I'm the kind of girl who is quite in large groups or around people I don't know; you only see the real me if we're close. I smile and laugh a lot, especially at most inappropriate times. I'm a hopeless romantic. I trip on air, up stairs, and over people's feet. I am the hardest person to offend, but it is all too easy t make me feel horrible. I fate telling people about my problems; they don't need to worry about me. I'm the one who listens to other people's problems. I believe people should not be judged before one takes time to get to know them, yet I am guilty of doing the exact same thing. I love think rather than talk. I'm awkward, clumsy, shy, strange... but this is me. Take it or leave it
me, whispering to the ao3 page of an author who wrote one life altering banger and nothing else: I hope your pillow is cool and your skin is clear and you find money in a forgotten jeans pocket
aint it crazy how many people realize they're queer when they have the language to express how they feel and a support system to encourage self exploration????
1. obsessively consume all canon content faster than human beings should be capable
2. pick a ship at random and read 2/3 of everything that exists on AO3 for that ship
3. The YouTube Edits Phaseâą
4. whatâs in this tag on tumblr? (repeat as many times as necessary)
5. scream
Friendly reminder that this blog is pro-choice and if you donât think everyone should have full control of their own body, then kindly unfollow me right now and go to hell
Fuck the fascist bastards who agree with this. Everyone has a right to their own autonomy. Fuck pro life. You disagree? Keep it to yourself. Unfollow me. Iâll do just fine without you.
Don knew he was handling things differently. Every case that involved kids was bad however, he could feel them hitting him a little deeper now. Lucinda Shay was a single mother just like Janice had been and when he saw her son at the crime scene all he could think of was what Abby must have gone through when she was alone after her mom died.Â
Despite this he had to stay focused on the case, keep his emotions in check, that was the only way they were going to catch the killer and get justice for Lucinda and Daniel. He entered the office and spotted Charlie standing out like a curly headed traffic cone dressed in orange with David and Colby who were gray and white suits.Â
Don quickly made it over to his brother âhey, thanks for comingâ he gave Charlie a pat on the shoulder.Â
âNo problemâÂ
âHey did the kid see anything?â David asked, gesturing toward where Megan was sitting with Daniel playing cards.Â
âWell, if he did, heâs not saying anything.â Don replied.Â
âI didnât know Lucinda Shay had a kidâ Charlie voiced.Â
âYeah little boy named Daniel,â Don explained, pointing to show Charlie, who looked back letting sadness drift into his eyes. âWhat? You knew her?âÂ
âI met her a few times.â Charlie explained âwhen the scandal first broke at the SEC, I was asked to examine the accounting related to Syntelâs offshore partnerships. She was very helpfulâÂ
âYeahâ Colby murmured âwell sweetheart plea bargain will do that for youâÂ
âYou know I donât think she knew what Syntel was doing at first but once she figured it out, she blew the whistleâ Charlie informed âWas her son there whenâŠ?âÂ
âYeahâ Don murmured, cutting Charlieâs question off.Â
âWhat can I do?â Charlie asked.Â
âWell, weâre putting together a list of former employees and shareholdersâ Don explained âmaybe you could narrow it down?âÂ
âIâve already analyzed the companyâs SEC filings. Itâs a pretty good picture of who made money, who lost money.â Charlie explained.Â
âAll right, well, whatever you can do, weâd appreciate it,â Don said gratefully.Â
âYou got it,â Charlie agreed.Â
âThanksâ Don murmured, patting his brother on the shoulder again as he headed over to where Megan was sitting with the boy.Â
âWhatâs going to happen to her son?â Charlie questioned.Â
âWe donât knowâ David admitted âsheâs a single-parent mom. Iâm trying to run down the father, any other relative, but, uh, so far no luck.âÂ
âYou know after Abbyâs mother died they were able to find Donâ Charlie offered âI mean it took a couple months but, you could find someone for this boyâÂ
âWeâll be trying Charlie,â David reassured the mathematician.Â
Meanwhile Don was knocking at the door of the sitting room Megan and Daniel were in. His partner looked up and he gestured for her to come and talk. She told Daniel sheâd be right back before getting up and meeting Don outside of the room and earshot of the boy.Â
âHowâs he doing?â Don asked.Â
Megan cleared her throat glancing back at the boy before turning to Don âthereâs some blunt effect in response to the trauma.â she explained.Â
âWhatâs that, like some kind of post traumatic shock kind of thing?â the man inquired.Â
âA littleâ Megan informed âthis is more immediate and hopefully itâs temporary. But heâs like an overloaded circuit. Heâs just shut down right now.âÂ
âIâm going to need him to talk to us,â Don murmured ruefully.Â
âI know that,â the woman reassured, glancing back at the boy âbut heâs too fragile right now.âÂ
Don shrugged âI know, but if he knows who shot his mother-âÂ
âItâs exactly the problemâ Megan clarified âhe probably did, and heâs a little boy and heâs terrified. And if we push him too far now, we may never get what we needâÂ
âAll right, all rightâ Don agreed, walking past Megan into the room and taking the seat across from the boy âhey Danielâ he greeted attempting to shake the twisting feeling in his gut and the thought of Abby. âIâm Don Eppes. Remember? From before?â he paused and when the boy gave no indication of response he sighed âLook, Iâm sorry about what happened to your mom, but-â he hesitated as Daniel shifted and grimaced slightly âI know how rough this must be for you, what- what you must be thinking.â He took a breath and glanced back out at the bullpen, the thought of a young, alone Abby still pulling at the back of his brain thoughts of his own mother as well âActually, you know, to be honest, I donât know what youâre thinking. But I do know something about what youâre feeling.â he admitted âYou know, not too long ago my mom died.â Daniel looked up at that but his eyes quickly flickered back to the table âyeah she was like the one person who had the right answer for everything. You know, I mean all the time. And then all of a sudden she was goneâ Don took a deep breath âHereâs what Iâm hoping. That you and I maybe could partner up. Maybe help each other out.â he paused, gauging the boy carefully before continuing âI need to know if you saw anything this morning, Daniel.âÂ
âNo,â Daniel barely whispered, shaking his head.Â
âYou sure?â Don pressed carefully.Â
âThe doorbell rang,â Daniel voiced.Â
âMm-hmm and your mom answered it?â The agent inquired. Daniel nodded âdid you hear any voices?âÂ
Daniel shook his head âjust the gunâÂ
âWhat about after?â Don asked âDid you see anything, hear anyone?â Daniel shook his head looking down at the table again curling into himself. âAll right, okay.â Don backed off âHey, thatâs a good start. Good jobâÂ
âI wantâŠâ Daniel spoke up voice choked with emotion âI want her to come backâÂ
âYeahâ Don sighed, biting his lip âI know you do. Me, too.âÂ
