
Time was getting short; we were supposed to be at Mojave Space Port on 26 June, just two weeks away. It was high time I was picking out what to take. The allowance was fifty-seven and six-tenths pounds per person and had not been announced until all our body weights had been taken.
The booklet had said, "Close your terrestrial affairs as if you were dying." That's easy to say. But when you die, you can't take it with you, while here we could— fifty-seven-odd pounds of it.
The question was: what fifty-seven pounds?
My silkworms I turned over to the school biology lab and the same for the snakes. Duck wanted my aquarium but I wouldn't let him; twice he's had fish and twice he's let them die. I split them between two fellows in the troop who already had fish. The birds I gave to Mrs. Fishbein on our deck. I didn't have a cat or a dog; George says ninety floors up is no place to keep junior citizens—that's what he calls them.
I was cleaning up the mess when George came in. "Well," he says, "first time I've been able to come into your room without a gas mask."
I skipped it; George talks like that. "I still don't know what to do," I said, pointing at the heap on my bed.
"Microfilmed everything you can?"
"Yes, everything but this picture." It was a cabinet stereo of Anne, weighing about a pound and nine ounces.
"Keep that, of course. Face it, Bill, you've got to travel light. We're pioneers."
"I don't know what to throw out."
I guess I looked glum for he said, "Quit feeling sorry for yourself. Me, I've got to give up this—and that's tough, believe me." He held out his pipe.
"Why?" I asked. "A pipe doesn't weigh much."
"Because they aren't raising tobacco on Ganymede and they aren't importing any."
"Oh. Look, George, I could just about make it if it weren't for my accordion. But it licks me."
