Chapter 68
Posted: Sun Mar 18, 2012 4:10 pm
^ I'm guessing a lot of fans feel that way about Tess. I think she was supposed to represent the conflict between their "old" lives and their new ones. Either that or she was just the typical romantic doorstop one finds in most TV shows.
CHAPTER SIXTY-EIGHT
January 31, 2000, 3 p.m.
Roswell Sheriff's Station
"Knock, knock," Hanson said, poking his head in the door. "Got a minute? Sure is a relief to have the convention over with," he went on when Valenti nodded. "Busy weekend."
"It was," Valenti agreed. "And we almost made it without major mishap. Emphasis on the 'almost'."
"Yeah," Hanson agreed ruefully. "I've got the preliminary report on Hubble here. Thought I'd show it to you before officially filing it."
"Please," Valenti said, gesturing. "Have a seat."
Valenti did his best to look unconcerned as Hanson settled into a chair. It was standard procedure that when an officer was involved in a shooting, other officers conducted the investigation. He'd given his statement when Hanson had arrived to collect Hubble's body; now he'd be hearing any other statements Hanson had collected for the first time, and he had no idea what Max Evans had told him. They really should have squared their stories before they'd parted, but hindsight was always twenty-twenty. What he'd come up with to explain his own part in this little drama should withstand scrutiny, so he could only hope that Evans had covered his own butt as well.
"Okay, first of all, I've got your statement," Hanson said. "Hubble called you, said he wanted to meet you at the cafe but didn't say why, you went to the UFO center to find him—"
"You don't have to read me my own statement, Hanson," Valenti said, fearful even now that he'd missed something, that some vital detail would leap out and give the lie away. "What about the rest of it? Did you find anything in his motel room?"
"No, sir," Hanson answered, "unless you count lots of dirty clothes, take-out containers, and ants. No papers, no cameras, nothing that would indicate what he was up to."
"Naturally," Valenti sighed. "What else?"
"I spoke with Milton first," Hanson went on. "He said that Hubble had agreed to be at the round table discussion and that he'd sent him off with his assistant to pick up his slides in Bitter Lake, which is interesting given that he hasn't lived there in decades. He confirmed you asking after them, and also said two other people had asked where they were going, an unidentified middle-aged white male and that kid who broke into the UFO center a while back, Michael Guerin.
Middle-aged white male... So that was the mystery Hubble chaser. "Did you talk to Guerin?" Valenti asked.
"Yep, and he said he hitched a ride up north. Said he was worried because a convention attendee had been talking to Hubble and identified him as a 'nutcase'. And get this—that attendee was none other than Larry Trilling."
"The witness from the Crashdown shooting," Valenti murmured.
"The same," Hanson agreed. "Apparently Trilling told the shooting story at the convention as an example of an 'alien encounter' and pissed everyone off. Hubble talked to him afterward and seemed to believe him. He was really rattled when I told him Hubble was dead. Left in a hurry, although I insisted on his contact information in case we need to find him."
"And Evans?"
"Confirmed that he left with Hubble to pick up his slides in Bitter Lake. Said they'd only been on Route 70 East a short while when Hubble suddenly said he'd changed his mind and demanded to get out of the car. Told Evans to go back and tell Milton to go to hell."
"So he left him by the side of the road?"
"Yes, sir. Must have walked to where you found him."
Okay, Valenti thought, letting out a long slow breath. So far the tale Max Evans had come up with meshed with his own. Good news, that, but they weren't out of the woods yet. "Did Hubble tell Evans why he wanted to be left in the middle of nowhere?"
"Nope," Hanson answered. "Just insisted on getting out, and insisted Evans leave. Thing I can't figure out is, Hubble had a rental car. Why'd he get some kid to drive him when he could have driven out there all by himself?"
"Who knows," Valenti said lightly. "Hubble could be a scary guy; God knows he scared me back when he had my dad wrapped around his little finger, and I was an adult. I'm not surprised Evans just did what he told him to. I would have."
To Valenti's relief, Hanson nodded. "Evans was pretty rattled about the whole thing. Nothing like Milt, though. He's gonna need analysis."
"He needed it anyway," Valenti said dryly. "What about Hubble's phone?"
"That was a bust. No numbers stored in it. No calls other than local calls. The last call that came in was a blocked number."
"Of course it was," Valenti murmured.
"You still think he was working for the FBI?"
"He knew something I only told Agent Stevens," Valenti answered. "That's the only explanation that makes sense."
Hanson hesitated before leaning forward. "If you don't mind my asking, sir," he said in a low voice, "what did he know?"
"Yes, I mind," Valenti said tartly. "There's a reason I only told Agent Stevens."
"Right," Hanson said quickly. "Right, well...that's about it. Oh...there was one more thing," he added, pulling a manila envelope from the pile of papers in his hand. "This is the ballistics report my father filed for you. Must've called in a favor or three to get it back so fast."
Valenti stared at the envelope like it was poison. "Thanks."
****************************************************
UFO Center
Max Evans trotted down the stairs into the UFO Center, his backpack so heavy it made his shoulder ache. He must have every textbook he owned in there, each weighing several pounds and each guaranteed to keep his mind off his near brush with death last night. He'd learned the hard way that the best way to avoid thinking about one thing was to focus on another, or try to anyway, and he intended to try by doing the world's best homework tonight. Prior to that he intended to scrub this entire place from top to bottom, an idea that was curiously comforting, as though he were washing Hubble's residue away. This was the danger zone, the lag time between school and work, so he hurried into the office, eager to get started before his mind wandered into places he'd rather it not go. Milton was sitting in front of the computer, and he turned around when Max walked in.
"Ah. Evans. I thought you were here."
Max blinked. "You did?"
"Of course. I walked in and found this on the screen. It wasn't me, so it must have been you."
Max's eyes scanned the text on the screen......shooting at Silo...Sheriff James Valenti...Everett Hubble... "Uh...yeah," he answered, his eyes darting around the office. "Hope you don't mind. I was just trying to...understand things a little better."
"Of course," Milton said sorrowfully. "Of course. Perfectly understandable." He rose from his seat, put both hands on Max's shoulders. "Evans, I can't begin to tell you how sorry I am about all this. It's dreadful. Simply dreadful."
"You apologized last night," Max said. "No need to do it again. It wasn't your fault."
"But I feel like it was," Milton said in an anguished tone, revisiting the script from yesterday evening. "I sent you off with him with no idea how...how unhinged he was. Thank God he didn't take it out on you."
He tried, Max thought privately. "At least the sheriff is okay," he said out loud.
"And thank God for that too," Milton agreed. "I gather it was something about that business with Valenti's father, although from what I've heard, it should have been the sheriff going after Hubble, not the other way around. And to think I was so excited when I first saw him, so honored that he'd chosen me and my humble haven to make his first appearance in years. And to have it end like this...well...it's just cruel to have such a glorious weekend...implode...like that."
"It was a good weekend," Max agreed. "Lots of people, lots of cash. Don't let Hubble ruin it for you."
