sister.
“If they tell stories, they don’t stay my assistants,” Catherine said.
“She’s gotten better,” Hart said. “Or at the very least, I think I understand her better.”
“That’s good to hear,” Isabel said.
“Ask him about the dog,” Wes drawled from his lounge.
“The dog?” Isabel said, looking over to Wes and then back to Hart. “What about a dog?”
“You know what, I think I’ll tell you that one later, Mom,” Hart said. “Maybe after dinner.”
“Does it end badly for the dog?” Isabel asked.
“End? No,” Hart said. “It ends fine for the dog. It middles poorly for him, though.”
“Diplomacy is awesome,” Wes said.
“We thought you were coming in yesterday,” Isabel said, changing the subject.
“I got hung up at the hub,” Hart said, remembering his hotel room. “It was easier to head out first thing in the morning.”
“Well, but you’re staying for the week, right?” Isabel said.
“Five days, yes,” Hart said. He had another night at the Campbell reserved before he headed back to the Clarke . He intended to use it.
“Okay, good,” Isabel said. “If you have time, I have someone I’d like you to meet.”
“Oh, Mom,” Catherine said. “Are you really going to try this again?”
“There’s nothing wrong with introducing Hart to some options,” Isabel said.
“Does this option have a name?” Hart asked.
“Lizzie Chao,” Isabel said.
“This is the same Lizzie Chao who I went to high school with,” Hart said.
“I believe so,” Isabel said.
“She’s married,” Hart said.
“She’s separated,” Isabel said.
“Which means she’s married with an option to trade up,” Catherine said.
“Mom, I remember Lizzie,” Hart said. “She’s really not my type.”
“She has a brother,” Wes said, from his lounge.
“He’s not my type, either,” Hart said.
“Who is your type these days, Hart?” Isabel asked.
“I don’t have a type these days,” Hart said. “Mom, I work out of a spaceship all year around. I share quarters that are smaller than our kitchen pantry. I spend my days trying to convince aliens we don’t want to blow them up anymore. That’s an all-day job. Given my circumstances, it would be foolish to attempt any sort of relationship. It wouldn’t be fair to the other person, or to me, for that matter.”
“Hart, you know I hate sounding like the stereotypical mother,” Isabel said. “But you’re the only one of my children who isn’t in a relationship and having children. Even Wes managed it.”
“Thanks, Mom,” Wes said, lifting his hand in a lazy wave.
“I don’t want you to end up feeling the good things in life are passing you by,” Isabel said, to Hart.
“I don’t feel that way,” Hart said.
“Not now,” Isabel said. “But honey, you’re thirty and you’re still at deputy level. If it doesn’t happen for you in the next year or two, it’s not going to happen. And then where are you going to be? I love you and want you to be happy. But it’s time you start thinking realistically about these things and whether the CU diplomatic service is really the best use of your talents and your life.”
Hart leaned over and gave his mother a peck on the cheek. “I’m going to go up and unpack, and then I’m going to check in on Dad,” he said. He swallowed the rest of his drink and walked into the house.
“Subtlety still counts for something, Mom,” Hart heard Catherine say as he entered the house. If his mother responded, however, it was lost to Hart.
Hart found his father, Alastair Schmidt, in his home office, situated in his parents’ wing of the third floor, which included their bedroom, its master bath suite, attached and separate wardrobes, individual offices, library and drawing room. The children’s wing of the house was no less appointed but arranged differently.
Alastair Schmidt was standing behind his desk, listening to one of his political underlings give him a report
Tara Brown writing as Sophie Starr