Saturday, August 31, 2013

Carbon and Steel

Carbon and Steel

A thick blanket, or rather, a thick carpet of smog covered the entire ground level of New Quebec. Stacked atop the carpet was layer after layer of thick, purplish exhaust, reaching up for hundreds of feet. Only the lower classes and degenerates lived in those places, and only with the assistance of lung re-breather implants. Higher still was the Autoroute. Here, motorists piloted their flying automobiles through crowded airways, sending cascades of exhaust down to the lower levels. The Autoroute itself, even though it technically is only empty space, hummed as if it were alive, and glowed from the shimmering neon and xenon lights on the storefronts. Bright blues, and dark yellows, shapes and splotches, a stained glass still image of the human condition. In fact, the image was rather still around 15 PM. That’d be the rough equivalent of 9 PM Earth time. Gridlock.
“Move it! C’mon,” a motorist shouted into a device that broadcasted his voice outside of the vehicle. Though he was airborne, hundreds of feet above the ground, he had a relaxed posture in his seat, one hand on the steering orb, seat slightly reclined, his other hand dangling a cigarette over the disposal unit. In the co-motorist seat lay a dark brown duffel bag. On the navigation system, a gently pulsing lime green dot lay between the intersections of Chêne and 35th and Genévrier and 35th. He was currently on Genévrier and 26th, and the package needed to be delivered within the half hour.
At that moment, a woman, beautiful and devastatingly so, exited a small diner, snatching off her apron, and tossing on her overcoat. The sidewalk she stood on was a glorified taxi stop, and stopped at every intersection with a sudden drop hundreds of feet to the ground. In New Quebec, no one enforced the rules about jaywalking. It more or less enforced itself. She raised her hand, waving for a transport of some kind.
“Hey, buddy,” the motorist shouted, as a taxicab tried to merge into his lane directly ahead of him. “What are you doin’?”
“‘Eh screw you,” he shouted back. “I got a family to feed.” However, he didn’t quite have enough room to merge, leaving his vehicle at an askew angle inside of the gridlock. The motorist threw his hands up and looked to his right. He saw a woman, the one who hailed the taxi. Inspired by her beauty, and irritated in equal parts, he extinguished and stowed away his cigarette, and spoke into his communicator device.
“Hey, lady,” he started. “I don’t know what his fare is, but I’ll get you where you need to go, and for half the price.” The woman looked at the motorist’s vehicle, an old, antiquated, but still sleek and shimmering machine before she made her response. She approached the vehicle, and the motorist rolled down the window.
“This heap of metal isn’t going to fall apart with me in it, is it?” she asked first. The motorist was hurt to his soul, but he decided to let it go, seeing as how she was both attractive and about to pay him.
“Of course she won’t,” the motorist said. Now, the taxi driver was looking back in his rearview camera feed, wondering what had happened to his customer. With a smile, the motorist tossed the dufflebag in the back seat, before opening the door for the woman.
She hesitated for a second, feeling as if there was a chance this could be a very bad idea. Then she remembered how poor she was, and how much she needed to save every  crédit.
“I’m Charlotte,” she said, as she sat down in the smooth leather.
“No merde,” the motorist asked, more like a statement. It was a very Old American style of swear, and it didn’t sound quite as casual as he liked.
“Excuse me,” Charlotte asked. The motorist had a brief panic, due to the door still being open, and the taxi still being present. She could easily walk away from the whole deal still. He composed himself before speaking.
“Sorry. Just caught me off guard. My name is Charles,” he said. She smiled with her thin tired lips and shut the door. “So, where are you headed tonight, Charlotte?”
“3362 Bonhomme Parkway,” she said. “I know it’s in the opposite direction that you’re heading now. Will that be fine, Charles?”
“Of course,” he replied. “Also, call me Chuck.”
Chuck pressed the clutch and switched the vehicle into a higher gear. He nudged the accelerator, and scooted forward, sliding into the gap that the taxi created with his clutzy maneuver.
“Chuck,” Charlotte started. “What are you doing?” Chuck didn’t respond. He needed total focus for what he was about to do. He turned the machine so that it’s hull pointed towards the sidewalk. A devilish grin appeared on his face as he tapped the accelerator once more, climbing over the curb and onto the sidewalk.
“Chuck, this is insane!” Charlotte spoke. “I’m not in a rush!” Still, he didn’t respond. He wished he could at least say something to calm her nerves, but he knew better. Even a second with his eyes not glued to the monitors could mean a tragic accident. With solid ground under the vehicle, Chuck allotted extra power to the vertical thrusters, causing it to rocket into the air about 20 feet. Charlotte panicked and felt around for her seatbelt, which she had neglected to put on.
“Now, here comes the tricky part,” Chuck said, smiling with only his mouth. While high above the Autoroute, he spun his hands around the steering orb frantically, trying to put the machine in the right vector. He needed to merge back into traffic from above, a feat which seemed impossible and idiotic to even try.
“Alright. Just gotta merge back in, and we’ll be on our way,” Chuck said, with undertones of panic in his voice. Charlotte only stared at him, thinking that she had just gotten into a car with a maniac. Presently, a red light began to flash from under the dashboard, and the turbines began to lose their RPM. A pinging sound, shrill but musical, came from the same place.
“Damn it, Arke,” he said. “Too soon.” They began to lose altitude quickly. From below, a city bus had a persistent shadow looming over its roof. Gawkers began to notice the vehicle starting to feather down out of the air, straight for the bus.
“Pretend you didn’t see this,” Chuck said. He reached down and pulled out a small, pentagonal shaped box with a tube in the back it that went further back under the dashboard. He inhaled deeply and blew into it.
“Is that what I think it is,” Charlotte asked. The pinging sound stopped, as did the flashing light. Chuck put the box back and pulled back hard on the pitch column, making the car float gently over the bus. Charlotte looked at Chuck, wide-eyed and frightened.
“What? I’m completely sober,” Chuck said. He tapped the display of light lime green letters that read, “.001”.  Her face didn’t change. “I am! That’s from mouthwash, I promise.” He laughed, and put his eyes back on the road. There was a break in the traffic; a teen looked down for a second to check a holo-mail message from his sweetheart. Chuck pointed the hull down, and pounced on the spot like a falcon, surprising the teen, as well as every passenger in every vehicle adjacent. This lane of traffic was leaving the heart of the city, and therefore less congested.