As Don got up to leave gesturing for Megan to take his place sitting with the boy he wandered into the breakroom. He let off a large breath and reached for his phone on his belt. He wanted to call Abby and just hear her voice for whatever reason but a quick glance at his watch told him sheâd be in class and unable to take his call. So he took another deep breath and replaced his phone on his belt before making for the coffee.Â
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Abby POV.Â
I walked out of class with an annoyed groan. âOh dear did Prof. Lisben assign another tedious reading exercise?âÂ
I looked up at the question to see Larry meandering down the hallway. âEssayâ I explained âand I already have two others due for other classesâÂ
âAh I seeâ Larry sighed as we began to walk down the hallway âquite the taxing conundrumâÂ
âI mean professors do realize that we have more classes than theirs, right?â I asked.Â
âIf they do I suppose they donât careâ Larry declared juggling the apple in his hand âsuch is the lot of the student I supposeâÂ
I hummed in agreement as we reached my uncleâs office and headed inside. He was working on the blackboard with his back to us as we entered. What looked to be some kind of tree-pruning algorithm.Â
âCharlesâ Larry spoke calmly. Charlie about jumped out of his skin though.Â
He let off a breath once he realized it was just us âI wish you wouldnât do thatâ he muttered.Â
âBooâ I shrugged.Â
âIâm sorry, Iâm sorryâ Larry apologized âbut why are you splitting a tree-pruning algorithm?âÂ
âIâm trying to reduce a cumbersome set of variables to a common pointâ Uncle C explained as I headed over to one of the various chairs in the office and sat down.Â
âOkay, well, a bit of pruning I understandâ Larry said âbut why divide it into subsets?âÂ
âBecause Iâm dealing with different groups of suspects each with almost opposite motives for committing the same crimeâ Charlie informed.Â
âAh, so an FBI caseâ I voiced.Â
âYes, Don asked for my helpâ Charlie informed âone set lost money and wants revenge. The others made money and wants to keep it.âÂ
âOh, this is about Syntel Corp.â Larry deduced coming closer.Â
âHow do you know that?â Charlie questioned, surprised.Â
âWhatâs a Syntel Corp?â I asked.Â
âA large corporation that was caught with a fraud scandal not long agoâ Charlie explained.Â
âOhâ I nodded in realization.
âI heard about the Chief Financial Officer being killed.â Larry informed âyou might recall I lost a considerable investment in SyntelâÂ
âYeah? Well, you got an alibi for this morning?â Charlie joked. Larry let out a breath âIâm kiddingâ Charlie chuckled and I smirked.Â
âAh donât be too quick to dismiss me as a suspectâ the physicist objected.Â
âWhy, how much you lose?â Uncle C inquired, exchanging a concerned glance with me.Â
â175,000â Larry sighed.Â
âDollars?â Charlie questioned in surprise.Â
âNo eurosâ I muttered and earned a small glare from my uncle.Â
âLook, in my defense, I didnât count on being defrauded,â Larry pointed out.Â
âOh wow, well, are you okay, financially?â Charlie asked.Â
Larry scoffed âwell letâs just say the words âpublish or perishâ have taken on a brand-new meaning. But, yeah, I mean, fortunately, Iâve hedged my bets on Google.âÂ
âWell help me thenâ Charlie voiced, turning back to the chalkboard and I swiveled in my seat to get a look as well. âIâve, uh, Iâve got to combine two different groups of suspects,â Uncle C explained, raising up the front of his chalkboard. âAccording to monetary incentives and risk/reward ratiosâ
âSo we need to rank them according to their motive for committing the murderâ Larry clarified.Â
âWhile also taking into account what might deter them from choosing murder verses another path hence the risk/rewardâ I added.Â
âThatâs right,â Charlie agreed.Â
âOkay, what do these variables here express?â Larry inquired, pointing past Charlie at an equation on the chalkboard. I craned my neck to see the board around my uncle.Â
âWell, I derived them from the bankruptcy data.â Charlie informed, âI assigned probability values to motives according to the suspectsâ current circumstance.â
âCurrent circumstances?â Larry questioned confused âlike what, where are they now or..?â
âRight,â Charlie nodded.Â
âOkay,â Larry murmured, pacing around the younger professor. As we all thought on the problem. âCharlesâ Larry finally voiced after a moment and my uncle hummed in response. âJust as a thought experimentâ the physicist paused and Charlie nodded for him to continue as I sat forward in my seat âwhat if you didnât know the story of the Garden of Eden?âÂ
âAdam and Eveâ Charlie muttered as Larry gestured to the apple in his hand.Â
âWhat does this have to do with the creation of the world?â I inquired confused.Â
âItâs just a thought experiment, let me explainâ Larry advised me and I nodded. âLet's say you met them after they were exiled from Eden. Now, as they both suffer equally under the same punishment, how would you know which of them had taken the bite from the forbidden fruit?âÂ
âBut they both-âÂ
âShhh shhh shhh thought experimentâ Larry hushed me as the cogs in Charlieâs brain began to turn.Â
âThe outcome doesnât provide enough information to discern the inputsâ Charlie deduced âif I really want to figure out whoâs guilty Iâve got to reconstruct the original fraud at SyntelâÂ
âPreciselyâ Larry concluded âyouâve got to go back to the appleâ the man took a large bite of his snack.Â
Charlie turned back to his chalkboard and began working again at a dizzying rate. Meanwhile Larry meandered back over to my side of the desk. âYou know people are always so hard on Eve but Adam was just as bad if not worseâ I voiced.Â
âWhatâs that?â Larry questioned.Â
âWell Eve had to deal with the literal devil Adam just had to say no to a naked womanâ I pointed out. Larry made a humming noise as his eyebrows rose on his head and he practically nodded with his hands.Â
________________________
3rd POV.Â
Don sighed as Charlie headed out of the room and his eyes scanned the bullpen landing on Daniel who was at a desk with his meager bag of belongings. âHowâs our kid doing?â he asked Megan, eyes still on the boy.Â
âUh, I guess heâs a little better, but you know,â she let off a breath. âhow would any of us be doing in his situation?âÂ
âYeahâ Don sat down next to her âany word from family services?âÂ
âThere is no father in the pictureâ Megan explained âand we found a grandmother inâ she reached for a pad of paper where she had written a note down âBethany, Oklahoma. She has a heart condition and she canât fly.â
âSo what happens to him?â Don inquired looking over to see an agent talking nicely to the boy.Â
âWell, tonight heâs going to go to this group home.â Megan informed.Â
Don felt his stomach drop âoh come on youâve got to be kidding meâ he stated âI mean, thatâs a nightmare. You know what those homes are like Abbyâs social worker said she was put in one after her mom died. And- and she hated itâÂ
âI knowâ Megan defended âbut I called WITSEC and they wonât put a minor into custody without a court order. And you know what? Itâs not really any better than a group home is, anyway.âÂ
âI know, but I just donât want him to get twisted around, till whatever chance we have of getting what he knows is gone.â Don explained trying to keep his emotions in check and make a logical argument. He had to stop thinking about Abby on this case.
