Dillon smiled. “Can’t blame a guy for trying.”
“Thanks,” she said again. “You’re sweet.”
He crossed his arms again. “So, how long have you been with Maxine?”
“Couple of years. She’s an engineering student at UCSD.”
“Heh. Good that one of you is eventually going to make some money.”
Sho leaned back in her chair and laughed. Neither she nor Dillon was ever likely to get rich.
“And, ah, I take it it’s serious?” Dillon said tentatively.
She suppressed a grin; hope springs eternal. “Very much so. I’d marry Max, if I could.”
“Oh.”
“You know I’m from South Carolina, right?”
“I do declare!” he said, in a really bad Southern accent.
“But Max is from L.A.—South Central. Her family’s all there, and, well, it’s not like they can afford to travel to Boston or up to Canada. She wants to get married here in California, but…” She lifted her shoulders a bit.
“It used to be legal here, didn’t it?”
Sho nodded. “Got overturned the same day Obama was elected. A bittersweet night, I can tell you, for a lot of us. I was simultaneously elated and crushed.”
“I bet.”
“It
“I guess it’s against some people’s religions,” Dillon said.
“So what?” Sho snapped. But she put a hand to her mouth. “Oh, I’m sorry, Dillon. But I just get so tired of arguing this. If
“Hey, Sho. Chill.
“There’s nothing sacred about marriage. You can go to city hall and get married without God once being mentioned.
“I guess,” said Dillon.
But Sho had worked up a head of steam. “And gay people getting married doesn’t take anything away from anyone else’s marriage, any more than, say, the addition of Alaska and Hawaii made the people who were already Americans any less American. What we do doesn’t affect anyone else.”
Dillon nodded.
“And you’re a primatologist,” she said. “You know that homosexuality is perfectly natural.
“No doubt,” said Dillon. “But—playing devil’s advocate here—a lot of people who accept that it’s natural still don’t think that a union between two people of the same sex should be
“But we have
“Okay, okay,” said Dillon. “But…”
“What?”
“Oh, nothing…”
She tried to make her tone light. “Sorry. I didn’t mean to take your head off. What is it?”
“Well, if they do repeal the ban here, so you and Maxine can get married, um, how does that work? Do you, you know, have two maids of honor…?”
“People do it different ways. But I’ve already decided I’m going to have a best man.”
“Oh? Anybody I know?”
“Yep.” She glanced at the monitors that showed the feeds from the cameras on the island. “Oh, and look— he’s painting another picture!”
At 4:00 p.m., after a day of brainstorming with her mother and conversing with Webmind, Caitlin’s computer bleeped and a little window popped up that said
Caitlin opened an IM session and told Bashira that she wouldn’t be returning to school.
Caitlin hated to lie to Bashira.
Caitlin felt her stomach churn.
Caitlin shook her head. She would
She hadn’t had a chance to ask Bashira to clean out her locker for her, but—
A bleep, then:
She opened another IM session.
And she hated even more to lie to him, but:
She took a breath.
There was a long pause, then:
Caitlin felt queasy.
He was probably thinking that he’d never see her again—and she certainly didn’t want him to get comfortable with
She typed it in.
There was a long, awkward pause—she didn’t know what else to say, and neither, it seemed did he.