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Chapter
Six
"Excuse
me... you're Helen Morgendorffer, right?"
Helen looked
up from her desk, a slight tinge of annoyance as she saw the tall,
scarlet-haired woman standing in the doorway of her office. Tall, very
attractive, excellent taste in clothing and jewelry - although a bit more (and
a bit much) than I'm accustomed to, more than enough hair, a touch of attitude
to go along with the smarts that I can see in her eyes... Las Vegas lost yet
another showgirl to a foolish rich man and the Elvis Wedding Chapel, I see...
"I'm
Bronwyn Ruttheimer."
That name
brought Helen to full attention - and wiped the snide remark away with blinding
speed. The Ruttheimers were one of the wealthiest families in the state - even
wealthier than the Barksdales. The computer and 'dot-com' industries were the
crux of the 'nouveau riche' caste, creating a new host of multimillionaires and
the occasional billionaire - for which the Ruttheimers CERTAINLY qualified.
Counting only RADIAL, the cyber-company Charles Ruttheimer, Jr. founded on his
own in the early 1980's, the Ruttheimer fortune was easily valued in the
billions of dollars...
Nor was
Bronwyn someone to be trifled with: as Chief Operating Officer of RADIAL, she
nevertheless managed to find the time to have seven children (three sets of
twins and a spare), have an actual family life, and garner one vicious
reputation through the business world. The 'Great Red Shark' (but not to her
face) pocketed an MBA from NYU, came to Texas in the early 1970's as a newlywed
and worked as an office manager to pay the bills. She did this while her
husband worked all-hours to develop not only new computer codes and software,
but tried to think ahead to the potential needs that the public would have for
the oncoming rush: the how-to's, the 'what's that's' and the 'how do I do this'
of the computer age. He was remarkably accurate, and with Bronwyn working the
business end, Ruttheimer Advanced Development and Integrated Adaptation
Logistics (RADIAL) became one of the first major cybernetics research and
development companies in the business.
Needless to say - of Bronwyn, Helen was a very big fan.
"Yes...
yes, of course," Helen replied, rising from her chair. "It's very
nice to meet you in person; I've read about you for years. Why don't you come
in and have a seat?"
"I've
got a better idea, " Bronwyn said, spinning her car keys on her finger.
"Ever knocked back a really good bottle of hundred-year-old wine?"
*****
"Sandi,
you've got to try harder! It took you over three minutes for you to stabilize
the machine! That's almost as bad as Mack's time - you have to do better!"
"Look,
I'm trying, like, all right?" Sandi snapped, unfastening herself from the
belt harness of the three-ring stabilization trainer - a NASA-issue piece of
equipment, sold for surplus, that was now the biggest draw at the local arcade.
"I can do it, it's just that it takes me a moment or two to focus!"
"You can
try again, Sandra - but now, it's Miss Lane's turn," Upchuck said, motioning
for Jane to get into the device. "Jane, just remember what we've said
about -"
"Yeah, I
think I've got it, Jane shot back, watching the fawn-like wobbling of Sandi's
legs as she stepped down from the trainer and then stepped up the four steps in
order to climb aboard. The trainer was an odyssey; a tribute to weird design
and looks married in a shotgun wedding to simplicity and purpose. It was simply
three concentric rings (each one singularly representing the X-, Y- and Z-
axes) with a pilot's command chair and a display monitor located within the
innermost ring. The three rings spun in differing directions, giving the
'pilot' one hell of a ride unless he (or she) could use the control yoke (or
'joystick') to control the rotations and stabilize the rings... not an easy task,
by any means.
"Here,
let me help you strap in," Ted said, scampering up the steps and lending a
hand as Jane began to fight with the locking mechanism on the heavily
reinforced safety belts. "It's not that hard - just put it in like
this..." He looked up into Jane's eyes of light-struck sapphire, and a knot
appeared in his throat. "I'm sorry - I didn't mean it like that, and
-"
"Thank
you, Ted," Jane said, favoring him with a smile that put him at ease.
"How do you know about this?"
"I went
to Space Camp three years in a row!" he announced proudly. "I tried
for so long to work this the right way, but my stomach -"
"Three
times?"
"Yeah,
my parents wanted me to have the experience!"
"That
would be nice..." She gave off a slight squeak as Ted tightened the belt a
bit, and laughed at his expression. "Oh, don't worry, Ted. Nobody around
here expects you to end up working at 'Helga's House of Pain!"
"Pardon
me?"
"Armageddon?'
The Bruckheimer asteroid-killing audience eardrum-snapper from '98 with Bruce
Willis and Ben Affleck? Animal cracker rodeo on Liv Tyler's stomach? 'We win,
Gracie?"
Ted's face
went blank, and Jane blinked hard as the thought entered her mind: 'I have got
to take this guy to see a real movie, or invite him over to see 'Sick, Sad
World'-
"Stop
making moon-eyes at our Director of Medicine and Research, Lane," Upchuck
cackled, his head popping in-between the two blank-eyed teens. "You're
about to take a ride, and you'll want to concentrate on that... you, too,
Ted."
Ted suddenly
realized that he had been staring into Jane's eyes - she's so pretty
- and hopped down after giving the harness a final check, while Upchuck gave
Jane a once-over. "Hello, Miss Goodheart," he growled, waggling his
eyebrows at her as he took on what he thought was (for him) a grandiose tone,
complete with him rolling his 'R's like SUV's on an interstate highway. "I
see Lothar has made your acquaintance with the Cradle of Persuasion. I am -
Chaotica, Supreme Lord and Emperor of the Universe! Welcome - to my Dungeon of
Pain!"
"Can we
just get on with this?"
"Oh,
you're no fun," he grinned, his normal voice back as he stepped away from
the machine. "Okay - start it up!"
Jane felt her
stomach suddenly lurch as the three rings began to move and quickly began to
twirl about; grasping at the control yoke, she watched the screen and attempted
to align the rings... her hair flew, her vision blurred and blood rushed to her
head, but she kept going...
"Hey,
look at her!" Mack exclaimed, watching as the rings began to roll into
alignment. "She's really good at this!"
"Go,
Jane!" Brittany called out, her inner cheerleader getting the best of her
for a moment. "You can do it - Go, Jane, go!"
"My,
my," Upchuck said, shaking his head in wonderment as Jane hit the control
on the trainer, locking the rings in place. "Forty-eight seconds. Not bad
at all."
"Not bad
at all - Jane, that was great!" Ted piped up. "And for this being
your first time doing this, you were absolutely incredible!"
"Well,
it seems like you've got a new fan, Jane Lane," Sandi huffed, but without
her trademark snootiness behind it as she watched Ted go up and unfasten Jane
from her seat. "Can I try again, now, please?"
*****
The
atmosphere around Jake's office was - to be blunt - morose. Horizon sat at her
desk, sorting out the different types of tasty kibbles in her bag of trail mix
and putting them in small piles, while a fuming Wendy tried to while her time
away on the editing suite. The sharp, occasional burst of choice profanity
nearly blistered the paint off the walls in the hallway, and the tiny redhead
wanted so badly to pick up something and throw it - or throw it at Helen's
head, given the chance.
Wendy had
never really had the chance to meet Helen, and her vicious little snit aimed at
Lauriel had destroyed her chances of Wendy ever caring about her. The woman
didn't deserve the crap you laid out on her, and I wish you had talked to ME
that way. I'll take a copy of the state lawbook and ram it up your ass! I mean,
how much money has Lauriel laid out on your family, and you never even bothered
to send her even a thank-you note for the lobsters. See, that's your problem -
you've spent so much time in courtrooms against a lot of people you can just
walk like dogs because they don't know the lingo. That's not me. Pull that on
Lauriel again and the word for the day's going to be 'Ow'....
She almost
smiled at the thought of Helen's having been harassed by a LPD officer last night.
Serves her right - wouldn't have happened in the first place if she had been
supporting her man by being there on time... damn, she doesn't think much of him!
And this is the person she's supposed to honor and cherish above all others?
Yeah, right!
Well, what
can you say? 'That's 'Love, American Style' - truer than the red, white and
blue...'
"I'd
give you a penny for your thoughts, but they'd probably corrode the
metal."
Wendy looked
up from the computer screen to see Horizon standing there.
"How long
have you been standing there?"
"Long
enough to know that Richard Pryor would blush because of the stuff coming out
of your mouth."
The dryness
in her mouth made Wendy realize she had been talking for what must have been an
extended period of time. "I've been ranting, haven't I?"
"Someone's
going to stick a 'TV-MA' label on the right side of your forehead. Have you
seen Jake - I mean, Mr. Morgendorffer? He was supposed to come in at ten,
but..."
"No, and
I know that he isn't with Lauriel. She caught a flight out of 'CCI-Air' to New
York City - she's got a couple of days worth of meetings," the redhead
spoke up, referring to Carter County International Airport. "After last
night, I suggested that she bum out for an extra day or two... the network's
paying for it. You know, he may be down at police headquarters - with his
wife."
"Wonderful
woman, isn't she?"
"Oh,
she's the best."
The sound of
the greeting bell caught the ladies' attention, and they started towards the
front office - only to be caught up short by the sight of Quinn, wiping her
nose with a tissue.
"Uh,
hi," Quinn said uneasily, glancing away from Wendy's angry stare to
Horizon's quizzical expression. "I - I wanted to know if you could tell me
where Lauriel is -"
"MISS de
la RIBAS is out of town, Miss Morgendorffer," Wendy spat, and Quinn winced
at the way the woman glared at her. "What do you want, anyway - want to
deliver a poisoned letter, or follow up on your mom's performance and act like
one of the tramps on 'All My Children'? What your mother did last night was
some vile, crappy -"
"Wendy,
come on!" Horizon said, stepping between the twosome. "She's not her
mother!"
"Okay,
then what DID you come down here for - you never bothered to come down here
since I've been around! Hey - why ARE you here? Why aren't you in school?"
"They
sent me home because I've got the flu or something -"
"And you
come here to spread it around? Just HOW DUMB are you?"
"-And I came down to see how Lauriel was doing."
Wendy spun
back on her heels to face Quinn. "Excuse me?"
"My
mother was... well, it wasn't right for her to hurt Lauriel's feelings like she
did and call her all sorts of names," Quinn continued, warily due to
Wendy's proximity. "She's a nice lady - she IS a lady - and my mother's a
bit high-strung and possessive. I just wanted to apologize for my mother... and
to let Lauriel know that I still like her."
"You
actually feel bad for Lauriel." It was an ephipany in the making for
Wendy.
"COME ON
- it was, like, the biggest night of her life! Well, actually, it would be the
fourth biggest night of her life because your Senior Prom's the second biggest
night of your life ESPECIALLY if you're actually in love with your escort to
the prom - he's an 'escort', not a 'date', because this is a FORMAL event! Or
wait - the Senior Prom is the THIRD biggest night of your life, because your
Debutante Ball is your formal 'coming-out' affair into society, and THERE you
have an ESCORT so I guess your date to the Senior Prom really IS a date after
all! And of course, your WEDDING NIGHT is the BIGGEST night of your life, so
everything has to be planned just right and MONTHS in advance - I mean, can you
just see having your wedding night ruined because they didn't put enough ice in
your Honeymoon Suite so the diet soda is warm, let alone the champagne - and
what if everyone eats up all of the wedding cake so you don't have any to feed
each other in bed?"
Quinn
actually stumbled a bit as she covered her eyes, trying to ward off the
imagined sight. "The horror... the horror!"
"Somewhere
in there, I think that there's actually some genuine concern for Lauriel,"
Horizon mused, reaching out to steady Quinn, and offering her tissues from a
box. "Miss Morgendorffer - Lauriel's not in right now. She had to go to
New York City for a couple of days to take a meeting or two."
"Oh."
Quinn's face fell, and even Wendy suddenly felt a bit sorry
for the girl. "Well... when she comes back, could you tell her that I asked
how she was doing, and I'm sorry about the way my mom was acting."
As the
teenager turned to the door, Wendy grimaced and said, "Just a minute,
kid."
Quinn turned
back as Wendy scribbled a number on a business card she scooped off Horizon's
desk and handed it to her. "That's her room number at the hotel she's at.
Call after nine - New York time, remember that - they'll probably take her out
to dinner, and she'll be back in about then."
"Thanks!"
"I won't
tell you did something out of the kindness of your heart on one
condition," Horizon said, sitting down on top of her desk after Quinn had
left. "Go out and buy a bra - a padded one. I'm tired of being reminded of
the neighborhood I grew up in every time you walk through the door."
"Shouldn't
you be thankful I don't just whack you upside the head every time I see you,
Intern Girl?" Wendy shot back. "I'm old enough to -"
"Have
gotten past the 'Look at me!' part of your life," she shot back.
"Besides, those won't be sitting up so high and proud in a few years -
unless you're planning on having some construction work done."
"All the
more reason to showcase them now. Besides - you have no room to talk. Who
dresses you for work - Heather Locklear or Heidi Fleiss? No, Kathie Lee
Gifford's your role model - 'look businesslike, but let them know that it's a
breakaway outfit!"
The two women
were silent for a moment.
"Beer
after I close up the office tonight?'
"Beer
and onion burgers."
"Onion
burgers?"
"Are you
dating anyone?"
Another
moment of silence dusted the room.
"Beer,
onion burgers... and waffle fries with cheese dip and ranch dressing on the
side."
"No
dessert?"
"No
dessert."
"Look,
Intern Girl - screw Calista Flockhart, Tava Smiley and the popsicle-stick
horses those penny-thin bitches rode in on! A man wants a little something to
hold onto, and he doesn't want to worry about it snapping in half!"
And yet
another moment of silence passed through the office.
"You
want a dessert."
"I want
a dessert."
*****
Brittany
Taylor leaned against the door of the arcade, sipping her chocolate shake and
glancing up on occasion to watch Sandi trying to master the flight simulator.
As she absently flipping through a copy of 'American Rifleman', a trio of men,
each wearing the 'AXP' of the Alpha Chi Rho fraternity on their jackets, walked
past. Two of the 'frat-rats' gave Brittany a serious once-over as they did so...
and then, suddenly broke away from the third and headed back on a beeline
towards her.
"Hey,"
the lanky, dark-haired young man said in a slight Southern accent, smiling a
smile that, if Brittany wasn't thinking like a security-type, might have been
charming enough to have landed him a date right on the spot. "Love the
'Men-In-Black' thing. Going to a costume party?"
"It's my
uniform," she said, and the way she turned her back on the boy made the
second, a small, wiry young man slightly older than the first, with wild brown
hair and a hawkish nose that only detracted slightly from his looks, break out
in laughter.
"DUDE!
She just burned you all up!" the brown-haired frat rat laughed. "Hey,
Joel - doesn't work on her! Somebody must have told her about you!"
"Hey,
shut up, Rob! Go off somewhere else!" Joel growled, and Brittany rolled
her eyes. "So, you're into guns, hmn? I've got a P-85 and a Remington
12-gauge... I'm also going to get a Glock as soon as I can."
Brittany and
the third frat-rat, who stood a reassuring distance away, laughed at the same
time. No, he's not really a frat-rat, she thought, looking at the slightly
overweight African-American who stood barely an inch or two over Joel. He's too
old - maybe he's a grad student, because he's at least 27 or so.
"WHAT?" Joel barked. "What's so funny?"
"I
wouldn't take a Glock if you paid me," Brittany said. "So some people
say they don't jam - I want an external safety. I don't need to play 'John
Wayne' for anybody."
"Roger
that - go Baretta 92F if you want to go classic 9mm, or try a SIG Sauer for the
new stuff," the grad student agreed. "They've also got one chambered
for .357 Magnum, and their .40 supposedly kicks major ass."
"I like
wheelguns for the .357 - give me a Colt Python, but Taurus also makes nice
guns, too. If you want to go into the .40 stuff, I like the P-16,"
Brittany said, turning with some interest to the grad student-type.
"Sixteen plus one in the pipe - how sweet is that?"
