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Marigold, Part 10  
by
  Vulgar Argot 
(rom, nosex) 
 
When 
 
 
"Holy shit," Dawn
  leaned in over the front seat as soon as she bounced into the back,
  "What did you do to all of your beautiful hair?" 
 
 
 
Dawn wrinkled her nose in
  amusement, "Now that you mention it, I don't miss having all that hair
  either." She primped her own pixie cut a little. 
 
"I thought that you
  were very pretty when your hair was longer," said 
 
 
Dawn pouted, "You
  don't think I'm pretty now?" 
 
 
 
Dawn blinked at him,
  "Yes?" 
 
"You're a lesbian,
  correct?" asked 
 
 
Dawn seemed to puzzle over
  the question, "I think so. Yeah." 
 
"You are," asked 
 
 
"I don't know,"
  admitted Dawn, "It's all pretty theoretical at this point anyway." 
 
"In that case,"
  said 
 
 
Dawn laughed, "You're
  funny. Can I rub your head for luck?" 
 
 
 
Dawn said, "Wait. I'm
  ugly now? I thought I was only plain." 
 
"Hideous,"
  elaborated 
 
 
Dawn reached up and rubbed
  the top of 
 
 
When he went to the door to
  get Marigold, Jonas answered the door. Rather than greeting 
 
 
Marigold came down, looking
  puzzled. When she saw 
 
 
"I slept an extra
  forty five minutes today," said 
 
 
"But," Marigold
  pouted, "I liked your hair." 
 
They were walking down the
  front path now. 
 
 
Marigold opened the car
  door, "It made you look like you. Now, you look like a stranger." 
 
 
 
"I can hope,"
  said Marigold. 
 
Dawn waved from the back
  seat, "Hi. Third party here." 
 
"Whoops," said
  Marigold giggling, "You were so quiet, I forgot you were here." 
 
Dawn laughed, "You're
  talking about the hair, right?" When Marigold nodded, she went on,
  "He let me rub it once for luck, but only once because I'm horrendous to
  look at." 
 
"I believe," said
  
 
 
Dawn leaned over the seat
  again to pout at Marigold, "You don't think I'm hideous to look at, do
  you?" 
 
Marigold laughed,
  "Nah. I'm sure that you're at least moderately attractive." Then,
  she reached back and ruffled Dawn's hair. 
 
 
"Wow," said
  Marigold, "I think it's working. All this time,
  I've been studying for tests and all I needed to do was rub your shaved head.
  Where have you been for the last four years?" 
 
 
 
As they walked to homeroom,
  Marigold wrapped herself under 
 
 
To his surprise and, for
  the first time in weeks, 
 
 
He drove home with his
  window open, enjoying the feel of sun on his skin and wind in his face. In
  the back seat, Dawn chattered about her newest love interest, apparently
  having given up hope on Oxana to a cheerleader who returned her interest.
  Dawn wouldn't name the girl because she wasn't out about her sexuality. 
 
 
After he dropped Dawn off,
  Marigold asked casually, "Which cheerleader do you think she could be
  talking about?" 
 
 
 
"I don't know,"
  opined Marigold, "Brianne rules that squad with an iron fist. You can
  get thrown out for wearing last year's fashion or the wrong color of lip
  gloss." 
 
 
 
Marigold's eyes brightened,
  "Does that mean you're going to let me help you in your one-man
  crusade?" 
 
 
 
"I know," said
  Marigold, "You keep warning me that your hands are going to be dirty and
  I might hate you at the end of this. 
 
 
 
 
"So," asked
  Marigold, "are you justified?" 
 
"Yes," said 
 
 
"Then, I'm by your
  side." Marigold leaned across the seat and kissed him full on the mouth.
  The kiss was more tender than sexual. 
 
 
"Come inside," he
  said quietly, "there's something I want to show you. Then, you can decide
  if you're by my side, want to keep your hands clean, or...or just want to
  walk away from me." 
 
