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YULA'S ARK - chapter 17
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Brenda H
I'm a well-known person and prefer to stay anonymous, thank you. 
By Brenda H
Published on 10/25/2007
 
A Brenda H novel.

YULA'S ARK - chapter 17

copyright 2007 Brenda H all rights reserved

CHAPTER 17 -

Johannsen thought it was funny.  Beck considered Scott's
butt an affront to the dignity of The Bureau.  But then it
had been Beck's eye on the telescope.

"Okay, so he knows we're up here," Johannsen said
philosophically.

"So he won't try anything," Beck spat out.

"Hey, that's okay with me," Johannsen said.

"We're here to arrest people," Beck reminded Johannsen.

"We're here to limit their activities," Johannsen
corrected.

Beck shrugged.  He didn't know why the hell they were
there.  Fifteen years with the service and he still didn't
know.  Seemed like they were always sent on the wild ones. 
They'd yet to work on a single kidnapping or drug bust. 
It's always these rinky-dinks, political groups, radicals,
Klanners, foreigners.

Johannsen stood.

"If there's a bomb down there, they aren't going to show
it to us," Johannsen said.

"Maybe we should just watch the road," Beck suggested.

"The environmentalists," Johannsen said.

Beck shrugged.  He didn't care.  He thought about the
girl.  Kerry.  She'd been nice.  He'd like to see her
again.  Sleep with her again.  The enemy.  It was odd for
him, liking a woman.  She'd told him an incredible story. 
Beck hadn't even related it to Johannsen, it was so
unbelievable.  He hadn't even played the tape for him.  Beck chuckled to himself.  He'd slept with her.  Again and again. The girl Scott seemed to like.  That was something.  Some compensation for the butt he'd showed them.

Until she'd said no.

"Okay," Beck said bitterly.  "The environmentalists."

They walked over the ridge to their unmarked car.  On the
way back to town, they reviewed the evidence.

"Okay, this guy Scott's an electrical engineer with a
company that does a bunch of defense work and a bundle of
aerospace," Beck began.  "Knows a pile of secrets."

"So he suddenly quits his job," Johannsen continued.  "He
comes out here for an unknown purpose and hooks up with
these unknown people."

"He makes contact with the environmentalists and makes a
bunch of crazy reports to the sheriff," Beck went on.

"Deputy sheriff," Johannsen corrected.

"Then he buys a gas-can and fills it."

"Two days in a row," Johannsen said.

"What's he up to?" Beck mused.  "Who's he with?"

"We have evidence of association with radical
environmental causes," Johannsen reminded Beck.

"That stuff," Beck snickered.  "Sierra Club, Friends of
the Earth, Greenpeace."

"I say we stake out the motel," Johannsen suggested,
ignoring Beck's slur.

Beck shrugged.  He really didn't care anymore.  All life
was garbage as far as he was concerned.  He'd watch the
girl.




Xavier was still up when Scott woke.  He'd worked 
frantically through the night on his gadget.

Scott took a cup of coffee to Xavier out behind the
cabin.

"Got another list?" Scott asked.

Xavier handed it to Scott without comment. 

Down to specific transistors and switches.

"Are they still asleep?" Xavier asked.

"Yes," Scott said.  Yula and Tenner were a foot apart on
the floor of the cabin.  Scott had felt a twinge of jealousy seeing them that close together.

Xavier coughed and dropped a screwdriver.  His hand
shook.

"Take a break," Scott suggested, placing a hand on the
older man's shoulder.

Xavier rocked back and sat.  He breathed a great,
congested sigh.

"Drink the coffee." Scott suggested.  Xavier shook his
head.

"How can you drink that stuff?" he asked.

"It's good," Scott chuckled.  "Keeps you awake."

Xavier canted his head--he hadn't known.  He tried to
drink some of it.

"So how does this thing work?" Scott asked, sitting next
to Xavier, pointing at the gizmo.  Xavier considered for a
long moment, finding a way to explain.

"You have lighting devices?" Xavier said with a certain
condescension.

Scott pointed to the kerosene lamp.  It was still lit,
though the sun was fully up.

Xavier shook his head.

"No.  Light bulbs.  Tom Edison bulbs.  Incan...?"

"Incandescence."

"Right.  A great deal of amperage through a small
conductor.  Like a slow-burning fuse."

"Okay," Scott nodded. 

"We do the same with time," Xavier announced.

Scott's brow scrunched up in doubt.  Xavier laughed.

"Trust me on this," Xavier said.

Scott chuckled.

"I will," he said.





Scott stopped at the drugstore and bought antihistamines,
decongestants, something for vomiting and cough medicine. 
He considered a vaporizer, but rejected the idea--they'd
have to run the generator all night to use it.

"Is there a doctor you can recommend?" Scott asked the
drug clerk.  "A general practitioner?"

"Have to go down the mountain," the woman said, shaking
her head.  "There's a whole medical center right on the edge of Gunniston.  Can't miss it on the right."

Scott nodded.  Never talk them into it.  Still, in an
emergency...


Scott stepped out into the sun.  There was a pay-phone
right outside the drugstore.  Should get some numbers.  Of
doctors.  Down the mountain.
  Scott stepped up to the phone
and dialed.

"Hello," Kathy said in her little six-year-old voice.

"Hi.  It's Daddy."

He could barely hear her.  Kathy could be painfully shy
when the excitement of the moment overwhelmed her.  There
was so much Scott wanted to tell her, and do for her, so
many things to protect her from.  Scott's heart ached
against his ribs.  Tears flowed from his eyes in a river of
loss.  He tasted them and remembered the way Kathy would 
wipe her tears with one little finger and immediately
deposit them in her mouth, as if one drop of her sorrow was
too precious to waste.

Kathy was talking quickly, about starting first grade,
about one of her friends, about what Mommy wouldn't let her
do, about the mean things boys did.

"Do you want to talk to Mommy?" Kathy asked after it all.

"Yes," Scott choked.

"Mommy!" Scott heard Kathy shout.

"Kathy," Scott said.

"Yes."

"I love you."

"I love you too, Daddy."

Scott couldn't do it.  The phone hovered over the
receptacle and he heard Lorraine's tiny "hello, hello"
before Scott hung it up.