"True -
if you're going in the open," the grad student responded. Two things,
though. One - if you're trying to carry concealed, it's a bitch-kitty to try
with something THAT big. Two - no offense, but you don't look like your hands
are big enough to handle a Para-Ordinance pistol."
"I
practically grew up with a 1911A1 in my hands!" Brittany said, stepping
past the annoyed Joel and the smirking Rob to face the grad student. "I
was putting six through the X-ring before I was eight years old with an old
Colt .44 - my grandfather on my mother's side was a Texas Ranger!"
"No
wonder you love wheelguns," he replied. "What are you into for the
heavies?"
"M-16'll
do just fine for my main carry rifle, but if I'm doing special ops, I carry an
MP-10 or I don't go."
"You
really like things that make you go 'thud', don't you?" the grad student
laughed. "Steyr AUG for me as a main rifle - love that 'bullpup' design -
and for the ops-"
"Let me
guess, Mr. 'classic 9mm' - an MP5SD2."
"Set for
three-round bursts."
"Subsonic
rounds, hollow-point design?"
"Of
course - why have a surpressed weapon and then have bullets that make their own
sonic boom? Kind of defeats the purpose, don't you think?"
"You
probably grew up on the unusual weapons."
"First
gun I ever used was a MAC-10."
"Room
broom' baby," Brittany smiled. "Which post?"
"Fort
Devens," the grad student said. "My father was a prick in the
artillery, so I spent as much time as I could around the special troops who
came up for commo encrypt training. They taught me a few things."
"Like
what?"
"Like
how to not screw around with forms I'm not familiar with," he said,
looking at the way her feet were positioned. "Tae kwon do or
hapkido?"
"Tae
kwon do, with some escrima training included. You?"
"Tae
kwon do - though I couldn't stand it. Hate those flying kicks. Then on to kendo,
Aikido and 'drunken boxing'. People hate it when I do that."
"Could
we go now?" Joel whined, now thoroughly disgusted at being totally
ignored.
"Oh,
stop whining," the grad student snipped. "You wouldn't have been able
to talk to the young lady anyway - after all, she's only seventeen!"
"What?"
"Sixteen,"
Brittany smiled, and the grad student laughed aloud at the stricken look on
Joel's face. "My birthday's next month."
"When it
hits, don't celebrate by shooting your boyfriend."
"Won't
have to - he acted up a few weeks ago and I did a few moves on him with a
friend of mine in the school parking lot," she shrugged. "Now, all I
hear is 'Don't hurt - don't hurt!"
"Way to
go."
"Oh,
yeah - I'm Brittany."
"I'm
Gerald. The tall wannabe player's Joel - we call him 'Brother Psycho', and the
short one's Rob - 'Brother Bud Bundy'. My frat-rat brothers call me-"
"Hey,
come on!" Rob called out, following Joel, who was already in search of
better prey. "We're riding in Joel's car - remember?"
"Nice to
meet you, Brittany," Gerald W. Wright said, making a motion as though he
were tipping an imaginary hat.
"Same to
you, Mr. Wright."
"Hey,
Grimace! Come on!"
Gerald smiled
and received a smile in return. "Like the lady said -'Keep it real."
"You,
too."
*****
Jake was
sound asleep, laid back on a surprisingly comfortable couch in an office within
the Lawndale Police Headquarters, when the door opened to admit Detective
Sergeants Melinda Hadley and Denise Riker.
"Look at
that, Lindy - your boyfriend's rolling through la-la land," Riker snorted,
the annoying sound quite different than the sensual, yet firm, athletic figure
that a commitment to bodybuilding since she was seventeen had blessed her with.
"Be careful when you wake him up, girl - but then again, maybe you want to
wake only a part or two up..."
"Shut
up, Denise!"
At five-nine and one hundred and thirty pounds (none of it
fat, thank you VERY MUCH!), with butter-blonde hair cut in a short, elegant
style that matched the stylish outfit she wore, 'Lindy' Hadley looked far more
like a female lawyer or futures trader - or a high-priced call girl, in the
right outfit. That was the primary reason she (and Riker, her taller and
equally attractive African-American partner) kept getting tapped for vice squad
duty - or had, until her promotion to a gold shield ensured that she'd never
have to wear garter belts or a bustier again... unless she wanted to put on a
naughty little show for the current love of her life.
She also hated being reminded of the soft spot that she had
for Morgendorffer, or for anything that looked sad, lost and alone... In a way,
it was part of what led her into law enforcement, and she hated having to go
hard on some of the individuals her conscience cried out for her to help...
"I'll go get our poor lost lamb a cup of coffee,"
Denise snickered as she moved so Lindy could pass by. "You tell him that
his so-called wife never showed up - not that it matters, with the calls the
first floor's got about that Internet broadcast."
Lindy sighed: Officer Sha'Nequa Remy never did have her head
on straight, and was too stupid to know who not to mess with if she saw them
stepping outside the boundaries... 'Yes, but some people are MORE equal than
others...'
"We're going to take a big hit in the press about her
pulling her baton on Morgendorffer."
"That's why you said you didn't want to partner with
her," Lindy replied. "She likes being 'the Man' too much."
"Her problem's that she didn't get to be a man,"
Denise concluded. "Don't get lip gloss all over him, all right?"
Lindy ignored her partner, turning back to watch as Jake was
lying on the couch, beginning to find his way back to the land of the real. He's
such a gentle, sweet man, and he's got the soul of a child... I wish that I could
find a man like you for my own. There's got to be at least one other sweet,
sensitive man who isn't pretending and isn't married... I'm just so tired of just
being alone.
"Hmn... oh, hello, Lindy," Jake mumbled, lifting his
head and smiling as he saw the officer. "Didn't get to see you or Denise
last night."
"Yo, Iron Chef 'Tex-Mex' - I'm right here!"
"I'm sorry, Denise - I didn't see you there," Jake
smiled, looking directly at the beautiful Black officer. "I looked up to
see this luscious, angelic Nubian queen of love and war standing over me, and
it never occurred to connect that image with you - after all, you're just a
beat cop."
"For some reason, I keep penciling in 'kick Jake's ass'
on my things to do list," Denise spoke, rewarding him with a smile that
would have made most of her fellow officers pass out in shock - they thought
her scowl was the only facial expression she owned. "Now I know why. Don't
use him up too badly, Lindy - he still has to get my little boy that audition
for the amusement park ad."
"See you later," he smiled back as Denise left, and
looked back at Lindy. "What happened last night? You won one of the taster
spots off 'Z-93' and I was surprised to see you blow it off!"
"Couldn't be helped, - we worked a bad one out at the
quarry last night," she said, leaning against the door. "Three guys
got jammed by someone who knew what 'kicking someone's ass' is supposed to
mean. It wasn't pretty; whoever did it took pride in their work."
"That bad?"
"The worst one's not coming out of the hospital for at
least a month - and he's got a lot of rehab work in his future. Oh, we've seen
him before - likes to beat on women and anything smaller than him. I guess he
ran up on something bigger." Lindy smiled grimly as she spoke, remembering
the image of the man as he lay quivering in a hospital bed, a body-cast swathed
lump of bandages, tubes, blood spots and pain...
Sic semper tyrannis, you son of a bitch. If only you could do
a day in ICU for every person you put your paws on - no, someone worthwhile
might need the bed and care. If there was any real justice, you'd be in a HMO
somewhere, lying on bed sores in a lake of your own piss and getting your
morphine drip cut by two-thirds. At least you've only got half the chance you
had before of bringing another little dropping of crap into the world NOW, eh,
donkey-dick? Guess the pen is mightier than the sword - and hurts a hell of a
lot more, too.
"Lindy, you're getting that look again..." Jake had
taken to warning the blonde officer when she was moving towards what he called
her 'TV-cop face'; she only tolerated it because she knew that he was right,
and because he was concerned about her. "And has my wife come in
yet?"
"Haven't seen her - and it's been six hours."
"She was supposed to drop off some work and then come in
here at ten!" Jake complained. "She probably got caught up in
something..."
*****
"So,
Hadley's still got it bad for Morgendorffer, hmn?"
"Not
hearing you," Denise yawned, turning her back to Lieutenant Ed Mintner as
she sipped her coffee. "Does your mommy know that you're cutting class
again?"
"I
outrank you, Riker -"
"That's
why we always stand downwind. Let me enjoy my coffee in peace before I tell
someone why your office door's always locked while you're inside."
Ed wanted to
make a sharp reply but bit it off. As the youngest squad commander in the
Lawndale Police Department (and a former star of the Internal Affairs Division
who transferred to the Violent Crimes Division to make his way up to commissioner's
stars), he knew that he still hadn't completely earned the trust and respect of
his underlings even after seven months in charge of the squad. Better to simply
do the job, and let the comments slide. For now.
"Drink
it on the way to the Landon's place."
"Who?"
"The kid
from Lawndale High who OD'd on something and went psycho on one of her
classmates, remember? Ross and Wildman had it, but I pulled them off for
another job. That means I need you and Juliet there to go talk to the family
and check the kid's stuff. The doctor over at Cedars of Lawndale thinks that
someone slipped it to her, but toss her room anyway."
"But
we're off duty now!"
"Then be
polite when you toss the room. I want a report by ten a.m. tomorrow morning.
The Mayor and the school superintendent are both anxious about this, and they
want something to release to the press for the noon news."
"Don't
take it too seriously, Riker," a voice from behind spoke up, and Denise
smiled as she turned to see a man in the uniform of the Lawndale County
Sheriff's Department, stirring HIGHLY-oversugared coffee and skim milk in a
large bowl as he broke up a trio of honey buns in the mixture. "His shorts
always rode up a bit too high, and he wants to move up the ladder. Just get a
few big cases cracked for him and they'll promote the weasel out of your
hair."
"And
what do I need to do to get you out of my hair, Perez?"
"Stay
over on your side of the bed."
Deputy Manuel
Perez waggled his eyebrows at Denise. "Oh, yeah - that was in my dream. When
are you going to let me feed you and buy you things like a normal woman?"
A sound like
a deep, low rumble came from the floor just behind Manuel, and Denise looked
down to see a pair of long, furry legs that could be mistaken for weathered
logs just as a pair of yellow-flecked brown eyes looked up at her. "As
soon as you send HER on a nice long vacation. Hello, Judgement."
The
desk-sized, black-on-black German Shepard known as Judgement rose up from where
she rested, and gently nosed at the bowl Manuel stirred in. "Just a
moment, girl, they're not soft enough yet. Denise, you know that she likes you
too - why don't you give her a chance?"
"The
dog's the size of a Yugo, Manuel. I like smaller animals - animals that can be
stopped without the help of the National Guard."
"You're
going to hurt her feelings," the Latino deputy said, sliding the bowl to
his 'K-9' partner. "Here you go, girl. Slowly, now - don't scare the
people."
Denise
watched, amazed, as the police dog sniffed the bowl's contents, and then began
to slowly lap the concoction up. "You're going to ruin that dog's nose by
giving her stuff like that. Then you won't be able to use her for drug work and
you'll have to send her back where she belongs - over to Fort Hood, where all
of the other Army tanks live."
"They'll
have to get in line if they want to get their hands on Judgement. Everyone with
a badge keeps trying to peel my girl off, but we're a team - end of story. She
finds it - drugs, people, the best Mexican food on this side of the border -
and I do the rest."
"Perez,
take your mount outside with the rest of the horses," Mintner said,
passing by with an armful of folders. "Try to get a date with Riker later
- she has work to do."
"He was
an abused child," Manuel said, and smiled at the attractive Lawndale cop.
"When you finally come around, give me a call."
*****
"Great,"
Lindy said, looking out the window at the exchange. "Manuel and his
doughnut-scarfing war elephant are out there hitting on Denise - again - and I
wonder what scut job the Lieutenant wants us to pull now..."
She glanced back at Jake. "So, are you all rested and
happy?"
"I'm okay," he allowed. "Why'd you let me sleep
this long?"
"Because you definitely needed it, knowing you - and you
probably haven't eaten anything today waiting on Helen all this time, so lunch
is on me!" she said, waving Jake off the couch. "After we collect my
partner, we'll go on over to the Settlement and grab something, and you can
tell us about last night - yours had to be better than ours."
"Aren't you still on duty? The Settlement's halfway
across town, and -"
"We both just came off double shifts when the quarry call
came in," Lindy told him. "I've got the next three days off. After we
eat, I'm going home, pour myself into a tub for about an hour, and then I'm
going to sleep for the next twenty-four hours."
"In that case - let me treat the two of you to a really
nice meal. I happen to know people at Chez Pierre, and I also happen to know
that, for some reason, my money just isn't any good there - no matter what the
order is."
"It's a shame you're married, Jake," Lindy said,
watching as he slid his suit jacket on. Especially since you've already
got someone in the waiting room if and when you remove that bitch from your
life - wish I could grow my hair out like Lauriel does... "A dodge like
that would be the thing for a man who's dating."
"You'd think that Helen would let me take her out for
dinner or even a fancy lunch,"
Jake chimed along, "but it's always 'I've got work to
do!" or 'Eric and the partners wouldn't look kindly on an associate who
just wastes her time and the firm's acting like a character in a soap opera -
just sitting around in the so-called 'lap of luxury', sipping drinks and acting
like they're the only important thing in the world!"
Lindy laughed
out loud at Jake's dead-on impersonation of Helen, complete with hand waving
and Helen's haughty, wealth-cultivated accent. "You had better not ever
let her catch you doing that!"
"Well,
it's not as if she goes out of her way to have few laughs..."
*****
"You have got to be kidding - an hour and ten
minutes?"
"I met Jake just before he turned eighteen, Bronwyn.
That's the thing - if you want them to be good at it, you've got to get them
when they're young!" Helen laughed, taking another deep drink of the tangy
wine in her glass. "That way, you train 'em up right the first time,
teaching them to do what makes you feel good instead of having to break
them of the bullshit that they see James Bond and Hugh Hefner pushing. Men
don't understand that it's about US - making sure that we get what we came for.
After all - if they want us to come back over for dinner again, then they need
to serve up a full-course meal right the first time!"
"I know that's the truth," the redhead laughed, her
face slightly flushed with the color that comes only from intoxication. "I
met Charles when he was twenty-two, and you wouldn't believe the work I had to
put into putting him on the leash! I love my Charles, yes I do, but Ruttheimers
are sometimes the worst! It's like they're born already aroused and thinking
that the opposite sexes were put here just to scratch that itch!"
Bronwyn leaned forward and speared another thin slice of rare
roast beef off her plate, swirling it around before eagerly devouring it.
"I thought that a good lunch would be appropriate for talking over
business," she continued, "but I didn't realize that we were so much
alike!"
Helen looked around the colossal area and spectacular
surroundings that made up the Ruttheimer Gazebo, and turned back to her
hostess. "We're not that much alike..."
"Helen, please! The only differences between us would be
hairstyle & color, area of expertise, the number of children we have and
the fact that you don't let your dorsal fin ride as high in the water as
I do!" Bronwyn laughed, and washed down the beef with another drink of the
fruity Italian wine. "Oh, come on! You think I haven't picked up on that
from 'the Street'? You're just biding your time at that law firm until you make
partner - and then, you're going to carry out a pogrom there that'll make
Stalin weep! I have done it before, you know..."
The shorter woman nodded; she had heard about Bronwyn's
lightning-swift and vicious decapitation of a Japanese firm that had tried to
come in on a hostile takeover of RADIAL - and of several members of RADIAL's
own Board of Directors, when she found out about the complicity within. People
in the financial community, and others closely associated with them, still
whispered in board rooms and limousines about the ruthless, gangland-style
tactics Bronwyn mercilessly employed on the 'Day of Rutting' - not to mention
the SEC investigations she had initiated that fully vaporized everyone on the
wrong side of Bronwyn's holy, cleansing flames...
"I'll bet you spent the '60's' in handmade clothing and
sandals, protesting the war and the draft, too! What did they call you?"
"They hung 'Lavender' on me," Helen admitted.
