SEVERANCE PAY
CHAPTER THIRTY SEVEN
We're both sitting at the kitchen table. The police had just left. Mom
says I had been screaming bloody murder.
I can believe it.
It took a little while to convince the cops. They insisted on checking
out the house, to make sure we weren't being held hostage. The woman
cop also wanted to check me for signs of abuse, after seeing my skinned
knees and bruises. I told her it was from basketball but she wasn't
buying it until I got a ball and made a couple of dribble moves to
prove I knew what I was doing. She was impressed.
Now it's just the two of us, Mom with coffee and me with hot chocolate,
the Remote on the table between us, its back off and it's batteries
out.
"I'm so sorry, honey. I had no idea this had happened. It was an
accident, I swear!"
I'm still kinda shaky from that dream, but the chocolate has helped. It
always does.
"I know. I don't blame you. I've been jerky the last few days. Stuff
happens."
She sips her coffee. She hasn't said much since I told her about the
nightmare. Nightmare. The word hardly seems adequate. What's a
nightmare times ten? Times a hundred? It's clear she wants to ask
something but is afraid to, not knowing how I'll react.
"Go on, Mom. Ask me. We gotta figure out what happened."
She puts her coffee down. "Should we call Thomas? We never discussed
this possibility. Obviously, if the Remote runs on batteries, they'll
need to be replaced, sooner or later. He had to consider this
possibility. Surely, if doing so would cause this ... problem, he'd have
warned us."
"If he knew about it. Remember, I'm a prototype. There's still a lot of
unknowns. Yeah, we need to call him ... but we don't tell him about the
dream."
"Why not? You've never had a nightmare that bad before, it might mean
something."
"Oh, it means something alright. It means a lot."
"So, we tell him."
"We can't, it proves he's screwed up."
"How does it do that?"
"All my prior nightmares have been taken from my memories ... no
exceptions. I never got the sexy dreams that Lipscomb reported.
Sometimes the dreams were kinda weird, sometimes they got a little
strange, but they were always based on something that actually happened
to me and I was always Peter Harris ... no exceptions."
I take a sip of my hot chocolate.
"This time, I'm a girl, not just a girl but the same girl I am today,
just younger. I'm in a place Peter Harris never was, doing something
Peter Harris never did. The only physical change was that the Remote
was turned off. It was the same kind of nightmare I've had since the
transfer, just as vivid, just as real."
"What are you saying, Patricia?"
"I'm saying that I relived something that happened to the original
owner of this body. Jennie Jo was raped by her father."
"You don't know that, you can't know that."
I tap the side of my head. "Up here, I know it. Some of her memories
are still here, in my head. Huh, yeah MY head, Patricia's head, Jennie
Jo's head, whoever."
Mom reaches out, taking my hands in hers. "Honey, you're still upset,
you don't know what you're saying. Thomas said all the original
memories were erased."
"He was wrong. Now, I've got to try and find out what happened to her."
"Patricia ... we've got a job to do, a different, more important job. You
just can't abandon the team now to go on some kind of goose chase. The
police looked for information when ... she ... first died and they found
nothing. What makes you think you can do better? And not mess up the
job we're working on now?"
"You weren't there Mom, you didn't feel her pain, her panic, her fear.
I can't forget about it, about her. You can help me or not but I'm
doing it."
She sighs, hanging her head. "This just complicates an already
difficult job, Patricia. It's not our problem, besides, she's already
dead."
"She's not dead, not as long as I can remember. Are you with me or
not?"
She grimaces, then chews her lip a moment. "Are you certain about this?
Really certain?"
"Yes, Mom. I am."
She shakes her head in resignation. "I suppose that deep meditation
might help resurrect buried memories."
"And we don't tell Matthews ... right?"
"We'll have to say something. We need to know if you can safely reload
the Remote. We need to know what happens if the Remote goes dead. Is
there a safety setting? A default setting? We need those answers."
I pull my hands from hers, grab the Remote, slip the batteries in
place, slap the back on, and set it on Blue Forty.
"PATRICIA! What are you doing?!"
I freeze in place, waiting for something to happen ... but nothing does.
"I'm answering the first question. Nothing bad happens. Let's talk to
him about the rest right now."
* * * *** * * * *** * * *
I don't know how long the phone's been ringing. I have an answering
machine on the office line but not my personal line. However long, it's
ringing when I wake up. 4:38 in the morning.
"Hello?"
"Thomas, is that you?"
"Of course it is. Who are you?"
"Jessica Conner. We've had a problem."
"What kind of problem?"
"The batteries accidentally fell out of the Remote. We're not certain
what to do. We never discussed that situation before."
"We never discussed it because I've been changing batteries at every
check up. Just put them back in."
"Well ... they have been out for some time."
"How long?"
"At least six hours."
"It took you that long to call me?"
"We just discovered they were out, it was an accident, remember."
"Six hours, six minutes, it shouldn't make any difference."
"Thomas, what happens to the Balancer when the Remote loses power?"
"If it's in range of the Remote, it turns off."
"My God! That's terrible."
"Hardly terrible, Jessica. It simply stops actively managing the
separate parts of the brain. The structure remains present, the
connections are still there, the information is still being
transmitted. Everything continues to work, just at a lower level. It's
as if you had turned off the amplifier in a stereo system. The sound
still gets to the speakers, just at a much reduced volume. Patricia's
brain still functions, just not at the same level."
"And the balance?"
"It defaults to zero, no preference for either Blue or Pink."
She doesn't say anything but I can hear a muffled conversation taking
place on her end of the call.
"Thomas, what if there was ... additional information being transmitted?"
"From where?"
"Inside her brain."
"That's impossible. There are only two sources present, beyond the
lizard brain and the midbrain. The higher brain just has Peter and
Patricia, nothing else. They are both routed through the Balancer. It's
a closed system."
"And nothing else could ... force its way in?"
"There's nothing else to do that. The lizard brain is too simple and
the midbrain was wiped clean."
"But if it wasn't wiped clean?"
"It was, Jessica."
"Humor a worried mother, Thomas. What would happen?"
"Likely nothing. The higher and midbrains are connected, all three
sections are. There is a certain amount of overlap at those connection
points, no definitive line where one part stops and another starts.
Random information could reside in the gray transition zones but they
aren't connected to the Balancer."
"Aren't the nanites supposed to be making new connections all the
time?"
"Only in response to new information, new memories."
There's another pause and more conversation at Jessica's end of the
call.
"What about repairs, Thomas? Aren't the nanites supposed to repair
damaged areas of the brain?"
"Certainly, but all those repairs have already been made ... unless
Patricia has suffered some new brain damage. Has that happened?"
"No ... no, of course not. Everything's fine with her. We were just
concerned about the batteries, that's all. I feel foolish about the
whole thing now. Sorry to have bothered you, Thomas."
I yawn. "Perfectly alright, Jessica. I understand. Can't be too
cautious. Let me know if she has any problems of any kind."
"We will, Thomas. Good night."
