First Do No Harm Winter JenningsChapter 15 Eagle
- 4 years ago
- 23
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That night, Felicity and I checked into the Beverly Wilshire around eleven. Thank you, Carmen. I felt wrung out. I’d gone from a sugar high — copping Bolton’s digital data — to just plain scared.
Felicity was nervous too, but she hadn’t been personally involved in the Macklin case like I had. Mostly she was enjoying the sights — Los Angeles, Beverly Hills, this hotel.
I went to sleep, forgetting to let Vanessa and the kids know where I was.
I woke up with the faintest, faintest notion of a notion. A wisp of a hint, a trace of a remembered conversation. Hugh Macklin’s daughter, Grace.
I spoke to Gloria, “Long-shot idea. I’d like to use the Sullivans.”
Sharp look, “Why?”
I told her. Succinctly, with an emphasis on how long-shottish my reasoning was.
She looked off into space, much like Matt used to do. Nodded to herself, “Pinkham told me Pittsburgh is the best. The Sullivans are good, better than we had, but they’d probably be duplicating efforts. Go ahead. Tell Carmen to give you Fourteen.”
Fourteen turned out to be a small, windowless conference room. But filled with everything we needed including a fully stocked fridge. Coffee maker. Snacks that involved Gloria’s mini Snickers bars. Which the Sullivans were on like wolverines.
Echoing Daddy, I said, “Let’s put the tech stuff aside for now. Refocus on the people.”
Jessie and Jesse glanced at each other; came to an agreement. Nodded.
“Tell me what you know about Eric Roberts.”
Like always, they tag-teamed each other.
Roberts was California-born to parents of modest means. Early video game ace. Computer whiz. Stanford scholarship. Heavily recruited in Silicon Valley. Within two years, he’d worked his way up to head of security in a Foster City startup specializing in Artificial Intelligence. AI.
Jessie said, “He was offered more cash at Dell and Hewlett Packard, you know, old-timey companies. But he went for stock options. Ground floor.”
I said, “Why security?”
Jesse said, “That’s what he majored in at Stanford — writing security code. He was sort of a campus legend in that field.”
I frowned, “Didn’t Roberts leave Silicon Valley under some sort of cloud? When Macklin hired him?”
Jessie, “Yeah. No official charges out here. But supposedly he was selling company stock before he was fully vested. In another name.”
“Whose?”
Jesse was scrolling, ‘Holy fuck! John Bolton!”
Okay. Nothing, as the lawyers say, probative. Nothing linking Bolton himself to the Macklins. To the Obliteration Virus. But as Daddy says, better to know than not.
Felicity was listening intently.
Unbidden, Carmen sent in lunch from The Ivy. Even I’ve heard of it. Wisely, Carmen joined us.
Fresh-squeezed tangerine juice. Cold poached artichoke. Wild swordfish tacos. Ricky’s fried chicken. Snickers for dessert.
Back to work.
I looked at Jessie, at Jesse. “Talk to me about Grace Macklin.”
Another glance-exchange. Puzzled this time.
Jesse was scrolling, scrolling. Jessie said, “We stopped looking at her after that first pass.”
Jesse said, “Okay, Caltech. Apparently genius level.” He raised a little hand about shoulder-high, “Roberts was a campus legend.” He held his other hand above his head, “Grace Macklin was up here.”
I looked at my handwritten hotel notes from this morning. Smiled at the leprechaun twins, “Again, let’s forget about the tech-tech side of things. Look at this as a ... a puzzle. Logic puzzle.”
They nodded uncertainly.
“Roberts was a code-writer extraordinaire. We think that he created a ... an anti-security virus. The flip side of what he did at Stanford.”
Jessie and Jesse frowned.
“But where, exactly, is that virus? You spotted a hint of it. Maybe, probably, aimed at Gloria Allen and Gathers and Gates. But the clock is tick-tocking. The Feds are combing the country for Roberts. Why hasn’t he activated the Obliteration Virus?”
Jessie held up her little hand, a child back in the classroom.
“Yes?”
Jesse asked the question for her, “Maybe because he can’t? He created something very sophisticated, but got stalled when he tried to activate it?”
Jessie said, “It’s not so much that he couldn’t figure out how to launch the Obliteration Virus. It’s ... he couldn’t control it, couldn’t limit the spread.”
I nodded, “And who could deploy the virus with more ... confidence?”
Jessie, “A hacker! Grace Macklin.”
The Sullivans and Felicity and I took our raggedy-ass theory to Carmen and Sistine. Who brought us into Gloria’s office. With the New York trophy wall.
I said, “This isn’t technology, Gloria. You have the Sullivans and Pittsburgh for that.”
She rolled her hand in a get-to-it motion.
“Grace Macklin was humiliated at the firestorm of Triple-I exposure. Public exposure, world-wide exposure. Personally, she hasn’t been charged with anything.”
“I know.” Move it along, Winter.
“But what if there were a way to ... obfuscate everything. Maybe even make the human experiments go away. The charges against her father anyway. I mean the taint will always be there, but if proof of the human trials went away...”
“The Obliteration Virus.”
“Right. Let’s say Roberts, the code-writer, created it. But didn’t quite know how to activate it safely. Needed a hacker, genius hacker.”
“Grace?”
Jessie said, “Caltech.”
Jesse said, “She even put on an anti-hacking tutorial for freshmen.”
Jessie, “While she was still in school.”
Gloria frowned, “So ... a ... two-step process. Create the virus. And hack your way into a controlled distribution.”
Gloria nodded to herself, smiled at me, “Lawyers chase shadows. You chase the people who cast shadows.”
She frowned again, “Where is Grace Macklin? New York? Kansas City?”
I shook my head, “We weren’t tracking her. When she first disappeared, she went back home. Mission Hills, just across State Line from Kansas City.”
Gloria looked at Jessie, at Jesse, “Find her.”
She looked at me, “I’ll call Pinkham.”
If my reasoning were anywhere near accurate, Eric Roberts was fighting for his freedom. His life. Attacking.
Grace Macklin ... it was more complicated. She could never hope to clear the family name, but maybe obscure things enough to have some credibility reestablished.
And there was her father, Hugh. I had no idea what their relationship was like. Apparently he kept her segregated from the Triple-I’s day-to-day. At the same time, he’d created a non-voting seat for her on the Board.
Did Grace hope to muddy the legal waters enough to get the charges against him dropped? Or at least reduced enough that he might come home to fight it. Plead it down.