"You?"
"Oh, I was 'Bronwyn' all the way through. I dressed every
day the way any good little Irish Catholic girl out of Boston should, and made
my people angrier than hell when I kept getting busted. I still remember how
the people I hung with tried to nickname me 'Big Red,' but I was like, 'If I'm
going to be free, I'm going to be free my way as myself - not the fashionable
way that everyone's doing by getting a nickname and hiding who I am. Now shut
up, gimme another toke, then get over here and do me."
"I'll just bet that you were a real fireball."
"I think of it in a reasonable way," Bronwyn said.
"Unless one of my kids comes home holding hands with 'E.T.', I really
don't have room to talk about who they find out there or how they do it. Even
then, all I ask is that it's someone who's not going to hurt my babies and make
them feel bad about themselves. That's all I ask."
"Were you really THAT wild?" Helen usually didn't
pry into other's business, but Bronwyn was a fascinating person with a
background much like hers - and several bottles of wine did loosen the screws
on her curiosity.
"Helen, I probably did everything but the 'Ed Sullivan'
show," she remarked casually. "I was a little tramp. And where did
you sow your wild oats?"
"Europe," she admitted, inwardly wondering why she
was telling a secret that had never seen daylight before. "Paris, Milan,
Corsica, and Barcelona... with a weekend side trip to Amsterdam. My mother gave
me a four-week trip for my Christmas present during my first year in law school
- I think she thought I'd find someone over there and get rid of Jake."
"I see that you didn't find someone else."
"That doesn't mean that I didn't look around... a
lot," Helen giggled, amazed that she was capable of the sound. "You
know, every woman should have a 'Paolo' in her life, even if it's for just one
night."
"That's because you're a WASP, Helen. If you're an Irish
Catholic girl, then it's got to be an 'Ian', with a strong, muscled back, long
hair with a touch of curl, a twinkle in his eye, and a book of sonnets or
poetry. You don't know what making love is, Helen, until an 'Ian's' made love
to you under a Irish sky, with the smell of all nature about you."
"Oh, yes, I do. You should try a 'Paolo', in a rose-petal
strewn bed in the center of a bedroom that looks like the foyer of a church,
with candles and silk all over, with open windows so the cool night air can
gently blow through, and the scent of the sea just barely comes through,"
Helen continued. "Being young only comes once. I'm glad I didn't waste it
all."
"Did you have fun?"
"Yes..."
"Did you help anybody get out from under the
bullshit?"
"I think so."
"Was the sex great?"
"It wasn't bad."
"And we had penicillin, Pink Floyd and the joy of seeing
'Tricky Dick' get the axe, so we didn't waste anything," Bronwyn told her.
"You know - I've wanted to talk to you for a while, and when Little
Charles told me about what that horrid policewoman did last night, I felt that
I needed to make the time to come and meet you. I've been meaning for some time
to inquire about retaining your services as my personal attorney -"
Helen barely kept from choking on her green vegetables and
goat-cheese medley at that; such a move by her would increase the incoming cash
flow to the firm by at least an order of five - and could mean her partnership
by the end of the week.
"- But I didn't realize that I'd find such a good friend
as well."
Bronwyn nodded at the sudden look of surprise on Helen's face;
for her part, Helen felt the need to glance at her watch - and realized that it
was almost four P.M.! We've been out here talking and drinking since at
least ten-thirty, and I haven't spent that much time just wasting time since...
since...
I can't remember the last time I've wasted this much time -
and I don't believe that I actually haven't taken a cellular phone call or even
touched my phone in hours... Eric'll think that I - to hell with what he thinks!
"I haven't had a friend that I could do things like this
with," Helen admitted ruefully. "They all think I'm a bitch."
"True," Bronwyn said. "Just so long as they
understand that you're the Queen Bitch, so everybody knows what's coming if
they step out of line. If they show proper respect, you and I may choose not to
notice when they slip up here and there."
"You don't care if they think of you that way?"
"There are the people I care about, the ones I can use -
and everyone else had best stay out of my way," Bronwyn stated flatly.
"I care about my babies, my man and most of the people who work for
Charles and me."
She lifted her glass. "I also care about my
friends."
"Friends," Helen said, trying out the word as if it
were a newly forged sword, feeling the heft and balance. "A friend."
She also lifted her glass in salute. "It's nice to have
friends."
Bronwyn nodded, and looked over as she saw Michelle and
Danielle Ruttheimer, her oldest daughters, as they ran into the gazebo and over
to their mother. "Mom, Danny broke the car again!" Michelle
complained. "I needed it to go over to Oakwood tonight, and -"
"Follow that God-awful so-called band to listen to them
kill cats with their music!" the other auburn-haired twin snapped back.
"Micky acts like that scarecrow fronting Mystik Spiral's 'so special and
so cute' - somebody needs to feed him a sandwich and throw him into a music
book! That's as close as he'll EVER get to real music! Come on - 'Ow, my nose?
Ow, my face?' If you played their tape in a pet shop, you'd get busted for
animal cruelty!"
"Girls, go inside. I'll take care of everything
later-" Bronwyn began.
"You get a few music reviews published, and NOW you're
Miss Rolling Stone! You don't know music, and you're still pissed off because
the guy in the leather didn't give you any play when you came on to him -"
"Danny, Micky, I have a guest..." Bronwyn interrupted
again, but the twins weren't paying any attention to their mother.
"I'm not the one who said he dressed like he's in the gay
version of 'Gladiator' - but since we look alike, it got back to him that it
was me, you big-mouthed tramp!
"Big-mouthed tramp? The only reason your mouth's so small
is because you don't need to open up that wide for a -"
"That's it!" Bronwyn snapped, rising up and towering
a good foot over her twins. "Both of you, be quiet and get up to your
rooms right now! No television, no phones, no electronics of any kind until I
come up and deal with the both of you!"
The attractive twins looked at each other in a confused
manner, and one of them spoke. "Mom, you can't ground us. We're
twenty-one."
"Besides, Mom," the other parroted, "we don't
even live here any more, and -"
A very large chunk of roast beef barely missed the head of a
twin! "And what is it about the words that are coming out of my mouth that
you two wee beasts don't understand?" Bronwyn shouted, her deep, throaty
Irish accent coming to the fore. "I said get up to your rooms before I
burn your overly rounded little backsides off right here and now - and don't
think that Helen here hasn't seen someone take a belt to their child
before!"
"Mom, you can't use a belt on a kid - that's child
abuse-"
A solid lump of meat, fully six pounds in weight, flew through
the air and actually grazed the back of the other twin's head!
"I'VE GOT THE MONEY FOR THE FINE! GET OUT!"
"That's one blast furnace of a temper you've got,"
Helen commented, watching the twins sprint towards the main house. "I
can't wait until I get to see it in action on someone you don't like."
"Part of your new job'll be to keep me from doing that to
the ones I don't like. I won't be able to get back into their good graces with
an honest hug, money and new 'Playstation 2' games," Bronwyn said, her
anger bleeding off as she looked at the lumps of meat on the floor. "Damn.
That's why I usually keep grapefruits out on the table."
"I understand. I have daughters, too."
"No sons?"
"I wasn't that lucky."
"Not exactly luck. You don't have to worry about your baby
boy running into some bimbo who'll try her best to siphon his trust fund out
from beneath him - or worse, playing 'wounded dove' to get his sympathy and
have him doing all sorts of fool things for her."
"My concern's that I'll be a grandmother before my
daughter graduates."
"You said 'daughter'. Only one's a problem?"
"I'm not worried about Daria - but Quinn; I just pray
that she can make it through the next year without getting pregnant."
"My oldest son graduates next year."
"So does my older daughter - the younger graduates the
year after."
There was a moment of silence, and a look of purpose went
across the table between the two friends...
"This is a picture of Daria, and a shot of Quinn,"
Helen said, fishing out a pair of photos. "She's almost seventeen."
"They're both attractive... and Quinn - oh, she's adorable
- and I just love her hair," Bronwyn cooed, bringing out a shot of Upchuck
for view. "This is my Little Charles..."
"The boy who helped me out last night," Helen said.
"He's a wonderful young man."
"He'll be in a fight for valedictorian next year."
"I know - against my oldest daughter."
"Let's talk about Quinn."
"What would you like to know?"
"What kind of person is she?"
"She's a touch flighty," Helen admitted, "but
that's because she's caught up in this little club. We got her a tutor over the
Christmas break and that's really helped her; she's buckled down and started
living up to her potential. I understand from her teachers that she's started
to really do well in math and history - and they're REALLY excited about her
math potentials."
"Little Charles has always done well in school - even so,
he really doesn't need to consider a career based on how much money he can
earn. Because of that, I've been trying to have him become more involved in the
arts - he possibly could become a true name in the art world, if he'd only put
his soul into it. I'll show you some of the pieces he's painted; he's done some
truly inspired work."
"I think that Quinn would be flattered and overwhelmed if
a gracious and extraordinarily talented young man were to offer to paint a
portrait of her," Helen continued, a light coming on in her eyes. "It
would be a wonderful gesture, one I can't see her turning away."
"Nor my Little Charles," Bronwyn finished, the same
light glowing in her eyes. "I believe that he would consider the chance to
have such a beautiful young woman model for him an opportunity not to be missed
- and the time they spend together as he paints will give them a chance to get
to know one another..."
There was another slight moment of silence.
"You know - when Quinn graduates and takes the summer to
prepare for school, Little Charles might possibly be able to help her out a
bit. After all, he won't be just another boy from high school - he'll be a
college man."
"This is true," Helen spoke. "You know - when
Quinn leaves for college two years from now, she'll be leaving not as a child,
but as a woman. She'll have reached... the age of consent."
"This, then, is also true," Bronwyn replied.
"You know - the University of Texas at Lawndale has a very active Greek
system, and the most incredible academic programs..."
"Academic programs? Which ones would the children be
interested in?"
"Oh, I wouldn't worry about that," the Olympian
redhead said, raising her wineglass. "We have more than a year and a half
to make those decisions for them."
"The University of Texas at Lawndale," the lawyer
replied, her glass raised in return. "I find it just remarkable that both
your son and my daughter are thinking about attending school there."
"Isn't that an interesting coincidence," Bronwyn
Ruttheimer remarked.
"Yes, isn't it just," Helen Morgendorffer concurred.
The two women of substance drank their toast - and the wheels
began to turn...
*****
Daria sat
alone in the bleachers, looking down at the football field and the school
grounds, now nearly deserted, with a benign look on her face and some serious
soul-searching going on in her mind. She had an interesting, if somewhat short
discussion with Andrea, who wanted to know about how she and Trent were doing...
'And I'll have to kill you if it gets back to anyone that I
actually asked you this, but could I PLEEEZE see the diamond necklace that he
gave you? Jane told me about it, and I know it's so stupid to act like this,
but please... just once?'
The look on
Daria's face spoke volumes, and the next five minutes saw her reconstructing
events of the last day or so... and feeling waves of absolute shame, regret and
anger at herself wash her masks of cynicism and self-righteousness away without
struggle. I knew that things were... a little different lately between Trent
and me: some of the looks, and the way he's been doing things...He wanted for
there to be an 'us'.
And then I
went and blew it all to hell. Oh, God, what did I do? He was going to come to
me last night... he was going to tell me that he... I have to go and talk to him -
and Jane, too. There's going to be some serious eating of crow, but I have to
put this right... I- I...
I love them.
A familiar
engine noise in the distance caught Daria's attention, and she saw Trent's car
pull into the LHS parking lot. Well, there's no time like the present. I'll
talk to Trent, and then I'll go over to their house and wait for Jane. Pizza
King's stock is going up tonight, because I'm buying enough pizza for Jane to
qualify her for Italian citizenship... and as for Trent... A wan, knowing smile
went across Daria's face.
I think
that I can figure out a way to apologize properly to him...
*****
Trent sat in
the driver's seat of his car for a good ten minutes, going over the things in
his head that he wanted to say to the Doctor and the things he wanted to tell
him.
Doc Kyle,
I know that you're probably pissed off at me because I didn't come in on your
gig, but it wasn't my thing - the money didn't have anything to do with it, and
yeah, I could have made things a lot better for Janey and me with it. I could
have done a lot for Janey with that kind of cash - but it's more important that
I was around for her, not hopping around the world with a baby supercomputer on
my back while tossing cash back towards her - that's what the P's do to her
now. I always wondered if I had made the right decision, and then one day, a
person came along on the way to Alternapaloosa and told me that I needed to at
least try for my own dreams. Even if I fail, I still have the knowledge of
knowing that I tried... and that's something I wouldn't have had if I had gone
off with your people. I learned a lot in your seminar, and the summer that I
spent at Grove Hills, but you've got to let that go. I even kept the gizmo your
buddy Davers sent me on my seventeenth birthday, even though I keep it in the
back of the closet in the wall...
I can't let
you get Janey into that stuff. Even though you had them teach me stuff that
still helps me out - she needs to do her own thing.
"Trent."
Flowing from
reverie to reality, Trent's eyes flicked over onto Daria.
"Trent -
can we talk?"
Wordlessly,
Trent extracted himself from his car and focused himself on the slender beauty
before him. A day earlier, and this moment would have been heavy with promise,
with the simmering chemistry between them all but about to churn over and
breach the surface of her stoic nature and his reticence... but now, his emotional
landscape was unnaturally quiescent, divorced from sensation, or reaction, or
the input of his own feelings. He had taken time to touch his inner self - and
in reaching a state of transcendence, had come to several conclusions...
"Trent, I've got a lot of stuff I have to say - no, I
don't. I only have a couple of things to say."
Daria didn't
notice how Trent's expression didn't change.
"Last
night, you tried to be there for me, and I returned the favor by saying the
most horrible things imaginable to you. It didn't matter what I was going
through, or how I felt, I had no right to attack you the way I did. I had no
right to denigrate you, your family, your dreams and goals, and I don't have
any excuse for what I did. All I can say is that I was hurting, and when I saw
the concern you had in your eyes for me and you didn't expect anything in
return, it was as if the universe was Lucy from 'Peanuts', holding you out like
the football and daring me to kick it so it could pull it away and see me lying
out while you went off with Monique, or my cousin, or someone else -'
Trent had
never seen Daria go off-course in a conversation. "What I did to you last
night was wrong. I know that it was wrong. It was wrong, and even worse when I
actually take the time to step back from myself and realize how much that I
-"
Her voice
caught, and she forced herself to maintain eye contact with Trent. "I'm
sorry, Trent. I don't know how long or what it'll take to convince you of that,
but I am sorry for what I said to you. I know you're probably really angry at
me, but when you feel that you're ready - I hope that we can still be
friends."
Daria took a
deep breath, and took the biggest gamble of her young life; she reached out and
took his hands in her own, then looked up, her eyes full of hope and promise.
"Maybe... we can someday be more than friends."
Trent looked
down at her hands, and as gently as he could, disengaged his hands from hers
while letting the look of shock and horror wash past him.
"I'm
sorry, Daria. I'm not sure if that's something that we can even look to. Not in
the near future, and not anytime soon. Not more than friends... not even
friends."
Daria's
expression went blank.
"I
understand that you've been hurt, Daria," he said, and she heard him;
absorbing what he said while trying her best not to crumble in front of the man
she loved. "I understand that someone really must have caused a lot of pain
for you, and yesterday, it must have been more than you could bear. I can tell
that you're angry at whomever it is that caused you pain - but angry and hurt
doesn't explain everything."
He took a
slight step away from Daria. "One of the things that makes you special is
that you say what you know is true. You don't sugarcoat things; you want to
face the truth. That's why I have to believe you're sorry for the effect that
saying those things would have on me - but not for saying them. How could you
be? On some level, you must believe that there's truth to what you said. You
have to believe that, otherwise, it wouldn't have been there for you to use.
Somewhere deep inside yourself, you know that I'm right - and in that same
place, you know that there's never going to be an 'us'." Trent swallowed.
"I may want to be there for you, and you may want me there - but you don't
respect me, and you certainly don't need me. You don't need me in your life...
you don't need me for anything."
