“Thank you for the colorful commentary.” Joe looked at the bottle. “This will burn the animal’s mouth?”
“Yes. Really badly too. O.K.? That’s the best I can do now. Bye.”
“Ellen,” Joe called out to her as he held the bottle closely to his nose. “This smells like straight garlic.”
“Um . . . yeah. It is. Bye.” She hurried for the door again.
“Hold it.” Joe set the bottle down. “Since when did garlic burn an animal’s mouth.”
“It works on werewolves.” Ellen shrugged and lifted her arms.
“Vampires,” Joe corrected.
Robbie looked at Ellen. “This isn’t a joke because you said the animal rips apart the throat first. Is it?”
“No.” Ellen shook her head. “It’ll work. Trust me. I think. Not ‘think’ that you should trust me. You should trust me. But think that it will . . .”
“Ellen,” Joe stated her name harshly. “You’re saying this is an animal. Garlic won’t burn an animal’s mouth.”
“That will.” Ellen pointed.
“It’s garlic,” Joe said.
“Yes.”
“Garlic won’t do it. It’s an animal, Ellen, not vampires. We don’t have vampires in Beginnings.”
Henry held up his finger. “If I may, Joe. You did say you felt like you were in a Stephen King novel”
“Henry.” Joe looked at him.
“Yeah?”
“Don’t.” Joe grabbed the bottle. “Now, Ellen . . .”
“Bye, Joe.” Ellen waved and ran out the door.
Joe, angry, stood up. “She knows something. I know she knows something.”
Robbie turned from the closed door to his father. “What can we do though?”
“You and you.” Joe pointed to Henry and Robbie. “Can do nothing but I have two doctors and a doctor wanna be who can pretty much make heads or tails out of her autopsy reports.” Joe sat back down. “And that’s where I’m gonna start.” He picked up his phone and dialed. “Andrea. It’s me. I have something you need to do for me.”
^^^^
Binghamton. Alabama
“What are they doing?” John asked Jess who watched Frank and Dean.
“Staying out of sight while they talk.”
“They should be back inside. Someone is going to see them together out there.”
“Nah. They’re hidden. Look.” Jess handed John the binoculars.
“Does it . . .” John lowered them from his face. “Does it look to you like they’re arguing?”
“Yeah, but they wouldn’t be arguing. Catching up, maybe. I mean, they haven’t seen each other in a while. They’re on the same side. They’re probably just discussing George really in-depth and it’s making them look like that.”
“Yeah.” John returned to watching them. “You’re probably right. What the hell could they possibly have to argue about anyhow?”
^^^^
“Henry,” Frank said the name so insistently.
“No, Frank. Robbie.”
“Henry.”
“Robbie,” Dean spoke argumentatively.
“This whole conversation is pretty fuckin stupid.”
“Go figure. You started it.”
“Hey!”
“Hey yourself, Frank.” Dean looked around to make sure they still remained behind the large storage building. He placed his hands in the front pockets of his jeans. “Robbie.”
“Henry.”
“Frank, you haven’t been there in a month. I know.”
“Don’t matter Dean. I know.”
“What do you know?”
“I know that she was living with fuckin Henry to stay neutral between us and . . . and.” Frank pointed. “You and I are gone. He’s gonna jump on it, especially since he thinks you really left Beginnings for the Society. In Henry’s eyes right now. You’re a gone man. I’m a dead man. He’s a lucky man and trust me. He’s gonna waste no time.” Frank nodded with assurance.
“O.K., O.K. you have a point. But . . .”
“No buts.”
“Yes Frank but. I’m saying with all certainty, Robbie will go after Ellen.”
“Robbie!” Frank scoffed. “Why in the world would Robbie go after Ellen in our absence if he knows your coming back and he knows me, his brother, is alive.”
“Because I told him to make it look like Ellen turned to him when I left. I . . . I told him to watch over her and take care of her.”
