companion 30 to 40 years old. Mature,
stable gentleman, financially secure,
well-educated, conservative and
reliable. Was Indian chief in former life,
and a member of the men in black.’
A few eye witness reports did
seem credible. In one or two cases,
people had actually received verbal
warnings from men in black not to
discuss things they had seen. After
thirty minutes, Cassiopia decided there
was little helpful information and gave
up. She folded up her laptop and
decided to head for the dining car for
something to eat.
The coach cars were much busier
now. Ample baggage protruded from
the overhead storage. There were
empty seats but most rows were
occupied. The men in black were still
gone. Cassiopia purchased a turkey
sandwich from a machine, along with
hot coffee. She sat at a table, ate, and
stared out the window. The rattle of the
car made concentric rings in her coffee.
She loved the smell of fresh coffee.
Here it was mixed with a touch of
machine and people smells. She
wondered what Scott was up to back at
home. The robot and dog were now his
only company, and his relationship with
the TEL robot was sometimes
tempestuous. On several occasions he
claimed that the machine was making
fun of him or even laughing at him,
something that was just not possible. It
was true there were unexpected side-
effects from Cassiopia’s programming,
and the machine had been exposed to
some very unusual environments, but
it was still just a mobile computer,
nothing more. At least, that was what
she still believed.
Scott was as difficult to understand
as the robot. At times, he would carry
on about the spiritual side of life, and
other times think nothing of fighting to
the death with bad guys. Her various
university degrees were impressive but
seemed of little interest to him. He had
barely scraped through high school. It
was strange how trouble always
seemed to find Scott, as though life
considered him an antidote. At least,
she had come to understand one thing.
She was deeply in love with the man.
Shouldn’t it have been someone
advanced in the sciences? Someone
who spoke her language? Could
someone with a high IQ really bond
with someone whose outlook was
purely spiritual? It seemed like two
opposites. And, he still was quite
reluctant to say I love you. Marriage
was probably out of the question. She
had once promised him their plan
would be to have no plan. She would
need to keep that promise. Apparently
this human relationship thing was
something not easily understood. A
one-day at a time experiment.
Cassiopia finished her coffee,
dropped her garbage in the trash slot
and headed back. She slid open the
door to the next coach car and froze.
There in the forth isle down, sat one of
the men in black.
It was impossible. It looked like
one of the same men who had been left
behind on the platform. There was no
way they could have re-boarded the
speeding train. They would have had to
drop in from a helicopter and there
hadn’t been time to do something as
absurd as that.
Cassiopia caught herself staring
and quickly regained her composure.
She walked by the man and dared a
quick glance without turning her head.
This time he was staring back, folded
newspaper in his hands, his clothing
just as pristine as before. His face was
expressionless.
Bewildered, she hurried along to
the next coach car. As she crossed
over, she nearly bumped into someone
going the other way. She looked up
and let out a small yelp of surprise. It
was the second man in black, waiting to
pass by. He did not apologize for
startling her. He waited with a flat
stare as she moved on.
With her hand on her racing heart,
she made it back to the roomette. She
shut herself in and again took her seat
facing her still-sleeping father. It took a
concentrated effort to slow her
breathing and regain her poise. She sat
staring into oblivion for a moment, the
finger tips of one hand over her mouth,
trying to understand what had
happened.
How could they possibly have
gotten back on the train? Bumping into
the second one had not been by
chance. They were letting her know she
had not escaped, perhaps also
expressing their displeasure with her
trickery.
Cassiopia nervously tapped her
sleeping father’s leg. “Father,
something happened.”
The Professor stirred but resisted
waking.
“Father…”
Professor Cassell reluctantly
struggled to open his eyes. He blinked
and stared out of focus, finally nodding
to his daughter. “Yes? We haven’t
arrived?”
“No, we’re not there yet but
something happened that scared me. I
think I may have acted too
impulsively.”
“You? Surely not.”
Cassiopia recounted everything
that occurred while the Professor
stared silently. “What do you think,
Father? How did they get back on? It’s
a mystery.”
“I don’t know,” he replied.
“There was no way they could
have gotten back on. Even a helicopter
could not have picked them up and
lowered them aboard in that little
time.”
“I do not know the answer,” was
all the Professor could say. He briefly
looked around the roomette, tilted his
head against the window, and again
went to sleep.
Annoyed, Cassiopia dug her cell
phone out of her purse and hit the
autodial.
Markman answered on the first
ring. “Hey.”
“Hi. It’s me.”
“Are you alright?”
“I think I may have gotten myself
involved in something I should not
have.”
“You? No…”
“Please Scott, I’m serious.”
“Okay, what did your conniving
little mind come up with this time?”
“I was only trying to test an
hypothesis.”
“And what poor unsuspecting soul
did you do something to?”
“No. It’s not like that. It’s those
men we’ve been seeing parked near
the house.”
Markman’s voice dropped to a
more somber tone. “I was just about to
call you. I know who they are and why
they are watching us. It’s okay.”
“Tell me, please.”
“It’s too much on the phone. I’ll
meet you at the conference and we’ll
go over everything. In the meantime,
there’s nothing to worry about. They
won’t do anything.”
“When will you come?”
“I’ll grab the first flight out.”
“Are you sure?”
“It doesn’t bother me at all.”
“I’ll pick you up at the airport,
then.”
“No, I’ll get a rental. You might be
tied up at the conference. I’ll find you.
Will the construction people be okay if
none of us are here?”
“Yes. The building plans are all
firm. In fact, they seem annoyed when
I try to help out.”
“No.”
“You’re being funny again.”
“Will the dog be okay with just the
robot?”
“Are you kidding? The TEL is a
dotting den mother. I will have to look
into that when I get back.”
“I’ll see you soon, then.”
“Please text me so I know you’re
okay.”
“I promise. You too.”
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