No Tour Guides in Hell: Chapter 21

ARLINGTON, VIRGINIA
Chapter 21
THIS LITTLE PIGGY WENT TO MARKET

Victoria Blake watched the Nation’s Capital shrink as the cab sped toward rural Virginia. At a stop, the driver leaned over the seat and brought a dose of droop-eyed ugliness back into her world.

“Where do you want out?”

“Isle of Paradise Spa.”

“You work there?” he grinned, revealing a row of rotting teeth. “You don’t seem like one of those girls who drown her blues in a hot tub. Maybe you’re the towel girl, huh?”

She hesitated, but he didn’t notice.

“Change towels? Right? Yup, I’m a great towel changer.”

“Lady, you’re nuts. That’s what you are.” She had to agree with him because this charade was a tricky thing for the First Lady to pull off.

She paid him and went into the spa. The same receptionist was still sitting at her desk, filing her nails.

“Hey,” the security guard suddenly appeared. “You can’t walk in here, lady. You’re not a member.”

“How do you know?” she asked, but she let him push her backward, out the front door.

“I see you here again, sister, and I’ll call the cops.” He left her on the curb.

Two senators’ wives came out complaining. They brushed past her without showing any recognition on their faces.

“Say, are you the new girl?” The man was the same one she’d seen in the sauna. “You need to use the back door. And pick up an ID in Personnel.”

“Oh, thanks,” she replied. “I’m a towel girl.”

He looked at her oddly. “Towel girl? That’s a new one. I thought we hired a reflexologist.”

“I’m definitely a towel changer,” she insisted.

“Must be the Linen Room. The rules are the same. You need a uniform and an ID. Follow me,” he said, and led the way to the back of the building. “You want to come in this way. They don’t like us to use the front entrance. That’s for the fancy, high-society wives.”

The back hallway wasn’t as upscale as the areas used by wealthy and famous clients. She followed the Sauna Guy into the locker room.

“You want to wear a clean uniform every day. They get mad if you don’t look spotless. So, if someone messes you up, just come back and grab some clean clothes,” he passed her a flamingo pink coat and lavender slacks.

“Thanks, this really is lovely.”

“Funny. Maybe you’ll last longer than they usually do here. At least you’ve got a goddamn sense of humor. Now take your sweet ass down to Personnel and get an ID badge.” And with that, he vanished.

A heavy woman with a sparse mustache and squeaky, sensible shoes entered. She examined Victoria.

“Where’s your name tag?” she hollered. “Who the hell are you?”

“I’m new,” Victoria stuttered. “I’m going straight to Personnel this minute.”

“Good. Say, you sure are cute,” the woman smiled, and Victoria turned beet red. She hurried down the hall, leaving the woman to entertain herself.

“Excuse me, do I know you?” Senator Ashton’s wife stopped her. Then she patted her silver-blue curls. “Are you the girl who does my pedicure?”

“Uh, no. I’m not,” and she wasn’t lying. “Have you seen Margreth Willson?”

It’s Mrs. Willson to you, sweetheart. She’s in the Tropicana Room. She was hobnobbing with Blake’s wife this morning and just breezed her way into the most prestigious room in the building. Showing off. Say, don’t I know you?”

Victoria lifted the stack of towels higher so that only her eyes were visible.

“No, I don’t think so.”

Then she rushed down the hall, away from danger. Or so she believed. After what felt like an eternity, she reached the Secret Service’s territory. That led directly to the highly secure Tropicana Salon.

A.J. Baldridge’s discarded magazine still lay on the chair. The blank faces of the monitors stared at her. The door to the Tropicana Salon was shut. Victoria could hear muffled voices on the other side. It wasn’t Margreth; the voice was too deep. It was a man. No— it was two men.

There was a bolt on her side of the door, and she thought for a long time before sliding it into place. Then she looked for the switch that controlled the bank of monitors. She’d seen it done a million times.

The monitor in the main hallway flickered on. The entrance was busy with employees and clients. The next switch turned on the sauna monitor, and there was Sauna Guy, large as life, handing out towels to women of different sizes, all wrapped in fluffy white terry robes.

The next two monitors watched the building’s front and back entrances. Nothing unusual was happening outside.

The final switch revealed the Tropicana. The camera was pointed at the far wall, and she could see a man’s head. He looked familiar, but she didn’t recognize him, so she used the joystick to pan the camera. First, it moved downward, showing black shoes standing in a sea of red soup. She pressed a button and captured a wide-angle shot.

Margreth lay on her back, helpless. A wad of cloth was jammed in her mouth. Her toes had been removed and littered the floor. The stumps spurted, shooting fluid across the room.

Victoria gagged. She was so terrified that she was tearless. Then she panned the camera to the other side of the room and captured the other tormentor.

“You might wonder why we’ve gone to such trouble to gather information from you.” The man’s back was to the camera, but she knew he must be sneering by his tone. “We need to determine how much you know and who you’ve told. You will, of course, forgive me.”

Victoria looked at the phone. It felt miles away from her. She was frozen with fear as she watched the horror her friend was going through. The man turned. The face was that of someone she saw every day. Someone her husband trusted.

“So, you told Victoria Blake nothing? Is this true?” Margreth nodded weakly yes.

“And Victoria Blake doesn’t know her child is part of a top-secret government research project and is actually a clone?” Margreth made a gurgling sound.

“Was Jake Barnes the only person to whom you divulged everything?” Margreth nodded, “Yes.” Her eyes reflected stark, naked pain.

Victoria felt a wave of dizziness and collapsed into the chair.

“Neither the President nor Mrs. Blake knows anything about the Government’s involvement in the cloning project? You didn’t tell her this morning?” Another shake of the head indicated no.

“Good job. I’ll finish you off and do you a favor. Sorry for the inconvenience of our little visit. But you should have known better than to poke your nose where it didn’t belong.”

Victoria didn’t want to watch the rest, but her eyes were glued to it. This couldn’t be real. And what about Margreth’s nose? How could she breathe?

As Margreth’s life ebbed onto the spa floor, Victoria sat in the pitch-black room, watching. When she realized she was tilting dangerously in the chair, she lowered herself to the cold tile floor and hugged her knees. As the men tore Margreth apart before Victoria’s eyes, her resolve hardened like a rock against her heart.

Arthur Holmstead, the Associate Director of the CIA, was covered in Margreth’s blood. He worked feverishly, trying to dismantle his victim. The other man assisted.

Holmstead wiped his knife on the sheet. The two men looked toward the door, as if they’d heard something in the outer room. The stranger tried the door, then turned to Holmstead in a panic.

“It’s locked. Someone’s outside.”

“Find a battering ram, you horse’s ass,” Holmstead spat. Then he looked up at the camera’s eye, and she felt him peer into her heart. “You’re dead, whoever you are.”

Victoria grabbed her pile of towels and hurried away, not bothering to turn off the monitors. In the locker room, she found a storage area filled with boxes of cleaning supplies. She huddled behind an industrial drum containing floor wax.

Afternoon turned into evening, and the building grew silent. She slipped from her hiding spot and headed straight for the front door, but there was no way out. The outer door was locked with a deadbolt, so she needed a key. She grabbed the phone from the snotty receptionist’s desk to call her husband’s private line.

“Hello, Vic. Is that you?”

“Yes, it’s me.”

“Where are you? We’ve been worried sick.”

“I know. It was stupid of me.” The truth was dangerous turf. “I have something to tell you.”

“It better be a good story. You gave the Secret Squirrels a heart attack. Baldridge is interrogating anyone who moves. He even threatened Troast with the rack. Art Holmstead even offered to look for you. Isn’t that nice?”

“I’ll get there as quickly as I can.” She hung up before he could say more.

She sneaked down the hallway, just in case one of Margreth’s killers was still there. The colorful sign on the back door told her what she needed to know.

Reminder: Third shift coming up!

Mr. Safety advises using the front entrance after 10 PM!

The schedule was posted near the time clock, and Victoria checked it. Betty was expected to arrive at any minute for her late evening cleaning shift.

“Betty, you’re my ticket to freedom,” Victoria muttered. “Get your sorry ass to work, girl. I’ve got to get out of here.”

She crouched behind the receptionist’s desk, still shaken from Margreth’s ordeal, when she heard a key turn in the front door.

“Hell’s Kitchen,” Betty growled. “This place is like a mausoleum at night. My mama warned me I’d end up in a dead-end job.”

The woman shuffled down the hallway and disappeared. Victoria headed straight for the door. The woman’s keys still dangled in the lock. Seconds later, she was sprinting across the porch, only to be stopped short. An Arlington Police cruiser idled at the curb.

The urge to run into the officer’s safe arms was strong, but something held her back. She slipped around the side of the building and crouched in the bushes. The cruiser pulled away from the curb, slowly moving down the street. Ten ragged breaths later, siren wailing, the patrol car returned.

Victoria peered at the squad from her hideout. She could see the officer’s face as he approached the building. It was Holmstead’s assistant—Margreth’s tormentor.

Deep in Victoria’s mind, a crucial part of her suddenly snapped like a twig. It was as if a mysterious switch had been flipped, causing her feet to freeze and her pounding heart to slow. I must live—I have a child.

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No Tour Guides in Hell: Chapter 20

WASHINGTON, DC
Chapter 20
VICTORIA BLAKE’S SECRET

Nameless, blurry faces gathered on the sidewalk as the First Lady’s motorcade sped past. She was still in shock from Margreth’s revelations and couldn’t shake the ominous prick of fear.

Not a human. That’s just not possible. Jefferson is a normal baby. He doesn’t resemble a damned monkey. Still, there’s some truth to that story.

The activity level increased in the front seat. A.J. had made at least four calls to God knows where. She looked out the rear window—a few more cars had joined the procession. It was a damn parade. All they needed was a brass band.

Something was wrong with the Secret Squirrels, as she liked to call them. A.J. Baldridge was as jumpy as a one-legged man in a sack race.

The limousine pulled into the circular driveway of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, and the White House loomed before her in all its splendor. The feeling of returning to this place never seemed to fade; it never quite felt like home. Nicholas greeted her at the private entrance, while, as always, the driver avoided the crowds gathering at the front.

A.J. usually hustled to get to the door, but today he was preoccupied. Nick opened it, and her questions turned to concerns about Jefferson’s illness.

“Honey,” she took his warm, strong hand and kissed his cheek. “A.J. said you called the doctor?”

“Yes, I did. But Jeff’s doing much better now.” He glanced toward the far end of the lawn. “What in the bejesus is going on?”

“I was just about to ask A.J. the same thing,” she admitted. Hearing the car door slam, she turned and watched Baldridge run across the White House lawn toward a group of his friends, who were gathered in a huddle. “He sure took off in a hurry.”

“There’s always some disaster lurking with those guys. Some nut-job calls in a bomb threat, or a group home walkaway is seen nearby with a submachine gun, and they freak out. Every so often, they get it right. Then again, sometimes they totally mess up, like Hinkley.”

“Well, Hinkley was all about Jodie Foster. Women will lead you to that kind of thing,” she smiled. He snorted.

Always the consummate politician, Nicholas took his wife’s arm and gracefully led her past the busy staff and a few reporters. He consistently played to the photo opportunity, showcasing the First Couple in the best light for the public.

He told her, “It wouldn’t do for the President to get caught picking his nose.” And she agreed.

On their way to Jefferson’s room, they paused in a somewhat hidden nook on the landing. Nick shed his gentleman’s pretense and embraced his wife.

“Do you think our lives will ever be the same again?” she asked, already knowing the answer.

“I really don’t think so,” he admitted. But he didn’t sound as sad about the loss as she felt. “Gilda called. She says the SS found a listening device in her alarm clock, and one of those video cameras was in the showerhead. It’s not just us; it’s the children who’re affected by this damned intrusiveness.”

“I dislike it. The media always needs a new scandal every hour.”

“They’re competing in a market where the average person likes to see a big crash or mass killing at least once a day.”

Victoria shifted topics. “Nick, speaking of scandals. We might have one brewing.”

“It’s all about ratings,” he was rambling. “If they can’t get footage of the President getting a blow job in the Oval Office, they’ll settle for a slaughter at Bob’s Grocery Store.”

