plus tips are going to run over here and risk their lives for a customer?”
“Maybe.”
He grinned, glancing back at a child at the table behind them. He leaned back in his chair, partially exposing the holster with the pistol inside. “I’ll tell you exactly what would happen. Nothing. Not a single person in here would do anything once they saw this gun. I would pull it out, shoot you in the head, and then again in the heart to make sure you were dead. I would take the keys out of your pocket and then find someone else to drive me. Maybe the hostess.”
She shook her head, her eyes on the table. “Why are you doing this to me?”
“I’m not doing it to you. You were brought here by your choices. The choices you’ve made in life brought you here , and the choices I made in life brought me to this side of the table.”
“You’re not making sense. You said our thoughts bring us where we are.”
He smiled. “Thoughts make our choices, and our choices make our actions, which make our lives.”
The food came out a short while later , and he ate with gusto, then chugged a full glass of water.
“You were absolutely right about that,” he said. “That was delicious.” He wiped his lips with a napkin. “So have you made your decision?”
“About what?”
“About whether you’re going to scream or not.”
She didn’t say anything , and he rose from the table, leaving a hundred dollar bill next to the plate. He took her arm and dragged her out of the restaurant, and she didn’t protest much.
Once they were on the road again , he pulled out his phone and checked the next name before he said, “Head to the 405. We got a thirty-minute drive ahead of us.”
15
Dobbins Air Force Base was the closest air base to Samantha , and she sped down the interstate to get there in time for her flight. She wouldn’t arrive in California until early the next morning. But she was too wired to sleep on the plane, so she’d brought her iPad, which had several movies on it she hadn’t watched yet.
When she arrived , the flight wasn’t scheduled to leave for another forty-five minutes, so she waited by the gate since they wouldn’t let her in without proper clearance. Duncan had forced himself onto the flight and demanded that he go with her. She protested, saying he should be on the flight for purposes of getting her there and then fly right back after dropping her off. But he wouldn’t take no for an answer, and she didn’t fight hard. The truth was she could really use someone with her.
Within minutes of her arrival, Duncan appeared at the gate in a cab. He paid before getting out, then hugged and kissed her.
“You sure about this?” he asked by way of greeting.
“She’s my only sister. And she’s in trouble . I know it.”
He nodded. “Okay. But we’re going there as part of the military. I only got you clearance by saying the CDC needed access as part of a study I’m doing and that I couldn’t do it without you. You cannot go anywhere without me. I’m serious, Sam. You have to stick by me once we’re there.”
“Why? What did they tell you was going on?”
“I’m not entirely clear on the details, but it sounds like they’ve shut the entire state down, and no one can leave. I don’t know how they intend to enforce that, but that’s their plan.”
She shook her head. “I thought we were done with this. I though t the agent had died out in South America and Oahu.”
“Nature doesn’t know how to give up . But I think it’s contained. Just under a hundred known infections, every one of them quarantined in a hospital. Hopefully, this will be over once no more cases appear.” He looked at the guard at the gate and then back to Sam. “You certain?”
“Yes.”
“Okay, let’s go.”
16
Dr. Aneil Deluge walked down the corridor of Saint Anthony’s Hospital in Napa, California. Under his arm, he carried a clipboard
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