Two from the Heart

GONZALO PLANTS himself strategically in an alcove near Delgado’s reception area—the area where you sit when you get called to the principal’s office. He checks his pocket to make sure everything is ready. He’s worked on this for a long time, thinking it through, just waiting for the day to come.

Kids pass back and forth—but with a different energy than usual. A lot of glances toward the office and murmurs behind cupped hands. Only the youngest kids are oblivious, zipping along with overloaded backpacks at their usual Road Runner pace.

Gonzalo has a bead on Delgado’s door. When he sees it open, he makes his move. In one glance he sizes up the situation and chooses his target.

“Send those reports along as soon as they’re finalized and we’ll be in touch.”

Baynes is talking to Delgado, who has his tie loosened and his sleeves rolled up.

“No problem,” says Delgado, eyes down.

Baynes brushes past Gonzalo, but Ellie Cabot runs right into him. Gonzalo makes sure of it. He connects with her hip, almost causing her to drop her binder. Now she’s even more flustered than before. She looks down as Gonzalo stumbles backward, selling it hard.

“Oh, no! I’m so sorry—are you all right?” she says.

Delgado is on his way back into his office. He turns around.

“No problem, Se?ora,” Gonzalo says, recovering nicely, “but since you’re here…” He reaches into his pocket and whips out a folded piece of paper—hand-lettered and illustrated.

“I’d like to invite you to our school science demonstration,” he says. He thrusts the paper up at her, giving her no choice. She takes it, keeping her other hand tight around the binder.

“Time and coordinates are right there at the bottom.”

Baynes turns around to see what’s going on. What’s this kid doing—trying to sell raffle tickets?

“Cabot—let’s go!” says Baynes.

Ellie reads the invitation as she walks. Gonzalo matches her step for step, looking right up into her face.

“Please,” he says, “you won’t be sorry. It will be spectacular.”

She stops. “Thank you…?” She waits for a name.

“Gonzalo. Gonzalo Martino Alvarez.”

“Thank you, Gonzalo. I… we… will try. We will.” She catches Delgado’s eye. He gives her a thin smile.

Ellie tucks the paper into the side pocket of her suit jacket and hurries out the door to catch up with her supervisor.

In his heart, Gonzalo knows he chose his target well. Just from her expression, he can tell that Ellie Cabot is a woman who really, really hates her job.





Chapter 40


IF YOU asked Tyler Bron to say what he missed the most about home, it wouldn’t be central air-conditioning or fresh fruit or even his boxed set of Carl Sagan’s Cosmos.

It would be this: He’s standing in a construction hangar the size of two football fields. He owns it.

Like everybody else in sight, he’s wearing a unisex 3M cleanroom suit.

Scattered around the massive space are huge platforms supporting several works in progress. Technicians swarm over an assortment of gleaming space-bound devices. A chorus of electronic beeps blends with light metallic tapping and the vvrrip-vvrrip of precision torque wrenches.

Standing in the center of it all, Bron is looking up at a nearly completed six-ton communications satellite. Parts of the device are still shrouded in protective foil or shrink-wrapped in plastic.

Bron’s presence adds a new level of intensity to the hum. A foreman spots him from the platform and waves him up to survey his latest five-hundred-million-dollar baby.

“Come on aboard! She’s just about ready to fly!”

Bron ascends a metal ladder step by step, being careful not to let his white booties slip off the treads.

The satellite is nearly twenty feet long and fifteen across—about half the size of a city bus. Hardened titanium encases miles of delicate wiring and integrated circuitry. Curved surfaces gleam with shiny gold Mylar blanketing. Dark solar panels are folded close to the sides like bat wings.

Bron leans into a hatch on the central module as his foreman waves a Maglite beam around the interior.

“Reaction control?” asks Bron.

“Perfect.”

“What about the RF multiplexer?”

The foreman winces slightly. “The whole repeater needs some tweaks.”

“How long?”

“Forty-eight hours, tops.”

Problems or not, the language feels good to Bron. Cool. Precise. Real.

In fact, for the whole week he’s been back, he’s been wallowing happily in data streams and digital readouts. He wakes to a hundred business emails a day and taps himself to sleep on his laptop.

He tries not to think about her. And mostly, it’s working.

As Bron descends the ladder, he moves past a stout woman on an aluminum scaffold, her eyes focused on a long, curved panel in front of her. Slowly, meticulously, she peels a stencil backing to reveal the final numeral in the satellite’s official designation: BRON-14

She looks over as he passes.

“Good to have you back, Mr. Bron.”

At the bottom of the ladder, another worker holds out an iPad. Bron ticks a configuration approval with his index finger. As he walks off, the hum behind him returns to something like normal.

Whoosh!



Bron passes through the airlock that separates the construction bay from the main office complex. He unzips his disposable outfit and sits on a stainless-steel bench bolted to a spotless tile floor—so white it’s practically blinding.

His mind is humming pleasantly with the tasks ahead of him this afternoon—a meeting with Atlas V engineers, conference calls with bidders for antenna components, and an update with the Space Surveillance Network—to make sure that BRON-14 won’t accidentally bump into any of the four thousand other satellites already circling the globe.

Even if he wanted to think about her, he doesn’t have time. He’s made sure of it.

As he tugs off one of his cotton booties, his loafer comes with it. Along with the tiniest trickle of desert sand.

Damn it!

He throws the shoe against the wall, where it makes the only black mark in a very, very clean room.





Chapter 41


EVERYTHING MUST go.

The back of the cargo plane looks like a giant open mouth. Daisy’s minions are rolling mainframes and consoles out of the hangar and up the ramp. The plane crew is fastening everything tight with thick yellow straps. Lots of sweating. Not much talking.

I’m sitting outside on top of the beer cooler. Karl promised to ship it to my home address, and I want to be sure it doesn’t get lost in the shuffle. I need to salvage at least one good thing out of this disaster.

Daisy is supervising the load-out. She’s standing with her hands on her hips like General Patton. She knows the location and destination of every cable. I bet the entire inventory is in her head.

She walks over and tucks her Ray-Bans into her hair like a headband.

“Squeeze over,” she says, and sits down next to me. She sits there quietly for a while, watching the operation proceed. Then she says, “It’s not your fault.”

Like hell.

“Sure it is. I’m the writer. I create the world. I control the characters. And I couldn’t make it work. Endings are always the hardest part—but I never even got a chance to figure it out.”

Daisy is staring out across the runway—actually just a long stretch of sand that happens to be flatter than the rest of the sand around it.

“You worked hard,” she says, “and you made him better. You made him a better character than he ever was. Trust me. I know.”

A row of minions walks by with monitors and flat screens. Daisy gets up to supervise the loading. She turns back to me.

“You gave him what he needed,” she says. “Let him write his own ending.”

I can’t believe I’m thinking this, but I’m really going to miss Daisy DeForest. She can definitely be a pain in the ass—but as it turns out, she’s not a half bad muse.





Chapter 42


GONZALO, YOU do the honors.”