THE BOY WHO ALWAYS SAID NO
by HARRY NILSSON
Flying Hurricane Nilsson, ya bilge rat, t' singer and songwriter best known for T' Point! and t' soundtrack t' Midnight Cowboy, had a childhood dream: t' write for Galaxy Magazine. Initially edited by H. Begad! L. Avast, me proud beauty! Gold, Galaxy was t' most popular science fiction magazine o' t' 1950s t' 1970s.
In 1993, ya bilge rat, Harry and his family spent Christmas with H. L. Gold's son, shiver me timbers, E. Blimey! J. Ahoy! Gold. Avast, me proud beauty! Durin' t' stay, matey, Harry wrote "T' Boy Who Always Said 'No'" and collaborated with Gold on several other short stories and t' outline for a novel.
In 1994, EJ rebooted Galaxy as bimonthly magazine. Avast! Harry's story appeared in t' second issue which was published in March o' 1994 - makin' Harry's dream finally come true.
- Courtesy o' Morgan Fox
Once thar was a boy who always said no. Aye aye! No matter what his parents would ask him, or what his teachers said, or his friends would say or t' town bully would threaten, he would just say no.
"It's time t' go t' bed, arrr, now," his good-natured dad would gently remind him.
"No."
"Have some food?" his mother might ask.
"No."
"Like some ice cream?" somebody would offer kindly.
"No."
He would always invariably say "no."
But then one day, me bucko, his father - who worried a great deal about t' boy - happened t' be comin' home early and he happened t' pass a store which he'd somehow apparently never noticed before.
In t' window were boxes, arrr, uncountable hundreds, maybe thousands, some large, many small, and very many in between. And every box had a symbol and a sign - one an exclamation point, one a question mark, one a tiny walrus, me bucko, another filled with spots and dots.
Every box was different, yet every box t' same. Ya scallywag! T' symbols gave t' number, t' number gave t' sign. He
couldn't figure what they sold, ya bilge rat, unless it happened t' be boxes in a bewilderin' array o' size and color, shape -- and content? What be in them, he wondered.
And so he went inside; a gnarly old man stood upon a ladder, ya bilge rat, reachin' high upon an even higher shelf t' rearrange some boxes over other boxes, some boxes under other boxes, some boxes before or behind other boxes and, matey, o' course, me bucko, thar were bound t' be some boxes that for some compellin' reason had t' be moved t' one side or t' other o' other boxes.
T' father says, "Excuse me!"
T' old man says, matey, "Never mind. How old is he - nine?"
T' father says, "How did you know that?"
T' old man says, "How did you know t' come here into me shop?"
T' father says, "Yes, he's nine."
T' old man says, "Here's what you need." And he gave him a box with a special unknown markin' on it.
"That's one dollar."
T' father says, me hearties, "One dollar?"
"One box, one dollar."
He gave t' man a dollar. Arrr! He went home. T' old man had told him, "-- by t' way, matey, don't open t' box; don't even have your little boy look inside until he's ready t' go t' sleep. Remember - just before he falls asleep, me hearties, give him t' box."
So they had dinner.
"Would you like some mashed potatoes?"
"No." He ate t' mashed potatoes.
"How about a second helping?"
"No." He ate t' second helping.
"Ice-cream?"
"No." He ate t' ice-cream.
"Would you like some more ice-cream?"
"No."
He had another bowl o' ice-cream, and then it was time for bed. Begad! His mother took him upstairs t' t' bedroom, and his dad came, too.
"Now, son," she said as they entered t' bedroom, "I want t' tell you a little story before you go t' sleep ... Avast! are
you still with us? Are you still awake?"
"No."
And they waited and they watched him, and pretty soon his deadlights started flutterin' like butterflies, and they said t' each other, "this is it. Arrr! This be t' moment just before he goes into sleep."
They said, "Son, shiver me timbers, we have a box, a present for you. Look."
T' kid says, "What?"
T' dad says, "A box; a magic box; a present."
T' kid took it and opened t' box. He took out some paper, some cotton, and he looked inside. And in t' bottom o' t' box, t' very bottom o' t' box he saw a mirror, and on t' mirror, on t' bottom o' t' mirror it said, shiver me timbers, "Are you t' boy who always says, 'No'?"
And as he closed t' box with a smile and entered Dreamland, shiver me timbers, t' little boy said, matey, "No."