file:///G|/Program%20Files/eMule/Incoming/Pat%20Cadigan%20-%20Death%20in%20the%20Promised%20Land.txt
head, she thought, horrified. The cut across his throat had been so deep, it had come off when
they'd peeled him.
Then she felt the metal through the plastic and realized it was the kid's head-mounted monitor.
"Oh, good one, Celestine. " She tucked the monitor under her left arm. "If I'd dropped that, we'd
be filling out forms on it for a year. "
"You, drop something? Not this lifetime." Celestine grinned; her muttonchops made her face seem
twice as wide as it was. Konstantin wondered if there was such a thing as suing a cosmetologist
for malpractice.
"Thanks for the act of faith but next time, save it for church. " Konstantin went up the hall
toward the main lobby, Pleshette following in a swish of kimono.
There were only two uniformed officers waiting in the lobby with the other three members of the
night staff, who were perched side by side on a broken down, ersatz-leather sofa by the front
window. The rest of the police, along with the clientele, were already down the block with
Taliaferro, one of the uniforms told Konstantin. She nodded, trying not to stare at the woman's
neat ginger-colored mustache. At least it wasn't as ostentatious as Celestine's muttonchops, but
she wasn't sure that she would ever get used to the fashion of facial hair on women. Her ex would
have called her a throwback; perhaps she was.
"That's all right, as long as we know where they are." Konstantin handed her the bagged headmount.
"Evidence-look after it. There's some surveillance footage I'm going to screen in the manager's
office and I thought I'd question the staff there as well-" The people on the couch were gazing up
at her expectantly. "Is this the entire night shift?"
"The whole kitten's caboodle," Pleshette assured her.
Konstantin looked around. It was a small lobby, no hiding places, and presumably, no secret doors.
Small, drab, and depressing-after waiting here for even just a few minutes, any AR would look
great by comparison. She turned back to the people on the couch just as the one in the middle
stood up and stuck out his hand. "Miles Mank," he said in a hearty tenor.
Konstantin hesitated. The man's eyes had an unfocused, watery look to them she associated with
people who weren't well. He towered over her by six inches and outweighed her by at least a
hundred pounds. But they were fairly soft pounds, packed into a glossy blue one-piece uniform
that, combined with those gooey eyes and his straw-colored hair, gave him a strangely childlike
appearance. She shook his hand. "What's your job here?"
"Supervisor. Well, unofficial supervisor," he added, the strange eyes looking past her at
Guilfoyle Pleshette. "I'm the one who's been here the longest so I'm always telling everybody else
how things work."
"So go ahead, Miles," Pleshette said, her voice flat. The kimono sleeves snapped like pennants in
a high wind as she stretched out her arms and refolded them. "Say it-that if they promoted from
within here, you'd be night manager. Then I can explain how they had to go on a talent search for
an experienced administrator. It'll all balance out."
"Nobody ever died while I was acting night manager," Miles Mank said huffily.
"Yeah, that's true-everybody survived that riot where the company had to refund all the customers.
But nobody died so that made it all good-deal-well-done. "
Miles Mank strode past Konstantin to loom over Pleshette, who had to reach up to shake her bony
finger in his face. Konstantin felt that panicky chill all authorities felt when a situation was
about to slip the leash. Before she could order Mank to stop arguing with Pleshette, the mustached
officer tugged her sleeve and showed her a taser set on flash. "Shall I?"
Konstantin glanced at her nameplate. "Sure, Wolski, go ahead." She stepped back and covered her
eyes.
The flash was a split-second heat that she found oddly comforting, though no one else did. Besides
Guilfoyle Pleshette and Miles Mank, Wolski had also failed to warn her fellow officer, the other
two employees, or Taliaferro, who had chosen that moment to step back inside. The noise level
increased exponentially.
"Everybody shut up!" Konstantin yelled; to her surprise, everybody did. She looked around. All the
people in the lobby except for herself and Wolski had their hands over their eyes. It looked like
a convention of see-no-evil monkeys.
"I'm going to screen surveillance footage of the victim's final session in the manager's office,
and then interview the rest of the staff," she announced and turned to Taliaferro. "Then I'd like
to question anyone who was in the same module and scenario." She waited but he didn't take his
hands from his eyes. "That means I'll be phoning you down the block, partner, to have select
individuals escorted to the office." She waited another few seconds. "Understand, Taliaferro?" she
added, exasperated.
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