âWell, I donât like this at all,â Megan agreed âbut Iâm not set up to take care of a kid and you can barely handle the one you haveâÂ
âThanksâ Don muttered but knew she was right.Â
âWhat are we supposed to do?â Megan asked and Don looked back out at the kid, an idea coming to mind.Â
âCharlie has an extra room at his houseâ he voiced.Â
âYeah,â Don muttered. He watched the kid for a moment longer.
âDonâ his partner finally broke the silence with a tone that made him turn to look at her eyes and he could tell she was profiling him. âIf you keep acting like this case isnât hitting you differently youâre not going to handle it properlyâ she declared.
Donâs eyebrows knit together âIâm not- I just-â he cut off at her look.Â
âThat boy reminds you of Abby. You said it yourself a second ago that Abby was in the system after her mom died and before they found you as her guardian.â Megan voiced âitâs okay if it gets to you.âÂ
âYeahâ Don sighed. Knowing she was once again right.Â
_______________________
Abby POV.
I gasped as my eyes scanned over the page of the book I was reading. âWhat?â Gramps asked mildly concerned as he sat reading in his chair.Â
âPlot twist- I- neh-â I ended up just making a weird noise and waving him off as I continued reading the story.Â
âOkay thenâ I heard the man mutter then there was noise from further in the house.Â
âCharlie that you?â Alan called.Â
âNo, Dad, itâs me,â my fatherâs voice replied. âHey Abbyâ he called in greeting and I waved in his general direction. My eyes still transfixed on the story in my hand.Â
âDonnie. What are you doing here so late?â Alan questioned âI thought Abby would be spending the night and dinnerâs been put away alreadyâÂ
âShe is and I donât need dinner.â he paused âlook-âÂ
âIf youâre looking for Charlie heâs not here yetâ Gramps informed.Â
âActually, I think I can talk to youâ Don explained âI mean Iâm sure heâll be okay with it, but..â Don trailed.Â
âAnd who is this?â I heard Alan inquire and I finally looked up to see a boy standing in the foyer looking around a bag hung on his shoulder. Â
âThis is Daniel.â Don introduced.Â
âHeâs not my brother is he?â I asked and both men gave me a look.Â
________________
I sat a plate of PB&J down in front of Daniel as Alan and Don talked in the other room. The boy immediately picked it up to start eating. Once Don had explained what was happening I felt bad for the kid and my previous joke. This kid and I actually had a lot in common.Â
âThanksâ he murmured after a moment.Â
âNo problemâ I replied with a small smile. Then paused âIâm sorry about your mom. I lost my mom too and I know it hurtsâÂ
He looked up at me in a little surprise âyou lost your mom?âÂ
âYeah and I didnât know my dad back then either.â I explained âso I know it can be scary when you donât have anybody but I know my dad now and I know heâll work to get your mom justice at least okay?âÂ
The boy nodded slightly and I looked up to see Don coming over. âHey buddyâ he greeted Daniel taking a seat. âShe makes a pretty good sandwich, huh?â he asked, sharing a glance with me.Â
âMomâs is better,â Daniel stated.Â
âYeahâ Don nodded âyeah, Iâm sure thatâs trueâÂ
âI was thinking about what you asked me,â Daniel explained hesitantly âyou know, about what I saw?âÂ
âUh-huh,â Dad murmured, encouraging the boy to continue.Â
âThere was a carâ Daniel informed âAfter I heard the gunshot, I looked out the window.âÂ
âDo you remember what kind of car it was?â Don questioned carefully.Â
âIt was black or blue, maybeâ Daniel offered thinking âbig but not as big as an SUV.â
âYou think if I showed you some pictures, maybe youâd remember?â Don suggested âI mean, you just have to do the best you can. Itâs uh..â he trailed, losing the words.Â
âSo did you find them?â Daniel asked after a moment.Â
âWho?â Don questioned.Â
âThe people who killed my momâ the boy stated.Â
âWhy do you think-â Don pressed, confused as I looked at the boy in surprise âI mean, are you remembering something?âÂ
âThey were talking,â Daniel explained âat your officeâ a sad and guilty expression befell my fatherâs face as the boy continued âthey said there are, like, 6,000 people who wanted to kill my mom.âÂ
âOh, no, no, noâ Don quickly objected âoh, no thatâs not, thatâs not⊠I think the thing is, um, you know, sometimes when we donât know who the bad guys are, we start with a really big list. And, uh, it doesnât mean everyone on it wanted to hurt your mom. I mean, in fact, I really think weâre probably just looking for one person.â
âWhere am I gonna sleep?â Daniel asked, changing the topic.Â
âUh, I thought Iâd put you up in my roomâ Don suggested giving me a look to tell me I would not be staying in the room I normally held in the house. âHowâs that?âÂ
âWhere will you sleep?â Daniel inquired, looking confused.Â
âOh, I donât live here anymore, itâs from when I was a kid,â Don explained. âAbby stays in it when she sleeps here. Itâs a pretty good room. I think youâll like it.âÂ
âBut youâre gonna stay right?â the boy clarified âyouâre not gonna leave?âÂ
 Don looked back at the boyâs worried gaze before replying âuh, yeah, I can stay, sureâ he agreed. âYeah, you got it.âÂ
_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~
3rd POV.Â
Abby blinked her eyes open. There was a figure looking down at her. She was laying down. There was a mask on her face and cool air was coming from it. Everything seemed hazy. She was looking up at the night sky. There were a lot of moving figures at the edge of her vision and she smelled smoke.Â
âMy momâ Abby tried but the words were quieter and hard to get out âwhereâs my mom?â Hadnât they just been driving a second ago? How had she gotten here? She couldnât remember. That started her heart to beat faster and her breathing picked up. She always remembered. Why couldnât she remember what just happened?
âHey youâre awakeâ the person above her, who was still little more than a blur, spoke comfortingly. âTry to stay calm. Whatâs your name?âÂ
âAbbyâ the girl replied softly, a sharp pain stabbing her side âwhereâs my mom?â she grunted through the pain.
âI donât know Abby but weâre going to get you to the hospitalâ the person replied. She tried to sit up but her back wouldnât move. The only responsive part of her body seemed to be her arm and when she lifted it up she could see the blood covering it. âAbby?â She heard the person but they were muffled as her arm fell and the hazy darkness consumed her vision again.
