John Locke - A Girl Like You

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This detachment is the reason Rachel stopped loving him long before I entered the picture.

I check my watch and see it’s three hours till midnight. I call Pete and tell him I’m done for the night. He knows to add an extra twenty percent to the built-in tip charge. In a few hours when I need a ride, I’ll take one of Sam’s cars. I call Lou again, to work out all the arrangements for what’s going to happen after the snake does its job. If the snake doesn’t bite Sam when he sits on the toilet, I’ll put it in his bed. If that doesn’t work, I’ll knock Sam unconscious and push its fangs into his chest. Bottom line, I’m not leaving till Sam gets snakebit.

I look at my watch again, and wonder what Miranda is doing instead of being with me.

I wonder where Rachel is, and hope she’s being treated humanely. But I worry she’s not, since her abductors killed Dr. Dee and tried to kill Nadine.

I set the alarm on the clock in my command center, the one that wakes me with a flashing light instead of a buzzer.

I lie down.

My stomach growls, and I realize I haven’t eaten since this morning, so I turn off the alarm, slip out of my command center, climb down the brick ladder on the side of Sam’s house, go back through his yard, across the golf course and fields, past the vacant Chevy dealership, and take a seat at the counter of a nearby Steak ’n Shake.

15.

Sam didn’t go to sleep at his usual time.

Being an extremely orderly guy, Sam sticks to a rigid schedule, unless he’s working on something important. When he is, he loses all track of time. I’m hoping this project isn’t going to stump him. For a guy like Sam, this should be simple. What could be in Rachel’s blood test that would frighten the government so badly, they’re willing to kill people to keep it hid? There couldn’t be many answers to that question. But when I leave his house, Sam is still at his computer.

On the way to the park, I call Lou and ask him to check with the Sensory Resource doctors, who are among the best in the world.

“I already asked them,” Lou says.

“And?”

“They have no idea.”

I hang up and call Dr. Howard, Chief of Staff, who works the day shift.

When he answers, I say, “Hi Doc, it’s Donovan Creed.”

“You know what time it is in Virginia?”

“Yeah. Same as Louisville.”

He yawns. “How’s the face holding up?”

Doc Howard headed the team of plastic surgeons that made me look handsome.

“You made me look like a sissy.”

I hear him chuckle.

“I need to ask you something, Doc.”

“Can it wait till morning?”

“If it could, you’d still be asleep.”

I hear him moving about, probably adjusting himself to a sitting position.

“Okay, shoot,” he says.

“A lady named Rachel gets her first blood test ever. When the results come back, something shows up that is so terrible, so horrifying, the government kills Rachel’s doctor, and sends a professional extraction team to kidnap her.”

“That sounds like the plot of a terrible book.”

“Save your review till after I write it. For now, just tell me if it’s possible.”

He thinks a moment, then says, “No.”

“Are you certain?”

He says, “The lady appears to be healthy?”

“Physically, yes. Mentally, she’s a mess.”

“Can she walk and talk and move around normally?”

“Yes.”

“Well, then, to the best of my knowledge, there is nothing to be found in her blood that would frighten anyone outside of her friends and family. If there were abnormal cells or some type of blood disease that hadn’t affected her physical health, her doctor would schedule further tests. If her blood work is completely off the charts, she’s either ill, or the sample got contaminated. If contaminated, they’d simply repeat the test. Beyond that, the notion of a doctor or lab sharing a random person’s blood work with the government is absurd.”

I think about what he’s told me, and work it around in my head. I know I’m missing something, but have no idea what it could be.

He says, “Are you doing anything dangerous tonight?”

“No, why?”

“You know I live vicariously through your adventures.”

I see a van pull up to the park entrance.

“Go back to bed, Doc,” I say. As I hang up I hear him shout, “Hey, you’re welcome!”

Two minutes later I meet the snake guy.

“Be careful of Frankie,” he says. “Water moccasins can bite through burlap.”

“Snake’s name is Frankie?”

“That’s right. Most water moccasins are docile, except when cornered.”

“But not Frankie?”

“No sir. Frankie don’t let you corner him. He corners you!”

Walking back to Sam’s house, carrying the very dangerous Frankie, I hear nothing, but feel plenty. I’m suddenly on the ground and fairly certain someone has shot me in the head with a high-powered rifle.

16.

I’ve been shot before, but never in the head, so I’m not positive how I’m supposed to feel less than a millisecond after the hit.

But I’m pretty sure I’m not supposed to be feeling fine.

My first thought is that Lou might have set me up with the snake man, or one of his buddies who may have been hiding near the drop off spot. But I didn’t hear a gunshot. As quiet as it was, I should have heard a gunshot, had there been one, even if the assassin used a silencer.

I wait a few minutes to make sure no one is hanging around to finish me off, then run my hands over my head, but find no lumps or bruises. I realize it’s dark, but blood feels like blood regardless of the light conditions, and I don’t feel any. Just to make sure, I get to my feet and walk to a lamp post and look at my hands and still find nothing.

Whatever just happened had been internal. Had I suffered a mini-stroke? I lift my hands over my head, something that’s supposed to be hard to do if you’ve had a stroke. I speak out loud: “Sal Bonadello lives in Cincinnati.” I repeat the sentence and listen to see if I’m slurring my words. I don’t appear to be. Then again, maybe only others would be able to tell.

But I feel fine. Slight headache, nothing more. Whatever it was, lasted only a fraction of a second, but hurt like hell. Could I have an aneurism? A brain tumor? These are happy thoughts.

I go back and retrieve Frankie the snake from where I’d dropped him, then he and I head for Sam’s house.

17.

When I get back to Sam’s and check the camera screens, I see he’s still in his office, working. So I’m stuck in a tiny cubicle with a poisonous snake that’s trying to get out of a burlap bag. Each time I set the bag on the plywood floor, it moves toward my leg. I try hanging it from one of the hooks at the top of the eave, but that puts the bottom of the bag within inches of my body. I could put Frankie outside, but it’s cool out, and I don’t want to make him docile. I decide to let him hang where it is, and make a point not to get too close.

Thankfully, I don’t have to wait too long. Sam shuts his computer off at one a.m., and heads to the master bathroom to get ready for bed. He sets the alarm and takes his sleeping aid, and I wait for it to do its job.

I wait an hour before wrestling Frankie through the crawl space. He’s highly agitated. The bag is thumping and rolling, and I have to extend it as far as I can from my body. Finding my way down the brick ladder in the dark is much harder than climbing up it had been a couple hours earlier, but I manage.

I know about Sam’s alarm system. Specifically, I know he has contact alarms on all the doors and windows. He also has glass break alarms. But if I can cut the glass without shattering it, I can climb in through his basement window.

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