Maybe

Maybe by John Locke

Book: Maybe by John Locke Read Free Book Online
Authors: John Locke
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right.”
    He frowns again. “Fine.”
    “You can sit in the sun by the pool.”
    He puts his index finger in the air and spins it around.
    “Whoopee!” he says.
    “I thought old people loved sitting in the sun, by the pool.”
    “Fuck you,” he says.

 
    “AM I ALLOWED to be pissed off?” Lou Kelly says.
    Miranda and I are in the rental car, headed south on 81, bound for Sensory Resources, in Bedford, Virginia.
    Wait. I know what you’re thinking. Bedford’s east of Roanoke, not south.
    You’re right. I mean, that’s what I’ve always told you.
    But it’s not true.
    I’m trusting you with this because…well, because I trust you. You’ve known me awhile, now, and you deserve the truth. Sensory isn’t near Bedford. It’s eighty miles south-west.
    Why did I lie?
    We’ve always lied about the actual location. It’s what I programmed my staff and all the workers to say.
    Here’s why:
    Bedford’s a small town, where everyone knows everything about everyone else. There are people in Bedford who contact us when strangers show up asking questions about Sensory Resources, Donovan Creed, Lou Kelly, Callie Carpenter, Jarvis Kent, Jeff Tuck, Joe Penny, and the various assassins and bomb-builders who work for us, as well as the doctors and security personnel who work at the Sensory facility.
    Those who come to Bedford seeking information… stay in Bedford, if you get my drift.
    Lou doesn’t know we’re forty minutes away from paying him a surprise visit, but he’s on the phone and pissed because he just learned…well, I’ll let him say it:
    “I busted my ass to get you the victim photos, then I hear you spent the morning viewing not only the photos but the victims themselves!”
    “Relax, Lou.”
    “This is why you had me fly Miranda Rodriguez to Louisville last night? You could’ve saved me hours of work by telling me your plans. It’s not like I’m sitting around, twiddling my thumbs all day.”
    “Listen. Twiddling your thumbs all day is hard work. Don’t let anyone tell you it’s not.”
    “Hilarious. Look, if you want to catch Felix, we can’t do the same things. You’re wasting my talents and resources.”
    “I agree. This was a spur-of-the moment decision. I hoped to interview the victims, see if they saw anyone suspicious.”
    “Did they?”
    “Yes. They saw Felix. And Santa, Elvis, and the Tooth Fairy. They were so drugged up they could barely think.”
    “I could’ve told you that before you made the trip.”
    “I know. But I wanted to see them for myself, in person. It fuels me.”
    I put Lou’s call on speaker. Then ask, “Any news on Felix?”
    “If I had anything, I would’ve called you.”
    “I believe you. But where would we be if I failed to ask?”
    “It’s been less than two days since the fair. You expect him to do something this soon?”
    “Yes. This is an angry corporate chemist. Probably lost his job recently, so he’s got free time, fresh supplies, and a whole lot of pent up aggression. If we let him cool off or run out of supplies, he’ll probably quit.”
    “That’s a good thing.”
    “If he quits, he gets away with it.”
    “True. But the world’s a better place.”
    Miranda and I exchange frowns. I say, “So he cools off, gets another job, and gets fired again. What then?”
    Lou says, “What made you narrow him down to a corporate chemist? Why can’t it be a high school or college professor?”
    “Did you see the photos of the kids’ faces?”
    “Yes.”
    “You think a teacher would do something like that?”
    “A crazy one, maybe.”
    “This is an angry corporate chemist. He’s been fired recently.”
    “Not retired?”
    “No. Retirement is something you see coming. Felix is angrier than that. He’s been fired for doing something wrong, or because of the economy. Get your geeks to search that angle.”
    “Will do.”
    “Keep me posted.”
    “I will. By the way, the CFO at Jefferson Memorial said you’re paying the victims’

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