"I shouldn't," Milton agreed, looking close to tears. "You're right, I really shouldn't. I sincerely hope this incident doesn't wind up reflecting badly on the center."
"It won't," Max assured him. "A lot of people were gone already when it happened because they had to get home for work this morning. Only the diehards stayed for the round table discussion, and they're the most likely to understand someone like Hubble going..."
"Nuts?" Hubble suggested. "Whacko?"
"I was thinking 'dangerously unstable'," Max finished.
"That, too," Milton sighed. "Well...I suppose we should both get cracking. Lots to clean up before we reopen tomorrow." He was halfway to the door when he turned around.
"You know, they say meeting aliens can make you go mad. If 'direct contact' makes you end up like Hubble, maybe I should be careful what I wish for." He paused. "Nah. Who am I kidding? I'm never going to have a 'direct contact'."
"Then I guess you've got nothing to worry about," Max said.
"I guess not," Milton agreed. "Although it does make me wonder if I want to keep doing this in such a public way. After last night, I'm not so sure."
After he left, Max leaned against the desk and breathed a sigh of relief. "All right, Michael, you can come out now. He's gone."
There was a pause before he heard a shuffling noise in the corner. "How'd you know it was me?" Michael asked, hoisting himself onto the edge of the desk.
"Because only you would be stupid enough to break in here when you're already on Milton's shit list," Max said darkly. "And here you are."
"Hey, this was the perfect time to break in here," Michael argued. "Place is closed today. Fewer people to dodge. Besides, I had to find out what we were up against. The sheriff did something really weird last night, and we didn't know why—"
"Okay, okay," Max broke in, holding up a hand. "So did you find out why?"
"Oh, yeah," Michael said with satisfaction. "Hubble was there the night Valenti's father was arrested for shooting some unarmed guy and wound up losing his job over it."
"I vaguely remember reading something about that," Max said. "So what?"
"So didn't you hear what Hubble said last night when Valenti threatened to shoot him? He said, 'Your old man couldn't do it, and neither can you'."
"No, Michael, I didn't hear," Max said crossly. "I had a few other things on my mind, like the gun pointed at me."
"But don't you see what that means?" Michael pressed. "It means Valenti's father probably didn't shoot that dude. Hubble did, and Valenti's dad took the fall."
"At the risk of sounding like a broken record...so what?"
"So that explains why Valenti was talking to Hubble, and why he was willing to shoot him, and why he—"
"Okay, I get it," Max broke in. "They had history. We already knew that. Not the details, maybe, but the basics. How does this help us?"
"Maybe it doesn't. I just wanted to know the score in case Valenti blew us in."
"I don't think he'll blow us in, Michael. If he were going to do that, he would have done it already. Besides, we could blow him in, and after what happened to his father, he must be aware of what that could mean."
"Let's hope so," Michael agreed. "Anything happen at school?"
"Does that mean you didn't go?" Max asked, wincing when Michael shrugged. "No, nothing happened at school. No one even knew about it. No deputies either; that was all last night, thank God. The last thing I needed was someone knocking on my front door or pulling me out of math class."
"So the story worked?"
"Guess so. Nobody's questioned it, least of all Milton."
"Great," Michael said. "So we're done."
"No, we're not 'done'," Max said. "We still have to tell everyone."
" 'Everyone'?" Michael echoed. "You mean Isabel, right?"
"No, I mean everyone. Liz, Maria, Alex, everyone."
"What for?"
"Because there might be other Hubble's out there," Max said. "They need to know that because Hubble could have taken any of us in order to get to me. Nobody's safe, Michael, not us, not anyone who knows us."
"All the more reason no one should know us," Michael remarked.
"Says the guy who was necking in the janitor's closet," Max muttered.
"Not recently. And not ever again."
"Oh, that's right," Max said dryly. "You're gonna think about mud and make it all go away."
"Hey, whatever works. I say we give it the week," Michael went on. "Let it become older news before we give Isabel a reason to flip out." He hopped down off the desk. "There's one good thing about this, you know. We learned something else about Nasedo."
"Yeah," Max said tonelessly. "We learned someone else is dead because of him. Why would we want to find this person? Do we even want to know him? He left a pile of bodies a mile high."
"So they say."
"So lots of people say," Max corrected. "I know you don't want it to be true, but we've heard this from enough people now that even you have to admit the possibility."
"Fine," Michael said. "I admit the possibility. But we need to find him one way or the other, even if it's true. Maybe especially if it's true."
"We especially need to find someone who killed people?" Max said doubtfully.
"Definitely," Michael answered. "Because if it is true...we need to know why."
******************************************************
The Haven Living Center
"Dad?"
Valenti waited, his hands nervously clutching the manila envelope with the ballistics report as his father slowly turned in his wheelchair, blinking as though he'd been lost in thought as opposed to simply staring out the window.
"Jimmy?"
He knows me, Valenti thought with relief, taking a seat beside him. Given his father's condition, that was always up in the air, and today, more than ever, he needed his father to recognize him, to remember. Part of him wanted to just launch into the whole Hubble debacle because part of him needed his father like he hadn't in years. The other part of him wondered if his dad would even remember that he'd been here before and why.
"What happened?" his father asked. "Where's Hub?"
Settled that one, Valenti thought, glancing around the "town square", The Haven's optimistic name for their community room. No one was close by, or no one capable of eavesdropping, anyway. "Hub's gone, Dad," Valenti said quietly.
"Gone? Gone where?"
"Gone for good," Valenti clarified. "He's...dead."
His father gazed at him in silence for a moment. "Hub's dead?"
"Yeah. He, a...he was shot."
"Shot?" his father repeated. "Who shot him?"
His father's gaze was unrelenting now, the man who usually looked absently out the window now looking steadily at him. Valenti fidgeted with the ballistics report, the envelope twirling once, twice, three times.
"I did," he said finally, surprised by how tight his throat felt, how hard it was to speak. "I didn't mean to," he went on in a rush as his father continued to stare at him without reaction, without blinking, even. "He was threatening to shoot someone, a kid, a boy he thought was...an alien," he finished in a lower voice. "I told him to stand down, but he wouldn't. He just wouldn't."
Silence. His father stared at him for several more long, agonizing seconds before turning his gaze back to the window. Great, Valenti thought heavily. His father's clarity had lasted just long enough for him to confess, but not long enough to explain, not really. And not long enough for absolution either, although also not long enough for condemnation. There was that, at least.
A hand crept over his, patted it. "You did the right thing, Jimmy. Good boy."
There. Only eight words, yet they carried the mother lode of not only absolution, but the one thing he'd always sought from his father even as he'd hated himself for doing it: Approval. "I didn't want to," Valenti said, his voice close to breaking. "Why didn't he just put the gun down? Why do I think it's my fault even though he wouldn't put the gun down?"
"Because it's hard to kill a man," his father said. "Always is. Always should be. But at least you killed the right one."
"See, there's the thing, Dad," Valenti said, brandishing the envelope. "I had the bullet that killed that drifter checked, and it didn't come from your gun. I was right, wasn't I? Hubble shot him."