"Good night." I hang up the phone and rub my eyes. I need to make a
note about that. Test the Balancer in passive mode. The results could
be interesting.
* * * *** * * * *** * * *
"Did you hear all that? You didn't ruin anything."
I didn't ruin anything? Thanks, Mom. Who's the one who threw the darn
Remote?
"Yes, thank heaven for that ... Mom. At least we have a couple of
possible explanations for what happened."
"Are you certain it wasn't just a dream? Thomas seemed quite sure."
"And I'm quite sure, Mother. Either those memories have been there all
along but overwhelmed by the Balancer or they were in areas of my brain
that were not connected due to old damage which were repaired after my
header into the bleachers."
"Patricia, you didn't say anything about hitting your head.
"I didn't hit it that hard, no concussion or a knock out or anything."
"You should tell me everything if you get hurt."
Am I going to bring the trust thing up now? No.
"Sorry, Mom. It just wasn't that big a deal. Hopefully it won't happen
again. I still want to find out all I can about Jennie Jo."
"It'll just complicate things, Patricia. We won't be able to do
anything about it."
"Maybe not right now and maybe not officially but we won't know until I
try. Will you help me?"
She looks at me with tired eyes, then sighs. "I'll help, as long as it
doesn't, in any way, delay us from getting Hobbes. You have to promise
that you will do everything you can, as quickly as you can, to get into
his computer system. If you promise, then I'll help however I can. I
can't promise any results."
"Neither can I, but I promise I'll try."
* * * *** * * * *** * * *
My intercom buzzes.
"Yes?"
"Mr. Lipscomb is here, Mr. Tyson."
"Thank you. Send him in."
It takes almost a minute for Lipscomb to open the door, probably
hitting on Larson.
He nods his head as he closes the door behind him. "Walter"
"Have a seat, Dan."
Lipscomb settles in the worn, padded chair opposite my desk, crossing
his legs, hands in his lap.
"What is it you wanted to see me about, Walter?"
"You're probably aware of the increasingly frequent requests from
Washington for some kind of progress on the war on drugs."
"I've seen the emails."
"There's been video conferences too. And memo's. And text messages. And
just about every other form of communication other than tweets ... so
far. The long and the short of it is they want action, any kind of
action, now."
"What they really want are positive news stories and some snappy video
to use to get reelected."
"You should know, Dan, they're the administration that appointed you.
The most recent demands for action include the threat of budget cuts."
He frowns at that, Lipscomb knows were this is headed.
"Walter, you can't mean ..."
"Afraid so. I've kept my part of our deal, Dan. Haven't bothered you
once, haven't asked for a single report, an update, anything. I've
given you everything you asked for, but Washington isn't willing to
wait."
"I appreciate it Walter, I really do, but this is exactly what my
operation is designed to avoid. I give you information, you send it to
Washington, God knows who sees it and my people end up dead."
"Is there even any information to give me?"
"You know I can't answer that."
"If you can't, then I'm afraid I'm going to have to pull the plug."
He jumps up out of his seat, planting both hands on my desk, leaning
forward. "WALTER! You can't do that! I'm so close!"
"How close, Dan? If I knew that this operation of yours was going to
lead to something, then I could defend it to Washington, or at least
put them off awhile, but I've got to have something to work with. Your
promises aren't good enough."
He drops back down in the chair, head in his hands.
"I'm closer than anybody else ever came, Walter. You CAN'T stop me
know."
"Again, how close, Dan? I need something."
He looks up at me, clearly debating what he should say next. Finally,
he makes a decision.
"You understand, whatever I tell you, can't leave this room. Not a
peep. Lives are at risk, my life is at risk."
"I may need to tell Washington ..."
"NO! I trust you but no one else! Hobbes is everywhere! If you aren't
willing to fight for this operation, then shut it down, now. I won't
put lives at risk."
I'm surprised at his reaction. Maybe he's actually got something of
value.
"Alright, Dan, only between you and me."
"No one else. I need your word on that, Walter."
"Fine, you've got it."
He pulls his chair closer to my desk, leaning as far forward as he can.
He waves for me to come closer. I do.
"I have a man inside Hobbes household" he whispers. "He's been there
for about a month."
"MY GOD!" He gestures for me to keep quiet. "What is he doing?"
"I can't say, Walter. Don't push me on this, I truly can not tell you."
"You don't know yourself?"
"I know, it's just ... unconventional, that's as far as I can go. The
main thing is, he's there."
"Has he gotten anything useful?"
Again, the internal debate. The fact that he has to think about it
means the answer is "yes". Now, I just need to wheedle it out of him.
"Yes and No. He's discovered something big but we can't use it.
However, there's the chance for him to get the mother lode."
"Why can't we use it?"
"You'd need to involve way too many people, there's no chance to keep
operational security. Once Hobbes finds out, and he will, we're screwed
... and likely dead."
"What the hell does your man have, Lipscomb?"
"I'd rather not ..."
"Dan ... I'm going to need this. I assure you, it won't leave this
office. No offense, but you can't just say you've got a man inside. I
need some proof of some kind. I can't simply take your word for it
because you've got a reason to be ... unreasonably optimistic about the
situation."
"Walter, are you accusing me of lying?"
"I'm not accusing you of anything. I'm simply pointing out that,
unfortunately, in this case, you're word isn't good enough. Normally,
it'd be fine ... but not now. I need something concrete for me to hang my
hat on. Without it, I won't really have a choice, not with what
Washington is asking from me. It's out of my hands."
I've actually got more latitude than that, but he doesn't need to know
it. Back to that internal debate. This time, it takes more than a
minute. I don't interrupt him.
"Walter ... I can not stress the importance of this information being
kept ultra, ultra secret. If Hobbes is tipped off ... my people will have
no chance. None. Zip. Nada."
"I understand. I'll be ultra, ultra careful." He frowns at me. I
deserve that.
He sighs, giving up. "I have the location of every one of Hobbes drug
stashes and the inventory of each location."
I don't react, I can't react. It's as if he told me he had conclusive
proof of the existence of Santa Claus, the Easter Bunny and Big Foot.
It's something you never, in your wildest dreams, expect to hear.
"Come again?"
"You heard me, Walter. I've got it all, every warehouse, safe house and
hole in the ground where Hobbes has hidden his drugs in the US and the
amounts, down to the kilo. I calculate it's over a billion dollars,
give or take a few million. Well, that was as a few weeks ago."
"You SAT on this for weeks?!"
"Quiet down, Walter."
"Don't tell me to 'quiet down'! How could you not tell me about this
immediately?!"
"Two reasons. The first is that there is a bigger target. My man
believes that he can gain access to Hobbes computer system. If he does,
we get absolutely everything. His resources in other countries, the
location of his money, his production facilities, his sales force, the
names of all the people he's bribed, his transportation routes ... every
single thing we wanted."
Is that even possible? "Go on, Dan."