~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~
Abby POV.Â
I gasped awake sitting up in bed and putting a hand to my mouth half expecting the oxygen mask to still be there. I took a couple deep breaths as the memory faded and looked around. I was in the guest room of Charlieâs house. And according to the clock on the nightstand it was the middle of the night.Â
I took another deep breath and sighed getting up. It figured that everything going on with Daniel would stir up my memories of my motherâs death. I opened the door to the room quietly and carefully krept down the hallway and stairs. I was cutting through the foyer heading for the kitchen when the light flicked on behind me and I whirled around.Â
Don was sitting up on the couch giving me a disgruntled and questioning look. âI was just getting a glass of milk,â I informed at a whisper.Â
The man sighed and looked at his watch. âWhy so late?âÂ
I shrugged âcouldnât sleepâÂ
âNightmare?âÂ
âSort ofâÂ
Don sighed and started to get up. âYeah I could use some milk tooâ he stated and we both headed into the kitchen. I hopped up to sit on the counter as my father got two mugs and filled them with milk. âMy mom always said if you heat it up it helps you sleepâ he informed.Â
âActually, while milk does have trace amounts of tryptophan which is used within the brain to make serotonin and melatonin. Itâs been tested and proven that milk doesnât help you sleep better. Heated or not. Itâs just relaxingâ I explained. Don gave me a look as he placed the mugs in the microwave. âSorryâÂ
Don sighed, pressing the button to start the microwave and turning to me. âItâs fine at this point Iâm used to the random fact dropping in the houseâÂ
âFair enoughâ I smirked. There was a quiet moment when neither of us spoke and the kitchen was only filled with the sound of the microwave humming.Â
âListen Abby-â Don started hesitantly but then was cut off by the sudden beeping of the microwave that made us both jump. He sighed, removing the two steaming mugs and handing me mine so I could blow on it softly. âAbbyâ he started again âI wanted to ask you, ab- about when you were in foster careâ he stated. I looked at him a little confused over the top of my mug. âItâs just Megan mentioned something today and you know Daniel was almost sent to a group home before I offered to watch him and uh- you never really talk about your experience so-âÂ
âDadâ I cut off the manâs rambling. âItâs okay,â I reassured him, feeling comfortable at least talking about that side of my history. âI wasnât there long to be honest. It was just one house Iâd been in the hospital for two week after the accident because of the my injuries and uh, yeah the mom was mean, the dad was ignorant, the daughter was a brat, and the son was a pervâ Don choked on his milk slightly at the last but Abby kept talking âI was there for about a month before I ran away.â
âA month?â Don questioned, perplexed. âBut I thought it was a whole six months before you came to live with me after Janice diedâ
âIt was,â I nodded. âI just spent most of it on the streetsâ Don blinked at me in shock. I had figured my social worker had already told Don that. âItâs not that big a dealâ I spoke quickly âiâm fineâÂ
âYeah but you were really homeless for five months?â the man exclaimed.Â
I shrugged, pushing away the thoughts of a dancing girl with red hair, an old abandoned apartment building, an underpass, an old house with loud music and a smiling boy on a table. âIt was just another season of my lifeâÂ
Don sighed taking a drink from his mug âyouâre too young to have seasons to your lifeâ
âMaybeâ I murmured holding my warm mug with both hands âbut it made me who I am today so, not all badâÂ
A girl with flaming red hair was spinning dancing to the music as lights flickered around her and people bounced and swayed to the music. She took my hand and pulled me up onto the coffee table twirling me around and we laughed.Â
I blinked away the memory, the smile fading from my face as Don straightened from where he had been leaning on the counter opposite me. He placed his mug in the sink âwell we should try and get some sleepâÂ
âYeahâ I nodded, hopping off the island counter and heading back to my room with my still half filled mug. âGoodnightâ I called as I reached the steps and Don made it to the couch.Â
âGoodnightâ he called in reply.Â
________________
â... look I couldnât get a hold of you, so I asked him, and he said it would be okay.â Don was telling his brother as I came downstairs in the morning.Â
âOkay for what?â Charlie questioned.Â
âFor Lucinda Shayâs kid to stay here.â Don murmured checking his phone then spotting me coming over.Â
âOf course, yeah, thatâs fine.â Charlie replied a little surprised âDaniel Shay is upstairsâÂ
âI think he just got upâ I informed the men who turned to me âI heard him head to the bathroomâÂ
âLook, I also need another favorâ Don continued as he tucked in his shirt. âI gotta get to the airport to see if I can catch up with Thomas Galway. You two think you can hang here till Dad gets back?âÂ
âYou need me to baby-sit?â Charlie asked.Â
âI just donât think itâs a good idea to leave him here alone.â Don explained.Â
âHeâs eleven he doesnât need that much babysitting Uncle Câ I scoffed at the professor âyou donât have to look so scaredâÂ
âIâm not- Iâm not scaredâ Charlie objected adamantly. âActually, I have a way with children, so..âÂ
âOh, yeah?â Don asked skeptically and I raised a dubious eyebrow at the mathematician.
âYeah. Iâve been told I do.â Uncle C insisted.Â
âYou positive there wasnât sarcasm involved?â I questioned and earned a reproachful look from my Uncle.Â
âItâs just for ten minutes,â Don interjected, grabbing his jacket and heading for the stairs âcome on, Iâll introduce you.âÂ
________________
âHey Grangerâ I called as I approached my uncleâs office.Â
The agent who had been standing in the doorway turned and smiled. âHey Abbyâ I came up beside him and spied my uncle in the room working completely oblivious to his audience. âDoes he always work like that?â Granger questioned, seeming fascinated.Â
âNah, this is him more relaxed actuallyâ I murmured.Â
Granger scoffed and finally knocked on the door stepping fully into the office as I followed. âCharlie, Don sent me down to check and see what you got from the supercomputer,â he explained, grabbing the professorâs attention.