Blesstasia, part of the domestic staff, came down the stairs with a stack of linens, and their moment of privacy vanished. Nicholas threw his hands up, frustrated, and stomped past the squat woman, who was so overloaded she looked like she might topple. They tiptoed into their baby’s nursery.

Jefferson was sleeping. Still flushed with fever, he peacefully sucked his thumb. The nanny’s southern half was loaded into the rocker, but she had draped herself over the crib rail and seemed to be napping.

“Nick, I have to talk to you,” Victoria whispered. He silenced her with a wave and ran his hand through his son’s hair. She didn’t want to tell him her ‘your baby’s a monkey’ news’.

“Not now, Darling. There’s a news conference in ten minutes. I’ve got to find that damn speechwriter. I’m not witty under pressure, and I’m not good at speaking unprepared. The stupid bastard still has my script.”

He gave her a quick hug.

“We’ll talk later. Remember, that goofball Prime Minister of Ethiopia will be here for dinner — the guy with an obnoxious wife. He’s a loud talker, but very smart.”

“Seriously? I don’t want to deal with that stupid woman,” Victoria snarled, feeling like the day couldn’t get any worse. “The woman’s loathsome. She smells like rotten fish, and I hate her.”

Nick avoided giving his ‘politician’s wife’ speech. Victoria didn’t seem like she was in the mood.

“I told the doctor that if you call, he needs to get his ass over here or his next job will be in a leper colony.”

“Great, Nick. I’m sure he’s eager to respond,” she lifted Jefferson and rocked him in her arms. He felt like a tiny oven, radiating warmth. “Besides, leper colonies don’t exist anymore, silly.”

“He’s the best there is, Vic.” He had a quick flashback to their college days, and a touch of nostalgia crept in. “Love you.”

He hurried from the nursery, leaving her to care for their sick child alone. Well, not entirely alone. Elsie Hodgeworth sat slumped in the rocking chair.

“Elsie, wake up.” Victoria shook the woman, and she woke up suddenly.

“Mrs. Blake,” she mopped her wrinkled brow with a tissue. “My goodness gracious. It doesn’t do for you to get yourself all worked up. Babies get sick all the time.”

Elsie gently took the child from Victoria’s arms and placed a cool cloth on his forehead.

“They’d just as soon throw up a meal as keep it down. Jefferson’s fever is breaking,” Elsie cooed. Chanting in a singsong voice, she soothed the sleeping child.

“A.J. said it was an emergency.” Victoria was confused by the agent’s urgent claim.

“I don’t know why he’d get you all worked up, if you don’t mind my saying. I called over an hour ago and said Jeff was doing a bit better.” Elsie laid the baby down and tucked the sheet around the mattress.

“Strange. Still, I don’t think we can be too careful, especially with Jefferson,” Victoria said.

“Of course not, dear,” the old lady agreed, as if she thought Victoria was deaf. “By the by, I heard about your Gilda.”

“Oh, yes,” Victoria remembered Nick’s news about the camera. “It’s appalling. Those sick media hounds were probably going to post her online. Live footage of the First Daughter washing her bum or something.” She said this, hoping Gilda wasn’t dating an Iranian student or smoking pot.

“I heard it on the radio. Your Gilda apparently threw quite a fit over the violation of her privacy. She’s her father’s daughter, all right.”

“I didn’t hear that part,” Victoria wondered what else Nick was hiding. “I’ll have to call her. A parent’s always the last to know. Have you taken Jefferson’s temperature lately?”

“It’s 101, down from 103.”

“That’s high enough to fry an egg!” Victoria leaned over and kissed him on his warm forehead. “Elsie, do you think Jefferson looks a little, uh. Well, does he look ordinary?”

“He’s about the prettiest baby I’ve ever seen. Got a voice on him too,” Hodgeworth whispered, although Victoria wasn’t sure why. “He was crying this morning, and suddenly he let out a hell of a shriek. He had half the staff in here in a New York minute. Nobody believes that little Jeff made all that racket, but I swear it’s true.”

“Funny you should mention that, Elsie,” Victoria frowned. “He did that last week when we were getting off the helicopter. Nick said it was the whine of the engine. I was sure it was Jeff. Made the hair stand up on the back of my neck,” Victoria puzzled this into the he’s not a real baby equation.

“You know what, Elsie? I have an important errand. It’s imperative, or else I wouldn’t leave little Jeff,” she whispered, just in case. “Cover for me, okay?”

Elsie Hodgeworth nodded, and Victoria, thankful for her support, grabbed her purse and searched through the mess.

“Somewhere in this trash bin, there’s a card with the Isle of Paradise Spa’s phone number,” she mumbled. Then she paused, eyeing Elsie.

Though she trusted Elsie, everyone has a price. She didn’t know what the nanny’s limit for betrayal was.

It’s too late now, she thought as she dialed.

“Hello?” Victoria tried a Midwestern accent, but it sounded silly.

The spa receptionist sounded bored; Victoria would have recognized her nasal whine anywhere.

“Yes, could you tell me if Margreth Willson is still there?” The nanny seemed unaware of Victoria’s conversation.

“You haven’t seen her leave? That’s good. No, no message,” Victoria eyed Elsie. The woman seemed distracted, but she attributed this to simple worry. She was determined to see Margreth. Hopefully, the Secret Squirrels hadn’t eavesdropped on their afternoon meeting. She’d go back to the spa.

“Ms. Hodgeworth?” Victoria asked. “I’m leaving now. Don’t forget, if anyone asks, you don’t know where I went. Not even Nick, okay?”

Before Elsie could come up with an answer, including her fear, Victoria kissed the baby again and left.

“Oh dear,” she managed before Mrs. Blake disappeared.

Elsie Hodgeworth told herself she needed to call security. She rubbed her chin, lost in thought.

Blast it all, I refuse to do it. They can find another snoop if they don’t like it.

She looked down at the sleeping baby, who had now cooled considerably.

Victoria Blake has everything. But it’s not a life I’d want to be burdened with. And all I have are four kids who don’t speak to me and a serious problem with my best buddy, Jack Daniels.

She remembered the threats in that damp room deep below the CIA building’s subbasement last week. A couple of turbaned, angry men with unnaturally white teeth had tried and succeeded in intimidating her. But now she realized she had nothing left to fear.

This baby’s going to have his nanny, no matter what kind of devilish plot those foreigners hatch against the Blakes.

As she had this internal conversation, she remembered the dark man’s dangerous black eyes. Elsie Hodgeworth was left worried about a sick baby.

Victoria moved down the hallway, staying close to the wall and avoiding the security cameras that kept constant watch. She reached the master suite and went straight to her dresser.

She chose a loose sweater and a pair of ragged jeans. From an old gym bag, she pulled out a pair of tennis shoes that had seen better days. Placing the clothes in her carryall, she quietly headed back down the hallway toward the public side of the building.

Miraculously, she made it to the East Wing without any issues, aside from passing a few staff members too low in the hierarchy to matter.

She slipped into the ladies’ room, changed her clothes, tied her hair into a ponytail, and wiped off her makeup. She appeared younger and more attractive.

Victoria opened the door and waited patiently, planning her escape. When a security guard bent down to drink from the water fountain, she slipped into the hall. She passed just inches from him, but he was unaware of her presence. She had become just another annoying tourist.

Within minutes, she’d joined the buzzing crowd gawking at the Lincoln Room. They make it so hard to have privacy. She held the thought in abeyance and went unnoticed—an unimportant part of the “flotsam tourista,” as Nick liked to call them.

As the guide described the Kennedy assassination, an elderly woman dressed in polyester glanced at Victoria. She held her plastic purse tightly, as the poorly attired First Lady seemed to be in urgent need of money.

Mingling with everyday folks, Victoria Blake left the White House alone for the first time since becoming First Lady. She pushed her way through the crowd, battling a dizzying panic attack.

At the curb, she flagged down a passing cab. The vehicle jerked to a stop, and she hurried inside. She turned pale as she saw the driver’s face in the rear-view mirror. The dark-skinned driver was leering. His limp hair left oily marks on his collar. A bit of food was hanging on his lip, and one eye was half-closed and drooping.

“I need to get to Arlington,” she said, watching his expression.

His eyebrows knit together in deep furrows. His droopy eye looked as if it was stuck in a wink.

“Lady, this isn’t the Salvation Army. I don’t give advice, and I don’t give free rides,” he said. She did look a step above a bag lady on the food chain.

“I have money, really,” she was insulted to think she looked destitute.

“Right, and I have an elephant in the glove box. People stiff me all the time. Let’s see some green,” he was watching her with his one good eye.

Victoria dug into her purse and pulled out a crisp fifty-dollar bill.

“That’s a good girl. Do you want to go for a little ride downtown? I have rooms at the Embassy. I pay my girls well.”

“Good God.” Victoria was stunned. “I’m not in that line of work.”

“My luck, huh? Alright, then. I’ll take you to Arlington.”

Jesus H. Christ, she thought. This has been one wild day. I should have just waited for Margreth. Once the Secret Squirrels find out I’m missing, they’ll tell Nick. Then Nick will call the Coast Guard and have them dredge the Potomac. Still, it feels good to be free for an afternoon.

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No Tour Guides in Hell: Chapter 19

CEDAR CREEK, MICHIGAN
Chapter 19
THE PREACHER MAN

Barney hit the brakes at James Street, turning into the neighborhood of old clapboard houses that brought back nostalgic childhood memories for both Hank and him.

“Look,” Hank Bradford gestured toward Mrs. VanderLaan’s porch. “The old bag must be indoors. That must be the best luck I’ve had all day.”

“Probably inside baking a batch of tasty-shit so you’ll give her the old hi-dee-ho,” Hank chuckled until Barney caught his shoulder with a good wallop.

They parked in the church lot next to Esther VanderLaan’s, which also served the parsonage. A weathered welcome sign proclaimed, “Broken hearts are mended; Wounded souls are healed” in faded black script. The parish had shrunk over time, with some members passing away and others remaining in the nursing home, which held them captive.

“I haven’t been here in months, Barn. It’s damn shameful, the state of my soul.” Hank dreaded the pastor’s scornful demeanor. He wouldn’t say anything, but he’d be thinking about it. Hank could read his puritanical mind.

“Walls will probably tumble under the load of sins you’re carrying.” Barney wasn’t helpful. “I try to do it once a month myself, but my feeling about God is, you’re much better off if you don’t call attention to yourself. Ya know what I’m saying. Keep your head down and your powder dry.”

“That’s an uplifting thought, Barn. I’ll keep it in mind.”

Hank followed the sidewalk around to the parsonage, which was connected to the Revelation of Faith Baptist Church by a breezeway. He guessed that the conduit symbolized the Reverend’s constant connection to God. Barney was eager for his first chance to question the pastor directly, mainly because Hank often added a bit of profanity to his interrogations. He hurried to get to the door first.

Barney knocked for a long time before the Reverend’s elderly mother answered the front door.

“Hello, gentlemen, won’t you come in?” Ruby Mae Carrington was dressed in a strict black dress.

Her hair was pulled tightly into a steel-gray bun that no hair dared to escape from. Her skin looked grayish, making her seem as if she were made of pewter. Her thin fingers touched his hand, and creeping bugs seemed to crawl up to his shoulders.

“Is the Reverend here, Ma’am?” Barney bowed slightly, though he wasn’t quite sure why, maybe because she was the closest thing to the Queen Mother in Cedar Creek.

“He’s in the study, boys.” She still thought of them as boys. “My son is busy with his sermon, as he should be.”

“I don’t suppose we could interrupt him for a little while.” Barney held his hat respectfully, following Mrs. Carrington’s rule against wearing hats indoors.

Hank expressed his opinion, earning a disapproving look from the widow.

“We’re on some urgent police business, Mrs. Carrington,” Hank said, already feeling the urge for a cigarette even though he had just crushed one out in the parking lot.

“Ah, the Bradford lad,” she crowed. Hank felt as if he’d just launched a baseball through the window and was about to get a stern talking to. “I haven’t seen you on Sunday for quite a while.”

