unsupportable claim, I think. âAnyoneâ? You would think that âanyoneâ could make a decent bagel just by following the steps in the manual and referring to the detailed plans, but experience belies it again and again.â
âHe makes a point of the fact that no welding is required.â
âThe bagel analogy holds.â
âHe says heâs sold more than two thousand sets of plans.â
âI smell a home business for you there.â
âHundreds of Pinch-a-Pennies are currently under construction,â I went on.
âSays Nort.â
âSays he.â
âI take that to mean that hundreds of Pinch-a-Penny projects are languishing in back yards and garages.â
âSeven are flying. Have flown.â
âSeven.â She leaned toward the screen. âTell me what you see here,â she said.
I looked at the photograph on the Pinch-a-Penny website.
âI see a stocky man, whom I take to be Norton Prysock, standing beside what I assume is his own Pinch-a-Penny, at the point in its construction when it was complete except that the fabric that would eventually cover the wings, control surfaces, and, optionally, the fuselage aft of the cockpit had not yet been applied.â
âDo we know that he ever did get around to covering the thing?â
âSkeptic,â I whined.
âAnd daughter of a skeptic,â she reminded me. âWhat did my father always say?â
ââAssume nothing.ââ
âLook behind Nort and the Pinch-a-Penny, Peter, and tell me what you see there.â
âThereâs an outbuilding of some kind, a shed or garage, or a shed with a carport attachedââ
ââand the siding has never been put on it, just the raw boards that are supposed to underlie the siding.â
âRight.â
âAnd the roof has been covered with tar paper but not shingled.â
âRight.â
âThere is a stack of something on the left and a stack of something else on the right, both stacks covered with tarpaulins.â
âMaybe heâs going to use those tarps as fabric for the wings.â
âI wouldnât be surprised. And then whatever is under those tarps will be exposed to the weather, and in time will molder and rot.â
âMaybe.â
âNort has a serious personality flaw, Peter. He is not a finisher. He probably abandoned the carport project when the Pinch-a-Penny passion struck.â
âI donât know about that. He looks so relaxed and self-confidentâthe way heâs leaning on the planeââ In the photograph, Nort was resting his right elbow on the aluminum just ahead of the cockpit.
âHe appears to be leaning on it,â said Albertine, âbut I donât think he actually is.â
âYou donât?â
âNo. There is a tension in his body that makes me think he is holding himself in that position, giving the appearance of the builder at his ease, resting on the plane he has built, but in fact being careful not to put any weight on it.â
I looked more closely. I took the magnifying glass from my desk drawer and looked more closely still.
âWell?â she asked.
âYou may be right,â I said.
Chapter 24
Surplus Motorcycles? Why Not?
THE HEART of the aerocycle design was a surplus motorcycle. The people at Impractical Craftsman asserted that the builder could obtain a surplus motorcycle locally and easily. They passed over the acquisition of a surplus motorcycle so quickly, in so few words, that I got the impression of a vast glut of surplus motorcycles, a buyerâs market in surplus motorcycles, and I was amazed that I hadnât ever seen any abandoned by the side of the road, considering that the glut must have made them all but worthless.
I looked in the Yellow Pages under âMotorcycles, Surplus,â but there was no entry for âMotorcycles, Surplus.â I looked under
Brandon Sanderson
Joseph Anderson
Stephen Harding
Dante D'Anthony
Giselle Renarde
Sherrilyn Keynon
Lynne Gentry
Tony Parsons
Faith Baldwin
Carina Axelsson