The Price of Entanglement

The Price of Entanglement - Chapter 9, pt. 3

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“Gran, I’m sorry. I didn’t think—it didn’t occur to me that—” she stopped, biting her lip. “I—I’m sorry. This isn’t like—like that was, I promise.”

He looked at her, eyes drained of all spark, and nodded. There was a deep-seated fear there though, seated where the spark usually sat. She wished she could push it aside for him and rekindle the spark. All she could do was take his hand in hers and squeeze, trying to fill him with a reassurance she wasn’t quite sure she felt herself.

Later, after they’d gotten Gran to bed, Quinn asked in a hushed voice. “That picture—was that—”

“Phil.”

He was quiet a moment. “I barely remember him. He was almost never around,” he finally said.

“Yeah. He was already mostly gone by the time we met.”

“I guess there’s been no word on him?” He didn’t sound like he really needed to hear the answer.

“No, not since the hospital.” She sighed. “I used to go down to the police headquarters and ask about it. Once every couple months at first, then once a year. I haven’t been in a few years, now.”

“He was … kind of a hand full,” he said, sounding like he was picking his words very carefully.

She chuckled. “It’s okay, you can say it. Gran’s asleep. Phil was trouble, real trouble. After his mom died, the things he’d say …”

“I remember a little of that. Not much.”

“Yeah, you didn’t come by very often when he was around.”

“That wasn’t an accident. He scared the crap out of me, Jo. He was a few years younger than us, and he scared the crap out of me.

Jo wasn’t shocked by that; Quinn had always been a small kid, while Phil was fairly big and strong for his age. She’d never had anything more than suspicions that he’d bullied other kids even before his mom died until just now; the look in Quinn’s eyes told all.

“He always seemed so fearless,” Quinn continued, “not many of us wanted anything to do with him. Even the older, bigger guys usually avoided him.”

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The Price of Entanglement - Chapter 9, pt. 2

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A crash like breaking glass sounded from upstairs, and Jo bolted to her feet, tablet still in hand. Her mind snapped back to the terrified-but-ready-to-act state that she’d felt in that basement. “Gran! Are you okay?” She practically flew up the stairs, Quinn right behind her. She brandished the tablet like an awkward club.

She burst into Gran’s room and stopped. He was kneeling down over a broken picture, trying to brush shards of glass from a printed photo with shaking fingers. Tears ran down his cheeks as he turned to look at them. “I-I’m sorry I startled you, Jo. My h-hand, it slipped …” He bowed his head over the photo.

Jo felt all the adrenaline drain from her body; she knelt and swept the glass from the picture. “It’s okay, Gran. The print is fine, no damage. See?” She focused on the image, and her heart dropped a few centimeters in her chest. It was a family picture taken almost eight years before; Jo herself, and Gran, and her cousin Phil, Gran’s son. Jo couldn’t have been more than sixteen, maybe seventeen. Phil was a couple of years younger. It had been a long time since she’d thought about him. It’d been even longer since they’d heard from him.

He’d been a hellion of a child, and he’d lost his mother not all that long after she lost her own parents. He hadn’t dealt with it as well as she had. He’d gotten in trouble constantly, and as he got into his teen years, it’d gotten sharply worse. Instead of getting in trouble with the schools, he was getting in trouble with the constabulary.

Finally he fell in with a bad crowd, and the last they’d heard of him was a criminal investigation report of a shop robbery. They had holo-footage of Phil leading a group of five other guys in an assault against a small store. He was shot on his way in; his friends wounded the shopkeeper and were gunned down themselves by police minutes later, while they were ransacking the place.

Two of the guys had died; Phil and the three other survivors were taken to the hospital, but escaped before they could be treated and locked up. And that was it. He’d been all of fifteen at the time, and they hadn’t heard a single word about him since, if he was even still alive.

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The Price of Entanglement - Chapter 8, pt. 4

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“I’ve got mapping software going here, just need to put in as much information as I can about it. Can you toss those files over to me?”

