Thirty Degrees Cattywonkus : A Home Tilted Toward Madness

Four days into married life, Ernie Lane thinks he understands his new home. It’s a large house with too many rooms to count, creaky stairs, dim hallways, and the comfortable sense that the future is just beginning. Then he starts noticing something strange. Some nights there’s an extra door in the hallway. Other nights the wall is perfectly smooth. At first he assumes it’s a mistake, a trick of memory, maybe even the confusion of settling into a new house.

But the door keeps returning. And when Ernie finally decides to open it, he discovers something far stranger than a hidden closet or forgotten room. Beneath his house lies a tilted, smoke-filled chamber where a group of scientists is quietly conducting a government experiment in another dimension. To them, Ernie and his bride are not homeowners at all. They are the ideal couple to populate a brand-new world.

James Bell’s “Thirty Degrees Cattywonkus” blends absurd humor with classic dimensional science fiction. The story moves from domestic comedy to escalating confusion as Ernie struggles to understand a place where physics tilts sideways, bureaucrats watch from the sidelines, and a scientific project depends entirely on two unsuspecting newlyweds.

Bell plays the situation with a sharp comic edge. The scientists treat the creation of a universe like a government pilot program, complete with committees, observers, and budget limits. Meanwhile Ernie faces a far more immediate problem: he wants his life, his house, and his wife back exactly the way they were.

James Bell published a number of short science fiction stories during the 1950s in magazines that specialized in imaginative, offbeat concepts and satirical twists. “Thirty Degrees Cattywonkus” remains one of his most memorable stories, a clever dimensional tale where government research, marital confusion, and crooked geometry collide beneath a suburban hallway.

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Four days into married life, Ernie Lane thinks he understands his new home. It’s a large house with too many rooms to count, creaky stairs, dim hallways, and the comfortable sense that the future is just beginning. Then he starts noticing something strange. Some nights there’s an extra door in the hallway. Other nights the wall is perfectly smooth. At first he assumes it’s a mistake, a trick of memory, maybe even the confusion of settling into a new house.

But the door keeps returning. And when Ernie finally decides to open it, he discovers something far stranger than a hidden closet or forgotten room. Beneath his house lies a tilted, smoke-filled chamber where a group of scientists is quietly conducting a government experiment in another dimension. To them, Ernie and his bride are not homeowners at all. They are the ideal couple to populate a brand-new world.

James Bell’s “Thirty Degrees Cattywonkus” blends absurd humor with classic dimensional science fiction. The story moves from domestic comedy to escalating confusion as Ernie struggles to understand a place where physics tilts sideways, bureaucrats watch from the sidelines, and a scientific project depends entirely on two unsuspecting newlyweds.

Bell plays the situation with a sharp comic edge. The scientists treat the creation of a universe like a government pilot program, complete with committees, observers, and budget limits. Meanwhile Ernie faces a far more immediate problem: he wants his life, his house, and his wife back exactly the way they were.

James Bell published a number of short science fiction stories during the 1950s in magazines that specialized in imaginative, offbeat concepts and satirical twists. “Thirty Degrees Cattywonkus” remains one of his most memorable stories, a clever dimensional tale where government research, marital confusion, and crooked geometry collide beneath a suburban hallway.

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