"If you're care to—"
"I'd like that," she said.
"After work, then," he said. "If Frank knocks off in time to leave us some daylight. I can have a picnic packed."
"Wonderful," she said, with a radiant smile.
Inside, he watched as the makeup techs worked. He, himself, applied the enzyme glue to the eyes and positioned them.
"That's much better," Sheba said, looking out through only one facet.
Vinn powered down the generators, put the portable Century Series computer to bed. The film crew was scattering. A pickup groundball game was getting underway in a field that had been cleared for the landings of supply and transport vessels. From one of the living cubicles came the soaring strains of the triumphant movement from Selvin Mann's symphony, The Ascent of Man. The murmur of multiple strings hushed the avian songs from the surrounding forest. The sun, whiter and much more fierce than the kind, yellow sun of Xanthos, was still three standard hours high.
When Vinn knocked on the door of Sheba's quarters she called out, "It's open." He stepped into her smell. Like her dressing room her living area was in a state of charmingly feminine deshabille. The briefs she had worn under the Artunee fur made a filmy, pastel pile on the carpet. The shower was running and the door to the bath was open.
"I hope that's you, Vinn," she called out.
"It's me," he said.
"Come and hand me my towel."
He swallowed, walked into a new smell of steamy moistness and fragrant soaps. The shower stall was enclosed in frosted duraglass, but he could see her silhouette. He found the towel. The rushing jet of water ceased. A slim, tanned arm disappeared above the shower stall.
"I'll be quick," she said, as the door to the shower opened and she stepped out. Her long, blonde hair was tucked up into a shower cap. Her petite, molded body was covered totally with the towel. She removed the cap and shook out her hair. It fell in a cascade of shining brightness. Vinn stood, mesmerized.
She laughed. "If, sir, you would kindly step out into the other room sothat I can get dressed?"
"Oh, sure," he said. "Sorry."
"I hope you remembered that food you promised," she called out to him. "I'm famished."
"Yes, I did."
She appeared in the doorway. She wore lime colored briefs and bra and heels that made her calves arch attractively. "We won't be doing any hiking, will we?"
He swallowed. "No."
"Oh, dear," she said, "I'll bet you didn't have any sisters."
"No. Why?"
"It's obvious that you're not used to seeing a lady being casual in her undress."
"No." He made an effort that surprised him. "But feel free—" He gulped.
"I mean, well."
She laughed in delight. "You remind me of my brother, old Josh. He was always yelling at me to put on some decent clothing."
"I am not yelling."
She winked. "But you're blushing."
"And enjoying," he said.
She lifted her arms high, slipped into a simple little sheath dress that came to a point just above her knees.
"I am ready," she announced.
They were approaching the car park when the director hailed them.
"Where do you think you're going, Sheba?" Frank demanded.
"Sightseeing," Sheba said.
"Our insurance does not cover flight in private aircars," Frank said.
"Mine does," Sheba said.
"Sheba, I'm warning you," the director said.
"Frank, I have a commercial license," Vinn said. "That automatically makes the aircar a public carrier."
"You see, love," Sheba said, "there's nothing to worry about."
Inside the aircar, as she settled in and fastened the safety harness she asked, "Really?"
"Really what?"
"Are you really licensed?"
"Oh, yeah. Unlimited, as a matter of fact."
"Anywhere, anytime, any size vessel?"
"I think that's the way it reads."
"I'm impressed anew," she said. "When did you manage to find time to study and get the field experience for that?"
"Well, I got my private license when I was in secondary school. I picked up some navigation hours in college, on field trips. And then I signed on as third mate on a deep space miner for a two year hitch to finish out the required hours."
"How old are you?" she asked.
"Thirty-five."
"Buster, either you're stretching the truth or you were an early starter," she said, disarming the challenge with one of her finest smiles.
"I entered Xanthos U. at fourteen," he said, as he fed power into the flux drive of the aircar and lifted it smoothly up and away in a soaring arc.
The desert began no more than four hundred miles from the location site. The jungle became thinner, was degraded into savanna bushland, and then, just beyond a tall, rocky range of mountains that stored any stray drop of moisture in eternal snows there was the harshness of aridity.
Barren sands and jutting buttes and mesas gave up the glory of their brilliant colors to the setting sun. Vinn slowed the aircar, lowered until they were crawling along just above the rocky terrain. The colorful upthrusts of the landscape towered above them.
"So beautiful," Sheba whispered.
"Pick a spot. We'll land and have our picnic."
"There," she said, pointing to a parched, rocky mesa. "We should have a fine view."
With the sun low the heat of the desert diminished to the level of comfort. With the coming of twilight it would be quite chill. Sheba spread the cloth from the picnic basket, set out the goodies that Vinn had provided, led the way in diving into them with enthusiastic "Ummms" and other brilliant comments such as "ahhhh," and even, "good."
Vinn, too, found his appetite. The sun sank lower. Sheba shivered and Vinn leapt to his feet to drape a warm wrap around her shoulders. He was still on his feet when Sheba lifted her arm, pointed, and said, "Wow, look."
A blaze of fire was sweeping across the cloudless sky from east to west toward the setting sun. Sheba jumped up, put her arm around Vinn's waist. It was over in a few seconds. The fiery object seemed to be coming directly toward them.
It flashed by overhead and the sonic boom jarred them, reverberated in the arid valley below.
"There's going to be one hell of an impact," Vinn whispered, but even as he spoke the object arced upward, drove toward the blue dome of sky, and disappeared.
"Some damned fool just burned off a few hundred thousand credits worth of insulation," Vinn said.
"Wow," Sheba said, her arm still around Vinn.
"Well, there's still dessert," Vinn said.
She ate the frozen delicacy slowly, licking the spoon with evident enjoyment. The sun was below the horizon but left a lingering farewell in the form of a blazing red sky. Sheba finished her dessert, sighed with satisfaction, snugged the shawl around her.
"Thank you," she said. "That sunset is the nicest gift I've had lately."
"It is I who should thank you," he said.
"Oh, well, if you want me to arrange another spectacular sunset for you, just let me know."
"For coming with me," he explained. He spread his hands. "I still can't believe it. Me, having a picnic with Sheba Webster. You and I have grown up together, but with you on the holoscreen. I saw you first when I was sixteen. I spent hours in the library searching out all the films in which you appeared, and I haven't missed one since."
She laughed. "Good Lord, you saw my early efforts and you still like me?"
"Your acting ability developed steadily. Your beauty just ripened, piling flawlessness atop perfection."
She watched the play of crimson fade on the horizon. "Vinn, I understand what you're saying. When you were watching me in three dimensions and glowing color in a holofilm I was—"