Web of the Weaver Book III: Financial matters, Chapter 3
Added 2024-04-03 04:30:52 +0000 UTCI spent several days working, both as The Investigator and as Orb Weaver.
Criminals were becoming nervous. The rumor was that something had⊠irritated Orb Weaver.
If only they knew, I thought as I looked through the paperwork as The Investigator. The problem was that materials were both hard copy and online, and I had to compare them. The hall of records allowed me in, but⊠I stared at the stacks of records around me, while bugs worked on the modified cell phones Iâd built for them. They were underground, just outside of the hall of records, little antenna pulled out to allow them to tap into the signal. Arcadia was having a teacher in-service day so I was free.
For myself, I had four record folios open at a timeâthe field of vision of my eyes didnât let me do more, and I had to manually turn the pages. It was irritating that I just couldnât use my bugs, but well, Orb Weaver and The Investigator didnât know each other, not that well.
And nothing. There was no sign of difference between written and online records, but that would have been easy.
The holding company had, by the records, little involvement in the operations of their subsidiary. There was little sign that they were shorting the company, and while some of the records of meetings mentioned worries about the profitability of the establishment, it didnât look like they were squeezing the company.
And yet Dad had talked about scrimping on safety measures. Signs that a company was doing poorly.
So⊠where is the money going? Someone dipping in the till?
I leaned back and frowned, rubbing my face through my mask.
Fact. According to the holding company, this company wasnât that unprofitable.
Fact. They were skimping on safety measures.
Fact. The previous company was also facing difficulties and had a whistleblower, butâŠ
But they were also providing money to the holding company and stockholders. There was no sign that, at the higher levels, there was any sense of concern beyond what you normally got from a struggling business. Not enough to risk the utter torrent of shit that was now coming down on everyone associated with the affair. In fact, I had to delay my session to give the FBI time to copy every record regarding the disaster. A few of the agents had given me suspicious looks as they left the hall of records.
Well, I couldnât blame them. They had issues with Parahumans, given that not three years after theyâd archly told the PRT that the FBI had no need for assistance, Password had strolled through their HQ using his insignificant parahuman power to⊠scramble every password and code of every device the FBI used.
The PRT had managed to avoid laughing, at least on TV, as they sent some Protectorate tinkers to save the FBI, but a certain amount of bad blood remained, and that extended to unaffiliated parahumans.
But if the money wasnât going to the holding company, and it wasnât going to the now deceased managersâand there was no sign it had been, thenâŠ
It was going somewhere else. The difference between what the holding company received and what the cost-cutting had saved was⊠substantial.
In fact, I couldâ
My burner phone rang. There were only a few people who had that number. I picked it up, while my bugs just froze.
WINSLOW. TROUBLE. COME DRESSED FOR WORK. 304WRK5
Dadâs ID, and WRK5 said that he wasnât in danger, the call was uncoerced, and there was no probability of violence, but that I was needed.
Interesting. I hadnât expected my codewords to come in handy so quickly. I stared at the pile of work, then sighed. I would get back to this tomorrow.
But what was going on at Winslow? If it was Greg, I would be very cross.
*****
Walking into Winslow felt odd. I was in uniform, voice changer active, and some of the kids were filming me. They were backing off a little, whispers and comments.
The Investigator might not be Orb Weaver, but any cape commanded respectâor fear. Even Leet, even if only due to the possibility of being in the blast radius of his gadgets.
Every cape, even the least, had some fragment of power that no mere âmortalâ could touch. Probably explained why so many Capes were so arrogant.
My bugs were tracking everyone in the building. Most of the kids were in class, the ones currently out, likely because they had seen the taxi that had delivered me to the front of the school.
And they were being quickly ushered into their classes.
So, unlike the Winslow I remembered.
It didnât take me long to get to the office, and the secretary called ahead. I walked into the office andâŠ
Wait. Maria?
Along with Kurt and Lacy. Dad had sent me some messages, but he couldnât be here. He had no reason, and it would be suspicious. But he mentioned someone could use a hand.
Maria had a rapidly worsening bruise on one eye, and three teens were in the other part of the room.
E88 members. Or well, wannabe members. None of them, I expected, had been initiated.
E88 Initiations appeared to be on temporary hold. Something about bug issues.
âWhatâs a cape doing here?â one of the E88 members said. I could see his ID on the desk of Principal Thomas.
Upside down, but that was easy enough for me to work around.
âI am here because I knew I would be needed, Mr. Wilkes.â In my pocket, my bugs worked on the phone. âIn the office so soon after your arrest for vandalizing a car?â
âHow doââ
âI know many things. But not, it seems, why Iâm here.â
Thomas sighed. âWell, tell The Investigator, Maria.â
âI tried to beat up one of the boys, the other two helped him, but I started it. I said I had to go to the bathroom, and then⊠you know.â
Lie.