"The second reason is that you couldn't do anything with the data. To
put together raids on all these locations would require numerous
warrants, over three hundred officers from several agencies, both
federal and local. There is no way in hell that Hobbes wouldn't find
out about it long before you could pull the trigger. We end up with
nothing and Hobbes goes on the warpath searching for the leak, putting
me and my people at risk."
DAMN! He's right! Lipscomb's smarter than I thought he was.
"I'll be damned! It's too big to move on."
"That's what my man said."
"Your man is smart. If he gets out of this alive, he's got a best
selling book on his hands."
Dan smiles for the first time. "You have no idea, Walter."
Huh. Wonder what that means?
"You got all this information in writing?"
"My man took notes. It is all legitimate Walter, I swear."
Now it's my turn to debate. Do I trust him and push back against
Washington, hoping to make the biggest score of any prosecutor's career
or pull the plug now? Lipscomb wouldn't be fighting this hard unless he
saw a real pot of gold at the end of the rainbow. He's more than
selfish and immoral enough to toss his people aside if it would benefit
him, yet he's still here.
"Dan, you get me a copy of the notes and I'll review them. If I agree
that they're legit, I'll take on Washington for you. I won't tell them
anything that'll hurt you or your people; I'll put my reputation behind
you. I can't guarantee it'll be enough, but I'll try my best. That's
all I can do." I hold out my right hand. "Good enough?"
He pauses a second or two, then shakes my hand. "I hope this works,
Walter. We're looking at the total destruction of the Hobbes
organization and rooting corruption from the criminal justice system.
It's a once in a lifetime opportunity."
"It is that."
Slowly, like the rising sun at dawn, another option begins to grow in
my mind. No need to bother Lipscomb about it yet ... or maybe ever.
CHAPTER THIRTY EIGHT
"Ms. Larson, get me Nicole Moser on the phone."
"Yes, Mr. Tyson."
Moser's in charge of the multi region Emergency Preparedness Task
Force. There's a national test scheduled in three weeks. Both Federal
and local agencies will be working together on staged emergency
scenarios. The people at the top will know what's planned but the
locals will be given the information at the last minute. Some areas get
tornadoes, some railroad accidents, some flooding, others get toxic
spills.
The idea is to see how well the federal and state agencies cooperate in
dealing with the usual range of emergencies that regularly crop up in a
year. Thousands of firefighters, rescue crews and police officers will
be on the road, going where they're directed, without any advance
notice. Some of them will be in groups with FBI agents leading them.
I've seen Lipscomb's mans notes. The guy's got to have an extraordinary
memory. I don't remember ever hearing of a veteran undercover cop with
that kind of memory, so Lipscomb may have gone outside the usual
suspects to find him. Probably best not to speculate about what exactly
is going on, but it's hard not to.
Eleven locations spread out over six states, all within Moser's
jurisdiction. I figure that a minimum of two FBI and ten local police
could initially raid each location and secure it until a larger force
could arrive. Each one of the warehouses are legitimate operations,
they just act as covers for the illegal drugs. In fact, their security
is so good, all the police need do is lock the place down until
reinforcements arrive. It's unlikely they would face armed opposition;
Hobbes knows the occasional seizure is the cost of doing business. None
of the prior seizures we suspected were associated with him became
violent.
If the two FBI agents were clued in as to what was happening, they
could take any ten locals with them. As long as they couldn't
communicate with the outside by cell phone once they found out where
they were going and what they were doing, even if they were on the
take, it would be too late for them to tell Hobbes what was up, they'd
have to follow through with the raid or risk exposing themselves. It's
more likely they'd chose to explain to Hobbes why they couldn't inform
than give up their careers and cushy pensions.
As for the warrants, I know a Federal District Judge in North Dakota,
far away from Hobbes' area of influence. We play golf together when he
comes to Florida on vacation during the winter. He's an old fraternity
brother. The chance of his Court being infiltrated by Hobbes is remote.
While it's not Standard Operating Procedure, a Federal Warrant is a
Federal Warrant, good anywhere in the entire country.
If I had a minimum of twenty two trustworthy, untainted FBI agents, we
could safely raid all eleven of Hobbes warehouses, if Moser will let me
piggy back with her regional program. Her brother was a DEA agent
killed in the line of duty in Texas during an undercover operation. If
there is anyone more opposed to illegal drugs than Nicole Moser, I
haven't met them.
The intercom buzzes again.
"Nicole Moser on line two, Mr. Tyson."
"Thank you, Ms. Lawson." I push button two. "Hello Nicole. Walter
Tyson. I'm calling concerning your Regional Emergency Preparedness
Drill."
"You're not going to complain about a waste of resources and time, are
you Walter? After the Katrina fiasco, I would think that's a lesson we
all learned and would not want to repeat."
"Not at all Nicole. You have my support, one hundred percent."
"Huh. Glad to hear it. I've been fielding complaints all month from
police departments coast to coast how this is all unnecessary, it
stretches limited resources, they have better things to do, overtime
costs, yada, yada, yada."
"That's unfortunate, Nicole. I am willing to commit the resources of my
office to the exercise, limited as they may be."
"I see. What might these resources be?"
She senses that I'm up to something, better make this offer in person.
"I'd like to meet, show you something that more clearly explains how we
may be able to help each other. You have any time Tuesday next week?"
"Can't you just fax me something, Walter? Video conference?"
"Afraid not, Nicole. This is kind of your eyes only. I think you'll
really appreciate the possibilities when you see it."
"I'm intrigued. Okay, how about ... 3:15 p.m., Tuesday?"
"That works for me. You won't regret it."
"We'll see about that. You have a reputation, Walter."
"Moi?"
"Oui. Good bye, Walter."
She hangs up. Now to call Judge Hastings and run a hypothetical by him.
* * * *** * * * *** * * *
"Aaaarggghhhh!" I toss my pencil down, bouncing it off the top of the
kitchen table, hitting the cabinets over the sink.
"Patricia! Calm down! What's the problem?"
"There's no way in! Tippett's got that computer system locked down
tight. I've pinged and probed for three days, nothing. He's probably
left a back door somewhere but I can't find the password. He's too
smart to make it easy to guess. If we had a couple of hundred machines,
I could try to muscle my way in but that's not how we need to do it. I
need to be able to slip in and out, leaving nothing behind."
"Is you're computer up to the job?"
"Yeah. I'm using my school computer. I disabled all programs that
limited what it can do. It's not really a question about how advanced
the computer is, it's programmer versus programmer, and right now, he's
kicking my behind."
"Maybe you need to do more research."
"I don't think it's going to do any good. He's likely read the same
things I have, he probably wrote some of it. The guy's good, more than
good, he's one of the top guy's in the world. Hobbes hires the best."
"Take a break. Come at the problem with a fresh set of eyes. We can try
meditation again, see if you can connect with any buried memories."
"That's been another big, fat nothing. All I get is a headache. I keep
searching but get squat. I'm beginning to wonder if you were right all
along."
"I'm beginning to think I was wrong."
"What?"
"There've been a number of things I couldn't explain, things you did
that were too natural, too much like a ..."
"A real girl?"
