One thing in Terri’s favor was this: if Uncle Chuck came back home unexpectedly, she’d be able to hear the car pull into the driveway. So she’d have time to get back into her room before he came in. But she knew she couldn’t fool around, she had to be quick about it, and of course, the first thing she had to do was find the briefcase. She brought a Bic pen and a piece of notebook paper with her, stuck them in the pocket of her shorts. Then, very quietly, she opened her door and left her bedroom.
The house seemed very quiet right now, maybe because she was doing something she knew she wasn’t supposed to be doing. As always, the floor of the foyer went
The hall to the kitchen was dark. She tiptoed quickly across the carpet and slipped into the kitchen. She wished she’d thought of this before; she could’ve been looking for the briefcase earlier, while she was on the phone with Patricia.
Uncle Chuck’s briefcase wasn’t anywhere to be seen.
Terri looked all over the place: the kitchen table, the big veneered walnut cabinet her mother kept her bills in, the closet, even the regular cabinets. She couldn’t find the briefcase
Terri’s thoughts stopped short.
She searched the dining room from top to bottom. The briefcase wasn’t there.
Now this really
She paused, took a deep breath—
—and entered the room.
Uncle Chuck’s bedroom was neat as a pin. The bed was made, the fern-green drapes were tied open, showing the sunny front yard. All of Chuck’s clothes hung neatly in the closet, like in the men’s section of a department store. But Terri’s eyes glanced about the room in total dread—
She didn’t see it anywhere! Where else could it be? It wasn’t on the floor anywhere; it wasn’t in the closet. If she didn’t find it this minute, she knew she’d have to give up because Uncle Chuck would be back soon, with her mother.
She searched the room three times—no briefcase. She was so frustrated she wanted to throw her arms up and shriek. But just as she was about to check the room one more time, she turned, and her foot touched something—
Her foot touched something under the bed.
Terri dropped to her knees very quickly, and pulled up the bed’s fluffy comforter, and there it was—
The black-leather briefcase had been slipped under the bed, almost as if it had been deliberately hidden.
But it
She paused for another moment, gazing down excitedly at the front edge of the briefcase.
Yes, it was exciting.
Exciting to know that, very possibly, all the answers to all the questions she had were right here at her fingertips.
She slid the black briefcase out from under the bed, pushed the two black-metal latches with her thumbs—
««—»»
The first thing Terri saw when she opened her uncle’s briefcase were several glossy textbooks with very complicated titles on the covers, titles she didn’t understand. She wished she could look through the books but she knew there wasn’t time: Uncle Chuck would be home soon, and so would Terri’s mother. Instead Terri lifted the books up and looked under them.
A spiral notepad lay there, just like the kind Terri herself used for her schoolwork. The cover of the notepad was turned back, and she could see handwriting on the first page.
She remembered now; seeing them again sparked her memory instantly.
The words she’d seen on the computer screen in the boathouse, plus the words on the glass tanks and the labels on the weird glass bottles full of gunk.
Here they were again. The first line read:
LOT 2b: TRANSMISSION FAILURE
Then the second line read:
LOT 3: POSITIVE REAGENT
TRANSMISSION OF GENETIC
CARNIVORE MUTATION.
And written closer to the bottom of the page, still in her Uncle Chuck’s handwriting, was:
COUNTER-REAGENT 6b ADMINISTERED
…and then yesterday’s date.
Exactly as she remembered from her quick trip to the boathouse this morning.
She took out her Bic pen and the piece of paper from her shorts, and quickly wrote the words down.
That done, she realized time was getting short.
Using her good sense, then, she was about to put the textbooks back and then close the briefcase, but something made her hesitate. Terri’s curiosity was so strong, sometimes she simply couldn’t resist it.