“Atta girl,” Chuck congratulated, patting the dashboard firmly. Charlotte exhaled softly and looked herself up and down. Then she looked back up at the road and smiled. The two drove a few streets in silence, hearing nothing but the soft whir of the Autoroute. Chuck’s gaze, as it methodically went over the road ahead again and again, was intense and pervasive. Instead of focusing on one point like radiation from a laser, all of the world in his vision seemed to sweat and melt like hot wax. Here was a man, full of such mystery, Charlotte thought.  
“Earlier, you called the car a name,” Charlotte stated. “Ark? Arka? What was it?”
“Her. I called her Arke,” he responded, smiling like a proud father.
“Where’s that from? It sounds...” she began. Chuck cut her off.
“Greek. Arke was a messenger goddess.”
“How come I’ve never heard of...”
“She’s the sister they don’t like to talk about up in Olympus,” Chuck explained. He had a way of speaking from the corner of his mouth, while keeping his eyes on the road ahead. “I’m sure you’ve heard of Iris, and Hermes too. But there was a third, and her name was Arke.”
“What’s her story,” she asked. Chuck turned the corner before speaking again.
“Well, when the gods of Olympus went to war with the Titans, Arke...Well she picked the wrong side.”
“She fought alongside the Titans?” Charlotte asked. Chuck nodded.
“Not a bad choice. Just a wrong one. Who would have known? Anyway, long story short, she was locked up with the rest of the titans in Tartarus.”
“Interesting choice in names,” she responded.
“Oh, no, I didn’t name her. I only rescued her,” he said smiling slyly.
“From where,” she asked. “Some kind of car prison?” Chuck didn’t respond. He only kept driving.
“You’re not going to tell me, are you,” she asked.
“Nope.” The conversation ended like closed case. Chuck looked over, and he noticed Charlotte fishing through her satchel. She pulled out a tablet, and unlocked the screen, revealing a massive wall of numbers and figures.
“You’re at l'université?” he asked, using a slight uptown accent to try and sound more refined than he actually was.
“Dropped out,” was her reply.
“Really, now,” he said, genuinely surprised, but unsure of how to convey that in an unfamiliar accent.
“You don’t believe me,” she asked.
“That’s a loaded question if I’ve ever heard one,” he replied. “No, I have no reason to doubt you, but I’m still shocked. I generally assume that everyone I meet is a bit smarter than I am.”
“A bit,” she said, smiling. “I dropped out when I ran out of money. I couldn’t handle the debt.”
“What were you studying,” he asked. Ahead, firemen were attaching their hoses to a vapor hydrant.
Astrophysique,” she replied.
A small bakery on the corner of Pin and 17th exhaled sea-green flames. “Ooh, look at that,” Charlotte exclaimed.
“I hear that back on Earth,” Chuck started. “The flames were all yellows and reds.” The firemen hosed the flames down with an intense blast of water vapor, almost instantly extinguishing the blaze.
“I heard that too. They’re green here because of all of the copper in the air,” Charlotte responded.
“Thank you, Missus Rocket Scientist,” Chuck said with a smile.
“It’s Miss,”she began. “And it doesn’t take a rocket scientist to know that.”
“To know what, that you’re not married?” Chuck replied, trying to place the conversation where he wanted it to be.
“To know what the atmosphere is made of.”
“Ah yes. That,” Chuck laughed. “Well, are you or aren’t you?”
Charlotte flushed red. “I’m not married. In fact I’m not even seeing anyone right now.”
“I meant, are you a rocket scientist,” Chuck replied, grinning like a fool. “But if you insist upon talking about non-universitaires, then by all means let’s talk about that.”
“Sneaky bastard,” she replied, refusing to smile, but failing miserably.
“Oh, you wound me,” he said. They turned into an intersection, and ahead, an entrance to the lower apartments. Chuck frowned at the sight.
“Don’t tell me,” he began. “You live in the smog?”  She nodded slowly.
“The only rent I can afford,” she replied.
“Normally, I wouldn’t try this so soon,” Chuck started, slowly approaching the entrance. He turned his full attention to Charlotte. “Voulez-vous venir prendre un café avec moi ce soir? This is unacceptable.”
“Wow,” was all she could respond before she burst into laughter. “You must be American.”
“Are you kidding me? Do you see what you live in?” Chuck started. “You’re literally shaving years off of your life!”
“How noble of you,” she began. “For you to ask me back to your place within literal minutes of meeting me.”
“That’s not fair,” he replied. “I only have honest intentions, I swear.”
“So you weren’t hoping for anything more,” she said, intentionally twirling her hair flirtatiously.
“I plead the 12th Tenant,” He said, kissing the crucifix around his neck. She glared at him, but not in an adversarial way. In fact, it was more conversational than anything.
“I’m not opposed to cruising around some more,” she said. “But you’ve got to slow your pony down, cowboy.”
“Slow down? During gridlock?” Chuck asked. “We’re lucky if we get to speed limit.”
“I wasn’t talking about the car,” Charlotte responded dryly. Chuck laughed.
“Forgive me,” he began. “I’m not a rocket scientist.”

They drove in silence again, yet this time it was almost intentional. They listened to the sounds of each other’s silence, all while the Autoroute hummed softly. Chuck, Charlotte noticed, always tapped his right index and middle fingers on the steering orb to the rhythm of his turning signal click. Chuck observed the way that Charlotte seemed to show appraisal things with a 3 tiered system of sighs. An arm of the close-by Orion nebula breathed on the sky, like a glowing, almost sentient splash of paint, only just now becoming visible from this side of the planet. Automatically, a special tint covered every window in the city  to deflect radiation.
“It’s already that late, huh?” Charlotte asked, already knowing the answer.
“That it is,” he said, nodding his head. “Listen, I need to drop this package off. It’s better if you don’t know what’s in it.”
Charlotte looked at the bag in the back seat, trying to guess what it could be.
“Don’t worry about it. It will be out of our lives in a minute,” Chuck said, turning a corner onto Chêne. Traffic was beginning to clear up now, and the drive was much quicker. Charlotte looked down, almost sad that her adventure was coming to a close. Chuck turned the vehicle into a garage at his destination. The screen in the dashboard came on, showing a squirrely looking man, sweating and almost shaking on camera.
“H-Hello?” he asked.
“It’s Chuck,” Chuck responded. “You alright, Dane?”
“P-p-peachy,” he said. Every few seconds, he would look out of the corner of his eye, up at something.