"Don't say that, Patricia. You're as much a girl as any girl. It's just
that you ... sometimes were so pitch perfect and I knew it wasn't
anything I had done or Thomas had done. And, let's face it; it likely
didn't come from Peter Harris' experience. If there were some original
residual memories, that could explain it."
"So why can't I find them? We yank the batteries from the Remote, the
Balancer shuts down but, no matter how hard I try, I can't make
contact."
"That's your problem, you're trying too hard. Part of meditation is the
calm, making yourself open to experiences. It can't be forced one way
or another. You must be passive, inviting, willing to accept what comes
your way."
"That seems like it could take a long time for something to happen.
Just sitting around, keeping your mind blank, waiting. How do you make
sure that ... my God. That's it!"
"What's it?"
"The answer! I don't attack Hobbes' system, I let it come to me ... or
more particularly, Tippett comes to me."
"How do you do that?"
"Easy. You won't like it, but it's easy."
* * * *** * * * **** * * *
"This can't be real, Walter."
"I believe it is, Nicole. This wasn't just slipped under my door at
midnight. One of my men has an ongoing operation."
"I've never seen anything like it. If it's real ... if you could bust
each location ... good lord."
"Exactly."
"Would you be able to make it stand up in Court?"
"I've been thinking about that. I don't really care."
"You don't care? That's an uncommon attitude for a prosecutor."
"No. I've done some preliminary checking of the public records. There's
no obvious connection to any known Hobbes business. We could always
find something in confiscated records but Hobbes has historically been
very careful to leave no fingerprints on any of his drug supplies. We
may get someone to flip on him, but again, historically, that doesn't
happen. So we'll get a lot of drugs, some small fry convictions and
that'll be the end of it."
"That seems to be very pessimistic, Walter."
"You can't plan on miracles. Getting this information is a miracle. I
don't expect another. Maybe we find more information in the raids but
don't bet on it. Realistically, if we get this amount of drugs off the
street, it will cause Hobbes a great deal of difficulty and create a
major shake up in the markets. I'm willing to take that ... and so is
Washington."
"I'll certainly do whatever I can to help you. Do you really believe
you can keep this quiet?"
"Yes, I do. Keep the initial teams small and uninformed until the last
minute, led by a few, out of town, absolutely trust worthy agents. It
should work."
"What about the undercover agent?"
"I'll give them two days notice to get out. There's the promise of even
greater information but Washington's interested in the bird in the
hand, not the two in the bush."
* * * *** * * * *** * * *
That son of a bitch Raul gives me nothing but grief!
All I wanted was a bowl of ice cream ... a fucking simple bowl of ice
cream with fudge sauce. How hard is it to make god damn fudge sauce?
You'd thought I asked him to fry a turkey or something.
I'm under a lot of stress here, keeping Hobbes computer system safe and
secure. He doesn't attract a bunch of hackers but you can't tell the
difference between the random asshole screwing around and someone
determined to succeed, at least not at first. I can't take anything for
granted; Hobbes has made it quite clear what happens if I fail ... well,
actually, Cardoza did, but he speaks for Hobbes, everyone knows that.
If I don't get something to eat every couple of hours, I get the shakes
real bad. It's not my problem that he's in the middle of fixing dinner.
I got needs!
By the time I get back and open the door at my office, one of my
monitor programs has launched. Settling into the padded swivel chair
with a groan, I pull up the full screen.
Damn! It's that Conner bitch. She's not been doing much all week and
now she decides to go online. School musta just got out.
That's another job from Cardoza, monitor the Conner bitch. "Tippett" he
said "I want to know everything she does, no matter how small. That is
your responsibility. Don't fail me."
What is she gonna do? All week, just boring shit. Thank God she doesn't
have a bunch of friends, sending tweets, texts and emails back and
forth, full of the kinda crap teen age girls fixate on. Who's dating
who, clothes, music, beauty shit, all that girly ... wait a second! Who's
this? What did she ... I'll be damned! The fucking bitch is sexting some
kid! I knew she was a hot little twat. She even attached a photo. Let
me just ... yeah, niiiiccceee. She's still wearing her blouse and skirt
but the top three buttons are undone. That's a fucking nice pair of
tits!
She says she'll send him a new picture, a better picture every day. Hot
Damn! I'll just scan this for viruses then save it for closer
examination later on tonight ... when I've got time to appreciate it.
* * * *** * * * *** * * *
"Patricia, this photo is completely inappropriate! I can see your
panties!"
"Good, haven't done any of those yet, maybe Tippett's got a little
fetish going on."
"Patricia!"
"I know Mom, I'm not happy about it, but it's working. Tippett's
downloading each picture, along with the imbedded extra coding. It's
unrecognizable as a virus because it's just bits and pieces but, by the
time he's downloaded each picture, in the right sequence, the entire
worm will be hidden in his system, undetected, ready for activation.
Three down, five to go."
"I understand, but the entire thing is so ... tawdry! What if he shows
the pictures to someone else?"
"Then he does. It's not like I haven't posed for worse."
"Honey ... are you certain about that? Maybe it's just your imagination."
"No, the memory's quite clear. She came to Miami to get away from her
father. She started doing tricks and got involved with local porn
producers."
"And you remember all of that?"
"Just brief flashes, a few seconds here and there. She started in
Minneapolis, I think, met some guy who brought her here. It's all a
jumble in my head but it does explain a few things."
"What things?"
"Like how some of those photos posted on my fake Facebook page by
McBride were real. Jenny Jo actually did pose for those shots."
"I saw those pictures you found. The girl in them looks a lot like you
but you and she aren't identical."
"That's because she was already into drugs by then. She's a little
worse for wear. Thinner, her health is going downhill."
"I'm not saying you're wrong, Patricia. Just don't get too caught up in
this girls' plight until we have solid proof. I know you really want to
know what happened but a few brief flashes of memory are not a lot to
go on."
"I know, but I've just started to have some success with the
meditation. We'll see what else I can find."
"As long as you keep your eye on the big prize."
"I am Mom. Three down, five to go. If this works, we'll just need to
wait for the right time to spring the trap."
* * * *** * * * *** * * *
Father seems to be in a good mood this morning and Enrique is out of
town again. He's actually concentrating on what he's eating for
breakfast and not some written report. Now's as good a time as any.
"Father?"
"Yes, Gretchen."
"Next Saturday is Patty's birthday."
"My God! You're right! I'd forgotten that. November 12th. We must do
something special. I'll have Raul make something she'll really like. Do
you know what her favorite food is?"
"Fried chicken. I was thinking that maybe I could take her somewhere,
like somewhere that isn't here? Just the two of us?"
"What about her mother? We can't monopolize Patricia's time. They may
already have plans."
Damn it! I hadn't thought about that. Patty seems to really like her
mother, always says nice things about her, except lately, but I think
they're past that. She probably wants to spend time with family on her
birthday.
"I hadn't thought about that, you're probably right, Father."
"She's coming over this weekend, correct?"
"Yes."