"Trent,
I need -"
"What you
need... is something more than I can give you, or be for you, Daria," he
interrupted. "If there was something, anything that I could do or become
that I truly thought would help - you wouldn't have to ask. My forgiveness? You
have it. My friendship? When you truly want it - when it would really be
worthwhile - it'll be there, and you won't have to wonder about it. My
love?"
Trent looked away from her. "It wouldn't be enough. You
need more than my love - and I can't love someone who doesn't respect me, too.
You need help - and you need to admit to someone that you need it, too. The
problem is that you won't. You're never going to let anyone in to help you,
Daria. You won't ever let me in, because I'm not good enough for you. In your
eyes, no one will ever be good enough - and the sad thing is that not even you
know why."
He started away. "Find something or someone who can guide
you to the help you need, Daria. Let someone help you find yourself. Let them
show you that whatever is wrong doesn't need to stay that way - and that simply
needing or even asking for help isn't a bad thing, either."
Trent began moving towards the building, and Daria followed
him with her gaze.
"Trent. I'm sorry."
He slowed a beat, knowing what it must have cost the woman
behind him in pride and dignity to make the gesture of saying those three
words, a gesture that - for any other female, would have been expressed in a
shower of desperate tears and promises of change and eternal devotion - but
kept moving, not even turning back to face her.
"I know you mean it when you say you're sorry, Daria -
but it's done."
*****
"Did you
see the look on the Swede's face when she came out of Landon's room? Man,
whatever drug that kid took really ruined her world!"
"From
what I heard, someone slipped it to her - she's supposed to be the smartest kid
over there at Lawndale High!"
"And
nobody ever expects the smart, perfect ones to act like little freaks when no
one else is around, either!" the first voice shot back. "She's
probably selling the stuff, and acting like an angelic little virgin when we
all know it's going to come out that she's the biggest little WHORE in that
entire school -!"
The trio of
nurses on duty in the C/ICU observation station instantly snapped their mouths
shut as Sandi stepped around the desk and stood before them. "Can I help
you, little girl?"
"I want
to know how Jodie Landon is doing."
Perhaps it
was the precise, inflection-free manner that she spoke in that frightened the
three nurses, each one at least ten years older than Sandi. Perhaps it was the
bare, pale complexion she sported, without a touch of makeup, along with the
uber-tight 'Captain Janeway power-bun' her hair was in, reminiscent of the
hairstyle Kate Mulgrew wore her hair during the first season of 'Star Trek:
Voyager'.
Perhaps it
was the uniform, complete with decorations and skill-tabs. She wore the garb of
a 1st Lieutenant in the U.S. Air Force Commandos, complete with
beret and unit flashes - and no suggestion of a smile. She, Ted, Jane, Brittany
and Mack (who had also been recruited in haste) had received the things they
would need for their parts in Upchuck's plan. In Sandi's case (she was now one
of the team leaders - Upchuck was one fast talker and worked even faster), that
meant an Air Force uniform, ID cards and a BIG folder of information. The
entire group of students were to meet at the school tonight for a 'test run' -
and Sandi was REALLY stunned to find out what that really meant - so she suited
up before she came to the hospital.
Perhaps it was
the nonreflective, unblinking stare that Sandi fastened upon the nurses.
She wasn't
even sure why she came. It was common knowledge that she and Jodie were nowhere
near friendly to one another - and the truth was that she, Sandi, was mainly
responsible for that. The events were too many to list - and she really didn't
want to.
So why was
she here? Certainly not to listen to these bitches run Jodie down. They didn't
know her well enough for that.
One of the nurses tried to summon up a touch
of attitude - the one who was running Jodie down. "Who are you?"
"Wanda -
shut up."
The three
nurses went silent as Sarah the Swede walked up to the desk. She looked Sandi
over for a long time, then waved her towards a room. "This way,
Lieutenant... Griffin," she said blandly, looking at her nametag.
Sandi
followed quietly, walking behind the towering nurse and past the hospital
security guard into the ICU unit where Jodie was still wired up and on a
respirator. "I figured they'd send someone to look in on the girl - I
didn't think anyone would be so blatant to come in uniform," the Swede sighed.
"You DELPHI goons are far, far too arrogant for your own good - and one
day, it's going to bite you right in the ass. They didn't even have the decency
to send someone with some rank, either - just some wet-behind-the-ears little
wench who's probably just fresh out of training down in Georgia."
The Swede
looked over the various devices surrounding the bed, then turned back to Sandi
- but the young woman could see a touch of fear behind the attitude. "So,
what are you - somebody sent just to put the fear of God into everybody
here?"
In her
seventeen years, one lesson Sandi had seared into her soul was 'When you want
to know something, just be quiet and let them tell you everything.' She set her
jaw, looked the woman in the eye, and stayed silent...
The fear in
the woman's eyes blossomed to a level Sandi had never seen, even in Stacy
Rowe's eyes. "Here are her charts - if you need anything else, you have to
talk to Dr. Phillips."
The woman all
but ran out of the room.
Sandi watched
her go, then turned her eyes toward the guard.
"I'm not
supposed to leave the patient alone."
Sandi stopped
and looked at the guard.
After the
guard mumbled something about 'waiting outside' and darting off, Sandi went
over to the bed where Jodie lay. She looked at the way she was bandaged - it
looked like she was in a major accident, complete with respirator, neck brace,
restraints - and sympathy mixed with shame.
"Hey,
Landon - I mean, hello, Jodie. Everyone's talking about you back at
school," she said, sitting down on a stool next to the bed. "They all
know that somebody slipped you some drugs, but they don't know who. Don't
worry, though - Colonel Klink-of-the Shot-Glass'll run down whoever did this to
you-"
Her voice
caught for a second, and her hand unconsciously went to her neck, where the
bruises of the past day's events were hidden by the ascot she wore.
"First, I don't blame you for this. You weren't yourself, and everybody
knows it. I blame whoever gave you the drugs - and I almost feel sorry for them
if Ms. Li gets to them before the police do. Even my mother's shut up - after
seeing what you went through yesterday, she knows that something was wrong and
you weren't responsible."
She brushed a
wayward hair off the front of her uniform. "Hey, what do you think?
Upchuck had... HAS one for you, too. He wanted all of us to be in on his crazy
idea to ace the Doctor's class, and you should see the machine he had built! He
wanted you to be - he wanted you in for the spot that I'm in now... yeah, uniform
and everything! He said that he always saw you as a Navy officer - a real
'Captain America', doing whatever the country needed, like you are at school. I
thought he only saw you as another girl to try and score on. I guess he was
more right about you than I was. I thought that I could do anything that you
could. Truth is, you're the one who always deserved to be in the front, and me
- I always ended up stealing your place in the spotlight, and 'stealing' is the
right word. Look at this - even now, I've got the space that should have been
yours. No wonder something deep in you wanted to flatten me out."
Sandi leaned
forward. "Last night, I looked in my mirror, and I wondered what it would
be like if I wasn't in the world. I realized a lot of things about myself - and
about people like you. People like you - you make a difference in the world.
You make things better - and people like me..." She stopped. "I won't
say that I wish I could trade places with you. I don't - and I don't want to
know what you're going through. I don't even want to imagine it."
The
dark-haired young woman stood up. "I don't know what to think, Jodie. I
know that people wouldn't care as much if it were me up here - and I know that
they shouldn't, either. You're more impor- well, those women shouldn't have
been saying those things about you. That's what people would have been saying
about me... if they had even bothered to notice at all. Get well soon, Jodie.
Everybody needs you back."
The chart
under her arm, Sandi walked out of the room and past the nurses' station, where
the nurse named Wanda turned and stood up. "Excuse me, 'G.I. Jane' - but
you can't take that with you."
Something
snapped inside Sandi, and Wanda wilted visibly as she turned and gave her a
look that - in a movie - would have turned her into wisps of smoke and
free-floating atoms. "Uh, I meant that, well, it's hospital policy -"
Sandi
carefully placed the medical chart on the counter, and looked at the
now-trembling nurse's nametag for what seemed to be a long, long time.
"Wanda
Nelson."
The nurse
went white as Sandi's eyes moved from the nametag to her eyes, now quivering
and blinking in fear.
"I know
you now."
She turned
and walked away, ignoring the strong, sudden scent of ammonia and the rapidly
growing spot of liquid darkness that grew outwards from where Wanda stood,
rooted and unable to move.
*****
"You're
not gonna find any contraband in there," Rachel Landon said, adjusting her
lavender-colored 'smiley' T-shirt as she stood in the doorway of her sister's
room and watched Lindy and Denise go through Jodie's belongings. "They're
trying to say Jodie was high or something - the only thing she's that crazy
about are those funky potato chips..."
"You
don't think your sister was into the drug crap."
"She
wouldn't have the time, the way everybody always expects her to do things for
them and still be 'big student on campus', the girl said to Denise, rubbing her
neck. "Everything Jodie does is on a schedule - she probably only talks to
her boyfriend when he's on the schedule."
"Rachel,
go in your room and do your homework," Michelle said, walking into view.
"Officers, if you need to ask questions about Jodie, I don't care for you
going to my other daughter."
"Fair
enough," Lindy said, slightly uneasy about the meticulously clean and
arranged air of Jodie's room - from her psych training, she recalled that
persons with mental, well, irregularities, she preferred to say, had an
obsession with neatness and order in their lives. Jodie's room, she felt, all
but screamed 'Sooner or later, everybody - it's all just a matter of time...
"Mrs. Landon, do you believe that Jodie was taking any form of
drugs?"
"No,"
she answered bluntly. "Jodie kept herself on a schedule that simply
ensured that she wouldn't have time for any of that escapist nonsense - she's
understood ever since she was a little girl that drugs have no place in the
life of any Black person who wants to be a winner!"
In response
to the uncomfortable looks of the two officers, Michelle plunged on. "You
know I'm right - every time something goes wrong with any Black child, the
first question everybody wants to know is 'Was she high? Was she doing drugs?'
It's not like something else could have happened - oh, no, they're 'Black
folks', so they had to be into drugs! My baby's so afraid that someone'll say
that about her that she doesn't even take aspirin for headaches!"
"I
couldn't find anything," Denise said, more than a note of apology in her
tones as she went up to Michelle. "Mrs. Landon - I really don't think that
Jodie was into the drug scene. The question is, then, who would slip your
daughter a drug, and why?"
"The
'why' is easy," Michelle said. "My baby's the best that ever came out
of that school. Someone wants her to lose any chance she's got for a good life
just as she's about to have all of the recruiters from the REAL colleges come
sniffing around her - you know no decent school's going to take any student
with a history of drugs. Someone wants to drag my baby down because they're
jealous, or because they can't do what she can, or just because they're petty
little bitches who want to hurt her because they can!"
"Why do
you think girls are behind this?"
"If it
was a guy, he'd have set it up to screw her," Denise told her partner.
"GHB and all the date-rape drugs are the thing now. This was done to make
Jodie Landon look bad."
"She's
got a lot of potato chips," Lindy commented, looking at the bags of chips
in a box next to Jodie's desk. "Bayou Boiler Chips... 'HELL-flavored?' Man,
that kid must really like the hot stuff!"
"She got
those from a friend at school," Michelle told them. "No one else can
eat them like that - she's the only one with a taste for fire. Please - take
one, if you think it's important."
"Thank
you, ma'am," Lindy said, scooping one up. "Is there anything else
that you can think of that might help us?"
"What
about her computer?" Denise asked. "Is there anything that you know
about on the computer that may help us?"
"Yes,"
she told them, her voice suddenly flat as she turned and walked out of the
room.
The two
detectives shared a shrug, then followed Michelle to the living room and to a
small table, upon which sat a large collection of printed pages. "This is
her diary - she kept it all on computer," Michelle said woodenly. "I
called a friend from my old job to come over, open up the files and print them
out so I could read them... I thought I'd find out something to help. Take
them..."
The
detectives glanced at one another, and Denise scooped the pages up. "If
there's anything else you want to talk to us about -"
"Just -
just take those papers, and get out."
*****
Trent Lane,
unlike most people, had no problems when it came to returning to Lawndale High
School. Most high school graduates either detest even the slightest mention of
their high school years and fear returning to their old stomping grounds the
way a vampire fears hallowed ground, or relish their return the way a Macarthur
or a victorious Caesar relishes his return. The latter act as they do because
they reached their peak in high school, enjoying the belief that they will -
for a few brief moments - reign again as kings and queens of old did, while the
former act as they do because they remember high school as elderly Jews
remember the Holocaust. This is why many, even most persons avoid or even
refuse to go to their high schools for reunions. To those persons, two simple
words ring true: 'Never again.'
That mental
baggage was something that Trent had never managed to accumulate. He simply saw
those four years as something to get through on his way to 'the Prize'. The
teachers, the average Joes, the brains and the burners, the
pretty-beyond-perfect cheerleaders and the stylish clique-queens, the strutting
jocks and the way-cool mack daddies - they all had their own date with the
Inquisitor, that robotic-dude from the 'Red Dwarf' show out of England. They'd
have to justify themselves and what they did to themselves and everybody else
when they looked in the mirror, and that was cool; they got rewarded or
punished on their own - it didn't have anything to do with him or the way he
lived his life. You can live your lives how you want, just so you remember
that your rights end at my nose - and vice versa. I'm cool with that. I'll just
go my way, and do my thing, and I'll try not to get into your face with my own
dream trip. That's why I never jammed with other guys at lunch hour in the
cafeteria or out in the parking lot: I can see how some people might not be
down with my music. That's cool, too, as long as they're decent about it.
Hey - when it
comes down to it - school's just another building with a lot a people in it
most of the day... the foods in the cafeteria just sucks more here.
During his
four years of high school, Trent was the envy of more people than he would ever
know... or would have ever believed. Ferris Bueller had absolutely nothing on
Trent Lane.
*****
"So,
this is what you do when you want to pretend that you're a real person,
hmn?"
"Erin,
please."
"Kyle..."
Kyle watched
as Erin stepped into the room, and he tapped a few keys on the keyboard of the
room's computer terminal, where he was working on assignments for his seminar.
"No sex now - I'm working."
"No,
you're preparing papers for the students," Erin said, sitting down in a
student's desk in front of Kyle and displaying a spectacular pair of legs.
"You'll get to work when you get home. You have a lot to make up
for."
"I have
a lot to make up for? I do?"
"Oh,
please. Look me directly in the eye and tell me that you didn't stray one
single time!"
Kyle sat his
pen down and looked Erin directly in the eye. "I definitely had
opportunities, Erin. I won't lie about that."
He stood up,
and Erin looked at him with remorse as he came around the desk and took her
hands in his own. "But I didn't think about straying. I didn't have to. I
knew that I had someone at home, who was waiting for me. I wouldn't do that to
her."
Neither of
them happened to notice Upchuck, who happened to pass by at that moment - and
stopped to conduct an intensive sensor sweep of everything going on.
Tears
appeared in Erin's eyes. "Bastard. And I still care for you, too."
"Yeah,
well, I -" He caught himself as he was about to speak, and Erin stood up.
"You
can't even say it," she clucked softly. "I'll be back... I don't want
to look like a raccoon here."
"Hey, I
like raccoons. They're cute, and they're clever, and they really know how to do
a lot with their hands."
"I'll be
right back."
Kyle returned
to his desk as the door closed, and he had barely placed pen back to paper when
he heard it re-open. "Decided to find out if raccoons really do turn me
on, hmn?"
"Hey,
Doc Kyle - not my business what you like, but animals..."
The pen fell,
suddenly forgotten as Kyle's eyes came up slowly. "Trent."
"Been a
while, doc."
"Trent."
Kyle echoed, not believing his eyes. "You grew up, kid. You could use a
meal, though - and a set of free weights. What do you weigh - a buck-fifty,
soaking wet?"
"The
chicks dig the look," Trent said simply. "No complaints yet."
"Probably
because they're too drunk or too high to care," Kyle shot back.