Chuck reached into the backseat, turning his whole body in order to speak. “It’s a trap,” he said, too quiet for the receiver to pick up. Charlotte tried to hide her panic as best as she could.
“Hey, Dane, you gonna be here tomorrow?” Chuck asked. “I can drop it off then. I just realized I forgot to activate my radiation blinds at home.”
“Msr. Reyer insists that you deliver it today,” Dane responded.
“How do you know?” Chuck asked. Dane looked up for a second.
“I just know,” he said. The second he spoke, the door to the garage closed behind the vehicle. Quickly, Chuck switched the motor off, knowing how quickly the tiny space would fill up with exhaust.
“I’m bringing it up now,” Chuck said, holding up the duffel bag. Then he turned to Charlotte and apologized. “Sorry you got mixed up in all this. Relax, I’ll be right back.” Then he left.
Charlotte sat in silence for what seemed like hours. The garage was tiny, built for one vehicle, and just enough space between the car and the wall to walk. She took the time to memorize every single aspect of the room. There were two cracks in the ceiling, stained sea-green, one severely deprived tool bench, a camera in the corner, and grease spills all over the ground. More time passed, and she felt the arms of sleep groping her inappropriately. She shook herself awake, only to be dragged off to sleep even faster. And then, there were gunshots.
“Huh, What?!?” Charlotte shouted herself awake. Chuck rushed out of the door, duffel bag in one hand, and an older model of the P3-79 handgun. He was followed by two muscle bound thugs, one of which had blood splattered, in a circular pattern, on his suit. Chuck threw the tool bench down to the ground in front of the door, making it difficult for the thugs to get past. Charlotte threw open the door, and Chuck dove in.
The keys were still in the ignition, which made getting away considerably less difficult. With one fluid motion, Chuck switched the vehicle on, sat up, and put it in reverse. He backed into the garage door and only dented it.
“Damn,” Chuck cursed.
“They’re getting in,” Charlotte pointed out. One of the thugs had his whole arm inside of the door. Smirking evilly, Chuck put the car in drive, and rammed the door, completely shattering bone and tearing up tendons. With more room to gain momentum, Chuck jerked the vehicle into reverse, and wrestled his way out of the garage, in a hail of sparks and exhaust. Now, the second problem,arose. The duo were backing  out into a busy road at a high speed, and there was no time to reverse thrust, and slow their velocity. What Chuck did was divert all available power to the vertical thrusters, making the vessel leap high above the Autoroute, and onto the roof of a building across the road. The police arrived, flying above the traffic, using the emergency lanes. In New Quebec, it was a crime to park on top of a building, and also, to pilot a vehicle outside of the designated lanes of travel. Not wanting to deal with the police, on top of angry thugs, Chuck whipped the antique around in a tight semi-circle, and rocketed off of the roof, completely clearing Érable and suddenly decreasing altitude in the alleyway. He switched off the engine, hoping that he wasn’t seen. It was more of a pipe dream than he would have liked, however; there were cameras everywhere. Charlotte was desperately clinging to her bag, staring ahead, and shivering.
“Now...I could let you out here,” Chuck began. “But you’re even farther away from your home than you started.” Charlotte didn’t respond, rather, she was totally unresponsive.
“Right...I’ll just drop you off, then?” Chuck asked. Still, no response.
“Well, off we go.”

Chuck merged back into traffic, almost seamlessly. It will always look a bit shady when one pulls out of a darkened alley, that’s just a fact of life. Within minutes,Charlotte came back to her senses. Still, she didn’t have much to say, only a few questions.
“What happened, back there?” she asked.
“They wanted to kill me, and take the cash. I had a better plan,” Chuck responded, calmly turning the wheel onto the next street. A pair of blazing blue lights from the prow of a police cruiser encroached the vehicle from behind, sending a wave of panic through Chuck’s bones. The red lights on the roof were not illuminated, so he knew that he was not being pulled over. Still, he always felt apprehensive when being approached by lawmen. He looked around, making sure he wasn’t doing anything illegal. As soon as was possible, Chuck turned off of the road, looking back in his rearview mirror, making sure he was not following. The officer kept straight, and the duo relaxed a bit.
“So,” Charlotte began. “What are you, some kind of criminal? Is this car full of drugs?” Of course, she was a bit frightened of Chuck, but her curiosity was much more potent than her fear.
“If I had drugs in here,” Chuck started. “I would not be on the Autoroute, during gridlock.” He hoped that this would make her relax a bit, which it did, to an extent. Then she realized that his answer was a very roundabout yes to the first question.
“So, you are a criminal, then?” she asked. He never took his eyes off the road, speaking from the side of his mouth, once more.
“Got involved with some bad people. Had to go to worse people to protect myself,” he said. There was no trace of pride in his tone. In fact, his voice was dreadfully somber with bits of shame.
“I see,” Charlotte said back. Chuck frowned, and spoke.
“What do you want to do most, in the world?” he asked. She gave it some serious thought for a moment.
“I think I want to build spacecraft, still,” she said. “Spacecraft saved humanity from extinction back on Earth, and I believe wholeheartedly that they will take us all back home, one day.” Chuck nodded at the statement, and they drove in silence for a while, heading to Charlotte’s home.
Lo and behold, parked in front of the entrance to the lower apartments was a large vehicle, the equivalent of an SUV, if they were ground vehicles. Standing outside of the vehicle, flanked on both sides by large, suit-wearing thugs, was an intense, stern looking man, face like a vulture.
Merde.. Msr. Reyer,” Chuck spoke. Now, Charlotte began to panic. Instinctively, Chuck rocketed his vehicle up into the air, and zipped right past Reyer and his entourage. The three piled back into their vehicle, and roared through the air after them.
Chuck banked a hard left, around a corner, onto a one way street, into oncoming traffic. 7 lanes of oncoming flying machines, city buses, and even a few hover bikes, in the bike lane. The large, bulky vehicle following them rounded the corner, almost capsizing at the sharp turn. Chuck weaved in and out of traffic, going through it, as if he were playing a game. There were foul words, horns honked, and middle fingers thrown up, however Arke and her passengers made it through, turning off at the first intersection, without any harm. Reyer’s motorist was skilled as well, but when piloting so much steel at such a high velocity, things do not go very smoothly.. There was a sound of tearing metal, coming from behind them. Chuck checked his mirror, to see Reyer’s vehicle still approaching, fast, scraped to Hell on both sides, and the windshields beginning to shatter.
