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Carbide Tipped Pens Part 25

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"Like what?"

"Well, hypothetically ... prosopagnosia."

"What's that?"

"Face blindness. The FFA is also the part of the brain that processes facial recognition. There's a chance you could lose your ability to recognize people."

Rick fell silent.



"Drink ... your ... beer..." Chris punctuated each word with a jab of his finger. "Women are supposed to outnumber men in DC, so do yourself a favor. Find another girlfriend!"

The rain was coming down hard. Rick had left his umbrella in the car. He grabbed a magazine, a month-old copy of Aviation Week, from a table before exiting the revolving door into the parking lot. Laptop bag in one hand and the magazine held over his head in the other, he made a dash for his car.

As he fumbled for his remote, he spotted two people leaving the Devcon building. It was Mariel, sharing an umbrella with Dan Ricardo, one of the division presidents. They jogged the short distance from the building to the reserved parking spot where Ricardo's silver Jaguar sat. The lights of the Jag flashed, and Rick watched them open the doors and get in.

The Jag didn't start right away. Rick saw them talking inside. Ricardo looked old. Mariel looked happy.

Rick and Chris sat at a table near the back of Clyde's Restaurant in Georgetown, under a skylight from which models of World War I airplanes were hung. Along one wall was a large fireplace, while another was covered with travel posters from the Twenties and Thirties.

"I took Mariel here once," Rick said.

Chris poked his appetizer with a fork, pretending not to hear.

Rick looked up. "I want it done."

"Want what done?"

"The treatment," Rick said. "I'm tired of seeing Mariel every day and being heartbroken. I can't take this anymore."

"The only treatment you need is to find a cuter dinner date than me."

"Chris-"

"Get over her!"

"It's not that simple."

"It is that simple."

"You don't-"

"Rick ... grow up! I'm sick of hearing about this. Can we talk about anything else?"

"Some friend you are!"

"It's an experimental procedure with significant risks." Chris ticked off points on his fingers. "We've never done what you're suggesting. There's no way Barbara will go for this. Rick, we're treating people with serious neurological disorders, not-guys fixated on ... wacky women from Canada."

"Spoken by you, who still has a thing for what's her name ... Adrienne, from undergrad?"

"Hey-"

"You have no idea how much this hurts!" Rick's voice was rising. He looked around, and the other diners turned away, pretending not to hear. "To meet someone as beautiful as she is, to think you know this person ... and then, suddenly, one day it's like a switch is thrown, and she becomes someone else. And every day, every time I see her, I hope that maybe that switch will go back and she'll be that sweet and wonderful woman I fell in love with again."

Rick slumped in his chair. "The things I was going to do for her. Move to Canada, get a job in Vancouver..."

"Cook gluten-free food for her? Wake up beside her every morning and wonder if you've got Jekyll or Hyde for the day?"

They glared at each other. A waiter came and placed a pewter pitcher inscribed with the words REFINED WATER on the table. Neither man touched his food.

Finally, Chris spoke. "All right. I'll talk to Barbara tomorrow."

"Thank you."

"No, don't thank me, because it's not for you. It's for me." Chris waggled his fork. "I'm sick and tired of this girl and your moping. This'll be worth it if it'll make you shut up."

Rick said nothing.

"Besides, you're right about one thing." Chris poured himself a gla.s.s of water. "I'm sure we'll get a great paper out of this."

The treatment went faster than Rick had expected. When he woke from sedation, only five hours had pa.s.sed. Dr. Ho sent him away with a bottle of pills. "Retainers," she called them. He was to take one daily until finished, by which time the changes to the neural pathways in his brain would become permanent.

A beige Buick station wagon with wood-panel sides, a relic from the Eighties, pulled up to the curb in front of the Wood Basic Science Building. Rick got in.

"Hey."

"Yeah, hi."

Rick had barely closed the door and was still fumbling with the seat belt when Chris put the car in motion. They turned left on to East Monument Street, then proceeded to the on-ramp for the Harbor Tunnel Throughway.

"How do you feel?" Chris asked.

"All right, I guess. But I have a bit of a headache."

Chris looked surprised. "Really?"

As they approached the Fort McHenry Tunnel, Chris slowed the car and rolled down his window to drop some coins into the toll bin.

"Take an aspirin when you get home," Chris suggested.

"Yeah, I think I'll do that."

