Read Until Again Online

Authors: Lou Aronica

Until Again (5 page)

BOOK: Until Again
6.37Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Hensis and Sinica had never overreacted like this before. Obviously her father was much more concerned about what was going on with the Thorns than he’d acknowledged to her.

7

Becky ran into the house giggling. When the Ben Folds CD finished, she’d switched to the radio, and as they turned into the neighborhood, “Bohemian Rhapsody” came on and she and Dad started singing the crazy middle part together. Mom was in the kitchen, and Becky walked over to kiss her on the cheek, a huge grin still on her face, thinking about Dad’s ridiculous opera voice.

Just then, Dad came around the corner singing, “Scaramouche, Scaramouche, can you do the fandango” really loud. Becky giggled again and turned toward him. When she did, though, she saw Dad’s face drop as he saw Mom, and he stopped singing. Becky looked over at Mom and saw her eyes get small.

And all of a sudden, the world became real again.

Mom tried a smile at Becky that didn’t work. “Did you have fun tonight?”

“Yeah,” Becky said, unsure whether that was a good answer or a bad one. “We went to the movies.”

Mom nodded and then looked toward Dad. “A note would have been nice.”

Becky didn’t want to look at her father, even though she knew what his face was going to be like. She’d seen it enough times in these kinds of situations. “You were supposed to be home later,” she heard him say.

Mom’s eyes actually got smaller, which was saying something. “Well, I’m not.”

Becky was amazed that she’d been able to forget what things were like in the house for even a minute. Now that she remembered she just wanted to get away from it. If they weren’t going to tell her what was going on, they couldn’t expect her to stick around in the
middle of it.

“I’m gonna go up to my room to read,” she said.

Mom kissed her on the top of the head. “You go ahead, honey.”

Becky slowly walked out of the kitchen and then picked up speed as she got into the hallway. When she got up to her room, she realized that her Ray Bradbury book was still in the den. There was no chance she was going down to get it, though. She’d already made her getaway. She got her Nintendo DS instead and started to play a game.

She must have gotten really caught up in Dino Master, which was a surprise considering how she was feeling, because Dad made that throat-clearing sound he made when she’d zoned out and he was trying to get her attention. She looked up at him.

“Okay if I come in?” he said.

“Yeah, sure. What’s up?”

He took a few steps into her room. “It’s after eleven.”

“It is?” Becky looked over at the clock in her room. “Wow, I guess I was really concentrating on this game. I’ve gotten some cool fossils.”

Dad gave a tiny chuckle. “Maybe there’s a career as an archeologist in your future. Listen, Mom’s going off to bed, and I’m running out of gas myself. I figured we might want to get to the story before I’m too useless to make any sense.”

Becky looked down at her DS and turned off the machine. “Yeah. Let me go brush my teeth.”

Dad came into the room and sat on the bed while Becky went into the hallway. As she did, Mom came up the stairs and kissed her goodnight, hugging her for way longer than usual. Whatever Mom meant by this, it just made Becky feel heavy. She wished she was back in the world of Dino Master, or that she was a cartoon character, like RJ from “Over the Hedge.” She wanted to be anything other than what she was – a kid whose parents didn’t seem to like each other anymore and were making her feel really uncomfortable about it.

Becky brushed her teeth and combed out her hair and then went back to her room. Dad was sitting with his back against the wall as he always did. She climbed onto the bed next to him and allowed him to pull her closer, though she kind of felt like being alone. Superpremium and “Bohemian Rhapsody” seemed like they had happened a few months ago.

“Thanks for the fun night tonight, babe,” he said, as he squeezed her shoulder.

“Yeah, it was fun,” she said with as much enthusiasm as she could manage. It
had
been a fun night, hadn’t it? It just didn’t last. How much better would things have been if she’d just gone straight up to her room when they got home?

“So the motorcade was getting ready to leave, right?”

Dad obviously wasn’t going to say anything about his little exchange with Mom in the kitchen. Why would she have possibly expected him to do that when he hadn’t said anything about anything else? He just wanted to get into the Tamarisk story like they did every night at bedtime.
Into fantasyland.
Becky sometimes wondered if he wished he could go there rather than being here with her. Maybe he’d actually talk to his daughter if she were the princess of a kingdom rather than some ten-year-old from Connecticut. Maybe that was what was really going on here. Maybe Dad didn’t think she was
worthy
of talking to because she wasn’t of
royal blood
’.