“Broken windshields, huh?” Chuck asked aloud. Then, he pointed the nose of the vehicle down, submerging into the smog. With a broken windshield, one could not hope to survive extended time in the smog. The duo flew through the smog, turning down street after street, attempting to lose the other vehicle totally. After a few minutes, Chuck merged into traffic from below, a task just as difficult, if not more so, as merging from above. The sleek beauty of a vehicle rose from the smog, nose first, tendrils of smoke cascading down the sides. They were at the outskirts, now. New Quebec was situated in a very deep trench on the planet, and here they were, at the top of a plateau. A thin, unkempt paved road snaked out of the trench, out of the smog as well, leading out into the wastelands.
“Charlotte,” Chuck began. “In one evening, I believe I just ruined your life. So, here’s what I’m going to do.” She looked at him, recovering from her panic. Chuck reached back, and held up the duffel bag.
“Two-hundred million. This should cover your university costs,” he said. She raised an eyebrow at him. “One condition, though,” he began again. “They’ve seen your face in this city. You have to leave New Quebec, or you won’t be safe again.”
“But where should I g...” she started, but was cut off.
“Can you drive?” Chuck asked.
“Yes b-” she tried to start again.
“Follow this road to the next settlement. She’s got plenty of fuel, and there are more than enough rest stops. Start yourself a new life,” he said. Without waiting for a response, he opened the driver’s side door, and got out, onto the plateau. “I’ll deal with Reyer. You just have to leave. Now.”
“Are you kidding? He’ll murder you!” Charlotte exclaimed.
“Better me, than both of us. Now go,” Chuck spoke. She didn’t move an inch. Groaning, Chuck went to the car, one last time, and began typing away at his navigation system.
“What are you doing?” she asked. “Just get in, we can run away together!” He didn’t stop typing.
“They’ve got their bugs in my body. If I go with you, they’ll find us,” he spoke solemnly. He pressed a button, as Arke’s  voice spoke.
Pilote Automatique Embrayé.
Chuck slammed the door, giving her a smile with only his mouth. Charlotte looked on in terror as the vehicle zoomed off into the cold, broken wasteland.

 

Friday, June 7, 2013

Jimbeau

Jimbeau
                With every greedy gulp, and avaricious sip, Penelope felt that this case was getting nowhere, even slower. But it wasn’t her job to say that to Jimbeau. That’s not what she was hired for. The flask never strayed too far away from his lips, as if he were a noble crusader trekking through the wilderness on a quest to find the Holy Land, and his Holy Water was the only thing keeping him alive. However, not only was that a dramatization, Penelope thought, but it was also an extreme mistranslation.
                “We Parsons can hold our liquor,” he slurred out to Penelope. She was at the wheel, and the big red truck rolled through the town. None of the buildings in the town were any higher than 3 stories. Even the water tower, totally visible from any place in the town appeared to be short, as if no one in that town drank water, and everyone was just as much of a drunk as Jimbeau.
                “Well, now, don’t even gimme that look. You know I can hold my liq…” Jimbeau began, interrupted by a sharp hiccup.
                “’Beau, you’ve drank too much. I don’t want you to be intoxicated in front of our only lead, but it looks like we have no choi…” Penelope began.
                “Penny, girl, I done told you not to be usin’ them big words around me when I drink. I don’t even know what the hell you just sa…”
                “But, Jim you always drink.”
                “Exactly, sweetheart,” Jimbeau answered, chuckling. He reached over and tried to curl Penelope’s hair around his finger, but he missed horribly and accidentally stuck his finger in her ear. Used to these kinds of shenanigans, she smacked his hand down and said, “I’ll give you just this one warning, because I’m used to these kinds of shenanigans. Touch me again, and you’re gonna have a new hole to drink out of.”
                “Ooh feisty. I like it,” was Jimbeau’s reply. He was a bit more foreward than usual today.
                They pulled into the driveway of a trailer. There was a dog in the back, barking for attention, and a baby in one of the rooms by the window crying for the same thing. Penelope exited the car first. She brushed the dust off of her jeans, and examined her boots. The Magnum .357 in her holster bounced against her breast, reminding her of her empowerment. She put on her black blazer over her red shirt, and then removed her black, wide brimmed hat from the gun-rack in the back of the truck. She placed it on her head, and then put on her game-face.
                Jimbeau put his flask under his seat, and then stumbled out of the truck. He was also wearing jeans and a blazer, but his was far more wrinkled, and the white dress shirt under the blazer had sweat-stains in the armpit. He wore his .45 at his hip, and wore it out, brazenly so. His badge wasn’t visible however, which was probably due to the fact that he left it at home that morning.
                “Did you forget your damn badge, again?” Penelope asked.
                “It’ll be fine sweetheart. People know that I’m the law ‘round here,” he responded.
                “Whatever. Just let me do all the talking.”
                “Unh huh. Whatever you say, sweetheart.”
                She wished so hard that he wouldn’t call her sweetheart. She wished she could tell him, but that wasn’t her job. Penelope was not even an official officer of the law, like Jimbeau. She was a consulting private investigator on this case. Her job was to help Jimbeau.
A large woman came to the door, a small, crying baby clinging on to the top of her belly, and the flab on her back, confusing them both for breasts.
                “Are ’yall here for Jackson?” she asked, the motions of her lips being mimicked the motions of her chins. Her eyes were for the most part squinted shut.
                Penelope opened her mouth to speak but, “If you know where that summabitch is, you better start talkin, now, y’hear?” erupted from Jimbeau’s drunken throat. A bird in the bush flew away, startled at the volume, and the baby began to cry harder.
                “I don’t know where he is!! I swear,” her face sank back into her face-fat when she made the “s” sound, but then it emerged like a turtle when she made the “wear” sound.
                “And, We,” Penelope shot an irritated look at Jimbeau when she said we. “Believe you. We just have a few questions that we would like to ask…” she said, getting cut off again by Jimbeau.
                “And if I find out you’re lyin’ to me…” Jimbeau began.
                “Which I am certain wouldn’t happen. You appear to be reasonabl…”Penelope tried to cut him off.
                “Then you’re gonna find out what it feels like ta get jackslapped by the long arm of the law!”
                Penelope stomped on Jimbeau’s toe, making sure to use the heel of her boot. The woman was in tears, and together with her child, there was a big sloppy mess in the doorway, keeping them from their investigation. A man wearing old worn jeans, and paint covered shoes came around the corner inside of the trailer.