His father hesitated, nodded. "Then why in the name of all that's holy did you say it was you?" Valenti demanded, finding it difficult now to keep his voice down. "Why did you take the rap for it?"
"I never said I shot him," his father answered. "I said it was my responsibility. Guess they took that to mean I did it."
"God, Dad, don't play semantics with me!" Valenti exclaimed. "You knew they were 'taking it' wrong, so why didn't you correct them? I notice Hubble didn't, but you sure as hell could have."
" 'Cause it was my fault, Jimmy," his father said quietly. "It was all my fault. I may not have pulled the trigger, but I was the reason it was pulled."
"See, I'm not following," Valenti said, slapping the envelope down on his father's lap. "You told me that Hubble said he wouldn't hurt the drifter. So how do you figure it was your fault when he went back on his word?"
His father's eyes drifted from the envelope to the window. "Because I knew him," he said in a remarkably steady voice. "I knew how obsessed he was. I should never have believed him...but I did. I believed him, and because I did, a dangerous man got close enough to hurt someone, someone in my town, someone who was my responsibility. Didn't matter if Hub was right or not, if that drifter was alien or human. We were human, and we don't just execute people without a fair trial. Innocent till proven guilty. That's the way it works. That's the way I work." He paused, looking back at Valenti. "What about this kid? Was Hubble right? Is he an alien?"
Valenti glanced around the room, fearful that even the senile and the deaf would overhear this conversation. That it was taking place at all was nothing short of a miracle given the disdain with which he'd always treated his father's chief obsession, and he realized with a shock that he was seriously considering his answer, proof positive that he'd crossed the line.
"I don't know," Valenti said, unwilling even now to utter his suspicions out loud. "Something's weird, but...I don't know."
"What'd he do? Hurt someone?"
Valenti shook his head. "No; that's just it, he didn't hurt anyone. If he did anything, he...he saved a girl's life. How's that one for you?" he added, his voice heavy with irony. "This kid couldn't have been Hubble's alien...he wasn't even born in 1970...but he almost got killed for saving someone's life."
His father's eyes drifted back to the window. "They're not all bad, you know. She taught me that."
"Who?" Valenti asked.
"Dee. And that mother of hers, that spitfire. Hell raisers, both of them; apple didn't fall far from that tree, straight down, really."
"Dad, who are you talking about? Who's 'Dee'?"
"She came to me that night," his father went on, ignoring him. "Said Courtney was in trouble. Asked for my help. Showed me something, something...impossible."
Valenti closed his mouth, swallowing his next question. He'd heard older people remembered what happened years ago like it was yesterday, so perhaps this was accurate. Perhaps he'd better just shut up and listen, and sort out the details later.
"And I told her I couldn't," his father went on. "FBI was on my tail, and they would have followed me. Courtney wouldn't have been any better off if Lewis had gotten hold of her, worse, probably."
Valenti sat there in silence, one hand to his mouth to guard against any chance he would stop the flow of words. He had no idea who "Courtney" or "Lewis" were, and at this point, he didn't care; this blizzard of information was unprecedented.
"Courtney's father died that night," his father went on. "Dee didn't make it in time either. But she said there was a war on, and we were caught in the middle of it. Said they'd left town, maybe for good. For a long time, it looked like she was right.
And then Hub showed up," his father continued. "Maybe they'd left, but I'd know that handprint anywhere. Nobody believed him. It disappears, you know. All he had was the photo. But I believed him because I'd seen it."
His father paused, and it took every ounce of Valenti's willpower not the fill the silence with questions. "Hub shot that man because he thought he was an alien," his father went on, so quiet he was barely audible. "When he found out he was human, he was furious. He wanted me to lie and say the man had attacked us. Said it was an honest mistake. Said he'd back me up."
Sure he would have, Valenti thought sourly. Until the evidence proved otherwise, in which case he would have thrown his father to the wolves. "Dad, we need to go to the town council with this," Valenti said, unable to hold his tongue any longer. "We need to tell them what really happened."
His father's eyes swung around to rest on him. "What for?"
"What do you mean, 'what for'?" Valenti said in exasperation. "To exonerate you, that's 'what for'! I know you feel guilty about what happened to that drifter, but you were convicted of something you didn't do. That's not right either."
"Doesn't matter," his father whispered. "Hub's dead."
"You're not dead!" Valenti exclaimed. "And yes it does matter, because you're still here and people still think you did something awful, something you didn't do. Just talk to them, Dad. I can have them come here. Tell them what you told me, tell them..."
Valenti stopped, his plea dying in his throat as he saw his father's expression go blank, watched the veil descend as he turned back to the window, his fingers plucking at the afghan in his lap.
"It's freezing in here," he said tonelessly. "They're trying to kill me."
Nice going, Valenti chided himself, closing his eyes. Of course his father didn't want to relive the whole Silo affair. From his perspective, what would be the point? It's not like they could give him his job back. It's not like he'd be able to get out of this place. No, dragging this all back into the light of day wouldn't do a thing for his father but upset him; it was himself he was doing it for, himself who would reap the benefits of everyone knowing his father was innocent. Assuming they'd believe it, of course. The fact that his son had just shot one of the witnesses might put a damper on things.
"Is everything all right here, sheriff?"
An aide hovered nearby, eyes moving back and forth from him to his father with concern. "Yeah, I...we...he was just...remembering things," he finished lamely. "Guess it upset him."
"That happens sometimes," the aide said soothingly. "It's not your fault."
Yes, it is. "Yeah. Thanks," Valenti said heavily. "I...I have to go now. Dad, I'm going now," he added to his father. "Can I...have that back?"
His father didn't look at him, just continued staring out the window as though he hadn't heard a word. Valenti reached over and coaxed the manila envelope away from him, sliding it out from beneath his hands.
His father didn't seem to notice.
******************************************************
"I'm surprised to see you here," Brivari remarked as Jaddo fell in step beside him on Roswell's Main Street. "I would have thought you'd be lurking back at the house."
"Under the circumstances, I thought a public place might be more appropriate for our next meeting," Jaddo answered. "Or safer, at least. Especially after you ordered me away last night."
"I needed time to think. And while I admit it's difficult to hurl you against a wall in broad daylight in front of dozens of humans, you shouldn't worry about me. I'm creative."
"That's alarming," Jaddo said warily. "You don't sound angry, and you're actually joking."
"Is that bad?"
"It's incongruent. If I found out you'd kept the possible existence of a Pierce from me, I'd be furious."
"Can I have that in writing?"
"And there you go again," Jaddo muttered. "I think I prefer the relative simplicity of being thrown against a wall."
"Of course you do," Brivari chuckled. "Which is precisely why I'm not doing it, forcing you instead to wade through the swamp of emotion you typically avoid like the plague."
"Okay, seriously," Jaddo said impatiently, "would you please just react? Scream, yell, berate, take your pick, but do something."
"I am doing something," Brivari replied calmly. "I was checking out Hubble's motel room, or rather checking out what Valenti's deputies checked out about Hubble's motel room."
"And?"
"He left no clues to any involvement with the Unit," Brivari answered, "although if he were involved, it's unlikely he'd leave a business card."