“Yeah, the motorcade was getting ready to leave,” she said half-heartedly.

“Tell it, babe.”

Becky didn’t say anything for a few seconds, and then she started the story the way she always did before beginning tonight’s episode.

“When they walked outside, the sky was filled with dark clouds, and it felt like it does when you know it’s gonna rain but it doesn’t happen for a long time. It was just dark and – what’s that word? – oh, yeah,
ominous.
A hoffler ran across the lawn and went down into his hole like someone was chasing after it.

“’We weren’t supposed to get a storm today’ the king said to the queen. ’It was supposed to be clear and sunny’

“’Even the sky is worried,’ the queen said. ’Even the birds.’ She pointed to a norbeck mother nudging her babies toward the safety of the bushes with one of her beaks.

“For a second, the king reached for the queen’s hand and patted it. ’Everything is going to be fine. You’d know it if I didn’t believe that, right?’”

Becky looked up at her father to see if he recognized those words. If he had, he wasn’t showing it. When had he become so hard to figure out? She continued with the story.

“The queen nodded to her husband, and they went to their car. As they sat down, Amelan walked up to them, handing a folder to the king.

"’I’d feel better if I were coming with you,’ Amelan said.

"’I know you would,’ the king told him, ’but we need you to take care of things here. The palace doesn’t stop functioning when we’re away.’

“Amelan bowed his head and said, ’Of course, Your Majesty.’ He started to turn away, but then he looked back at the car, staring at them the way Amelan did when he had something serious on his mind. It was like he wanted to say something, but he couldn’t get the words out. Amelan was usually so tough, but today he just looked sad.”

Becky hesitated for a little while as she thought of Amelan's face and the queen’s face. In the picture she had in her mind, everyone, even the king, looked like they were worried that something scary was going to jump out at them and like their best friend was moving to another country.

“Babe, do you want me to pick up the story?” Dad said.

“No, I got it. Just thinking.”

She stayed quiet for maybe another minute. During this time, she thought about how intense everything was in this scene: the stormy sky, the nervous animals, the worried and sad people. This wasn’t the first time they’d told a Tamarisk story where dangerous things were happening. In those other stories, though, everyone had been courageous and confident. She couldn’t do this story that way. She just couldn’t.

“As the motorcade began to move, the king took a look back toward the palace and had a thought that sent shivers down his spine. He shook his head quickly, trying to get the thought out of his head, and he faced forward.

“To get his mind off things, he looked through the papers Amelan had given him. This didn’t help at all. The papers included reports of the latest acts of sabotage, including one that had killed one of the last remaining families of kestertons that scientists had been nursing back to health. The little cats were so delicate and innocent, and the evil, evil -”

Suddenly and completely without warning, Becky found herself sobbing. The image of beautiful furry creatures getting blown up had taken an already somber story and made it unimaginably worse. It was like there was nothing Becky could do to make this story better. Every word that came out of her mouth just seemed to make it sadder and sadder, even if she didn’t want it to turn out that way. And now all she could do was cry.

She felt Dad’s arms squeezing her. “Babe, are you okay?”

This had never happened to Becky before. She loved Miea and the king and the queen and the hofflers and the mohonks and the waccasassas. She thought about them all the time and felt like she knew them the way she knew her best friend Lonnie. But even when things had gotten scary or tense before, she’d never just started crying.

This wasn’t like anything else though, was it? This wasn’t like any other Tamarisk story, and she realized now that Tamarisk stories would never feel the same again.

Finally she wiped her eyes, looked at her dad – who seemed completely confused by what was happening – and then looked away from him.

“The Thorns are ruining everything, Dad,” she said.

And then another sob caught in her throat.