Marigold looked like she
  wanted to reassure 
 
 
Marigold sat down trepidaciously,
  pulling the bag open. Out came a half dozen cameras, some small enough to be
  unseen in plain sight, one with the kind of huge telephoto lens that
  paparazzi used to get pictures of celebrities from a half mile away. Then came a shotgun microphone. After that was a length of
  waterproof rope. 
 
 
 
"
 
 
 
 
Marigold nodded. She began
  pulling things out of the bag again. The ammunition, clips, survival, and
  Swiss Army knives occasioned no comment. After that, everything she pulled
  out seemed innocuous--tools and boots and the like. 
 
"Well," Marigold
  said, taking a deep breath, "It's not much worse..." 
 
 
 
"You missed
  something," he said. Undoing an internal zipper, he pulled out the
  innocuous looking black satchel and laid it out. Half a dozen little vials
  and pill bottles laid against the black felt that
  lined the inside of the satchel. 
 
He held up the first
  bottle, "Chloroform, in case I need to detain someone or move them
  quietly without a fight." 
 
On the next,
  "Nondilute LSD, enough to contaminate a small reservoir. That is not my
  intent. Even diluted to the one hundredth part, it creates a state of suggestibility
  similar to hypnosis." 
 
Seeing that Marigold was
  not showing revulsion, he decided to skip over the next two and get straight
  to the last bottle. He held it up and let Marigold read the label. 
 
"Rohypnol," she
  read, "
 
 
 
 
"Truth serum?"
  Marigold asked. 
 
"Also a popular appellation,"
  
 
 
Marigold nodded, her face
  serious, "And these last two?" 
 
 
 
Marigold picked it up,
  "What good is it for, other than pranks?" 
 
 
 
"Well," opined
  Marigold, "that's all excessively icky. Where did you get all of this
  stuff?" 
 
"It's all commercially
  available," said 
 
 
"And the
  Rohypnol?" Marigold asked. 
 
 
 
He started packing up the
  bag, "I waited until the party was in full swing, then stole the bottle
  out of Randy's pocket and left. I quit the team the next day. I was going to
  go to the police, but the chief of police is a Vandevoort, the sheriff is a
  Vandevoort. I dug a little deeper and found out that these parties had been
  going on for years. Ivan Vandevoort views the whole town as some kind of medieval
  fiefdom and he's more or less right." 
 
Marigold opened her mouth
  to speak, but 
 
 
"Because I quit the
  team," he went on, "I fell far enough out of favor that Maya became
  fair game. Randy even intimated once that he went after her specifically to
  make sure that I understand who was boss." 
 
"
 
 
 
 
Marigold shook her head,
  "Not to me. Well, maybe a little bit. It's not contradicted by any of
  the paltry facts I do have at my disposal. But..." 
 
 
 
"Mostly," said 
 
 
"There hasn't been
  anyone who refused to be bought off?" Marigold asked. 
 
"I looked," said 
 
 
 
 
"Oh, 
 
 
 
 
"Please don't tempt
  me," 
 
 
Marigold gave a moan of
  protest, but slid off of 
 
 
"I told you,"
  said 
 
 
"What's this meeting
  about?" Marigold asked. 
 
"I didn't tell
  you," 
 
 
"No," said
  Marigold, "you didn't." 
 
"I know," said 
 
 
"So," asked
  Marigold, "this meeting is dangerous, then?" She stood up and came
  over to him. 
 
"No," said 
 
 
Marigold reached up and
  straightened his collar, "Frighteningly professional. Promise me that,
  one day, you'll fuck me in this suit." 
 
"Don't be
  ridiculous," said 
 
 
"Promise me,"
  said Marigold more seriously. 
 
 
 
Marigold's knees buckled
  and she held on to 
 
 
 
 
Marigold laughed, "One
  day," she said wistfully. 
 
