“Washout? It’s too late for you to try and bring our case down by establishing a counter-case, if that’s what you mean.”
“The same defendant?”
“How convenient for you. By assets I assume you’re referring to the dowry he would presumably have received as a matter of course in marrying your daughter?”
John paused to laugh, a most peculiar sound.
Balot squeezed her glass tightly. Suddenly she had a feeling that she was
Balot’s feeling of unease started to solidify inside her. John’s words were triggering alarm bells somewhere deep inside her unconscious. Balot tried to put her finger on the reason.
“What exactly are you planning to do? Have him imprisoned and transported to a state where they have capital punishment, so that you can have the law do away with him for good?”
John laughed. Balot heard the laugh as if it were echoing in the room right beside her.
“Inheriting it…”
“You’re going to have Boiled kill Shell, is that the idea? You…”
“You dare to invoke the Three Magi? Can you put your founding director on the line to support your cock- and-bull story?”
“What I
“That’s a foul deceit—trying to justify the suffering of innocent victims, hiding behind weasel words.”
“What—”
“That’s just a fantasy that you guys conjured up to suit your own ends. There’s no such thing as
John’s voice was more sonorous than ever, and Balot honed in on the direction from which it came.
“No one who refuses to acknowledge that they themselves are potentially dangerous has any right to lecture others about morality,” Oeufcoque stated boldly. As he did so, Balot jumped into action.
With all her might she threw the glass in her hand toward the mirror at the end of the bar.
The mirror that one of the men’s stray bullets had cracked but not destroyed only a minute ago.
The glass smashed against the mirror, splashing the milk across the surface.
There was an audible gasp on the cell phone. This confirmed Balot’s suspicions, and she moved quickly. She picked up her gun from the counter and unloaded it into the mirror in one swift movement.
It really was a sturdy mirror. It took over ten shots before it gave up the ghost and started to collapse. Finally, though, it started peeling from the wall.
It was a one-way mirror. And the scene behind it was now revealed to all in the bar.
Balot threw her gun down and
Gun outthrust, she stood in front of the warped mirror.
A wave of disgust ran over her, one that made every hair on her body stand on end. Before she even had the chance to think about what she was doing, she pulled the trigger, hard. Oeufcoque was there for her, suppressing the bullet, stopping the action inside himself.
“Ah…you seem to have us at a disadvantage, sir. I never imagined for a moment that you would be in such a place. Although I daresay the disadvantage is now all yours…” Unusually for Oeufcoque, his voice dripped with sarcasm. But Oeufcoque was Oeufcoque, after all, and he could only take so much—the whole scene was evidently getting to him. “I can’t say I think much of your
Beyond the mirror were five or six boys and girls in varying degrees of undress, all young. Preteen young. In the midst of them was a giant lump of flesh—far bigger than Skyscraper—sprawled on a sofa in a nightgown, holding a phone in his hand and looking at Balot in mute terror.
“This is private property…” the corpulent figure finally managed to spit out. It was the same man they had seen back at the casino—none other than Cleanwill John October.
“Indeed, so we’ll refrain from actually entering unless we’re forced to. We’ll just wait here, keeping you under guard until the police arrive. Cleanwill John October, as a PI and Trustee for this case, I invoke my jurisdiction to arrest you on charges of attempted kidnapping, extortion, and—well, lots of other things.”
Oeufcoque managed to stay levelheaded. The proof of this was that he kept the safety catch on the gun firmly engaged. “Balot, call for police backup.”