“As long as you delete ‘em after we’re done, sure,” she said, flicking the collection of reports toward him on her tablet. They bounced back to the center of her display, but appeared on his as if she’d physically thrown them.

“Thanks,” he said absently, already leaning in to scan for relevant information. “Wish these were in a more current format, I’m going to have to dig out the details manually.”

“So sorry to inconvenience you,” she groused, though she smiled as she said it. She turned her own attention back to the files. They told largely the same story until she got nearer the end, then things took an abrupt turn toward the dark. “Whoa,” she said. “This one … according to the report, the owner of the lab filed a complaint. It says he ‘got into an altercation with one of his fellowes,’ but he refused to tell the police what the fight was about. Said it was confidential and dangerous information.”

Quinn’s fingers were still flashing over his keyboard, but he paused and looked up a moment. “A fight between lab researchers doesn’t sound all that dark. What else does it say?”

“Someone died. It isn’t exactly clear about how, though,” she said slowly. “The constable wrote that the lab’s owner was a pillar of the community, well known for a lifetime of service and intellectual leadership, and that murder wasn’t in his character, but that the circumstances were suspicious.”

“What circumstances?”

She frowned. “They’re blacked out in the record. It does finally name the owner though; someone called Archerd Dolet.”

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The Price of Entanglement - Chapter 8, pt. 3

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She tapped a control on her phone and flicked a set of files over to a larger tablet on her desk. Images of the recovered files appeared; she grabbed the device and together they studied the first one.

Quinn’s brow furrowed. “All of that for this?” The first record was an old police report. The constabulary had been called upon to deal with a noise complaint, of all things. “It’s not even an exciting report. Who’d care enough about this to kill for it?”

“Let’s check the rest, we don’t know what else is in here. There are a couple dozen files.” She flipped to the next document in the collection. More noise. And more. And more. “Someone was a bad neighbor.”

“No kidding.” Quinn flipped through them a little quicker until they got a little more than halfway through. “Ahh, it gets worse. Foul stenches, a lab, unnatural blue light in the middle of the night …”

Jo frowned. “Let me see that one?” She flipped it back.

Dated in the early 1890s, the report described what sounded like the latest in a series of sightings at the ironworks. The hair on the back of Jo’s neck stood up, her bad feeling intensifying. She shivered in spite of the warmth of the room. “The ironworks. I can’t stand that place,” she almost whispered.

“I’ve heard the stories, I didn’t know they were so old. I’ve never seen anything. Have you?”

She was about to say “No,” but hesitated. “Well, I’ve never seen the blue-light ghost of the stories, but my second … um … experience, I guess? It was right near there.”

She kept reading. Someone by the name of Tolvy Getz had reported seeing the blue-light ghost by a lab that neighbored the ironworks. He hadn’t been in his right state of mind; given how she felt whenever she was near the place, she couldn’t blame the poor man. He’d been in quite a state and confronted the constabulary about it, blaming the lab’s occupants.

“There’s not much here about the lab. Why would he blame them, instead of the ironworks?”

“Maybe the stories weren’t fully established then? If he saw the ghost near the labs, I guess it makes some sense.”

They flipped to the next report. It was dated several months after the last, and bore no mention of the labs. It _was_ another sighting of the ghost though, and in the same general area, if the reporting constable’s commentary was to be believed. The next one after that was very similar; a gentleman driving an auto-powered wagon with his lady had passed by the area of the ironworks and the labs around dusk when the poor lady let out a scream like she’d seen the headsman’s axe rushing to meet her, then fainted dead away.

The next several were similar, with complaints about noise and noxious odors fading in frequency as reports of sightings became more common and much more frequent. Jo’s early position that the labs were involved by their proximity was challenged as relatively few of the reports mentioned them specifically.

“I wonder if there’s enough data in these reports to match them up on a map,” she mused.

“Say no more,” Quinn said with a smile, by now as caught up in the unfolding drama as she was. He started typing away on a folding tablet-like computer with an actual physical keyboard that he swore up and down was far better for code input than any screen. Seeing how fast his fingers could move on it, she believed him.​

 

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