"Been
keeping track of me?"
"You
wanted free and clear, and I keep my word," was the response, "or did
you think I faked surprise when you walked in? I've heard things - but that's
it."
"What
happened to 'Forewarned is Forearmed?"
"For you
- it went out the window the same time you decided that you'd rather piss away
your mind and your skills than make something of yourself," Kyle said, the
room growing colder as he spoke. "Why are you here, kid?"
"My
sister's in your seminar. Don't talk to her about joining up."
"At
least you haven't lost your balls. I'm not trying to recruit Jane - she's just
an average kid. I understand she's got art skills, and potential as a
long-distance runner."
"But you
don't want her - especially since you figure that if you do get her, I'll come
along to keep an eye on her."
Kyle slammed
his fist down on the desk, and Trent's eyebrows raised. "One. I gave you
my word. You wanted out - you're all the way out. Don't call me a liar
again."
He stood up and marched over to Trent. "Two. I got
demoted, sent up for an internal review, lost my slot as a field leader, lost
some damned good friends and any chance I had to make General in this lifetime,
got stuck for a year in a listening post north of the Arctic Circle where I
spent double shifts running audio feeds on seals getting butt-fucked in the
dark by polar bears and looking at snow mounds for recreation - not to mention
losing a woman I cared about to a himbo with a sloping forehead and a fat
wallet while I was gone AND coming THIS CLOSE to being sent up for a general
court-martial on charges of barratry, dereliction of duty, failure to follow
orders, insubordination and TWO shots of conduct unbecoming - ALL BECAUSE I
DIDN'T RECRUIT YOU. "
To his credit, Trent didn't flinch as Kyle projected at him
with a voice that made the windows rattle - and then, as he came face-to-face
with Trent, dropped his tones to a low, precise series of sound that held the
inherent menace of a stiletto blade slipping from a leather sheath.
"If I went through all that and still didn't force you to
come aboard, then trying to get you to join up by going through your sister in
a class I'm teaching seems kind of weak - don't you think?"
"Kyle, I was halfway to the bathroom
when I heard you shouting," Erin said, coming back through the door.
"What are - "
She stopped in mid-stride.
"Trent."
Trent turned,
the smile on his face not going unnoticed by Kyle. "Hey, Erin."
"What
are you doing here, Trent?"
"Stuff with my sister," he said. "I'll tell the
band I saw you."
"Tell
them I'm behaving myself, but that's all I'll promise for now."
"How's
the husband?"
"Gone,"
she said, and Trent's eyes went up as she batted her eyelashes at him.
"Depending on this guy, you might have a shot."
"Erin -
like I said before, I like you a lot, and -"
"So -
you two know each other..."
By the way
both Erin and Trent flinched as nuclear fire boiled in Kyle's eyes, their
slight exchange couldn't have been any worse.
"Fascinating."
Trent's eyes
widened as he could all but see the emotions - anger, jealousy, and more than a
little hurt and disappointment - all but tearing and roiling just behind the
fire: He really, actually cares more than a bit about her - and it makes him
afraid...
"Doc, wait a
sec-"
"Close
your eyes, Trent."
Trent did as
he was told.
"Kyle,
what are you -" Erin began.
WHAM!
"Oh,
man..." Trent groaned, bent over in pain from the shot to the stomach as
Erin ran over to him. "I expected this years ago..."
Erin eased
Trent back into a chair, then whirled around to face Kyle. "What the hell
did you do that for?"
"Well,
damn, Erin - first dumb-ass football players, and now stringy wannabe
musicians! Where the hell do you draw the line?"
"At
smart-ass Marines who play teacher!" she shot back. "We met a few
months back, I had a little infatuation - and NOTHING HAPPENED!"
"So he
said no."
The sound of
the slap echoed through the room. "Don't bother calling me."
"Couldn't
if I wanted to - I left my whistle back at the dog show."
"Hey,
you two - don't say things you're going to regret later-" Trent began,
gasping out the words.
"SHUT
UP!" they barked in unison at him.
"You two
really do love one another," Trent said, bringing the shouting to a
screaming halt. "So, he's the guy that you're really crazy about. Kind of
figured that it wasn't that Brian dude... you never really seemed to
connect."
"If you
can't do the Deanna Troi routine in uniform, don't you even think about doing
it to me now!" Kyle hissed, and swung back around to face Erin. "And
as for you -"
"Doctor!"
Mr. DeMartino snapped, swinging the door to the classroom open. "Can I
have a moment of your time?"
"Yes,
sir," Kyle said, tossing his pen onto the desk and not even bothering to
look back at Erin or Trent. "I'm finished here."
Erin looked
down at Trent as Kyle left. "So - how is the band doing?"
Trent smirked
as he sat up. "About the same as when you were around. I see things with
your husband didn't go like you thought."
"Oh,
about the same as when you were around," she grinned. "So, you know
Kyle from here...?"
"Can't
talk about that."
"Oh, you
were in that 'shadow crap', too? Doesn't Kyle know anybody who, I don't know,
fixes air conditioners for a living? Jeez!"
"How did
you meet the Doc?"
"Come
on," she said, pulling Trent out of his chair. "I'll buy you a can of
soda, and tell you my story while you tell me yours."
*****
"Mr.
DeMartino -"
"Answer
me this question, Doctor - do you WANT to go back to living the life you did
when you were younger?"
Kyle blinked
hard at the question. "Sir?"
"You
forget we studied up on you when you came here," Anthony said. "All
you do is work. No one ever sees you out on the town, you never socialize with
the other teachers, and you don't eat or even spend time in the Teacher's
Lounge. You probably spent all of your time alone when you were in college, and
in the Corps, and wherever else you've been!"
"Mr.
DeMartino, I think -"
"And
that's your problem, kid. That's a pretty girl you've got back there, and
you're spending your time working and arguing about stupid stuff instead of
taking her off somewhere and just being another guy with a girl on his
arm."
"Oh."
"You're
telling these kids how to live their lives - especially Daria Morgendorffer -
so don't you think that you should start leading by example? The kids like you,
but don't you think that they need to see you living an actual life?"
"You've
been paying attention to me."
"Even
when I can't hear the sound of your voice halfway across the school," he
responded. "Go home. Take a long shower, knock back a couple of beers and
watch some bad television. Take that little woman you've got there and go walk
on the beach with a picnic basket and a sleeping bag. You're starting to stress
out a bit, kid. Go home - and I hope you've got the sense to just relax a
bit."
"I
really don't have a choice, do I?" He remembered that DeMartino was now
the Assistant Principal...
"Of
course you do. You can go off somewhere and relax, or enjoy it with your
friend, or mope about, or work on lesson plans. You just can't come back here
tonight."
Anthony put an arm over Kyle's shoulder. "You know,
there's a nice little bed & breakfast about thirty miles up the coast - the
Peterson Inn. It's a very, very nice and cozy little place. Fireplaces, thick,
heavy blankets, the smell of cedar, the whole New England feel to it... It's a
place where people go when they want to be alone & don't want to be
bothered - if you know what I mean. They also serve an excellent selection of
breakfast teas, and the ladies just love them."
Kyle drew
back, genuinely surprised. "Excuse me?"
"Kid -
between my blood pressure, my heart and the little terrors that litter the
halls here every day with their presence, how do you think I relax enough to
keep my head from blowing off?" He winked, a real smile spreading across
his face. "And that's our little secret..."
"Yes,
sir," Kyle said, also smiling. "You know - I'm busy tonight, but I
get some nice samples from a couple of microbreweries up in New York State.
Maybe one weekend or something, you'd like to come over and try some out."
"We'll
do that, kid. Just remember to stop punching out former students."
"I'll
apologize to him later."
"Buy him
a bar of soap, instead."
Kyle smiled
as he left, and Anthony shook his head when a voice made him freeze in his
tracks. "And the ladies just love them?"
"Claire!"
Anthony said, turning to see the arts teacher as she stood behind him.
"Why didn't you say something - we could have invited Kyle and his lady
friend over to have dinner with us this weekend?"
"Are you
sure that you wouldn't rather take a trip up the coast?"
"What's
up the coast?"
"From
what you just told Dr. Armalin, a very cozy little place for men to go and
watch the submarine races with whatever loose woman they can find. It's a funny
thing, Anthony - you never mentioned the Peterson Inn to me..."
"It's
not even worth mentioning, Claire. I went up there a couple of times a few
years ago - look, the boy's working himself into the ground. I know a little
about him, and he's a workaholic. I'm surprised that he's got a woman in his
life, and I was telling him to get out of here and go enjoy being alive - hell,
he's got to set an example for the kids he teaches, doesn't he?"
"You're
sleeping around on me."
"Claire
- you make it sound like I'm having an affair."
"You
might as well be," she said. "I thought that we were, exclusive, and
-"
"No one
ever said that, Claire. I enjoy being with you, and the sex is great, but let's
be adult about us and not make any more of it than it is."
"You
don't consider us a couple?"
"I
consider us friends," he said, stroking her cheek, "very special friends
who share so much with each other. Let's not ruin that, all right?"
Anthony
kissed her, then started to leave. "Why don't you come over later? I've
got some of that vegetarian lasagna that you like, and we can share a bottle of
the apple wine you brought back from Canada for Christmas..."
"Of
course, Anthony," Claire said, and she smiled at Anthony. "Six-thirty
sharp - and I'll bring some of those ugly rolls from the bakery."
Anthony
walked away, unaware of the conflicting emotions that began to run through
Claire's mind...
*****
"I'd
just turned nineteen when I met Kyle," Erin said, running her fingers
around the top of a can of Sunkist orange soda. "It was early in 1995, and
I was going to spend the semester as a White House intern - don't make any
jokes."
"They're
already old and dusty," Trent promised. "I always wanted to see
D.C..."
"Take a
bulletproof vest and a guard dog," Erin told him. "Mom and Grandma
decided that I needed to have something worthwhile that I could put on a resume
-"
"Must be
nice," Trent allowed. "Your family's got that kind of pull?"
"Let's
just say that my mom knew Clinton way back when and let it go. They got me an
apartment in Georgetown, and warned me every day to be careful - they actually
called every single night at 10:40, because Grandma said that I didn't need to
be out running the streets after eleven anyway. Kyle had the apartment two
doors down, and, well, the building superintendent decided that he liked the
way I looked. He was really putting the full-court press on me until one day,
when Kyle saw him corner me in the doorway and start to grope me... the guy's
probably still having a hard time with that arm."
"Hey -
gallant knight to the rescue."
"Not
hardly - he said I was a stupid little rich girl who should have enough brains
to know when to stop something like that before it got out of control. I asked
him how I was supposed to do that, and he goes, 'Can you use your eyes? Can you
use your hands? Do you have money? Then you should have gone out, bought a gun
and shot the bastard when you saw him looking at you - and shoot him in the
chest, because then you could claim self-defense!"
"That
sounds like the Doc," Trent laughed. "So that's when you started
seeing him?"
"No -
that's when we started to keep running into each other," she said.
"Kyle was spending his time running between the Pentagon, the White House
and the Capital Building - when he wasn't just disappearing off the map for a
week or so every now and then. I'd seen him in the White House a couple of
times with some other military types to brief the President, and, well -"
"Hey,
you can say it."
Erin blushed
a deep red. "It was kind of embarrassing when the First Lady and her
Secret Service detail came across us arguing in the Rose Garden and told us
that she tried to keep her dealings with her man from being a public spectacle.
Talk about 'famous last words'. Everybody in the place started trying to push
us together after that - and the people in our building? They all said that it
was obvious that we were interested in each other - and they got tired of the
sniping between us - so finally, they held a tenant's meeting, and when we
showed up, they locked us up together until we settled everything.
A broad
smile, risen from memory, spread across her face. "That was a nice summer,
back in that building."
"Cool."
"And
things have been off and on ever since. I thought that we really had a chance
to make it legal, back in the summer of '96-"
Trent's eyes opened up a touch wider.
"-But something happened and he got sent over to Europe.
I waited for him for over a year - he didn't even bother to call - and that's
when I met Brian. Kyle finally came back, we argued, I went home to Texas, they
both followed me, I kind of chose Kyle, Grandma wasn't happy about that and
chased him off, I married Brian - and here we all are."
"Whoa - now that's a soap opera," Trent laughed, and
coughed as soda went up his nose! "Thanks," he said, as Erin patted
him on the back and then offered him a napkin. "With all of that going on,
how do you have time for a job?"
"I work," Erin defended herself. "I write
children's books. I do the 'Samantha Explores...' series - that's about a cat who
goes off to be an explorer, and learns all about different things, cities,
countries and cultures. I won two Peabody Awards, and my agent says that 'Nick
Jr.' is interested in making it into a show. I've also did a couple of other
books, and I'm working now on a novel - a historical romance about White House
pages back during World War II."
"Oh, yeah... 'E.B. Chambers," Trent said lazily,
dragging a memory out of storage. "Samantha Explores The Capital'. My
niece and nephew read your books all the time... what's 'E.B.' stand for?"
"Erin Barksdale," she replied. "Grandma always
did have pull. After a while, I figured that a pen name wasn't such a bad idea
after all, so I kept using it. It also makes Grandma feel special, so I milk
her for stuff whenever I need things."
"What do you need?"
"With any other man, I'd swear that was a proposition.
About a year ago, I decided that I 'needed' a new BMW. Grandma sprung for it -
and pays the bills on the gas card and the insurance."
"Like I said - must be nice. Hey, Doc Kyle," Trent
said, looking over Erin's shoulder to see Kyle turn a corner and head for them.
"You're not going to hit me again, are you?"
"Trent, I'm sorry -" Kyle began, but Trent cut him
off.
"Relax, man. Been there myself."
Kyle turned from the forgiving smile Trent wore to Erin, who
wasn't even looking at him. "Erin, I-"
"Oh, no, you don't," she said, snapping at him.
"An apology won't cut it this time. I'm getting something more out of this
than a few choruses of 'I'm sorry'. I want some trinkets. I want some dinner, I
want some flowers, and I want some serious romantic gestures out of you before
I forgive you!"
"But, Erin, I am -"
"Didn't you just hear me? Prepare to grovel,
Marine!"
"I -"
"Grovel or get cut off," she said simply. "And
nights in the desert get really cold this time of the year..."
Kyle turned to Trent. "See what I have to deal
with?"
"Comments like that will not help you," Erin said,
turning and starting away. "Let's go, Kyle. You have a lot of groveling to
do before we hit Chez Pierre..."
"Give me a moment, okay? I need a moment with
Trent..."
Erin headed off, and Kyle turned back to Trent. "I mean
it when I said that I'm sorry, Trent."
"If I were into that type, I'd be a little hyper
myself," Trent allowed. "She's a nice girl, Doc Kyle, once you get
past the 'rich kid' attitude, but you've already done that. Just make sure that
you let her know you're there for her. She needs to know that somebody
is."
"Got it," he replied. "Oh - and one more thing.
I meant it when I said that I wasn't here to try and recruit your sister. I was
supposed to try for another girl, but I found out some things that made me
change my mind - and that won't get me busted down to a buck private when I
bring it before the board."
"Cool."
"I need to tell you something else - and that's only
because you were in the program for five minutes or so," Kyle continued.
"I understand you know the girl I was sent for. She's a little shaken up
by the last couple of weeks, because of the seminar, and because of the things
in her daily life, so -"
Trent's eyes grew wide. "You were here for Daria?
You came for DARIA?"
"Don't get ideas about popping me one, Trent. You were
atrocious in self-defense," Kyle cautioned. "I said, 'was'. She
doesn't have any idea about the program - we didn't get that far."
"But you did do something, otherwise you probably wouldn't
be talking to me," Trent said. "You probably want me to -"
"Be yourself," he said. "Just be nice. You
don't have to worry about Morgendorffer - I believe that I've put everything
back in place. As far as I'm concerned, she's not going anywhere."