Charlie hummed in disappointment âhe must not have gotten my messageâÂ
âI guess notâ Granger murmured then looked into my uncleâs bowl of bubble gum âooh, can I take one of these?â Charlie shrugged and the agent picked his candy as I went around to sit on the desk past the candy bowl. âWhich message?âÂ
âThere was a glitch in the data run,â Charlie explained. âBut- uh, can you just tell me which one youâre taking?âÂ
âThis red oneâ Granger replied, holding up the candy and I scoffed as Charlie dug around for the data sheet for his little experiment.Â
âThatâs very interesting,â the mathematician informed, writing down the information.Â
âOkay,â Granger muttered, shooting me a glance I just shrugged. âSo, look how small is this glitch, because Megan profiled seven ex-employees, all who have the potential to be the killer.â The agent handed Charlie the file and I hopped off the manâs desk to peek over his shoulder and he shifted the file out of view. âAnd anything you have might help us take this guy down before he has a chance to shoot another Syntel exec.âÂ
âI think I have one of these names on my list, actuallyâ Charlie said and I took a step to the side when I saw him grab the bottom of the chalkboard in order to flip it. âYeah, Morton Standbury, but the probability of Mortonâs guilt is less than ten percentâ Charlie tried to explain but Granger was already getting out his phone âI mean, thatâs hardly conclusiveâÂ
âGreat, thanks,â the agent murmured, giving a thumbs up and putting his phone to his ear as he headed out of the office âDavid, hey, itâs me. Listen, Megan was right on with her hunch. The Stanbury guy is a matchâ he gave one final wave before disappearing.Â
âSuccess?â I questioned giving Charlie a look. He just hummed looking back at the board âon only ten percentâÂ
__________________
3rd POV.Â
Alan smiled softly as Don got up from talking to Daniel. âWhat?â his eldest questioned as he passed him heading for the back door.Â
âNothing,â Alan shrugged following his son. âUh you know actually,â he paused, catching Don at the door. âYouâve just grown so much since, uh since Abby came along and uh, well I guess this boy is just bringing that out a bit.âÂ
Don let off a breath looking down to avoid Alanâs eye. âWell Abby changed a lot of things you knowâ he paused, biting his lip âIâll come by laterâ he murmured heading back out the door. Alan watched him go and nodded lightly.Â
_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~
âI have a granddaughterâ Alan voiced in bewilderment as both his sons and him sat at the kitchen table. The older one hunched over and looking like he was in between ill and dazed.Â
âI have a niece,â Charlie added, just as shocked as his father.Â
âI have a-â Don hesitated to say it âI have a daughter.â He let out a large breath with the statement âI have a daughter I never even knew existed.â The man opened his mouth to speak more on it but found the words gone and ended up looking like a fish on land.Â
âWell what are you going to do?â Charlie asked the big question.Â
âHeâs going to take her in.â Alan declared, looking to his eldest. âArenât you? âCause if you donât I willâÂ
âOf- of course Iâm going to take her in.â Don answered quickly âI just- I just-â but the words wouldnât come and the man simply stood up and left the room heading outside into the yard.Â
Alan watched him go. Charlie rose slightly from his seat as if to follow him. The elder quickly raised a hand to stop him. âIâll talk to him,â he declared, getting to his feet.Â
Alan headed outside to see Don pacing the yard back and forth. Running his hand through his hair and over his face.Â
âDonnieâ Alan spoke up to draw his sonâs attention. âTalk to meâÂ
âIt- its nothing Dad I just need a minuteâ the son attempted.Â
His father saw right through him. âUh huh sure because finding out you're a father is nothingâ the man stated sarcastically.Â
Don stopped in his pacing and turned to look at his father. The elder man took a seat on the back steps. A couple seconds later Don staggered over to join him.Â
âItâs just I have no idea what it is to be a father,â Don admitted. âI mean my work is my life and Iâm not in any type of relationship. Iâve never really even thought of kids b-â
âWhat? You think thereâs a manual for this?â Alan cut his son off. âThe day me and your mother brought you home I was more nervous and terrified than I had ever been in my lifeâ Alan advised. âI also was far happier than I had ever been. You see, no father knows what they are doing; they figure it out along the way. They take from those who influenced them and they try to do whatâs best for their kid.â He paused before adding âand pray they donât mess them up to badâÂ
Don scoffed. Looking out at the yard. âDo you think I can be a good dad?âÂ
Alan looked at his son with loving eyes. âI think youâre going to be the best Dad you possibly can and that with that youâll be just fineâÂ
Don smiled lightly. As his father pat him on the back. This however did little to quell the nervous churning in his stomach.Â
_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~
Abby POV.Â
âDo you have any idea what I could do with 300 million dollars?â Larry asked milling about Uncle Câs bookshelf as I sat on the floor doing homework and Uncle C worked on his computer at his desk.Â
âThree hundred and twelveâ Charlie corrected. âYou said you were alrightâÂ
âNo, I am.â Larry assured âI was talking about my application for the Talis Foundation Research GrantâÂ
âWhy are you worried about that?â Charlie asked.Â
âYeah werenât you just bragging yesterday how you would smoke the competition and theyâd be fouls not to choose you?â I asked.Â
âI was but now Ivan Tsgorski has taken over the chairmanship of the grant committeeâ Larry explained coming over.Â
âYou attacked his theory on polarization flux,â Charlie pointed out.Â
I winced âoh thatâs not goodâÂ
âI merely pointed out certain characteristics of gravitational waves that he had chosen to ignoreâ the physicist defended.Â
âLarry I was there when he gave that paperâ Charlie reminded âand you stood up and you called him a big, fat cheater in front of a room full of peopleâÂ
I gaped up at the older professor âyou did not?!âÂ
âWell, no. Now youâre exaggeratingâ Larry objected âthat room could not have been more than half fullâÂ
I scoffed in amusement at this discovery. âMight we get back on task?â Charlie interjected. âAnd you back to your homeworkâ he peered over his desk at me.Â
âYouâre no fun Uncle Câ I pouted.Â
âCome on, that essay isnât going to write itself, meanwhile we have to solve a caseâ Charlie decreed, looking to Larry.Â
âAll right, okay,â Larry muttered, rubbing his face with the palm of his hands as he plopped into the seat in front of Charlieâs desk. âthe money, the money, the money. The money is not where we thought it would beâÂ
âIt should show up in the companyâs cash flow statements, after the fraudulent transactionsâ Charlie explained as I attempted to focus on my mind numbing essay.Â
âYou know all these funds, they would have been transferred electronically, correct?â Larry voiced.Â
âI imagine so,â Charlie agreed.Â
âElectronic transactionsâ Larry stood up as he continued âhave no mass and cannot be constrained in the manner of physical objectsâÂ
âBut they are bound by time, Larry,â Charlie pointed out. âAnd time only flows one wayâÂ
âPlease do not start a philosophical debate right now I am already bored out of my mindâ I warned my uncle as the physicist wandered over toward the doors. Uncle Charlie sighed and gave me a look before Larry once again called our attention.Â