"Hmpf," Jaddo snorted.
"There was, however, the issue of the phone call placed to Hubble's cellphone mere minutes after he died. Valenti apparently answered it, the caller asked for Hubble, then hung up. It came from a private number."
"And there's the Unit," Jaddo said in disgust.
"Interestingly, Valenti seems to agree. Apparently Hubble had information he'd only given to Agent Stevens, which led him to the same conclusion."
"Score one for Valenti," Jaddo said grudgingly.
"Two," Brivari corrected. "He killed Hubble in an effort to protect the king."
"And do we know why he did that?"
"Hubble was deeply involved in an incident nearly thirty years ago which cost a man his life and Valenti Sr. his job," Brivari replied. "Something about Hubble being after the man who'd killed his wife." He paused, letting that sink in. "I have to say, I'm impressed, Jaddo. The trail of mayhem you leave in your wake is always long, but this one spans decades. That must be a new record. Well done."
"And there's the Brivari I know," Jaddo said with satisfaction. "Thank goodness. I'll take this opportunity to point out that none of us know the future consequences of any actions we take or don't take, and leave it at that. Now will you tell me why you're not angry?"
"Coffee?" Brivari suggested, gesturing across the street.
Jaddo blinked. "Coffee? Here?"
"Why not 'here'?" Brivari asked. "No better place, if you ask me."
The Crashdown was busy with the typical after school crowd as they slid into the one remaining empty booth. They had just ordered from an exceptionally surly waitress named "Agnes" when Brivari's phone rang. He glanced briefly at the number before replacing the phone in his pocket.
"Don't you need to get that?" Jaddo asked, the faintest note of derision in his voice. "No doubt Hollywood needs you."
"It wasn't Hollywood, it was Dee."
Jaddo's eyes dropped. "Does she know?"
"That her grandson was threatened by a madman you invented? No, she doesn't," Brivari answered. "Yet."
"Zan isn't her grandson," Jaddo said.
"Go ahead and tell her that," Brivari said, holding out his phone. "I dare you."
Jaddo eyed the phone warily as though it might bite him. *I suppose he could be both king and grandson,* he allowed, switching to telepathic speech.
*Wise choice,* Brivari said dryly. *And I was. Angry, that is. But then I realized it doesn't matter.*
*What doesn't matter?*
*Whether or not Pierce left an heir,* Brivari answered, *which, by the way, I've never heard either. But if so, and if he's working for the Unit, that essentially changes nothing; the Unit remains a threat with or without a Pierce. If they've acquired the serum, that was always a possibility with or without a Pierce. The presence or absence of a Pierce really has no bearing on the threat to our Wards or our response to it, other than to make this entire mess more...personal.*
Jaddo sat in silence for a minute during which their coffee arrived along with an exceptionally harried Maria DeLuca, who promptly got into an argument with Agnes about her tardiness. *I'm surprised,* he said finally. *As I noted, I'd be angry if I were to learn you even suspected.*
*Because for you, the presence of a Pierce would be personal,* Brivari said. *I'm unclear as to why you haven't pursued the issue more forcefully than merely keeping an ear to the ground. For you, that represents uncharacteristic restraint.*
*Don't think I didn't want to,* Jaddo said darkly. *But I became a parent. That tends to restrict one's freedom. And please, let's not have any more discussion about how that came about. It was a decision I made, and I know that. Rehashing it now is a waste of time.*
*I agree,* Brivari said. *Which is why I think it's time for us to bury the hatchet.*
*Bury...what?*
Brivari smiled faintly. *It's a human expression. It basically means to stop fighting. I think it's time we abandoned our antagonism and actively worked together.*
Jaddo's eyes narrowed. *You do? Why?*
*Because we just did,* Brivari answered. *I had no idea the threat Hubble posed. Without you, I wouldn't have known to pursue him. As it happened, that would not have been a problem, but it could just as easily have turned out otherwise.*
*Hmm,* Jaddo murmured skeptically. *So this has nothing to do with the fact that we're going to have to learn how to do this when Tess and I move here this summer, so why not start now and look magnanimous in the process?*
*That too. Look, I know we've had our differences,* Brivari continued as Jaddo raised an eyebrow, *and I know that probably qualifies as the understatement of the humans' new century. But they need both of us, Jaddo, all of them. They need as many Warders as they can get, with all our attendant strengths and weaknesses. They're ranging so far afield now and attracting so much attention that I'm no longer confident that it's wise for me to do this alone. I feel like I'm herding cats, with everyone scattering in different directions and me trying to keep up with them all. I need help. I need your help.*
Brivari waited while Jaddo eyed him warily, as well he might. He wasn't lying, but what he hadn't added was that he was badly rattled by what had nearly happened yesterday. Keeping Jaddo close would not only lessen the chances of another potential catastrophe but also provide the fringe benefit of averting another incident like his *sighting*. Granted Jaddo was every bit as likely to pull something like that as he was before, but at least he'd be more likely to know about it sooner. Dee tried, but even she had missed the signs that something was amiss with the fake sighting. Left unspoken was the fact that Jaddo was one of those cats he was trying to herd.
*Would this mean I'm now welcome in Roswell?* Jaddo asked.
*Yes,* Brivari answered. *As I would be welcome to see Ava. It works both ways,* he added when Jaddo shot him a suspicious look. *If you want access to your Ward, you give me access to my Ward's mate. One for the other.*
*I suppose,* Jaddo said grudgingly. *Although neither of us will have much in the way of 'access' until they're reunited. You can't leave your three, and my one can be every bit as much trouble as the others.*
*Mine actually haven't been any trouble for a full month now, something of a record for them,* Brivari added dryly. *They brought on neither your 'sighting' nor the latest debacle. Perhaps they're learning.*
*Perhaps,* Jaddo said doubtfully.
*You don't think so?*
Jaddo was quiet for a moment. *I think,* he said slowly, *that it will be Rath.*
*What will be Rath?*
*Whatever happens next. He knows the cave symbols are a map. He's forgotten how to read them, but I know him—he'll figure it out. He won't stop until he does. And once he does...well, let's just say I fear that their previous antics will pale by comparison.*
******************************************************
Hank Whitmore's trailer
"Yeah, yeah, yeah," Michael said in a bored tone, Hank's angry voice abating somewhat as he slammed the trailer's door behind him. Hank was incredibly annoying, but somehow it was hard to get all worked up over an irate drunk when they'd just been faced with a crazy man with a gun. Nothing like a good brush with death to put things in perspective; God knows his had for him. It had also precipitated a burst of memory, and as he boosted himself up on the picnic table, he idly wondered if it would have the same effect on Max. Would he suddenly remember something, a memory jarred from its dark shelf by a fight-or-flight reaction? Would he even admit it if he did?
Nah, Michael thought as Hank's tirade dwindled to angry, largely incoherent mutters. Max didn't want to know. Even if he remembered something, he'd probably write if off to a bad dream or something like that. Still, it wouldn't hurt to ask. It might even...