"Actually," said 
 
 
 
 
He let himself enjoy the
  moment for a few minutes before clamping down on his own ebullience. He was
  glad not to be going into this with a pervading sense of doom, but it
  wouldn't do any good to go in feeling happy-go-lucky either. He glanced in the
  rear-view mirror to check for any obvious dishevelment and gave a brief
  "ah" of surprise as he failed to recognize himself with short hair. 
 
 
 
To look at the downtown
  area, it would be easy to think that Jonas, not Ivan, ran most of the town.
  The Vandevoort name showed up on a few trucks and businesses while there was
  the Jonas Tarr library, the Tarr wing of the hospital, and even the high
  school was called 
 
 
The 
 
 
 
 
The receptionist smiled
  back, "Actually, it was Mr. Tarr's suggestion that you do so. Security
  is on this floor, straight back past the elevators. The door is kind of
  non-descript, but it's right next to the only ficus
  plant on this floor." 
 
As 
 
 
"Mr. Tarr's expecting
  you," said the guard, "You can go right up to the fifteen floor. The receptionist there will show you to his
  office." 
 
In the elevator on the way
  up, 
 
 
The executive receptionist
  turned out to be a pretty, Polynesian girl, probably not much older than 
 
 
Jonas's office was much
  larger than 
 
 
"
 
 
"Thank you," said
  
 
 
"Yeah," said
  Jonas. The only computer on his desk was a Bloomberg terminal. 
 
 
"I want to make sure I
  understand the corporate structure of Tarr Services Group," said 
 
 
Jonas laughed, "You
  gathered all the information you did and don't know what we do?" 
 
 
 
"Blame that one on my
  Grandpa Nate," said Jonas, "In fact, you can blame the odd
  corporate structure on Nate, too. He founded the core business in 1906. During
  the depression, when a lot of companies we had paper on failed, old Nate
  would call in his position and, in many cases, rather than sell off the
  company's tangible assets as his peers in the business did, he would put in
  new management, streamline the company, and get it back up and running. The
  cotton thing was purchased from the Egyptian government during one of its
  cyclical dire financial emergencies for about three times what anybody else
  thought it was worth. Along with a company that deals with the cotton on the
  other end in 
 
 
 
 
Jonas laughed, seemingly a
  little embarrassed, "Sorry. I was getting into the place in my head I
  need to use when dealing with Ivan. When we were both working for our
  fathers, he called us the crown princes. Now, he calls his son Randy the
  crown prince. He eats that shit up. I'm assuming that part of the reason he
  called today's meeting is that he wants to feel me out as to the idea of
  Randy and Marigold marrying now that Elliot is out of the picture. It strikes
  me as an ideal time to introduce my own new crown prince." 
 
"Strictly
  speaking," said 
 
 
"Good point," said
  Jonas, "If you hadn't corrected me on it, Ivan certainly would have. So,
  what role am I grooming you for? It would probably make you more appealing to
  him if you we trying to do as little as possible." 
 
"Yeah," said 
 
 
"Okay," said
  Jonas, "you could be in my IT department." 
 
"No offense,"
  said 
 
 
"Oh," said Jonas,
  "that's bad, is it?" 
 
 
 
 
"I repeat my
  offer," said Jonas, "if you actually want to work here..." 
 
"Thank you," said
  
 
 
Jonas frowned, "That
  would work if we had someone to handle IT recruiting here. Right now, it goes
  to anyone in HR, like every other job at the company." 
 
 
 
Jonas nodded, "Is that
  prestigious enough for the heir apparent? How would you betray me from
  there?" 
 
 
 
 
 
     
                         -=- 
 
During the next twenty
  minutes, 
 
 
Jonas said, "Ivan
  likes to pretend that we're still the best of friends, but knows we're not.
  He's got some Mephistophelean need to try to get me to do business with him.
  I think it's automatic now. Plus, it gives him a chance to try to get my
  goat. I imagine that he'll try to get yours too and, if I know the man at
  all, he'll start off by going after Marigold. He's been trying to get my goat
  over Holly for more than a decade. Just brace yourself for it and recognize
  what it's worth. If you let him get you off balance,
  he'll sense it and use it." 
 