âAre you aware you have standing water in this corner?â Larry asked, crouching down at the space between the two doors.Â
âI know about the leakâ Charlie muttered with annoyance âI called maintenanceâÂ
âAnd?âÂ
âAnd theyâve got to tear out the wall and find the source of the leakâ Charlie explained getting up while I craned my neck to see what Larry was up to. I saw him pull up the carpet in the corner. âWhat is with you today Larry? All I ask is for a little focus. Now what are we missing?âÂ
âPatienceâ I muttered under my breath and Charlie let out an exasperated breath.Â
âWhat are you doing?â he pestered the physicist who pulled out a pen.Â
âFinding the leak,â Larry stated, snapping the pen and pouring the ink into the puddle.Â
âWell, youâre making a messâ Charlie stammered as I got to my feet and came over to look over his shoulder.Â
âWell by staining the currents we can observe the ink spread out on the pooled water,â Larry explained âand then figure out the flow patternâ we watched the ink move in the water drifting closer to the wall âand once we know how it flows⊠yeah, you see?â he pointed âitâs not coming down from the wall. Itâs coming up from the floorâÂ
âThatâs cool Larry,â I commented.Â
âThatâs itâ Charlie muttered âweâre missing the flowâÂ
_________________
I headed into the house quickly and was met with a lot of FBI. âWhat happened?â I asked, approaching my uncle and father.Â
âDanielâs missing,â Don quickly informed.Â
âWhat!?âÂ
âItâs okay, Mr. Eppes. Weâre gonna find himâ Megan was reassuring Gramps as she entered the room with him.Â
âI went into the kitchen to get a couple of cans of soda for us.â Alan explained âhe was standing over there, right by the tableâ Gramps pointed past me and Charlie as Don raised his hands to try and calm his father down. âHe couldnât have gotten awayâÂ
âItâs not your fault. So could you please just calm down?â Don asked as me and Charlie headed over to the table.Â
âI would have seen him,â Alan insisted.Â
âYou're not helping the situation Dadâ Don sighed.Â
I looked at the table that pretty much only held a phone and a couple magazines âcould he have made a call?â I suggested.Â
âLetâs see,â Charlie muttered, picking up the phone and hitting redial.Â
 âHey, Don, give me a second.â Granger called while walking in, my father turned and spotted Charlie on the phone. âI just talked to David. He said he found something in the Syntel employment records.âÂ
âHold on,â Dad ordered his agent and then turned to his brother who was now talking to the person on the phone âCharlie, you got to keep the line clearâ then turned back to his agent âsay what?âÂ
âOkay can you hold on a secondâ Charlie muttered into the phone then looked to Don âDad said he saw him here. I hit redial. Itâs National Cab Company.âÂ
âCab? Why the hell would he take a cab?â Gramp questioned.Â
âRunning away?â I asked in confusion.Â
âAll right, Iâm on the cab.â Granger declared heading out of the room.Â
âTell me if you get anything,â Don told him, his eyes lingering on me for a moment before a thought occurred to him and he jumped into action. âMegan, come with me. I think I know where he is.â with that he was heading from the house.Â
âI hope heâs alright,â Alan muttered.Â
âMe too Grampsâ I agreed.Â
______________
I waved alongside Charlie and Alan as Daniel waved goodbye from next to Don. âI liked the kid, shame he has to goâ I muttered.Â
Alan hummed âyes well the next stray we pick up you can look afterâÂ
Charlie scoffed âadmit it you liked having him aroundâÂ
âYeah wellâ Alan sighed âhaving someone young in the house was a nice change of pace I supposeâÂ
I smiled as we watched Daniel give my father a hug. Don passed the boy off to a flight attendant at the door to the airport waving goodbye. âWhat?â he asked with a chuckle as he rejoined us.Â
âMy hope for grandchildren has been rekindledâ Alan decreed and I gave him a look.Â
âWhat am I chop liver?âÂ
âGrandchildren who I get to enjoy before they become angsty teenagersâ Alan replied.Â
âAhâ I scoffed.Â
âDonât start dad.â Don complained.Â
âIâm not making a formal request, Iâm simply saying it would be niceâ Gramps explained.Â
âCome on,â Don muttered.Â
âDad you do realize how long the odds actually are for this man?â Charlie joked.Â
âCharlie, whatâs your problem, huh?â Don defended quickly as he pulled me into a side hug âI already contributed. You got nothingâÂ
âWow now Iâm a bragging pointâ I muttered sarcastically.Â
âWell, given your dating patternâ Charlie argued âor absence of a dating pattern-âÂ
âLook, I wouldnât talk if I were you, buddyâ Don countered.Â
âIâm crunching numbers, kidâÂ
âOh yeah?âÂ
âStatistically Iâm on course to be way ahead of you in the stable family environment for offspringâÂ
âYeah, yeah, makes sense youâre olderâ Alan agreed as my father released me and we started walking.Â
âI donât see siblings in my futureâ I muttered jokingly. âWell anymore planned onesâÂ
âHey, keep it upâ Don muttered pulling his keys from his pocket âitâs a long walk homeâÂ
Me, Alan, and Charlie all exchanged a look and bit our tongues following my father to the parking lot.Â
The American conservative âadvocates for parental rights in schoolsâ known as Moms for Liberty have been busy working on making sure your children are protected from things like critical race theory (CRT), and any talk about gender identities (and...
Fuck love at first sight, give me friends at first sight. Maybe it's the instant recognition that whatever you have going on in your head, the person in front of you has the same stuff. It can be the spark of connection, the mirrored smile from opposite sides of a room, the companionable silence in a library, the shared boredom at a train station, the startled laugh that brings that warm, fuzzy, pleased satisfaction in the person that caused it. The joining forces for a shared objective despite being strangers, the lending a hand in the right moment, or maybe it's someone else making in the introductions, connecting two people that until now lived in close but separated quarters. There are a thousand ways to fall into a new friendship. Friendship at first sight. Adopting another person to be a part of your life, for who knows how long. Sharing a bus ride. Reading the same book and talking about it on the internet. Looking at someone and realising once again: "oh, we could be friends." Incredible.
âWhen you said that you purchased a new car, this isnât exactly what I was picturingâ Charlie pointed out as we approached Larryâs new classic.
âI donât think any of us were,â I murmured.
âOh, I know.â Larry said, rubbing his face with his hands âI guess it was a little impulsive of me, right?â
âVery Chitty Chitty Bang Bangâ Amita commented.
âNice car, Dr. Fleinhardtâ we turned at the new voice to see Megan approaching. âIs it new?â
âWell, only in the sense that itâs newly in my possessionâ Larry explained.
âAnd itâs like, a â32?â the agent inquired.
âUh â31, actuallyâ the professor corrected. âDawn of an amazing decade: F.D.R., Jesse Owens, Diracâs prediction of antiparticles.â me, Amita, and Charlie exchanged looks as the man continued to speak âYeah, our souls were rekindled.â
âI canât help but see it as 70-year-old technology,â Charlie stated as Megan went around the other side of the vehicle to get a better look.
âWhat? Do you have no sense of nostalgia?â I asked.
âYes, but also one of practicalityâ my uncle objected.
âYouâre just jealous because you canât drive a stick shift,â Larry told Charlie with a grin.
