“I… I…” Now that he was awake, more rational, more in control, he saw that the truth was simply too embarrassing to tell. Of
She was barely able to see him in the dark. In the dim glow from the time display she thought that she saw him wipe sweat from his face. “Are you sure you’re OK?”
“Yes, I’m OK!” he snapped. “Didn’t I just say so?”
In fact, he had not, but Brigitte knew a wounded ego when she saw one. She reached out, touching him gently, tracing arcs on his skin with her fingernails.
“Don’t do that.”
“You used to like—”
“I don’t care what I used to like. Just don’t do it.”
Three times in the past two weeks he had rejected her like this; harshly, abruptly, without explanation. While tonight might be explained away as residual tension from a bad dream, she knew that the overall pattern wasn’t good.
He was getting bored with her.
Slowly withdrawing her arm, she turned her back on him. Three strikes and you’re out. It was time to start making contingency plans, as Trevor York was not renowned for keeping his women around for long, and it appeared that her time was nearly up.
Brigitte intended to hit the ground running.
Roberta Lith was caught between conflicting emotions. On one hand, she was not only gainfully employed, but she was making an obscene amount of money compared to what people were making down on Earth in the midst of the Depression. She even had her own tunnel. Small, true, but adequate.
Balanced against this was the fact that her parents disapproved… hated, actually, Luna and all that it stood for. For years, they had made their point of view known in ways great and small. Those people…
And Roberta, their only daughter, had defected to the enemy without even so much as saying good-bye.
Roberta wasn’t homesick… honestly. She just wanted to hear their voices and to let them know that she was all right. It had been almost a year since she had slipped out the front door, leaving nothing behind but dark, sliding tracks in the early morning dew.
She had meant to write or call before this, but had always found a good excuse not to follow through. This time would be different, if only she could quit wiping nervous sweat from her palms.
Biting her lip, she told the computer terminal in her tunnel to dial. It had been programmed with the number long ago, the first time she had tried to call.
The signal took one and a quarter seconds to speed to Earth. It took an additional eight seconds for the call to be answered. In that short span of time, Roberta died a thousand deaths. She nearly reached out to slap the disconnect button.
But didn’t.
It was her mother’s face. “Hello?”
“Mom?”
By the time Roberta’s hesitant reply had time to travel the distance, her mother’s face turned pale. Her eyes grew wide.
If her mother had replied with anything other than that one word, Roberta would have been able to keep up a brave face. She crumpled instantly, tears pooling in her eyes. “Oh, Mom, I’ve missed you.”
For almost five minutes they waged a nearly incoherent battle with each other and with their own emotions. It was a subtle battle for mastery—was Roberta an adult, or was she a wayward but still much-loved child? Roberta won, barely.
She smiled and dabbed at her eyes with a tissue. “So… how are things down there?”
Her mother shook her head, part wonder, part tacit acknowledgment of defeat. “We’re fine, baby. We were really worried about you, though.”
“I’m OK.”
“Did you really do it? Are you really up there?” She craned her neck, trying to see around her daughter, to catch partial glimpses of the room where she lived.
‘Yeah, Mom. I live in Crisium now. Uh… would you like my address?”
“I guess I’d better get it. Your birthday’s coming up and I’d like to send you a little something.”
“Mom… don’t. I don’t need anything. Really.”
“But—”
“Mom, I make more here than Daddy did when he had a job. Seriously, I was going to ask if I could send
Her mother looked scandalized. “Darling! You can’t be serious. We’re doing just fine.”
“Look, I’m not kidding. I make plenty and spend almost nothing. I’ve even got money saved.” She paused, unsure as to whether she should, then told her mother how much she was making.
Her mother’s involuntary gasp was completely satisfactory.
“Please? I want to send you two something. Running off the way I did probably wasn’t the right way to handle things, but I want to show you that everything turned out all right in the end.”