Daddy had often told me, “People are never just one thing.”
Fuck.
The FBI was deep-delving into the Obliteration Virus. Searching northern California for Eric Roberts.
They’d obtained a warrant and were still closely monitoring every device John Bolton owned. And were reinvestigating the stock he’d sold for Roberts.
Also, they were quietly trying to suss out the whereabouts of Grace Macklin. She hadn’t been charged with anything, but they didn’t want her suddenly startled enough to flee for a bolthole. Like her father.
The NSA had obtained a FISA warrant to monitor all electronic communications from Hugh Macklin. The Feds were limited to Doha, however. Macklin hadn’t been sighted there since his Gulfstream had landed at Hamad International Airport.
But he hadn’t been spotted leaving Qatar either.
Low-level diplomatic inquiries were made. Those were somewhat complicated by DC’s uneven response to the Saudi-Qatar contretemps.
Rewards for Macklin-info were street-whispered among the domestics — low-level employees mostly from the Philippines, Indonesia, East Africa. Hotel maids, maintenance workers, personal servants ... the underground network was abuzz with the news — $100,000 US, no questions asked.
Senator Wainwright had been concerned enough about the Obliteration Virus to appoint a Congressional subcommittee to study the threat from a national security perspective.
Privately, he’d tasked Constance with assigning two investigators to look into the current Macklin imbroglio. Once that would have been Matt Striker.
I was back in Kansas City, feeling very much as it I’d been sidelined. Truth was, there wasn’t much of a role for me these days. The FBI — tech teams working on the Obliteration Virus and agents on the ground scouring Northern California for Eric Roberts — made me redundant.
Even with that frustration, it was good to be back home. Vanessa, Walker, Pilar, Hobo, the Proper Villain.
I’m not one of those people who is surprised that things change when I’m not around. Well, I guess I sort of am.
In order to become a permanent resident at the The Wrigley — or even a hotel / restaurant / bar / regular guest — you have to pass a Gossip Aptitude Test. The current buzz centered around Edwina Rowbottom. She had moved in with Wally Maypole. Shy little Wally. Edwina hadn’t had a falling out with her brother — she still accompanied Nature Boy as he reported to work every morning.
Pilar confided in Vanessa and me, “Wally was a virgin.”
Not exactly stop-the-presses news. More of a confirmation of what the hotel had believed all along.
As for Wally, there were tentative ... stirrings. Hints of possible changes. He wasn’t slapping people on the back, cracking one-liners, nothing like that. But he had a little spring in his step. Like he was ... undergoing a slow-motion personality-molt.
His sister’s absence — overnight absence — didn’t seem to affect Nature Boy. He still drove the elevator every day, still nude, often erect. With the exception of new guests, none of his passengers seemed to take much notice.
But for me, for Vanessa and me, a change was brewing. One that involved Gertie, our money, and Harold Hudson. The once preeminent pimp of the Forgotten Northeast.
Last year, with a gulp and a bit of a tummy flutter, I entered the classroom — Contracts I — on my first day of law school at UMKC. The next class — Criminal Law would be that afternoon.
Now, will a Juris Doctor help me in my career? Or will it lead to different career? Not sure, but I was ... determined if nothing else. Vanessa, of course, had my back.
Walker was proud that I was a private detective, but he would be proud of me as a soda jerk. Daddy was also supportive; he always has been in whatever Autumn and I undertook.
I had considered taking a joint degree back at John Jay; a lot of students did. But I decided to graduate, then enter law school. When that day came, decision day, I was too hungry to get out on the streets. To follow Daddy into the Cop Shop.
Then, ten years later, it was time.
I wasn’t the oldest student in my first ever law class. There were a couple of guys in their 40s; I figured midlife crisis, nothing to do with me.
I kept up — sporadically — with Eric Roberts and Grace Macklin through Carmen Ortega and Sandra Fleming.
Carmen updated me on what the rest of the Gloria Allen team was doing. Sandra gave me the FBI skinny that trickled down from DC and back from California.
Their mutual lack of progress made me regret my bench-time even more. Yet, what should I be doing? If I knew, I’d be out there kicking butt. But, like Daddy told me, “Sometimes you just have to let other people run with the ball.”
“And then step in when the timing’s right?”
“Sometimes.”
Carmen called me from LA, “Gloria talked with her DC connection. FBI connection.” Pinkham.
“Red Maplethorpe thinks he may have confirmed why it’s taking so long for them to deploy that Obliteration Virus.”
“Why?”
“The hacker, whether it’s Grace Macklin or someone else, can’t control the ... perimeter. Can’t keep it from spreading everywhere. That would be a national disaster.”
“So they’re afraid to unleash it.”
“That’s what Red thinks.”
Of course they could eventually solve that problem. Or, just say fuck-it.
Gertie looked at Vanessa, looked at me. “You guys are sitting on some serious cash.”
My inheritance from Matt, my bonus from Gloria, brighter than anticipated earnings from Euforia.
Gertie stirred her Tanqueray with her finger and looked around BEAR’s from our favorite corner booth. It was almost three, most of the lunch crowd had returned to work.
Harold, tall and skinny and black, looked almost natty in his black summer-weight blazer. Spread collar, no tie. He kept glancing nervously at Bear. Who had plopped down a chair from a neighboring table, turned it around and was resting his massive arms on the back.
Bear didn’t react to the scrutiny; if I didn’t know him so well I might think he was unaware of the furtive looks.
Gertie said, “We have a narrow-window opportunity to buy the Robert Louis Stevenson.”
Vanessa said, “The whole building?”
“The whole building.” Gertie sat back, a crafty expression that I’d seen before. Back when she moved some of my money into Alzheimer’s care.
Of course Vanessa and I were familiar with the RLS. Through Gertie, we’d purchased a luxury co-op that encompassed the entire top floor, the seventh floor. Rented it out to four young women who had been good tenants for two years.
The RLS had, like its neighbors, been a rental building ever since it was constructed in 1925. Plaza location. On a prime street — Jefferson between Brush Creek and 48th Street. Across from two hot restaurants — Parkway Social Kitchen and The Oliver.
Unlike its neighbors — Mark Twain, Lowell, Longfellow, etc. that were also in the Poet’s District — the RLS had gone condo a few years back.
Louie-Louie brought a fresh basket of house-made chips. He glanced at Bear who made a circle-the-wagons gesture. Another Tanqueray, ice tea for Harold, red for Vanessa and me, water for the proprietor.