I didnât need powers for that, but the three were starting to grin, and Kurtâs big, muscular hands were clenching. Lacy was doing the same, but I expect she was thinking more about using a sledgehammer than her hands.
âIsnât it like, mandatory suspension?â One asked. âYou know, for being a bully?â
For a brief moment, I considered having Orb Weaver just âhappenâ by, but⊠no. I couldnât.
âShe attacked youâŠâ I said. âInteresting.â I looked at one of themâhe had scratches on his face. âShe started with scratching you.â
âYeah! You got it.â
âAh.â
Every night I read from eight to twelve books, and I could remember much of them. In the daytime I read more, if I was close to a computer, because I didnât need to worry about dividing my attention.
And since I was the âInvestigatorâ many of those books were on interrogation and detective skills, as well as evaluating crime scenes.
And I knew why I was here. Maria wasnât going to tell, and if she didnât, one thing that Mr. Thomas had established was that the rules applied to everyone. And it was her word against three andâŠ
He had made it plain he had no patience for the E88 or ABB, which might open him to accusations of favoring a minority, especially if she claimed that she had started it.
âLet us see the crime scene,â I said. âIt was in a place where there were no cameras.â
âYeah, there was a camera there!â
âAnd?â
âAnd it was on a motorized swivel, which unaccountably jammed,â Thomasâs face was angry.
âAnd it was workingâŠâ
âThis morning. But I havenât had anyone touch it. I got a call you might be on the way.â
âThank you.â
Their parents arenât here. Why not? Apathetic, or wanting plausible deniability? Was this ordered by the E88?
If so, not anyone important.
The scene of the fight was in one of the corners, where the turn obscured the view of any of the classrooms.
I had personal memories of this part of the school. VERY personal memories. Bugs started gyrating, and then calmed down. The camera was new, but I could see the problem. It turned on a 30 second sweep, leaving blind spots.
But even with the extra money, Winslow was still not wealthy, and since a fight probably wouldnât end that quickly, and the camera could catch people coming and goingâŠ
âJammed before the fight, and no view of who came.â
âYeah.â
The camera was just out of my reach, but I could see the joint. There was some kind of residue on it, and I sent one of the ants crawling in the walls to run out of a gap and, as ants would do, run its feelers over the residue. Nobody even noticed.
âThe residue, I expect is from gum.â
Suddenly, the trio didnât look so happy.
âGum?â
âThe simplest way for Maria to stop the camera, before she ambushed youâŠâ I blinked. âBut how did she do it?â
âUm, just stuck it on?â
âMaria, come here.â
She did, still holding her bruised eye.
âStand up, reach up as high as you can. On your tiptoesâŠâ
Her hand was nearly six inches short of the swivel.
âOdd.â
âHey, she used a chair!â
âShe did?â I turned to them. âWhere is it?â
âIââ
âAfter all, Iâm certain nobody would have missed a chair, not after the principalâs orders.â
âUm, no, it was⊠she probably brought it here and then took it back.â
âSo sheâŠleft class. Secured a chair, dragged it here, with nobody noticing the noise and no other cameras picking up the odd sight, disabled the camera, dragged the chair back and then attacked you. I have a simpler solution. Why donât you come here and reach up.â
He did nothing, and then Thomas growled at him. He did, slumping, but at another growl, reached up.
And easily touched the swivel.
I hadnât sent any bugs to him, but I had a hunch.
âTurn out your pockets, please.â
It took another growl, but there it was. A pack of gum.
And a bit of gum wrapped up in its wrapper.
Remember, criminals love smart-stupid plans. A book Iâd read. Someone planning for the entire school to be shut down, hiding the evidence in their pocket, where they could dump it later. Instead of considering that nobody would go through every trashcan for something like this.
âSo, do you often carry used gum around?â I held out my hand, and like someone marching to his execution, he held it out and I opened the paper, sniffed it. âOdd, I didnât recall grease scented gum as a thingâŠâ
âIâshe said she did it!â the third of the trio burst out.
âBecause I expect you had a short conversation with her after you attacked her.â I gestured to Maria. âPlease show me your forearms.â
She did. âIt was⊠when I was hittingââ
âThe bruise patterns are consistent with defensive wounds. You were holding up your arms, trying to protect yourself, then they gripped you by the wrists, pulled your arms down, and then hit you in the face. You didnât try to fight until you couldnât escape, and probably surprised them, hence the claw marks.â
Her mouth opened like I had spoken some incredible feat of detective work instead of seeing what the adults probably noticedâAnd thatâs why Dad called for me. Being a cape gives me some gravitas that three thugs werenât expecting to encounter.
