A rounded wooden handle was buried in the side of his neck. The tattoo I’d seen yesterday was obscured by blood.

Ollie said, “Lyda…”

I was shaking, and couldn’t stop myself. Some neural pathways are so old, the grooves so deep, you’re forced to realize that you’re an animal first. Reason, choice, self-control? They all showed up late to the evolutionary party.

“The chemjet,” I said. “We need the chemjet.”

Ollie walked toward the bathroom and I rose to follow her. She pulled open the door. Immediately she put up a hand to have me stay back, but I stepped forward.

Luke, the skinny black kid who’d led us here a day ago, slumped on the toilet. I recognized him despite the plastic garbage bag cinched tight over his face like a superhero mask.

The chemjet was gone. The wire crates still sat on the floor of the shower stall, and a few remnant plastic tubes coiled around the drain, but the printer was gone, along with the boxes of c-packs.

“It’s got to be here!” I left the bathroom and slammed open the door to the office, but the printer wasn’t there either. I headed for the sanctuary. Ollie grabbed me by the shoulders and spun me around. I was still shaking.

“It’s not here,” she said. “And we have to go.”

“Wait. Where are his clothes?”

“The naked guy’s?”

I found them in the warehouse: shoes, jeans, and T-shirt folded neatly and stacked on one of the wire shelves. I set aside the shirt and turned out the pants pockets, discovering keys, a smart pen, a wallet. I opened the wallet. Ollie watched me, confused. “What are you looking for?”

In the wallet was the usual: cash, credit cards, receipts. I handed her all the loose paper. “Check for rice paper,” I said. “Anything that looks like designer print.”

I marched back to the bathroom. I crouched beside Luke, trying not to look up at his face, and pushed a hand into his front pocket. It was empty. I reached across him to the other pocket. He gave off an earthy smell. How long had he been dead: an hour, a day?

There was nothing in the other pocket but some loose change. So, the back pockets, then. I took a breath, held it, then leaned hard into him, shifting him off one butt cheek. I worked a hand into his back pocket, and pulled out a square of stiff plastic like a miniature wallet.

I let go, and Luke slid off the toilet with a sickening thud.

I opened the plastic holder. Inside was a strip of paper with a single word printed on it. “Logos.”

Ollie appeared in the doorway. “Got it,” I said.

“Good,” Ollie said. “Let’s go.”

She pushed me to the back door, then said, “I’ll be right back.”

“Where are you going?”

“A little cleanup.” She disappeared back into the building.

I stepped outside, and the back parking lot was empty. Where the hell was Bobby? I went down the steps, spun around stupidly. I put the mini-wallet into my pocket and reached for Fayza’s flip phone. I was about to dial when a pair of headlights turned the corner.

I backed up to the wall of the store. Bobby’s hybrid whined to a halt. “Where the fuck did you go?” I asked him.

“I’m sorry! I’m sorry! You guys were taking so long, then I saw a car and I thought it was the cops, so I—”

“Never mind.” I jumped in the back. “Shut off the lights.”

“What happened? Where’s Ollie? Where’s the printer?”

“Somebody got there first,” I said.

A minute passed, then two. Finally Ollie appeared. She shut the door behind her and climbed into the car. “Did you have to touch everything?” she said. But she was smiling.

“Drive,” I told Bobby.

*   *   *

“So what does it mean?” Bobby asked. “That word on the paper?”

We were the only three people in the harshly lit dining room of a twenty-four-hour Lebanese restaurant. Ollie sat on my side of the booth, her arm against mine, her hand on my knee. With her free hand she rummaged through a plate of falafel, three different dishes of fried vegetables, and a bowl of hummus. Driving the hospital food out of her system, she said. Bobby was deconstructing his baklava, eating it layer by layer like an archeologist. Me, I was just gripping a coffee, braced for the approach of sirens. I had no appetite. I kept picturing the awl in Pastor Rudy’s neck, the bag over Luke’s head …

“Lyda?” Bobby said. “What logos are they talking about?”

“Log-ose,” Ollie said. “It’s Greek.”

“Ding. Two points,” I said.

“For Gryffindor!” Bobby said.

“Gryffindor doesn’t play basketball,” Ollie said.

“The word means ‘word.’ ‘In the beginning was the word, and the word was with God—’”

“And the word was God,” Ollie said. Her eyes narrowed. “So you are religious.”

“I was raised by a schizophrenic Southern Baptist,” I said. “But it didn’t affect me.”

“Obviously,” she said. She was grinning, almost giddy. Seeing the bodies hadn’t seemed to faze her. And now she was flirting with me, leaning into me like an Iowa cheerleader in the front seat of a Ford pickup. Jesus Christ, what had I started?

Bobby asked me, “So are you going to eat it?” Meaning the paper.

“No, of course not.” I would have torn off a piece and swallowed it, if I’d known which letter had been printed with the drug. Or it could be that the dosage was on every letter, or evenly distributed across the word. I couldn’t afford to damage my one sample with a taste test.

“I need access to a lab,” I said. “And one special machine.”

Ollie squeezed my arm. “Where do we steal it from?” She was wide awake and ready to knock over banks.

“I’m cutting you off,” I said. I pulled out the phone and slid out of the booth. “I’ll be right back.”

Ollie stopped me. “What is that?” Staring at the phone. I heated with embarrassment, which annoyed me, because I didn’t think I had anything to be embarrassed about.

“Fayza gave me a phone,” I said.

Bobby said, “So how come you’re always borrowing mine?”

“She did not give you a phone,” Ollie said. “She gave you a tracking device. Give me that.”

“You’re going to do something to it.”

“Yes I am. Give it.”

She snapped it in half, then pried off the back and tore out the electrical innards. She picked out the tiny battery and popped it free from the chip, then crushed the chip with the salt shaker.

“Yikes,” Bobby said.

Ollie said, “Didn’t you wonder why she gave it to you?”

“I thought so she would know the call came from me. Maybe she has a whitelist. Or special encryption…”

Ollie was shaking her head before I’d gotten halfway through the sentence. “From now on we use burners. No personal phones.”

Bobby made a move to leave. “Bathroom.”

“You too, kid,” I said.

“But my apps! I have videos!”

Ollie said, “Relax, you can get it all back from your backups.”

Bobby morosely took his pen from his pocket and slid it to her. She destroyed it as thoroughly as she had Fayza’s device, then withdrew a new pen from the breast pocket of her camo jacket. She played with it for half a minute, activating it, then handed it to me. “Never been used,” she said. “We’re getting some Wi-Fi here, so I set it to reroute through an anonymizer server, so receivers shouldn’t be able to pick up our location. Later I’ll set up a hopper network so we can use the cell phone towers.”

I didn’t understand half of what she was saying. What was a hopper network?

Ollie saw my look and said, “What? This is what you sprung me for, right? These are basic countermeasures.”

“I get all hot when you do spy talk,” I said.

“Oh jeez,” Bobby said. He went to the bathroom, sans pen.

Ollie stopped me before I walked off to make my call. “I know you’re upset,” she said.

“And you don’t seem to be at all.”

“I’ve seen bodies before.” She shrugged. “Also, I’m in a weird state, chemically. I’m not sure if I’m reacting appropriately. Like, I can’t stop thinking about this falafel—it’s fantastic.”


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