Gertie said, “Harold has purchased three one-bedroom apartments on the second floor. Over time, I’ve bought four two-bedroom units on one and three.”
I said, “Why is the building even available?” I knew from our previous transaction that the conversion to condos hadn’t been that successful. About half the joint was still vacant. And most of the owners used their apartments only as a pied-à-terre. So, according to our real estate agent, Cindy McGovern, the building was ‘a little sleepy’.
Gertie smiled, shark-like, “Crandall Hopewell has a case of the shorts. Bad case.” The owner. “And the few people who have bought units are up in arms. Maintenance fees are too high and the work is shoddy. The Condo Board has agreed to convert the building to co-ops if we take over.”
Vanessa said, “How is a co-op different from a condo?”
Gertie said, “Winter.” Calling on my oceans of New York experience.
I smiled at Vanessa, “If we turn the RLS co-op, each apartment owner owns a percentage of the building. Not the individual unit.”
“What’s the advantage to us?”
Gertie said, “We own the building. Or the company we’re forming does. The apartments are like shares of stock.”
“Okay.”
“Plus the property taxes are changed from individual units to one single-property tax assessment. Now, income tax deductions are trickier on co-ops, but I’ll show everyone how to navigate those waters.”
Louie-Louie reappeared, deftly balancing a tray of small plates. “Chicken-liver mousse. Compliments of Herr Hesse.”
Vanessa and I raised a glass in the direction of the imperious, stiff-postured martinet. Who returned our greeting with a head nod so abrupt that it would have been easy to miss.
I spread some mousse on a cracker. Oh my. Salty, buttery, slightly tart. Decadent.
Vanessa sighed, “This is the gateway-drug to offal addiction.”
Bear smiled.
“Hey Jude” was playing softly in the background.
Gertie handed a cracker to Harold. He took a tentative bite, his eyes closed like a child. Then he smiled, “Hey.”
Gertie addressed Vanessa and me, “I’m putting in five hundred. Harold another hundred. Bear’s in for a hundred. You guys... ?”
Vanessa said, “Suggestion?”
“One hundred each.”
Gertie didn’t try to sell us. Didn’t mention how strong our current ... um, liquidity was. She was twirling an unfiltered Camel; the meeting was about to be adjourned.
Vanessa looked at me. I looked at Vanessa. We both nodded.
I had been, irrationally, driving past the Macklin house on West 59th Street in Mission Hills. Fucking Kansas, that urinal cake of a state. Did I expect to see Grace Macklin mowing the lawn? Sunbathing? No.
Yet I was still drawn.
One of the richest enclaves in the country, Mission Hills has some of the most gorgeous homes in the area. Some monstrosities too.
The town was part of the southern expansion of Kansas City that included the Country Club Plaza in the early 20s. The MH population is only three or four thousand — not many people can fade the entry fee.
I had to credit the Macklins — in this case, Grant Macklin. The house was large, but nicely proportional. Seven two-story pillars in front, three dormer windows above them. The house had an enormous front yard, probably a couple of prime acres.
I teased myself with the idea of simply ringing the front doorbell, “Hi, Gracie in?”
Sometimes I just want to run with the wolves.
Of course I think of Matt; it would be unhealthy, almost morbid, not to. He was always careful, so meticulous in his operational planning.
I remember he once told me, “The rests in music are just as important as the notes.”
“Fuck does that mean?”
“Sometimes it’s better to pass up an opportunity to strike. A missed shot can be far worse than no shot.”
As Dixie Wexler and Karl Hoffstatter learned. True, they hadn’t missed Matt, but they hadn’t hit me.
Walker was looking pretty pleased with himself at breakfast. He wasn’t smug, not strutting around — that wouldn’t have been him. Plus he knows better. He’d be sleeping with the fishes.
Pilar, who plays the flattery game as well as any grown woman, gushed, “I am spent. Nothing left. Last night ... Walker... “ She shook her head, let her voice trail off.
Vanessa glanced at me, “Maybe we should commemorate the occasion. An oil painting, say.”
Pilar hummed “Master of the House.”
I said, “Or a severed head.”
Walker touched his throat reflexively.
Constance Grayson called me herself. “Harper subpoenaed John Bolton. He’ll be interrogated by one of our investigators in San Francisco. Like to sit in?”
“God! I’d love to. Can I tell Gloria?”
“We want you to. She can draw up a list of her own questions.”
Gloria Allen had invested a lot of money in me. Or, Gathers and Gates had. But I felt their investment had already paid off. ZB8687 was, so far as we knew, out of play. Hugh Macklin was in hiding. Big Pharma, the opioids slice of it, was hastily negotiating a settlement.
And, thanks to my John Bolton research, the Sullivans had uncovered a hint of what may turn out to be a deadly software virus. Aimed directly at Gloria Allen and her team.
So I felt like the addition of a Senator Wainwright subpoena was ... what? A dividend. Gloria had hired me mainly because of my connection to Matt. And, indirectly to the senator. I hadn’t worked for her when Matt was still ... alive, but she’d researched me. Typical Gloria Allen.
She had been calculating, and, at the same time, correct. It was unlikely that any other congressman — House or Senate — would have even known about Bolton, let alone targeted him.
In a way, I imagine that a probe spearheaded by a United States Senator would be even more worrisome than a visit from the police. DC represented the weight and majesty of the federal government. Of the entire Homeland Security apparatus.
The imposing federal building on Golden Gate Avenue in San Francisco housed an unassuming FBI conference room with an unassuming investigator working for Constance Grayson.
A slightly plump, slightly frowsy, middle-aged woman smiled and shook hands with Gloria and me, “Hi. Florence Nelson.”
Gray, two-piece herringbone suit, sensible shoes.
“Gloria Allen.”
“Barbara Reynolds.” I wasn’t in costume, no lifter-boots, no wig. But if, in some labyrinthian way, news got back to Fowler; and, in some other, circuitous way was passed on to Eric Roberts ... well this was the girl they knew about. Barbara Reynolds who looked like Winter Jennings.
If the interview transcript ever ended up in some court proceedings, Barbara Reynolds would be identified as a part-time consultant to the FBI.
Convoluted, but designed to protect the civilian. Professional civilian. Professional as fuck.
Nelson handed Gloria a file folder, “Questions for Bolton. I understand you have your own list?”
The two attorneys scanned each other’s lines of inquiry.
Gloria nodded, “Good. We’re thinking along similar lines.”
Nelson pressed a button on a complicated desktop communications instrument, “We’re ready.”
