386 lines
21 KiB
Plaintext
386 lines
21 KiB
Plaintext
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This story is PG 13 for some adult situations. There is a somewhat
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steamy, (though NOT explicit,) dream encounter between Mulder
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and Scully, so if that sort of thing gives you fits - even as a dream -
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you can skip that part. This is not a "romance" in the accepted sense,
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however, so please feel otherwise safe in proceeding.
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Thank you to Tish Sears for all the editing help!
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Comments welcome, critique encouraged, flames humbly accepted.
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"Those Who Love" is posted in seven parts, all parts posted on
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September 5, 1995.
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Fox Mulder, and Dana Scully are the property of Ten Thirteen
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Productions, lovingly borrowed without permission, and without
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any intent to infringe, annoy or otherwise upset. The rest of the
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characters are mine.
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*****************************************************
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THOSE WHO LOVE - Part 3
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J. (Jamal) Gallagher did not like waiting in parking lots, he did
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not like sitting there in his car. It was too suspicious looking, it
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smacked too much of the actual business he was there to perform.
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Hendricksen had insisted, however, that he would not speak to him
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inside the bustling restaurant. He was to wait outside.
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Gallagher was already in enough trouble over the delays in
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this shipment, and he did not wish to antagonize his "superiors" with
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any further trouble, so he agreed to Hendricksen's condition. But he
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did not like it. The longer this whole transaction went on, in fact, the
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less happy he was. First there was the delay in delivery. He had
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examined a sample of Hendricksen's product, settled on a price very
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much to his liking, and had been promised delivery within two
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weeks. Those original two weeks, however, had stretched to three,
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and then four. Then Hendricksen could not make up his mind where
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the transfer should take place. That took another several days. If it
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was not for the fact that Gallagher had negotiated such an
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outstanding price on the "shipment", he would have called the whole
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thing off a long time ago, simply reported back that the deal was
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suddenly too risky. His "superiors" would have trusted his
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evaluation, and agreed, he was sure. But he had negotiated a very
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sweet deal, here, and he stood to make a lot of money. And he had
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bills to pay.
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He glanced at the back seat, at the locked briefcase lying
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innocently there. The transfer would be simple. He and Hendricksen
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would park, car door to car door, the doors opened in such a way
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that no one would be able to see between them. He would hand
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Hendricksen the brief case, Hendricksen would hand him the leather
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backpack containing the packets of uncut cocaine. Neither man
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would count, or examine, the merchandise or the payment at that
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time. Gallagher had already approved the samples, and Hendricksen,
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the price. And this was no amateur street operation. While there
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might not be honor among thieves, or drug dealers, there was fear,
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and a healthy respect. The likelihood of a double cross was slim; the
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last man to try to cheat his "superiors" was still floating up in the
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Wethersfield cove, a piece at a time. And, for such an illegal
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operation, his superiors had a surprising reputation for honesty. It
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was good business, and they were not petty criminals, moving dope
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out on the streets. These were businessmen with whom he dealt, first
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and foremost.
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Gallagher looked at his watch. When he turned his eyes back
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up to the road, a silver sedan was just pulling into the parking lot. He
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nodded to himself, and brought the briefcase up to the front seat. He
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waited until the sedan had pulled up next to him, facing the other
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way, so that their driver's sides were together. Gallagher rolled down
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his window, then waited for Hendricksen to do the same.
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"Are we all set then?" he asked, with strained patience.
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"Follow me," Hendricksen replied.
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Gallagher frowned in astonishment.
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"What do you mean, follow you!" he demanded in a harsh
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whisper. "I'm not gonna follow you! You have the stuff. I have the
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money. We make the transaction. Here. That was the deal."
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But Hendricksen shook his head.
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"Not here, there are too many people," he replied. "I know a
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place not far from here that is completely deserted. We'll go there."
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Gallagher struggled to contain his wrath. He had no intention
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of following this man anywhere; he was *tired* of this run around.
