See part one for explanation and disclaimers. Hallmark still owns the characters and I’m
still not profiting from this. Hope you’re enjoying this. Still recommended for teens and up for action/violence
and mild language.
The problem with the theory
of growing wiser with age was that, in the interim between “youth” and
“wisdom”, there was plenty of time to really screw up your life, especially
where your children were concerned. Frank
Scott was beginning to understand this towards the end of his fourth decade on
the planet. He was feeling the ‘older’
part, particularly since landing on this island-that-time-forgot, but he wasn’t
sure how quickly the ‘wiser’ part was coming along.
Karl
didn’t make things easier…in fact there were times that Frank was almost
positive his older son went out of his way to drive him crazy.
“This is another whim, Karl. This is another ‘dad hates it, so it must be
a good idea’ Karl special.”
“You might not believe it, Dad, but
I don’t plan my every move in life just to piss you off.”
“What do you expect? You want me to
be thrilled that my son’s flying around on some overgrown lizard with nothing
but that flimsy uniform between him and the ptera-whatever-you-call-them? Should I dance for joy that you’re using
yourself as live bait for the T-Rex? I
spent two months in that cave thinking you and Jack drowned. I didn’t get you back so you could risk your
life for this place.”
“This place, this job, is important,
Dad. It’s important to me. You don’t even want to try to understand.”
“I understand that you think you’re
going to stay committed to this, Karl, but I know you. In a couple of months, you’re going to
realize that dino-riding doesn’t make your happy and move on to the next big
obsession. I just don’t want you
getting killed for your hobby in the meantime.”
‘Hobby?!’ “No, you’re the one who can’t handle sticking with something,
Dad. You want to know why none of those
sports, those ‘extreme weekends’, the summer camps, the ‘guys’ nights out’, the
chasing girls in ever port, none of that stuff ever made me happy? Because that’s the stuff that’s important to
you and Jack, not to me. I hate sports,
I hate camping…I’m a nerd. I like
reading my books and my science projects and ‘Buck Rogers’ marathons on the
Sci-Fi channel. I don’t want to be a
jock, or a skirt chaser, or anything of those things you are. I for sure
wouldn’t knock up a girl and then ditch her and go knock up another girl. And I
really don’t need to have you give me that disappointed look you give me every
time I never measured up to your expectations.”
“Don’t act like a martyr, kid, you
weren’t the easiest person to get along with.
I tried being friends with you and all I got was the back of your head
while you had your nose stuck in those books and those science projects…”
“You have to have something in
common to be friends.”
“Thank you Dr. Phil. I was there for the important stuff. Could you ever
not call me if you needed me? I was there when your mother died.”
“I could’ve gone to live with grandma and grandpa.” It would have been better than dealing with
his father’s “grief through denial” attitude and Jack’s…well, Jack’s complete
absence due to his equal inability to cope the minute life got difficult.
“Like hell you could have. You’re my son, my responsibility.”
“Well, I’m staying with the corps
even if you don’t approve as usual. I’m not your ‘responsibility’ any more.”
“You’re still my son, aren’t you?”
Frank
had become a master of sticking his foot in his mouth when trying to
communicate with his older son. He’d
never had a problem talking with Jack, and, hell, for that matter, Frank could
communicate with the outsider kid better than he could with Karl. Carol had
known how to keep some sort of truce between her son and his father, but,
without her help, Frank was fumbling along as best he could. Frank was stubborn
and kept trying, but, unfortunately, Karl had inherited his father’s obstinacy
and gave it back in spades when he got his mind set to doing something. The kid worried him, though. Karl spent his life bouncing from one
obsession to the next, one friend to the next, one club to the next, never
settling anywhere and never finding his niche. Frank knew the kid was unhappy
in the corps and was probably sticking it out only for Marion’s sake, being so
set on impressing her.
Whatever it was that Karl
was looking for, whatever he felt was missing from his life, his father sure
hoped Marion could fill up the void because Frank was damned if he knew how to do it.
Karl had been right about
one thing: Frank’s parenting skills had
been somewhat wanting for the first few years of the boys’ lives. He knew he’d been irresponsible back then,
had still had a wandering foot that itched, a sex drive that wouldn’t be
satisfied by just one woman when there was a world full of lovely ladies out
there, and parenting skills that were lacking at best. He’d been so enthralled with the idea of
having a son that when he’d finally started hanging around with Karl, he’d had
started imposing all the things he wanted his oldest son to be onto the boy’s
shoulders. Frank had rebelled when his
own father had tried to mold him in his own image, but somehow he still managed
to be surprised when Karl reacted the same way to Frank’s efforts.