 
 
"Here we go,"
  said Jonas and off they went. 
 
 
 
 
 
"The little pad and
  pencil are sort of a trademark of mine," Jonas answered, "Everybody
  in the company knows about them. That new PDA is going to mean they'll have
  to find something else to joke about around here." 
 
 
 
Jonas asked, "Do you
  really think there's something wrong with my IT department?" 
 
 
 
"Possibly," said
  Jonas, "but I'd like to hear your perspective." 
 
 
 
"Acknowledged,"
  said Jonas, "you don't want to be a know-it-all. But, something seems to
  have created a strong impression and I'd like to know what it is--unless you
  were trying to get into some sort of intellectual pissing match over high
  tech." 
 
 
 
Jonas said, "The
  computers are so old because we've been able to do our jobs with them and
  don't see a need for the capital expenditure of keeping them current. I
  didn't understand the network comment at all. As for the security issue, I'll
  look into it." 
 
 
"That's why I said
  that I spoke out of turn," said 
 
 
Jonas didn't interrupt him.
  They were outside of the conference room now. Through the glass wall, 
 
 
Jonas reached into his
  pocket and brought out the little pad and pencil, "Edmonton Business
  Group," he muttered, "Do you still have a copy of your report that
  I can see?" 
 
 
 
"Erm," said
  Jonas, "I'd better send a messenger." 
 
                                -=- 
 
Inside, Ivan rose to greet
  them. Jonas introduced 
 
 
Ivan did not bother to
  introduce his assistant, "Ah, this must be the new crown prince,
  then." 
 
"Actually," said
  Jonas, "more of an heir apparent at this point. Marigold and Elliot only
  broke up a week ago. It's a little soon to be asking for the crown
  back." 
 
Ivan grinned, his teeth
  sparkling white, "How is Marigold? She's got to be around eighteen
  now." 
 
Jonas said, "She
  turned eighteen two weeks ago." 
 
"If she's anything
  like her mother, she must be developing into a fine piece of ass by
  now," said Ivan in a voice that would not be incongruous announcing a
  slight increase or decrease in a stock price, "You should bring her
  around some time, let me get a look at her." 
 
 
 
"What happened to
  Elliot?" asked Ivan, "I liked him." 
 
 
 
Ivan didn't speak, growing
  white-faced with rage. His assistant covered her mouth with a curled hand,
  unable to hide the laughter in her eyes. Jonas erupted into a fit of coughing
  and needed to have Inge fetch him a glass of water. Thule made another note
  in his Palm Pilot. 
 
Ivan regained his composure
  first, "I like this new one, Jonas. He's got spirit." But, even as
  he said it, his eyes bored angry holes in Thule's skull. Thule wondered if
  he'd gone too far and blown the whole charade. 
 
"So," said Jonas,
  recovering his breath, "you had a proposal in mind?" 
 
"Yes," said Ivan,
  indicating his assistant, who stood up and began handing out a thick
  photocopied report, "If you'd told me that the boy was going to be here,
  I would have brought more copies." 
 
"Actually," said
  his assistant, placing a report in front of Thule, "I brought plenty of
  copies." 
 
Thule winced a little for
  her, but recognized by the tone of her voice that she'd done it deliberately.
  Then, he tried to focus his attention on the business plan. He understood
  loosely that Ivan had found a company that he considered in danger of
  insolvency and was recommending a buyout with Jonas arranging the funding.
  After that, it was nothing but printouts of spreadsheets and dense text
  packed with terms Thule had never heard. By the end, he found himself
  answering e-mail on his Palm Pilot in spite of the fact that Jonas managed to
  mention him by name about a half-dozen times in forty-five minutes as if
  Thule were his exciting new hobby. Ever time he did, Thule made another note
  to remember what had been said to Ivan about him. 
 
