“And I’ll come back with them. And I’ll make this planet my life work. I’ve a Ph.D. in ichthyology, and I can get accredited as a scientific member of the expedition. There’s no doubt about it!”
Amra fell into his arms, weeping, crying that she had known all the time that he couldn’t leave her. Then in the next breath she was swearing that he was just promising to return so he would avoid a scene.
“I know men well, Alan Green, and I know you, especially. You won’t come back!”
“Yes, I will, I swear it. If you know men so well, you ought to know that no man who is worthy of being called a man could even think of leaving a woman like you.”
She smiled through her tears and said, “That’s what I wanted to hear you say. But, oh, Alan, it’ll be so long. Won’t it take at least two years?”
“Yes, at least. But it can’t be helped. I’ll worry about you while I’m gone. Or I would if I didn’t know how capable you were.”
“I can learn how to run this island,” she said half-sobbing, half-smiling. “By the time you get back I’ll probably be Queen of the Xurdimur. I could contact the Vings, and together we could have the whole plain and every city along its border under our thumbs. And…”
He laughed and said, “That was what I was afraid of.”
Turning to Walzer, he said, “Look, you’re too weak to consider another long trip immediately. Why don’t you just follow this island in your ship until we get to a safe distance from here, say about a thousand miles due north? We’ll live on the island until you get your strength back and get over your claustrophobia. I imagine it wasn’t helped any by being cooped up in that dungeon. When you’re ready we’ll take off. In the meantime I can be showing Amra and Grizquetr just what can be done with the island. She can be living on it while I’m gone. We’ll trap wild life to replace the animals that were strangled when I went up too high for them to breathe. She can shuttle back and forth over the Xurdimur, or over the whole planet if she wishes. And she will, I hope, stay out of mischief until I get back.”
“That’s fine,” said Walzer. “I’ll get in the ship and follow you.
Three weeks later, the two Earthmen boarded the scout and closed the port behind them, the port that would not open again until they were on Earth, some four months subjective time away. They sat down in the control cabin, and Walzer began pushing buttons and throwing switches.
Green wiped the sweat from his brow, the tears from his eyes, and said, “Whew!”
“A fine woman,” said Walzer, sympathetically. “A rare beauty. She has a tremendous impact upon one.”
“Something like crashing into a planet head-on,” said Green. “She has the faculty of wringing out every last bit of energy left in the particular emotion she happens to be feeling at the moment. A great actress who believes in her roles.”
“Her children are fine children, too,” Walzer added, slowly and as if he were about to say something that might hurt Green’s feelings but was anxious not to do so. “You will be glad to see them again, of course.”
“Of course. After all, Paxi’s my daughter, I love the others as if they were also mine.”
“Ah,” breathed Walzer. “Then you are going back to her?”
Green didn’t express surprise or anger, because he had guessed from Walzer’s actions just what he was thinking.
“You can’t imagine my wanting to live on that barbaric planet with that woman, can you?” he said, evenly. “That after all, there are serious gaps in our ways of thinking, in our behavior, in our education. Isn’t that what you meant by your statement?”
Walzer glanced out of the corners of his eyes at Green, then replied warily, “Well, yes. But you know what you want far better than I do.” He paused, then added, “I must say I admire your courage.”
Green shrugged.
“After all I’ve been through I’m not afraid to take one more chance.”