some peanuts." And the guests all watched the door in agony as Royce passed the peanuts around, then (finally!) went to the door to close it.
"Beautiful day outside," Royce said, holding the door open a few minutes longer.
Somebody in the living room mentioned a name of the deity. Somebody else countered wiih a one word discussion of defecation. Royce was satisfied that the point had been made. He shut the door.
"Oh, by the way," he said. "I'd like you to meet a friend of mine. His name is Robert Redford."
Gasp, gasp, of course you're joking, Robert Redford, what a laugh, sure.
"Actually, his name is Robert Redford, but he isn't, of course, the all time greatest star of stage, screen, and the Friday Night Movie, as the disc jockeys say, ha ha. He is, in short, my friends, a doghouse salesman."
Mklikluln came in then, and shook hands all around.
"He looks like an Arab," a woman whispered.
"Or a Jew," her husband whispered back. "Who can tell?"
Royce beamed at Mklikluln and patted him on the back. "Redford here is the best salesman I ever met." "Must be, if he sold you a doghouse, and you not even got a dog," said Mr. Detweiler of the bowling league, who could sound patronizing because he was the only one in the bowling league who had ever had a perfect game.
"Neverthemore, as the raven said, ha ha ha, I want you all to see my doghouse." And so Royce led the way past a kitchen where all the lights were on, where the refrigerator was standing open ("Royce, the fridge is open!" "Oh, I guess one of the kids left it that way." "I'd kill one of my kids that did something like that!"), where the stove and microwave and osterizer and hot water were all running at once. Some of the women looked faint.
And as the guests tried to rush through the back door all at once, to conserve energy, Royce said, "Slow down, slow down, what's the panic, the house on fire? Ha ha ha." But the guests still hurried through.
On the way out to the doghouse, which was located in the dead center of the backyard, Detweiler took Royce aside.
"Hey, Royce, old buddy. Who's your touch with the damnpowercompany? How'd you get your quota upped?"
Royce only smiled, shaking his head. "Quota's the same as ever, Detweiler." And then, raising his voice just a bit so that everybody in the backyard could hear, he said, "I only pay fifteen bucks a month for power as it is."
"Woof woof," said a small dog chained to the hook on the doghouse.
"Where'd the dog come from?" Royce whispered to Mklikluln.
"Neighbor was going to drown 'im," Mklikluln answered. "Besides, if you don't have a dog the power company's going to get suspicious. It's cover."
Royce nodded wisely. "Good idea, Redford. I just hope this party's a good idea. What if somebody talks?"
"Nobody will," Mklikluln said confidently.
And then Mklikluln began showing the guests the finer points of the doghouse.
When they finally left, Mklikluln had twenty-three appointments during the next two weeks, checks made out to Doghouses Unlimited for $221.23, including taxes, and many new friends. Even Mr. Detweiler left smiling, his check in Mklikluln's hand, even though the puppy had pooped on his shoe. "Here's your commission," Mklikluln said as he wrote out a check for three hundred dollars to Royce Jacobsen. "It's more than we agreed, but, you earned it," he said.
"I feel a little funny about this," Royce said. "Like I'm conspiring to break the law or something."
"Nonsense," Mklikluln said. "Think of it as a Tupperware party."
"Sure," Royce said after a moment's thought. "It's not as if I actually did any selling myself, right?"
Within a week, however, Detweiler, Royce, and four other citizens of Manhattan, Kansas, were on their way to various distant cities of the United States, Doghouses Unlimited briefcases in their hands.
And within a month, Mklikluln had a staff of three hundred in seven cities, building doghouses and installing them. And into every doghouse went a frisky little puppy. Mklikluln did some figuring. In about a year, he decided. One year and I can call my people.
* * *
"What's happened to power consumption in Manhattan, Kansas?" asked Bill Wilson, up-and-coming young executive in the statistical analysis section of Central Kansas Power, otherwise known as the damnpowercompany.
"It's gotten lower," answered Kay Block, relic of outdated affirmative action programs in Central Kansas Power, who had reached the level of records examiner before the ERA was repealed to make