Jonas finally stood,
  stretched his legs, and said, "I'll have my M & A guys take a look
  at the numbers. We may be able to do business." He reached out and shook
  hands with Ivan, "Bartholemew here is going to be much more involved in
  the business this summer. I believe he and your son Randy go to school
  together." 
 
Thule nodded. Ivan took the
  bait, "Oh, yeah? I'll let Randy know. Maybe the two of them can work on
  something together over the summer. It's about time Randy got some real-world
  business experience." 
 
Afterwards, Jonas turned to
  Thule, "You took an enormous risk in there, but I think it paid off. You
  definitely got his attention." 
 
"Good," said
  Thule, "although I hope it was the sort of attention I was looking for.
  If he decides to make my life miserable..." 
 
"I wouldn't worry
  about that," said Jonas, "If he seeks revenge, it will be publicly,
  so he can regain the face you cost him in there. More likely, he sees you as
  a kindred spirit. You knew just which button to push and pushed it. How did you
  know he was so homophobic?" 
 
Thule shrugged, "Lucky
  guess. I wouldn't be surprised if he's dabbled. He behaves like he has
  something to prove. Did you know he was fucking his assistant?" 
 
"I'm not
  surprised," said Jonas, "Ivan's fucking a lot of people." 
 
"Yes," said
  Thule, "but this one he's actually having sex with." 
 
"That was what I
  meant," said Jonas, "Why do you say so, though?" 
 
"I caught a glimpse of
  body language from outside of the conference room that made me suspicious.
  Then, when he made his crude comment about Marigold, I saw the look on her
  face. It was jealousy. Besides, she must feel pretty invulnerable to have
  pulled that stunt with the reports." 
 
Jonas chuckled, "Have
  you ever considered playing poker to pay your way through college?" 
 
"I've considered
  damned near everything to pay my way through college," said Thule
  ruefully. 
 
Jonas nodded. He seemed
  about to say something, but Thule cut him off, "I'm going to get that
  PDA set up and enter the information you need. Would Sunday be too soon for me
  to make sure you have it committed to memory?" 
 
"Actually," said
  Jonas, smiling wryly, "Sunday sounds perfect. Once I told Marigold I
  approved of you, she started lobbying to have you over for dinner. She's
  going to cook." He burst into laughter, "Don't look so trapped.
  She's a good cook." 
 
"That's good to
  know," Thule said uneasily as they passed through the door into Jonas's
  office, "but it was more about the official 'meeting the parents'
  dinner." 
 
"Don't worry about her
  mother," said Jonas, laughing, "she always disliked Elliot and
  wished Marigold would find someone else." 
 
"Okay," said
  Thule noncommittally as he started downloading the encryption tools for
  Jonas's PDA. 
 
He and Jonas worked
  silently for a few minutes. Finally, Jonas said, "You weren't talking
  about her mother, were you?" 
 
Thule didn't look up,
  "Everyone has different personae for different situations. I always
  respected you in Bible study. I actually like you when you're focused on
  business." He trailed off. 
 
"I am your
  girlfriend's father," said Jonas, "shouldn't you be sucking up to
  me, just a little?" 
 
Thule didn't want to answer
  the implied question. He saw that Jonas was giving him a way out of discussing
  a difficult topic. He knew he should take it. Instead, he said, "I
  always respected you in Bible study, but I found your
  interpretation....overly literal and rather humorless." 
 
Jonas stood up, stretched
  his legs and walked over to the corner of the office where he could look out
  the window and see his house. He stood there, just looking,
  long enough for Thule to wonder for the third time today if he'd just badly
  damaged his own plans. 
 