John Bolton and a distinguished-looking man in his 60s were ushered in. Mr. Attorney smiled and held out his hand, “Gloria.”
“Ashford. This is Florence Nelson and Barbara Reynolds. Florence is in charge — she has a few questions.”
“While my client is not here voluntarily, he is happy to provide his full cooperation to ... the appropriate authorities.”
Senatorial clout.
Bolton glanced at me without the slightest hint of recognition. Not from The Alchemist. Nor, apparently, from any third or fourth-hand description that could have come through Eric Roberts. Good.
Florence Nelson went for the jugular. First question, “When did you last communicate with Eric Roberts?”
Bolton knew from the subpoena that we’d accessed his devices. And that we knew he knew Roberts was wanted by the FBI. Bolton was already guilty — he and his attorney simply wanted to limit the damage.
And, fact was, Bolton was of only peripheral interest to the good guys. We wanted Roberts and had little interest in Bolton’s not having blown the whistle on his buddy.
Of course none of that was conveyed to him.
Nelson’s questions to Bolton were quiet, but firm. Direct, nothing lawyerly about them.
One hour and forty-five minutes of interrogation boiled down to five points:
Bolton had not seen Eric Roberts in over a year.
They had not talked on the phone during that time.
The only communications were through encrypted emails.
Roberts was terrified.
Bolton had no idea where Roberts was.
Florence Nelson, representing Senator Wainwright — and Gloria Allen, representing her own interests — agreed with the FBI’s plan. Bolton was to wait until Roberts contacted him again. Bolton was not to initiate anything. Might make Roberts skittish.
All Eric Roberts messages would be seen simultaneously by Red Maplethorpe and his team. Even if Roberts started using library computers, they could geo-locate his general whereabouts.
Because the authorities had frozen all of Roberts’ financial accounts, he was almost certainly hurting for money. Even if he had an Earthquake Fund from his Silicon Valley days, it probably wouldn’t keep him afloat that long.
Roberts had left his Aston Martin Vanquish Volante in his parking spot in a lower Manhattan garage. We didn’t know what he was driving. If anything. He could be paying cash to ride the dog. And, with his security background, probably had at least one alternative ID.
One way or another, he’d traveled from New York to Mendocino.
Jessie invited me to come by their little bungalow. It was around 10 on a warm August evening.
I said, “Burgers? Hogshead?”
“Perfect.”
Hogshead was a fairly new restaurant on the Country Club Plaza. We’d discovered it before it even opened — they had a food booth at the Plaza Art Fair. Cheeseburgers, expensive at $14, but worth it. Bacon from Daily’s. Farm egg, KCCCo hops pickles. Red onions, brioche buns.
Even though the Sullivans are diminutive, they have healthy appetites. I doubled the burger — only three more bucks, a bargain. A value. Because I didn’t want them to feel embarrassed, I went ahead and doubled my own order. Manners.
Chinese-red PJs this time around. We sat at their kitchen table and dug in. Icy cold PBRs, perfect for summer supping. And sipping.
Jesse said, “We went back to Caltech.”
Jessie said, “Yearbooks, school paper, off-campus clubs, social media.”
Grace Macklin.
Jesse, “Macklin crossed paths several times with a classmate, Valerie Slotskie. Especially their senior year. Two classes, chess club, fencing lessons.”
Jessie, “Epee.”
The twins were loving it. They’d found something and were drawing the conversation out. Fine. If they had even a single breadcrumb, it was more than I did.
Jesse brought fresh beers. “Slotskie flew here, to Kansas City, July 14th.”
Right after the Triple-I media explosion. The day Roberts disappeared, and Hugh Macklin flew to Doha.
I said, “She a hacker?”
Jessie shook her head, “We don’t think so. Geological and Planetary Sciences.”
“So, a friend?”
Jesse, “We think so.”
“Okay, where the fuck is Slotskie?”
Jessie didn’t try to hide her grin, “Mission Hills.”
Fuck me. Ass.
“The whole time? Over a month?”
Jesse, “No record of her leaving.”
I started with Daddy. Old-school.
“A friend of Grace Macklin’s, Valerie Slotskie, flew in last month and may still be with Macklin. In that Mission Hills house.”
“Mission Hills. That’s the Prairie Village PD.”
“Suggestions? I don’t know if the Feds could get a warrant to search the house again.” They’d given it a thorough going-over when Hugh Macklin fled the country. And Grace wasn’t wanted for anything.
“You want to see if Grace is there, right?”
“Right. And if she’s involved with the Obliteration Virus.”
“Let me make a call.” Daddy would have a pal in every police department in the area. Even in Prairie Village. Fucking Johnson County. Fucking Kansas.
Okay, Operation GM. Grace Macklin.
But, maybe I’m maturing. Or maybe still absorbing Matt Striker cautionary lessons. Rather than just rushing in, I decided to clear it with my boss, Gloria Allen. And with the FBI.
Daddy agreed with me. Probably was quite proud of his younger daughter.
I explained the old-school scheme to Carmen Ortega. She said, “I’m transferring you to Sistine.”
Sistine said, “Sounds good to me. Gloria will call you when she’s out of her Streep meeting.”
Streep? Meryl fucking Streep?
Gloria returned my call about an hour later, “I don’t see a downside, do you?”
“Not if it goes smoothly. But you know...”
“Worst case.”
“Grace Macklin tumbles to the ruse. Then she’ll know that we’re onto her. For something. And if she’s the hacker, she’ll suss it out. Might force her to take a chance on the virus.”
“What does the FBI say?”
“You were my first call.” Suck-up.
“Good. Let me call Connie. Carmen will get back to you.”
That was Monday.
I drove by the Macklin house twice more. Nada.
Carmen called me Tuesday afternoon, “Can you move in tomorrow?”
“I’ll double check with Daddy, but it was a go last I heard.”
Operation GM was a tricky bastard to pull off. Only one Prairie Village official — Daddy’s police buddy, Mac McDavis, was in on it. And he knew only one thing — I wanted inside the Macklin house.
His role, very peripheral, very minor, would be that of gatekeeper. After the accident, he would clipboard-record everyone who left and entered the house.
One of my Winter Irregulars, Mingo Bernhard Cochran, would be responsible for the utility failures. Five houses, and five houses only, would lose electrical power. Three of those houses would have a minor gas leak.
What Mingo wanted, more than anything, was access to the three houses that were to be evacuated. A light-fingered shopping spree. Instead, he accepted a take-it-or-forget it donation from me. Five thousand. From Gathers and Gates. Well, I’d worry about the expense report later.