                “What the hell is goin on ‘round here?” he questioned.
                “Nothin’ Lester. Just go’n back to your Tv,” the soggy woman at the door sobbed out.
                “You givin’ my woman a hard time?” Lester asked, pointing his finger, trying to be intimidating.
                “No not at all sir. We are looking for your son Jackson. He is wanted for the kidnapping of a minor and also…” Penelope started to explain.
                “Oh, that summabitch? He stopped bein my son a long time ago. Gloria, move your haunches out of the doorway, before you get charged with obstruction,” Lester said, managing to disrespect his entire family in one fell swoop. Gloria moved out of the way, and the duo entered the trailer, Jimbeau walking in first, too drunk to remember his chivalry if he had any to begin with. All four of the adults sat around the living room, the couple on the sofa, and Jimbeau and Penelope on the loveseat. Before Penelope reached her seat, she looked down to see Jimbeau’s hand placed palm up on top of her seat, almost beckoning for her forbidden lady parts. She quickly flashed her .357 at him, too fast for the couple to see, but just long enough for Jimbeau to move his hand.
                “Now, tell me, when was the last time either of you saw Jackson, for any amount of time?” Penelope calmly asked.
                “I seen ‘im around the water tower the other night,” Gloria stated. Lester stayed quiet.
                “Was this before the 20th?” Penelope asked.
                “This was two days ago,” she said.
                “Did he have a girl with him? Probably wearing shorts and a pink tanktop? She would have had long brown hair, and blue colored sunglasses?”
                “Hell, I don’t remember, sweetheart. I had been drinkin’ because I just left the bar,” she said. Penelope cursed to herself.
                “But…I think he was with his friend Matt. I never cared for him much,” she said.
                “Do you know where Matt is now?” Penelope leaned on the edge of her seat to ask.
                “If he’s not home, he’s usually out at the hunting lodge, out past Old Mt. Dill Highway,” Lester finally piped in.
                “It’s the one on Truman Lake,” Gloria added.
                “Jackson and Matt spent a lot of time there, but I ain’t seen them with any deer yet,” said Lester. That set off a red flag in Penelope’s mind.
                “Thank you both so much. Jimbeau, did you get all that,” Penelope asked before turning her head. Jimbeau had fallen asleep. She kicked his calf with the back of her foot, and woke him up.
                “Hunh Wha, you got the right to remain silent…” Jimbeau rambled out.
                “C’mon. Let’s get you home…” Penelope said, her cheeks turning red. The duo stood up and retreated from the trailer.
                Penelope sat at her desk in her home office. She had her reading glasses on, going over all of the evidence they had found so far. She wanted to get this right. 21 year old Jackson Lee, conveniently named after two American heroes, was wanted for the abduction of Hailey Chandler, a 15 year old girl from the local high-school. Hailey was last seen leaving the campus early for a “doctor’s appointment.” That was the 20th at 1 PM.
                Jackson and Hailey were apparently dating, as vile as that sounds, and his car was spotted circling around campus at around 12 PM that day. That was the last sighting of either of them, until two nights ago, an entire week later, according to Jackson’s mother Gloria. “Matt is worth investigating, and also the hunting lodge,” Penelope thought to herself. She pulled out a notepad and wrote down questions that she had: Was this abduction or a child running away? How does Matt tie in? Where was Hailey two nights ago? The possibilities on the third question made her shiver. There was a sudden knock on her door.
                “Come in, honey,” she said, knowing exactly who it was. A small, toddler pair of arms hugged her from behind, as she tenderly reached her hand back to stroke the head of her small child. The guest’s name was Phoebe, Penelope’s daughter. She was the real reason why Penelope did all of this; the reason why she even joined on the case with Jimbeau. She knew full well what kind of perverts lived in the world, and she knew the fate of many young girls who grew up without a father. Penelope put her entire being into the goal of making the world a safe place. She was both father and mother to Phoebe, Phoebe’s father dying in the line of duty worlds away in the desert before she was even born. All Penelope had left of him was his daughter who looked exactly the same as he did, and all Phoebe had left of him was a last name and really nice aunts and uncles. Sometimes, Phoebe would make the faces that her father made all the time, leaving Penelope to wonder how she learned to make them. And sometimes, as if a Jungian gift from the shared consciousness, shining through her juvenile mutterings, Penelope’s husband’s very words would waft from Phoebe’s lips. Sometimes, they were not in the right order, or not in correct context, but still his words the same, three in particular, “I” and “Love” and “You.”
                “You just waking up, honey?” Penelope asked.
                “Yes ma’am,” she replied sleepily. She was wearing her favorite pajamas in the middle of the day.
                “How was the sitter?” Penelope asked in a slightly more serious tone.
                “We played a game, and then I went to sleep, after I drank her juice,” Phoebe spoke. Although her wording was totally innocent, Penelope’s eyebrow shot up.
                “What kind of game, sweetie?” she asked.
                “Hide and seek, mommy,” Phoebe responded, giggling.
                “What kind of juice?”
                “Apple, mommy,” Phoebe replied.
                Satisfied, Penelope said, “Ok honey. Well, go put on some play clothes. We’re going to play some catch later.
                “Yay!!” Phoebe shouted, dancing out of the room and into the hall. Penelope took off her glasses and closed her case notebook. She stood up and stretched her day away. She wished that Jimbeau would either rehabilitate or disappear. She felt like the drunken oaf was still hanging off of her shoulders, nibbling on her ears. As soon as she had shaken him off of her shoulders, she received a phone call from Jimbeau. The phone buzzed off of the desk, and landed on the ground. Penelope picked it up to answer it.
                “What is it?” she asked, irritated.
                “We found her,” he answered.
                “Oh well that’s good to know,” she said.
                “Well, not really, y’see, we found her body,” he replied gravely. Penelope hung up the phone and went directly to Phoebe. Seeing the seriousness in her mother’s face, Phoebe asked, “Did something happen?”
                “Mommy has to go save the world again, baby doll,” Penelope sadly stated.
                “Awww…Is the world never safe, mommy?” Phoebe innocently asked.
                “Of course it is honey.”
                “Then why do you have to save it all the time?”
                “Because…because there are bad people in the world honey, and it’s mommy’s job to find these people, and bring them to justice, so they can’t hurt you,” Penelope said. Phoebe’s head turned sideways as the cogs turned in her mind. Penelope leaned down and picked Phoebe up, into a hug. Then she began to sing Phoebe’s favorite song.