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Besides, one of the reasons he was confident that he would never
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need to use his gun was the fact that he *always* performed his
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transactions out in the open, in full view, cleverly, carefully, but
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always in settings least likely to encourage a "business partner" to
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take a chance and do something stupid. Something fatal.
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"No way, man," he resisted, anger causing a hint of the old
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neighborhood patois to creep back into his voice. "No way I'm
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following you anywhere. The transaction happens here, or it doesn't
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happen. Now, let's get on with it." He took a deep breath, and
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struggled to calm himself.
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Hendricksen just looked stubborn.
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"I don't have the stuff with me," he explained. "I've got it,"
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he
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continued, seeing the look on Gallagher's face, "but not here. I've got
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it hidden on this place. It's not far. Honest. I just can't do it
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here,
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man, somebody will see us for sure, here. Just come with me. It
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ain't far. Just a couple of miles, on an old deserted farm."
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Gallagher was so angry he was shaking. He took a deep
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breath and tried to think. There was *no way* he wanted to follow
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this slime ball anywhere. This whole arrangement was starting to
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smell like nothing but trouble to him. He did not know what to do.
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Had he backed out of the arrangement before now, even a short a
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time ago as a week, his superiors would have understood, and
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perhaps even complimented him on his acumen. But to call it off
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now... They knew he was meeting Hendricksen tonight, to call it off
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now would look too suspicious. At best it would look like he no
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longer had the edge, or the nerve, to control these transactions, at
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worst like he had made some sort of a deal on his own behalf. He
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could not risk their ire. He would have to take his chances with the
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slime. He nodded.
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"Where?" he asked shortly. Hendricksen nodded and gave
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him directions. Gallagher waited until Hendricksen's car was out of
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sight. Then he threw his corvette into gear and peeled furiously out
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of the parking lot, nearly taking out a blue Ford Escort rental car in
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the process. He headed down the street.
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Mulder pulled into the restaurant parking lot just as the black
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corvette came flying out, nearly hitting him as it squealed around the
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corner.
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"Jesus Christ!" he cursed, swinging wide. He looked back
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over his shoulder. "Guy must have just caught his wife with another
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man..." He glanced at Scully, who had been thrown hard against her
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seatbelt.
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"You okay?"
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"Yeah," she sighed, shaking her head. They parked, and went
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inside.
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The place to which Bowman had directed them for dinner
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was called "Cousins", and was more of a bar and grill than a real
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restaurant. Several tables were set in the middle of the floor, and
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there were a few booths, but the long mahogany bar that took up
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most of the far wall left no doubt as to the establishment's real
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function. Still, wonderful smells had met them in the parking lot, as
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they pulled in, and that promise was met when their entrees were
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finally placed before them. Scully cut a slice from her roasted
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chicken breast, and watched Mulder tuck into his rib-eye steak and
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fries.
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She looked at him quietly for a moment.
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"So, are you still convinced these deaths are actually murders
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by haunting?" she finally asked. Mulder looked up at her.
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"The evidence seems to point in that direction, yeah," he
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agreed, eyeing her curiously. "I take it by the look on your face that
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you don't agree?"
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"I guess I just don't see anything I could call evidence of
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anything other than exactly what this seems to be - a very strange
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coincidence. Nothing more."
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"But what about Bowman's story?"
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"About the two ghostly lovers? I thought it was very
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charming. Delightful, really, and he tells it very well. I got the
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distinct feeling that he's been telling that story to anyone who would
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listen, for years." She smiled at Mulder fondly. "My father used to
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call that 'local color'."
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Mulder frowned at her.
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"His aunt seems to have had some personal experience with
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them," he countered.
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Scully nodded.
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"I've got an aunt like that, too, only mine sees angels.
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Mulder, all's you've got there is an eccentric old woman who forgot
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where she put things, and blamed ghosts for it. It doesn't prove
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anything."
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"What about Bowman's own experience. That was
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something less than charming, don't you think?"
