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“These guys are pretty regularly diurnal, too,” Marguerite said. “Another anomaly. As for where he’s going — hey, look.”

Subject reached an open archway and stepped out into the starry alien night.

“He’s never been here before.”

“Here where?

“A balcony platform, way up on top of his home tower. My God, the view!”

Subject walked to the low barricade at the edge of the balcony. The virtual viewpoint drifted behind him, and Chris could see the Lobster city spread out beyond the Subject’s grainy torso. The elongated pyramidal towers were illuminated at their portals and balconies by lights in the public walkways. Anthills and cowrie shells, Chris thought, threaded with gold. When Chris was little his parents used to cruise up along Mulholland Drive one or two evenings a year to see the lights of Los Angeles spread out below. It had looked kind of like this. Almost this vast. Almost this lonely.

The planet’s small, quick moon was full, and he could make out something of the dry lands beyond the limits of the city, the low mountains far to the west and a reef of high cloud rolling on a quick wind. Spirals of electrostatically charged dust rolled across the irrigated fields, quickly formed and quickly dissipated, like immense ghosts.

He saw Marguerite give a little shiver, watching.

Subject approached the balcony’s eroded barricade. He stood as if hesitating. Chris said, “Is he suicidal?”

“I hope not.” She was tense. “We’ve never seen self-destructive behavior, but we’re new here. God, I hope not!”

But the Subject stood motionless, as if intent.

“He’s looking at the view,” Chris said.

“Could be.”

“What else?”

“We don’t know. That’s why we don’t attribute motivation. If I were there, I’d be looking at the view; but maybe he’s enjoying the air pressure, or maybe he was hoping to meet somebody, or maybe he’s lost or confused. These are complex sentient creatures with life histories and biological imperatives no one even pretends to understand. We don’t even know for sure how good their vision is — he may not see what we’re seeing.”

“Still,” Chris said. “If I had to lay a bet, I’d say he’s admiring the view.”

That won him a brief smile. “We may think such things,” Marguerite admitted. “But we must not say them.”

Mom!” From the bathroom.

“I’ll be there in a second. Dry yourself off!” She stood. “Time to put Tess to bed, I’m afraid.”

“You mind if I watch this a little longer?”

“I guess not. Call me if it gets exciting. All this is being recorded, of course, but there’s nothing like a live feed. But he may not do anything at all. When they stand still they often stay that way for hours at a time.”

“Not a great party planet,” Chris said.

“It would be nice if we could take advantage of his static time and look around the city. But training the Eye to follow a single individual was a minor miracle in itself. If we looked away we might lose him. Just don’t expect much.”

She was right about the Subject: he stood absolutely motionless before the long vista of the night. Chris watched distant dust-devils, immense and immaterial, ride the moonlit plains. He wondered if they made a sound in the relatively thin atmosphere of that world. He wondered if the air was warm or cool, whether the Subject was sensitive to the temperature. All this anomalous behavior and no way to divine the thoughts circulating in that perfectly imaged but perfectly inscrutable head. What did loneliness mean to creatures who were never alone except at night?

He heard the pleasant sound of Marguerite and Tessa talking in low voices, Marguerite tucking her daughter into bed. A flurry of laughter. Eventually Marguerite appeared in the doorway once more.

“Has he moved?”

The moon had moved. The stars had moved. Not the Subject. “No.”

“I’m making tea, if you feel like a cup.”





“Thanks,” Chris said. “I’d like that. I—”

But then there was the unmistakable sound of breaking glass, followed by Tessa’s high, shrill scream.

Chris came into the girl’s bedroom behind Marguerite.

Tess was still shrieking, a high, sustained sob. She sat at the edge of her bed, her right hand pressed into the waist of her fla

The bottom pane of the bedroom window was broken. Shards of glass stood jagged in the frame and bitterly cold air gusted inside. Marguerite knelt on the bed, lifting Tessa away from the litter of glass. “Show me your hand,” she said.

No!

“Yes. It’ll be all right. Show me.”

Tess turned her head away, squeezed her eyes shut and extended her clenched fist. Blood seeped between her fingers and ran down her knuckles. Her nightgown was stained with fresh red blood. Marguerite’s eyes went wide, but she resolutely peeled back Tessa’s fingers from the wound. “Tess, what happened?”

Tess sucked in enough breath to answer. “I leaned on the window.”

“You leaned on it?”

Yes!

Chris understood that this was a lie and that Marguerite acquiesced to it, as if they both understood what had really happened. Which was more than he understood. He balled up a blanket and stuffed it into the gap in the window.

More blood welled from the exposed palm of Tessa’s right hand — a small lake of it. This time Marguerite couldn’t conceal a gasp.

Chris said, “Is there glass in the wound?”

“I can’t tell… no, I don’t think so.”

“We need to put pressure on it. She’ll need to be stitched, too.” Tess wailed in fresh alarm. “It’s okay,” Chris told her. “This happened to my little sister once. She fell down with a glass in her hand and cut herself up — worse than you did. She bragged about it later. Said she was the only one who wasn’t scared. The doctor fixed it up for her.”

“How old was she?”

“Thirteen.”

“I’m eleven,” Tess said, gauging her courage against this new standard.

“There’s gauze in the bathroom cupboard,” Marguerite said. “Will you get it, Chris?”

He fetched the gauze and a brown elastic bandage. Marguerite’s hands were shaking, so Chris pressed the gauze into Tessa’s palm and told her to clench her fist over it. The gauze immediately turned bright red. “We have to drive her to the clinic,” he said. “Why don’t you give me your keys; I’ll start the car while you bundle her up.”

“All right. Keys are in my purse, in the kitchen. Tess, can you walk with me? Watch out for the glass on the floor.”

She left blood spots on the carpet all the way down the stairs.

The Blind Lake Medical Center, a suite of offices just east of Hubble Plaza, kept its walk-in clinic open at all hours. The nurse on desk duty looked briefly at Tess, then hustled her and Marguerite off to a treatment room. Chris sat in reception, leafing through six-month-old print editions of travel magazines while gentle pop songs whispered from the ceiling.

From what he had seen, Tessa’s injury was minor and the clinic was equipped to handle it. Better not to think what might have happened if she had been more seriously hurt. The clinic was well-equipped, but it wasn’t a hospital.

She had “leaned on” the window. But you don’t break a window like that by leaning on it. Tess had lied, and Marguerite had recognized the lie for what it was. Something she hadn’t wanted to talk about in front of a stranger. Some ongoing problem with her daughter, Chris supposed. Anger, depression, post-divorce trauma. But the girl hadn’t seemed angry or depressed when he spoke to her in the kitchen. And he remembered the sound of her easy laughter from the bedroom just moments before the accident.

It’s none of my business, he told himself. Tess reminded him a little of his sister Portia — there was some of the same guileless amiability about her — but that didn’t make it any concern of his. He had given up comforting the afflicted and afflicting the comfortable. He wasn’t good at it. All his crusades had ended badly.