officially canceled. You do not feel better.
What also happens is all nine remaining members of the group therapy session are escorted to the police station in an armored vehicle. With Katelyn, they let us shower before the cops got involved, but no such luck with Brian. It was too much of a coincidence. Same group of people, same
wa-bam
.
This wasnât terrorism. Or, to be more accurate, Brian wasnât a suicide bomber. Around here, nobody thinks an East Asian person would be a terrorist. Which is silly, really, because East Asia has plenty of terrorists. Back in the nineties, there were a bunch of Japanese terrorists who filled a subway station with poison gas and killed a shit-ton of people. No Turk has pulled off somethingthat audacious, as far as I know. Itâs definitely racist to think that Katelyn was a terrorist and Brian wasnât.
But thatâs what people thought. Or they thought someone else in our class was behind both incidents. So the cops shuffled us pre-calc, group-therapy saps into a conference room where we sat, bloody and stunned, under awful fluorescent bulbs that flickered every few seconds.
âGahhh!â Becky Groves screamed as soon as the cops left us alone. They had gathered in the hall to talk to some FBI agents. To strategize, I guess.
âLet âem cool their heels a bit,â they were probably saying as they blew on their coffee. âGet their stories straight and then, blammo, weâll work the old McKenzie Doubleback on these perps.â
Yes, yes, I know, I know. Thereâs no such thing as the âMcKenzie Doubleback,â but Iâm sure they have names for their interrogation techniques.
Anyway, once Becky Groves was done screamingâwhich was a few seconds later because sheâs Becky Groves and she has the lungs of a water buffaloâClaire Hanlon said, âSo who did it?â
âReally?â I replied.
âReally!â Claire snapped. âThe police know this canât be a coincidence . . . and I know this canât be a coincidence . . . and I know I didnât do it . . . and so it has to be one of you.â An aneurysm seemed imminent the way Claire was panting out the words.
âHow?â Malik Deely asked.
âHowever . . . people like you . . . do these sorts of things,â Claire said.
You donât use the term âpeople like youâ around people likeMalik (that is, black people), but he had a cool-enough head to let logic beat out emotion.
âSeriously?â he said. âSeriously? There was no bomb. The guyâs chair was completely intact. Becky was sitting right next to him and sheâs fine.â
âGahhh!â Becky screamed again, this time with her eyes squeezed shut and her hands clawing at her frizzy red hair.
âPhysically fine, I mean,â Malik said. âWe all are. Something inside these kids just . . .
went off
.â
Greyson Hobbs, Maria Hermanez, Gabe Carlton, Yuki Dolan, and Chris Welch were all in the room too, but they werenât saying anything. Their perplexed eyes kept darting back and forth as we spoke. It was like they were foreign tourists whoâd stumbled into a courtroom. They werenât trying to figure out who was innocent or guilty. All they wanted to know was âHow the hell did we end up in this place? Which way is the way back to Disney World?â
When the door opened, those perplexed eyes all darted to Special Agent Carla Rosetti of the FBI. I would learn later that she wasnât necessarily the best and brightest, but at that moment, compared to our schlumpy local boys-in-blue, she looked like the real goddamn deal.
She stood in the doorway decked out in a white shirt, dark blazer, dark pants, and dark pumps. Standard FBI attire, I assumed, though a bit baggier than what the chicks on TV rocked. The clothes were obviously chain-store bought, but from a nice chain