They emerged from the tunnel and continued to Interstate 95. The dull buildings of Baltimore gradually gave way to the fields and farms of Howard County.

"Listen," Chris said, "I'm sorry about that time at Clyde's."

"Well, I can see why you'd get sick of hearing about my issues with Mariel."

"You went out to Vancouver last year to see her, didn't you?" Chris asked.

"Yeah. What a disaster that was."

"She did the Hyde thing up there too? Evil twin with the goatee from the Star Trek mirror universe?"

"You got it."

"Was she gluten intolerant then?"

"No. She told me she'd taken a bad fall while doing kung fu and hit her head."

Chris laughed. "I'm sorry!" He wiped his eye with a finger. "All I can say is, I would love to get this woman into our functional MRI. Now there's a paper!"

Rick stared out the window at the pa.s.sing countryside. "Speaking of papers, Dr. Ho wanted me to bug you about your thesis."

"Consider me bugged."

Chris stepped on the gas, and the car surged down the interstate.

There was a knock at the entrance to Rick's cubicle. He looked up from his computer.

A young Indo-American man was there. Rick blinked.

"Hey, you gotta check this out," the man said. "Davidson and Mariel are having some kind of screaming match in his office!"

After a moment, Rick recognized the voice as Sanjay's.

He followed the man through a maze of cubicles. Davidson's office was floor-to-ceiling gla.s.s on two sides with vertical blinds that were currently open. Sanjay and Rick could easily see inside, so they dared not get too close as the opposite was also true.

Mariel and Davidson were indeed in the office. At Rick and Sanjay's distance they could hear little, but mouths were flapping and fingers were pointing. Rick could see some of the engineers closer to Davidson's office cautiously prairie-d.o.g.g.i.ng over their cubicle part.i.tions.

Suddenly, the door flew open and Mariel shouted, "Fine! I'll bring it up with Dan tonight!" She stormed out of the office and marched down the corridor.

Rick turned to the other man. He saw the other man, Sanjay, shrug his shoulders.

Time was running out.

The defender marking Rick was already at stall six. Rick had less than four seconds to pa.s.s the disc. He looked down field to the end zone. A blond woman had broken away from her defender and was running for the corner.

"... stall seven, stall eight..."

Rick had a clear line of sight to her. She was looking right at him. But he hesitated.

"... stall nine..."

Rick was unsure, unable to throw.

"... ten. Disc is dead!"

Rick handed the disc to the opposing player, who tapped it into play. He had barely started counting stalls when his opponent threw a long hammer downfield toward a teammate in the other end zone. The throw was completed, and the opposing team scored.

As Rick walked off the field, the blond jogged up to him.

"What the h.e.l.l was that?" she demanded. "I was going for the corner! Why didn't you pa.s.s to me?"

"Knock it off, Ca.s.sie," said another woman.

The woman named Ca.s.sie pointed at Rick. "He was looking right at me and did nothing! It's like he didn't know I was there."

"Well, maybe if you wore an orange s.h.i.+rt like the rest of us you might be easier to see," the other woman shot back.

"Why do you defend him, Jill? He's sucked all season."

"Hey!" A male voice chimed in. "Knock it off, both of you."

The woman named Ca.s.sie stormed off to get water. The other woman, Jill, looked at Rick with an apologetic expression.

Rick turned to the third speaker. After a moment, he said, "Thanks ... Chris."

The Devcon cafeteria was serving tuna ca.s.serole. It was vile. A strange stench wafted from the plate. It was uneatable, so Rick didn't eat it.

He confronted the cook, a short middle-aged man with scrawny arms covered with tattoos who wore a small white ap.r.o.n and a silly, misshapen toque. His name tag read BOBBY MAC, CHEF DE CUISINE. Rick was convinced the cook was a parolee.

"I want a refund," Rick said.

"Why, sir?" Bobby Mac exclaimed brightly, a toothy grin plastered on his gaunt face.

"There's a weird smell. I can't eat it."

"But it's tuna, sir!" said the beaming Bobby Mac, as if it were an explanation.

After further negotiation, Rick got his money back. But he had lost his appet.i.te. He looked at his watch and decided to return to his desk.

As he walked through the seating area of the cafeteria, he pa.s.sed a table where a young woman was sitting alone.

"Rick!"

She got up and approached him.

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About Carbide Tipped Pens Part 25 novel

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