                “Mommy, what will happen if you die?”
                Penelope stopped in sheer horror at the thought, and also at the audacity of the question. She paused for a second too long.
                “Mommy?”
                “Um…well sweetie, I’m going to be around for a very long time, so don’t worry,” Penelope answered.
                “I read daddy’s last letter to you, and it said the same thing, mommy,” Phoebe responded, completely unaware of the weight of her words.
                “I…I don’t have an answer for you. If I do, you are going to go live with Grandma, but I promise you, that won’t happen anytime soon, okay sweetie?”
                “Okay mommy,” Phoebe responded. A silence passed. “Can I go to Grandma’s today?” she asked Penelope.
                “Sure you can honey. I was going to take you there anyway.”
                “Yay!” Phoebe exclaimed, hopping out of Penelope’s arms and doing her happy dance all the way down the hallway. Penelope made a mental note to lock up her husband’s letters until Phoebe was older.
                After Penelope dropped her darling daughter off at her own mother’s house, she made it to the crime scene. The body had been dumped in the droughted spillway, the neck sliced open, and one shoe missing.
                “Why dump here? It’s bone dry,” Jimbeau understated.
                “Because tonight, tropical storm Aaron is supposed to come,” Penelope said. “Even though, it was pretty stupid to dump in broad daylight with no water to wash it away.”
                Jimbeau took a sip from his flask.
                “You’re still drinking? Seriously, how much money would you save if you didn’t buy booze every weekend?”
                “I…” he hiccupped. “I only buy booze on Tuesdays, sweetheart.”
                Penelope’s head quickly declined into the palm of her hand. “Did you call forensics?” she asked Jimbeau.
                “No, I just called you here. I,” he hiccupped. “ I wanted to get a few minutes alone with you. So we could…you know…” he started advancing towards Penelope.
                “You’re a sick man! This girl is dead, and you didn’t…” Penelope started. Jimbeau leapt over the corpse and tackled Penelope down to the ground.
                “Don’t fight it, now. Jus’ let it happen, I’ll be the best you ever had,” Jimbeau whispered into Penelope’s ear. Enraged at the thought that he just inadvertently claimed a spot above her husband, Penelope brought a swift elbow to his neck. Jimbeau slapped her in the face, and then bit down on her neck, sucking on it. He tried to reach for her belt, but Penelope grabbed his hand and snapped his pinky.
                “Got Dammit!” Jimbeau shouted out in pain, before rolling off of Penelope. “You’re gonna pay for that, Bitch!” As he charged Penelope again, two guys walked up to the edge of the spillway, mid-conversation. One of them was Jackson, and the other one, Penelope presumed was Matt.
                “The man said that we could pick her up here…” Matt was saying.
                “Oh, God, no…no no no no…..Is that her down…yes it’s her!” Jackson began to exclaim. He ran back to the car, sobbing. Matt looked down at Penelope and Jimbeau. Jimbeau’s badge was clearly exposed.
                “Shit, we got cops. Get in, now!” he said, before running away.
                “Get your ass up, Jimbeau. We gotta catch ‘em,” Penelope said. Jimbeau didn’t reply with words. Instead, he grabbed at Penelope’s ankle and slammed her to the hard concrete. She covered her face before she fell. Jimbeau pulled out his handcuffs and tried to put them on Penelope. She bucked her hips and threw Jimbeau off of her, to the ground. Then she ran, and didn’t look back.
She ran to her car, started it up, and tried to chase after Jackson and Matt, but to no avail. She didn’t see where they were parked, what they were driving, or which direction they took off in. She decided to go to the lodge. She didn’t care that Jimbeau had just tried to rape her. She had too much adrenalin in her system. She put on her hat, checked her .357 and then floored it out of there.
                She drove into the back yard of the lodge out of site from the road, dust kicking up. Clouds were approaching in the distance, and ominous bolts leaping out like the spears of an angry God. Jimbeau had already gotten a search warrant for the place, which Penelope had long since taken into her possession. She removed a confiscated lock-pick from her pocket, and dexterously opened the door. No one was there, but she figured that if this was Jackson and Matt’s base of operation, then they would be on their way here anyway.
                Penelope walked into the main room, stepping on the bear rug, in front of the ash covered fireplace.
                “Lit fireplaces in a drought in summer? Interesting,” she said to herself. She looked at the coffee table, and saw wineglasses sitting on it. “Aha. This must be a love den,” Penelope said. She walked back into the bedroom next. The bed was neatly made and looked warm and inviting. She looked in the drawer beside the bed, and saw several boxes of condoms. She quickly closed the drawer. “But why murder her? They looked like they were getting along just….wait a second. No, they didn’t kill her at all. That would explain why Jackson ran away sobbing. Well, then, why did she…”
                Penelope looked out of the corner of her eye on the floor under the bed, and saw a bottle that read, “Adam and Steve’s ‘Anal Lube’.” A red flag popped up in her mind. She bent down, put on a pair of rubber gloves, and removed an evidence bag from her pocket. She lifted up the bed skirt, and looked underneath. Under the bed was a stack of Playgirl magazines, more condoms, and a rainbow bed quilt that looked like it had seen some use.
                “And the plot thickens,” Penelope said to herself. “I hate to judge, but this doesn’t look like a love nest between any man and woman I have seen in my life.” She couldn’t help but chuckle. This backwater town was so far behind, that the thought of having actual homosexuals in it was so foreign that it hardly ever crossed anyone’s minds. She stood back up and looked around on the other side of the bed. In the drawer in that side, there was a diary that read, “Matt’s.”
                Penelope began reading the latest entry, dated for the 18th. “Dear Diary, Jackson doesn’t look at me the way he used to, and he’s never had this much trouble getting up before. It must be that stupid high school girl that he started dating just to throw his parents off of our trail.”
                “Bingo,” exclaimed Penelope. She kept reading.
                “Maybe he’s actually gotten feelings for her now.” There was a break, but the entry continued that same day.
                “Dear Diary, I’ve found a ‘solution’ to my problem, but I don’t want to tell you too much ;) Let’s just say that if this works, we’re home free, but if it doesn’t…well it will just have to work.”
                Another red flag went off in Penelope’s mind. Before she could start talking to herself, the front door swung open. Penelope quickly slid the diary into the evidence bag.
                “They’re on to us, man! We gotta get the hell outta town now!” Matt’s voice said. Penelope stood around the corner, with her hands around the handle of her handgun. She wanted to hear how this would play out.