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Scully sighed.
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"Oh, come on, Mulder, look at it logically. You have a little
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boy, subject to a terrifying and heinous experience. A little boy who
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was brought up on stories about those ghosts, who romanticized
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them, whose own family member treated them like household
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companions. It's only natural to expect that the boy would 'see' one
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of these ghosts under the circumstances. Like an imaginary friend."
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"Imaginary friends rarely throw heavy lamps across rooms to
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save you from being raped," Mulder countered. Scully nodded
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gently.
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"And maybe this imaginary friend didn't, either" she
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suggested. "Did you stop to think that maybe Bowman did *not*
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escape that assault? That this 'ghost' is actually his mind's way of
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dealing with what was done to him?"
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Mulder made a face, but did not argue further. She had a
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very good point, one that had occurred to him as well. He looked at
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her out of the corner of his eye, then sighed and nodded.
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Scully ate her chicken, and let Mulder think for a moment.
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When he did not offer a counter argument, she ventured further.
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"Anyway," she began, "I have done *some* reading during
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my, uh, sojourn on the X-Files..." Mulder quirked a lopsided grin at
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her, and she smiled back, "and I seem to recall reading that
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hauntings, for the most part, are generally pretty benign occurrences.
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Ghosts are suppose to be little more than left over energy from a
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consciousness that has not found peace in death, for one reason or
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another, often due to some unfinished business, or violence
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associated with the death, itself. But usually, this energy just sort of
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hangs out. It may, possibly, repeat whatever activity is associated
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with the reasons behind the 'haunting', but nothing premeditated.
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With the exception of certain kinds of poltergeist activity - which
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may not even be spectral - ghosts don't really affect their
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environments much. And even poltergeists usually only move things
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around, or make noise. Ghosts can be a nuisance, but they are very
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rarely intentionally injurious to human life. Most of that is a
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Hollywood interpretation.
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"What you are suggesting, though, is that these 'ghosts'
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*intentionally* caused those men to die. Even given the possibility
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that you might be right about the *existence* of such entities, doesn't
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that theory pretty much fly in the face of the accepted thinking?"
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By the time she finished, Mulder was grinning widely.
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"You *have* been reading," he replied with a small laugh.
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"And yes, you're right. Most spectral activity is benign in nature.
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However, I think we have a particular situation here."
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He put down his fork and looked at her intently.
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"Let's take Bowman's story at face value for a moment, and
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assume that he is correct in his belief that Jeremiah Colter and
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Catherine Hewlett still haunt the Colter farm because of the depth of
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their love for each other. A love that was denied in life, and therefore
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cannot be denied in death. It could be postulated that the actual
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physical matter binding them to this Earth and to each other, is that
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house, itself. The house they lived and loved and died in. To lose
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the house would be to lose each other, which is something they
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cannot allow. They aren't really murdering. They are only defending
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themselves and their love.
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"As long as efforts go forward to tear down the Colter farm,
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I'm convinced that people will continue to die on that property."
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Scully smiled warmly, and glanced down at her dinner for a
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moment. Then she looked back up at her partner.
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"That was very touching, Mulder. Very romantic, actually. I
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didn't know you had it in you."
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Mulder smiled, a little sheepishly. But Scully sighed.
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"Look, I agree that coincidence isn't a very satisfying
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explanation, here," she admitted, "and, short of exhuming a body
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and looking for other evidence," she pointed a finger at him
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warningly, "which we have *no* grounds to do, so don't even think
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about it, your theory that those men were frightened to death makes
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as much sense as anything does. But I still fail to see what we can do
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about it."
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Mulder looked at her earnestly.
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"We either have to convince Bowman not to sell that
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property, or get him to bring in a parapsychologist who can contact
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the ghosts through a psychic, and convince them to leave the house,"
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he said. "It's the only way to prevent further deaths."
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Scully pursed her lips.