“He’s been in the institution, Ma’am,” Barney quipped, much to Hank’s chagrin. “They think he’s all sorted out now.”

Knowing she was being toyed with, Ruby Mae Carrington gave him a frown and snapped like an angry turtle.

“If you must see him, come this way.” They followed her into the parsonage.

She led them down a hallway lined with sepia-toned prints of intimidating faces, grim and cold. Hank felt as if eyes were watching him, as if his sins were bleeding onto the floor for these long-dead spirits to see. The house was spotless, but a sense of decay hung in the air like a toxic cloud.

In the library, Reverend Claypoole Carrington sat behind a mahogany desk. He was a stern-looking man with a large wart on his chin. Gaunt, his cheekbones jutted sharply around the hollows of his eyes.

Hot damn, Barney thought, just like in Night of the Living Dead. Hank was starting to get a similar case of the heebie-jeebies.

“Why hello, Chief. And Hank Bradford, how nice to see you again.” His pastoral message was delivered with a pleased expression, or at least as delighted as Reverend Carrington ever seemed, since there was no sign that a smile had ever crossed his face.

Hank was sure he caught a whiff of mothballs, the smell he often noticed in the breath of older folks. He looked around the room.

Old missionary’s rotting from the inside out, he thought. Several leather-bound tomes were scattered across the desk. Wads of paper decorated the ink blotter. Sermon-ball rejects, Bradford suspected.

Unbidden, Hank and Barney sank into worn leather chairs that were as cracked and faded as Ruby Carrington’s face. Hank reached for his cigarettes, but a sharp look from the Right Rev made him reconsider. Instead, he peeled his hangnails back to the quick.

“Fly, oops, I mean young Claypoole, might have been out at the O’Bryan place the other night. I guess you heard about the trouble.” Barney fidgeted. Carrington unfolded a sermon-ball, examined it, and frowned.

“The lad does wander on his bicycle.” The Reverend looked up briefly. “Was there a complaint?”

“I’ll be straightforward, Reverend. We found a body on O’Bryan’s land yesterday morning. We also found a bunch of Bite’Ems wrappers under a nearby tree.” Barney hesitated. “You know, we hate to think young Claypoole might be involved, but we need to rule him out, sir.”

The Reverend hesitated. He briefly remembered the dusty, dull years when his wife, Stella, was still alive. He can still picture her in the kitchen, pointing the meat fork at him and shouting like a fishwife.

“That boy,” she’d bellow. “He bears watching. Mrs. VanderLaan caught him hanging around the bathroom windows again. Mark my words, Clay. He’ll disgrace this house.” She had speared the roast with such force that the juices splattered onto her Sunday dress like an apron in an abattoir.

“I’ve got both eyes open, Stella. He’s the Lord’s own. He’ll not stray,” he’d assured her. But he’d been wrong and too distracted by his own low-down, nasty tricks. And Clay Carrington daily assured God that his evil thoughts were just Satan’s stain on his own soul, not leaching out to taint anyone who was pure of heart.

He quickly went back to the present.

“Junior has a minimal capacity for thought,” the Reverend said with a haughty tone. “I’m sure you both know that. We really can’t get him to tell us anything, can we?”

Then, he leaned back in his chair, satisfied with his answer. No, he was not responsible for the boy’s every move.

“We’d like to see his shoes, sir. Maybe a hair sample and a look at the clothes he was wearing.” Hank studied the man. He could see the wall rising as if it had an electronic eye that activated with any implied responsibility. “Just in case—you know—something matches.”

Barney piped up.

“The results may rule him out entirely, then we’ll all feel more comfortable,” and, having said his piece, Barney tapped a hefty fist on the Reverend’s desk. A few sermon balls danced off the edge. He caught a glimpse of what the Reverend had been working on. It was a collage of rectangles and circles.

Claypoole Carrington stood and straightened himself. His white collar wrapped around his thin, turkey-neck like a snow-white garrote.

“I assume you have a search warrant?”

Barney grunted with disgust.

“No, but we’ll get one. In the meantime,” Hank added, “we’ll be taking Fly, I mean Clay Junior, with us. We’ll ask him a few basic questions, see if we can get any response. You’re welcome to come along. He’s not considered a suspect right now, just a witness.”

The Reverend opened the study door, signaling that their conversation was finished.

“Gentlemen, my son is one of God’s mentally challenged individuals. He has little verbal ability, unless you count that annoying ‘Hi-Fly’ he keeps spouting. I prefer not to visit your station. It’s a small town. People talk.”

“Whatever you say, Reverend. I’ve known Fly since he was a baby,” Hank assured the walking skeleton. “We’ll take good care of him. We used to do a bit of fishing together, Fly and me. Well, I fished. He mostly ate candy and fed wrappers to the crawfish.”

“I appreciate that, Hank.” He grasped Hank’s forearm with a claw. “And Stella, God bless her righteous soul, she’d thank you, too.”

Uncertain if he wanted or needed the approval of a long-dead, rotted-in-the-grave ghost, Hank pulled away and followed Barney out the door.

Old Lady Carrington led them out through the kitchen without offering a piece of the fresh-baked pie resting on the counter.

Chances are, Hank thought, that pie’s bubbling over with sinner’s intestines or eye of blasphemer, some nasty treat anyway. And that made him view it with less longing.

“I know my grandson isn’t a typical boy, but I assure you he wouldn’t hurt anyone.”

“Yes Ma’am, we know. We just need to rule out every possibility,” Barney pressed on toward the porch and scrambled down the steps toward Fly, perched on the garden gate.

Hank looked back and yelled, “We’ll be back later with a search warrant.”

Mrs. Carrington had already vanished like a ghost, probably munching on her pie. His stomach rumbled.

“Hi, Fly.” Hank smiled. “Wanna go for a ride again?”

“Whup, whup, whup,” was the only reply as Fly jumped down from the gate and followed them to their car. A girlie magazine stuck out from his back pocket. He patted it, reassuring himself it was safe there.

The pastor stayed still in his high-backed chair.

I was out that night, not Junior. In fact, I checked on the boy when I came in. He was awake, his light on, hunched over his desk. It was just after dawn. The boy was working feverishly with toothpicks and glue, building some silly project or another. He didn’t even notice me, so I left him to his work. It seemed innocent enough. And I, I didn’t do anything wrong, did I?

Rising from his chair, Reverend Carrington headed upstairs to his son’s bedroom. The room was perfectly tidy, just as Ruby Mae Carrington always kept it.

He searched the closet and found nothing unusual. He looked at the table where Junior had been working. The object in the middle was stunning. He must have stolen it from somewhere. Still, it was made entirely of toothpicks and glue, so maybe—he decided not to think about it right now. He lifted the mattress off the floor and was shocked to find his personal collection of pornography.

But it was hidden in the lectern! Junior found it anyway, and now here we are. I’ve guided him to this.

Claypoole Carrington sat on the edge of the box springs, a stack of smut resting on his bony thighs.

Ah, he groaned and flipped through pages of pierced nipples and erotic poses. Stella’s worst fear came true. Junior would be exposed to my sinful ways and become corrupted. The Devil’s made off with his soul, and now I’m ruined. Ruined.

Feeling control slipping from his life, the Reverend broke down in tears. Ruby Mae Carrington found him.

Shaking her finger, she began, “Claypoole, have you been bringing evil into the house of the Lord again? How many times have I warned you? Sins of the father are visited upon the son. As Ephesians tells us, ‘No fornicator, unclean person, nor covetous man . . .”

He couldn’t stand hearing any more of the endless criticism. A rush filled his ears. From deep within his chest, his heart, stretched taut, sent shards of intense pain through his body, warming him and bringing all the long-suppressed physical desires to the surface.

“My soul,” he screeched, “is a witness to my iniquity. My sins hang like ornaments on a harlot’s Christmas tree.”

“Shut your pie hole, Claypoole,” Ruby Mae yelled.

“I see it, decorated with translucent balls filled with nude women, their breasts swollen.”

“Ahayeeeee . . .,” Mrs. Carrington covered her ears and looked heavenward for reprieve.

“It consumes me. I’m a fornicator, mother. I lusted after Betty Tanner and dreamed of taking her under the picnic table after Thanksgiving potluck. I lusted after Felicia Snart and imagined nailing her on the rectory table. I’ve . . .”

“My God. You’ve lost your mind, Claypoole.” She turned to leave after seeing him in his nakedness, his sinful nature exposed.

“Mother,” he called after her. The sting of her rejection cut deep as he sat among the books that had been his many lovers during these long, lonely years. He was heartbroken, a shattered man. The ghost of Stella sat in the window seat, mocking him.

“In truth,” he murmured. “I did not watch the boy, my dearest Stella. He slipped away while I was window peeping. He followed my lead to perdition, taking the express railroad to Hell just like his father.”

Receiving no reply from the banshee, he stood up and walked into the hallway.

“Mother… mother?”

Ruby Mae Carrington refused to answer. Not today.

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No Tour Guides in Hell: Chapter 18

No Tour Guides in Hell:
Chapter 18

Victoria

Arlington, Virginia

Margreth was running late, as usual. When she arrived at The Isle of Paradise Spa, Victoria’s three-car entourage was parked in the fire lane. A Secret Service agent stood guard over the presidential limo, wearing standard dark glasses and a black suit. Margreth noticed a flicker of recognition as she approached.

Look at the handsome fool… a cookie cutter of every other agent, she thought. She sprinted up the pink marble steps.

They look like clones! Considering what she wanted to discuss with Victoria, that was a chilling thought. Damn, if they weren’t mirror images of each other. The very idea screams paranoia. I’m going crazy.

The receptionist was idly filing her nails. Margreth passed the woman with a flick of her silver hair and headed straight for the Tropicana salon. Agents, supposedly discreet, were stationed along the way. They looked out of place like a bunch of clowns at a funeral.

Secret Service, my ass.

She chuckled, and one of them eyed her.

That’s a laugh. Like anything in this town, it’s never a secret. Still, they kept this cloning humdoozie hidden for about thirty years. Imagine the kind of twisted cloak-and-dagger stuff that’s gone on.

One of the agents lowered his dark glasses slightly, exposing striking blue eyes.

“Howdy-do, Margreth,” he said. There was no mistaking A.J. Baldridge’s smoky baritone.

“Hello yourself,” Margreth cooed in her fake, honeyed Southern accent. “How are you, A.J.?” she purred.

She didn’t really care how he was these days, only that he’d kept his trap shut.

“Fine. Yourself?” A.J.’s voice was too familiar, but his demeanor matched her role. The others didn’t seem to notice. She tried to remember what he’d looked like naked, but it slipped away, blending with countless other wasted afternoons.

He eased the door open; she moved through the security chamber, ignoring the cameras and static from the two-way radios.

She entered the luxurious surroundings of the spa’s most private room. Victoria lay on a chaise, with hot towels covering her flawless porcelain skin. Her sleek, blonde hair was knotted at the nape of her swan-like neck. She lay in perfect Grecian profile.

“Oh Margreth,” she sighed as if she were exhausted, which was hardly likely. Victoria was known as the least active First Lady in history—at least when it came to official duties and pompous, purposeless gatherings. “I hope you’re going to entertain me with something juicy. It’s been such a boring week.”

She smiled, and like a true politician’s wife, it was tinged with the forced quality they all mastered.

“We don’t have much time,” Margreth reopened the door just a crack and peeked out.

A.J. was sitting on the chair in front of the security cameras, flipping through an issue of Life Magazine. But the magazine was upside down, and that didn’t look good. She eased the door shut. Her eyes moved to the security lens that seemed to stare straight through her.

“I’ve stumbled onto something, Victoria.” She spoke so quickly and softly that it was almost unintelligible. The words tumbled over each other like clumsy acrobats. “You’re not going to like it, and there’s no easy way to tell you. But you’re my friend, and I must try.”

Victoria didn’t bother to quiet her voice.

“Oh my, is it about my husband? Rumors are always bouncing around the Hill. This week it’s Raphia, that slutty little file clerk. She wishes. Nicholas said she drooled all over his wingtips.”