“Dean!” Frank blasted. “What the fuck? Oh, man.” Frank shook his head. “You gave the two most immoral people in Beginnings permission to play house. Oh, you have no one to blame if something happens. You gave the green light. You know Ellen.”
“I know your brother too. That’s why I say Robbie’s taking advantage of us being gone. Of course I didn’t think they did after I heard they did it the one time in Ashtonville.”
“They didn’t,” Frank said.
“They did.” Dean told him. “El it happened when her and I broke up and she lived with him.”
“No.”
“Yes.” Dean nodded. “And bet me it’s happened before. But we can’t really get mad because we weren’t there in that history.”
“Technically we were,” Frank said. “We just don’t know it.” He looked at his watch. “Shit, we’d better be splitting up. We’ve been out here long enough.”
Dean checked out the time also. “Yeah. You’re right.”
“I’ll head out first.” Frank began to walk. “Hey, Dean. Thanks for the talk. And work on that chemical.”
“I will. You work on my animal.”
Frank just grinned and kept on walking.
^^^^
Beginnings, Montana
Was Andrea home already? Joe asked himself when he walked in the house, smelled the scent of food, and heard the . . . slamming of pots? “Andrea.” Joe walked in the kitchen.
“Joe.” Andrea kept her back to him. “I pretty much have everything ready. I have to do something around dinner time at the clinic. A, uh . . . . patient. It won’t take long. Hand the salad duty over to someone, please.”
“What’s wrong?”
It was high pitched and so female. “Nothing.” She laid a lid on the pot. “I just a patient.”
“I’m not talking about the clinic. I’m talking about with you.”
“What do you mean, Joe? What’s wrong with me because I won’t make the salad?” She stirred the cooking pasta. “I hate warm lettuce and you know perfectly well if you break it too soon it turns brown. I don’t know about . . .”
“Andrea! For crying out loud.” Joe stepped to her. “You found something out, didn’t you? When you, Jason, and Johnny looked into the autopsy you found something . . .”
SLAM! The metal pasta fork banged off the counter. Andrea spun coldly to Joe. “I found nothing.”
Joe’s eyes widened at the sudden switch in demeanor. “Excuse me?”
“And don’t you ever ask me to go behind a coworker’s back again. You hear me? Leader, former leader, council member. I don’t care.” Her arms waved about. “There was nothing what so ever in those reports. None of us found anything, Joe. You!” Andrea pointed as she backed up. “Just want answers so badly that you will stoop so low as to go behind Ellen’s back to find out. There are no answers, Joe, and I feel really awful for doing your dirty work. From now out, if you want to play private investigator and find out what you think you know, then you do it. Stop asking everyone else to do it. Stop asking me!”
“Why are you so upset about this? I asked you to read her reports.”
“Without her knowledge.”
“Yeah. So.”
“It’s wrong.”
“Yeah so.”
Andrea grunted loudly. “I’ll tell you what your problem is, Joseph Slagel.”
“O.K. I’m game. Tell me,” Joe said.
“Ellen said it was inconclusive., but your problem is this isn’t the CIA. When the truth is staring you in the face, you don
’t want to believe it because it’s not hidden behind anything. Well, Joseph, not all things are hidden deeply somewhere and sometimes you just have to take it for face value. Sometimes the most obvious truth really is the answer and this is just one of those cases.” Andrea stormed out.
Joe stared at the empty doorway. “In more situations than you realize, Andrea, you made a valid point.”
^^^^
Quantico Marine Headquarters
George smiled as he hung up the phone and looked at Steward who stood before his desk.
“Good news, sir, from Beginnings?” Steward asked.
“I don’t know. Could be.” George tilted his head with a smile. “Seems Beginnings has two men dead. Very violent killings.”
“And . . . does this have to do with us?”
“Aside that it’s just pleasant news to hear, it may.” George leaned back in his chair with a pleased smile. “It just may.”
