Saturday, May 10, 2014

Closet Spaceship Part 7

(Here's another installment about my interaction with the crew. Check out my Facebook page for some of their sayings.)

After the events in Outsider, I wanted to see Mark, but I didn’t think that was a good idea, for him or the rest of the crew. No matter what his reasons were, he left the crew—and his absence made the ship feel like a street where an ambulance has just passed, its siren blaring and its lights flashing. Vehicles that were crouched next to the curb can resume their courses, but the drivers feel the unnatural silence left after the siren tore the air apart. They wonder where the ambulance is going and what the consequences are at the end of its journey. They won’t talk about it because they have their own paths to follow, but still their eyes try to catch a last glimpse that might give them a clue to its destination.

Maybe I’m a little afraid of showing up in Mark’s presence, too. You saw his reaction to Sean’s appearance, after all. Sean was improbable; I’m almost impossible, as far as Mark is concerned.

On the other hand, Reggie never seems to mind my presence, at least after that first time. I don’t know why. He’s better at reading people than anyone, except Captain Lamont, of course, but I’ve always been afraid to ask him what he reads in me.

“Do you miss Mark?” I asked him once. (This was before the events in Another Shot.)

He gave me a sharp look, as if asking why I don’t have his skill at reading people.

We were alone, sitting in the conference room. He’d led me there without a word when I walked up to him in the dock and asked if we could talk. He’d poured himself a cup of coffee and settled into one of the more comfortable chairs on one side of the room, so I sat in a chair nearby.

I found it strange for us to be there. Reg is usually on the move, so seeing him sitting in one place was a little unsettling. Of course, having him give me that look didn’t help.

“That’s a dumb question,” he said.

And it was. It’s obvious he and Mark are good friends, and have been since they met at an airport in the middle of the night. If you read my first novel, you know a little about how they met, and ever since then, despite their differences, they’ve kept in touch. They respect and trust each other; at least, Mark does. I guess I didn’t know for sure if Reg could trust his friend again after Mark quit the crew.

 It’s one of the very rare instances when Captain Lamont and Reg got it wrong: Mark didn’t quit because he felt he had to punish himself. He quit because he didn’t think he deserved to be on such an elite crew; he hadn’t earned a place there. He’s always been hard on himself—I can relate to that—and didn’t see that the crew considered him one of them.

“I know it is,” I said. “Sorry.”

I meant to explain some of Mark’s motives to Reg, but he spoke up before I could.

“Let me ask you something,” he said.

“Sure.”

“Will I see him again?” Reggie asked.

I was surprised. Surely the captain had instructed his crew not to ask me stuff like that.

“I know I’m not supposed to ask you that,” he said, leaning toward me, “but I need to know.”

“I’m not supposed to tell you,” I said.

When I said it, his shoulders drooped and he kind of sagged back into the chair. I might be a lot of things, some of them not so great, but I’m definitely not made of ice.

“Listen,” I said in a low voice, “you will.  That’s all I can tell you.”

He nodded with an expression like that of a young boy whose friends have said Santa is fake but whose parents swear Santa’s real: he wants to believe, so his parents win out—this time, at least.

And that’s one of Reggie’s best attributes: hope. He hopes for the best, even when things don’t look good.

I was simply hoping that lightning wouldn’t strike me down and Captain Lamont wouldn’t ban me from the ship for breaking one of his rules. When I saw that little glimmer of hope on Reg’s face, though, I knew either one just might be worth it.


Keep hoping.

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