Brittany McPherson was
once again on duty that afternoon at the Conoco Station on Highway 11. She bore much the same expression she’d had
when Auburn had come in the week before—resigned, either due to fatigue or
boredom. Only this time, Auburn noticed
something else in the expression—either sadness or fear, she couldn’t tell
which.
She arrived at the
building right at two o’clock. Brittany
looked up with a jolt when the door opened, then relaxed when she saw
Auburn. Immediately, she went straight
back to a book she was reading, taking no further notice of her customer.
Auburn had been planning
to go straight to the counter, but the long walk had given her other
ideas. She went to the cold drinks
section and grabbed a soda, this time Big Peach—made by the same company as Big
Blue. Big Peach wasn’t quite as good as Big
Blue, but it was a nice flavor itself, and Auburn was in the mood for something
different today.
Suddenly, she stuffed her
hand in her pocket, just to make sure she’d brought money with her. Her hand closed around three bills—without
looking, Auburn remembered that these were a five and two ones. She was glad she’d had them with her,
especially since she hadn’t been planning to buy anything. As she marched to the counter, the Big Peach
was the last thing on her mind.
Brittany must have
remembered Auburn from the week before, because she didn’t mention the
club. She didn’t mention anything else,
for that matter. The first words out of
her mouth came after she’d scanned the Big Peach. “That’ll be $1.50.”
Auburn plunked down both
of the dollar bills and watched as Brittany opened the cash register, then made
her move. “Where was your project last
night?”
Brittany’s eyes grew as
wide as the old Eisenhower dollar coins from the 1970s (twice the size of
quarters, for those who have never seen one).
“My WHAT?”
“The project. Remember?
The one Mr. Richards mentioned when he came in here?”
“It was at the club!”
gasped Brittany, obviously flustered.
Her hand shook as she tried to pick up a quarter.
“It wasn’t at the club, was it?” said Auburn, knowingly. “It was somewhere else, I’ll bet. How many of you were there, four?”
Brittany dropped the quarter. “What are you talking about?” she said, even
as it was obvious that she knew the answer.
“Oh, you never went
inside with the rest. You’re too tall to
be mistaken for a midget. But those
weren’t midgets last night, were they?
They were other kids, too young to have driver’s licenses. I’ll bet you drove the—”
“No, no, no, it’s not
true, it’s not!” exclaimed Brittany. “I
didn’t rob that bank, I tell you I didn’t!”
“Who said anything about
a bank?” said Auburn. Brittany looked
up, frightened.
“I—I heard about it on
the radio this morning!” she said.
“Maybe you did, but you
already knew about it, didn’t you?” said Auburn. “Why else would you get so frightened when a
community leader like Mr. Richards—”
“He’s a monster, that’s
what he is!” exclaimed Brittany. “The
most evil man who’s ever lived in this town, and he’s got everyone
fooled—except the ones that can’t expose him!”
“Why don’t you?” Auburn
asked. “What hold does he have over
you?”
Panic now filled
Brittany’s eyes. “Don’t ask me to do
that!” she said. “You don’t know what
you’re messing with—look. I know who
robbed that bank the other night. I
won’t say whether I was in on it or not, and I don’t think you can prove who
was, but if you can, then please, listen to me!
None of us—er, none of the people who were there the other night wanted
to be there. We—they didn’t want to
steal anything that didn’t belong to them, but Richards wanted it, and he made
them rob it! His hold over them is worse
than death itself!”
“Worse than death
itself?” said Auburn.
“I—remember, I’m not
saying whether I was there or not, but I’d die before I’d do anything illegal
like robbing a bank. Richards has even
worse threats than that, and he’s using one on everyone in his Brotherhood
Club! They’ve all got to do whatever he
says, or he’ll, or he’ll go through with them, and—oh, it’s too horrible!”
“If no one stops him,
though,” said Auburn, “he’ll keep staging crimes like that and—”
“Don’t get involved!” said
Brittany. “You’ve got to avoid the club
and Richards at all costs! If he gets
you in the club, you’ll have to do what he says! You’ll want to give yourself up, but you
won’t be able to, because of the consequences—”
“What consequences?”
asked Auburn.
“I can’t tell you!” Brittany was adamant about that. “I’d be willing to go to jail for robbing a
bank, serve the full sentence, get a criminal record if it would mean getting free
of Richards. But if I ever were
arrested, somebody would get killed. It’s
not me, or you, but someone would, and that’s why I can’t get out of the club.”
“Who?” asked Auburn.
“I can’t tell you!” said
Brittany. “I’ve said way more than I
should’ve already. Please, just forget
about it entirely! Or else!”
Forget it? Yeah, right...
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