When Jonas spoke, he didn't
  turn around. Instead, he said, "When you're an addict, you can take
  damned near any facts and use them as a justification to feed your addiction.
  Facts, reasoned facts are slippery things. We rarely know them in absolute.
  The only absolute I had in my life was heroin. I replaced it with religion,
  but I needed religion to be absolute." 
 
Neither of them spoke.
  Thule waited patiently for Jonas to continue. Finally, the older man said,
  "Marigold's mother started drinking after we got married. I drove her to
  it. I had a ton of money and not an ounce of sense. When I...found Jesus, it
  worked so well for my addiction that I thought it would be perfect for Holly.
  And Marigold was getting into all sorts of trouble with that friend of hers,
  Marla or something..." 
 
"Maya," said
  Thule. 
 
"Right," said
  Jonas, "Maya. Marigold was troubled over her father's death and getting
  ready to screw up her life. I didn't know what to do. When religion is your
  absolute, when you don't know what to do, you look in the Bible. What I found
  there worked like a charm. She buckled down, got her grades up, became
  valedictorian, didn't get pregnant, didn't fall in
  with a bad crowd in a town where good crowds are the worst crowd of all. I
  have nothing to apologize for in the way I deal with my family." The
  words came out defiantly. 
 
"So," asked
  Thule, "why tell me all this?" 
 
"I don't know,"
  said Jonas, "I'm not very good at justifying myself. I almost never feel
  the need to do it. I've made my mistakes..." 
 
It was at that moment that
  Thule's cell phone started ringing. 
 
"And that," said
  Jonas, "will be Ivan. How did he get your cell phone number?" 
 
Thule pulled out his phone
  and glanced at it, "He didn't. I've got the phone at home call-forwarded
  to here." He answered the phone, "Hello, Thule speaking." 
 
"Mr. Roemer,"
  said Ivan Vandevoort, "I didn't expect you to be home yet." 
 
"I'm not," said
  Thule, "I'm still at the office." 
 
"This is Ivan
  Van..." 
 
"I recognize your
  voice, Mr. Vandevoort," said Thule, "what can I do for you this
  evening?" 
 
"I know that you're
  helping Jonas get his hands on some good IT people. I had an applicant here
  that isn't quite up to our standards, but I know that Tarr's IT needs aren't
  so...vigorous." 
 
"Thank you," said
  
 
 
"No," said Ivan
  soothingly, sounding hurt, "you misunderstand me. I just thought I could
  help out my old friend, Jonas." 
 
"Don't try to play me
  for a chump, Mr. Vandevoort," Thule said sharply, "You want me to
  insert a man of your choosing into Tarr, where he will have access to to
  their computer networks and, by extension, all of their corporate data. Cut
  to the chase. What is it worth to you?" 
 
"I'm sorry, Mr.
  Roemer," said Ivan stuffily, "you have misunderstood me very badly.
  I wish you good day." 
 
"Whoever they
  are," said 
 
 
"Did he commit to
  anything over the phone?" asked Jonas. 
 
"No," said 
 
 
Jonas nodded. He impressed 
 
 
"What do you want me
  to do?" asked 
 
 
"If his man is at
  least moderately qualified, hire him," said Jonas, "He's got spies
  in my company already. If he wants another one, it's just as well I know who
  it is. How much information could he really get out of our beer-to-beer
  network anyway?" 
 
"That's
  peer-to-peer," said 
 
 
"At
  headquarters?" asked Jonas, "about thirty-two hundred." 
 
"With that many
  people," opined 
 
 
"You're being
  paranoid," said Jonas. 
 
"Yes," said 
 
 
In five minutes, he'd found
  a domain administrator account with the password "sex." In ten,
  he'd gotten access to the mail server. By the time he was ready to leave, he'd picked a half dozen messages of the correct
  size to have attachments and copied them to his desktop." 
 
He showed Jonas, asking,
  "Do any of those look like sensitive data." 
 
Jonas pointed at one,
  "That's one I helped add some numbers to. It's very sensitive." 
 