"We will ask her then. Give her a choice. How does that sound?"
"And if she wants to do something with me, somewhere else?"
"I will consider it."
"No, Father, not that. You never ..."
"I will really consider it. Fair enough?"
"Yes, sir."
* * * *** * * * *** * * *
"Thank you Judge. This could be big, world record big."
"I agree Walter, just as long as I don't end up with egg on my face."
"Well, that's the advantage of a lifetime appointment, your Honor."
"Might as well be worth something, certainly doesn't help my golf
game."
We both laugh and hang up.
That's the last piece of the puzzle. I'll get my warrants when I need
them, faxed at the very last minute. Judge Hastings assured me he would
do the paperwork himself, no staff at all. Moser is on board and has
already issued the orders to the necessary police departments. The FBI
agents are lined up. I reviewed their records myself. They will know
generally what's up but not the specific targets until about an hour
before the raid. Their orders are simple; move in, lock down, call for
reinforcements. I've got the layout of each warehouse from the public
records, the building permits. Ultimately, I requested copies of
records for over seventy warehouses in the same general areas, just in
case Hobbes has someone at the local level keeping track of interest in
his stashes. They went through Moser's office to add another layer of
bureaucracy to hide behind.
The last step is to call Lipscomb, give him the news and have him pull
his man out. When the time comes, I want to make sure that Lipscomb
gets all the credit he deserves, his man too, if possible. The guy may
remain undercover so he can't get public recognition. Either way, he'll
have an entry in his jacket that would make any cop proud.
* * * *** * * * *** * * *
I hadn't said anything to Patty all week, I wanted my birthday plans to
be a surprise. I hope Father wasn't lying when he said he would
consider letting us go somewhere by ourselves. A movie and supper out,
no guards, no one to watch us ... just like regular people. Patty may
want to do something else, like shopping, or dancing, or a concert. I
don't care what it is, as long as we can get some time alone, away from
school, away from home, just the two of us.
I could hardly wait to spring it on her at supper. She and Father had
been talking about different famous businessmen who started out in
illegal activities and moved on to more legal businesses. I didn't know
that the Kennedy family made its first money as bootleggers. Guess
that's not the type of thing you're likely to hear in the history class
at a Catholic girls school.
According to Patty, there are a lot of other examples of famous
families that made money in less than legal ways in the beginning. Some
of the names surprised me. Father was surprised at the number too.
Maybe a drug dealer doesn't need to be a drug dealer all his life.
The maids were clearing the table before serving dessert when I decided
to reveal the surprise.
"Patty, I want to take you wherever you want for your birthday next
week."
"My birthday?"
"If you aren't already doing something with your family. If you are, we
can do it some other day. Whenever it is, I want to do whatever you
want to do."
She turns to Father. "Is this okay with you, Mr. Hobbes?"
"Gretchen may be getting ahead of herself. I told her I would consider
the possibility, depending on what your plans are. Certainly a trip to
France or Spain would be out of the question."
"I don't have a passport anyway" said Patty. "I don't want anything
big, assuming Mom lets me. If we do it at all, Mom's gotta approve it
first. If Mom says no, I can't go, Gretchen."
Why would she say no? Doesn't she like me? "I understand, but what do
you want to do? A movie? A concert? What do you want to do?"
She looks down, thinking, for several seconds, then her eyebrows creep
up as she slowly raises her head, a wicked smile on her face. I've seen
that look before, she's thought of something weird.
CHAPTER THIRTY NINE
Paintball World, a twenty acre paintball field on the outskirts of
Miami. The entire place is fenced in. It has a large, mostly wooded
area for hunting and stalking matches plus a smaller, cleared area for
speedball games. The cleared area has a 30' by 20' two story barn in
the middle surrounded by all sorts of structures to hide behind,
barrels, boxes, crates, oddly shaped inflatables. There's also a
clubhouse which sells supplies at outrageous prices and has a glass
walled viewing room where people can safely sit and watch the action.
It's the perfect opportunity. Get most everybody out of the compound,
including Hobbes and Gretchen. Give Gretchen another chance to impress
her father.
And bring my mother into the picture.
That last one was tough, but necessary ... at least for what I have in
mind. Right now, she's sitting in the observation room, as far away as
she can from everybody else. Most everybody else are in the clubhouse
acting like kids in a candy store. I walk over and sit down next to
her. She definitely looks tense.
"Keep calm, everything will be alright" I whisper.
"I don't know if I can do this, Patricia."
"I told you up front that there may come a time when you'd have to meet
Hobbes."
"And I told you that I may not be able to do it ... ever."
"He doesn't expect you to be his bosom buddy. I've already told him
you're very upset about the house being bugged."
"Really? A bugged house? That's all?"
"Look, you're the one who wanted in on this. It's all part of the deal.
Either you're a professional and get through it or you're not and you
can leave right now." I reach out with my right hand, laying it on
hers. "I know you can do this. It's important. It's only natural that
you'd attend a birthday party for your daughter, that you'd want to
meet the father of her best friend, the person with whom she's been
spending so much time. In fact, it'd be unnatural if you didn't, that's
why it's important."
She looks away. "I know, Patricia ... you're right, but ... this man ... I
want him dead."
I can't have that happen, not if I'm going to pull this off. "Mom, you
wouldn't ..."
"No, honey. Not here, not now. I've thought about it but ... no. I don't
think I've got it in me."
"I don't know about that. I'm kinda glad you didn't have a gun those
first few weeks."
She looks back at me, smiling. "Who says I didn't?"
"Ahhhhhh, you kidder!" I look over towards the pro shop and see Hobbes
heading our way, a paintball marker with a barrel plug in his hands,
barrel resting on his shoulder, pointing towards the ceiling, a large
smile on his face. I squeeze Mom's hand. "He's coming" I whisper.
She closes her eyes, swallows hard, nods slightly several times, takes
a deep breath, exhales slowly and opens her eyes. Looking at me, she
smiles tightly, teeth clenched.
Hope this works. Hobbes is on us in seconds.
"Patricia, what a brilliant idea! I'd never have thought of this
myself! The men can hardly wait. This is a great training opportunity."
I stand up. "Mr. Hobbes, this is my mother, Jessica Conner.
He lays the marker on the table and quickly steps next to her chair,
offering her his right hand. After just the briefest hesitation, she
takes it. He adds his left hand to his right.
"Mrs. Conner, I can not say how happy I am to finally meet you! Your
daughter is one of the most impressive girls I have ever had the
pleasure of meeting."
She lets him continue to hold her hand a few seconds before she
replies. "Thank you Mr. Hobbes. I've been interested in meeting you
too. As for Patricia, while a mother may be biased, I've found her to
be one of the most impressive persons I have ever known, male or
female, young or old."
Hobbes is taken aback but quickly recovers. "Yes ... yes, indeed, you are
correct, I apologize. No offense. I can see where Patricia gets her
directness."
"I think it more likely that she's influenced me, Mr. Hobbes."
She's consciously giving him a hard time while he's being polite. He's
clearly confused as to why this isn't going better. I should stop this
before it gets out of hand.