Victoria shifted the towel over her eyes to look at Margreth. “Or is it something else, Margreth? You seem jumpy.”

Margreth whispered again. The camera lens seemed to grow like a malignant appendage, a snaking spyglass watching their every move. But that was her imagination on overdrive.

“Victoria. There’s no easy way to say this. I know about your baby. I mean, where you got him from.” Margreth was stammering badly.

Victoria brushed the towel away from her face; her peaches-and-cream skin was blotchy from shock. Margreth noticed her expression, which was a mix of hostility and terror.

“What did you say?” Victoria whispered back, but her voice revealed fear.

“I said, I know about your baby. I know how you got him. Don’t worry, I’m not telling anyone. But I must warn you. I think he’s in danger.”

“Stop! Don’t say anything more.”

Victoria moved quietly around the camera, sneaking toward the door in her stocking feet. She gently pushed it open a crack and startled A.J. He was monitoring the bank of cameras and had just caught a shot of some lady’s behind covered in a sheet when he was spotted. She acted as if she hadn’t noticed.

“A.J., can you grab me a skinny latte.”

As she closed the door, she turned toward Margreth.

“Alright, talk fast. He won’t be long.”

“I understand the adoption problems and why you accepted William’s offer. The Vice Presidency in exchange for a baby.”

Victoria was trying to deny it, but Margreth interrupted her.

“No, don’t waste time. Your baby’s in danger. There’s a crisis. I wanted you to know. As soon as I found . . .”

Agent Baldridge entered the room holding a single latte. He studied Margreth, unsure if his gaze was lingering on their passionate past or if he was watching her for signs of high treason. She was sharing classified information like hors d’oeuvres at a cocktail party, after all. It was difficult to read him.

Victoria took the drink and waved him away.

This could be dangerous, Margreth realized. For a moment, she felt light-headed. Am I going to faint?”

Victoria’s voice snapped her back to reality.

“Seems crowded in here, A.J. Why don’t you turn one of those blasted TVs on to a rerun of The Fugitive or something?”

“Mrs. Blake, the President just called.” A.J. puffed up like a blowfish at the verbal slap. “He says the baby has a fever again.”

“Leave us for a moment. Amuse that trollop of a receptionist with some card tricks. Pull a rabbit out of your pants or something. I hear you’re pretty good with your hands.” At this, A.J. blushed.

“Charming,” she added. “I’ll be ready to go in . . .” she checked her watch. “Five minutes.”

The agent reluctantly backed away, but not before shooting a dangerous glance at Margreth, as if they’d never shared that secret embrace. When he was out of earshot, Victoria confronted her.

“Okay, you know about the job deal. Next election, Nicholas will appoint William as the new Vice. What kind of danger could that pose for little Jefferson?”

Once again, Margreth whispered, though she was sure that if they wanted, the agents could hear everything — maybe even her thoughts.

“Victoria, the baby isn’t really a person. Well, he’s a person, but not a real one. Oh dear, I’m trying to be so careful of your feelings.”

“What in the world are you droning on about, Margreth? Of course he’s a person. What a horrible, nasty thing to say!”

“I don’t know where to start. Victoria, do you know where your baby came from?” As Margreth tried to piece together the puzzle, it was clear Victoria didn’t realize any pieces were missing.

“Sure, it was Gloria’s baby. Nicholas told me so.”

“My Gloria? Our maid?”

“The one and only. She was pregnant with an out-of-wedlock baby. I didn’t want to tell you this, but Nick said it was William’s.”

Margreth was visibly stunned.

“I’m sorry if that hurts you,” Victoria said sincerely. “I didn’t mean to be so blunt. I understand how you feel, especially since he’s your husband and all. And without children of your own—I truly am sorry, dear.”

Margreth was briefly speechless.

“You know the issues we’d face with traditional adoption. Our age. Our lifestyle. Agencies wouldn’t even consider us for an infant, no matter if Nick was the President or the dogcatcher. Forty-eight is just too old. With Gilda away at college, the house felt so empty. I just needed someone to care for.”

“Victoria, Gloria didn’t have a baby! She was never pregnant. That’s a bunch of crap. William’s affairs are happening, but he’s had no accidents.”

“What?” Victoria frowned.

“He may have flirted a bit with Gloria. I wouldn’t put it past him. But he had a vasectomy years ago. Then, he had some radiation treatments for prostate cancer last year. Dried up those little swimmers like fossils in the Green River. So, it’s just impossible.”

Victoria, stunned, studied Margreth for signs of deception, like a facial tic that might reveal the lie.

“Then whose was it? Whose baby do I have?”

“I’m trying to tell you. It’s complicated.” Margreth began her story. “It all started many years ago, apparently, in Sumatra.”

“Suma what? Where on God’s green earth is that?” Victoria shouted.

“It’s some remote place in the West Indies, I think. Hell’s bells, I don’t know. But they’ve been cloning children there. Jefferson is a clone, and he’s not fully human. They used DNA from some primate, a monkey or something. Now there’s a crisis. The clones are getting sick and dying.”

“You have lost your mind,” Victoria accused. “My baby, a monkey? Have you seen him? He’s a perfect little boy.”

“Torrie, it’s true. I found all the classified papers. They cloned people to use for. . .”

There was loud knocking. When they didn’t respond, A.J. peeked in and saw the women facing off in some kind of emotional showdown.

“Everything okay in here?” A.J. frowned.

“Of course, you idiot. Quit interrupting,” Victoria snapped.

“Excuse me, ma’am. You said five minutes. The car’s ready. We better go. Word is the baby’s not doing so well.” He stepped back to answer a squealing radio call. It was only a brief pause.

“Listen, we’ll get together soon. You come to the White House for tea,” then to A.J.’s consternation, Victoria whispered into Margreth’s ear, her hand shielding her words.

“I’ll find us a spot to meet where no one can eavesdrop. These Secret Service guys are like a case of hemorrhoids. I just can’t seem to get rid of them.”

Agent Baldridge was getting restless, which in Secret Service style showed as little twitches and grunts that the public wouldn’t notice. Victoria packed up her things.

“I’ve got more to tell you, Victoria. And I need to know, does Jefferson have a headache?” Margreth ventured this, knowing she had stepped into a minefield.

“He’s just a baby, you silly twit. How would he tell me?” But doubt nagged at her conscious thought. “Still, he does have a fever. But there’s no time now, sweetie—please forget about that twit thing. I’m a bitch. I’ve got to see what’s wrong with Jefferson.”

Victoria headed down the hall with A.J. at her side. She hesitated and looked back at Margreth, who was nervously wringing her hands.

Victoria mouthed the words. “Four o’clock today.”

Margreth read her lips and nodded.

“So, we’ll get together next week,” Victoria said loudly. Accustomed to the façade of politics, she tried to sound bright and cheery. But she winked conspiratorially at Margreth.

Margreth’s words sounded truthful. If there was anything she could do to help Jefferson fight his infection, she’d do it. Absolutely anything.

Victoria thought there was something fishy about the whole deal as she was hurried to the parking lot. She remembered how Nick dodged her questions when she asked to meet the baby’s mother. Clone?

She did say the word clone, didn’t she? William had a vasectomy and radiation therapy, to boot. And Jefferson’s hair is such a brilliant golden red. Gloria’s hair isn’t red, and neither is Willson’s. But the whole Secret Service seems to be a pack of carrot tops.

Margreth hurried to catch up, seized Victoria’s graceful hands, and looked her directly in the eye.

“Be careful. I mean, with Jefferson. Have the pediatrician check him thoroughly.” The look A.J. gave her was withering, and she reluctantly backed away. The car sped away from the curb, leaving Margreth to wonder if she had done the right thing.

It’s too late to second-guess now. Anyway, what can they do, exterminate me? Jake Barnes’ voice still echoed in her mind, warning her of the danger she’d brought upon herself.

No use crying over spilt milk, my mother always said. Anyway, it’s only right to warn Torrie, I mean. Just think of it, a monkey baby. Whatever will she do?

With the First Lady gone to check on her baby’s emergency, Margreth wandered back into the salon and signed herself in as she would on any ordinary day. Surprisingly, she was escorted back to the Tropicana Salon, usually reserved for much more important guests than Margreth Willson. It was a long wait until four o’clock. Her schedule at the spa would fill the quiet time.

I don’t think Victoria believes me. I might as well have called Jefferson a Martian’s spawn. It’s just too far-fetched.

The attendant appeared after what felt like an eternity. He started the ritual by cleansing Margreth’s skin. She expected the scent of cucumbers and almonds almost before they were applied like wet putty. Lying under a poultice and steaming hot towels, she explained herself to the beautician’s assistant.

“I’m just completely exhausted. A quick nap and I’ll feel like myself again. Problems, always problems. It’s a long story, all about hired help, you know. I simply can’t find decent staff. If only they could all be like Digby. What a treasure. He’s a truly hard worker. What in the world would I do . . .?

A second anonymous attendant began her pedicure, grasping her foot rather roughly, she thought.


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No Tour Guides in Hell: Chapter 17

No Tour Guides in Hell:
Chapter 17
911

Location

CEDAR CREEK, MICHIGAN

Richard Underhill heard the crunch of gravel, a warning that the body-remover had arrived. He was under the kitchen sink looking for the carpet stain remover when the approaching vehicle startled him. His hands, skilled at darker tasks, weren’t quick enough to stop the bleach bottle from spilling. He pulled back to avoid the acrid fumes and hit his head hard on the cold-water pipe.

“Shit,” he spat, like a cobra with its tail caught in a door. The fumes were dizzying. He groped for the edge of the counter and hauled himself to the window ledge. He peered out.

Emily! I was sure it was the body snatchers. What a nowhere, pond-sucker town. I’d probably make the front page if I peed in a mailbox, but I let my kid just disappear, and nobody can do the math. One kid went missing on Fredericksburg Road; another was found in O’Bryan’s hayfield. It’s just math, folks.

Outside, Emily hesitated. She could see her boys in the car, their mischievous little heads spinning like tops. At least she wasn’t bringing them inside; that would have made things tougher. Emily looked around, scanning as if some internal radar was warning her.

Come on, you trembling fool—just a few more steps. Come to Papa. Damn, it’s a good thing I pulled the car into the pole barn. Stupid bitch thinks I’m gone.

He hurried to the bedroom, just in case any debris from his misadventure was lying around. He wanted to drag out this cat-and-mouse game a little longer. Oh, he’d tell her about Sarah—just before he choked the living shit out of her.

He knew she’d let herself in. He waited, sitting quietly on their bed. Soft footsteps trailed down the hallway into the boys’ room. The rustling and noise next door indicated she was in a hurry to pack and make a quick escape. Richard felt the adrenaline of a good hunt course through him. With his trap set, he was simply waiting for the kill.

“Ayaah. . .” She couldn’t hold back her scream. An armload of socks flew into the air and bounced around uselessly. “I thought nobody was here.”

She clutched her chest, fearing her heart would jump out and bounce away with the sock balls.

“Surprise!” His voice was smooth and unbothered. He lazily stretched and yawned, displaying his boredom.

“Where’s Sarah? I didn’t see her around.” She backed up, creating space to run. Like a hare caught in a wolf’s trap, she avoided inevitable slaughter by confusing her enemy with a distracting question.

“Sarah skipped off to Maggie’s birthday party and never came back. I guess she’s eating cookies and listening to the nonsense that O’Bryan woman fills her head with.”

Emily watched him carefully. Something about his words didn’t seem sincere. His lips twitched on one side, which was a bad sign. She looked around the bedroom — it was too tidy. He’d cleaned up a bit too much. Her eyes examined everything closely.

She saw a wad of cotton batting on the carpet near the bed. The little fear that had wrapped around her heart now took a bite of it. Hooha was always losing stuffing; he shed marshmallow orbs around the house as quickly as Emily could restuff him.

“So, that’s that.” She backed toward the door, socks forgotten. “I’ll just stop by Maggie’s on my way out of town. I want to say goodbye to Sarah properly.”

Emily knew the riskiest move was to turn her back on his beady little eyes. The first hint of an impending attack always came from that sinister stare.

Underhill slid off the bed and turned his back. He always did this when he was about to unload a big stinkpot of lies on her.

