The Speed of Dark

The Speed of Dark by Elizabeth Moon Read Free Book Online

Book: The Speed of Dark by Elizabeth Moon Read Free Book Online
Authors: Elizabeth Moon
Tags: Fiction, Science-Fiction
WINDOW. I FEEL light, as if I could float up into the air. “Being happy makes itfeel like less than normal gravity,” I say.
    I feel Marjory’s glance. “Light as a feather,” she says. “Is that what you mean?”
    “Maybe not a feather.I feel more like a balloon,” I say.
    “I know that feeling,” Marjory says. She doesn’t say she feels like that now. I don’t know how she feels.
    Normal people would know how she feels, but I can’t tell. The more I know her, the more things I don’t know about her. I don’t know why Tom and Lucia were beingmean to Don, either.
    “Tom and Lucia both sounded angry with Don,” I say. She gives me a quick sideways glance. I think I am supposed to understand it, but I don’t know what it means. It makes me want to look away; I feel funny inside.
    “Don can be a real heel,” she says.
    Don is not a heel; he is a person. Normal people say things like this, changing the meaning of words without warning, and they understand it. I know, because someone told me years ago, that heel is a slang word for “bad person.” But he couldn’t tell me why, and I still wonder about it. If someone is a bad person and you want to say that he is a bad person, why not just say it? Why say “heel” or “jerk” or something? And adding “real” to it only makes it worse. If you say something is real, it should be real.
    But I want to know why Tom and Lucia are angry with Don more than I want to explain to Marjory about why it’s wrong to say Don is a real heel. “Is it because he doesn’t do enough stretches?”
    “No.” Marjory sounds a little angry now, and I feel my stomach tightening. What have I done? “He’s just… just mean, sometimes, Lou. He makes jokes about people that aren’t funny.”
    I wonder if it is the jokes or the people that aren’t funny. I know about jokes that most people don’t Page 21

    think are funny, because I have made some. I still don’t understand why some jokes are funny and why mine aren’t, but I know it is true.
    “He made jokes about you,” Marjory says, a block later, in a low voice. “And we didn’t like it.”
    I don’t know what to say. Don makes jokes about everybody, even Marjory. I didn’t like those jokes, but I didn’t do anything about it. Should I have? Marjory glances at me again. This time I think she wants me to say something. I can’t think of anything. Finally I do.
    “My parents said acting mad at people didn’t make them act better.”
    Marjory makes a funny noise. I don’t know what it means. “Lou, sometimes I think you’re a philosopher.”
    “No,” I say. “I’m not smart enough to be a philosopher.”
    Marjory makes the noise again. I look out the window; we are almost to the airport. The airport at night has different-colored lights laid out along the runways and taxiways. Amber, blue, green, red. I wish they had purple ones. Marjory parks in the short-term section of the parking garage, and we walk across the bus lanes into the terminal.
    When I’m traveling alone, I like to watch the automatic doors open and close. Tonight, I walk on beside Marjory, pretending I don’t care about the doors. She stops to look at the video display of departures and arrivals. I have already spotted the flight it must be: the right airline, fromChicago , landing at 10:15
    P.M., on time, Gate Seventeen. It takes her longer; it always takes normal people longer.
    At the security gate for “Arrivals,” I feel my stomach tightening again. I know how to do this; my parents taught me, and I have done it before. Take everything metallic out of your pockets and put it in the little basket. Wait your turn. Walk through the arch. If nobody asks me any questions, it’s easy. But if they ask, I don’t always hear them exactly: it’s too noisy, with too many echoes off the hard surfaces. I can feel myself tensing up.
    Marjory goes first: her purse onto the conveyor belt, her keys in the little basket. I see her walk

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