He
was supposed to be better at dealing with his sons by now, wasn’t he?
Despite
many invitations to the tavern, Frank hadn’t seen Karl in the last few weeks,
not since that argument. Frank
half-expected that Jack would let it slip that their father was staying at
Flippeau’s that evening and Karl would high-tail it back to Canyon City without
ever stepping foot in the house. As
another hour ticked by with no sign of his sons, Frank began seriously
considering taking a “bus” (Lord give him strength living in a place where
heaping people onto the backs of giant dinosaurs and proceeding at a snail’s
pace through the forest constituted ‘public transportation’) to Canyon
City.
Then he heard the tavern
door creak open. Frank didn’t need to
ask who it was---the squeal of joy from Twenty-Six and the speed at which the
baby casmasaur launched herself from her bed beneath the table and charged
across the room to greet the newcomer told him who had arrived. Jack let out a bark of annoyance and
pain—undoubtedly nipped again---and a familiar voice mumbled something meant to
sooth ruffled baby dinosaurs in response.
The
tiny dinosaur’s body already had some weight and muscle to it, and she nearly
knocked Karl down like a bowling pin when she attempted to wrap herself around
his legs. “Easy there, Dino! I’m glad
to see you, too,” Karl smiled. He
scooped up Twenty-Six and tucked her under his arm before she tried to
head-butt his leg with that thick skullcap of hers to get his attention. “What’s the matter, girl? Jack did you leave her alone all day again?”
Jack
craned his neck, spying the figure approaching from the living room before his
brother did. “No! I left her with her grandpa.”
At
that, Karl suddenly looked up from the baby casmasaur he was holding and
froze. He didn’t have time to react,
much less put down Twenty-Six and head back out the door, before he heard a
response to Jack’s words:
“For
the last time, I am not her ‘grandpa’,” Frank insisted.
Karl tensed involuntarily at Frank’s voice. It was amazing how his dad’s mere presence could still twist him in knots as an adult the way it had when Karl was a kid. He gave Jack a withering glare. “You are so dead,” he whispered.
“Oops, look at that, forgot to feed Twenty-Six. I’d better get to it.” Jack bolted for the safety of the guest room, getting out of the line of fire, but forgetting to take the dinosaur with him.
Karl resigned himself to the
inevitable. “You two tricked me.”
“That’s
a helluva greeting,” Dad countered.
“I’m
kind of in the middle of something.”
“So
Jack tells me. Sit down for one minute,
kid, you look like you’re going to fall over.
Have you slept---”
Karl
turned towards the door. “I really
don’t have time…”
“Make
time.” Frank kicked a chair from the
small dining table towards his son to press his point. Karl balked, but grudgingly sat…or rather,
sagged…onto the seat. Frank sat across
the table from him. “I realize that
you’re a skybax rider now, but that doesn’t mean you can’t visit your family.”
“Can we not have this
argument again?” Karl asked. He hadn’t been to the tavern in a couple of
months, even though there was a room upstairs for his use any time he felt like
staying. Karl preferred his quarters at
the riders’ base for just this reason---too much time together invariably lead
to another row between the two of them.
Well, that wasn’t going to happen this time. Karl was resolved to be in and out in only
the time it took for Frank to say him whatever had made him come all the way to
Flippeau’s house from the tavern.
“I’m
not arguing. I’m just saying I’d like
to see my oldest son once in awhile.
You’re never around.”
“Like
father, like son, right?”
“Now
who’s starting an argument?” Frank fired back.
Karl held up both hands and Frank relented. “So, you had another run in with Barrett yesterday?”
“Yeah,
your buddy robbed the Sanctuary. He
took off with Marion’s sunstone medallion. Nice patrons, by the way, Dad. So,
like I said, I’m in kind of a rush to find him---”
“Sit
down!” Frank commanded and Karl plopped back into the seat at once. “Do me a favor: When I tell you what I’m going to tell you, don’t try to charge
in by yourself like James Bond or Batman and take on a whole pack of Outsiders
by yourself. I’m not going to tell you
if it means you getting yourself killed.
You’re supposed to be the sensible one in the family, so be sensible and
get help. Agreed?”
Karl
shrugged. “Yeah, sure.”
“Karl…”
“Fine. Agreed.”
