“Not really. Visited a couple of times. Once to go moose hunting in the Allagash. But the trip was a bust.”
“My wife and I went camping at Acadia National Park the summer after we got married,” Bern Stapleton says. “Beautiful place. I’m pretty sure we conceived our first child inside that tent.”
“TMI,” Kathy says. “
“Adesh,” Bern says, “please have the birds-and-bees talk with Commander Lundgren. I think it’s time.”
Kathy whacks the biologist on the shoulder. Laughing, he gets up from the table and collects his tray. “Off to get some work done. Be good, kids.”
“I’m right behind you,” Adesh says, standing and clearing his place. “I have a Zoom conference to prepare for.”
“Good luck,” Kathy calls as the two men walk away.
“I’m surprised you’ve seen so little of my home state,” Gwendy continues, once again staring at the billionaire. “With all that money, I figured you’ve been everywhere twice.”
“Well, excuse me for stating the obvious,” he says, “but with all that money, I wouldn’t exactly call Maine a desired destination. Paris, Tortola, Turks and Caicos, now those are a different—”
“Have you ever been to Castle Rock?” Gwendy asks, cutting him off. “How about Derry?”
“No and no,” he snaps, letting go of his fork. He quickly snatches it out of the air in front of him when it begins to float up toward the ceiling. “I’ve never been to Castle Rock and I’ve never been to Derry. Now, can I finish eating my dinner in peace?”
“Of course,” Gwendy says, slipping on her Patsy Follett smile. “Just one last thing—I wanted to thank you for returning my notebook. Lucky for me you found it.”
“Yeah, well, you ought to be more careful.”
She starts away, then stops and turns back. “Maybe you should be, too.”
A flush rises in his cheeks.
A few minutes later, while scraping their plates into the vacuum receptacle at the other side of the cafeteria, Kathy asks, “What in the hell was that all about?”
“What do you mean?”
“C’mon. You were
“I was just curious.”
“About what?”
“How he’d respond to a poke. Did you see that flush?”
Kathy frowns. “I didn’t notice.”
Gwendy watches her walk away, thinking:
On the way back to her quarters, Gwendy makes a brief diversion to the weather deck to check on the latest readings. She knows that some staff members back in the down-below—maybe even most of them—don’t expect her to perform much more than a lick and a promise when it comes to her climate monitor duties. But that just makes her want to exceed expectations and prove them all wrong; it’s how she’s always been wired.
Her laptop is back in her room, so she scribbles a couple of notations in a Moleskine ledger and returns it to its place in the top drawer of the desk. When she’s finished, she writes a reminder note about tomorrow’s video conference with faculty members from the University of Maine and sticks it right in the middle of one of the monitor screens. No way can she forget that. She hopes.
When she gets to her room a short time later, she makes a beeline for the sofa. She’s suddenly exhausted and all she wants to do is lie down and rest her brain.
Probably she didn’t. She’s gotten so forgetful. Then her eyes slide the rest of the way shut—and she’s sleeping the dreamless sleep of the innocent.
36
DAY 4 ON MANY Flags.