CHAPTER 58

 
 

Our Lady of Sorrow High School
Omaha, Nebraska

 

Gibson waited outside Sister Kate’s classroom for Timmy. He’d told Gibson that he was almost certain he recognized the woman who had been talking to Sister Kate earlier. He kept saying she was an FBI agent he knew. Yeah right, Gibson had wanted to say, but didn’t. He liked Timmy. And he liked having a friend.

Yesterday they discovered that they lived only about three blocks away from each other, so Gibson invited him to come over again and play some computer games. Now he wondered what was taking Timmy so long. Maybe he ran into the FBI lady. He had gone off to use the school’s ancient pay phone to ask his mom’s permission about going over to Gibson’s, which blew Gibson away. He couldn’t believe Timmy didn’t have a cell phone. Gibson thought he was the only teenager alive who didn’t have one.

He was actually feeling pretty good today. Sister Kate had taken more of an interest in his collection than he expected. She even praised him, telling him she was impressed that he had been able to find and barter such exquisite authentic pieces. She had actually called them exquisite. And she said she was impressed. Sister Kate was impressed with him and his collection. Yeah, it was a pretty good day. One of his best in a long time, probably since he helped her with her cataloging project.

Maybe he’d show Timmy the portfolio he found in his backpack. He was hoping that having Timmy there with him might give him the courage to go through the damn thing. He had carefully placed it in the back of his closet after he opened it and found Monsignor O’Sullivan’s name on one of the papers. He didn’t want to be reminded of the dead priest let alone go through some stupid papers about him.

He slung his backpack over his shoulder and leaned against the wall. Maybe Timmy had to get change from the office. The pay phone still took quarters. Probably not many like it left. Truly ancient. He smiled and thought Sister Kate should ask for it if and when the school ever replaced it.

“You, over there. What are you doing?”

Gibson straightened up and pushed away from the wall. It was the tall, hawk-nosed guy from Monsignor O’Sullivan’s office yesterday. And he was coming at Gibson, pointing a finger at him as if lasering him to the spot. It worked. Gibson couldn’t move, couldn’t even breathe.

“What are you still doing here? Isn’t class over?”

“I…uh…” Gibson tried to answer but his tongue stuck to the roof of his mouth.

“I saw you yesterday, right? You were snooping around Monsignor O’Sullivan’s office.”

The guy towered over him, looking down his nose, the finger still pointing, only now poking Gibson in the chest.

“Why are you still here?”

“I’m…uh, I’m waiting…”

“You’re meeting someone?” The guy looked around. “Maybe you’re meeting someone to make an exchange?”

“Huh?”

“Is this what you do after everyone’s gone? You make a few deals?”

The finger pokes emphasized “gone” and “deals.” Gibson didn’t know what the guy was talking about. His heart was beating so hard he felt sure it would explode with one more poke.

“What do you have in the backpack? Are there drugs in there? Is that what you’re waiting around for? To make a few deals? Open it up.”

Gibson held it even tighter. He knew they could do random searches, but this guy was scary. All Gibson wanted to do was find an opportunity to run.

“Do as I say.”

Gibson tried not to look him in the eyes, almost afraid they carried some sort of evil power. He should try to look at him, stare him down, make him think he wasn’t afraid, but he couldn’t do it. He was afraid.

“Give me the bag,” he said and reached for it. That’s when Gibson bolted to the left and tried to run. The guy held one of the backpack’s straps and he jerked Gibson with such strength it almost knocked him off his feet.

“What’s going on over there?” Gibson heard Father Tony’s voice, but he couldn’t see beyond the black frame of his captor.

“Everything’s under control,” the guy said in a voice that came nowhere near the tone he had just been using. It was almost soft and reassuring. And the tugging grip on his backpack loosened a bit.

Gibson yanked completely free, twisting around the guy, missing a swipe of his clawing hand by inches. He ran down the steps. He didn’t bother to answer when Father Tony called out to ask if he was okay. Like who would Father Tony believe anyway? Gibson or the Darth Vader of Our Lady of Sorrow?

Gibson ran, hitting the bottom of the stairs, pushing open the lobby doors. He kept running, past the sidewalk, past the parking lot, not looking back.

Maggie O'Dell #05 - A Necessary Evil
titlepage.xhtml
A_Necessary_Evil_split_000.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_001.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_002.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_003.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_004.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_005.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_006.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_007.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_008.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_009.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_010.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_011.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_012.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_013.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_014.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_015.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_016.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_017.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_018.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_019.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_020.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_021.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_022.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_023.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_024.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_025.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_026.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_027.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_028.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_029.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_030.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_031.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_032.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_033.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_034.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_035.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_036.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_037.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_038.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_039.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_040.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_041.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_042.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_043.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_044.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_045.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_046.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_047.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_048.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_049.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_050.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_051.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_052.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_053.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_054.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_055.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_056.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_057.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_058.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_059.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_060.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_061.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_062.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_063.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_064.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_065.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_066.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_067.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_068.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_069.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_070.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_071.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_072.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_073.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_074.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_075.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_076.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_077.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_078.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_079.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_080.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_081.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_082.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_083.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_084.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_085.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_086.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_087.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_088.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_089.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_090.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_091.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_092.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_093.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_094.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_095.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_096.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_097.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_098.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_099.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_100.html
A_Necessary_Evil_split_101.html