"I appreciate all the kind words but we probably need to get started.
Don't want to waste time; we've only got an hour."
Hobbes releases Mom's hand and picks up his marker. "Don't concern
yourself, Patricia. It's your birthday! I've rented the entire place
for the day."
"Mr. Hobbes, that's too much! I was just wanting the usual hour! You
really shouldn't have ..."
He waved me off. "Nonsense. It's nothing. I prefer it this way.
Security is better, no other patrons to deal with, and we have as much
time as we need. Gretchen suggested that I order pizza to be delivered
here after we are finished. Raul was not particularly happy about that
but I let him make a cake and some other dessert items to eat at home
after the pizza ... assuming your mother agrees, of course."
We both look at Mom, Hobbes in anticipation and me with apprehension.
"Because it's a special occasion, I'll agree."
Thank you. Now to get Hobbes away from her before something bad
happens.
"What did you pick as a marker, Mr. Hobbes?"
"Marker?"
"The paintball marker in your hands."
"Ohhh yes, the gun."
"Technically, they're called markers."
"Really? Why is that?"
"Probably for political correctness. Sounds better than people running
around shooting each other with paintball guns."
"You are likely right, Patricia, though it really doesn't make any
difference. They are what they are. The manager said that this is the
best ... marker in the store."
"You bought it?"
"Certainly."
"Why not just rent one for the day?"
"I prefer the best when it's available. Where is yours?"
"I left it in the pro shop."
I lead Hobbes back to the shop and away from Mom, happy to put some
distance between them. The manager is waiting for us as we enter.
"Is this the birthday girl?" he asks.
"Yes" answers Hobbes. "This is Patricia Conner."
"Well Patricia, I'm happy to have you and your group here." He scans
the crowded shop. "It's been a good day, so far."
I bet. It seems darn near every one of the guards have decided to buy
instead of rent. Most of them are holding bright, shinny new equipment.
I don't know if it's Hobbes treat or if it's coming out of their own
pockets, but the manager's probably sold about three thousand dollars
worth of gear, not counting CO2 fills and paintballs.
"Now, Patricia, what can I get you?" the manager asks, anticipating
another big sale.
"Nothing. I got mine right here." I pick up a black plastic case from
the table next to me. The manager's clearly disappointed.
"Can I see it?"
"Sure."
I lay the case back on the table, flip the latches up and open it. I
pull out the marker's body, slip on the barrel, insert the quick
release pins to lock it in place, take the 18 oz. CO2 tank, screw it
onto the back of the receiver, push a butt plate onto the bottom of the
tank and insert a barrel plug, then hand it to the manager.
"Why does Patricia's look so different from the rest of ours?" asks
Hobbes.
"Because this one's older than she is" answers the manager. "Where'd
you get this?"
"Mostly Ebay. The basic Stingray plus the 15" vented sniper barrel,
Starfire bolt and plastic detent ball, plus the modified trigger set
all were bought there. I made a couple of silicon cushion pads to quiet
it down a bit and polished all the metal to smooth out the action. The
rest is just normal nuts and bolts from the local hardware store."
He brings the marker up to his shoulder, sighting through the dove tail
and down the barrel. "I see. May I?"
"Go ahead."
He pulls back the bolt, pushes the safety off and pulls the trigger.
There's a resounding bang and clang as the marker fires. Everybody in
the room jumps then glare at him.
"Sorry, sorry, just testing the girls' equipment. Sorry."
"Really, Patricia. Allow me to buy you a new gun, it is your birthday.
There's no reason you shouldn't have competitive equipment."
"No thanks, Mr. Hobbes. The use of the range is more than enough. I
really can't accept anything more. My Mom wouldn't approve."
"This is a perfectly decent beginners' marker, Mr. Hobbes" said the
manager. "I just need to check a couple of settings on it, to make sure
it's safe, and she should be fine. Could you come to the back room with
me, Miss?"
"Okay."
He walks behind the counter and opens a door to the right. I follow him
and walk through the door as he holds it open for me. He enters behind
me, closing the door. He lays my marker on a table, swinging a
magnifying glass on an articulated arm near the trigger. He bends down
to give it an inspection.
"This is an old Brass Eagle Stingray II, isn't it?" he asks as he
continues to inspect it.
"Yeah, it is."
"The basic Stingray is generally considered to be a piece of crap."
"That's true."
He keeps checking it out. "You've wrapped the pressure screw with
Teflon tape. This thing doesn't leak, does it?"
"Not a drop."
He removes the tank, opens the bolt and shines a light down the barrel.
"This is polished like a mirror. The rest of the metal's the same?"
"You bet."
He lays the marker back down on the table. "As I said, the basic
Stingray was a semiautomatic piece of crap. What made it interesting
was that, with a longer aftermarket barrel, an improved bolt, assorted
other minor parts and some detail work, you could turn that piece of
crap into a long range, high power, reliable, dead accurate,
semiautomatic nail driver ... if you knew what you were doing." He cocks
his head to the side, looking at me intently. "You know what you're
doing, don't ya'?"
"Yup."
"And all those guys out there buying automatic, paint and gas burning
machine guns, they don't know what they're doing, do they?"
"Most of them don't."
"I see ... this is gonna be a slaughter, isn't it?"
"Hope so."
"It's still a god awful loud son of a bitch."
"Doesn't matter in speed ball, they know I'm out there. In fact, it
gives me a bit of a psychological advantage, the sound of impending
doom."
"Mind if I watch?"
* * * *** * * * *** * * *
What in God's name was Patty thinking?
I was this close to talking Father into letting me take her to a movie,
or a concert, or SOMEWHERE, just the two of us and she goes and chooses
this! Why would she choose THIS?!
At first, Father was surprised, then he jumped all over it, even had
Enrique come back from where ever he was to join in. Right now, while
everybody else is goofing around in the shop, Enrique's outside,
surveying the field, planning something, no doubt.
Father insisted on buying me a complete set of everything, padded vest
and pants, helmet, gloves and this shiny blue gun. It's the most
clothes he's bought me in the last six month's, not counting school
uniforms.
I wander out of the shop and see an older lady sitting by herself in
front of a big window over looking the playing field. She's probably
Patty's mother, though I don't see much of a family resemblance. She's
taller than Patty, but who isn't, ya' know. She's got normal size
breasts, more like mine than Patty's ... above average. She looks like
she was very pretty when she was younger. Slowly, she turns her head,
seeing me.
"Hello. You must be Gretchen."
"Uhh, yeah ... I mean yes, I am ... I'm Gretchen ... Hobbes. That's my father
in there." I point back towards the shop.
She frowns then stands up. "We've met." She walks over to me, stopping
to give me the once over. I'm used to that, people often look closely
at me, because I'm so tall, though she's almost as tall as I am.
Patty's Dad must have been short.
She looks at me a little wistfully and smiles.
* * * *** * * * *** * * *
I'd seen pictures of her but never in person. She looks much like
Alisha would at this age, tall and slim, though probably not as
beautiful as Gretchen. Patricia didn't do her justice.