“Actually, Sarah never made it to Maggie’s.”

“What?” Emily’s voice sounded strange and distant, almost lifeless. “She didn’t make it. I don’t understand, Richard. Where is your child?”

But her heart knew. It was pounding like a bird caught in a cat’s grip.

Richard Underhill turned to face her; his eyes reflected his disgust. Then he spewed more lies into the air.

“I went to O’Bryan’s house the next day. They said she never showed up.” He hesitated. “Mike said they figured she wouldn’t be coming over with the body found on their property and all.”

“What are you talking about?” Her lips felt thick and blubbery. Somehow, the air had been sucked out of the room. “What body?”

“I haven’t heard any details yet, but apparently little Maggie O’Bryan found a dead body yesterday afternoon, right in the damn cornfield. The police have been crawling all over the place.”

Richard looked out the window into the yard. The boys were hanging out of the car windows and spitting at the side mirrors. Little monsters—that’s what they were.

“I stayed away from the chaos.”

“Your child’s been missing for days, and you haven’t told anyone. Have you? Did you look for her?”

It’s funny she asked that because she knew Sarah could run away, might run away, but most likely, Sarah didn’t run away.

“I figured she’d just come home after missing a dinner or two. Hell, she’s probably out in the pole barn having a tea party with some stray cat.”

Emily could hear the boys. They had gone wild in the unsupervised car. It was only a matter of minutes before they made their way to the door. She stared at Underhill, noticing almost as an afterthought his immaculate shoes and careful choice of clothing, despite being sealed inside his lair.

Vomit rose in her throat, fueled by fear and a firm conviction that he was not only insane but as evil as the devil himself.

“Besides, Emily.” He smiled, but his eyes didn’t. “Kids run away all the time. They always turn up—somewhere. Even in cornfields!”

Emily felt cold. It wasn’t a chill that August heat could chase away. He was giving her a nugget of truth, and though she wasn’t quite sure she understood it, it was the signal that he had no more use for her. And that was truly a dangerous place to be.

Her husband kept yammering as she left the bedroom and stepped into the hall. He didn’t seem to notice, still lost in his evil words. His back was to her, but she felt like his iron grip was around her ankles, holding her in place. With feet of lead, she turned and ran.

She heard his feet pounding the stairs as she hurried out the front door. The boys were bouncing in the back seat.

“SIT DOWN,” she yelled as she jumped in. She turned the key, and the car coughed to life. He was only a few feet away when the tires sprayed him with a shower of gravel. Emily tore out of the driveway so fast that the boys turned into human superballs in the backseat.

“Mommmeeee,” they wailed. She kept her foot on the gas and sped past the service station with the payphone standing sentinel at the roadside. She couldn’t get involved. Then she remembered Sarah’s plaintive voice. And how she’d failed her.

A call would only take five minutes. Underhill couldn’t hurt her here; it was way too public. She hesitated but then turned and headed for the phone booth.

“Dispatch.” Sheila’s voice was cigarette-hoarse and tired.

“I want to report a missing little girl,” Emily yelled over the road noise.

“How long has she been missing?” the dispatcher asked with more interest.

“I’m not sure. Maybe three days.” Emily’s voice was barely audible.

“What’s your name? I hope you don’t live at a payphone on the State Highway, because that’s what you’re showing up as.” She hated prank calls.

“I was living at 1420 Fredericksburg Road with my husband, Richard Underhill, but I left him. I came back for my children’s clothing.”

The dispatcher rolled her eyes.

“Are you getting a divorce, ma’am? Is there some hostility between you two?”

“It’s not what you think. Please just check on her. Her name is Sarah Underhill.”

“How old is she?” Sheila squeezed a Twinkie out of its packaging and took a bite. A nagging feeling in the back of her mind told her this might be important, but the spark dimmed and quickly faded away.

“She’s six.” Emily watched her boys smear orange taffy on the car windows. “I asked him where she was, and he said she went to a birthday party. Then he admitted that she never made it to the party. You must check. Please.”

“What was she wearing when she disappeared?” Sheila watched Steve Brooks lean over the countertop to grab something. He was drifting away from the conversation, and that was a good thing.

Emily admitted, “I don’t know what she was wearing.”

“Great, that’s just hunky-dory. What does she look like? You do have some kind of idea about that, don’t you?”

“She’s small for a six-year-old, with long, dark auburn hair and green eyes. She looks fragile and undernourished to me. But she’s my husband’s daughter. I’m sorry, I don’t know more. He’s evil. I can tell you that.”

“Stay right there, Ma’am. Or you can come to the Cedar Creek station immediately. It’s your choice.”

Emily looked down the road. There was no sign of Underhill’s vehicle. He hadn’t bothered to follow her.

“I can wait here, at least for a little while.”

“Fine. You do that. I’ll send an officer.” Sheila hung up, crumpling the report into a ball. “Damned prank calls.”

She was about to throw the wad into the trash can when Steve snatched it away from her and smoothened the paper.

“What do you have there, Sheila?” he frowned. “Jesus H. Christ, Barney would’ve killed you.”

“Wha. . .,” she stammered, her Twinkie forgotten.

“You have a missing kid report that matches the description of little Jane Doe, and you’re just going to toss it in File 13? Even I know better than that, and I’m just a rookie.” He waved the slip under her nose.

“I’ll handle this. Let Barney and Hank know where I went. And don’t mess up.”

Steve grabbed a notebook and turned to Sheila.

“Don’t you ever pull a cheesy stunt like that again, or you’ll be flushing toilets at the Thunderdog Lanes for a living.” Then he stomped out.

“It’s not like that hasn’t happened before,” she said to his back.

Emily was sitting on the edge of a wheel-balancing machine, drinking a Coca-Cola, when Officer Brooks arrived. She watched him say a few words to the clerk, then stroll into the repair bay.

“Hi. You must be Emily. I’m Steve Brooks from Cedar Creek Police Department.” He was tall and handsome, with calm hazel eyes. He was everything Richard Underhill wasn’t.

“Yes, I’m Emily.” She managed to shake his hand, though somehow she had already gotten thick black grease on it.

“I left my husband a few days ago. His daughter, Sarah, was really upset. I’m not sure where her biological mom is, but I didn’t have any parental rights. I had to leave her behind.”

“Okay, so when you left him, was she okay?”

“Yes. So, I went back today to get the kids’ clothes. She was gone.” Emily turned.

Her boys were helping the gas station attendant. He was washing a car window, and they were hosing off his shoes.

“And he told you some fishy story? That’s what the dispatcher’s report said.”

“Yes, he said she went to Maggie O’Bryan’s for her birthday party, but then he found out she never arrived. Nothing he says adds up. I don’t know how to put it any other way, but the man is a monster. Where do you think she could be?”

This beautiful young mother was so overwhelmed with anxiety that Steve almost confessed what he suspected, but he remained silent.

“It’s hard to say, Ma’am. Maybe nothing’s wrong. We might need to get in touch with you… could you just write your number on this pad?”

“I’m sorry. It’s probably silly of me to call you guys, but he said you found a body at O’Bryan’s, and then he admitted that Sarah never came home.”

“No problem, Emily,” he smiled gently at her. “I’ll be in touch.”

Emily finished her Coke and watched him walk back to his squad car. She wasn’t divorced yet, and little Sarah was missing.

Steve’s adrenaline was rushing. He felt like he had just met the most beautiful woman in the world and cracked his first case—all in one lucky moment.

Steve pulled the cruiser into the driveway on Fredericksburg Road. Richard Underhill must be a darn fool to give up a woman like Emily.

The house was eerily silent. The swings showed only a gentle breeze swaying them. It felt like a haunted homestead if there ever was one. He knocked on the door, which was slightly ajar. He had half-expected there to be no answer.

As he turned to leave, a very short, balding man stepped into the doorway. He was slightly bow-legged, and his cheeks looked like he’d been in the rouge pot. Not a guy you’d picture having beautiful Emily as his wife.

“Yes?” Underhill didn’t seem flustered when a uniformed officer came to his door.

“We’ve received a report that your child is missing.” Steve took the open door as an invitation and walked past the leprechaun into the house. “I’m going to need some details. Mind if I look around?”

“You got a warrant?” Underhill still held the door open, clearly hoping he’d block Steve’s way. As if he could. Richard was so short that Steve could have stepped over him without messing up the man’s thinning hair.

“No, I don’t. Most people in your position are more than happy to cooperate,” Steve shot back, confidently maintaining his alpha energy.

“Well, I’m not most people, and I want you on the other side of the threshold,” Richard hissed.

Seems quite aware of his rights. Bet he knows the system from past contact.

“Mr. Underhill,” Steve persisted, “are you from this area?”

“We moved here last year,” Underhill admitted, eyes flashing with anger. He flung the door open wide and pointed. “Now get out.”

“Your attitude stinks, Underhill. I know you have a six-year-old daughter, and I know she’s missing. Do you want to produce a recent photo and a proper description? Or do I have the Police Chief ask you personally with an engraved search warrant?”

Steve, acknowledging Underhill’s rights, stepped back onto the porch but maintained the demeanor he had learned at the academy.

“She’s just a kid—your typical six-year-old pain in the neck. She’s probably run away.” Underhill scratched his goatee. “Fact is, when I took her to the circus just last week, she threatened to run away and join them.”

He acted as if he was about to cry, then he took out his wallet and showed two old, worn photos.

Steve looked at them. Sarah Underhill, on her first two-wheeler, grinned back at him. A tooth was missing. The other was a somber child sitting next to the monkey’s cage at the zoo. If a heart could truly sink, his did. Her eyes shimmered, bright in the glossy photo, still full of dreams and hopes, still alive.

“Mr. Underhill, you’ll need to come down to the station with me.” Steve could almost smell the miasma of decay that had permeated the hospital morgue. It was as if the rot exuded from Underhill and not from the child at all.


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No Tour Guides in Hell: Chapter 16

No Tour Guides in Hell:
Chapter 16
The Senators Wife

ARLINGTON, VIRGINIA

Margreth searched through the debris of sleep masks, lotions, and potions in her bedside table for her journal. Every sordid affair, insult suffered, and tearful, lonely evening was recorded in gory detail. But were there warning signs she had missed?

August 10th

I don’t remember the exact day I first longed for freedom. It might have been after the fling with my masseuse, or maybe it was following the Swede. Sven was a tennis pro with a well-strung racquet. Perhaps I grew tired of the daily grind of photo ops, perfect outfits, and lonely nights.

August 12th

A house with a picket fence was never part of the hand I was dealt. Anonymity would be the greatest treasure, a relief from the goldfish bowl we’ve been living in. My life ticks away like a bomb with a long fuse.

August 20th

Will’s early escapades weren’t anything extraordinary. A secretary here, a news anchor there—there was always someone. His latest fling— that redhead was a firecracker.

All of Will’s shady little secrets might end up on the front page of the New York Times. But that wouldn’t fix my problem. John Q Public would blame me. Margreth, you’re not meeting expectations, his mother would say, failing to keep the all-American boy happy. And she’s right. I once read a paperback over Will’s shoulder while he was going at it like a show pony. I can’t stand to look at him. Not to mention the smell of other women on him.

She tucked the diary back in the drawer and locked it. She couldn’t easily conceal the obvious betrayals in her life. Her thoughts wandered to her mission. Her plan was simple and foolproof, she hoped.

A rap on the door startled her.

“Come in,” she called out while brushing her shoulder-length, silvery hair.

“Mrs. Willson,” Digby peered around the corner.

“Come in, Digby,” she said. “Look at this huge beetle.”

A purple bug slowly crawled across the dresser until her hairbrush’s spine crushed it.

“You sure took care of him,” Digby chuckled. “I sure do hope you don’t squish me! I’d make quite a mess.”

“Oh, Digby,” she smiled. “You’re the perfect butler! I’d never consider squashing you. Now that chauffeur, I’d like to shove this hairbrush—oh, never mind.”

“Will you need a car this morning? You have that meeting with Jake Barnes, correct?”

“Yes, I suppose I should have Remington drive me, Digby. The man gives me the creeps, and I don’t trust him.”

