It was
disappointing that the best Kaylee could come up with was another list of names
of people who might be interested in the artifacts. Some hints about a person who’d been gloating
about something, or perhaps just expressing a great deal of interest in these
disks or the museum and suddenly going quiet about it, would have been nice.
Alex and
Harold were driving back to the loft, mostly in silence. There was some other traffic on the road with
them, but not much. He was driving about
ten miles per hour over the speed limit, trying not to tempt any passing
highway patrol officers, and it felt like they were barely moving.
I hope we didn’t go all the way out to the
middle of freaking nowhere for coffee for nothing, Alex thought. If we
have to waste our time, we could have at least wasted it doing something fun.
Speaking of wasting time, Alex realized he was
going to have to put a good amount of effort into contacting more people who
probably weren’t going to have any more info.
He was really more of an action guy, and that kind of work seemed an
awful lot like a dull office job. And he
had to put up with Harold on top of it.
Harold, Alex thought. That’s
it. I can let him do the calling, and
find something more entertaining to do while he’s at it.
Alex
suddenly felt much better about things.
He was, after all, supposed to be working with Harold, so he might as
well share the work.
“Say, Harold,”
Alex said. “How would you feel about
getting in touch with the folks on the list Kaylee gave us?”
“I would
be happy to, Mr. Minor,” Harold said.
“Anything I can do to help.”
“Excellent,”
Alex said.
Problem solved, he thought.
Alex had
not even had a chance to start daydreaming about what he could do with his time
while Harold was busy making phone calls, when a car passed in the left
lane. It was a bright blue and looked
kind of like a rally car, with a ridiculous spoiler on the back. Alex guessed it was a Subaru. He wouldn’t have thought anything of it, if
the passing car hadn’t cut sharply in front of Alex, barely missing his fender
and forcing him to brake hard. Harold
and Alex were pitched forward against their seatbelts.
The blue
car continued moving to the right, past Alex’s car, through the right hand
lane, and up an exit ramp.
“Wow,
what was that about?” Alex said. His
heart was pounding, and he was glad he’d seen the other driver in time to hit
the brakes.
Harold
didn’t seem particularly concerned by the close call. He’d just taken a breath to answer Alex when
another car, this one an orange hatchback of some sort, did nearly the same
thing, coming from the right this time.
“What
the hell?” Alex said, perhaps a little more forcefully than he needed to.
The
orange hatchback did not continue in to the left lane, but stayed directly in
front of Alex’s Mustang. And slammed on
the brakes.
“Holy
buckets!” Alex said, and slammed on his own brakes. There wasn’t enough room between them, and
the Mustang ran into the back of the orange car with a shockingly loud
bang. Alex and Harold were both thrown
against their seatbelts, again.
“What
the hell was that?” Alex said. “Why did
they brake like that? Did you see anything ahead of them?”
Harold was just saying that no, he hadn’t seen
anything, when the orange car accelerated hard away from them again. Alex watched, dumb-founded, as the other car
continued down the road, still accelerating.
He’d never heard of a hit and run where the car that got hit was the one
to run from the scene.
“I guess
we should probably get off the road and inspect the damage,” Alex said.
Harold
said nothing.
Alex
started accelerating, slowly in case anything important had been damaged. He was going about forty five miles per hour
and moving from the center lane to the right when he noticed the headlights in
his rear view mirror were awfully bright and awfully close.
He was
still surprised when the car behind them rammed into the back left corner of
the Mustang. The force of the impact
caused the Mustang to swerve a bit, and Alex felt like they were right on the
edge of fishtailing for a couple of seconds.
As he wrestled the car back under control, they drifted on to the shoulder
of the freeway. Alex was dimly aware
that the car that had rear ended them was passing by on the left, accelerating
hard. Whatever it was, it was big, and
dark colored.
Alex
brought the Mustang to a stop there on the shoulder.
“Are you
OK?” Alex asked Harold.
“Yes,
I’m quite all right. How are you, Mr.
Minor?” Harold said. He sounded entirely
calm, even disinterested.
He sounds like I’d lightly bumped into him
while walking by, Alex thought. Does this guy ever get riled up?
