responses. At times he thought she used her human qualities as a weapon, banking on his difficulty in separating her s.e.xualized appearance from her biomech nature. Yet if she had realized how she affected
him, why suppress it? She "lost" her emotions when she spoke about Charon.
"No matter what orders he gave you," Thomas said, "I won"t take you out of here."
"Your loss."
He smiled dryly. "Actually, it would be that if you escaped."
To his surprise, she laughed, a low, sensual rumble. "And what a loss that would be. For you."
Good Lord. A laugh like that could make a man lose all sense of reason. "You don"t lack for self-
confidence." After a pause, he added, "Or at least the simulation of it." He kept forgetting that.
Her smile vanished. "Make no mistake, General. More is at stake than my freedom."
"Such as?"
She met his gaze. "Human ascendancy on this planet."
II: A Word Too Many
A night heavy with drizzle had settled over the house in Chevy Chase by the time Thomas arrived home.
He unlocked the front door and stepped into the foyer. Relief settled over him and . . . something else. A sense of homecoming? He usually returned to a dark house. Tonight lights glowed in the front room, and he remembered with a sharp pang the days before his wife, Janice, had pa.s.sed away. All those evenings he had come home to a house full of light, voices, laughter. These past four years, since her death, he had adapted to his solitude, but he missed that time. His three children were grown and Janice was resting in the cemetery, but for a few days he had warmth back, and he discovered that it meant the world to him.
The s.p.a.cious living room lay straight ahead, the kitchen was to his left, and the hallway on his right went to the family room. The parquetry floors in his house gleamed, and the throw rugs were clean and fluffed. The shades were drawn against the night. It was all fresh and tidy. And empty.
He heard voices, though, a child and a woman. He headed down the hall toward the family room, past the holoscapes of beaches that glowed on the walls, shedding blue and green light as if he were submerged in the ocean.
"h.e.l.lo?" he called.
"Grampy!" The young voice came with a squeal of delight. A small figure dashed into the hallway and
cut a beeline toward him. She was wearing a pink jumpsuit smudged with paint, and her yellow curls flew about her face.
Thomas crouched down so his granddaughter could hurl herself into his embrace. She put her small arms
around his neck and hugged him hard. Standing up with her in his arms, he inhaled the scent of fingerpaint and childhood, and savored the joy that came with her.
"Evening, General," a voice said.
Thomas peered around Jamie to see a woman a few paces away. With her plump figure and graying hair, Lattie Douglas looked more like someone"s favorite aunt than his housekeeper. It fl.u.s.tered him to realize she had seen him acting sentimental.
He nodded stiffly. "Good evening."
Lattie chuckled. "It"s no crime to hug your granddaughter."
Thomas knew he shouldn"t feel self-conscious, but he had always been restrained in expressing
affection. At the same time, he didn"t want Jamie to think she wasn"t welcome in his house. His heart attack last year had made him painfully aware of how transient life could be. He could have died with so much left unsaid to the people he loved. Since then, he had tried to be more open with his family.
He bounced Jamie in his arms. "You"re an A-one sight to come home to." Not brilliant wording, but perhaps it would do.
She blushed pink and hid her head against his shoulder.
Thomas looked over her head at Lattie. "Thank you for staying. It would have been difficult to bring her with me to the base."
"It wasn"t any trouble." With a wry smile, she added, "Maybe you should take her to your war councils.
She would tell everyone to be friends. Might do you all good."
Jamie pulled her head back to regard him, and Thomas smiled at her. "All friends?"
"Everybody, Grampy." She put her arms around his neck and tilted her head against his. "Mommy says you make us safe."
Thomas felt his insides melting. He had been the same way with her mother when Leila had been this age. "Always, Moppet."
Lattie came over and patted Jamie on the arm. "Be good now." She nodded briskly to Thomas. "I"ll be saying good night, then."
"You"re sure you can"t come tomorrow?" he asked.
"Sorry, General." She seemed genuinely regretful. "She"s a pleasure, and if I"d had a little more notice, I could have rearranged things. But I can"t drop my other clients."
"I understand."
"I could come later, around three, if that would help."
Relief washed over him. "Yes, that would be good."
"Well. That"s settled." She beamed at Jamie, and the girl let go of Thomas long enough to hug Lattie.
The housekeeper gave her a kiss and then bustled off, waving at Thomas as she went down the hall.