Jesse Sullivan and I were in white coveralls. White van. The lettering on both sides of the van read:
KANSAS CORPORATION COMMISSION Utilities Division
Headquartered in the state capitol, Topeka, so it shouldn’t seem remarkable that no Johnson County officials recognized us.
Two big ifs of course. Was Grace Macklin even there? And what about her laptop?
I could have cloned the contents myself; I’d done it with Drake Fowler. But Jesse would be faster, surer. And, I could run interference — get him in, get him out. Keep watch.
I found myself drifting off course in the Macklin affair. I kept reminding myself that I wasn’t taking on a cause, a crusade. A big-picture understanding can be helpful. But my work, my career, is ... individuals, not industries. I’d gotten caught up in the American Nazi movement, but my main focus was on Dixie Wexler all along. So ... Big Pharma. Fine. Individual companies like Macklin. Fine. But somewhere out there was a Dixie Wexler. I just didn’t yet know who he was. Or she. What is...
On the United flight to LA — mileage! — I recapped my last few days. I’d crept Dr. Samantha Rowley twice. Jersey again, then Chelsea on Sunday night. I’d couriered the photos to Carmen Ortega. They’d found something — I’d learn what later this morning. Monday — Jakub Nowak. Nic. Nada. Tuesday — Mr. Drake Fowler I was hand-carrying the ... um, research. Would turn it over to the Gloria Allen team. None of whom would inquire about the provenance of the material. I wouldn’t mention that the...
My second stop let me spend the night with Vanessa and the kids. Hobo and the Proper Villain. But first, I hit Waldo. The Sullivans. “Full court press on Eric Roberts. Was he selling his company stock before it was vested? Why did he leave Silicon Valley? Rumors, gossip, trade magazines, anything. Everything.” Jessie said, “You think Fowler might be a ... a front? Roberts is really the bad guy?” “I don’t know. What I do know is that LA knows Roberts was copied on some of Rowley’s reports....
Eons ago, Walker and I were having a Saturday lunch at the Unicorn Club. Back then it was tottering its way toward the rocky shoals of Chapter 11. Before Bear and Vanessa took over and saved us from BK ignominy. Walker and I had ordered hot dogs — butterflied and grilled. We were seated at a table in the bar section. He was at that age where he had recently noticed the woman he was living with was a living, breathing person. With boobs. Something other than just a mom. I’m sure he believed...
Gloria Allen’s file on the Macklin operation was thick. And well organized. A Summary Sheet provided an overview. The individual sections were tab-delineated and color-coded to match the Summary. Like a legal brief that needed to pass courtroom-muster. A separate folder contained suppositions, rumors, speculation. Facts were one thing; assumptions, projections, implied relationships another. Everything was also on a thumb drive, but I started old-school. I began with the facts. Macklin...
The first thing I did was change the bedroom and bathroom linens in Matt’s apartment. Everything in the washer; then fresh sheets, pillowcases, towels. Kitchen napkins too. I wasn’t trying to remove the Matt-scent; that was baked into the condo. I just liked ... fresh. Clean. I didn’t even try to not think about the times, good times, that he and I had spent here. Laughter, bed, laughter, food. I got a little teary a couple of times, but my sobbing days were in the past. At least I hoped...
Vanessa came home, chatted with Gloria. In English. She took a quick shower and joined us for dinner. Slipped a Mendocinas to Hobo. The Proper Villain was on the prowl. Pilar poured him some dry food, added a little empanada juice from the cast iron pan. Gloria watched with interest. She had a grown daughter, but, so far as I knew, lived alone in LA and New York. Maybe being around a family was refreshing. Gloria reached over, patted my hand, “So, how are you?” “Pretty good, considering....
We were having a because-why-not? celebration dinner. All my hospital stuff was behind us. Gertie Oppenheimer was in the house. Vanessa was on day two of her gumbo preparation. Heavenly smells. She had started with a light roux and turkey stock. The Cajun Holy Trinity — onions, peppers, celery. Freshly-peeled shrimp tossed in with okra, cayenne, tomatoes, some crabs, crawfish heads. Pilar, innocence personified, asked Gertie, “What do you think of all that free speech ruckus on...
The Princeton University campus looked like a college should look. An Ivy, anyway. Venerable, distinguished buildings. Sidewalks that wended and winded. Even in the July heat, hordes of students were strolling, reading, lying on lawns, playing hacky sack, sharing a joint, napping. I felt ... old. It was Saturday morning; Rowley was still at the Marriott Marquis. She had requested a late Sunday checkout. Thank you, Jessie and Jesse. I was on my way to Rowley’s leafy neighborhood, to Elm...
I issued a family BOLO as soon as I had a mugshot of Cozad Dillinger. I told Vanessa and the kids, “This may be the mook that rammed my truck.” We all studied the surprisingly clear photo. And read the description. Cozad was 26. Five feet, nine. Hundred and seventy. Minor stuff — bar fights, two motorcycle crashes, two DUIs. Dropped out, or kicked out, of North Kansas City High School. Possession of weed; released for time served. I said, “Nothing to indicate murderous intent. And it’s...
Back in Los Angeles, I was now in a graduate seminar. Carmen Ortega smiled, “Sistine thinks you’re ready to move on.” From opioids to the Post Traumatic Stress Disorder drug that Macklin had under development. PTSD. I had briefed the three of them — Gloria Allen, Sistine Sanders, Carmen Ortega — on l’affaire Dillinger. It was over, time to turn back to my real job. I said, “He wasn’t a criminal genius. The Sig Sauer was in his glove compartment. But he’d already confessed by then.” Gloria...
‘Mmm, Bastien…’ Sebastien Byrne looked down in dismay, watching as his new bride lovingly faked her way through another orgasm. She was very good at it—soft and sweet, and imminently realistic. No glass-shattering screeches, or siren-like banshee wails. In fact, if he hadn’t been inside of her when it happened, he would have sworn that it had been real. His pleasure greatly diminished, he rolled over onto his side, and pulled her body tightly against his. Winter wrapped her arms around his...
The last time I saw Ellie she had been running out of the house holding her blouse and her purse in her hand. She hadn't even taken her car. I found out later, with help from Rex, that she had evidently gone down a few blocks and called a cab. Then she had simply disappeared from the face of the Earth. I was sure she would return at some point during those next few days and try to talk to me. But I was wrong. As the days passed and became a week, then two, then three, with no attempt to...