 
 
 
 
"Don't be so hard on
  yourself," 
 
 
Jonas didn't speak. So, 
 
 
"
 
 
 
 
Jonas shivered,
  "Thanks," he said more normally, "that puts it in a little bit
  more perspective. I just suddenly felt like there was an abyss opening at my
  feet. Are you sure you won't come work for me, for
  real?" 
 
 
 
Jonas nodded, "Okay.
  Thank you. Should I do anything in the meantime? I want to tell everyone to
  turn their computers off and not turn them on again until they're
  secured." 
 
 
 
Jonas grinned too, a little
  less than certain, "All right," he said, "you go ahead. I'll
  see you tomorrow morning." 
 
Down in the parking lot,
  Jonas saw no courier. He got in his car, fiddled around with the radio, read
  a little, filed the notes in his Palm. After twenty
  minutes, he decided that no courier was coming, started his car, and headed
  for home. 
 
As 
 
 
When Thule came out, a tall
  thug dressed with the same haircut Thule had, dressed all in black, and
  wearing dark aviator sunglasses was leaning against his car, smoking. 
 
 
 
The thug laid down a thick,
  manila envelope, fumbled through his pockets, and produced a lighter,
  "No pitch. I'm just here to deliver something." He handed 
 
 
 
 
The thug shrugged,
  "I'm diabetic," he tapped one lens of the glasses, "very
  photosensitive." 
 
 
 
The thug nodded,
  "Twenty five gee." 
 
One of the things 
 
 
He looked down at the
  resume, determined to follow the script he'd set up for himself, even though
  it was killing him to do so. He looked up at the thug, "Are you
  authorized to take a message back?" 
 
The thug nodded, "Yup.
  I'm a regular Mercury. Don't you see the little
  wings on my shoes?" 
 
"Well, Mercury,"
  said 
 
 
"That, I am not
  authorized to do," said Mercury, "If you want to give it back, talk
  to the boss." Then, he smiled somewhat menacingly, got into his car, and
  left. 
 
                              -=- 
 
When 
 
 
He typed back, "Have
  you been using the public chat rooms?" 
 
Marigold: "Yes.
  Y?" 
 
 
 
Marigold: "A
  what?" 
 
 
 
Marigold: "Yes, 
 
 
 
 
Marigold: (: 
 
Marigold: How did it go? 
 
 
 
Marigold: You sound tired. 
 
 
 
Marigold nodded into the
  web cam, leaned forward, and kissed it. 
 
 
                       -=- 
 
 
 
Then, he tore the tape off
  of all of the other boxes on the palette and retaped them so that they would
  look uniformly used. He surveyed his handiwork. Satisfied, he piled all of
  the other boxes back on top of the row. One day, he'd figure out how to
  redistribute the dust so that it didn't look like he'd disturbed anything.
  But, for tonight, this would have to do. 
 
Downstairs, he took a quick
  shower, cleaning all of the grit and grime off of his body. Toweling off, he
  was grateful to realize that his hair dried almost as soon as he got out of
  the shower. Throwing on only a fresh pair of boxers, he had barely laid his
  head on the pillow before he was asleep. 
 
   
                 -=- 
 
When the doorbell rang, 
 
 
Dragging the duffel bag
  part-way out of the closet, he reached in and, by feel, found the pistol and
  loaded in a clip. Crawling across the floor, he looked out the window, but
  whoever was at the front door was too close to it for him to get a look at
  them. There was no car in the driveway. 
 
Gathering his robe from the
  floor, he shrugged into it. As he crab-walked across the floor, the doorbell
  rang again. Out of the doorway of his bedroom, he could see out the picture
  window in the living room who was standing there. 
 
He scowled, stood up,
  strolled across the living room, and opened the front door, "Do you know
  what time it is? You scared the shit out of me." 
 
Maya glanced meaningfully
  at the gun at 
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