Keith felt his anger about to boil over. He tried to calm himself, and closed his eyes, hoping to summon a tranquil image. He expected to see his wife’s face, but the picture that came to him was of an Asian beauty two decades younger than Rissa—and that just made Keith madder at himself. He opened his eyes. “Look,” he said, a quaver in his voice, “I don’t give a damn whether you approve of the choice of me as
“Your posturing does you no credit, Lansing. The resources I am demanding are for the good of our mission.”
Keith sighed again. He was getting too old for this. “I’m not going to argue anymore, Jag. You’ve made your request; I’ll give it all the consideration it is due.”
The Waldahud’s four square nostrils flared. “I am amazed,” said Jag, “that Queen Trath ever thought we could work with humans.” He rotated on his black hooves, and headed down the corridor without another word. Keith stood there for two minutes, doing calming breathing exercises, then headed along the chilly corridor toward the elevator station.
Keith Lansing and his wife, Rissa Cervantes, shared a standard human apartment aboard
The main door to the apartment slid open, and Keith stormed in. Rissa must have arrived a few minutes earlier; she came out of the bedroom naked, obviously preparing for her midday shower.
“Hi, Chesterton,” she said, smiling. But the smile faded away, and Keith imagined that she could see the tension in his face, his forehead creased, his mouth downturned. “What’s wrong?”
Keith flopped himself onto the couch. From this angle, he was facing the dartboard Rissa had mounted on one wall. The three darts were clustered in the tiny sixty-point part of the triple-scoring band—Rissa was shipboard champion. “Another run-in with Jag,” said Keith.
Rissa nodded. “It’s his way,” she said. “It’s their way”
“I know. I know. But, Christ, it’s hard to take sometimes.”
They had a large rear window on one wall, showing the starfield outside the ship, dominated by the bright F-class star nearby. Two other walls were capable of displaying holograms. Keith was from Calgary, Alberta; Rissa had been born in Spain. One wall showed glacier-fed Lake Louise, with the glorious Canadian Rockies rising up behind it; the other a long view of downtown Madrid, with its appealing mixture of sixteenth- and twenty-century architecture.
“I thought you’d show up here around now,” said Rissa. “I was waiting to shower with you.” Keith was pleasantly surprised. They’d showered together a lot when they’d first gotten married, almost twenty years ago, but had gotten out of the habit as the years wore on. The necessity of showering twice a day to minimize the human body odor Waldahudin found so offensive had turned the cleansing ritual into an irritating bore, but maybe their impending anniversary had Rissa feeling more romantic than usual.
Keith smiled at her and began to undress. Rissa headed into the main bathroom and began running the water.
He followed her into the bathroom. She was already in the shower, soaking down her long, black hair. Once she’d moved out from under the shower head, Keith jockeyed into position, enjoying the sensation of her wet body sliding past his. He’d lost half his hair over the years, and what was left he kept short. Still, he massaged his scalp vigorously, trying to work out his anger with Jag in doing so.
He scrubbed Rissa’s back for her, and she scrubbed his in turn. They rinsed, then he turned off the water. If he hadn’t been so angry, perhaps they’d have made love, but…
Dammit. He began to towel off.
“I hate this,” Keith said.
Rissa nodded. “I know.”