When they were alone, Thomas stood holding Jamie, at a loss. He wasn"t certain what to do, but she seemed content, so perhaps he was managing all right.
"Are you hungry?" he asked.
"Lattie made macaroni "n" cheese." Concern showed in her large eyes. "You missed it. You need to eat, Grampy."
"I did." He had managed a sandwich between meetings. He set her down, but she looked disappointed, so he offered his hand. She put her small one in his large grip with a trust that bemused him. He couldn"t remember being so fl.u.s.tered by his children. Janice had always been there, though, to take care of them.
He didn"t recall any time like this, when it had just been him and a toddler.
Jamie regarded him with an expectant gaze. So he asked, "What shall we do?"
"We could play with my dolls," she offered.
"I don"t think I would be very good at that."
"I know!" Jamie dropped his hand and dashed toward the living room. She spun around and ran back to him. "Play chase."
Laughing, Thomas caught her. "I don"t have your energy."
"Let"s watch the kitty holo."
He hadn"t even known he had holovids of cats. "Did Lattie bring it over?"
"No. I found it." She beamed with the unrestrained pleasure of a three-year-old. "I made it go, too. Lattie couldn"t."
"You set up the holoplayer?" Thomas had trouble himself figuring out the blasted thing.
"It"s easy." She pulled him into the family room. Her paints were on the table, but someone had put them away and closed up the box. Jamie"s attention was on the entertainment center on the far wall, all glossy screens and glowing lights. She drew him over and pushed a blue panel at about her height. The screen above it came to life in a wash of blue.
"Wait a minute." Thomas wasn"t sure what she had done. "Did Lattie show you how to work this thing?"
"No." She regarded him patiently. "I show Lattie."
"How did you know?" He had only had this set up for a few weeks.
"Playing." She pressed another panel and a swirl of speckled gold and black lines appeared on the
screen. It resembled the op art kids used to draw when he was a boy, with lines so close together, they shimmered. This was a hologram, the template used to project a holographic image. Decades ago, holos had been static because of the difficulty in producing holograms fast enough to portray motion, but nowadays, holo-movies were commonplace. A three-dimensional image appeared in front of the screen, a stylized view of the Pentagon in silhouette.
"Jamie! That"s my work file." Thomas poked the blue panel, but the Pentagon stayed. Fl.u.s.tered, he jabbed another panel. The holovid continued, the symbol fading into the image of a jet fighter soaring through the air, an F-14 Tomcat from the twentieth century. The reproduction was so well done that he found himself extending his hand to touch the jet. His fingers went through the image.
"How did you find this?" he asked.
"I looked lots," Jamie explained. "See?" She pointed to the aircraft carrier in the water beneath the Tomcat. "It says "kitty." "Thomas squinted at the image. A glowing caption labeled the carrier as the Kitty Hawk."Cats don"t like birds," Jamie told him. "They eat them."Thomas smiled at his granddaughter. "Did Lattie tell you what that said?""I read it."That couldn"t be right. "But you"re only three."She held up four fingers. "And four months.""Good Lord." He indicated the screen. "Can you turn it off?"Her smile faded. "You don"t like the kitty-bird?""I like it a lot. But you shouldn"t play with my files." The report contained nothing cla.s.sified, or he wouldn"t have brought it home, but the footage of wars in the Middle East might upset her.
"Mommy says to share toys," Jamie admonished.
"Not this one, Moppet. It"s from your grandpa"s work."
"Oh." With obvious disappointment, she pressed more panels. The holos faded and the screen went dark.
Thomas took her hand. "Come sit with me."
Her face brightened. ""Kay."
He was pretty certain that meant "okay." He took her to a couch along the wall. The room was agreeable
and pristine, with its oak paneling, ivory rug, and gold furniture, but it seemed strangely sterile. He hadn"t noticed before. His family room no longer had a sense of being lived in the way it had when his wife and children had filled the place with noise and mess and sparkle.
They sat together on the couch and Jamie snuggled against him, oblivious to the fact that most of the Air Force thought of him as an iron man.
"Will Mommy come home tonight?" Jamie asked.
"Not tonight." Thomas awkwardly put his arm around her. His uniform crinkled, and he took care not to let the ribbons on his chest catch her clothes or jab her. She closed her eyes and settled against him as if