Mrs. Hallett was in her
room, silently admiring the ocean. Not
for long. The door burst open, and Carol
ran in.
“Mom, can I talk to you
about something?” she asked. Something
in her tone implied this was going to be a very personal matter. Mrs. Hallett was used to dealing with
personal matters; she’d done that with her children for years. This wasn’t her child, though. It felt very weird to her, but she remembered
her role. She responded:
“Yes, Carol?”
Carol walked over to her
mother and handed her a note. “It’s
about school,” she said. “Do you think I
should trim my bangs or not?”
Mrs. Hallett didn’t answer;
she was too busy reading the note. I have to search the room. Please pretend you’re carrying on a normal
conversation with me, in case someone’s listening.
“Mom?”
Mrs. Hallett looked over at
her daughter. Carol was giving her a
pleading look, and it wasn’t about bangs, either.
“I heard you,” said Mrs. Hallett. “It’s just—well, it reminded me of something
that happened to me when I was your age.”
“What?” asked Carol, peeking
behind the paintings on the wall.
“There was a girl at my
school named Molly MacPherson,” said Mrs. Hallett. “She was the popular girl there. It was a small school, and we all knew each
other really well. Most of the girls
wanted to be like Molly. When she cut
her hair short—just above the shoulders, in those days—they did too. When she started wearing jeans with a hole,
they all trimmed one in theirs. When
lots of lipstick came into style, the guys did whatever they could to avoid
being kissed.”
Carol, now spraying
something on the window, laughed. “What
happened then?”
“Well, I wanted to do the
same things they were doing, but my mom—”
“Grandma?”
“Yes…Grandma,” Mrs. Hallett
felt so odd as she said the word. “Grandma told me that Molly could start
whatever fad she wanted, but that what’s on the inside was the most
important. So, my hair stayed long. My jeans stayed in good shape—until I’d had
them for a while, of course. I avoided
the lipstick. And then, you know what
happened?”
“What?” asked Carol, diving
under the bed.
Mrs. Hallett stared at the two
feet sticking out. “When Molly got
suspended for cheating, she wasn’t so popular anymore. I never became the popular girl, but I didn’t
see all my friends turn on me overnight, either. It took me two years to realize this, and I
only wish I’d learned it sooner.”
“Ah-ha!” came from under the
bed, softly. Carol peeked out. “More!” she whispered.
“Well, uh, it was a valuable
lesson to me,” said Mrs. Hallett.
“Perhaps more valuable than anything I ever learned in math class,
history class, science class, English class, gym class—”
Carol came out from under
the bed, zipping up her purse. “Thanks,”
she said. “Thank you very much! I love you, Mom!” she shouted, rushing across
the room.
Mrs. Hallett couldn’t decide
whether to bolt or duck. Before she did
either, Carol reached her, flung her arms around her, and pretended to kiss
her. “I’m going to tell that Jenny Marks
exactly what you said,” she said. “See
you later!”
“Huh? Oh, OK!” said Mrs. Hallett. “Bye!”
I
guess she found what she was looking for, Mrs. Hallett thought to
herself. Then, she chuckled.
I
wish my kids had listened like that!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Carol darted back into the
room she shared with Renee and slammed the door. Locking it, she rushed over to the window and
shut the blinds. Then, she plummeted
down onto the bed and opened her purse.
She reached in and pulled out—
A menu.
Carol hadn’t been able to
see the thing too well under the bed, but she had seen one thing. “Don’s Drive-In—Serving Southern California since
1954.” Now that she was alone, she
examined the flyer more closely.
There was nothing unusual
about it, except two things. First, the
#3 was circled. It was “Don’s Famous
Chickenburger—topped with lettuce, tomato, and onions. Mustard, ketchup, mushrooms, and bacon available
on request.” Mushrooms was the second thing out of the ordinary: it was
underlined.
Carol carefully placed the
menu back in her purse. She wandered
over to the radio and put some music on.
Then, she slipped into the restroom and put on the shower. She did not get in it, however. Instead, she snuck into the closet, reached
into her makeup bag, and pulled out a compact.
It wasn’t a compact. It was a small computer. Carol placed the second and third fingers of
her right hand on a keypad, and the screen lit up.
“Carol Lawrence—Agent
3145-778.” Carol entered a twenty-seven
digit password. Then, she clicked
something and started typing.
“Don’s Drive-In—Malibu, CA.”
Nothing happened on Carol’s
end for twenty seconds. Then, the screen
flashed.
“No Data.”
“Hmm,” said Carol to
herself. She went to the report section
and typed, “1000 hours. Found a menu for
Don’s Drive-In hidden under Pearson’s bed.
The number three was circled and mushrooms was underlined. Sending a photo.”
Carol pulled out the menu
and waved her “compact” over it. Then,
she hit send. Washington (D.C.) now had
the data.
Yawning, Carol was about to
flip her compact shut when she remembered something. “Graz Conference” she typed.
Five seconds elapsed. Then, something appeared on the screen. Carol’s eyes grew big as saucers as she began
to read.
These spies get the best tech...
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