She trusted Digby, though. He knew all her secrets. And he was discreet and loyal. He’d proved himself.

“I’m trying to act as if everything is normal. It’s a lot to ask of you, but could you park my sports car on the side street near that bakery? I think I will lose Remington as soon as possible.”

“Don’t blame you none there, Ma’am. I’ve always had a bad feeling about Remington,” Digby said, his voice as smooth as Fine bourbon. “I’m sure he knows how to find the bakery. But it’s a bad neighborhood. You want to be careful.”

“I’m going to leave a little early, Digby, just in case. If Mr. Willson asks, tell him it’s my turn to bring treats to the bridge club this afternoon. In the meantime, I’ll stop at the spa.”

“Yes, Mrs. Willson. You’re going to the bakery,” the butler repeated. “And then to the spa, and then to the club. I’ve got it. I’ll have the car brought around front.”

Margreth pondered the details, the weave and weft of the story she’d craft for Jake Barnes. Just a few months ago, Will had pulled into the driveway after one of his mysterious trips. He left such a scavenger hunt of clues that even she could follow them.

Soon, she stood at the entrance, tapping her foot impatiently. Remington came out of the garage in a sleek black sedan.

“Bitch,” he said aloud as he passed the groundskeeper, with a welcoming smile to greet her. He opened the rear passenger door, not really caring where she wanted to go. Margreth dove into the limo.

“Remington,” she asked sweetly, “do you happen to know why there’s a Michigan map back here?”

The look he gave her in the rear-view mirror showed he’d only tell her when hell froze over, and the devil danced in heaven. She rummaged through the remaining pockets of the leather seats and found a fat, foul-smelling cigar butt.

Odds were good that Will wasn’t shining deer or smelt dipping in a Michigan river. Her husband probably had a bundle of joy hidden at some bimbo’s cabin in the forest, right where the big red X was on the map. Manistee National Forest.

What I care about is Andrew—that he is always safe and well cared for. If William had ever shown promise as a husband or a father… well, if wishes were fishes and cows could fly. A woman does what a woman must do.

Margreth applied a deep ruby lipstick. She masked her washed-out, tired appearance with a swipe of makeup here and there. She felt as though she had aged at least twenty years in the few short weeks since becoming deeply involved in William’s secret life.

Mr. Big is in serious trouble. The secret documents could finalize the deal. He’ll support us, and I’ll manipulate him expertly. And maybe, just maybe, I’ll find someone who truly loves me and my son.

Margreth watched Arlington fade away as the car sped by. The sun was already burning off the fog. She checked her watch. She planned to walk into the front door of the bakery and out the back — very sneaky. Her detour to the diner to meet Jake Barnes would be quick and crucial. It was crucial if she wanted to win a marital death match.

Remington screeched to a stop at the curb. He opened her door because that’s what chauffeurs do. His hand brushed hers, and she cringed. He looked as greasy as one of those muscle-bound guys at the gym.

“Thanks,” Margreth’s tone was so cold it could chill a martini. “You can go polish something, Remington. I have some errands to take care of,” and she thus dismissed his service.

He frowned, surprised by the situation.

She rummaged through her purse. The document was still snugly tucked between her makeup bag and wallet. She stepped into the bakery. It was scorchingly hot and smelled delicious. She gave quick instructions for fast delivery to the club and slipped out the back door as if this was just another routine daily shortcut.

In front of the bakery, Remington watched, but she didn’t come out. As time went on and he grew bored, he decided to head back to Arlington. Nobody cared, especially not the Senator.

Margreth took the alley to the next side street and spotted the diner with shabby curtains hanging lazily in the steamy window. It had no name, just a large neon sign with a hefty black cook holding a stack of steaming pancakes. The white teeth flashed on and off like a beacon for hungry, lost people.

The neighborhood was peaceful. A few junkers lined the street, and the sleek gray convertible that Digby had parked for her stood out like a diamond in a bowl of cheap plastic beads. She opened the cafe door with only slight hesitation.

According to Digby Brown, Jake Barnes was the best private investigator in town and played a fierce game of checkers. He described Barnes as deeply tanned, with reddish-brown hair that was a bit too long—a real rapscallion. The restaurant looked sinister and shadowy through her dark glasses, but she couldn’t risk being recognized.

A man sitting in the last booth fit the bill. He was dressed in an army jacket and a fedora, just as he said he would be. Margreth surveyed the other diners before approaching him.

The cook waddled over, holding menus in his mitt. His apron stretched tight over his ample belly and was covered with greasy patches. She took a menu and smiled at Jake. Her silver-gray hair swept over one eye, giving her the look of a well-aged seductress.

She’s beautiful, he thought. Barnes waited for her to speak.

“Black coffee,” she said, to keep the cook from touching her drink more than necessary. The man waddled away.

Jake Barnes was handsome. His dark, mysterious eyes seemed to hold all her secrets, while she knew none of his. He lifted his hat, and his wavy hair spilled onto his collar, barely covering the gold earring piercing one lobe. Jake offered her a lazy half-grin.

“Mr. Barnes?” Margreth purred. “May I call you Jake?”

“Please,” he said, staring. “What can I do for you, Mrs. . . .” She shushed him.

“I need to be careful. I think you can guess what I might be facing,” she was coy.

He became aroused.

“Who gave you my name, Margreth?” he asked, emphasizing her name with such passion she nearly sank into the Naugahyde bench. Even the way he stirred his coffee was alluring.

“My butler, Digby Brown. He told me you were the best. I had no idea how to find a private eye. He said you’re discreet,” Margreth whispered. “Look at him. He’s watching us.”

The cook kept wiping the same spot on the counter near them with his greasy rag. It made her nervous.

“You’ve been watching too many Bogart movies,” he joked. She was not offended.

She slid the documents across the table, covered by the menu.

Jake examined the papers, and his face showed concern. “This is dangerous. Tell me everything else you’ve learned,” he said in a hushed voice that made her even more worried.

And she did. Hesitantly at first, then experiencing a catharsis of sorts, until she revealed every sordid detail. Their coffees cooled, but neither noticed. She felt a flood of relief, finally sharing her devastating secrets. He was lost in the mire of the plot she wove.

Margreth finished her story, leaving him on a fragile ledge. He knew she didn’t realize she was fighting not only her husband but also the entire US government and the Al Amorta Ujung.

She searched through her purse, unaware of the danger nearby. Would he protect her? Could he save her from the fate she had chosen for herself?

“You need to get these papers back where you found them,” Jake said. “Before they’re missed. I’ll be blunt. This could cost you your life.”

“I have to meet Victoria at eight-thirty,” she told him. “I must warn her. I’ll put them back after that.”

“Do you think you can just drop this bomb on the President’s wife and walk away without shrapnel tearing a chunk out of your butt?” Jake asked. “I have to tell you; it isn’t going to happen that way.”

“I’ll just give you this.” Margreth slid a bulky, white envelope across the table. “I’ll be fine. Victoria is a friend. I absolutely must tell her.”

“The President’s wife has no friends, Margreth,” Jake hissed. “You’ve been married to a U.S. Senator for how many years? You know that better than I do. There’s only one difference between a politician and a terrorist, Margreth. The terrorist will plant a bomb in your car; the politician will have someone else do it.”

“Then, before this bomb blows up in her face, I have to tell her,” Margreth said, captivated by his cloak-and-dagger demeanor. “My husband won’t miss these for a few hours—his desk is a mess.”

“Please be careful,” he said. She experienced a strange tug on her heartstrings.

Before he could argue, she had already left. Only a cup with her ruby lipstick tattoo remained to show she’d been there.

If there was an illegitimate Willson child, Jake would track down the bastard. All of this was to make sure Margreth’s secret, Andrew, wouldn’t be exposed if she died before his father. What a cruel joke for a legitimate child—to find out he’s an unknown entity and therefore not named in his father’s will. And how could a private eye change those odds? He paid his bill and left.

Jake had fifty thousand dollars in crisp green bills to help Margreth. He could earn a thousand times more money with the information she’d just given him. Jake started his car and let out a sigh of relief when it didn’t blow up.

The cook watched from the greasy window. As soon as the coast was clear, he used the payphone two doors down.


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No Tour Guides in Hell: Chapter 15

15
NATAGNA

WESTERN SUMATRA

Natagna

Natagna saw a juicy insect dart across a wide, green leaf, its quick movement catching his sharp eye. He picked it up, looked it over, then popped it into his mouth.

While scratching a deep itch on his shoulder blade, one of the females approached. Natagna growled, showing a bit of his teeth. This successfully warned her off. His head hurt too much to be interested in mating.

An intriguing animal outside the enclosure emitted a familiar call, its kiss-squeak cry demanding his attention. He smacked his lips together and gave a loud reply. The animal stretched a bare limb toward him, offering a durian. The stench of the luscious fruit, which smelled like rotten eggs, was filet mignon to an orangutan. Natagna accepted it joyfully.

The other animal’s skin was hairless and cool. Its fingers reached out, gently stroking the pad of Natagna’s cheek. Natagna sniffed, then backed away to a tree, giving a loud call that echoed through the compound. He crossed the enclosed arbor hand-over-hand. The sun sparkled off the razor wire, blinding Natagna to the soldier holding a loaded gun on the wall.

The Old One stepped out from the nearby house, waving his arms and shouting at the small animal that had given Natagna the tasty durian. Natagna watched as the creature ran off and rejoined the others of its kind.

He scratched his chest and ran his fingers through his long, fiery orange hair. He rubbed his head and let out a soulful moan. His head was aching badly.

Natagna disliked the old one who often poked him with sharp sticks that left holes in his skin. Now he saw the snowy-haired man move away from the enclosure and felt relieved. Natagna’s offspring played in the branches of nearby trees. He watched them suspiciously. Unknowingly to him, more of his offspring played jump rope on the playground below. He was not burdened by paternal longings anyway.

He tried to tear down the metal walls of his prison and escape into the rainforest. Freedom was on his mind today, along with pain.


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No Tour Guides in Hell: Chapter 14


14
THE CITY OF LIGHTS

WESTERN MICHIGAN

Harley followed the ramp up to the first level of the city underground. Gardens, lit by ultraviolet lights, lined the walkway. In the main corridor, conveyors moved men and women in both directions. They wore white jumpsuits and had ginger hair. They cruised past him like ducks in a shooting gallery.

People turned with suspicious glances as Harley boarded the northbound conveyor. He disembarked at the third exit and scanned the choice of passageways until he found the Conference Concourse.

Negotiating a busy revolving door, he entered a circular lobby with rooms arranged like spokes on a wheel. Finally, he found the door labeled Omega and opened it.

A half dozen people stood chatting in a group, but their conversation halted when he entered. He could read their thoughts.

Where’s Senator Willson? Where’s the big cheese? They were all thinking it.

He smiled and nodded hello.

Damn Willson. He set me up to take the fall for him. Harley Quinn squared his shoulders and took a seat.

A woman in a gray suit gave him a hard stare. Harley held her gaze steadily, unflinching. She was creepy. She made his skin crawl. A pitcher of ice water sat sweating in the middle of the buffet, and Harley poured himself a glass to wash away the nerves he was feeling. He waited for his anxiety to ease. You never know what might happen in these situations.

His immediate neighbor was General Howard Robinson, a tall Black man. The officer had so many military decorations that he probably needed a forklift to move them around.

They were a pack of wolves waiting for the alpha female. Barbara Hagopian was a tough, no-nonsense senior United States Senator. She burst through the door and hunched over the lectern like a vulture.

“We have a crisis with Omega.” Her eyes swept the room, selecting targets for her verbal strikes. “I want to seal this coffin before the US Senate becomes the night of the living dead. Omega is compromised, and we need to wipe our fingerprints off this sucker yesterday.”

“Omega has been operating covertly for decades, but I believe it’s about to come into the bright light of day,” General Robinson said. “It’s a Pandora’s box with a tiny crack. And I don’t think the world wants to see what might spill out.”

