Lost Boys

Lost Boys by Orson Scott Card Page B

Book: Lost Boys by Orson Scott Card Read Free Book Online
Authors: Orson Scott Card
Tags: Fiction, Horror
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on, who do you think can hear us?”
    Step thought, but did not say, that the games in the room made them talk louder , while the noise they made wouldn’t interfere half as much with someone outside the room who wanted to listen in.
    Someone knocked on the door.
    â€œCome in!” yelled Gallowglass.
    It was Dicky, and for a moment Step felt that rush of guilt that comes when you’ve just been caught. Dicky had been listening.
    â€œSo there you are,” said Dicky. “I’ve been looking all over for you.”
    â€œMe?” said Step.
    â€œI wondered if you wanted to go for lunch with me.”
    â€œHe can’t,” said Gallowglass immediately. “He’s going to lunch with me , so I can get him up to speed on the new features in Scribe 64.”
    â€œAnd I have to get him up to speed on everything else,” said Dicky, looking a bit stern.
    â€œHey, leave me out of this,” said Step. “This is my first day, I’ll go wherever I’m told.”
    But Dicky and Gallowglass gazed at each other for a few long moments more, until at last Dicky said, “Come see me after lunch.”
    â€œSure,” said Step. “But you’re my supervisor, Mr. Northanger, so my schedule is yours to command.”
    â€œCall me Dicky,” said Dicky.
    â€œNot Richard?” asked Step.
    â€œIs there something wrong with Dicky?” asked Dicky.
    â€œNo,” said Step. “I just thought—”
    â€œDicky is not a nickname for Richard,” said Dicky. “It’s the name I was christened with.”
    â€œI’m sorry,” said Step.
    â€œAnd meeting with you after lunch is what I prefer .” Dicky closed the door behind him.
    â€œMan, you’re a champion suck-up,” said Gallowglass.
    Step turned on him. “What are you trying to do, get my supervisor permanently pissed off at me on my first day on the job?”
    â€œDon’t take Dicky so seriously,” said Gallowglass. “He can’t touch a program without introducing a bug into it. The guy’s worthless.”
    Apparently Gallowglass had no concept of the kind of trouble that Dicky could make for a man in Step’s position. This kid’s relationship was with the owner, and he was the programmer of the bread-and-butter program that was paying everybody’s salaries, so he really could treat Dicky however he liked. But that didn’t mean Dicky liked it. In fact, if this had gone on very long, by now Dicky probably seethed at anything Gallowglass did or said. And he’d take it out on whoever was closest to Gallowglass who actually needed his job.
    Step.
    â€œDo me a favor,” said Step. “Don’t do anything to get Dicky any more ticked off at me than he is.”
    â€œSure,” said Gallowglass. “Don’t get mad. It’s really OK, I promise you. You’re in like Flynn around here, everybody’s really excited you’re actually here. You’ll see, it’ll be great.”
    â€œNo sweat then,” said Step, though Gallowglass was probably wrong.
    â€œAnd I really would be glad to tend your kids for you.”
    â€œThanks,” said Step.
    â€œI’m really good at it. And I’m not afraid to change diapers.”
    â€œSure,” said Step. “I’ll talk to DeAnne about it.”
    â€œOK. Squeet.”
    â€œWhat?”
    â€œSqueet. It’s just a word we use around here. It means Let’s go eat, only the way you say it when you say it real fast. Squeet.”
    â€œSure, fine,” said Step. “Squeet.”

4
Y UCKY H OLES
    This is why DeAnne, a westerner all her life, was unpacking boxes in the family room of a house in Steuben, North Carolina: Her earliest memories were of growing up in Los Angeles, in a poorer part of town back in the fifties, when gangs did not yet rule and blacks were still colored people who were just starting to march and had not yet

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