âHey you canât beat automatic transmission with cruise control.â Uncle C stated.
âCharlie tells us youâre looking for Skylar Wyattâs stalker.â Amita spoke to Megan before I could get my next sarcastic comment out.
âYeah, her security video didnât pick up his image.â the agent explained âand I understand that camera placement is done by math formulas? Well, whoever designed it probably isnât as good as you, so maybe youâll find something they missedâ she handed Charlie a disc.
âLarry, a more modern pursuitâ Charlie declared.
âOkayâ Larry chuckled, following Charlie off toward his office.
_____________
I chopped down on another spoonful of cereal as I read my book sitting cross-legged in a chair by the window. âChvatalâs Art Gallery Theorem?â Charlie proposed.
Larry ripped a piece of tape off with his mouth as he stood up. âThat would assume a simple polygon, though, wouldnât it?â he pointed out.
âPolygonsâ Charlie grumbled.
âWowâ Alan exclaimed coming into the dining room from the kitchen âI was wondering why we had no cereal left or anything else that was in the cupboardâ
âI didnât let all of it go to wasteâ I pointed out, holding up my bowl so Gramps could see it.
He nodded slightly, his eyes on the cardboard structure Larry and Charlie had constructed on the table. âWhat in the world..â
âI needed the cartons,â Charlie explained. âweâre building a replica of Skylar Wyattâs house. Weâre checking the positioning of her security cameras for a blind spot.â
âWhy didnât you just go to the house and use that?â Alan inquired.
âWell, as part of this test, we need to be able to manipulate these walls so as to determine what types of angles would be possible under different scenariosâ Charlie informed. âThatâll help us calculate these potential blind spots.â
âAnd for some reason, they wonât let us move the walls of the actual house,â Larry muttered.
âHow inflexible of them,â Alan quipped looking over the replica.
âLike you could even move the wallsâ I muttered around a bite of cereal turning the page of my book.
âWhat is, uhâ Alan walked around Larry to the other side of the replica âwhat are those?â he pointed to two little black marks on the board.
âThatâs where the FBI found two footprints,â Uncle C answered.
âAh. What conclusions have you come up with?â Alan asked.
âPolygons are annoyingâ I offered sarcastically as Charlie shook his head.
âFor some reason,â Larry said, picking up one of the clips that was supposed to be a camera, âwe have too many cameras.â
âThatâs probably because neither one of you can read a blueprintâ Alan muttered. Heading over to where the blueprints were stacked and putting on his glasses. âLet me just take a look at this.â his eyes bounced from the replica to the blueprints for a moment ânow, you see here, you got the slide door in the wrong place, and the dimension of the parapet is wrong. Itâs too high. Let me fix it for you.â he picked up a pair of scissors and started cutting.
âI-I feel like Iâm in the fifth grade againâ Charlie scoffed âremember, uh remember, Dad, when we did that show box thing?â
âYeah, the diorama,â Alan agreed.
âRight,â Charlie smiled.
âOf Lincolnâs Gettysburg Addressâ gramps explained. âYeah, your mother and I were so happy to be able to help you out with anything school-related that you conned us into doing the whole thing for youâ
âI- hey! What are you..? I helped calculate the aspect ratios so we could get the depth effect rightâ Charlie objected.
âYeah, and certainly aspect ratios were the key to perhaps the greatest oratory ever writtenâ Larry muttered sarcastically as I chuckled and Charlie waved a hand at him in dismissal.
âThere it is,â Alan declared, holding up the properly cut parapet. âRight sizeâ
âEvery entry and exit point seems to be covered in this arrayâ Charlie voiced looking the replica over âthe cameras should have seen himâ
âOkay, well forgive me if I seem overly reductive here, but how do we know anyone was actually in this house?â Larry questioned.
âWell, you had that celebrity, right?â Alan pointed out âshe said she saw himâ
âPeople can lie,â I cautioned.
âRight. But there are also these footprints, guys.â Charlie objected. âI mean, this isnât, uh, Sasquatch.â
âMust be something wrong with the cameras,â Gramps declared.
âHacked? Or bad maintenance?â I suggested.
âThey were all functioningâ Charlie informed, putting his hands over his head and beginning to pace around the table.
âWell, maybe, thereâs something wrong with the way they function.â Alan muttered.
âOkay, letâs remember: the human eye can only detect color within a certain narrow range of the spectrum. Now a camera, which replicates the ability of the human eye, is just as limited if not more so.â Larry mused.
âYouâre rightâ Charlie declared leaning down âthe cameraâs an eye and eyes donât see everythingâ
âSo instead of Sasquach a ghost?â I asked sarcastically as I took another bite of cereal.
____________
âYouâve got to drive it more Larryâ Amita stated as me, her, and the guys walked through campus. âI mean, you just take it to campus then bring it homeâ
âThat car deserves the open road, Fleinhardt.â Charlie agreed.
âAnd itâll make you look cool driving down the streetâ I pointed out.
âBut the very thought of staining that perfect finish with sooty exhaust,â Larry objected âexposing it to the negligence of some Humvee driver on a cell phoneâ
âAll right, Larry, itâs a carâ Uncle C insisted âItâs whole function is to transport you from point A to point Bâ
âSee, this is the philosophical schismâ Larry declared âbetween a student of applied science and a student of the cosmos. For me aesthetic beauty is its function enough.â
âOr thatâs just the excuse of a nervous physics professorâ I quipped from the other side of my Uncle who chuckled slightly.
âWell, the aesthetic beauty of the sun is that it works,â Amita pointed out ânot just that itâs brightâ
âHell of a pointâ Charlie agreed as we approached the car in question.
âWell, maybe itâs more art than a machine,â Larry suggested leaning on the vehicle.
âYeah and artâs meant to be displayedâ I stated.
âHey, Meganâ Amita called in greeting and I turned to see my fatherâs partner approaching.
âHey, guys,â she replied.
âHey. Uh, youâre here for the photo enhancement.â Charlie inferred âitâs um itâs still, you know, enhancingâ he stammered.
âNo, Iâm here for FISHâ she replied.
âThe aquatic creature or handwriting analysis thing?â I asked with a slight smirk.
Charlie chuckled lightly putting a hand on my shoulder âIâm positive sheâs referring to the Forensic Information System for Handwritingâ he then turned back to her however Meganâs gaze was fixated on Larryâs car âAll Iâll say is that I helped develop an algorithm for the secret service, uh, based on segmentation, or writing elements, that are considered to be in isolation, such as whole words or words separated by pen lifts-â
She held up a hand, her attention returning to the mathematician âat the moment, weâre not having a lot of luck with it.â Megan explained.