Kyle dropped coins into the soda machine, and selected a root
beer. "I heard that she's got a crush on you. Now, I don't want you to
jump at her, but be just a little more -"
He saw the way Trent went white and knew instantly that
something horrible happened... and something even more horrific was on the way...
"Trent... what did you do...?"
*****
"Charles
- I am just so proud of you..."
Upchuck felt
his face flush as he turned around to see Stacy's beaming face in the window of
his bedroom, and he opened the door to let the young woman climb in out of the
darkness of the early evening. "You shouldn't do that, Stacy - the dogs
-"
"Like me
a whole lot more than your mom does," she said, kissing him as soon as she
set foot in the room. "So, Mr. Director of Science and Technology - what
do I have clearance for?"
"Stacy -
if my mother came in-"
"We'd
give her a shock!"
"Come on
- we already talked about this..."
"And
maybe I want to celebrate in a special way, especially after the run-through
you had tonight," Stacy said. "Come on - EVERYTHING worked just as
you planned it!"
"Besides," she laughed, pulling at the zipper of her
top to partially reveal the slight, gentle swelling of her breasts, "Don't
all the powerful men in the Capital have beautiful women to... take care of their
every need and desire?"
"Stacy..."
Upchuck had to force his eyes away from the pleasing sight before him. "I
think that you need to -"
"Oh, I'm
just kidding," she smiled. "I can wait until the Doctor calls the
Dean of Admissions at Harvard and gets you in a year before you graduate!"
Stacy leaned
against the wall, and saw the UPN Network promotional poster for 'Seven Days'
on the inside of the kiosk that served as Upchuck's computer area. "I
can't believe you got all of these people to work together on this idea,
Charles. It's just so amazing - and the money you spent -!"
"It's
not about the money, it's the people that matter," Upchuck said. "I
just wish Jodie was going to be here... I hope they find the slimes that gave her
the drugs. I'd pay someone to take them into the prison laundry and - You've
never seen 'The Shawshank Redemption', have you?"
"Yes,"
Stacy said, stepping back from the mean look that crossed Upchuck's face for a
moment. "Charles, you wouldn't really do something like that, would
you?"
"I was
wondering who would play me, if all of us were the people in 'Seven
Days'?" he said, letting Stacy's question slide unanswered. "I
wonder..."
"I know
who the main characters would be!" Stacy exclaimed, bouncing onto the huge
four-post bed. "We'd have Claire Forlani play Sandi, because she's
beautiful, slender and has great eyes, but she can be serious and mean - she's
the 'Donovan' character! Reese Witherspoon could play Brittany as 'Ramsey', the
security chief, and Jason Biggs could be Ted, who's the boy version of 'Olga'!
"
"How
come you're switching all the sexes around?"
"I can
see Brittany as Ramsey, because they're clueless, but they're nice deep down and
they're good at what they do! Sandi as Donovan - that's easy, she takes being
President of the Fashion Club so seriously - and look at the way Ted and Jane
have been looking at each other lately!" Stacy said, tossing a pillow at
him. "That makes it perfect for Rachel Leigh Cook to be Jane's version of
'Frank Parker', since you've always wanted her to be your first choice for
chrononaut."
"More or
less," Upchuck said, picking he pillow up. "Why not Alyssa Milano
instead?"
"Too old
and too big up front - Rachel looks more like Jane."
"Okay..."
he said, holding the pillow high over his head. "And what do I look like
now?"
"Somebody
who's about to get beaten up in a pillow fight!"
The two teens
started to pummel one another with pillows, playing and having a wonderful time
- until Stacy drew back to smack Upchuck down and whacked Bronwyn directly in
the face!
"MOTHER..."
Upchuck said, watching with immediate dread as the tall redhead began to pick
feathers from her hair and eyebrows, with Helen watching from the safety of the
doorway. "I... we were -"
"Moving
on a bit more in the direction of trouble," she said, looking at the
exposed cleavage that Stacy showcased as she stood next to Charles. "I see
you finally learned that sex is a weapon. Use it on one of those boys out in
the street."
"Mrs. Ruttheimer-"
"TEN," Bronwyn snarled, her nose almost touching
Stacy's as she all but spat out the word. "Nine... Eight... Seven... Six...
Five..."
"I'll
see you later, Charles!"
Helen moved
aside quickly as the girl ran out of the room at full speed, and Bronwyn went
to her son. "Take the BMW. Make sure that she gets home safely."
"Yes,
Mother."
"So,
that's the unwashed peasant girl trying for the glass slipper," Helen
commented as she stepped into the room. "Stacy Rowe - one of Quinn's
Fashion Club friends. She seems like a nice enough girl -"
"She's a
pretty little hothouse flower who'll crumble as soon as the fit hits the shan -
and when that happens, she'll go into the bottle, the medicine chest, the
nuthouse or another man's arms, taking my baby's heart with her. I will not
have it."
Bronwyn
turned back to Helen. "You can't POSSIBLY believe that that pathetic
little weed from surburbia would be a better wife than your Quinn, do
you?"
"I don't
think so," Helen agreed - and her breath caught as her sight fell upon the
giant 'nude demon' mural. "Oh, my," she gasped, looking in awe at the
sight. "That is - it's just... Oh, my."
"I
know," Bronwyn said, absolute pride in her voice as she watched Helen
begin to move about the room, looking at Upchuck's paintings. "My baby boy
has skills. He's got this silly little dream about going to Harvard and being a
scientist, or perhaps flying in the Air Force - It's not going to happen. He is
NOT going to waste his time and talent sitting in some laboratory, or in a
fighter plane playing like Tom Cruise. He's going to be an artist, and the
world is going to see just how wonderful my Little Charles is."
"I can
understand that," Helen allowed, looking at the incredible portrait of
Bronwyn and her husband. "Any of these works could go for thousands - tens
of thousands, if you cared to sell them!"
"The
mural's got a standing offer for four million from some half-crazy producer out
in L.A. We had the works appraised last year, and they accidentally were put on
display - the lowest bid was two hundred K, for the fractal," Bronwyn
said. "However, the Prime Minister of Columbia REALLY wants that mural. If
the war on drugs goes a little better for the U.S., I told him that my Little
Charles might be amenable towards selling, or even taking on a special
commission - for our friends down south."
"Really."
"Everyone
has their price - and legal tender isn't the only coin of exchange. We want to
put a factory on the ground down there to service our Latin American interests,
the government wants to show results in their silly little drug war, and the
Prime Minister wants to show he has a taste for original works of art. Business
on the global scale - you'd be surprised at what gets the wheels greased... or
maybe you wouldn't. In any case - if your girls travel, make sure that they
watch their steps in the Asian countries... and steer clear of the Middle East.
They like their Western women over there... they like them down on their
knees."
"Thanks
for the warning."
"Nothing
you wouldn't have found out yourself," Bronwyn shrugged. "Come on. I
know you must be tired, and those fools at your office are probably annoyed
that you didn't come back today."
"I don't
think that'll be much of a problem," she said. "I do need to check in
on Jake and the girls."
"Oh, yes
- and how's everything going with Miss Thing, and her eyeing your
husband?"
Helen was
slightly floored. "You've been paying attention?"
"Someone
always is. If she's getting to be a pain, we can always have her ruined."
"It's
tempting..."
"He
hasn't strayed off the ranch, has he?"
"No..."
"Good.
Then when you and yours come over for dinner, I won't have him disappear into
one of the wine cellars, never to be seen again."
Something in
Bronwyn's voice told Helen that her words were not an idle threat. "So,
when would you and the family like to come over to celebrate?"
"Let me
get back to you on that," Helen told her. "I'll have to grab Daria
and tell her that she's coming - aside from that, we could be here tomorrow
night."
"Is your
oldest that much of a problem?"
"Daria's
problem is that she doesn't have a problem to really care about," Helen
sighed. "If these were the '60's, Daria would be right at home. Sometimes,
I just don't understand my baby. We'd give her anything she wanted, but she
won't tell us what she wants!"
"Children,"
Bronwyn said, shaking her head. "Schultz nailed it right on the head when
he said that little children step on your feet, and older children step on your
heart. What can you do?"
*****
"Are you
two still here?" Manuel said, poking his head into Denise and Lindy's
office. "What is that - some amateur porn fiction you pulled off the
Net?"
"Not
now, Manuel," Denise said, her face solemn and drawn as she flipped
through a mass of papers. "Jeez... this girl was skating the edge, Melinda.
She's really on the edge."
Thoughts of
playful romance disappeared from Manuel's mind; all business, he walked into
the office and looked over Denise's shoulder. She only called her partner
'Melinda' when she's in a bad or a serious mood - what this?
"This
girl's actually considering suicide," he said, after picking up several
pages of Jodie's diary and reading them twice. "Either that, or this is
the lowest point of her life. My God - hasn't this child ever been happy?"
"Not for
a lot of years," Lindy answered. "The last time she was happy was
when she was eight - she talks about wanting to be a ballerina, but got pulled
out because her parents want her to be 'the next great Black leader'. This
Landon kid had it worse than that Cameron kid did in 'Ferris Bueller's Day
Off."
"I saw
that," Denise concurred. "Here, she talks about a field hockey game
she went to, but her parents refused to even let her try out because of some
girl they all saw playing - they thought she might become a bad influence... they
forced her into tennis because of that."
"Seems
like she spent her days doing schoolwork and putting on a good face, but it
wasn't enough for her parents," Denise continued. "No wonder Mrs.
Landon was on the warpath - this all but says that she wishes that her parents
would leave her alone... and she's not nice about how she says it."
A sudden
squeal of shocked surprise from Lindy's desk made Denise and Manuel jump, and
they turned to see Lindy knock several things off her desk as she leaped away
from Judgement, who had lain down unnoticed next to her desk and brushed
against her leg with a huge, furry stalk of a tail.
"Would
you mind getting your Yeti out of here? We've got work to do!"
"Sorry
'bout that," Manuel apologized. "I told you both before - she likes
you. She wants to be around you, and -"
A loud,
threatening rumble rolled through the office; Lindy froze, her hand hovering
above a folder as she was suddenly face-to-face with a growling juggernaut!
"Good
dog. Good doggy..."
"Better call your dog off - now," Denise
said, the rest of her body immobile as her hand slid into the top drawer of her
desk and wrapping around the Casull .454 Magnum wheelgun she kept inside.
"I don't know what her problem is - but I will end it. Back her off
slowly - NOW."
Lindy knew
what her partner was about to do - and just what Denise's gun was capable of
doing. A special-commission weapon that was custom-built to hold six rounds
instead of the traditional five thumb-sized rounds the Casull was known for,
the all-titanium version of the most powerful production pistol on Earth was
built to handle a combination of specialized - and HIGHLY illegal - types of
ammunition she kept locked away in her desk. Denise referred to it (when she
mentioned it at all to Lindy) as her 'DS Gun', after the weapons from the novel
'Logan's Run'. Only Lindy knew she had it; she got it just after she came out
of the Marines, where she spent three years as an MP, and cost her almost a
full year's salary. It was, Denise said, for 'special situations - when her
.357 SigSauer P239 semi-automatic pistol just wasn't gun enough.'
The six rounds loaded into the Casull came from some 'old
friends' who were still in the military. These were handloaded rounds, full
metal jacket, and jacked up to the ballistic maximum that the .454 was capable
of handling. Known as 'SABER rounds' (after the violently apocalyptic super-pistol
used by Raymond Steele in the 'Left Behind' books), each round was so powerful
that even the air pressure from the shell's passage could maim... a good two feet
from the point of impact.
Lindy gulped
audibly. She knew that a single round would literally blow the dog in half -
and both her and Manuel clear through the wall...
"Judgement,
heel!" Manuel said, standing up. "What's the matter with you, girl!
HEEL!"
The dog
looked up at Manuel, took two steps backward, and continued to growl...
"I'm
really not feeling comfortable right now," Lindy said. "Maybe if you
get rid of the damn huge beast-dog of Satan before she EATS MY FACE-!"
"Judgement
- Down! Heel!"
Judgement
stepped back, as though understanding that she was scaring Lindy - and when the
blonde officer was safely behind her desk (with her hand on the butt of her
classic Colt M1911A1 .45 pistol), the dog moved forward and stuck her nose out
at the pile next to the desk before looking up expectantly at her handler.
"What -
you FOUND something HERE?"
A whine,
followed by a pointed nose, and Manuel went to the papers. "What?"
Lindy said, still uneasy. "I didn't do anything - get that thing out of
here!"
"What
are these?" the Latino deputy asked, picking up the bag of 'Bayou Boiler
Chips' from the bottom of the small pile. "Hell-flavored? Who eats those
around here?"
"We
picked those up at the Landon's house - what the hell is she growling
about?" Denise said, her hand now off the .454 and out of the drawer.
"Lose the animal!"
"She
only has a reaction like this to..."
Manuel's eyes
came up, and were met by two pairs of eyes that held the same amount of
surprise and revelation. "To drugs," Lindy finished for him.
"Holy Mother of God. The chips - if they're - it's gotta be a false
reaction -"
Manuel waved
the bag of chips in front of Judgement's nose: the resulting explosion of
barking drew even Mintner from his corner of the squad room. "Well,
well," Manuel said, patting Judgement on the head. "Didn't I hear
your L.T. mention that someone thought that this Landon girl had the drugs
slipped to her?"
"Yeah,
you did," Denise said, rising out of her chair. "But this... this is
unopened - and you can see through it, so you know that nobody's put small
packs of the skank in the bag..." She exchanged looks once again. "Oh,
come on! Nobody could have fixed the bags that the damn things came in - "
Lindy, five
seconds ahead of her, was already on the phone. "I'll get the FBI Sci-Tech
boys in the regional office on the line, and I'll ask if they can test this and
get the results back to us, really fast. If it pans out, then it looks like
we've caught a break..."
Manuel rubbed
the soft, brown underbelly of his dog. "Good girl, Judgement. Good
girl."
A glazed
'Krispy-Kreme' doughnut lofted through the air from Denise's fingers, and the
huge German Shepard went up on her hind legs to catch it with unholy grace and
gentleness!
"What - you want coffee, too?" Denise said, as
amazed as her partner at the dog's catch, and the way she sat back on her
haunches, placed the pastry down on the desk and looked up at her expectantly.
"Oh, yeah - that's a cop dog, all right. Give 'em an inch and they'll want
the whole mile. Come on - and get your own damn bowl..."
*****
Quinn was
laid out upside down on her bed, her hair fanning out across the floor as her
head lay just over the foot of the bed, and her eyes wide open and yet blind to
her immediate surroundings. Dressed in a cream-colored set of pajamas with a
tiny, cutesy 'smiley-face' on the left breast pocket, the little redhead was
off in another place...
A loud sneeze
exploded from the room, and Quinn grimaced as she wiped her nose with a
foursome of facial tissues (one just won't do - and I might get my own cooties
on my own hands!).
"EEEWWWWWW..."
Quinn hated
being sick. As soon as she arrived at school, she had met up with Stacy and
Tiffany - and unexpectedly cut loose with a hurricane-force sneeze through both
her nose and mouth, sending a gob of mucus flying right across Tiffany's
forehead and into her hair! Tiffany ran off, a litany of 'Oh... My... God... It's...
Happened...Again...' repeated over and over as she dashed towards the bathroom, and
Stacy rushed Quinn to the nurse's office, where she was immediately sent home.
It's probably only a 24-hour thing, the nurse said - were you out in a draft
last night? Just stay in bed and warm under your covers, drink plenty of
fluids, and rest - this 24-hour bug can make you a little tired... or maybe it's
a case of the stomach flu. We've had a few cases of that lately.
Maybe it's
a case of the 'I don't want my parents to argue' flu, Quinn thought, her
mind going back to the events of last night and this morning - and the ongoing,
full-volume argument/screaming match that kept her awake and awakened her as
well. Nobody was doing anything wrong, and Mom didn't even bother to show up
for the taping. She promised Dad she would - what a slap in the face! I mean,
you PROMISED, Mom! And then, to accuse Lauriel of sleeping around with Dad in
front of all of those people...