“Barrett
and Le Sage have got a meeting with an Outsider named Gabriel Dane sometime
tomorrow. I’m pretty sure it has
something to do with that necklace he stole from Marion.”
Karl
knew of Dane…and he knew Marion had a run in with him months back while Karl
and Jack were busy dealing with Cyrus.
She’d told him the entire story, and the notion of Dane mistreating her
still made Karl’s skin crawl. He was
probably the only outsider on the island whom the skybax rider despised more
than Barrett. “And you’re actually telling me about it?”
“Why
wouldn’t I?” Frank sounded offended.
“I just
meant---you always say you don’t like to get into the affairs of your patrons…”
“And
I don’t like my patrons messing with my sons or their friends,” Frank
added. It was true---Frank liked Marion
very much. Her welfare was important to
Karl, so it was important to Frank as well. He didn’t voice his other concern,
but privately he was also worried about the Outsider kid. Dane was dangerous and his grudge against
Barrett was common knowledge among the packs, which meant that it was also
common knowledge to the proprietor of their favorite hangout. Frank doubted Barrett would fare any better
against Dane on his own than Karl would.
Frank would rather see the skybax riders arrest him or whatever they did
than leave him to Dane’s pack.
Karl
actually looked pleased, just for a second or two. “Where are they meeting Dane?”
“Can’t
help you there. All I know is it’s a
beach. Barrett said it was the one
where Dane gave him that scar over his eyebrow. Don’t ask me what that means
‘cause I don’t have a clue.”
“That’s
a lot of beaches to check.” Marion might know. Karl would ask her. He and Romana had already come up empty
looking for Barrett at Le Sage’s that day---it wasn’t like the outsider could
hide that albino pterosaur, even in her castle. His instincts had been right, though, Barrett had been heading to
Le Sage’s. Karl must have just missed
him. It was too late to go back there
now, but the castle went to the top of his list of places to stakeout in the
morning.
“Dane’s
dangerous, Karl. That’s why I made you
promise not to go alone. Don’t mess
with him unless you----well, don’t mess with him period.” Frank was still
explaining, “I do know Dane’s been
spending a lot of time around Gull’s Bay and Zuru. Barrett’s been in that area, too. I can’t say for sure, but since he made a point of taking that
sunstone…and some of the things he’s said around here…I think Barrett might
have it in his head to try to cross the Razor Reef.”
Of course. Karl should have thought about that way before now, he kicked
himself mentally. Suddenly, the reason
for the robbery clarified: Barrett wanted Cyrus’ submarine. If Dane had found it first, then the
medallion was Barrett’s leverage. It would serve the obnoxious outsider right
if Karl just left him to Dane, or better still let him crash into the Razor
Reef…or maybe they’d all get real lucky and Dane would drop Barrett into a hole
somewhere…
Frank
read his mind. “You understand that
would be a bad thing, right?”
“I
s’pose.” Karl rose from the table and
headed to the door. “I guess I’ll tell
Romana and Marion. First thing
tomorrow, we’ll go get the annoying sonu---”
“Karl…”
“Kidding!” He paused in the doorway. “Thanks, Dad.”
“You
should come around the tavern more often.
You might hear these rumors for yourself,” Frank chided gently. “Besides, it would be nice to see you once
in awhile.”
Karl
grinned this time. “We’ll see.” Then he was gone.
Frank
sighed. I guess that’s a start.
*
One
of the things Romana Denison liked about flying was the quiet times. Certainly, there were hair-raising moments
when the riders were called upon to rescue citizens from carnosaurs, which
almost always meant physically putting themselves between the dangerous
creatures and the bystanders to give the civilians time to escape. When called upon, Romana was afraid, of
course, but she never hesitated. She
was a Denison, after all. She came from
a long line of skybax riders, all of whom had earned the respect and praise of
their wingmates. She even used the
saddle her father, a legend among the riders, had used during his time in the
corps. She had been preparing all her
life to accept the dangers that came with the job.
But
there were other moments to off set the perilous times. Being in the sky, alone on the back of her
pterosaur, with the wind making any communication between riders, other than a
sort of sign language, impossible, was the time when she felt most at
peace. She was away from the boisterous
crowd in the common areas of the base, away from the bustle of the city, with
time to think…for a great deal of thinking, in fact.
As
she waited outside the house, Romana’s thoughts---as they frequently did
lately---turned to her wingmate. They
weren’t romantic thoughts in any way.