âNone of you have been blooded,â I said. âNot on the streets, not in Hookwolfâs rings.â
âIâfuck we haââ
âBecause if you were, you would understand how serious this is. The DA might see himself clear to filing felony charges against you, with hate crime enhancements. Since you deprived Maria of a right to a free education, Federal civil rights charges would also apply. Given that you are juniors, you would likely be charged as an adult.â I shook my head. âCall it⊠twenty years. At least for those who do not confess and show it wasnât their idea.â
A lie. Any DA, let alone a federal DA who tried to file felony charges for this would be laughed out of court.
But teens were ignorant. Worse, they thought they knew everything. I know I had. And now a cape, with all that implied, was telling them this, and since their great plan, which probably even Skidmark could have improved on, was collapsingâŠ
âIââ
âIt was George!â the youngest member of the trio said. âHe said that she was just a slut, and we could smack her around and have some fun with her and sheâd neverââ
âShut up!â
âFuck you, Iâm not going to prison for you!â
âI didnât want to do it!â the third shouted out.
âDo it? I thought Maria attacked you?â I couldnât keep the satisfaction out of my voice as I saw his fear. Huh. Maybe I wasnât completely over my bullying.
âNo, I was in her class, and I texted⊠but I didnât want to do it.â
âYou fuckââ George was advancing but suddenly ran into Thomasâ outstretched arm. It stopped him like an iron bar.
âGentlemen,â he said. âWeâre going back to my office, and I think your parents need to be there for your change of educational institution.â
âWhat?â Three voices sounded as one.
âWhether or not Mariaâs guardians take further action is up to them, but since you didnât bother to listen to the zero tolerance bullying policy, or read what you and your parents signed⊠your future education lies with Lincoln Continuation School.â
âWhatâbut you canât do thatââ
âOkay, Iâll just call the police.â
âSuch a scandal would inconvenience certain individuals,â I commented. âKaiser, for one. I canât but wonder if he might not bail the miscreants out in person⊠to express his annoyance.â
They deflated. If anyone else had said itâŠ
But no, they probably assumed that I did talk to Kaiser. Granted, I might be right. If I were Kaiser, Iâd want nothing to happen to blot my constructed lie of worrying about the welfare of the good people of the Bay. Three on one girl didnât look good for the people he was trying to convince. As for the others, Kaiser didnât need to woo them. If anything he was probably worried they might exceed his orders.
With that, we tromped back to the office, the completely deflated teens being sent to another room to wait.
âDo you want to go home, Maria?â Thomas asked.
âI⊠no. Iâm⊠Iâm sorry I liedâŠâ
âYou were afraid,â I told her. âUnderstandable because you are not Alexandria. But rememberâŠâ I paused, and bugs froze, then started moving again. âThe bully has to make you helpless in your own mind. To convince you that you canât fight back. Winslow, Iâve been told, is different than it used to be. People will listen, but you must speak to them.â I shook my head. âEasier said than done, I know.â
Boy, did I know.
âHoney, are you certain you want to go back?â Lacy said.
âI⊠yes.â Maria nodded. âIt doesnât hurt that much.â
A lie. We could all see it. She was embarrassed, a little ashamed at her fear and she didnât want to run away.
Well, I could certainly empathize with that.
âFine, but Iâll have someone walk you back to class.â A few minutes later, and a short Asian girl came walking in. âReina,â Mr. Thomas said. âCould you take Maria back to class.â
âOf course. Reina, you will sit with us for lunch.â
âBut Iââ Mariaâs mouth snapped shut.
Reina laughed. âDonât worry, I think itâs time we started breaking down some of these stupid barriers. Weâre just high school students, after all. Iâd like to get to know youâŠâ And with that, they left.
Kurt and Lacy thanked me, and Iâve have to Remind Dad that they knew Taylor, and my disguise might not work on close observation, especially if they werenât worried like they are now. I made my farewells, leaving the principal to talk to Mariaâs parents.
Parents in truth if not in law. For all the risk, I felt a good deal of satisfaction.
But I had other things to think about. Everyone reacted to a cape differently. Even Mr. Thomas, who had experience had shown a certain reserve, someone around a possibly dangerous individual. Even Kurt and Lacy. Mast definitely the trio, and Maria.
But Reina⊠Sheâd had a cool regard for me. But no awe. No fear.
InterestingâŠ
Well, it was time to get back to my research. If only corporations were as easy to buffalo as a band of racist teens.
Comments
Oh: "Reina, you will sit with us for lunch" > "Maria", surely
Craig Neumeier
2024-04-04 01:10:59 +0000 UTCSo, Reina comes ever so slightly to Taylor's attention. Interesting.
Craig Neumeier
2024-04-04 01:10:17 +0000 UTC