Michael paused, staring at the sky where the stars twinkled overhead. A moment later, a wide smile spread across his face. Perfect. Their recent crisis had indeed jarred lose a memory, and whatever gods there were had seen fit to send it to the right person.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I'll post Chapter 69 next Sunday.

CHAPTER SIXTY-EIGHT
January 31, 2000, 3 p.m.
Roswell Sheriff's Station
"Knock, knock," Hanson said, poking his head in the door. "Got a minute? Sure is a relief to have the convention over with," he went on when Valenti nodded. "Busy weekend."
"It was," Valenti agreed. "And we almost made it without major mishap. Emphasis on the 'almost'."
"Yeah," Hanson agreed ruefully. "I've got the preliminary report on Hubble here. Thought I'd show it to you before officially filing it."
"Please," Valenti said, gesturing. "Have a seat."
Valenti did his best to look unconcerned as Hanson settled into a chair. It was standard procedure that when an officer was involved in a shooting, other officers conducted the investigation. He'd given his statement when Hanson had arrived to collect Hubble's body; now he'd be hearing any other statements Hanson had collected for the first time, and he had no idea what Max Evans had told him. They really should have squared their stories before they'd parted, but hindsight was always twenty-twenty. What he'd come up with to explain his own part in this little drama should withstand scrutiny, so he could only hope that Evans had covered his own butt as well.
"Okay, first of all, I've got your statement," Hanson said. "Hubble called you, said he wanted to meet you at the cafe but didn't say why, you went to the UFO center to find him—"
"You don't have to read me my own statement, Hanson," Valenti said, fearful even now that he'd missed something, that some vital detail would leap out and give the lie away. "What about the rest of it? Did you find anything in his motel room?"
"No, sir," Hanson answered, "unless you count lots of dirty clothes, take-out containers, and ants. No papers, no cameras, nothing that would indicate what he was up to."
"Naturally," Valenti sighed. "What else?"
"I spoke with Milton first," Hanson went on. "He said that Hubble had agreed to be at the round table discussion and that he'd sent him off with his assistant to pick up his slides in Bitter Lake, which is interesting given that he hasn't lived there in decades. He confirmed you asking after them, and also said two other people had asked where they were going, an unidentified middle-aged white male and that kid who broke into the UFO center a while back, Michael Guerin.
Middle-aged white male... So that was the mystery Hubble chaser. "Did you talk to Guerin?" Valenti asked.
"Yep, and he said he hitched a ride up north. Said he was worried because a convention attendee had been talking to Hubble and identified him as a 'nutcase'. And get this—that attendee was none other than Larry Trilling."
"The witness from the Crashdown shooting," Valenti murmured.
"The same," Hanson agreed. "Apparently Trilling told the shooting story at the convention as an example of an 'alien encounter' and pissed everyone off. Hubble talked to him afterward and seemed to believe him. He was really rattled when I told him Hubble was dead. Left in a hurry, although I insisted on his contact information in case we need to find him."
"And Evans?"
"Confirmed that he left with Hubble to pick up his slides in Bitter Lake. Said they'd only been on Route 70 East a short while when Hubble suddenly said he'd changed his mind and demanded to get out of the car. Told Evans to go back and tell Milton to go to hell."
"So he left him by the side of the road?"
"Yes, sir. Must have walked to where you found him."
Okay, Valenti thought, letting out a long slow breath. So far the tale Max Evans had come up with meshed with his own. Good news, that, but they weren't out of the woods yet. "Did Hubble tell Evans why he wanted to be left in the middle of nowhere?"
"Nope," Hanson answered. "Just insisted on getting out, and insisted Evans leave. Thing I can't figure out is, Hubble had a rental car. Why'd he get some kid to drive him when he could have driven out there all by himself?"
"Who knows," Valenti said lightly. "Hubble could be a scary guy; God knows he scared me back when he had my dad wrapped around his little finger, and I was an adult. I'm not surprised Evans just did what he told him to. I would have."
To Valenti's relief, Hanson nodded. "Evans was pretty rattled about the whole thing. Nothing like Milt, though. He's gonna need analysis."
"He needed it anyway," Valenti said dryly. "What about Hubble's phone?"
"That was a bust. No numbers stored in it. No calls other than local calls. The last call that came in was a blocked number."
"Of course it was," Valenti murmured.
"You still think he was working for the FBI?"
"He knew something I only told Agent Stevens," Valenti answered. "That's the only explanation that makes sense."
Hanson hesitated before leaning forward. "If you don't mind my asking, sir," he said in a low voice, "what did he know?"
"Yes, I mind," Valenti said tartly. "There's a reason I only told Agent Stevens."
"Right," Hanson said quickly. "Right, well...that's about it. Oh...there was one more thing," he added, pulling a manila envelope from the pile of papers in his hand. "This is the ballistics report my father filed for you. Must've called in a favor or three to get it back so fast."
Valenti stared at the envelope like it was poison. "Thanks."
****************************************************
UFO Center
Max Evans trotted down the stairs into the UFO Center, his backpack so heavy it made his shoulder ache. He must have every textbook he owned in there, each weighing several pounds and each guaranteed to keep his mind off his near brush with death last night. He'd learned the hard way that the best way to avoid thinking about one thing was to focus on another, or try to anyway, and he intended to try by doing the world's best homework tonight. Prior to that he intended to scrub this entire place from top to bottom, an idea that was curiously comforting, as though he were washing Hubble's residue away. This was the danger zone, the lag time between school and work, so he hurried into the office, eager to get started before his mind wandered into places he'd rather it not go. Milton was sitting in front of the computer, and he turned around when Max walked in.
"Ah. Evans. I thought you were here."
Max blinked. "You did?"
"Of course. I walked in and found this on the screen. It wasn't me, so it must have been you."
Max's eyes scanned the text on the screen......shooting at Silo...Sheriff James Valenti...Everett Hubble... "Uh...yeah," he answered, his eyes darting around the office. "Hope you don't mind. I was just trying to...understand things a little better."
"Of course," Milton said sorrowfully. "Of course. Perfectly understandable." He rose from his seat, put both hands on Max's shoulders. "Evans, I can't begin to tell you how sorry I am about all this. It's dreadful. Simply dreadful."
"You apologized last night," Max said. "No need to do it again. It wasn't your fault."
"But I feel like it was," Milton said in an anguished tone, revisiting the script from yesterday evening. "I sent you off with him with no idea how...how unhinged he was. Thank God he didn't take it out on you."
He tried, Max thought privately. "At least the sheriff is okay," he said out loud.
"And thank God for that too," Milton agreed. "I gather it was something about that business with Valenti's father, although from what I've heard, it should have been the sheriff going after Hubble, not the other way around. And to think I was so excited when I first saw him, so honored that he'd chosen me and my humble haven to make his first appearance in years. And to have it end like this...well...it's just cruel to have such a glorious weekend...implode...like that."
"It was a good weekend," Max agreed. "Lots of people, lots of cash. Don't let Hubble ruin it for you."
"I shouldn't," Milton agreed, looking close to tears. "You're right, I really shouldn't. I sincerely hope this incident doesn't wind up reflecting badly on the center."
