Identity
By GEORGE O. SMITH
Illustrated by Williams
[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from Astounding Science-Fiction, November 1945. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
Cal Blair paused at the threshold of the Solarian Medical Association and held the door while four people came out. He entered, and gave his name to the girl at the reception desk, and then though he had the run of the place on a visitor basis, Cal waited until the girl nodded that he should go on into the laboratories.
His nose wrinkled with the smell of neoform, and shuddered at the white plastic walls. He came to the proper door and entered without knocking. He stood in the center of the room as far from the shelves of dangerous-looking bottles on one wall as he could get—without getting too close to the preserved specimens of human viscera on the other wall.
The cabinet with its glint of chrome-iridium surgical tools seemed to be like a monster, loaded to the vanishing point with glittering teeth. In here, the odor of neoform was slightly tainted with a gentle aroma of perfume.
Cal looked around at the empty room and then opened the tiny door at one side. He had to pass between a portable radiology machine and a case of anatomical charts, both of which made his hackles tingle. Then he was inside of the room, and the sight of Tinker Elliott's small, desirable head bent over the binocular microscope made him forget his fears. He stepped forward and kissed her on the ear.
She gasped, startled, and squinted at him through half-closed eyelids.
"Nice going," she said sharply.
"Thought you liked it," he said.
"I do. Want to try it over again?"
"Sure."
"Then don't bother going out and coming in again. Just stay here."
Cal listened to the words, but not the tone.
"Don't mind if I do. Shall we neck in earnest?"
"I'd as soon that as having you pop in and out, getting my nerves all upended by kissing me on the ear."
"I like kissing you on the ear."
Tinker Elliott came forward and shoved him onto a tall laboratory chair. "Good. But you'll do it at my convenience, next time."
"I'd rather surprise you."
"So I gathered. Why did you change your suit?"
"Change my suit?"
"Certainly."
"I haven't changed my suit."
"Well! I suppose that's the one you were wearing before."
"Look, Tinker, I don't usually wear a suit for three months. I think it was about time I changed. In fact, this one is about done for."
"The one you had on before looked all right to me."
"So? How long do you expect a suit to last, anyway?"
"Certainly as long as an hour."
"Hour?"




