be really nice, thank you.” He tried to hide another yawn. “I’ll see you tomorrow, Wendy. Have a good night.”
“You have a good night too.”
Wendy left the office and responded to the chorus of good nights from
the machines as she left the yard, smiling to herself when she heard them
questioning Bob about whether she was going out on jobs with them and what they
would be doing the next day. She
wondered as she walked the two short blocks to her house how much longer Bob
would stay up talking to the machines, doing paperwork and getting his next
day’s list of jobs ready.
Her little house was dark and not too welcoming –Wendy
hadn’t expected to be coming home after dark, so she hadn’t left any lights
on. She went into the kitchen, the one
room that was completely unpacked, and made herself a
cup of herbal tea generously sweetened with honey. The tea and a plate of Mrs. Lykins’ cookies from the day before lasted through two
boxes of books being unpacked and sorted onto the built-in shelves in Wendy’s
new living room, and then she turned off all the lights and went upstairs. She
got ready for bed, got into bed and turned out the light…and stared at the
ceiling. Which was
still unfamiliar, since this was only her second night in her new house. A wave of homesickness flowed over Wendy,
much to her surprise. Wasn’t twenty-nine
a little old to be feeling homesick? She
was, though. Everything and everyone
around her was so new: new house that wasn’t a home yet, new people who weren’t
friends yet, new job that wasn’t…well, she wasn’t
exactly sure what Bob and his building yard were going to be for her yet. She had a good feeling about her new
partnership, but it was really too soon to be completely sure.
A flash caught her eye, and Wendy pushed up onto her elbows
to look out the window. A square of
yellow light was shining through the darkness, reassuringly warm and welcoming
like a vision of home in the distance after a long journey. Wendy smiled at her own silliness; she was
peeping in someone else’s bedroom window in the middle of the night, that wasn’t
something to get sentimental over. Maybe
something to get arrested over…
A shadow crossed the square of light, vanished, and then
reappeared. It turned, blurred shadow
becoming a sharp dark profile, and Wendy’s mouth dropped open when she realized
the bedroom she was peeping into was her new partner’s. Bob was getting ready for bed. She saw him stretch, all too obviously trying
to pop his back, and then he moved out of sight again and a second later his
light went off. The window two blocks
away wasn’t completely dark, though; a blue-white glow now shone from it, so
much fainter that if she hadn’t been looking there already it wouldn’t have
drawn her eye. Bob had a nightlight on.
Wendy got out of bed, dug her own nightlight out of a box on
her dresser and plugged it in, and when it obligingly lit up for her the rosy
glow it emitted made her smile. The
light reminded her of home…and reminded her that eventually this place would become
her home too. Homesickness muted a
little bit, she went back to bed, took one last look at the faint light two
blocks away, then rolled over, pulled up her blankets and closed her eyes. The workday started early at Bob’s Building
Yard, she needed her sleep.
And then tomorrow after work, she was definitely going to
put up her bedroom curtains.