"I'm happy to finally meet you Gretchen. Patricia has told me so much
about you, I feel I know you. She said you were a beautiful girl, I
just didn't realize how lovely you are."
She blushes and turns slightly away. "Patty said I was beautiful?"
"More than once, quite often actually."
"Well, I think she's beautiful too."
"That's nice of you. I agree ... but then I'm her mother and not exactly
unbiased."
"Oh she is, beautiful I mean. She's the prettiest girl I know. And
smart too. God! She's sooo smart. And fearless. Nothing scares her!
There was this time at the softball field ... well, you probably know all
about that."
"Patricia did mention it to me."
"Of course she did. Patty said she tells you everything."
I wish. "Patricia says you do quite well in school yourself, Gretchen."
She shrugs. "I'm doing a lot better know, since Patty started helping
me. She's really great."
Do I detect a hint of a crush? Could just be my imagination.
"Mrs. Conner ... can I ask you a question?"
"Certainly, Gretchen. What is it?"
"Patty ... you talk with her, spend time with her, you think you know how
she thinks ... and then she does something crazy ... not crazy, not really,
just ... it's surprising, that's all. Has she always been that way?"
I smile. "She's been that way as long as I've known her, Gretchen. I
gave up trying to predict what she'll do some time ago. But, I must
admit, things usually work out the way she expects them to."
Gretchen sighs and rolls her eyes. "I know! It does! I just wish she'd
let me know what's going on before it happens. Like this!" she raises
her hands, which are holding a mask with a large, clear plastic face
plate and a bright blue metal paintball gun. "What's with this? She
never once said anything to me about paintball. I thought she might
want to go out and we could see a movie or a concert or something, just
me and her for once. And then this happens. Sometimes, I just don't
know what's going on in her head."
I pat her on the arm. "Don't worry about it, dear. I suggest you do
your best to just trust her. That's what I do ... and she hasn't let me
down yet." Not exactly.
She smiles at me. It's a youthful, radiant smile, without guile or
traces of pain or regret. "Thanks Mrs. Conner, I'll try."
Everybody starts to leave the building, walking out onto the playing
field. Gretchen waves and joins the crowd. As they all leave, a man
wearing a company baseball cap enters the room and begins flipping
switches on a console near the large picture window. Several flat
screen monitors mounted on the wall on either side of the window
brighten, displaying various areas of the playing field. I stand closer
to the window and look around the field, searching for the cameras.
Counting Patricia and Gretchen, there appears to be twenty or so people
getting prepared to begin, slipping masks over their heads and aiming
their ... markers. The man comes up behind me.
"Ma'am?" I turn to face him. "Hi. I'm Bob Highsmith, I manage this
place. If you want a good view, just have a seat back here. You can see
most of the field through the window and the rest is visible on the
monitors."
"That's very convenient, Mr. Highsmith. Thank you."
"We like to record everything when we get a big group in. We burn it to
a DVD and they can buy it as a memento or relive the day by watching it
here. They usually get a kick out of it."
"I can imagine."
"Who you with today?"
"My daughter, the birthday girl."
"Aahhhh, that one. She should make this interesting."
"In what way?"
He keeps working with his electronics. "From her marker, I suspect
she's got some experience with paintball. Am I right?"
I don't know where Patricia got that thing, she just showed up with it
yesterday. "Yes, you're right, Mr. Highsmith."
"Thought so. The rest of those guys don't. They all wanted markers that
shoot as many balls as fast as possible. Guys like that come out
blasting, spraying paint all over the place, wasting ammo and gas. It's
a macho thing. Her marker can't shoot nearly as fast but it's a lot
more accurate and can shoot farther. If she's smart about it, she can
get them before they can get her."
"If Patricia is anything, it's smart."
"I've seen a small group of experienced young kids, ten, eleven years
old, absolutely swarm a larger group of inexperienced adults. A school
of sharks. The adults never knew what hit em'. Why aren't you out
there?"
"It's not exactly my idea of fun."
"You'd be surprised. I get a lot of women and girls out here. After
they get over their initial reluctance, some of them are totally
vicious, real killers. Paintball's not about strength, it's about
strategy."
CHAPTER FORTY
Mr. Highsmith picks up a microphone mounted next to the window, winks
at me, then flips the switch on the microphone.
"Good morning, everybody. I'd like to quickly review the rules before
you start. If you get hit by a paintball and it breaks, leaving paint
on you, you're out. If the ball fails to break, you live to keep
fighting. If the paintball strikes a barrier, breaks and splatters you
with paint, you're still alive, unless it's a paint hand grenade. If
you get splattered by a hand grenade, you're out. If you run out of
ammo or C02 gas, there's no refills until the next match, unless you
can get it from a teammate."
"As for the type of matches, that's up to you. We have flags if you
want to play 'Capture the Flag', you can form teams and the last team
with active players wins, or you can play it every man ... or woman for
themselves, last one standing wins. If there's any dispute as to
whether or not a player is out, I make the ruling and my ruling is
final, no whining. We're all mature adults here, let's behave like it.
Everybody got that?"
Several of the men raise their guns and wave them.
"All right then, ready when you folks are. I'm recording all this so
you can all relive the greatest hits when done."
There's a lot of laughing and pointing among the men. Patricia is
standing slightly off to the side, surveying the playing field.
Gretchen is standing next to her, looking lost.
* * * *** * * * *** * * *
Hobbes steps forward, clapping his hands.
"Gentlemen! As this is Patricia's birthday, she gets to chose first for
her team."
All eyes turn towards me.
"For the first one, Gretchen and I'll guard the barn and the rest of
you can try to take it."
They all look at us for several seconds before the laughter starts. It
continues until Hobbes waves them silent.
"That's hardly fair to you, Patricia. Pick some more men for your
side."
"Naw, we're good."
"Come now, this will hardly be a contest."
"Then it shouldn't take you very long to beat us and move on to the
next match, will it?"
Hobbes shakes his head and smirks. "As you wish. Let's go men." Hobbes
walks away from the barn, towards the farthest end of the field. The
others follow him, weaving in and out of the assorted structures
littered around the field. As they walk away, Gretchen grabs my arm.
"You want to tell me what's going on?"
"Sure. As soon as we start, I'll attack and pick off the leaders then
drive the rest of them into the open where you can get them."
"What happens if they charge me?"
"Shoot em' ... but they should be too busy dodging me to get organized.
If I can get them on the run, you should be able to stay right here and
clean up. Just keep low, wait until I flush them out and don't waste
paintballs."
"I don't know about ..."
"Don't worry about it, no pressure. If it works, it works. Just have
fun. You may get a chance to shoot your father."
"Really?!"
"If I don't get him first."
"You get Enrique, I'll get Father."
"I'll try. When I'm ready, I'll raise my hand and point where I'll
chase them to. Keep watch because I won't leave it up for long, just a
second or two. Got it?"
"Yeah."
