She glanced past him down the corridor. “This is the last one I’m going to do. I don’t feel safe any more. Being out alone like this, late at night.” She shook her head. “I wanted to do one more, though. I had to say good-bye to Alan in my own way.”
“What if I offered to stand guard? I don’t want you to quit doing this if you feel that you have more to say.”
“But—”
He pursed his lips, thinking. “Tell you what. Just call me at work when you want to do something. If you don’t get me, just leave a message that I’m to call the Court Jester. People will look at me funny, but that’s my problem, not yours.”
“Are you sure that’s all right?”
He nodded. “I’m going to stand back over here against the wall. You go right ahead and finish.”
As the painting took shape, Watts noted that she added a small body circling Luna. The face she gave it was unmistakably his own, scowling fiercely outwards as though to say that Alan’s death would never be repeated.
Hank and Carol Willis sat on one side of the booth. Sheila Haskel, arriving later in the evening, sat across from them. “I heard from Reg this afternoon,” Sheila said.
Hank’s eyebrows rose. “So how is he?”
Sheila shook her head in wonder. “He’s got a job. After all that bitching he did the last time that he called, he just up and took the next thing that came along.”
“What’s he doing?”
“Something small, it sounds like. He’s working for Lunar Magnetics there in Crisium. He said he’s working in their machine shop. Something about building prototypes.”
Hank nodded approvingly. “OK. I can see how he might fit into something like that.”
“He’s… changed. You know how he used to be so much fun? Then he lost his job and turned into a major grump. You’re not going to believe this, but he almost sounds like he used to—the old Reg. I wouldn’t go so far as to say he’s happy again, but he certainly isn’t anywhere near as gloomy as he was six months ago. He was even telling jokes.”
Carol looked surprised. “It’s been a
“Maybe he got religion,” Hank suggested.
“He said that Commissioner Lister came and saw him just before he was shot. Reg acted funny about it. Almost as though he was ashamed to talk about it.”
“Wonder what Lister said,” Carol said.
“I don’t know, but whatever it was, it seems to have made a big impression on Reg.”
“And he hated Luna so badly.” Carol mused.
Hank huffed. “He didn’t hate Luna. He was just jealous. They had jobs and he didn’t. If he’s got a job now, then he doesn’t have to feel that way any more. His pride is coming back.”
“He’s asked me to come up,” Sheila said quietly, almost as an afterthought.
“To Luna?” Carol cried incredulously. She and her husband exchanged looks. They had suspected a last minute liaison between Reg and Sheila, but nothing had led them to anticipate this.
Hank was teasingly skeptical. “Are you sure this call wasn’t a wrong number? This doesn’t sound like the Reg I remember. This guy’s an imposter, although I’ll be damned if I can see any reason someone would want to palm himself off as Reg. After all that complaining he—”
Carol clapped a hand over his mouth to shut him up. “Let’s get to the important part. What did you say?”
Sheila looked sheepish. “I told him I’d think about it.”
“Don’t pull that crap on me, Sheila! Are you going up there or not?”
She nodded. “If they’ll let me.”
“First Frank, then Reg, and now you,” Carol said. She punched Hank in the ribs with her elbow. “So when are we going, you big ox? Everybody else has up and gone. Are we going to let them leave us behind?”
He affected a surprised look. “You mean I can speak now? Golly!”
“You not only are permitted to, but it’s expected of you. Answer the question.”
“Do you mind if I think about it a bit first?”
“Of course not. As long as you don’t take over sixty seconds and the answer is yes.”
He rolled his eyes heavenwards. “Reg, just wait until I get my hands on you!”
Ron Abner examined his best friend with a critical eye. “Something’s up.”
Mike Ordner looked at him quizzically. “Was that a question or a statement?”
“Both. You’re grinning like an idiot and I want to know why.”
Ellen, Ron’s wife, said, “There’s a woman involved. See the smug, self-satisfied look, Ron? I’ll bet he got—”
“How about it, Mike? What happened?” she demanded, pointedly ignoring her husband.
Chuckling and shaking his head, Ordner said, “Well…”
Ellen nodded approval. “Good. Now you can forget all about Susan. She wasn’t good enough for you, anyway.”
“OK, I confess—” Ordner began.
Ellen pounced. “I
“Roberta Lith.”
He nodded.