13
Three o’clock in the afternoon.
No news from the men hunting for Luke Ellis in the woods. Plenty of communications, yes,
but no news. Every member of the Institute staff had
been notified of the escape; it was all
hands on deck. Some had joined the searchers. Others were
combing the Institute village,
searching all empty quarters, looking for the boy or at least some sign that he’d been there. All
personal vehicles were accounted for. The golf carts the employees sometimes used to get
around were all where they belonged. Their stringers in Dennison River Bend—including two
members of the town’s small police force—had been alerted and given Ellis’s description, but
there had been no sightings.
With Alvorson there
was
news.
Ionidis had shown initiative and guile of which Jerry Symonds and Andy Fellowes, their IT
techs, would have been incapable. First using Google Earth and then a phone locater app, Zeke
had gotten in touch with Alvorson’s next-door neighbor in the
little Vermont town where
Alvorson still maintained a residence. He represented himself to this neighbor as an IRS agent,
and she bought it without a single question. Showing no signs of the reticence Yankees were
supposedly famous for, she told him that Maureen had asked her to witness several documents
the last time Mo had been home. A woman lawyer had been present.
The documents were
addressed to several collection agencies. The lawyer called
the documents C-and-D orders,
which the neighbor rightly took to mean cease and desist.
“Those letters were all about her husband’s credit cards,” the neighbor lady told Zeke. “Mo
didn’t explain, but she didn’t need to. I wasn’t born yesterday. Handling that deadbeat’s bills is
what she was doing. If the IRS can sue her for that, you better move fast. She looked sick as
hell.”
Mrs. Sigsby thought the Vermont neighbor had it right. The question was why Alvorson
would do it that way; it was carrying coals to Newcastle. All Institute employees knew that if
they got into any kind of financial jam (gambling was the most common), they could count on
loans that were next door to interest-free. That part of the benefits package was explained at
every new employee’s intake orientation. It really wasn’t a benefit at all, but a protection. People
who were in debt could be tempted to sell secrets.
The easy explanation for such behavior was pride, maybe combined with shame at having
been taken advantage of by her runaway husband, but Mrs. Sigsby didn’t like it. The woman
had been nearing the end of her life and must have known that for some time. She had decided
to clean her hands, and taking money from the organization that had dirtied them was not the
way to start. That felt right—or close to right, anyway. It fit with Alvorson’s reference to hell.
That bitch helped him escape, Mrs. Sigsby thought. Of course she did, it was her idea of
atonement. But I can’t question her about it, she made sure of that. Of course she did—she
knows our methods. So what do I do? What
will
I do if that too-smart-for-his-own-good boy
isn’t back here before dark?
She knew the answer, and was sure Trevor did, too. She would have to take the Zero Phone
out of its locked drawer and hit all three of the white buttons. The lisping man would answer.
When she told him that a resident had escaped for the first time in the Institute’s history—had
dug his way out in the middle of the night under the fence—what would that person say? Gosh,
I’m thorry? Thath’s too bad? Don’t worry about it?
Like hell.
Think, she told herself. Think, think,
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