8

Plenium spent several seconds simply watching his daughter’s face. He realized of course that she could see him as well and that she might easily notice he wasn’t entirely paying attention to what she was saying, but right at this moment, he felt a strong need to look at her. He always noticed the combination of wisdom and innocence in her eyes. He always noticed the vibrancy and sense of possibility in the timbre of her voice. For just a few seconds though, he wanted to absorb all of it, to remind himself how important it was to do this. He needed to remember that capturing the essence of his daughter was a vital thing to do whenever the opportunity arose.

He snapped from his reverie when he noticed Miea was no longer speaking.

“It’s worse than even I thought,” she said when he made eye contact on the screen with her again.

“I’m sorry, my dear, I just got distracted.”

Miea frowned. “You don’t
get
distracted, Dad. The only thing that would distract you is if you were thinking about an enormous state problem.”

“That wasn’t what I was thinking about. I was thinking about how remarkable you are.”

Miea rolled her eyes and shook her head at the same time. “You’re going to need to do better than that, Dad.”

Plenium grinned. “You don’t believe I think you’re remarkable?”

Miea tipped her head forward. “You know that isn’t what I’m saying.” She made a shooing motion with her hand. “What I was telling you, when you weren’t paying attention to me, is that there was a great deal of conversation on campus today about the mission now that you’ve officially announced it. Of course everyone thinks you and Mom are geniuses for making this overture. You’re going to have to teach me that trick. How do you get the entire kingdom to believe that every move you make is the right one?”

“You weren’t at this week’s Kingdom Congress. If you’d heard the accusations the representatives from the Pinzon Merchant Association were making, you wouldn’t believe the feelings about your mother and me are so unanimous.”

“Okay, so not everyone thinks you’re flawless. There have been quite a few rumors, though.”

“What kind of rumors?”

“About what’s happening down south. Some people are claiming that there have been many more incidents than have been reported. I keep telling them I would know about this if there were, and that you wouldn’t be going on a diplomatic mission to Gunnthorn if things were that bad. Of course they respond by saying that this is precisely what I would say if things
were
that bad.”

Suppressing the media had never been a policy of Plenium’s governance. However, because so much of Tamarisk was agrarian and by nature less connected to what was happening in Tamarisk City, it was possible to keep local incidents local by simply revealing less about them. There had been long conversations about how to treat the spate of recent acts of sabotage, and Plenium, Folium, and their advisors ultimately decided that if there were to be any chance of diplomatic accord with the Thorns, it was essential not to enflame the Tamariskian citizenry. He knew that increasing the wariness the people of Tamarisk had for the Thorns would make it exponentially harder for them to accept harmony between the kingdoms should Folium and he be able to negotiate it.

That wasn’t the reason he hadn’t shared the worst of this with Miea, though. That reason was far simpler and entirely unmotivated by politics: he didn’t want her to worry. At some point in her life, Miea was going to assume the burdens he currently carried. Even once she set foot off campus permanently, she would be responsible for a certain amount of statesmanship along with her career in botany. For now, though, she still had time to experience the pure joy of life.

Folium didn’t entirely agree with this sentiment about their daughter. She believed Miea needed gradual exposure to the political complexities that came with leading the kingdom. Plenium had prevailed in this argument, though, because so far he’d been able to convince the queen that there was always another day to begin Miea’s training as a sovereign.

“Tell your friends I’ll be happy to do a remote Kingdom Congress with them when I’m back from this trip and that I’ll answer any questions they have with complete candor. I’ll only put one condition on such an event.”

“Oh? What’s that?”

“That your young man be in attendance.”

Miea chuckled, and it was the most musical thing Plenium had heard all day. “If you were to hold a remote Kingdom Congress, Dad, you’d have to post guards to keep Dyson away.”

“Then I should have thought of this sooner. I assume he’s still treating you well.”

“As well as he was treating me when you last asked three days ago. And since you’ve added to my security detail, you have even more people with whom to confirm that.”

BOOK: Until Again
6.37Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Families and Friendships by Margaret Thornton
Doc Sidhe by Aaron Allston
Wrong Way Renee by Wynter Daniels
Liaison by Anya Howard
Girls by Frederick Busch
The Sex Sphere by Rudy Rucker
Doctor In The Swim by Richard Gordon
Two for Joy by Mary Reed, Eric Mayer