The wagon finally pulls up to the shop, Grayson immediately jumps down and embraces his family in a huge hug, exclaiming “How I’ve missed you!” as he kisses his wife quickly and hugs each of his kids. Turning, he motions towards Sasha. Sasha then turns to the girl, and says “Wait here, I’ll be right back.” As the girl is waiting next to the back of the wagon, Sasha walks over to Grayson and he introduces her to his family. “This is Sasha, she’s the knight who escorted me all the way here.”...
Winter and I played in the bathtub together. Our fingers,lips and tongues,teased and caressed each other,until the water took on a chill and the bubbles from our bubble bath were almost gone. I drained the tub,turned on a warm shower and as we rinsed off I could not help but notice how beautiful she really is. Winter will grow to be be a stunningly gorgeous woman. I am sure of that.Once again I wrapped her in a towel and carried her back to the bed. She, snagged another towel from the rack as...
The homeless and poor peoples winter feastBy RotnebSynopsis: Every year there was organized a charity festival in the village hall for the city's homeless and poor people, a feast where all the poor once a year get filled stomachs and amused. This year will be something special when Lisa and eight other young women voluntarily donate their naked meat to the feast banquet and to entertainment for the homeless and poor. The story is only fantasy.The meats The first Sunday in February came the...
Introduction: Story about brave girl winter walk At first I have to start with me, that this project requires to give also self-experience. I have practiced winter nudity many years, but not regularly. There have been some pauses. I have been lucky to share winter nude walk with some girls, like here: http://www.nudeimagehost.com/viewer.php?file=56243058045088081241.jpg These are my photos and my car can be seen in two photos of these series. In previous winter I began from 1st January and then...
Marlene was a princess of the 9thB class in her school in little town of the northern country. She was an excellent student and also beauty – long blonde hair, pretty face and model-like legs. She was aware of her charm, but she wanted more. She tried to figure out, how to impress stronger. Marlene was ready to show up naked in front of the boys, but she wanted to find a good reason, which does not seem too easy. Suddenly she found a way – it must be an extreme nakedness like naked in...
In previous winter I began from 1st January and then every weekend, but not only the coldest (4-5 Feb), from which I wrote main story later. Longest time was at 26th February 1 h 47 min and temperature in this day about -4-5 (23-25 F), but sunny. Feeling of cold is not the same every time. Generally it can be very different. But normally after some 30-40 minutes is the warmest moment, then you don’t feel any cold. After some 1 h – 1h 15 min body started to feel colder again, but not too much....
October 12, 1996, Rutherford, Ohio Rutherford, Ohio was a relatively small town; but then again compared to Chicago, Cincinnati was a relatively small town. Rutherford was bigger than Milford, but not by a lot. It had the regional trauma center, the BMV, and the Harding County courthouse and other government buildings, as well as the Sheriff’s Department. I could imagine Milford being like Rutherford if all those facilities had been in Milford, instead of Batavia, which was the Clermont...
Siberia, morning of 23. December, second day of school holidays. Yulia xxxxxxx (family name secret), 11, unlike other girls, is nudist, which means, she spend holidays mostly naked. In summer it is not a big problem, only for community maybe, but here in xxxxxx (place name secret!) village nobody is complaining about matter. But now is winter. This year weather has been more severe already before winter solstice. Temperatures has been fallen below -30 and today is not an exception....
Richard Hyder was apoplectic, “Your Honor! This is outrageous! Trial by ambush! I’ve never seen anything so ... underhanded, so deceitful, in my forty-one years before the bar.” “Is there an objection in there?” Judge Graves seemed more amused than annoyed. “Yes! Yes there is. The Defense hasn’t even begun to present its case and this ... this ... private eye miraculously points the way ... I object! This ... these items cannot be entered into evidence.” “Grounds?” “Illegal search and...
On a hunch, Clint asked his Vanguard counterpart in Boise to go through the old surveillance videos before the raid on the Gunther compound in northern Idaho. A raid clandestinely approved and funded by Senator Harper Wainwright. And orchestrated by his chief of staff, Constance Grayson. And field-directed by Matt Striker. Boise called back the next day. Winner-winner, chicken dinner! Martin Folsom again. That tied him to two American Nazi compounds. And also made me start reconsidering...
The churning and merging is so vigorous that surrounding objects tremble with the movements, and so wet that a continuous sloshing sound is noticeable above the din of heavy breathing, rhythmic throbbing intonations and voices that betray heightened excitement and arousal. With pressure rapidly building and heat rising, the white frothy liquid reaches a point where it must burst from its dark enclosure. The bright juice sparkles in the sunlight as it is spewed, in copious amounts, into the air...
Group SexThe Necessity of Winter By Armond *** 1. Arthmael. I ripped the dagger from her heart... ...and held it, inches from the girl's fur wrapped chest. My hand refused to sheath the blade, pleading instead for release, to plunge it back. How I longed to; for the first time in my life, I would raise my wishes over duty to my people. Time stilled, as I fought my nature. The single movement in the room was bright red blood falling from gleaming blade.... ...one drop...
The police responded in under three minutes; two ambulances right behind them. One of them said, “Gun!” and I felt, but couldn’t see, one cop grab my shoulder bag where he removed the .38. The other one cuffed me, hands behind my back. Morales and I were rushed to University hospital. I ended up on the second floor of the Critical Care Tower. Morales was in the same building, but in the burn unit. When Suzette aimed at me, I had ducked my head and squeezed my eyes shut. That helped, but my...
2019 That was then; this was now, four years later. A lot had changed in my life since I told Carol Sue Parker goodbye at O’Hare. Of course, a lot would change in any four-year period; it’s just that I ended up measuring that particular span in terms of a young woman I had thought I’d never see again. Life goes on. Walker was now 15; I was 33. I was married, deliciously so, to Vanessa Henderson. Walker had a live-in girlfriend, his second, named Pilar Paloma. I was still doing a daily...
Chapter One“Damn it! Where did they go?” I mumbled to myself as I came to a fork on the icy path on this icy alpine mountain. Derrick, my boyfriend, thought this trip would be a great way to spend our winter break from the University we attended in Chicago.Susie, my BFF, and Sean, her boyfriend, all were excited about the trip. I guess I was the only one who didn't like the idea. The news has a way of making the world seem dangerous. Chicago doesn't have the best reputation, but I feel safe...