"It won't," Max assured him. "A lot of people were gone already when it happened because they had to get home for work this morning. Only the diehards stayed for the round table discussion, and they're the most likely to understand someone like Hubble going..."
"Nuts?" Hubble suggested. "Whacko?"
"I was thinking 'dangerously unstable'," Max finished.
"That, too," Milton sighed. "Well...I suppose we should both get cracking. Lots to clean up before we reopen tomorrow." He was halfway to the door when he turned around.
"You know, they say meeting aliens can make you go mad. If 'direct contact' makes you end up like Hubble, maybe I should be careful what I wish for." He paused. "Nah. Who am I kidding? I'm never going to have a 'direct contact'."
"Then I guess you've got nothing to worry about," Max said.
"I guess not," Milton agreed. "Although it does make me wonder if I want to keep doing this in such a public way. After last night, I'm not so sure."
After he left, Max leaned against the desk and breathed a sigh of relief. "All right, Michael, you can come out now. He's gone."
There was a pause before he heard a shuffling noise in the corner. "How'd you know it was me?" Michael asked, hoisting himself onto the edge of the desk.
"Because only you would be stupid enough to break in here when you're already on Milton's shit list," Max said darkly. "And here you are."
"Hey, this was the perfect time to break in here," Michael argued. "Place is closed today. Fewer people to dodge. Besides, I had to find out what we were up against. The sheriff did something really weird last night, and we didn't know why—"
"Okay, okay," Max broke in, holding up a hand. "So did you find out why?"
"Oh, yeah," Michael said with satisfaction. "Hubble was there the night Valenti's father was arrested for shooting some unarmed guy and wound up losing his job over it."
"I vaguely remember reading something about that," Max said. "So what?"
"So didn't you hear what Hubble said last night when Valenti threatened to shoot him? He said, 'Your old man couldn't do it, and neither can you'."
"No, Michael, I didn't hear," Max said crossly. "I had a few other things on my mind, like the gun pointed at me."
"But don't you see what that means?" Michael pressed. "It means Valenti's father probably didn't shoot that dude. Hubble did, and Valenti's dad took the fall."
"At the risk of sounding like a broken record...so what?"
"So that explains why Valenti was talking to Hubble, and why he was willing to shoot him, and why he—"
"Okay, I get it," Max broke in. "They had history. We already knew that. Not the details, maybe, but the basics. How does this help us?"
"Maybe it doesn't. I just wanted to know the score in case Valenti blew us in."
"I don't think he'll blow us in, Michael. If he were going to do that, he would have done it already. Besides, we could blow him in, and after what happened to his father, he must be aware of what that could mean."
"Let's hope so," Michael agreed. "Anything happen at school?"
"Does that mean you didn't go?" Max asked, wincing when Michael shrugged. "No, nothing happened at school. No one even knew about it. No deputies either; that was all last night, thank God. The last thing I needed was someone knocking on my front door or pulling me out of math class."
"So the story worked?"
"Guess so. Nobody's questioned it, least of all Milton."
"Great," Michael said. "So we're done."
"No, we're not 'done'," Max said. "We still have to tell everyone."
" 'Everyone'?" Michael echoed. "You mean Isabel, right?"
"No, I mean everyone. Liz, Maria, Alex, everyone."
"What for?"
"Because there might be other Hubble's out there," Max said. "They need to know that because Hubble could have taken any of us in order to get to me. Nobody's safe, Michael, not us, not anyone who knows us."
"All the more reason no one should know us," Michael remarked.
"Says the guy who was necking in the janitor's closet," Max muttered.
"Not recently. And not ever again."
"Oh, that's right," Max said dryly. "You're gonna think about mud and make it all go away."
"Hey, whatever works. I say we give it the week," Michael went on. "Let it become older news before we give Isabel a reason to flip out." He hopped down off the desk. "There's one good thing about this, you know. We learned something else about Nasedo."
"Yeah," Max said tonelessly. "We learned someone else is dead because of him. Why would we want to find this person? Do we even want to know him? He left a pile of bodies a mile high."
"So they say."
"So lots of people say," Max corrected. "I know you don't want it to be true, but we've heard this from enough people now that even you have to admit the possibility."
"Fine," Michael said. "I admit the possibility. But we need to find him one way or the other, even if it's true. Maybe especially if it's true."
"We especially need to find someone who killed people?" Max said doubtfully.
"Definitely," Michael answered. "Because if it is true...we need to know why."
******************************************************
The Haven Living Center
"Dad?"
Valenti waited, his hands nervously clutching the manila envelope with the ballistics report as his father slowly turned in his wheelchair, blinking as though he'd been lost in thought as opposed to simply staring out the window.
"Jimmy?"
He knows me, Valenti thought with relief, taking a seat beside him. Given his father's condition, that was always up in the air, and today, more than ever, he needed his father to recognize him, to remember. Part of him wanted to just launch into the whole Hubble debacle because part of him needed his father like he hadn't in years. The other part of him wondered if his dad would even remember that he'd been here before and why.
"What happened?" his father asked. "Where's Hub?"
Settled that one, Valenti thought, glancing around the "town square", The Haven's optimistic name for their community room. No one was close by, or no one capable of eavesdropping, anyway. "Hub's gone, Dad," Valenti said quietly.
"Gone? Gone where?"
"Gone for good," Valenti clarified. "He's...dead."
His father gazed at him in silence for a moment. "Hub's dead?"
"Yeah. He, a...he was shot."
"Shot?" his father repeated. "Who shot him?"
His father's gaze was unrelenting now, the man who usually looked absently out the window now looking steadily at him. Valenti fidgeted with the ballistics report, the envelope twirling once, twice, three times.
"I did," he said finally, surprised by how tight his throat felt, how hard it was to speak. "I didn't mean to," he went on in a rush as his father continued to stare at him without reaction, without blinking, even. "He was threatening to shoot someone, a kid, a boy he thought was...an alien," he finished in a lower voice. "I told him to stand down, but he wouldn't. He just wouldn't."
Silence. His father stared at him for several more long, agonizing seconds before turning his gaze back to the window. Great, Valenti thought heavily. His father's clarity had lasted just long enough for him to confess, but not long enough to explain, not really. And not long enough for absolution either, although also not long enough for condemnation. There was that, at least.
A hand crept over his, patted it. "You did the right thing, Jimmy. Good boy."
There. Only eight words, yet they carried the mother lode of not only absolution, but the one thing he'd always sought from his father even as he'd hated himself for doing it: Approval. "I didn't want to," Valenti said, his voice close to breaking. "Why didn't he just put the gun down? Why do I think it's my fault even though he wouldn't put the gun down?"
"Because it's hard to kill a man," his father said. "Always is. Always should be. But at least you killed the right one."
"See, there's the thing, Dad," Valenti said, brandishing the envelope. "I had the bullet that killed that drifter checked, and it didn't come from your gun. I was right, wasn't I? Hubble shot him."
His father hesitated, nodded. "Then why in the name of all that's holy did you say it was you?" Valenti demanded, finding it difficult now to keep his voice down. "Why did you take the rap for it?"
