checking on her availability. He erased the message and tried to figure it out, finally deciding that Lilly had put down her cell phone number on the mailbox application forms. Curt had called her cell phone.
It wouldnât change his plan.
He brought the phone to the couch and sat down and wrote the name Lilly Quinlan on a fresh page of his notebook. He then pulled the business card out of his pocket.
âI want you to call this number and say you are Lilly Quinlan. Ask for Curt and tell him you got his message. Tell him his call was the first youâd heard about your payment being overdue and ask him why they didnât send you a notice in the mail. Okay?â
âWhy â what is this for?â
âI canât explain it all to you but itâs important.â
âI donât know if I want to impersonate somebody. Itâs not â â
âWhat you are doing is totally harmless. Itâs what hackers call social engineering. What Curt is going to tell you is that he did send you a notice. Then you say, âOh, really? What address did you send it to?â When he gives you the address write it down. Thatâs what I need. The address. As soon as you get it you can get off the call. Just tell him youâll come by as soon as you can to pay, and hang up. I just need that address.â
She looked at him in a way she had never looked at him before during the six months she had worked directly for him.
âCome on, Monica, itâs no big deal. Itâs not harming anyone. And it might actually be helping someone. In fact, I think it will.â
He put the notebook and pen on her lap.
âAre you ready? Iâll dial the number.â
âDr. Pierce, this doesnât seem â â
âDonât call me Dr. Pierce. You never call me Dr. Pierce.â
âThen Henry. I donât want to do this. Not without knowing what I am doing.â
âAll right then, Iâll tell you. You know the new phone number you got me?â
She nodded.
âWell, it belonged previously to a woman who has disappeared, or something has happened to her. Iâm getting her calls and Iâm trying to figure out what happened to her. You see? And this call I want you to make might get me an address where she lives. Thatâs all I want. I want to go there and see if sheâs okay. Nothing else. Now, will you make the call?â
She shook her head as if warding off too much information. Her face looked as if Pierce had just told her heâd been taken aboard a spaceship and sodomized by an alien.
âThis is crazy. How did you ever get caught up in this? Did you know this woman? How do you know she disappeared?â
âNo, I donât know her. It was purely random. Because I got the wrong number. But now I know enough to know I have to find out what happened or make sure sheâs okay. Will you please do this for me, Monica?â
âWhy donât you just change your number?â
âI will. First thing Monday I want you to change it.â
âAnd meantime, just call the police.â
âI donât have enough information yet to call the police. What would I tell them? Theyâll think Iâm a nut.â
âAnd they might be right.â
âLook, will you do this or not?â
She nodded in resignation.
âIf it will make you happy and it will keep my job.â
âWhoa. Wait a minute. Iâm not threatening you about your job. If you donât want to do it, fine, Iâll get somebody else. Itâs got nothing to do with your job. Are we clear on that?â
âYes, clear. But donât worry, Iâll do it. Letâs just get it over with.â
He went over the call with her once more and then dialed the number of All American Mail and handed the phone to Monica. She asked for Curt and then pulled off the call as planned, with only a few moments of bad acting and confusion. Pierce watched
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