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weren’t eating or shooting up the place, we headed to the computer lab and sat down at one of the open computers far enough away that the screen wouldn’t be clear to passersby. I logged into a guest account inserted the disk I burned, noting that the CD was covered with my fingerprints, and navigated to the bank transaction history file. The file opened in Excel, and described every transaction in both accounts from now dating back as far as I could go (two years).

After some inspecting, I’d located his paycheck direct deposits from the school. They were clearly labeled as deposits from the Fredericksburg School District and were consistently a $2200 deposit every two weeks.

“Almost $53,000 a year,” Amy said, “that’s… I don’t know. That’s more than a teacher makes.”

“Yeah, but it’s not unusual for a principal I think. But he’s almost got that much in his accounts right now. Between the $8,876 in checking and the $43,605 in savings, that’s almost exactly a year’s wages. That’s a lot to have accessible, and not in a retirement account or something.”

I’d done a bit of research into finances when I received a $500,000 check hand delivered to me by a bonded currier with an off-duty cop.

I kept looking through the transactions, sorting them by deposit amounts.

“Whoa,” I said.

“What?” Amy said, leaning closer to the screen.

“Look at this. Besides the direct deposits from the school, every month there’s three other direct deposits in a row. Every month they’re for different amounts each, but look, if you add them up…”

I selected the three deposits from this month ($1301, $2134, and $2565), and added them together (with a sum() formula in Excel), together they equaled $6,000 exactly. I did the same with the three deposits the previous months, all different amounts but totaling $6,000 together.

“So he’s making an extra…$72,000 a year on top of his school salary?” Amy asked.

“That’s what it looks like. These deposits go back as far as the transaction history.” I said.

“Does it say who the deposits are from?”

“No. That’s the weird thing. Direct deposits have to list the issuing bank’s account holder. It’s the law. All these have is an account number. The only people who could issue deposits without disclosure would be…” I paused when I realized what I was about to say. The weight of it bounded against my mind and pulled my jaw down.

Amy spoke up, “What, Chris?”

I closed my mouth and bit my lip. Finally, giving into the conclusion and seeing no alternatives, I said it.

“The government.”

CHAPTER 10

I leaned over a glass counter, the edge digging into my stomach. Amy stood next to me, watching expectantly over my shoulder. A salesman stood behind the counter, each hand hovering a few inches from the two selections my eyes darted between. I liked the silver one; Amy had her eye on it since the beginning. The other was silver and graphite with clean lines; the light hit it beautifully. There was a gold one down in the case that actually looked kind of nice, but was way — way too tacky. I scratched my chin; they were both so expensive. I shifted my weight between my feet and sighed, then pointed at the one on the right; the silver and graphite one.

“This one,” I said to the store keeper, “the H&K. I’ll try this one.”

“Ok, sure,” the man said. “How many boxes of ammo do you want?”

The shooting range was Amy’s idea. After the reconnoitering at school the day before, we both felt like spending some time away from conspiracy theories. I suggested movies, she suggested pistols.

She’d gone online and found a gun store with a pistol range in Lorton that rents their guns for the range. We drove my white ‘99 Honda Civic; it took about 50 minutes on I-95 which took us right through Quantico. From the highway all you could see of Quantico was the dense woods of the USMC base on either side of the road but somehow it still felt creepy. Somewhere behind those trees was a university with a lab that my Dad worked in for over 25 years and I’d never even been there. I kept driving, but I knew somewhere beyond the forest and brick there were probably answers to questions I haven’t gotten around to asking yet.

When we got to Lorton we stopped at a branch of the bank where I’d put most of my money and I withdrew a few hundred dollars. I requested hundred dollar bills, so when the man at the gun store told us that we had to be 18 years old to use the range I could hold up a few hundreds and say, “even if I pay with twenties?” That worked, well enough, and now I had to choose a gun knowing nothing about them. Amy picked hers in a snap; she’d told me her dad was in the Corps when he was younger and that he had a Beretta 92 that he let Amy shoot a few times, so she was the expert between the two of us. I just picked the one that looked the coolest, which was apparently a Heckler & Koch USP with a silver slide.

“It’s a choice weapon,” the shop guy said, “they made them especially for the US Special Ops.”

“Neat,” I said, feeling kind of silly.

Amy wanted us, or me specifically, to go shooting because she figured that if I am indeed able to fight unusually well — maybe I’m also able to shoot unusually well. Short of picking random fights, there’s no easy way to test my fight skills again, but testing my firearm skills is only a rental away.