It was true that bonding between riders was commonplace, the byproduct
of long hours or days at a time spent together on patrols and missions, and
Karl had the qualities Romana would have found attractive in a prospective
lover---kindness, courage, intelligence, determination, and dedication to the
corps and to the island and its people.
For all those things he’d earned her unwavering friendship, and she
would have his back no matter what. But she’d still never quite had those feelings about her wingmate. Besides which, even if Romana had the
slightest inclinations towards bonding with him, it had been apparent to her
since the first day he’d arrived in Canyon City that Karl was whole-heartedly
enamored of the matriarch’s daughter, Marion…even if he was obviously going to
need a swift kick in the seat of his pants to get him to pluck up the courage
to ask her to the Dawn Festival.
No,
they weren’t romantic thoughts preoccupying Romana. She was worried about Karl Scott.
Like
Romana, most skybax riders knew from childhood that the corps was where they
belonged. The sky called to their
souls, and youth was spent impatiently searching for any means to get airborne
until the day came when they were finally dubbed “of the Sky” and called to
Canyon City for training. A few riders,
those who hadn’t fully heard the call within their soul, were directed to the
corps by Rosemary or Sanctuary Keepers.
Such riders might start off with doubts, but with encouragement usually
overcame such doubts. Invariably, the
corps became their lives and they were quite happy there. The ones who couldn’t get over doubts and
fear were ultimately weeded out by their trainers or rejected by the
pterosaurs. A prospective rider unable
to find a pterosaur to accept him was dismissed from the corps. A very, very
few people with such doubts had enough raw determination to make it through the
training and to even find a pterosaur, but invariably they were never quite
happy in the corps afterwards.
That was what had worried
Romana more and more over the past few weeks since she’d become Karl’s
wingmate: He wasn’t happy. Karl was a great rider, one of the best in
fact, but his heart wasn’t in it. She felt it intuitively in her own heart; she
saw it in his eyes in moments when he let his guard down.
Romana
suspected his family was one of the sources of his unhappiness in the
corps. She knew what it was like to
deal with family expectations, but in Karl’s case, his father’s plans for his
son had never included landing on Dinotopia much less having his son occupying
the single most dangerous job on the island.
The harder Frank Scott tried to persuade his son to abandon the corps
for something safer, the more determined Karl was to stay.
There was also Marion, and
Karl’s infatuation with her, to consider.
It was Marion’s family who placed Karl in the corps, and if it impressed
the girl, then Karl would probably stay in the corps until he was old and gray,
miserable the entire time. Just look
how he was ready to hunt down that thief who’d made the mistake of stealing
Marion’s sunstone.
Romana was ready to hunt him
down as well, but for her own reasons:
She despised thieves. She’d been
raised to do her share for the well-being of the island, to believe in the
rules and tradition of the Dinotopians.
Those rules and traditions, the need for everyone to work together, was
what enabled people to survive on the island. A rider who didn’t follow rules
got other riders killed. A civilian who
didn’t follow the rules lived off the labors of others. Anyone who was too lazy
or otherwise unwilling to pull their own weight, who didn’t respect the rules
of the island, annoyed her deeply. That
was one reason she frequently lost her temper with Jack, who was more adept at
sleeping than working. But, with Karl, it wasn’t the fact that the thief defied
Dinotopian law that drove him, nor was it because the medallion was a
Dinotopian artifact---Karl wanted to catch the thief simply because he’d stolen
from Marion.
She’d
have to speak to Karl. If she didn’t,
she knew Udo would. But it was going to
have to wait until the more important matter of retrieving the medallion was
resolved. After an exhausting day of
combing the island, unsuccessfully, in search of the outsider, she was ready
for her bunk at the base. She lingered
in Waterfall City only long enough to deliver the days reports to Waldo and
Rosemary and was just climbing onto her skybax when she heard her wingmate
calling her. She’d left Karl and Jack at
Flippeau’s and hadn’t expected to see him until morning. Whatever it was must have been important.
“Romana!”
She
saw Karl jogging towards her. From the
look on his face, he had good news. Romana had put her troubled thoughts to
rest.
“Glad I caught you.” He took a minute to catch his breath. “You’re not going to believe this, but I
think I just got the 411 on our outsider buddy.”
Another off-worlder
expression, but at least it was one Romana was now familiar with. “From who?”
“My dad.”
Romana couldn’t hide her
surprise. Karl grinned---an expression
he didn’t often wear these days, especially after he’d been talking to his
father. “Hope you’re up for a trip to
the coast in the morning.”
She
returned his grin. “Always.”