^^^^
Jess and John had to stay hidden deep in the brush so that the headlights from the four huge military trucks didn’t shine upon them. They were taking pictures then they needed to be when the trucks arrived. They were so engrossed with Frank standing on the roof of the one building, posing as if he were some hyped-up wrestler in an arena full of people. It was so evident that Frank knew from Dean that John and Jess were probably out there, scouting and taking surveillance photos. John and Jess took some good shots of Frank and had some laughs before the trucks pulled through the gate and stopped just inside. The arrival of the trucks shocked them but not as much as the regimented lines and lines of shaven-head soldiers who stared blankly and coldly as they marched right in.
“Shit.” Jess exclaimed.
“What?” John asked.
“CME’s.”
“What?”
“I estimate that over two hundred of what you call SUTs, just made our chances of getting in that base a little tougher.”
^^^^
Dean kept looking at the men who started to line up at the gate. They were waiting for someone but obviously not Frank. They were in the distance, but still Dean could tell by their expressions what they were. They weren’t all human. That was a quality they lost at the hands of some cyborg surgeon.
Dean would walk, stop, look, and walk again to the lab building. He was so into the arrivals that he didn’t see Leonard walking out of the lab building. Dean nearly bumped into him.
“Dr. Hayes.”
“Leonard.” Dean tried to get passed him.
“Working late this evening, I see.”
“I found some interesting compounds we don’t have in Beginnings. I wanted to look and work with them some more. Is that a problem?”
“No, not at all. President Hadley would be pleased to know of your curiosity.”
Dean grunted and moved to the double doors.
“Dr. Hayes.” Leonard’s call caused him to stop. “In your journeys across base, did you by chance run into Lt. Murphy? He’s the black man that stays with we ambassadors.”
“Nope.” Dean shook his head. “Losing men Leonard? George won’t be pleased.”
“No he won’t. I’ll have to find our other lieutenant for the arrivals.”
“You do that.” Dean really wanted to tell Leonard he could care less. But he didn’t want to draw any attention to himself. He just kept walking. He went into the building, through the main lab, and passed the freezer room into the hideous hideaway--as Frank referred to it. Then Dean stopped. “Frank.” Dean immediately closed the door and shut the blinds. “What the hell is this?”
“Your test subject.”
Dean looked at the black man in uniform, tied and gagged to the chair. The man was sweating and his head was bleeding. “This . . . this is Lt. Murphy.”
“Yeah. Your point?”
“They’re looking for him, Frank.”
“Yeah.” Frank placed his hands on his hips. “And your point?”
“They’re gonna know he’s gone.” Dean grew excited. “You can’t just kidnap and tie up everyone, especially him. They’re gonna start to wonder what happened to him, Frank.”
“No they won’t.” Frank waved his hand. “He’s at survival training.”
“Survival training?” Dean asked. “Where the hell is that?”
“That’s the special secret place that all good Society officers go.” Frank placed his finger to his own temple, imitated an explosion sound, and let his head drop to the right only before snickering.
“You’re sick.” Dean pointed.
“Yeah, and you have a test subject.”
“What are we gonna do with him while I figure out the chemical compounds?”
“Aha.” Frank walked over to a counter, bent down, and opened the large door underneath. “Quite cozy. While he’s tied up and gagged, no one will hear him.”
“That’s cruel.”
“It’s war and he’s our prisoner.”
Dean’s hand covered his eyes as he shook his head in whining debate. “Frank. Frank. Frank.”
“Dean. Dean. Dean. You gonna make him shrivel like in Colorado? Hey, Dean. Make it take a while, O.K.”
“Frank.” Dean cringed. “Enough of the sick comments. Let’s get him situated . . .”
“You gonna use him then?”
“I have no choice. We can’t set him free. Oh, if we get busted.”
“We won’t. If you don’t want him Dean, I’ll just take him out to survival training.” Frank began to place his finger in a gun fashion to his own temple again but Dean lowered his arm.