I grabbed the gun and a box of .45 ammo and sauntered into the shooting range with huge earmuff things on my head. Amy followed behind me with two paper sheets with plain-looking black silhouettes printed on one side. The indoor range was otherwise empty, with about 15 firing positions all in a row. I set my gun down on the platform inside one of the positions and Amy set up in the one next to it. I figured out how to attach the target sheet onto the metal clips and sent it back a few feet with a rickety-sounding electronic pulley.

Amy slid bullets into the clip of her gun in silence, and I tried to emulate her as if I knew what I was doing. After about eight rounds, the resistance of the spring was making it near impossible to slide any more bullets into the clip; I figured they must use machines to load them to capacity, or maybe it was just that my hands were shaking. I held small explosives in my hand, lead and steel wrapped around combustible powder. The earmuffs made my quickened pulse echo back into my ears. I gave up on loading more rounds and slid the half-full clip into the gun to a satisfying click. Amy watched me with a half smirk on her face.

I set the gun back down and gestured to Amy for her to go first. She didn’t understand, and pulled the muff away from one ear and asked, “What?” which barely made it through my own ear protection.

I freed one of my own ears and said, “You take a few shots first.” I hoped my nervousness wasn’t showing.

She smiled, and stepped back into her firing position. I had to step out of mine to see what she was doing. She pulled back on her gun’s slide, held the gun straight forward with both hands, held her breath, and pulled. A loud bang tore through the concrete room and a lead bullet tore through the paper hanging about twenty feet away from her. Mister black target man had a fresh hole in his shoulder. Looked easy enough.

I went back to my partition and picked up my gun. It felt heavy now, the cold metal sucked the heat from my hand. I was holding a lethal weapon. I could kill someone. It’s a creepy feeling.

I held up the gun as Amy had, pulled the slide back as Amy had, and pulled the trigger as Amy had. Nothing. Stupid safety.

I flicked the switch on the side of the gun from a white S to a red F and readied again. I held my breath, aimed at the middle of the target’s featureless face, and squeezed the trigger. The gun bucked loudly in my hand and as the slide kicked back an empty cartridge sprung out, spun through the air, bounced off the partition wall to my right, and popped me right in the cheek. It was hot, as if it just been party to a controlled explosion of magnesium and sulfur. I yelped and swiped at my cheek. Nobody ever seems to talk about the flying cartridges or show them in movies. Those little buggers have a mind of their own.

Through the muffs I could hear Amy laughing. I turned around and saw her behind me covering her mouth and giggling, but she wasn’t looking at me. I followed her eye line over to my paper target, dangling happily from the clips in perfect health. I hadn’t even hit the paper.

“What the hell?” I yelled, pulling down my ear protection. “How did I miss? How could it be that complicated? You point and you shoot.”

Amy shrugged, still giggling, and went back into her position and began popping more rounds into her target.

I growled and picked up my gun and fired through five more rounds. A few of them hit the paper; one actually hit the target… in the arm. This was surprising. It seems like if you aim at something and shoot, you should hit where you aim. There shouldn’t be too much more to it. Sure, super-spy accuracy wouldn’t be so simple, but the bullet should go in the general area of where I point.

I finished my rounds and dropped out the clip. I went through another clip’s worth of bullets, and another’s. My box of ammo was half spent. I dropped the gun and stepped back. Amy was having a blast, it seemed.

“I guess that answers your question,” I said once she’d stopped and taken off her earmuffs. “I’m not Jason Bourne.”

“Yeah, you don’t have the shoulders,” she said.

I pointed at my depressing target, “Or the weapons training.”

“Well,” she said in deep thought, “When you got in that fight, were you thinking about what you were doing or just doing it?” She was holding the gun still, down at her side.

“I didn’t think about it, I was too freaked out by the guy about to smash my face in. It was an instinct, like maybe watching a bunch of action movies was just burying all those fight scenes into my subconscious.”

“You’ve seen enough gun fights, too,” she paused for a second. “So don’t think about shooting, just pick up the gun and shoot. Don’t think about your arms or aiming. Close your eyes, take a breath, open them, and shoot.”

So I got back in my firing position and slid my ear covers on. I slid a newly loaded clip into the gun, and set it down on the platform in front of me. What a waste of time.

I looked up at the target; the lifeless outline of a man was mocking me. Don’t think, just shoot. That’s what they told soldiers in World War II so they wouldn’t have to consider the fact that they were killing human beings. Just shoot. Shoot the damn gun.

I closed my eyes and took a deep breath, as Amy suggested. Eyes still closed, I took more deep breaths and visualized the target hanging in front of

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