"I never said I shot him," his father answered. "I said it was my responsibility. Guess they took that to mean I did it."
"God, Dad, don't play semantics with me!" Valenti exclaimed. "You knew they were 'taking it' wrong, so why didn't you correct them? I notice Hubble didn't, but you sure as hell could have."
" 'Cause it was my fault, Jimmy," his father said quietly. "It was all my fault. I may not have pulled the trigger, but I was the reason it was pulled."
"See, I'm not following," Valenti said, slapping the envelope down on his father's lap. "You told me that Hubble said he wouldn't hurt the drifter. So how do you figure it was your fault when he went back on his word?"
His father's eyes drifted from the envelope to the window. "Because I knew him," he said in a remarkably steady voice. "I knew how obsessed he was. I should never have believed him...but I did. I believed him, and because I did, a dangerous man got close enough to hurt someone, someone in my town, someone who was my responsibility. Didn't matter if Hub was right or not, if that drifter was alien or human. We were human, and we don't just execute people without a fair trial. Innocent till proven guilty. That's the way it works. That's the way I work." He paused, looking back at Valenti. "What about this kid? Was Hubble right? Is he an alien?"
Valenti glanced around the room, fearful that even the senile and the deaf would overhear this conversation. That it was taking place at all was nothing short of a miracle given the disdain with which he'd always treated his father's chief obsession, and he realized with a shock that he was seriously considering his answer, proof positive that he'd crossed the line.
"I don't know," Valenti said, unwilling even now to utter his suspicions out loud. "Something's weird, but...I don't know."
"What'd he do? Hurt someone?"
Valenti shook his head. "No; that's just it, he didn't hurt anyone. If he did anything, he...he saved a girl's life. How's that one for you?" he added, his voice heavy with irony. "This kid couldn't have been Hubble's alien...he wasn't even born in 1970...but he almost got killed for saving someone's life."
His father's eyes drifted back to the window. "They're not all bad, you know. She taught me that."
"Who?" Valenti asked.
"Dee. And that mother of hers, that spitfire. Hell raisers, both of them; apple didn't fall far from that tree, straight down, really."
"Dad, who are you talking about? Who's 'Dee'?"
"She came to me that night," his father went on, ignoring him. "Said Courtney was in trouble. Asked for my help. Showed me something, something...impossible."
Valenti closed his mouth, swallowing his next question. He'd heard older people remembered what happened years ago like it was yesterday, so perhaps this was accurate. Perhaps he'd better just shut up and listen, and sort out the details later.
"And I told her I couldn't," his father went on. "FBI was on my tail, and they would have followed me. Courtney wouldn't have been any better off if Lewis had gotten hold of her, worse, probably."
Valenti sat there in silence, one hand to his mouth to guard against any chance he would stop the flow of words. He had no idea who "Courtney" or "Lewis" were, and at this point, he didn't care; this blizzard of information was unprecedented.
"Courtney's father died that night," his father went on. "Dee didn't make it in time either. But she said there was a war on, and we were caught in the middle of it. Said they'd left town, maybe for good. For a long time, it looked like she was right.
And then Hub showed up," his father continued. "Maybe they'd left, but I'd know that handprint anywhere. Nobody believed him. It disappears, you know. All he had was the photo. But I believed him because I'd seen it."
His father paused, and it took every ounce of Valenti's willpower not the fill the silence with questions. "Hub shot that man because he thought he was an alien," his father went on, so quiet he was barely audible. "When he found out he was human, he was furious. He wanted me to lie and say the man had attacked us. Said it was an honest mistake. Said he'd back me up."
Sure he would have, Valenti thought sourly. Until the evidence proved otherwise, in which case he would have thrown his father to the wolves. "Dad, we need to go to the town council with this," Valenti said, unable to hold his tongue any longer. "We need to tell them what really happened."
His father's eyes swung around to rest on him. "What for?"
"What do you mean, 'what for'?" Valenti said in exasperation. "To exonerate you, that's 'what for'! I know you feel guilty about what happened to that drifter, but you were convicted of something you didn't do. That's not right either."
"Doesn't matter," his father whispered. "Hub's dead."
"You're not dead!" Valenti exclaimed. "And yes it does matter, because you're still here and people still think you did something awful, something you didn't do. Just talk to them, Dad. I can have them come here. Tell them what you told me, tell them..."
Valenti stopped, his plea dying in his throat as he saw his father's expression go blank, watched the veil descend as he turned back to the window, his fingers plucking at the afghan in his lap.
"It's freezing in here," he said tonelessly. "They're trying to kill me."
Nice going, Valenti chided himself, closing his eyes. Of course his father didn't want to relive the whole Silo affair. From his perspective, what would be the point? It's not like they could give him his job back. It's not like he'd be able to get out of this place. No, dragging this all back into the light of day wouldn't do a thing for his father but upset him; it was himself he was doing it for, himself who would reap the benefits of everyone knowing his father was innocent. Assuming they'd believe it, of course. The fact that his son had just shot one of the witnesses might put a damper on things.
"Is everything all right here, sheriff?"
An aide hovered nearby, eyes moving back and forth from him to his father with concern. "Yeah, I...we...he was just...remembering things," he finished lamely. "Guess it upset him."
"That happens sometimes," the aide said soothingly. "It's not your fault."
Yes, it is. "Yeah. Thanks," Valenti said heavily. "I...I have to go now. Dad, I'm going now," he added to his father. "Can I...have that back?"
His father didn't look at him, just continued staring out the window as though he hadn't heard a word. Valenti reached over and coaxed the manila envelope away from him, sliding it out from beneath his hands.
His father didn't seem to notice.
******************************************************
"I'm surprised to see you here," Brivari remarked as Jaddo fell in step beside him on Roswell's Main Street. "I would have thought you'd be lurking back at the house."
"Under the circumstances, I thought a public place might be more appropriate for our next meeting," Jaddo answered. "Or safer, at least. Especially after you ordered me away last night."
"I needed time to think. And while I admit it's difficult to hurl you against a wall in broad daylight in front of dozens of humans, you shouldn't worry about me. I'm creative."
"That's alarming," Jaddo said warily. "You don't sound angry, and you're actually joking."
"Is that bad?"
"It's incongruent. If I found out you'd kept the possible existence of a Pierce from me, I'd be furious."
"Can I have that in writing?"
"And there you go again," Jaddo muttered. "I think I prefer the relative simplicity of being thrown against a wall."
"Of course you do," Brivari chuckled. "Which is precisely why I'm not doing it, forcing you instead to wade through the swamp of emotion you typically avoid like the plague."
"Okay, seriously," Jaddo said impatiently, "would you please just react? Scream, yell, berate, take your pick, but do something."
"I am doing something," Brivari replied calmly. "I was checking out Hubble's motel room, or rather checking out what Valenti's deputies checked out about Hubble's motel room."
"And?"
"He left no clues to any involvement with the Unit," Brivari answered, "although if he were involved, it's unlikely he'd leave a business card."
"Hmpf," Jaddo snorted.
"There was, however, the issue of the phone call placed to Hubble's cellphone mere minutes after he died. Valenti apparently answered it, the caller asked for Hubble, then hung up. It came from a private number."
