Story:
Little Brother
By Bruce Holland Rogers
Peter had wanted a Little Brother(tm) for three Christmases in a row.
His favorite TV commercials were the ones that showed just how much fun
he would have teaching Little Brother(tm) to do all the things that he
could already do himself. But every year, Mommy had said that Peter
wasn't ready for a Little Brother(tm). Until this year.
This year when Peter ran into the living room, there sat Little
Brother(tm) among all the wrapped presents, babbling baby talk, smiling
his happy smile, and patting one of the packages with his fat little
hand. Peter was so excited that he ran up and gave Little Brother(tm) a
big hug around the neck.
That was how he found out about the button. Peter's hand pushed
against something cold on Little Brother(tm)'s neck, and suddenly Little
Brother(tm) wasn't babbling any more, or even sitting up. Suddenly,
Little Brother(tm) was limp on the floor, as lifeless as any ordinary
doll.
"Peter!" Mommy said.
"I didn't mean to!"
Mommy picked up Little Brother(tm), sat him in her lap, and pressed
the black button at the back of his neck. Little Brother(tm)'s face came
alive, and it wrinkled up as if he were about to cry, but Mommy bounced
him on her knee and told him what a good boy he was. He didn't cry after
all.
"Little Brother(tm) isn't like your other toys, Peter," Mommy said.
"You have to be extra careful with him, as if he were a real baby." She
put Little Brother(tm) down on the floor, and he took tottering baby
steps toward Peter. "Why don't you let him help open your other
presents?"
So that's what Peter did. He showed Little Brother(tm) how to tear
the paper and open the boxes. The other toys were a fire engine, some
talking books, a wagon, and lots and lots of wooden blocks. The fire
engine was the second-best present. It had lights, a siren, and hoses
that blew green gas just like the real thing. There weren't as many
presents as last year, Mommy explained, because Little Brother(tm) was
expensive. That was okay. Little Brother(tm) was the best present ever!
Well, that's what Peter thought at first. At first, everything that
Little Brother(tm) did was funny and wonderful. Peter put all the torn
wrapping paper in the wagon, and Little Brother(tm) took it out again
and threw it on the floor. Peter started to read a talking book, and
Little Brother(tm) came and turned the pages too fast for the book to
keep up.
But then, while Mommy went to the kitchen to cook breakfast, Peter
tried to show Little Brother(tm) how to build a very tall tower out of
blocks. Little Brother(tm) wasn't interested in seeing a really tall
tower.
Every time Peter had a few blocks stacked up, Little Brother(tm)
swatted the tower with his hand and laughed. Peter laughed, too, for the
first time, and the second. But then he said, "Now watch this time. I'm
going to make it really big."
But Little Brother(tm) didn't watch. The tower was only a few blocks
tall when he knocked it down. "No!" Peter said. He grabbed hold of
Little Brother(tm)'s arm. "Don't!"
Little Brother(tm)'s face wrinkled. He was getting ready to cry.
Peter looked toward the kitchen and let go. "Don't cry," he said.
"Look, I'm building another one! Watch me build it!"
Little Brother(tm) watched. Then he knocked the tower down.
Peter had an idea
When Mommy came into the living room again, Peter had built a tower
that was taller than he was, the best tower he had ever made. "Look!" he
said.
But Mommy didn't even look at the tower. "Peter!" She picked up
Little Brother(tm), put him on her lap, and pressed the button to turn
him back on. As soon as he was on, Little Brother(tm) started to scream.
His face turned red.
"I didn't mean to!"
"Peter, I told you! He's not like your other toys. When you turn him
off, he can't move but he can still see and hear. He can still feel. And
it scares him."
"He was knocking down my blocks."
"Babies do things like that," Mommy said. "That's what it's like to
have a baby brother."
Little Brother(tm) howled.
"He's mine," Peter said too quietly for Mommy to hear. But when
Little Brother(tm) had calmed down, Mommy put him back on the floor and
Peter let him toddle over and knock down the tower.
Mommy told Peter to clean up the wrapping paper, and she went back
into the kitchen. Peter had already picked up the wrapping paper once,
and she hadn't said thank you. She hadn't even noticed.
Peter wadded the paper into angry balls and threw them one at a time
into the wagon until it was almost full. That's when Little Brother(tm)
broke the fire engine. Peter turned just in time to see him lift the
engine up over his head and let it drop.
"No!" Peter shouted. The windshield cracked and popped out as the
fire engine hit the floor.
Broken. Peter hadn't even played with it once, and his best Christmas
present was broken.
Later, when Mommy came into the living room, she didn't thank Peter
for picking up all the wrapping paper. Instead, she scooped up Little
Brother(tm) and turned him on again. He trembled and screeched louder
than ever.
"My God! How long has he been off?" Mommy demanded.
"I don't like him!"
"Peter, it scares him! Listen to him!"
"I hate him! Take him back!"
"You are not to turn him off again. Ever!"
"He's mine!" Peter shouted. "He's mine and I can do what I want with
him! He broke my fire engine!"
"He's a baby!"
"He's stupid! I hate him! Take him back!"
"You are going to learn to be nice with him."
"I'll turn him off if you don't take him back. I'll turn him off and
hide him someplace where you can't find him!"
"Peter!" Mommy said, and she was angry. She was angrier than he'd
ever seen her before. She put Little Brother(tm) down and took a step
toward Peter. She would punish him. Peter didn't care. He was angry,
too.
"I'll do it!" he yelled. "I'll turn him off and hide him someplace
dark!"
"You'll do no such thing!" Mommy said. She grabbed his arm and spun
him around. The spanking would come next.
But it didn't. Instead he felt her fingers searching for something at
the back of his neck.
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