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"And, you might even be able to convince Bowman of that,
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although his *brother* doesn't seem much like the 'parapsychologist'
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type to me," she agreed. "But what the *hell*, Mulder, are you
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gonna tell Skinner? This is *not* our job. Under no circumstances
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can we even justify *this* little junket, we can only hope that
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nobody has been looking for us, so we can get back to Washington
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tomorrow without having to explain our absence."
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Mulder did not look happy.
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"So what, we just let the deaths continue?"
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Scully sighed, beginning to get exasperated again.
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"Mulder, I don't know what you want me to say," she replied.
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Her partner eyed her, then finally nodded in defeat.
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"I'd still like to go through the house tomorrow morning,
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before we leave," he said, his disappointment clear in his voice. "Just
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to satisfy my curiosity."
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"All right, if we do it early," Scully agreed, knowing she had
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won, and not wanting to rub it in. "I'm kind of curious, myself."
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J. (Jamal) Gallagher pulled off the road behind Hendricksen's
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sedan, and looked around. There wasn't much moon, but enough to
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see that he was parked beside an open, and overgrown field. He got
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out of his car and walked cautiously up to Hendricksen's. He peered
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in the windows and saw the keys still in the ignition, but the vehicle
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was otherwise empty. He peered up into the field.
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"Up here!" Hendricksen called him distantly. In that vague
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light, Gallagher could just make him out on the boarder of the
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woods. "Bring the briefcase and come here!"
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The hell he was going to do that. Gallagher tossed the
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briefcase full of cash into his trunk and slammed it shut. Then, hand
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over the butt of his gun, he trudged up the long incline to where
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Hendricksen was waiting. He could not see well in the half light, so
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he had several deep scratches and a wrenched ankle by the time he
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reached Hendricksen. He mood, never very good, was no longer the
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least cooperative.
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"Hendricksen, what the *fuck* is this all about, man?" he
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demanded, frustration destroying the last vestiges of his carefully
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cultivated speech. "What the *fuck* is going on here?"
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"Nothing, man," Hendricksen demurred placatingly. "I just,
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you know, didn't like to do the transfer in that parking lot. Too many
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people around." He looked at Gallagher. "Where's the money, man.
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I tol' you to bring it?"
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"An' I don't take orders from no slime like you," Gallagher
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hissed. "It's locked in the trunk of my car, and that's where it's gonna
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stay until you tell me what the hell you're up to. Where's the stuff?"
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Hendricksen kicked a backpack at his feet. "Right here,
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man."
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Gallagher looked down, and nodded.
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"Let's get the fuck out of this field, then. Bring it down to
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the
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cars." He turned and started down the slope.
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"I don't think so," Hendricksen replied, his voice firm and
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hard, all traces of whining vacillation now gone. "Turn around."
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Gallagher turned around and found himself staring down the
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barrel of a .38 caliber revolver. He gaped in shock.
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"Now give me your car keys."
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"What are you *doin'*, man."
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"The keys, Gallagher. Slowly. Now."
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Gallagher drew breath slowly.
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"Are you crazy? They'll kill you, man. I don't show up with
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the goods tomorrow, they gonna *know* you double crossed them.
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They'll find you, man."
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But Hendricksen shook his head.
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"You don't show up with the goods tomorrow, they'll figure it
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was *you* who pulled the double cross. By the time they pull your
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car out of the Cumberland marsh, I'll be long gone. With the cash,
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and the stuff."
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"Man, you're nuts!"
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"Give me the keys."
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Gallagher dropped his hands to his waist, and thought
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furiously. He could not believe this was happening. It had to be a
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dream. His hand brushed the top of his gun butt.
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Maybe it was a deer, or maybe it was just some rotten tree
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limb finally giving up and cracking to the ground, but the sudden
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sharp noise within the woods made Hendricksen jerk his attention to
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the left, just slightly. It was only a fraction of a second, but it was
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enough. Gallagher drew his weapon, clutched the butt in both hands,
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and fired.
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It took him a moment to realize what he had done.