Fantasy & Sci-FiWe both awoke around six-thirty and we still smelt of sex, I think it turned us both on because she was soon all fours wiggling her arse and demanding, "Fuck me, come on, I'm horny!" We had a fast, furious five minutes of hard sex and we both came again. We then sat up to get our breath and Kelly said quite matter-of-factly, "What else turns you on? Would you fuck my arse, do a threesome with me and another girl? Would you tie me up and fuck me, spank me, piss on me, or me piss on you,...
aka “Winter in the Mountains” By Louishoney This story is written for ADULT entertainment ONLY! If you are not at least 18 years old, LEAVE! She ran as fast as she could through the forest and past the pines steepled atop the golden hills of grass. She was in a panic. Her footsteps were being dogged by a band of Chippewa looking to make her their sex slave again. Four or five of them had jumped out of the forest three days ago and ran after her across the meadow while she was...
Here is talking not me, but one girl about her winter nude experience.In the middle of December my friend suddenly proposed that I could ski nude. My first reaction was: what are you talking about!? But then very quickly I realized that it is good idea. I can't explain why I liked it but when that day came when we drove to the ski center, I was overexcited and I really had irresistible desire to go there nude and start to skiing. All my life I had always proper clothing according to weather and...
"Master, more slowly go! I pray you, less haste!" Ranulf reined in impatiently under the frost-rimed trees, brushing his red hair back from his forehead. The cold was growing more intense as they plunged ever deeper into the forest. His squire's hissing speech was slurred as the cold slowed all his bodily functions. "We'll make camp as soon as we find a place that gives us any shelter. That I promise." His voice was brusk but not unkind. The lizard man had served him well in his...
Pilar: “Guy walks into a bar and is shocked to see a horse behind the bar.” Walker: “Horse says, ‘What’s the matter? You can’t believe that a horse can tend bar?’” Pilar: “No. I just can’t believe the ferret sold the place.” Alicia Collins called me from New York. “Bear told you.” “Yes. Have to admit it shocked me. Vanessa too. And the kids.” “I’m sorry I didn’t say anything. But I felt it was Bear’s news to share.” “No, I understand. And he would have wanted to be the one to tell...
Walker: “A rabbi, a priest, and a Lutheran minister walk into a bar.” Pilar: “Is this some kind of joke?” Walker and Pilar, holding hands, bowing, “Thank you, thank you. This ends our Kansas City engagement.” xxxxxxxxxx Douglas ‘Duke’ Arlington. A new trial, his second, for the murder of Gustav Hindenburg in Ft. Payne, Alabama. Different courtroom, different judge, different jurors, different defense attorneys. New evidence. Ned Daniels and Hilary Dunne would reprise their prosecutor...
For some reason, crime in America follows railroad tracks. And Kansas City has plenty of both. My first, and I hope last, shootout took place near my office in the Stockyards. Besides gunplay, it involved ramming my bright red F-150 into a larger Dodge Ram. The Ford Motorcar Company told me, and I verified it through an independent mechanic, that the frame had been wrenched out of shape. It could be straightened, but wouldn’t drive the same, not really. I sat down with Vanessa and Gertie...
The new year had passed long ago on Earth, but our start of the new year was just another day on Arbor. The Arborian New Year started on the first day of spring, the vernal equinox. I chose that propitious day to deal with the alaspore and its master. I wove a new trick out of something Cor showed me how to do using the wind. I wove a cocoon out of moving air as she had shown me. I was able to use it, as she did, as a method of transportation, but I couldn't become the wind as she could, so...
Saturday morning breakfast, Walker and Gregory in charge of provisioning. Vanessa smiled at Pilar, “Is Walker still servicing himself?” Sucking his own cock. “Sometimes. Depends on what I’m in the mood for.” Gregory turned to Vanessa, not one whit of embarrassment, “I can’t suck it yet, but I can lick the very tip. Pilar thinks I’ll be able to if I keep practicing.” Vanessa gave him her glorious smile, ‘How often do you practice, honey?” “Every night when I’m home.” Pilar said, “I have...
I woke late and lingered over my campfire and my breakfast. It would take only a half day's riding to get to where I was going, and anytime today would be a fine time with me. The skies had cleared again and it was nice to wait for the chill of the night to abate before setting out. Deak seemed to appreciate it, along with the relaxed pace. He tossed his head now and then and nickered at me softly when he did. Perhaps, like me, he was chasing Vulkai cobwebs out of his mind. Remembering my...
He smiled as the sentence was handed down, Arthur Edward Winter, you have been brought before this court, for a charge of: - Well perhaps it`s not relevant here and to spare his blushes we won`t go into it, but the sentence was seven years, that’s the bit he got loud and clear. And, it must be said, so did his wife, tall willowy and dour Jenny Winter, sat up in the gallery, her face a mask of total disgust, mostly at her husband for getting caught and of course for the fact she would be on her...
Clint called, “Any New York plans yet?” “Remember Vanessa? Tall, good looking. Married.” “I’ll throw in a set of steak knives.” Click. Hey! I’m the one supposed to be hanging up. We invited Cathal Conway and family for Sunday brunch. Riles went with Walker and Pilar back to their room. She may be only 10, but the kids treat her as an equal. Jorge and Javier immediately started roughhousing with Hobo. The Proper Villain jumped up on Juanita’s lap. Cathal accepted his glass of Jamison —...
My mother called me. At work. First Autumn, now ... Flora Jennings. “Winter, can you come by?” Mom knew I worked, had my own office. But since I was no longer with the KCPD, nor employed by a real company, she simply hadn’t accepted that I do anything worthwhile. In fact, after Reggie left me, and before Vanessa married me, my mother regarded me as ... sad. A loser. Couldn’t keep a man, couldn’t find a real job. So it didn’t surprise me that she would expect me to drop whatever...
I was spending hours with the diminutive, scarlet-haired Sullivan twins, bleary-eyed from the grainy security tapes. Duplicating what more competent investigators with the KCPD were doing. At home, at dinner, I tried to wear a game face for Walker. He had lost Mindy to California, to Stanford, to a more age-appropriate life. I had lost my friend, Mary Packer, but I was determined not to let the gloom prevail. After working all day on her dream restaurant, Euforia, Vanessa was overseeing the...
Robert ‘Bobsy’ Atwater, as part of his three-patent sale to Hayes-Harris, the venture capital company, became an employee there. He wasn’t a partner, but he was one of seven on the Executive Evaluation team. He sat in on presentations from individuals and companies looking for investment capital. Hayes-Harris took small fliers and big risks, tiny positions and majority ownership. They provided money when they were interested. And money, expertise, guidance, even personnel, when they were...