“A crack? Is that what we’re calling it, General?” Hagopian’s smile masked her disdain. Harley expected her tongue to flick from between her narrow lips and snatch the general into oblivion. “We have three fronts in this battle: Underhill and the dead kid, an infection that’s affecting clones here in Sanctuary, and a meltdown in our relationship with Al Amorta Ujung. I sense there’s a pattern to this chaos.”

“The misappropriation of a cloned child by a United States Senator was news to me,” the General said. His sharp look shot a quiver of arrows through Harley. “Now we discover that at least one other child has been pilfered. You know what I’m saying? Or shall I be more candid?”

“Please, spill all,” Hagopian replied gently.

Robinson said, “Blake’s adopted kid.”

“No,” she gasped. “As payoff for what? Does Blake have something on Willson?”

“No.” General Robinson looked at Harley, who pretended to be confused by the turn of the conversation. “This Quinn guy shouldn’t be here.”

“Willson’s deal is that he’ll run as Nicholas Blake’s Vice President in the next election.”

“A bipartisan ticket?” Hagopian laughed. “That’s the stupidest thing I’ve ever heard,” she sneered. Then she turned the Howitzer on Harley. “What do you have to say about this?”

“The Senator apologizes for any inconvenience his absence causes the Committee,” Harley replied curtly. “As he told you, he has unavoidable business on the Hill today.”

“Inconvenience!” she snorted. “He’s caused more than an inconvenience! That man has single-handedly jeopardized the Omega Consensus. We were quietly shutting down this project, you son of a bitch. Removing the bullets from Al Amorta’s weapons so we could leave them with rubber band guns—that would have reduced oil prices for American citizens before the next election. Now we’ve got a mess on our hands.”

“What about the Sumatran Compound?” General Robinson asked. He looked at Firdaus. The man seemed a little too squirmy.

“Dr. Syringh Firdaus is Holmstead’s man and our liaison with the Sumatran branch of Omega,” Hagopian turned to the raisin-skinned doctor. She sent the message that she preferred his answers. “You were born in Sumatra Barat, is that correct?”

“Yes, that is true,” Firdaus replied, and waited for the drilling he knew was coming.

“What are your thoughts on this mess?”

“I’ve heard nothing from Sumatra,” Firdaus admitted. It was true, but he hadn’t made contact because he knew Dr. VandenHeuvel would be in a murderous rage over Azara’s death. “I’ll be checking for you, Madam.”

“Good, at least someone has a brain around here,” she snapped. “What about you, Watson?”

“The Justice Department needs a heads-up on how serious this situation is,” the round-headed bureaucrat replied. “The Attorney General wonders if this requires a special prosecutor.”

“Are you seriously oblivious? This is as urgent as a heart attack. We have a dead clone lying in some hick’s field, and we still need to recover the evidence. That’s in progress, isn’t it?”

“Right,” Firdaus and Robinson said in unison. They glared at each other threateningly.

“And we’ve got a perp wandering around who knows God knows what about the inner workings of the government,” Hagopian was foaming at the mouth. “Christ almighty, he could have state secrets stashed in his underwear drawer.”

“May you excuse me, please?” Syringh Firdaus mopped his brow with a hanky as they fixed their eyes on him like a half dozen bayonets.

“This afternoon, I visited the site where the clone unit was abandoned. I examined the body and removed evidence linking Omega, specifically the ID chip. I can assure you this was not a case of violent death. In fact, it seems to be the same infection that is spreading here at Sanctuary.”

“And what about the transporter? Why was he disposing of the body like roadkill?” Hagopian demanded.

“We picked up the clone known as Kowa last night,” General Robinson said. “He was forced to abandon the body when his vehicle had a blowout. He wasn’t familiar with the area and encountered a rather nonverbal young man. Then a tow driver surprised him when he was unloading the trunk. He had to hide. Given the turn of events, he thought it was best to conceal the body and return for it later. We picked him up in a Black Hawk without incident.”

“Without incident, General? It sounds like a damn media event. Why didn’t you pick the body up right then and there?” Hagopian sniped. “Eh? Just send in a team and take care of business?”

“Infrared revealed a patch of heat in the middle of a tree—it might have been the possibly autistic man. We sent a rescue team the following day. We were within fifty feet of the site when the farmer’s little girl found the body.”

“You should have killed the child and finished the whole business,” Hagopian suggested. “Then, you should neutralize this Underhill fellow.”

“Kill the child? Do you think we’re just common thugs?” General Robinson was appalled.

“Don’t you people know anything about damage control?” Watson bleated. “Sometimes you have to kick ass and take no names.”

“Just rub them out?” Harley blurted, then, seeing the hostility building around him, he shut up.

“My God.” General Robinson’s face showed his disgust. “We aren’t in the business of killing citizens, especially innocent children and disabled folks. I never signed up for that duty.”

“Are you a warrior?” Hagopian turned the blade she’d stuck in his back. “Or aren’t you?”

“Madam,” Syringh Firdaus tried to soothe the infidels. “The local authorities are unlikely to discover any DNA abnormality. I don’t believe this is a widespread crisis.”

“Mr. Quinn,” the chairwoman hissed, turning her furious face toward Harley. “How did this clone end up in the hands of a predator like Underhill? And what’s this about Blake’s baby?”

“Actually,” Harley hedged, “there’s a good explanation. Unfortunately, I’m not at liberty to divulge that information. Senator Willson will have to answer those questions.”

He paused, and hostile faces fixed on him like a bug in a collection. “I don’t know about Blake’s baby. That’s news to me. The other—well, the Senator does get himself in a pickle sometimes.”

“More than likely, his pickle is the problem,” she nailed him. “So, can I infer Underhill’s connection to your boss is of the sordid variety?”

Harley admitted, “That’s safe to say.”

“The clone’s body is in St. Cecilia’s Hospital morgue. The case’s pathologist is Dr. Gene Walker,” General Robinson interrupted. “We’re confident the body can be recovered and all traces of the investigation eliminated within twenty-four hours.”

“General, please excuse me,” Dr. Firdaus said. “These people will suspect something other than death by natural causes if we intervene. I have examined this child. There were no serious or life-threatening wounds.”

“And if this Walker fellow figures out that this child is a clone?” Hagopian asked. “What then? Is your boss going to eliminate him?”

“If that is necessary, we will consider all options. Let us first see what he discovers. In the past, Dr. Walker has published cloning abstracts and journal articles.” Dr. Firdaus said. “Mr. Holmstead has been watching him closely. If he makes a move, the CIA will know.”

“The CIA can’t operate within US borders,” General Robinson pointed out. “I suggest Dan Urban of the FBI is the man to contact.”

“Nobody tells Holmstead to butt out,” Hagopian confessed. “I don’t want my name on his ‘retaliation list’. I’m not that stupid.”

“Let this fellow run his studies and carry out his testing routines. Their tests are too rudimentary and their experience too limited to discover anything,” Firdaus said with an authoritative manner that quelled their dissent.

“I agree, Madam Chairperson,” Watson, the Justice Department’s loyal supporter, nodded. “Thank God, Holmstead’s man has a brain.”

“It’s the safest course for now. I hope we don’t live to regret it.” Hagopian pinned them to their chairs with her glare. “But let me warn you. If there’s one more goof, Art Holmstead will need to bat clean-up. The evidence will never be found after he runs you through his inquisition team.”

Harley assured, “Senator Willson will deny everything if any of this becomes public.” He told me to say that.

“Denial of culpability is not one of his options,” General Robinson snapped. “He should resign and slink back under whatever rock he crawled out from.”

“We’re completely aware of Senator Willson’s leisure activities, Mr. Quinn. As his VALET, I’m sure you know that.” Senator Hagopian gave him a wicked grin.

“Anything you care to add, Doctor?” Hagopian looked at a very old man in a white lab coat who had yet to speak. “Josef is an old friend of Senator Ashton. And he’s the Medical Director of Sanctuary.”

“There is a slight problem.” His German accent was as thick as that of a new immigrant. “Several clones at Sanctuary have succumbed to a mysterious infection.”

“Why is it a mystery?” Dr. Firdaus asked. “Do you not know the pathogen?”

“The bacterium is usually harmless. Doesn’t cause serious illness, much less deaths in the zoo animals that carry it,” the old man replied. “These clones are succumbing within a few days of the symptoms’ onset.”

“Well, Josef, isn’t that nice?” Hagopian said, almost furious. “Our clones have been contaminated like the monkey house at the zoo?”

“I’m telling you it is not a strange coincidence that they are susceptible to the same bugs as the common orangutan, or any other barnyard beast,” the wizened physician replied. “If we are lucky, this pathogen will ONLY affect clones.”

“And if we aren’t? What then? You’re saying that it could affect everyone?” Hagopian asked intensely. Harley imagined shards of light shooting from the top of her head, but it was just the natural adrenaline kicking up his fight-or-flight system.

“Is this a fucking plague?” Barbara Hagopian grasped her temples as if she were suffering an impending stroke.

“You have a very coarse manner, Madam,” Sanctuary’s Chief of Medicine noted. “Are you Jewish, perhaps?”

“Armenian,” she spat. “What’s it to you?”

“Very interesting,” he noted. “Very interesting indeed.” He sat down, having said all he was going to say about the matter.

“Jah Lo has made contact,” Barbara Hagopian said, a bit shaken, and changed tactics. “He’s demanding that we buy one million barrels of oil at four times the market rate. He says this will compensate the Al Amorta Ujung for their security services in Sumatra this month. That bastard has upped the ante for the last time. We’re going to shut him down.”

“Then what?” the General asked.

“We’ll evacuate VandenHeuvel’s team from Sumatra and disperse them. Then, when we’re ready, we’ll nuke the region and remove the Sultan of Timoresh from his throne.”

“Just what the country needs,” General Robinson grumbled. “Another Vietnam.”

“We have no options left,” Watson agreed. “This highway robbery is the biggest boondoggle in US history. Everything, including Omega, must end here and now. The world won’t tolerate another human rights scandal.”

The meeting ended on a bleak note. The participants drifted away in groups, engaged in tense conversation, leaving Harley by himself.

Quinn found the lobby, sat down, and packed tobacco into his pipe’s bowl. He struck a match and watched it burn to his fingertips.

“No smoking here.” The uniformed guard suddenly appeared out of nowhere.

“Fine,” Harley agreed, handing his pipe to the redheaded soldier. “You want to pound that up your ass for me?” Then he took the elevator back to civilization.

As he moved through the trap door, a wave of relief washed over him. It just didn’t feel natural to explore an underground city.

Kowa had anticipated his arrival and waited with Harley’s carryall bag. “Watch the north edge of the driveway. It’s a regular minefield.”

“Are you shitting me?” Quinn gaped. His pulse had to be about two hundred beats per minute. Snagging his tote, he walked through absolute darkness. Once in his auto, Harley followed the gravel drive, staying so far to the right that he took out small spruce trees.

At the log cabin near Sanctuary, Kowa and Onu sprawled on the porch, watching the night sky through the treetops.

“You didn’t really tell him that,” Onu chastised his companion.

“Yup. Probably shit his pants,” Kowa replied.

As Harley turned south onto M-37, a gray sedan pulled out behind him. His surveillant remained two cars back.

I made it. His chest muscles and arms relaxed just slightly. Quinn reached into his glove box. The compartment was empty. I was sure I left my gun in there.

Holmstead’s man parked a quarter mile away in a private driveway, watching Harley Quinn with his night vision goggles. The senator’s valet sat on a dirt berm, smoking a fat cigar and clutching his flask.

The agent recorded in his log:

Time: 10:45 PM; Location: M37, six miles north of Newaygo; Subject: HARLEY QUINN stopped for a brief rest.


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No Tour Guides in Hell: Chapter 13


13
The Site

CEDAR CREEK, MICHIGAN

Maggie O’Bryan spelled her name with alphabet noodles from her soup. They stuck to the table like gummy charms. Crossword with lunch. Using her M, Robbie spelled Mortshoe. The referee was busy doing the dishes.

“No fair,” Maggie howled. “What’s a mortshoe?”

Robbie shot her a look of disdain.

“It’s the big metal thing that holds the milker; it’s in the barn, stoopie pants.”