                “She…she’s dead man,” Jackson replied, sobbing.
                “Forget her. She’s just trailer trash, they come a dime a dozen. We gotta go!”
                “Watch your mouth! She was a good, Christian girl!” Jackson said back sharply.
                “’Cause good Christian girls sleep ‘round with guys 6 years older than them?”
                “That’s not fair! That was part of the plan!”
                “Was fallin’ for her part of the plan too?”
                “What are you…”
                “Oh don’t think I ain’t notice the way you looked at her, the way you held her in your arms after fuckin’ her, how much I had to fight you to get you to come back to bed, and leave her out by the fire.”
                “Are you jealous?”
                “No, I’m…no that’s not the point! The point is, you were cheatin’ on me with her!”
                “But it was a part of the plan!”
                “Maybe it was a bad plan!”
                “Maybe, but it was your plan! Which went horribly wrong by the way! She won’t supposed to die!”
                “Plans change,” Matt said. A red flag went off in Penelope’s mind right there. A lightning bolt struck a tree on the other side of Truman Lake, as she put her thumb over the safety. The second before she stepped around the corner, the front door flew open yet again. Jimbeau and three other officers burst in, brandishing handguns, aiming them on the two.
                Jimbeau said, “Jackson Lee and Matt Meadows, you are both under arrest for the murder of Hailey Chandler!”
                “But we ain’t kill her!” Jackson protested. Jimbeau began reading them their rights. Penelope was still around the corner, angered at Jimbeau for nabbing the wrong criminals. There was something deeper going on here, and Penelope felt the need to find out exactly what, in the name of justice. She remained hidden as Jackson and Matt were carried out. When she felt it was safe enough, she stepped out from behind the doorframe. The cars were driving down the road towards town.
                Penelope then walked into a room that appeared to be an office room. The only phone in the entire lodge, as well as the desktop computer, was housed in this room, both surrounded on all sides by piles of papers. Penelope leafed through the papers on the top of the stack.
                “Birthday lists…phone numbers…checkbook! Aha!” she exclaimed. She looked at the balance. The most recent charge was for 75 dollars, to the ABC store, probably for the wine. Before that was a huge debit of $745 to Rudy’s Repair Service.
                “Rudy’s Repair Service? Never heard of it. Interesting,” she said to herself, putting the checkbook in an evidence bag. Gravel in the driveway crunched under the tires of a heavy car. Penelope made a quick about-face, drawing her handgun in one solid movement. Jimbeau’s truck was pulling back in. Penelope put her gun down at her hip, because aiming your gun at an officer of the law is definitely a felony, but she still kept her hands on it. She quietly shut the door to the office.
                “I know you’re in here, li’l bitch, and I’mma tell you like this: Nobody say no ta Jimbeau,” He said. He had seen Penelope’s car earlier, and only pretended to leave. “Now, come on out here, and let’s have us a good ol’ time, and I might forgive you, baby.”
                “Hunted,” Penelope thought to herself. “Like a piece of meat. Well Jimbeau, your dinner hasn’t given up just yet.” She waited until Jimbeau was right in front of the door before she made her attack. She burst out of the door shouting. Jimbeau was so drunk, that he stumbled backwards several feet. Penelope bashed him across the head with her pistol, and knocked him out cold. Then she ran out into the storm. She hopped in the car, and drove away without looking back.
                Later that night, Penelope volunteered to be in charge of interrogating Matt.
                “You don’t want to wait for Jimbeau?” the chief asked.
                “Oh, he said earlier, that he needed to take a nap, but I’m sure he’ll be here soon,” Penelope responded, choking back laughter.
                “Okay then. Have fun in there,” he said.
                “I’m definitely going to have something, chief,” Penelope said before walking in.
                “When do I get my phone c…” Matt started. Before he could finish the sentence, Penelope tossed the journal and the checkbook on the table in front of him, waiting for his reaction to give him away. He looked at it wide-eyed, his brain already knowing the link between the two objects, then he looked up to Penelope. For five minutes, he tried his hardest to keep his composure.
                “You don’t know shi…” Matt began. His lawyer kicked his leg under the table.
                “Well then educate me, Matt. Help me understand,” Penelope said, trying to be both reasonable and stern. Matt only crossed his arms.
                “Okay then, I’ll be more specific. There is a young underaged girl with her neck sliced open, and a family who will never see their daughter again. Why?” she asked, circling around Matt like a she-wolf eyeing her quarry from the edge of the woods. His heartbeat and breathing rate both increased and he broke into a sweat.
                “Matt, I can be your best friend. I can be your angel, your savior right now. Or, if you would prefer I can be the lion in the pit that rips you apart while everyone you know and love sits in the stands and watches. Your life as you know it can be over tonight, if you don’t talk to me,” she said, while hovering over his ears. Matt began shivering, and quivering, starting from the knees and working up his spine. Penelope sighed quickly and walked to the other side of the table.
                “Do you know what they do to pedophiles and child murderers in jail, Mr. Jones?” she calmly asked him, while sitting down in the chair across from him.
                “I AIN’T DO NOTHIN’ TO HER!!” Matt shouted. Penelope looked down at the table and kept speaking.
                “If you’re lucky, they’ll just kill you in the first month or so, but if they decided to keep you around then…well hey, I don’t know. You might be into that kind of thing, right Mr. Jones?”
                “What are you sayin’,” Matt asked, deeply offended.
                “Let’s hope so, because they’re definitely going to be into you,” Penelope said, chuckling devilishly.
                “You watch your mouth! Just because I’m gay don’t mean that you can just go ‘round sayin’ shit like that!” he shouted. The 3 letter word dropped like a bomb in the room. Penelope wasn’t shocked at all, because she already knew, but Matt didn’t know that, and the lawyer was farthest out of the loop. She looked up wide-eyed and covered her mouth with her large right hand.
                “So, Jackson is your lover, is that correct?” Penelope asked.
                “NO!..Yes..I mean…He was…used to be my lover…but…” Matt started. The lawyer spoke up finally.
                “Too far, detective. Besides, we don’t have to take this from you. You don’t even have a badge!” she said. Penelope completely disregarded her and kept going.
                “He didn’t love you anymore?” Penelope asked.
                “No…He…” at this point, Matt started crying. “He fell in love with that trash…” Penelope got out of her seat and circled around behind Matt.
                “It’s okay, darlin’,” she began, her voice suddenly being sweetened with a few drops of southern honey. “So, Jackson starts cheating on you with her?”