Mom had no
right to treat Lauriel like that, she thought for what had to be the
thousandth time in the past day as she watched the balled-up wad sail through
the air, rebound off a 'Teen PEOPLE' pin-up of the girls of 'Eden's Crush' and
drop into a wastebasket.
Okay, so it's obvious that she has a little bit of a crush on
Dad - GOD, Mom, don't you know that having a guy that other women are
interested in is a GOOD thing? That means that they're going to look at you and
say, 'What is it about HER that makes him want to be there - and how do I get
some? Besides, I see every day how Dad looks at you - trust me; he's not going
ANYWHERE!
Get with the
program, Mom! If Lauriel really does has a crush on Dad, then that makes YOU the
sexiest woman in town because he could make a play for her - but he only wants
to be with you! You should be proud, but you're acting just like Sandi!
Should I call
Sandi, and see how she's doing after yesterday? It can wait - I don't want to
hear how I should have blown Dad off to help her pick out something to cover up
her bruises. Wear a black turtleneck - and I promise that there won't mention
of why you've got it on coming from ME. But, hey, Sandi - if someone wonders
about why you're dressed that way, take your own advice and 'Don't worry about
it...'
I want to
talk to someone. Stacy? Tiffany? Tori or Brooke? Aunt Amy?
Lauriel?
Quinn suddenly lifted her
head up (immediately regretting it, as a dull pulse of pain rolled through),
and dug into her jeans pocket for the business card that the redhead from Dad's
job had given her. Maybe I should give her a call right now - she's probably
feeling down after Mom raked her over the coals, and -
The sound of
the doorbell ringing sent the girl on a long, aching journey through the hall
and down the stairs to the front door! "Hello - oh, hi."
Trent looked
over to Kyle, who gave Quinn a cool stare that didn't even faze her. "What
do you want? Daria's not here!"
"It's
the way she is, Doc. Don't knock her for it."
"Right,"
Kyle said. "Miss... Morgendorffer, do you have any idea where your sister
is?"
"Like
I'm my sister's catcher, or whatever," Quinn huffed. "Look. I'm home
sick with gooey stuff coming out every time I sneeze, and nobody's here to make
chicken soup for me, and I was about to make a very important phone call, and
Daria isn't here, so unless you want to admit you realize that your outfits
suck, know that you need to change and are willing to wait for me to get better
so I can give you both the help that you need, then there's nothing that I can
do for you!"
"Look,
Daria's sister... we need to find her. It's really important."
"How
important could it be - I mean, look at how you're dressed!" Quinn shook
her head, sighing as she looked Kyle over. "And I heard that you spent a
year over in Europe, where the men really know how to dress well. Pity you
didn't browse the shops there..."
The door
closed upon two very annoyed men, and Quinn went to the couch, picking up the
cordless phone as she plopped down and pulled out the business card...
*****
"Charles,
what have you done?"
"Bronwyn
- what are you hissing about now?" Charles Ruttheimer II said, not lifting
his head from a copy of 'The Origin of Species' as he sipped at a large glass
of tea. "I hope you've let the girls out of their rooms by now..."
"Why are
you bankrolling Little Charles' class project - I've just seen the financial
outlay sheets for the past week!"
"Honey,
don't you have a small corporation out there that you could decapitate? I'm
trying to relax for a bit; I have to fly down to Lima in a day or so to look
over the new plant."
"And you
call reading THAT relaxing? Why - no, you're not getting me off the
subject!"
Charles
shrugged. "Damn. Honey, leave the boy alone - he's having some fun, and
doing something intelligent and creative."
"He's
simply flexing his wallet just to impress that little fluffball," Bronwyn
huffed, crossing her arms and setting her jaw in a fashion that never failed to
catch her husband's attention.
"Oh,
yeah - that, too," Charles grinned. "Nice to see the boy actually
land one, every now and then... of course, he is only seventeen, and we
Ruttheimers usually start taking serious scalps once we're in our twenties... You
know, if you don't want Little Charles whoring around the globe like Wilt
Chamberlain on a bet, you might want to ease up on this girl and let him decide
if he wants just her -"
"Let
'Rowe the Doe' leads our little boy by his nose, just so she can get him to the
point where she can have someone snap it off? That will NOT happen."
"Look -
the boy's earned some slack - besides, we need to give him a little
leeway," Charles pointed out, finishing his tea. "He's always felt a
little left out because he was a single -"
Bronwyn
nodded, knowing her husband was referring to the fact that Upchuck, unlike his
six siblings, was not born with a twin brother or sister. " -So we need to
let him have a little extra, every now and then. You really ought to look at
what he's put together, it's quite fascinating-"
"Later,"
Bronwyn said bluntly. "I also wanted you to know that I've gone ahead and
hired Helen Morgendorffer as our new family attorney."
"Morgendorffer?"
Charles said, his eyes widening. "Eric Schrecter's lead hellhound - the
one that Wolfram & Hart use when they need a job done here in Texas?
Bronwyn, I thought you wanted a lawyer, not a consigliere!"
"Oh,
you're so funny I could have you killed."
"Bronwyn,
when you don't want people thinking you're part of the Irish Mafia, it helps
not to say things like that," Charles said, rising from his seat. "I
love you, woman, but you have to watch your temper."
"That's
why I hired Helen. She's a cool, calculating woman - a perfect balance for my
temper."
Something in
Bronwyn's inflections caught her husband's attention, and Charles looked closer
at his wife...
"What?"
"You
like her, don't you? You like this Morgendorffer as a person!"
"I do
like some people..."
"Since
when?"
"I'll
admit, she could be a friend -"
"You
made a friend? She's your friend now? Oh, this is really something!"
"Charles,
don't start with me..."
"Let's
face facts, Bronwyn - you don't like most people, so when you make a new
friend, it's something to take notice of!"
"Well,
let's try to notice other things from now on - like that little bitch,
half-dressed in Little Charles' room!"
"Bronwyn.
Little Charles is old enough to know better than to get himself into a bad
situation, so let it go - "
"You
don't understand," Bronwyn seethed. "You just don't know - but I've
seen it. I've seen it up-close. You have the sweet-oh-so-sweet little thing,
coming around with her pretty little face and her dimples, and eyes so big that
they should have their own zip code, and she's just SO innocent and just SO in
need of someone to just be there for her, because no one else cares. She'll
have him eating and sleeping and living to help her, to make everything right
in her tortured little life - and then he'll fall in love with her, because men
just have to fall for the women that they rescue..."
Charles rose
from his chair and went to his wife. "Baby, Little Charles is not your
brother-"
"But
it's all the same. The innocent little thing gets back on her feet and suddenly
decides that she doesn't need Nicky anymore, which is bad enough to make him
hurt ESPECIALLY because he doesn't have money and the new guy in line's a trust
fund baby-"
Bronwyn
paused; she had taken GREAT pleasure in tracking that S.O.B. down and pulling a
few strings on his family's cash purse - enough to plop the bastard in Federal
prison for fifteen-to-forty (he'd be eligible for parole in 2009) and render
his family destitute.
"-But then the NEXT sad-eyed thing that he goes all out
for crawls right back to her crazed daddy, gets herself knocked up by the
animal, comes back to Nicky's apartment with her mind half-blown on something
and hangs herself in his shower!"
She shuddered as she remembered being thirteen. She remembered
seeing the huge bloodstains where her brother's head should have been, covered
beneath a blanket as two uniformed Boston police officers escorted her out of
the brownstone where Sebastian Aames had come to reclaim his daughter. After
finding Marlene hanging by an extension cord tied to the shower head in the
bath, Sebastion (according to the jailhouse interview) calmly made himself a
cup of oolong tea, fixed a cucumber sandwich with the crusts cut away, and
waited in the living room with the double-barreled twelve-gauge he used every
year to take a fresh turkey for his family's Thanksgiving celebration...
"Bronwyn, you can't bring your brother back, and you
can't blame some women because they're not as strong as you are."
"The hell I can't," she told him. "No more
yes-girls. No more sad sisters. No more moon-eyed damsels in distress with big
breasts, tears running like waterfalls, and all the willpower of a cinderblock.
NO MORE WEAK WOMEN. I am NOT going to lose my child or anyone else to shrinking
violets who can't stand up for themselves, and suck everyone around them into
Hell when they finally realize that the best thing that they can do for Society
is fertilize a patch of flowers in a graveyard somewhere!"
"Honey, you have to let all of that go," Charles
said, holding his wife closely. "I know it still hurts you, even after all
of this time, but it's better for you, in the long run.
Never, her look clearly stated as she returned her husband's embrace.
"Let it go, Bronwyn - and leave Little Charles and his
project alone, too. He's been willing to listen to your prodding him towards
those art colonies over in Europe this summer instead of taking college hours,
so let him have his fun."
Charles kissed
his wife, and then looked her directly in the eye. "But you're going to
try and muddle around anyway, aren't you?"
"Have
you ever known me to stop when someone else wants me to?"
"No -
and that's probably why we've been married all these years," he replied.
"But this is our boy, not an acquisition we're handling. At least think
about handling it with velvet gloves - remember, the boy does love his mommy,
and doesn't think she's the type to make him unhappy."
"You
know my babies mean everything to me..."
"I
know," Charles said, running his fingers through his wife's thick, fiery
mane. "I know that they won't always be babies, either. Start letting them
go, honey. That way, they'll keep coming back."
*****
Wearing an
oversized terrycloth bathrobe with the insignia of the New Manhattan Regency
Hotel on the breast pocket, Lauriel lay back on the king-size bed in her plush,
airy suite and blew half-dried wisps of her hair away from her eyes as she
stared at the ceiling. A half-eaten meal of lemon chicken cutlets, herb-dusted
angel-hair pasta and cauliflower florets sat abandoned on the bottom half of
the bed, and a bottle of a exquisite Italian white wine sat unopened, the ice
in the silver wine bucket turned to water long before.
The phone
rang six times before Lauriel realized that it was her phone, and she picked it
up and answered hesitantly. "Hello...?"
"Hi,
Lauriel!"
"Quinn...?"
"Wendy -
Miss Thackerell - gave me this number. I wanted to call and see how you were
doing... you know, because of last night."
Lauriel's
stomach began doing flip-flops. "Quinn - about what your mother said,
well, I do care a lot for your father. He's done a lot for me, and I consider
him a very good friend, but I've never -"
"You
didn't do anything wrong with him! I can tell!" Quinn chirped. "Look,
Mom had no right to be so mean to you - I mean, you're so nice, and sweet, and
you wouldn't try to hurt anybody!"
"I don't
think that you should be apologizing for your mother, Quinn -"
"As if
she's going to find the time to do it herself!" the redhead scoffed.
"I like you, Lauriel, and if Mom would ever find time to pull away from
being 'Polly Mason', she'd see that you're a good person! I just wanted to call
and make sure that you weren't feeling bad because of Mom - and to see if you
were going to do any shopping while you were there!"
For the first
time in almost a day, a genuine smile appeared on the lovely Latina's face.
"You know, Quinn - it is possible to go to New York and not shop."
"I'm
going to pretend that you never said that," Quinn said, all seriousness in
her voice. "So, are you going to Bloomingdale's? I've heard that they have
an UNBELIEVABLE shoe inventory, and if you're going to get shoes, then you'll
need a matching scarf AND an appropriate blouse... Please, please tell me that
you'll go to the makeup section, so you can make all the women jealous when
they ask and you say 'No, I DON'T use makeup!"
Lauriel
laughed out loud. "Quinn, you're terrible!"
"Come
on, Lauriel - you know that with your complexion and skin tone, you're going to
make those cows cry as you go past! If you really want to make them hurt - wear
a dress. Wear your sweater dress, if you have it - and take a walk down the
street. I'll know if you do - because the news will talk about a major car accident
in New York!"
"Why
don't I just go by the 'ABC News' studio in Times Square and have them put me
on camera?"
"Because
the weird, unpopular people who always crowd out in front of the MTV studios
across the way and are way too yucky to EVER get invited in for 'TRL' could SEE
you - or do you WANT hundreds of freaky, pimply, geeky guys who wear stupid
costumes or even worse, unfashionable clothes trying to gather around you, give
you CHEAP presents or - God and heaven forbid - wanting to TALK to you? Pul-eease!
Charity has its limits!"
Lauriel shook
her head as she laughed; the girl really didn't mean any harm, but she was such
a, a - a teenager! Well, in a way, it's a good thing - she'll have something to
grow out of, and she really is a good kid...
"Quinn, you're incredible."
"No -
I'm better than that."
*****
"No
wonder Daria's got problems, if she's had to deal with the 'prom princess' back
there her whole life," Kyle growled, driving his black Lincoln Town Car at
a fast clip through the streets of Lawndale. "A damned gourmet recipe for
Texas-style 'Armageddon-in-a-can. Bad parents, no readily accessible role
models, sibling rivalry that makes Cain and Abel look like members of the Von
Trapp family, no real social life or outlets for releasing the pressure, a
skewed self image, intelligent, angry and hurting - my God, she's a
Columbine-class shooter just waiting to happen."
He shot an accusing look at Trent. "And then there's you.
My God, boy - how could you do -"
"Get off
my back, doc. She might have been on the edge - but you're the one who showed
up here and yelled 'boo," Trent scowled. "Anyway, things were
supposed to be different. I had plans and stuff. You don't know the whole
story."
"I probably know parts of it you never will," he
shot back, gnawing on a string of red licorice and tossing another to Trent.
"I thought you knew how to treat women."
"I do."
"I bet Sam would say different."
"Let's
just find Daria," Trent seethed, his anger instantly stoked at the mention
of that name. "I'll tell you all the places she hangs out."
"Good -
those are the first places we can cross off. Tell me what she can't stand -
that's where she'll be."
*****
Listen,
baby, I'm sorry - just wanna tell you 'Don't worry',
I will be
late - don't stay up and wait for me
I said again,
'You're dropping out, my battery is low'
Just so you
know, we're going to a place nearby - gotta go!
Cloistered
within a dressing room at Cashman's, Daria sat on the small, cushioned chair
and stared at the annoyingly cheerful colors and poster cutouts of MTV 'Total
Request Live' regulars on the walls. She ably ignored the bubbly pop sounds of
the Backstreet Boys on the store's digital cable music feed, the overly loud
whispers and giggles of girls over clothes and secrets passing about boys,
school and each other, and wished that she had never been born.
"Excuse
me, but you dropped these..."
Daria brought
herself back to the now at the sound of the knocking at the saloon-style doors
of the dressing room, and stood up to see a crown of dark hair - turned away
from the door to maintain Daria's privacy.
"Dropped
what?"
"Your
keys," the pleasant male voice said, and Daria poked her head through the
door to see a young man standing there, his back turned and arm outstretched
with her keys in hand. "They dropped and slid out here a moment ago - I
guess you were too wrapped up in your clothes to notice."
"Really.
I like what you're wearing, too," Daria shot back. "Shouldn't you and
the other guys in '2Gether' be out scouring the 'Make-A-Wish Foundation's
database to find a replacement for 'Q.T.?"
"And one
of the cranially-challenged crowd of Cashman's has a dark sense of humor,"
the boy said, examining his clothing - dark sweater, cargo pants and loafers -
as he turned around. "I'm 'Jerry O'Keefe'... very funny -"
His eyes fell
on Daria as she stepped out of the room to retrieve her keys. "I was right
about your sense of humor," he said, taking in her attire. "You must
be getting ready for your sorority's 'Make Fun of Girls Without Platinum Cards'
party. I'll leave you alone now..."
"And
what was THAT supposed to mean?"
"Hey, a
sorority girl like you doesn't want anything like reality interfering with your
life, so I'll just be going - before I hurt your feelings," the boy said,
his green eyes boring through Daria. "I was just trying to be nice with the
keys and such - don't mention it."
"What
makes you think I'm in a sorority?"
The boy
turned back, a predator's smile half-visible on his face. "As Tom Sawyer
told his Aunt Polly's yellow cat Peter - 'Don't ask for it unless you want
it."