Alex
wondered how it was that all of his co-workers seemed to be entirely cool and
in control in intense situations that left him in a sweat with his heart
pounding.
“Fine,
I’m fine,” Alex said. “God damn it, what
the hell is going on? There’s no way
that was a coincidence.”
“No, I
would say not,” Harold said.
“Have
you pissed someone off?” Alex asked Harold.
Harold
looked blankly back at him.
“Lighten
up, Harold. I’m just trying to make a
joke,” Alex said. He swung the door
open, and got out to see how badly bent the Mustang was.
Alex
went to the front of the car first. It
was looking pretty mashed in, but it didn’t seem to be leaking any important
liquids. He figured he’d be able to get
away with driving it a ways further.
The back
left corner of the bumper was also looking pretty beat up. The bumper had a big, ugly dent in it, and
the tail light was smashed.
The car
was definitely worse for wear, but seemed like it was still completely
drivable.
Alex got
back in the car. He said to Harold, “Do
you think we should call the Police and report the accident?”
“Do you
think that will actually help the situation, Mr. Minor?” Harold asked.
“I don’t
know. It might help with the insurance
claim. Did you managed to get any of
their license plates?” Alex said.
“Of
course I did, Mr. Minor. I’m surprised
you didn’t, but I suppose your attention was focused on driving the car,”
Harold said. “Are you planning to
actually file an insurance claim?”
Alex
thought about it for a minute. He’d just
been in two hit and run accidents in short succession, and he himself had
clearly rear-ended someone. The Mustang
was so powerful it was barely street-legal, and the insurance on it was already
criminally expensive. He suspected that his insurance rates were going to get a
big hike if he filed a claim. It would
probably be easier, and less expensive in the long run, to just get the car
fixed himself.
Mr.
Darcy probably knew someone who could do it, too.
“No, I
don’t think I will. You’re right. And I suppose the police aren’t going to be
much help in tracking down the people behind this,” Alex said. He sighed, then said, “Come on, let’s roll
back to the loft and figure out our next move.”
Alex was
already pretty sure that the best move they could make next would be to make
themselves a couple of strong drinks.
The Mustang started immediately when Alex turned the key, and the rest
of the drive was uneventful.
In the
fluorescent light of the parking garage, the damage to the Mustang was that
much easier to see. It was pretty
ugly. Alex felt a spark of anger looking
at it. He knew that risk and danger were
part of the job, but he also knew that the Mustang was his favorite thing, and
there were at least three assholes out there responsible for its current state.
He
grimaced as he looked at the front end again, then said to Harold, “Let’s head
up and make ourselves some strong drinks, Harold.”
“That
sounds like an excellent plan, Mr. Minor,” Harold said.
Back in
the loft, Alex’s first order of business was to get into some more comfortable
clothes. After an evening like the one
he’d just had, the only appropriate attire was sweatpants, slippers and a
t-shirt.
Once he
had changed, Alex went back into the kitchen, only to find Harold had already
made him a Martini, and was working on making one for himself.
Alex
took his drink and said, “Thanks Harold.
Here’s to excitement and adventure.”
“You’re
welcome, Mr. Minor,” Harold said. “And
here’s to a fruitful day.”
Alex
nearly choked on his drink. “Fruitful?”
“Indeed. We have a list of contacts to investigate,
and someone is apparently interested enough in what we’re doing to try to
intimidate us. We’ve got the license
plates of the three cars involved in the little escapade earlier. Those may or may not lead us to some more
interesting information. I would say
we’ve done pretty well for not doing much more than a coffee run this evening,”
Harold said.
“Fair
enough,” Alex said. “Though I wish we
could have gotten all this information without having to sacrifice the
Mustang. It seems like kind of a steep
price to pay.”
“I think
that’s just part of the cost of being in this business, Mr. Minor,” Harold said.
Alex
gave him a noncommittal grunt, and wandered over to his desk carrying his drink. He turned on the computer, and opened his
email client. It was more out of habit
and boredom than anything. He was mostly
concerned with getting the Mustang repaired, so a distraction was welcome. He was pleased and surprised, then, to see
there was a new email waiting for him.
It was
from Kaylee, and the subject line said, “You may find this interesting.”
hmm..
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