                “No…not really…I guess so…yeah, he did. She was the escape plan, but she turned into the thing the held us here…” he cried.
                “This plan you keep referring to, what was it?” Penelope asked.
                “I…he…we were planning on movin’ away from this backwater place,” he began. “We were gonna move somewhere nice up north, but…we had a problem.”
                “What was the problem?” Penelope asked, going back to her seat.
                Matt continued. “We needed cash. Jackson’s dyin’ grandpa had the cash we needed to get outta here, but on his deathbed he said, ‘Not one red penny of my estate will be left to a faggot,’ lookin’ directly at Jackson. His whole family knew he was a little bit queer.”
                “Go on. What happened next?” Penelope asked.
                “We…Jackson and I decided to find him a mock girlfriend. Just until his grandpa kicked the bucket, you know?”
                “But he fell in love with her,” she asked.
                “It won’t supposed ta end like this….you know…at the beginning,” he shouted out.
                “Funny how that works, isn’t it?” Penelope said. “Something in your house needed…repairing, Matt?”
                He hiccupped, and cried harder. “He ain’t ever gonna love me again!”
                “The repairman. What did he fix?” she asked again.
                “My problem!” he said slamming his fists down on the table. “I couldn’t have her in the picture no more! If we skipped town, Jackson’s heart would stay here with her! So…I made a phone call…” he said.
                “A phone call to whom?” she asked. Matt stopped talking. That wasn’t enough to catch the assassin, but she was sure that the assassin and the repairman was the same person, which was enough for her. The great, grey angry clouds split open and the rain lightened up, but one last pillar of lightning slated the earth below, making the ground move with its thunder.
                The front door to the department flew open, and in came the clunking of two tell-tale steel-toe size 10 boots. “Right on time,” Penelope thought. Since she wasn’t the actual officer on the case, she couldn’t officially charge him, and nothing that Matt actually had said could be used against him in court. Jimbeau needed to be there in order for the law to be fulfilled.
                The door to the interrogation room flew open, and in sauntered a rain soaked and sautéed Jimbeau. He glared at the back of Penelope’s head with eyes red hot as pokers in a fireplace, but it didn’t faze her in the slightest.
                “Matt Jones, I’m settin’ you free, and droppin’ all charges against you. Jackson is the real criminal here,” Jimbeau spoke through anger and through liquor.
                “You’re doing what, Jimbeau?!?” Penelope frantically asked.
                “It’s obvious isn’t it? Jackson killed Hailey and tried to frame Matt here!” Jimbeau said back, to Penelope’s disgust. All of her hard work was about to be slurped right down Jimbeau’s liquor scarred esophagus.
                “Chief, back me up here! You heard the entire interrogation!!” Penelope shouted to the two way glass. The light flicked on in the other room to the chief sitting down with his hat brim over his eyes. He had been asleep the whole time. The lawyer jumped into action.
                “Matt! Not another word!” she said. Matt complied as a maniacal grin invaded his face, almost screaming, “Revenge.”
                “Look here, Penny, I don’t care what you think happened! I am the law around here, and my word is final!” Jimbeau shouted, virtually slapping Penelope in the face.
The case was lost, and there was nothing she could do at this point. Matt had confessed to a different crime from the one he was being charged for, and Jimbeau was fully responsible. In Penelope’s mind, Jimbeau was the real criminal here. Matt put his head down on the table, the lawyer grimaced at Penelope, and Penelope glared at Jimbeau. The good guys lost to the bad ones that night.
                That night turned into a new day. Days turned into weeks. Weeks into months, and the night before the trial, a certain message was left in a particular voicemail box.
                “Hey, Jimbeau, this is Penelope. I apologize, but tonight, I won’t be able to go on that date with you, that I promised. My daughter, her dance recital is actually tonight, so you know how that is. So um…I will have to do this some other time. Goodnight.”
                Jimbeau was already sitting in his favorite corner of his favorite diner waiting for Penelope to show up when he received that message. Across town, at the local elementary school, a troupe of 6 5 year olds pranced on stage, wearing different colored tutus, and at the center, a familiar figure, Phoebe, as the princess in the princess and the frog.  The assistants moved the girls into position on stage, but Phoebe was a natural at this. She was already in the right spot. Penelope sat on the front row, clapping with her hands, and cheering on her daughter.
                In the diner, Jimbeau ordered a coffee, as he was finally sober long enough to feel hung over. He listened to the message over and over again, and he probably would have all night too, if not for the greasy little man who approached his booth.
                “You’re Jimbeau, aren’t you?” he asked.
                “Who the hell wanna know?”
                “I’mma big fan, man. You put away my cousin Vick. He was the black sheep, ya know? Thank you for getting him off of the streets and behind bars where he needs to be,” he responded.
                “Uh-huh. Sure, now beat it,” Jimbeau responded. However, the man kept talking. If Jimbeau wasn’t so hung over, maybe he would have noticed the sleight of hand of the man dropping a small little something into his coffee.
                The overture ended, and the girls began dancing and prancing as well as kindergarten ballerinas can. Except for Phoebe. She danced as if she were a demigoddess of beauty, and a paragon of passion. And the poor frog who’s moves where choreographed to look brutish and ungraceful looked like an eyesore on stage.
                Jimbeau took a sip, totally unaware, and the effects started almost instantly. He clutched his throat. The man had long since walked away. Jimbeau stood to his feet, choking and losing motor function rapidly. He flailed his arms around violently as he danced his last dance. The waitress was on the phone with the hospital, but it was far too late to save Jimbeau. Minutes passed, and Phoebe pranced and pirouetted across the stage a few more times, carried by the invisible threads of melody, harmony, and rhythm. She pretended to kiss the frog, she turned him into a prince, and Jimbeau lay dead on the diner floor.
                There was a standing ovation. Phoebe was sweating, but she knew that she had just had the best performance of her life. The greasy little man climbed into his van, parked on the other side of the street.  The side of it read, “Rudy’s Repair Service.” Little did he know that there was a cherry bomb planted in the engine. He turned the key in the ignition, and as soon as the motor started, the entire van exploded, just as the clapping and cheering reached a crescendo.

                Penelope held her child in one arm, and her bouquet of flowers under the other. She looked her child in the eyes, and kissed her forehead. They both smiled, Phoebe because she loved being with her mother, and Penelope because she knew that for once, she had made the world a little bit safer.