I sent Clint some suggestions for the name of our firm. For incorporation purposes, he would be the equivalent of a CEO, but no one seemed to be interested in titles. To the clients, potential clients, each one of us would be the Indian Chief in our home town. As for a corporate name, I was leaning toward Winter Jennings & Associates, LLC. A second stolen print ended up for sale in Omaha, then a third in Des Moines. Little Rock, Denver, St. Louis. I push-pinned a map and noted that...
Clint spoke softly, “Does he have a gun?” “No, not in the basement. I don’t think.” Our first words. Clint bundled me in his arms and carried me back inside. He sat me gently on a hall bench and flicked the safety off on his Sig Sauer. Even in my panicked state, I registered his new P320. And I also became conscious of the anguished howls coming up from the basement. Clint opened the door cautiously. He didn’t look away from the stairwell as he asked me, “What did you do to...
It was the day before our expedition to Pickering was due to set off. Kelly, Kirsty, Kat and I were going and we were taking Will Hinds, Harry Wilton and Emma. Jim Bolton was also coming with us. Although he was now quite frail he wanted to feel useful and his military experience would be good for Will and Harry. He still had sharp eyes and would stay with the train on lookout duty. Katie and her group were all travelling and we would use both engines, with the same make up of carriages as...
At noon on Thursday, Miss Thompson's presence was requested at the principal's office. She arrived to discover a parent seated opposite the principal, dressed conservatively but expensively, with conservative but expensive jewellery. The wedding rings on her hand were expensive, elegant but not ostentatious. The contrast between her and the two educators, both of whom were wearing runners, ankle socks and minor jewellery, could not have been more strong. The Principal herself had decided to...
Meredith Daulton was running around her house yelling. They’d been given the evacuation order a few minutes ago. The Ranch wildfire was coming and they had twenty minutes to get out.Paul Caruso was packing both the car with computers, legal papers, and some clothes.“My jewelry, “Meredith screamed as she threw a bag at him. “I need that, it’s valuable.”“Is it insured?”“Of course it is...”“Then you don’t need it. I said clothes now, get in the fucking car and let’s GO!”She snatched the bag from...
Love StoriesAs the bright, invasive afternoon sunlight came streaming through my stained (with dust and dirt) glass window, I found myself spooning (and possibly forking) with my new dream girl, Winter Summer, whom I had met earlier at the Public Market. Rubbing my aching jaw from our earlier sexcapades, fearing I might have lockjaw then grinning like an escaped lunatic as I recalled her hairy pussy, suddenly so afraid she might be a werewolf I had to rush out to buy silver bullets (the ammo, not that...
HumorThe day began like all others, climbing out of bed at the crack of noon, devouring a Toaster Strudel and mayonnaise sandwich before braving the crisp Canadian weather by going to Vancouver's Public Market for fresh seafood now that I'm eating healthy. Along the way I passed a group of American hipsters vaping cannabis oil on a street corner, celebrating Tommy Chong's birthday. Damn Americans! Since Trump's election, they have flocked here like a silverfish infestation. Silverfish, that...
HumorNina sat idly flicking through a few magazines while she was waiting for her appointment with the dentist. For the last three years, she and her mates had hit Southern California beaches, where they swam, surfed, danced and drank themselves silly for about three weeks solid.This year Nina wanted something different, a much more relaxing and hopefully a more romantic setting place to visit. She closed her eyes for a moment, maybe somewhere with a lake, mountains, spa, hiking trails, and clear...
Seduction>?> > The coach just returned from his winter retreat with his special > boys. All the boys on the team want to go on the winter retreat of course, > but the coach only selects the very best. The boys who have maintained > strict control and discipline over their exercises and development. No boy > who has shot a load in the last six months gets to go on the winter retreat. > No boy who has spoken to a girl gets to go on the retreat. Only boys who are > totally focused and dedicated to the...
It was the first week of October 2013, I was working in the garden of my cottage on the edge of the Yorkshire Wolds near the coast. I hate gardening, always have done, but after last winter when potatoes reached £120 a pound on the black market, I decided that turning the garden, and a bit of the field behind the garden, with the agreement of the farmer who owned it, into a large vegetable patch was prudent. I was lifting the last of my potato crop and storing them for use during the winter....
I eyeballed Sandy Seaver two different ways. From the stands in The K and by tailing him. My first time in a baseball stadium. It was a revelation. An expensive revelation if I’d been paying for everything. Parking, tickets, food, beer. The little magazine that tells you ... um, baseball stuff. And, if I’d had little kids ... all those treats and souvenirs and whatever else they needed. I bet a family of four couldn’t get out of the park for under a couple of hundred bucks. But the scene...
The kids were hunched over the kitchen table moving black and white stones around a board. Gertie, sipping her Tanqueray, was watching with interest. I said, “What’s this?” Walker, shoehorning pity into a single word — a feat that only a teenager who had a slow mother could master — said, “Go.” I swatted the back of his head, “I know that, dumbbell, why are you playing Go?” Pilar, not looking up, said, “Gertie said that when AlphaGo beat Ke Jie, it was China’s Sputnik moment.” Walker,...
Two parallel investigations — sometimes intersecting, sometimes intertwined. The FBI, supervised by Ash Collins, was focused primarily on illegal weapons — manufacturing and sales. And chasing the gun money, possibly diamonds, around the world. Matt Striker, reporting to Constance Grayson, was all things Meriwether. Their PAC, their possible connections to Wexler and Hoffstatter. And, just maybe their connections to diamonds. I was, for now, relegated to the sidelines. Impatiently so. Ash...
American Snapshot: In Montana it is illegal to guide sheep onto a railroad track with the intent of damaging the train. Vanessa and I agreed to bring Walker and Pilar back home. We couldn’t hide them forever, although Rebecca Montgomery was enjoying their company enormously. But school. Friends. Life. An FBI agent was still posted in the Wrigley lobby. Gunther wouldn’t be able to board the elevator even if he were foolish enough, or desperate enough, to return for another try. Nor would...
The magic of Gaen seems closely bound to music and song while at the same time, Magic and Music each seem to be blooms from very different flowers. Beneath everything, they are very much of the same body. Mathematicians and musicians will both tell you this is true. Wizards will too, if you are in a position to ask them. Threes and fours, apart and in combination, especially in combination, have strong ties to the magic and history of Gaen. These numbers, especially in combination, seemed...