“Stop that. All right.” Dean looked at Frank. “Let’s take care of him. Then you, as fake C.O. here, have another issue to deal with.”
“Like?”
“Like the two hundred SUTS that just marched in the front gate.”
“Fuck.” Frank took off.
“Frank!” Dean spun with his hand out but Frank was gone. “Damn it.” He turned around and looked at Lt. Murphy, who, frightened and shaken, stared at Dean as if for help. Dean shrugged, raised his eyebrows, and lifted his hands to the Lieutenant. “Sorry.”
^^^^
Beginnings, Montana
Joe recalled in his mind how angry Andrea was at the snooping issue, going behind Ellen’s back, and looking into her things. Joe even recalled how Andrea--while getting dressed for the house full of company she left--went on and on to Joe about the respecting of other people’s privacy and business. Honesty and trust. Joe whole heartedly agreed with Andrea, one hundred percent but there were times where you have to just swallow your morals and what’s right and dig at whatever cost for the truth. That was the reasoning Joe used in his mind when he followed his wife from the house in the middle of a Slagel family gathering. Telling them he wanted to walk her home because it was dark, Joe left minutes after she did.
Everything Andrea preached about honesty, trust, and respect went right out the window when Joe saw she never went to the clinic. Quietly and in the dark, she sat on a bench behind the chapel with Rev. Bob--which was convenient for Joe because he could hide and not be seen. He couldn’t hear what they whispered, only that they did. But what they said didn’t matter. He didn’t need to hear the words. What he saw was enough. More so than Andrea’s lack of honesty was the fact that there in the dark, hidden and alone, were the two people in Beginnings who were somehow connected very personally to George. The two people in Beginnings who were Joe’s top suspects. And there they were . . . together.
CHAPTER
THIRTY-TWO
September 28
32 Miles West of Binghamton, Alabama
It wasn’t even light yet, but Robbie spotted Jess and John right on time. There was a certain fright of a chopper heard in such a dead world, hence the reason Robbie just wanted to get out of there as soon as possible. Jess and John wasted no time getting in and closing the door, Jess for the simple fact that he just wanted to sit, and John Matoose because he awaited the reunion glances between Robbie and Jess.
 
; “Man, do you two reek,” Robbie commented as he lifted the chopper.
“Ha, ha.” Jess shook his head with a smile. “You try spending twenty four hours straight outside in forest filled with decaying bodies, compliments of Frank.”
“Frank?” Robbie laughed. “Taking them out is he?”
“Oh yeah. We got some good shots of him though. Didn’t we, John?” Jess looked around to the back of the chopper where John sat.
“It was amazing seeing him, Robbie,” John said. “You know, I told your Dad from the start that George wanted him and would set it up like Frank was dead. I didn’t think he was dead. But it still doesn’t hit you that Frank’s all right until you see him.”
Jess raised an eyebrow. “Robbie, your brother has hair.”
“Yeah.” Robbie nodded. “All over his body.”
“No on his head instead of that clipped short hair. It’s hair.” Jess stated. “He looks . . .”
“Weird?” Robbie asked.
“Yeah.” Jess nodded. “But enough of the good news.”
“Shit.” Robbie shifted his eyes. “What?”
“Let’s just say when we get home and we show you the pictures, all that bragging you do about being the infiltrating champ better be true,” Jess said seriously. “You have your work cut out for you.”
^^^^
He was a flowery sort of gentleman, eccentric and different. George wondered, as he stared at the conductor, what he was doing working for the Society. It was bad enough that they had to stop the train ten miles from Binghamton, but did they have to stop it because Chuckie the conductor wanted to release all the bad feelings the train was picking up on the journey. George looked at his watch as he walked outside the train, getting some air on their unscheduled break. His views snapped to the sky.
“What’s wrong?” Chuckie asked.
“Did you hear that. It sounded like a chopper.”
The Horse Soldier: Beginnings Series Book 10 Page 54