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Hendricksen's body collapsed into a heap in the shadows. Gallagher
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could not see the extent of the damage his bullet had done, but
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Hendricksen had to be dead. Shit, the man had taken that bullet right
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in the face, no one could survive that! He kicked the body, and felt
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no movement, heard no response. Then it hit him. He had killed the
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man, *killed* him. For all of his flirtation with the underworld, for
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all that he had grown up on the streets, Gallagher had never killed
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anyone, before, had never even known anyone, intimately, who had
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done so. Panic took him. He had to get out of there.
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Hendricksen's body had fallen over the backpack. Gallagher
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jerked it out from under him, then opened it quickly. He tipped the
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mouth of the bag to catch the moonlight, and shuffled his hand
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around inside. It collided with something soft, and he drew out a
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clear plastic bag filled with soft white powder that glittered in the
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faint light. Gallagher dropped the bag back into the backpack, and
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zipped it closed again. He had to *do* something. He had to get out
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of there. He could take the coke, he could be take the coke and the
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money back to his superiors, explain what had happened. But his
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superiors were tidy men, and serious businessmen. They would not
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like this little complication, not at all. There was not telling what
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they
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might do to "discipline" him for this slip-up. Gallagher shuddered at
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the thought.
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He could always just blow. Take the money, take the coke
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and run. He could be a thousand miles away before the sun came
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up. But they would find him. He knew they would find him. He
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had to think. He looked around wildly. Hide the coke, hide it
|
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|
somewhere and go someplace where he could think. He had to get
|
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|
away from the body, get the hell out of that field. He peered into the
|
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|
woods, but it was too dark to see, and he was not going in there
|
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|
anyway. He turned around slowly, looking around him as he did.
|
||
|
His eyes strained across the field.
|
||
|
He had not noticed the old house, at first, because it was
|
||
|
partly hidden in the shadows of the surrounding trees, but his eyes
|
||
|
had adjusted to the near darkness, by now, and he could see the
|
||
|
outline clearly. It returned to him that Hendricksen had said this was
|
||
|
an old deserted farm. He jogged toward the building, desperate to
|
||
|
put as much distance as he could between himself and Hendricksen's
|
||
|
body, sure he could find someplace in that ramshackle building to
|
||
|
safely hide his burden. He ran, unmindful of the rough ground, and
|
||
|
the brush clutching as his pant legs. He did not stop until he had
|
||
|
reached the house.
|
||
|
The old well presented itself like a vision of salvation.
|
||
|
Gallagher careened to a stop and bent over, gasping for breath beside
|
||
|
the stone circle. He set the backpack onto the ground, and shifted
|
||
|
the stone well cover to one side. Without stopping to think, he
|
||
|
dropped his gun inside. Then he felt around the inside of the rim.
|
||
|
Yes! Exhilaration filled him as his fingers found the iron bucket
|
||
|
hook wedged in the wall of the well. He lowered the backpack over
|
||
|
the side, and hung the straps over the hook. Then he pulled the cover
|
||
|
back over the well. By morning, the trampled grass would be back to
|
||
|
normal, rising with the dew. There would be no evidence that
|
||
|
anyone had tampered with the well.
|
||
|
Gallagher brushed the dirt from his hands, and thought about
|
||
|
Hendricksen's body. Leave it, his brain said. The farm was deserted,
|
||
|
chances were no one would even find the body until the wild animals
|
||
|
had decimated it. And even if they did, there was nothing to lead
|
||
|
them back to him. He could drive Hendricksen's car into the marsh;
|
||
|
it would be days before it was found. Even Hendricksen had been
|
||
|
sure of that. He felt unreasonably better as relief flooded him. The
|
||
|
money was in his trunk, the coke would be safe in that well forever,
|
||
|
and he had all the time in the world, now, to figure out the best thing
|
||
|
to do. He looked around, slightly disoriented, then saw the road. He
|
||
|
strode purposefully back down the hill.
|
||
|
|
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