âYeah, Iâve always thought that we missed something in the development of the softwareâ Charlie informed âso Iâm going to take another crack at it. What do you say?â
âI thought youâd never ask,â Megan murmured. She handed over a stack of papers sheâd been holding âthanks Charlieâ she then headed over to the car to give it a look as I craned my neck over my Uncleâs shoulder.
He quickly shifted the papers away from me âoh come on Uncle C Iâm just lookingâ I complained
âMaybe but with you Just looking normally turns to just tinkering and then just tinkering becomes just helping and just helping turns into Don mad at meâ Charlie grumbled.
âHey well itâs not like he can ground youâ I muttered.
_________________
I finally finished setting up my new laptop with a happy sigh leaning back on the couch. Gramps had bought me it for a late birthday present. Heâd figured Iâd need one for school now that I was in college. It definitely helped. The reason it was late was because he had to get Amitaâs advice on which was the best. I was very happy with the choice.
I was jogged from my thoughts by a knock on the door. I closed my laptop and got up. Charlie and Gramps were both in the garage right now so it was up to me to get the door. I opened it and was somewhat surprised to see a man standing there in a suit with short dirty blonde hair.
He looked equally as surprised to see Iâd answered the door âuh, is this the Eppes house?â he asked.
âYeahâ I replied hesitantly âwho are you?â
âUh,â he reached in his pocket and pulled out his wallet. âAgent Colby Granger I work with Don he sent me over to check on Charlieâs work see if heâs got anythingâ
âOh okayâ I murmured, getting a good look at the badge before allowing him in. âHim and Gramps are in the garage. Iâll show youâ I closed the door behind us and started leading him through the house.
âSo, uh, who are you again?â Granger inquired.
âIâm Abby. Donâs daughterâ I informed him.
âDon has a kid?â Granger muttered in shock as we exited the back door.
âObviouslyâ I replied. Showing him into the garage. âUncle C we got a visitorâ I announced, leading Agent Granger into the garage.
âCharlie, heyâ Granger greeted my Uncle with a smile and handshake then turned to Gramps âMr. Eppes, nice to see you.â
âWell heyâ Alan exclaimed in greeting.
âSo Don sent me down here to check and see how the handwriting analysis was going,â Granger informed.
âI was just telling my father that we failed to have the FISH program take into account that the shape of an individual letter varies depending on where itâs place in a wordâ Charlie explained âyou write and âOâ different;y is thereâs an âSâ placed in front of it Accounting for that, I found some interesting things out about these letters that we didnât expectâ Charlie lead the agent over to one of his chalkboards as I cleared a little space and hopped up to sit cross legged on the desk in the center of the room next to my grandfather.
âAll right, what was that?â Granger asked.
âHey, look at thisâ Gramps spoke up before the agent could get his answer âthis letter was an originalâ he pulled a pink piece of paper from a stack on the desk âHey, Charlie, they let you handle actual evidence?â
âGive that to meâ Charlie snapped quickly.
âWait, there shouldnât be originals,â Granger objected, âyou should only have copies.â
âActually, thatâs not one of Skylar Wyattâs letters,â Charlie explained.
âYeah, I know. Itâs addressed to youâ Alan said.
âThen why did you ask if it was evidence?â I inquired but went ignored.
âIs that lavender I smell?â Gramps asked, sniffing the card.
âYes, lavenderâ Charlie muttered uncomfortably, plucking the card from his fatherâs hands.
âNice, Charlieâ Granger chuckled then his phone rang. âI got to take this, I'll be right backâ the agent shuffled out of the room.
âSo whoâs it from?â Alan inquired.
âI hope not anybody I knowâ I muttered. Then thought about it for a minute âunless itâs Amitaâ
âWho the hell knows?â Charlie exclaimed exasperatedly âitâs not signed.â
âNot signed?â Alan questioned âsince when does a college professor receive anonymous fan letters?â
âYou kidding?â Charlie asked, seeming a little surprised at the question âRichard Feynman was a stud. He got marriage proposals by the dozen. Einstein was a true sex symbol.â
âCharlie, donât you think thatâs from Amita?â Alan inquired.
âThatâs what I want to know,â I declared.
âActually, um, noâ Charlie admitted âbecause I already compared it to her writingâ
âOhâ me and Alan both exclaimed in annoyance.
âSo the old FISH system is inefficientâ Grange spoke up, getting off his phone âbut it kicked out a name, Lawrence Pike. His handwriting matches the stalkerâsâ
âOkay, thatâs all good but-â
âBut the problem is this guyâs been in jail in Utah for the last three monthsâ Granger cut Charlie off âso he canât be the stalkerâ
âWhich is exactly what I was about to tell youâ Charlie explained âthe same person did not write all of these lettersâ he walked around the desk again leading Granger back to the chalkboard theyâd started at âmy analysis say thereâs a first writer and a copycatâ
_________________________
âI canât retrofit a 1931 car with seat belts,â Larry objected.
âWhy not?â Alan asked.
âBecause itâs not authentic to the period,â Larry explained as we walked through the school campus.
âWhat I meant was, itâs authentic to this periodâ Alan pointed out.
âItâs totally physics Larryâ Charlie stated âI mean, without a seat belt, you could get hurt even in a minor accidentâ
âCar accidents shouldnât be taken lightlyâ I declared, trying to keep my voice light.
âAbby is rightâ Alan agreed placing a reassuring hand on my shoulder âyou could get badly hurtâ
âLook, if I'm in an accident in that car, I hope I donât survive,â Larry declared.
âWell isnât that a bit dramaticâ I scoffed. Swallowing the small lump in my throat and infringing memories.
âLook, itâs a love affair, me and that carâ the physicist explained âwith affairs of the heart you know, sometimes common sense gets thrown out the window.â
âYeah, or through the windshieldâ Alan muttered. I shifted uncomfortably and he shot me a concerned look.
âHey, speaking of affairs of the heart,â Larry redirected the conversation thankfully onto Charlie âdid you ever find out who sent you that anonymous note?â
âOh, yeah, I was wondering about that.â Gramps agreed.
âStudent or teacher?â I asked curiously.
âNo, not yet,â Charlie muttered.
âI think we should run a handwriting analysis against the schoolâs records office,â Larry suggested.
âYou know what? Iâve decided I donât need to knowâ Uncle C declared.
âOh, yes, you do,â Alan objected.
âWhoever it was they chose not to sign it,â Charlie explained âmaybe because theyâre just not ready to tell me.â
âWell, I think thatâs very wiseâ Larry murmured âlet your life retain some mysteryâ
âYeah, or the poor student forgot their name and thinks you're ignoring them nowâ I muttered pessimistically which earned me a look from my uncle.
âYeah. Besides, you havenât figured out what to do with the girl you already know aboutâ Alan pointed out. We all nodded before continuing our walk down the path.