"And there's the Unit," Jaddo said in disgust.
"Interestingly, Valenti seems to agree. Apparently Hubble had information he'd only given to Agent Stevens, which led him to the same conclusion."
"Score one for Valenti," Jaddo said grudgingly.
"Two," Brivari corrected. "He killed Hubble in an effort to protect the king."
"And do we know why he did that?"
"Hubble was deeply involved in an incident nearly thirty years ago which cost a man his life and Valenti Sr. his job," Brivari replied. "Something about Hubble being after the man who'd killed his wife." He paused, letting that sink in. "I have to say, I'm impressed, Jaddo. The trail of mayhem you leave in your wake is always long, but this one spans decades. That must be a new record. Well done."
"And there's the Brivari I know," Jaddo said with satisfaction. "Thank goodness. I'll take this opportunity to point out that none of us know the future consequences of any actions we take or don't take, and leave it at that. Now will you tell me why you're not angry?"
"Coffee?" Brivari suggested, gesturing across the street.
Jaddo blinked. "Coffee? Here?"
"Why not 'here'?" Brivari asked. "No better place, if you ask me."
The Crashdown was busy with the typical after school crowd as they slid into the one remaining empty booth. They had just ordered from an exceptionally surly waitress named "Agnes" when Brivari's phone rang. He glanced briefly at the number before replacing the phone in his pocket.
"Don't you need to get that?" Jaddo asked, the faintest note of derision in his voice. "No doubt Hollywood needs you."
"It wasn't Hollywood, it was Dee."
Jaddo's eyes dropped. "Does she know?"
"That her grandson was threatened by a madman you invented? No, she doesn't," Brivari answered. "Yet."
"Zan isn't her grandson," Jaddo said.
"Go ahead and tell her that," Brivari said, holding out his phone. "I dare you."
Jaddo eyed the phone warily as though it might bite him. *I suppose he could be both king and grandson,* he allowed, switching to telepathic speech.
*Wise choice,* Brivari said dryly. *And I was. Angry, that is. But then I realized it doesn't matter.*
*What doesn't matter?*
*Whether or not Pierce left an heir,* Brivari answered, *which, by the way, I've never heard either. But if so, and if he's working for the Unit, that essentially changes nothing; the Unit remains a threat with or without a Pierce. If they've acquired the serum, that was always a possibility with or without a Pierce. The presence or absence of a Pierce really has no bearing on the threat to our Wards or our response to it, other than to make this entire mess more...personal.*
Jaddo sat in silence for a minute during which their coffee arrived along with an exceptionally harried Maria DeLuca, who promptly got into an argument with Agnes about her tardiness. *I'm surprised,* he said finally. *As I noted, I'd be angry if I were to learn you even suspected.*
*Because for you, the presence of a Pierce would be personal,* Brivari said. *I'm unclear as to why you haven't pursued the issue more forcefully than merely keeping an ear to the ground. For you, that represents uncharacteristic restraint.*
*Don't think I didn't want to,* Jaddo said darkly. *But I became a parent. That tends to restrict one's freedom. And please, let's not have any more discussion about how that came about. It was a decision I made, and I know that. Rehashing it now is a waste of time.*
*I agree,* Brivari said. *Which is why I think it's time for us to bury the hatchet.*
*Bury...what?*
Brivari smiled faintly. *It's a human expression. It basically means to stop fighting. I think it's time we abandoned our antagonism and actively worked together.*
Jaddo's eyes narrowed. *You do? Why?*
*Because we just did,* Brivari answered. *I had no idea the threat Hubble posed. Without you, I wouldn't have known to pursue him. As it happened, that would not have been a problem, but it could just as easily have turned out otherwise.*
*Hmm,* Jaddo murmured skeptically. *So this has nothing to do with the fact that we're going to have to learn how to do this when Tess and I move here this summer, so why not start now and look magnanimous in the process?*
*That too. Look, I know we've had our differences,* Brivari continued as Jaddo raised an eyebrow, *and I know that probably qualifies as the understatement of the humans' new century. But they need both of us, Jaddo, all of them. They need as many Warders as they can get, with all our attendant strengths and weaknesses. They're ranging so far afield now and attracting so much attention that I'm no longer confident that it's wise for me to do this alone. I feel like I'm herding cats, with everyone scattering in different directions and me trying to keep up with them all. I need help. I need your help.*
Brivari waited while Jaddo eyed him warily, as well he might. He wasn't lying, but what he hadn't added was that he was badly rattled by what had nearly happened yesterday. Keeping Jaddo close would not only lessen the chances of another potential catastrophe but also provide the fringe benefit of averting another incident like his *sighting*. Granted Jaddo was every bit as likely to pull something like that as he was before, but at least he'd be more likely to know about it sooner. Dee tried, but even she had missed the signs that something was amiss with the fake sighting. Left unspoken was the fact that Jaddo was one of those cats he was trying to herd.
*Would this mean I'm now welcome in Roswell?* Jaddo asked.
*Yes,* Brivari answered. *As I would be welcome to see Ava. It works both ways,* he added when Jaddo shot him a suspicious look. *If you want access to your Ward, you give me access to my Ward's mate. One for the other.*
*I suppose,* Jaddo said grudgingly. *Although neither of us will have much in the way of 'access' until they're reunited. You can't leave your three, and my one can be every bit as much trouble as the others.*
*Mine actually haven't been any trouble for a full month now, something of a record for them,* Brivari added dryly. *They brought on neither your 'sighting' nor the latest debacle. Perhaps they're learning.*
*Perhaps,* Jaddo said doubtfully.
*You don't think so?*
Jaddo was quiet for a moment. *I think,* he said slowly, *that it will be Rath.*
*What will be Rath?*
*Whatever happens next. He knows the cave symbols are a map. He's forgotten how to read them, but I know him—he'll figure it out. He won't stop until he does. And once he does...well, let's just say I fear that their previous antics will pale by comparison.*
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Hank Whitmore's trailer
"Yeah, yeah, yeah," Michael said in a bored tone, Hank's angry voice abating somewhat as he slammed the trailer's door behind him. Hank was incredibly annoying, but somehow it was hard to get all worked up over an irate drunk when they'd just been faced with a crazy man with a gun. Nothing like a good brush with death to put things in perspective; God knows his had for him. It had also precipitated a burst of memory, and as he boosted himself up on the picnic table, he idly wondered if it would have the same effect on Max. Would he suddenly remember something, a memory jarred from its dark shelf by a fight-or-flight reaction? Would he even admit it if he did?
Nah, Michael thought as Hank's tirade dwindled to angry, largely incoherent mutters. Max didn't want to know. Even if he remembered something, he'd probably write if off to a bad dream or something like that. Still, it wouldn't hurt to ask. It might even...
Michael paused, staring at the sky where the stars twinkled overhead. A moment later, a wide smile spread across his face. Perfect. Their recent crisis had indeed jarred lose a memory, and whatever gods there were had seen fit to send it to the right person.
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I'll post Chapter 69 next Sunday.