“I never heard daddy say that word,” she frowned and ate her name, dismissing the false entry of mortshoe. “Let’s play hide-the-carrot.” She waved her vegetable under her brother’s nose as if to lure him.

“That’s a stupid game. Besides, the underside of the table is already crammed with vegetables. You’re such a baby.” He skillfully hurled the ultimate insult, and it hit its mark.

Amelia watched her children. They were hunched over the table, having an animated discussion that seemed to involve a carrot. She washed a mug, scrubbing at the stubborn coffee ring. It seemed she was constantly washing something. If she wasn’t scrubbing dishes, then dirt off Mike’s boots, or Jell-O off the sofa. Her world was never-ending drudgery. Through the window, she could see Mike’s blue hat crossing over the top of the corn.

He was a farmer, but also a regular at the bar, always with a beer in hand. Hard farm work and life’s monotony had worn him down. Mike’s energy was poured into the land, and what was left was drowned in beer. Still, Amelia felt a spark of hope when the tractor rolled into the yard at day’s end. The night seemed to promise romance, until John Barleycorn dashed those hopes.

“We’re done!” the children shouted in unison, running through the kitchen. The screen door slammed behind them. They reached the yard before she could respond; their legs churned like whirligigs.

She raised the kitchen window. “Don’t go past the yellow tape!” Unsure of whether they heard her, she turned to the task at hand. A mountain of laundry needed sorting.

Maggie took Robbie’s hand. He did so reluctantly because she was the Dead Body Finder, a title that would earn her respect for at least a week. The fence was brightly decorated with saffron ribbon.

“DO NOT CROSS . . . BY ORDER OF POLICE,” Robbie read. He hoisted himself over as if the sign read . . . EXCEPT ROBBIE. Maggie scrambled after him. Though he was reluctant to set a precedent, Robbie helped her to the ground.

“You’d better be carefuller, Maggie. Ma’s gonna whip ya if you wreck another dress.”

“Carefuller is not a word. It’s like mortshoe.” And on that note, she sprinted for the woods.

The field lay fallow. Their dad will plant sugar beets next year. The children hugged the tree line, unnerved by thoughts of a body on their farm—a body with real hair.

“Look, it’s Bite’Ems wrappers.” Robbie dug through the poison ivy patch scattered with colorful papers. “Fly’s been out here.”

“How do you know?”

“Cause, stupid,” Robbie said. “Everyone in town knows Fly’s partial to Bite’Ems. He leaves a trail of wrappers everywhere he goes—like Hansel and Gretel.”

“They left crumbs.”

“You’re a dumbbell,” he replied. Then, adding insult to injury, he said, “You’re a girl and girls are all stupid.”

Robbie collected some of the pink waxy wrappers and put them in his pocket.

“I’m not as stupid as you! You’re digging in the sumac, and Ma’s gonna dose you with pink lotion.”

He ignored her. “Look, a free decoder ring coupon. And I got enough wrappers to send for it!”

The rumble of a motor drew Maggie’s attention. “Someone’s coming. Pa’s gonna whup you good, Robbie O’Bryan.”

“He can’t, because this is evidence,” he said with mock seriousness. “I’m Colombo.”

“Go ahead, be him. Dad says he’s got a glass eyeball. You got a fake eyeball, Robbie?” Her voice was sweet, but she was holding a sharp stick.

“You’re gonna get it. I’m telling you. Do you want to go stick some frogs?”

A police car pulled into the two-track. The kids ducked behind a bush and peeked out; Barney Deters spilled out one side, while Hank climbed out the other. The back seat revealed a new guy and a pretty lady.

“Duck, it’s the cops,” Robbie shoved her. “Let’s pretend they’re really the killers and we’re hiding, okay?”

Maggie nodded solemnly and tightened her grip on her stick. Hank and Hallie stepped over the chain and walked toward them. Barney and Steve stayed close behind. Seeing the children crouched near the trees, they decided to leave them alone for now.

“Hallie,” Barney muttered. “You stick around here. Keep an eye on those gosh darn kids for me. Steve, keep those news hounds away. No offense, Miss Ruben.”

“None taken,” she smiled.

“I’m going to take Hank with me,” he added. Hank adjusted his holster, just in case.

The two veteran cops walked side by side, scanning for any overlooked clues between the road and the clearing where the body lay. They examined for bent grass, fibers, or any other unusual items. When he reached the top of the knoll, Hank called out.

“Look. The grass has been tamped down. Our perp came through here. We can forget about getting any good footprints back on the road. We never took castings or a single photo, and then those blamed reporters stomped all over the place.”

Barney wiped a dirty handkerchief across his forehead.

“What the hell? We could ditch our shoes anyway. Of course, that means all the trash scattered around looks like the Oregon Trail. Half the county trampled through our crime scene. We look like country bumpkins.”

“Face it, Barney, we are bumpkins. The prints near the burn barrel are intact,” Hank was moving again, his eyes sweeping the terrain. “Look, Barn. A condom.” The shriveled balloon was old. “I think I parked out here with Edie Banks one time. It could be . . .”

Barney covered his ears. “Too much information, you son-of-a-bitch. And don’t pick it up. It might be contaminated with some nasty social disease.”

“We’d better take it anyway,” Hank said. “We’ve made enough unforced errors.” He used tweezers to drop the evidence into a plastic bag. It probably had nothing to do with their scene, but you couldn’t be too careful.

The men searched the area they had explored the day before, reaching the clearing without finding anything new. Hank used a trowel to scoop soil from the makeshift grave into a plastic tub. The debris revealed nothing important, just a few tubers and some root fibers.

Barney collected debris from the burn barrel: shards of bone from a dinner of pork chops, bread wrappers, and shiny tatters of a magazine that failed to burn.

Plastic sheeting covered the footprints: a man’s shoe and a bare foot. Hank pulled back the tarp, took photos of the prints, and then poured quickset plaster of Paris into the shallow marks.

A silvery gleam in the soil caught his eye. He pulled out a silver disc hanging on a chain. The tag was dull and well-worn. On its face, in tiny letters, was stamped “Property of US Government E-20028.”

“Looks like some kind of dog tag, Barn.” Hank dangled it from his tweezers. “Not like my Army tags, though.”

“Don’t look familiar to me.” Barney shook his head. “May be important. Let’s not lose it.”

Finally giving in to exhaustion, the men gathered their evidence and headed back to the cruiser. Suddenly, the air filled with shrieks, and the men ran. Well, Hank ran while Barney tried to. Robbie and Maggie were wailing like banshees.

“Help, help!” Robbie shouted.

Steve held Robbie tightly, and the boy flailed like a fish on a line. The young cop also had a solid grip on Maggie, but she kept fighting back.

“These hooligans really scared me.” He had his hands full.

“We were playing Colombo,” Maggie wailed. “I didn’t mean to poke him with my stick.”

“Yeah, we were just playing,” Robbie sniffed.

Steve brought them back to solid ground, and the children ran toward Hank and Barney, whom they recognized.

“Wanna see my evidence?” Robbie begged the Chief.

“Sure, Robbie, what do you have?” Barney rested a gnarled hand on Robbie’s shoulder.

Robbie grabbed Chief Deters by the hand and pulled him along. Barney waded through the brush behind the boy. Robbie retrieved a bag and pulled out a handful of candy wrappers.

“Well, I’ll be damned,” Barney said. “Where’d you find these?”

“Right here, Chief Deters. There’s more,” declared Robbie. “Look.”

Barney followed him to a patch of poison ivy. The crushed leaves surrounded the massive tree. Candy wrappers were embedded in the ivy like ornaments on a Christmas tree.

“Fly must have one hell of a rash!” Barney noted.

Back at the car, Hank tossed the evidence bag with the medallion to Steve.

“Guess it wasn’t a bust after all. Look at this. What do you make of it?”

Steve caught the parcel. Hank watched the blood drain from the rookie’s face.

How in the world did he get this? Steve’s heart pounded like a trip hammer, but luckily Hank couldn’t hear that.

“What is it, Hank? Some religious item?”

“Maybe, if it’s from the Church of Uncle Sam. It says Property of US Government,” Hank said.

Steve shrugged and threw the bag back. Hank watched the young man—his hands shook as if he were struck with palsy.

“Hey, fellas,” Barney ambled along like the pied piper with the children in tow. “It looks like Fly Carrington was out here all right. Is he our perp or a witness?”

“He was acting a little hinky in the squad,” Hank noted. “He kept making that stupid noise. Whup, whup, whup. And that’s odd because ‘Hi Fly’ has always been the extent of his conversation.”

“Just what do you suppose it means?” Steve tried to sound normal. He couldn’t seem to take his eyes off Hank’s pocket—the medallion was so close.

“He’s a mental case. I don’t think he’d kill a ladybug. But maybe he saw something.” Barney ran his fingers through what was left of his hair. “Question is, how do you squeeze a lemon that’s got no juice?”

“What difference does it make? He’d make a piss-poor witness,” Hank replied. “Let’s get back and try to put this together. Come on, Hallie.”

“Oh yeah,” Barney grinned. “You just go on, you two. Don’t stop for lunch unless he’s paying, Hallie.” He watched them walk away. Damn, this might just work out despite the tragedy.

“What?” Steve interrupted Barney’s thoughts.

“Oh, I was just hoping that young lady might lift Hank’s spirits. He’s been missing his wife who passed away,” Barney replied.

“He does look happy. I don’t think I’ve seen him without a frown since I started working for you.”

“Right,” Barney climbed into the passenger seat of the cruiser. “Hey Steve. Does Art Hughes still work at the academy? Did you have him for any classes?”

“Art Hughes, Art Hughes. Yup, I believe I did. Name rings a bell,” Steve replied, backing into the road.

“It should,” Barney said. “He’d been there about a hundred years.” He watched the familiar countryside slide by as he thought about his dilemma. Because there was no Art Hughes at the academy. There had never been.

An icy dread chilled Barney’s heart and made his knees weak. It was the skin-crawling anxiety that always signalled some catastrophe, like an old man’s gouty toe shouting about rain on the way.

The redheaded child’s ghost taunted him. Now he had to include Fly in the chaos for a guaranteed community disaster. Then there was Steve Brooks, the elusive rookie who seemed to appear out of nowhere and appeared to have all the correct answers except one.

Steve pondered the medal and E20028. He watched Barney, who was lost in thought. Personal danger wasn’t something Steve expected in Cedar Creek. Art Hughes, Arthur Hughes—the name seemed as elusive as smoke. He thought about the academy and tried to picture his instructors, but nothing and no one came to mind. Not even faces.

In the other vehicle, Hank sat quietly, recalling hot afternoons fishing beside the creek. Young Fly Carrington often sat on a nearby log, but not too close to bother him. Fly would pop a candy into his mouth and use the wrapper to bait his hook. Over the years, Fly had become more of a loner. Or was it Hank who made him that way? Had he neglected the boy?

Hallie watched Hank from the corner of her eye and thought of Ruth or Hanna’s face replacing the dead little girl’s. She reflected on their growing beauty and delicate naiveté. And she considered the pain of some unfortunate mother, soon to receive the tragic news of her little girl’s death.

Back at the O’Bryan Farm, Robbie and Maggie headed home, following the ditch and making wishes on Queen Anne’s lace.

“Robbie,” Maggie asked her mean, ugly brother, “Do you think it was a real person out in our field? Do you think the monster will find us, too?”

“Monsters don’t come after boys.” Robbie kicked a stone, sending it skittering into the road. “Just girls.”

A clump of mud hit the back of his head and knocked him into the ditch. He surfaced from the water with a bloodsucker stuck to his cheek. He was holding a soggy teddy bear.

“HOOHA!” Maggie yelled.

“Don’t just holler, pull this sucker off my face,” Robbie squealed.

“That’s Hooha! Sarah’s bear.”

Pull this thing off right now. I’ll get rabies and foam at the mouth like Ol’ Yeller and bite you,” Robbie threatened.

Maggie grabbed the bear and held it tightly to her chest. Then she ran, unaware of her brother’s situation. Robbie followed her muddy footprints, bleating like an injured goat all the way to the house. All was not well in Cedar Creek on this hot summer afternoon.


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