
A weary traveler on a routine flight discovers that his peculiar talent—sensing the shape, texture, and hidden contents of anything he touches— is both a curse and a curiosity. He can “read” a stranger’s purse without opening it, feeling the weight of a lipstick, a compact, a few crumpled bills, and even the faint hum of a concealed weapon. The narration follows his quiet, obsessive habit, recalling schoolyard incidents that taught him the value of silence, and showing how he manipulates tiny mechanisms, from a clock’s balance wheel to a buzzing alarm, simply by nudging them with his mind.
Set against the backdrop of a cloud‑filled sky and a cramped airline cabin, the story explores the loneliness of a gift that isolates as much as it informs. As the protagonist contemplates the limits of his sense—unable to see colors or read thoughts—he wonders whether this hidden ability might ever become more than a secret hobby, and what price a life lived on the edge of the unseen might demand.
Language
en
Duration
~24 minutes (23K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Greg Weeks, Mary Meehan and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2019-11-20
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1913–2002
A prolific science fiction writer and screenwriter, he moved easily between pulp magazines and classic television, contributing stories and scripts that reached audiences far beyond the genre's core fans. His work is closely tied to mid-century speculative fiction, from novels and short stories to episodes of landmark series like The Twilight Zone and Star Trek.
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