Daria crossed
her arms and looked at him.
"Okay.
You're a really attractive girl who's cloistered herself in 'Teen Queen
Advertising Hell', staring off into space - probably because your boyfriend
didn't give you the right tennis bracelet - so you came here to binge and purge
with the help of Daddy's money. You saw THAT outfit - where you got it from in
here I'll NEVER know - and probably decided to get it to make fun of all the
girls who don't go through the fashion magazine racks the way most people go to
church." The boy shuddered. "Instead of doing something worthwhile,
you're probably in some weird club where everybody sits around and decides
stuff like what the right lipstick and mascara you should wear that goes with
gym shoes. No - you're probably more worried about how to stack guys up and
make each one think you're only with him, so you'll never be without a
date!"
He started to
turn away, but stopped and looked at her boots. "Nice boots, though."
The boy
started away, but something made him stop and turn back: he saw Daria, simply
standing still in the middle of the floor. "What? What's wrong?"
Daria's face
was blank, devoid of anything. "Oh, what's wrong? Did I hurt little
Jennifer's or Alison's or Heather's feelings? Did I make her feel bad about
pissing away someone else's hard-earned money so she could have all the other
girls tell her how pretty she is? Did Daddy's little princess have an attack of
conscience - I know that's a big word, but it means 'the little voice that's
supposed to tell you that bothering the average people and treating them like
'the unwashed villagers' is wrong -"
The boy
noticed the way Daria looked about the floor, and his expression shifted, as
though he realized he might have made a hideously, monumentally idiotic
misjudgment in character. "Hey - it's just my opinion. Really. It's
nothing to - look, I'm sorry-"
"Who is
that you're talking to?"
"Would
you please be quiet?" the boy snapped, turning as a young woman (obviously
family, by their looks) appeared from between a row of clothing with large
sacks in her arms. "I was just talking to -"
He looked
around the area; Daria was gone. "You weren't talking to that girl in the
green jacket and the Doc Martens, were you? Jeez, Tom - I thought you had
taste."
Tom Sloane
glanced over the aisles of clothing and accessories for a further glance of
Daria, but saw nothing. "I guess I was a little hard on her," he
said.
"About
her clothes? You should've been!" was the sarcastic reply Elsie Sloane
fired back. "Those boots need to be retired, and she should go on and
exchange that 'I'm so above it all' attitude for one that works! Hey, wait a
minute... you like that type, don't you?"
"What?
Oh - of course not!"
"Yeah,
right," she shot back. "I remember how you were before Mom and Dad
made you stop hanging out at those cruddy little joints like that 'Zen' place.
Who knows what you would have picked up if you had kept going there."
"Taking
my car for a year wasn't necessary - or packing me off to Fielding." No
- but they probably had fun doing it...
"They
thought so - but now, since you've been behaving like a good little boy, they
gave you the silver Corvette with all the extras," she reminded him.
"Wave goodbye to the geek girl who doesn't even have sense enough to wear
Danners because she's stuck on the 'Doc Martens is the boot for the 'out crowd'
look. We're out of here."
"Yeah,"
Tom said, and as he stepped out the entrance, an absolutely strange sensation
settled over him. It was Rod Serling-strange; it was a morbid feeling, as
though he had just missed something very important, like a train or a plane,
only to find out that he was to die on it or was to meet the love of his life -
and now, he held within himself an emptiness that momentarily made his stomach
a bottomless pit of despair -
And then it
was gone, just that quickly.
"Tom,
are you okay?" Elsie asked. "For a moment, you looked so lost..."
"I don't
know," he told her. "I just, I don't know how to describe it..."
"Describe
what?"
Tom took a
deep breath. "Have you ever missed a bus, or missed getting on an
elevator, and have that feeling that somehow, someway, something's changed? You
know, like you've just missed a part of your life, or something like
that?"
Elsie looked
at her older brother as though he had just talked about seeing a herd of pink
unicorns in tiger-stripe leotards doing the 'Riverdance' in the mall promenade.
"You need help - or at least a good, cold glass of water, with some of the
nice, big pink pills that the doctors give to Grandma whenever she starts to
see Cossacks riding their horses across the lake. Let's go."
She tugged
her brother's arm just as he glimpsed a flash of a dark skirt and a boot as the
wearer turned a corner, and he suddenly, undeniably, had that momentary sense
of a great loss - of missed opportunity - pass through him.
"Tom -?" She saw the look on his face, and was
immediately concerned. Something had really bothered him - something had really
caught him where he lived, and it showed in his face. But what... that girl... did
she spook him like this?
Her? How? WHY?
"Tom... Tom - are you okay?"
In that moment, Tom Sloane took several measured breaths, drew
himself up straight and tall, and promised himself that he would never set foot
in Cranberry Commons - ever again.
"Let's get the hell out of here."
As Tom and Elsie turned away, neither noticed as Trent and
Kyle passed them and headed into Cashman's. "This is her sister's favorite
place," Trent said, stopping at the doorway. "You go ahead and look
around - I'll watch the door."
Several minutes passed, and Kyle re-emerged from the store.
"We're going to make a few more sweeps around the area and try to find
her, and then we'll call it off," he said. "One of the cashiers saw
her, and let me look at the security video. She's all but worn out, and some
boy gave her a dressing-down that really took the wind out of her sails."
"Some guy dogged out Daria?" Trent said, his eyes
going wide. "That's deep. Hey - how'd they let you watch the -"
Kyle flashed his federal ID out for Trent's inspection.
"Peripheral duties with the National Security Agency," he said,
pocketing the wallet. "Cuts through a lot of the bull with the local
villagers. Say the word, kid, and you'll have one just like it in twenty-four
hours."
"Doc, I told you-"
"If you say one damned word about your music, I'll hit
you so hard that they'll feel it on the steps of the Vatican," Kyle
snarled, turning on the younger man with a true fury. "In case you haven't
noticed it lately - you are not a fucking musician. Musicians - REAL musicians
- are brave souls willing to put it on the line for themselves and their craft,
grow from the experiences and then share them with the world! You're just a
man-bitch who mumbles into a mike and pisses a little of his soul away every
time he gets on stage and tries to fool himself into thinking that he's got
something deep to say and needs to do it to music!"
Trent froze. "Cyber-jock, operative, lord of crypto,
math-god - you had opportunities that most people would kill or die to realize.
You could have done something REAL. Something worthwhile - something that has
meaning - something that could have helped you grow as a person and led to
bigger things for yourself and the people around you!"
"Like you?"
The young man suddenly found himself hoisted off his feet,
gasping for breath as Kyle, angrier than Trent had ever seen, had him suspended
by a hand around his neck that just as well could have been made of iron!
"That's two. If that accusation comes out of your mouth
ever again, it will be the last thing that ever does," Kyle spoke in that
calm voice that brought fear even out of people like Janet Barch - and which
made onlookers decide that they, in fact, didn't see anything out of the
ordinary. "You could have made a contribution. It didn't have to be in the
Program or even the service - and yes, I'd have been happy if you'd chosen that
route. Even if it really were just to go out and make a difference through
music, I would have respected your decision because you actually were going
somewhere for something worthwhile and actually making an effort. But then
again, you think it's better to lie out on a funky mattress with crusted
sheets, sleeping your life away and not even having the drive and desire to at
least be a decent example to your sister, who you supposedly stayed out of the
program for."
Kyle looked Trent directly in the eye. "So tell me, big
brother - what have you done on your sister's behalf lately, besides suck down
her money and any chance of her looking at you with respect for what you've
done with your day? Yeah - that's what I thought."
The lack of respect in Kyle's face and tone made Trent wilt
inside, and he didn't look up to face his former instructor even after Kyle let
him down. "Come on. I'll give you a ride home so you can get back to
what's really important to you - your bed."
"I can have my partner do that," a voice spoke up,
and Kyle glanced sideways to see Denise Riker leaning against a wall. "We
need to talk about you roughing people up in plain sight."
"If you'd really wanted to see me, Riker, you'd have come
to say something after you read about Jodie Landon and my seminar," Kyle
said bluntly.
"I didn't say 'ask you to talk' - sir,"
Denise said, her tone equally blunt. "We will have words. We will do it
here, or we will do it in a Class Five holding cell that Uncle Sam thoughtfully
provided the county two years ago. In either case - we will have words."
"Riker, don't threaten me. Forget about all of the legal
things or the rank or anything else - just consider one thing."
Kyle turned to face Denise fully. "If I don't choose to,
you couldn't force me if you tried," he continued, and Lindy, off to the
side, looked at Kyle's eyes and suddenly felt the need to check and see if her
gun was still there.
"After all - I have more ways to kill you than you have
ways to die."
"Don't start with me, sir," Denise said, and Lindy
was truly surprised to see that she was wearing the .454 Casull. "One
shot, one kill - and you know I was the best shooter in the program's
history."
Kyle shook his head sadly. "For some reason, they all
want to pretend that Aki Ward never walked through the door..." He looked
up and fastened an imperious stare on Denise.
"And this frightens me because...?"
"Dude, try talking peace instead of kicking ass,"
Trent said, going over to Lindy. "Your friend said that you'd give me a
ride..."
As Lindy led Trent away, Denise came over and looked Kyle
right in the eye. "Sir, you know the rules - no going meta-active in view
of the public!"
"The boy weighs barely one-fifty - I was pissed off, not
crazy." Kyle looked at the gold shield on the woman's belt. "I see
congratulations are in order."
"Screw you, sir," Denise replied. "First - you
put your hands on someone like that again, and I run you in on felony assault.
No joke, and you do time under the Kelly Act."
"You should really wake up now, First Sergeant. Save the
tough talk for the jaywalkers and double-parking types who've never been to a
'camp of strict regime."
Denise let the challenge go unanswered. "Second - I need
anything that you can find out about Jodie Landon, the kids she hangs with,
anything like that."
"What's up?"
"I can't tell you right now, sir-"
"You mean that you won't."
"Just keep your eyes open and tell me about any of the
strange things that you see the kids do."
"It's high school. Strange is what they're all
about."
"Whatever. I got you that report - you owe me."
"You got that for me because those are the rules,"
he stated bluntly. "If I see anything, Three/Ten, I'll let you know. Call
me in a couple of days-"
Denise glowered at him as she viciously cut him off.
"Don't ever call me that again, sir. I'll help you and you'll help me
because, like you said, those are the rules - but don't ever call me
that."
The woman got directly in Kyle's face. "You may still be
Delphi, but you are no longer POGO. You need to remember that, sir. You... are
not one of us."
Denise turned and left Kyle without a backward glance.
"Oh, well," Kyle replied, taking a long, deep breath. "It's not
as though I expected anything different from any of them..."
*****
"Quinn,
how are you feeling?"
"Hi,
daddy," Quinn said innocently, as she looked up from the couch as Jake
came in. "I'm okay - nobody's been here to make me soup, or squeeze
oranges so I can have some juice-"
"Where
is everyone?"
"Well,
Mom hasn't come home yet, and Daria's little friend's brother and a teacher
came by looking for her earlier," she told him, putting her copy of 'E!
Entertainment Television Presents 'Rivers of Agony: Joan and Melissa on
Hollywood's Fashion Flubs and Firestorms'. "I guess she's in some sort of
trouble, or something."
"Because
of what?" Jake was still sore about Daria's no-show at the taping, and
hadn't had a chance to talk to her about it. "Does this have anything to
do with Daria's not being here last night-?"
"No -
they probably wanted to talk to her because of what happened yesterday,"
Quinn told him. "Sandi and Daria are both in that seminar that everyone's
so crazy about, but yesterday, Daria said something to Sandi so Sandi jumped
all down her throat and told her that she was a person who didn't care about
anyone and called her 'the Queen of Misery', then somebody slipped Jodie Landon
some drugs and SHE went crazy and chased Sandi down and tried to choke her to
death before the drugs messed her up and put her in the hospital so the teacher
must want to talk to Daria because she was there but even if she was there then
I don't know why her friend's brother was there because I know Daria likes him
but why would he come along unless he's a narc but then I would have heard
about it but it does explain why his band's music sucks -"
"HELEN!"
Jake cried out as his wife opened the front door (and leaned on it somewhat
unsteadily for a moment or so) and walked into the house. "Quinn said that
there's a drug problem over at the school, one of Daria's friends OD'd and
THAT'S why Daria wasn't here last night - and you were supposed to come down to
the station to file a complaint on that cop! Where were you, Helen? I waited
there for you for HOURS-"
"Mom,
that Eric guy left a LOT of messages on the answering machine, and the people
from all of the news stations called to ask you about why you hate Lauriel so
much -"
That piece of
information made Jake's head snap around; Quinn sneezed into her tissues and
kept going. " -And both Jodie's and Sandi's moms called to talk to you.
Sandi nearly got choked to death by Jodie yesterday while Jodie was high, and
now both of the moms want some legal advice on what they should do next -"
Helen didn't
say a word; she simply made her way to the stairwell and started up the stairs
- but stopped at the first step and turned to her family. "Jake - I don't
really feel like dealing with your boring, childish antics or your infantile
attitude right now," she said, and Quinn drew back from the look that
appeared on her father's face. "I am going to bed, and I really don't care
to be bothered. I have to think about a very important opportunity that came my
way today, so I'll take care of all of those problems so you won't have to
worry - and so you won't screw everything up. I will talk to both of you
tomorrow."
Something in Helen's voice - the casually arrogant,
self-righteous and callous tone that came through when she was really drunk,
and reminded both Jake and Quinn of Helen's mother - kept both of them quiet as
Helen disappeared up the stairs.
"I think we can talk to your mother tomorrow
morning," Jake said.
"Okay, Dad." Quinn said as she slid off the couch
and headed upstairs, her eyes now widening with fear as she took the steps
three at a time. She saw how Jake watched Helen as she went up, and she knew
that life in the Morgendorffer household - for her parents, herself and even Daria
- were about to change... and, Quinn feared, for the worst.
Quinn grew up watching her parents' relationship and knew that
her mother was the dominant one in the mix, but unlike Helen, Quinn had chosen
to deal with the dimmer sex with a velvet glove.
Better to let them think that they're superior and 'let them
lead' - lead right where you wanted them to go. I mean, the three J's do
ANYTHING I ask!
I looked once in one of Stacy's science fiction books, and the
woman in the book had it right. 'Unless you intend to kill him immediately
thereafter, never kick a man in the balls. Not even symbolically. Or perhaps
especially not symbolically.' Mom's always held herself and everything that she
does over Dad's head - but she's NEVER treated him like that before. I love
you, Mom - but you don't deal with men that way. It's only going to make them
mad, and competitive, and horny - and if you do THAT, it means that sooner or
later, they're going to do WHATEVER they can to show that they still are men!
They'll usually do the worst thing possible if a woman insults their manhood -
and the worst thing they usually come up with is getting drunk and either
getting in a fight somewhere or sleeping with another woman!
You jumped on him about Lauriel last night - why push Dad in
that direction by telling him that he's not a man in your eyes and never has
been?
Mom - what you did just doesn't make any sense. You just all
but told Daddy that he's worthless and that you don't need him for anything
important. Why you would basically show Daddy the door and tell him that you
really don't care if he uses it makes no sense - especially if there's a pretty
girl possibly in the wings to take YOUR place? What's going on, Mom? Did
something happen that makes you think that you don't need Daddy anymore?
Mom - what are you doing? Do you WANT Daddy to walk out on
you?
A thought went through Quinn's mind that made her go cold all
over.
No - you're sneakier than that... you're like Sandi. You'd do
stuff to make Daddy do something stupid, so you could do mean things to him and
feel like you're doing the right thing because 'he hurt you'. That's really
sleazy, Mom - and it's one of the lawyer tricks I've seen you do all of your
life, and what did you say when you came in -
Quinn suddenly stopped in her tracks, and turned slowly in the
direction of her parents' bedroom.
Oh, God.
A look of horror rising upon her face as she saw the light go
off and heard the door lock behind her mother.
You're planning on getting rid of Daddy...
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