"Okay. Put your mask on, pull your barrel plug and get ready to rock
and roll!"
* * * *** * * * *** * * *
All the men walk to the far end of the field, leaving Patricia and
Gretchen alone near the barn.
"What are they doing?" I ask.
"Looks like they've chosen teams. It's the boys versus the girls"
Hightower answered.
"What?! That's completely unfair! It's two versus ... twenty!"
"I'll admit that's a lot more uneven than I've seen before but I think
that's what your daughter wanted."
I sigh. "She would. What now?"
He picks up the microphone again. "I say Go." He brings it to his mouth
and pushes the button. "Is everybody ready?"
Patricia slips her mask down over her face and gives a thumbs up.
Somebody at the far end waves their hand. At this distance and with a
mask on, it's impossible to say who it is, probably Hobbes. Suddenly,
the possibility of being out there, shooting at Hobbes, doesn't seem so
far fetched. I may be missing an opportunity.
Hightower reaches next to the window and flips a switch. Several lights
start blinking on his console, he must have started recording. He looks
back at me with a grin on his face, then shouts into the microphone.
"GO!"
I immediately lean forward in my seat, trying to get a better look. I
can see Gretchen, squatting down behind a large wooden crate almost
completely covered by paint splashes of various colors. Patricia is ...
gone.
"Where's my daughter?"
"She's right ... damn, where is she? She was ... wait, I think she's ... no,
she's over ... man, she's fast! There, there she is, about seventy five
feet away from them. They're just getting organized, they don't know
she's out there. Wakey wakey guys."
* * * *** * * * *** * * *
"Alright gentlemen, let's go."
Enrique touches my arm and moves around in front of me.
"Raymond, perhaps we should let the men do it themselves this time. If
this is to be a training exercise, you wouldn't be leading them, they
would be protecting you."
Even now, he is trying to keep me safe. Enrique can be too much of a
mother hen sometimes.
"I think we can worry about that later, Enrique."
"Then let them take the lead and we can follow behind." He leans in
closer to me. "You yourself said that the Conner girl is very clever
and she insisted on this. Best to not be the first man through the
door."
He may have a good point there.
"Henry, you can lead the men this time. Enrique and I will wait back
here, in reserve."
He already has his mask over his face. "Yes sir, Mr. Hobbes."
"Make sure that my daughter isn't hurt."
"Yes sir."
* * * *** * * * *** * * *
All the guys are milling about, firing their markers at different
nearby structures, testing them out. There's a lot of laughing.
Sometimes, one of them lobs a few paintballs towards the barn but it's
way out of range.
Three of them are standing off to the side, talking. With their masks
on, it would be hard to know who they are. Luckily, I memorized what
each of them was wearing before we started. They're Henry, Lou and
Sidney, the three most senior guards. All within range of my Stingray.
* * * *** * * * *** * * *
"We split everyone into three groups. I take one group up the middle.
You take a second group down the right side, Lou, and Sidney takes the
final group down the left."
"Why bother, Henry? Just send a couple of guys down there to take care
of the girls then we can get down to some serious blasting."
"Because Hobbes wants to use this as a training drill, Sidney. We have
to take this seriously. The other reason is that Conner set this up.
She's got something up her sleeve."
"You got that right, Henry."
"Lou, you're still pissed that she cost you four bills."
"Doesn't mean Henry's not right, Sid. She's sneaky ... and smart, fucking
smart."
"Fine, let's get this over with. The pot's already over a thousand for
the last man standing."
Sidney's got a short memory. He's forgetting what Conner did to us the
first time we met her. I sure as hell won't.
"Just make sure you take this seriously, Sidney. We don't want to be
embarrassed by a couple of little ..."
What the fuck! Who the hell shot me in the face mask?! I can't see
shit! I whip off my mask. The face plate is covered in bright orange
paint. So are Lou's and Sidney's.
OH SHIT!
"Take cover! Take cover!"
"Who did this ..."
"It's Conner, you idiots! She's sitting out there somewhere, picking us
off!"
"Where, Henry?"
"Doesn't matter, Lou. We're out. Those guys are on their own now."
Guys are getting hit left and right. Some of the ones still alive start
firing back but they're shooting blind. The more noise they make, the
harder it is to pick up where Conner is. The smarter ones take cover.
The guys who just stand there, firing back don't last long. Same place,
smack in their face plates.
* * * *** * * * *** * * *
It is pandemonium. Enrique dives for cover at the sound of the first
shots, pulling me down with him. We both peek over the top of a pile of
sand bags.
"She's over there, X-ray." Enrique points to a small stack of crates
about forty yards away. At first, I don't see what he does, but then
the tip of her barrel appears and there are several puffs of gas.
God, that is loud! Three more men are hit, two in their clear plastic
masks, one in the mouth. That one quickly removes his mask and spits
out a stream of orange paint. It's Gomez. His moustache is stained
almost entirely orange.
Looking around, it appears that more than half my men have been hit,
almost all in the head. The remaining men are hiding behind whatever
cover they can find.
Enrique stands up.
"What are you fools doing?! She's just a tiny girl! Go get her!" he
screams.
"Where is she?" asks Escaban.
"That stack of crates to your left!"
"Got it!"
Three men pop up over their respective cover and begin firing at the
crates. It takes a few seconds for them to actually hit them. Once they
do, the remaining men swarm out and take up new positions closer to the
crates. They start firing and the other three join them.
This is more like it. The men methodically move closer to the crates,
each providing cover fire for the other as they close in. Enrique and I
follow them. Finally, one of the men runs the final few feet, jumping
behind the crates, firing as he does.
He steps back around the crates, raising his hands and shaking his head
"No".
He gets hit square in the face.
Paintballs strike all around the men, forcing them to run forward and
to their left. Somehow, Patricia had gotten behind us.
The men take up new positions while Enrique and I rush back to our
prior protection, though Patricia isn't shooting at us, for some
reason. The men begin shooting in the general direction of where
Patricia last fired from. Suddenly, they are attacked from behind ... by
Gretchen. Patricia and my daughter have them in a cross fire. Patricia
begins to fire again.
Enrique grabs my arm, pulling me away from the area. We crouch low and
work our way back towards our original position, moving from one
structure to the other.
"Stay here and do nothing" he says once we reach our destination.
"Did you see what Gretchen did?! My daughter actually shot my men! I'd
never thought such a thing possible! I've never been prouder!"
* * * *** * * * *** * * *
"Yes, I saw, X-ray. Very impressive. I'm happy for you."
Connor drove the incompetent fools to an ambush. Given what she did to
the other men, she likely could have finished them off herself but she
gave Gretchen the honor of the kill. She likely could have also
finished us off, but she didn't. Which means she has something else in
mind.
"You stay here, keep an eye out for Conner. I'll circle back and search
for her. If either of us sees her, shout out. Remember, she has a
superior weapon."
"How is that possible? Ours are the latest, most modern available. The
manager said hers was older than she was."
"I don't know how it happened, but it did. How else can you explain
what just occurred?"