Aquilla once again closed the laptop that she was getting nowhere on. What the hell did all of these numbers mean? It had to be some sort of code. Julius, I don’t understand. She sat at the corner desk and wrote the numbers out. 2-16-22-8-13-13-1. “Oh my God,” she said out loud. It was so simple. Each letter was her name in code. The first number 2 was the second letter after the first letter of her name in the alphabet. The second number, 16, was the letter before her name. But, that still didn’t make sense. She figured out how the numbers were coded to her name but she had tried Aquilla. It didn’t work. What if I use the letter with the number? She opened up the laptop and typed. A2-16Q-22U-8I-13L-13L-1A. Voila, it worked. Her heart sped to an unhealthy beat. It really worked. Damn, she was smart.
Maybe not, he had another stupid code to get into the word processor where she knew his journal was kept. 9-12-21-22-21. What the fuck, Julius? She worked out the same concept and knew that the numbers represented I LUV U in the alphabet. It didn’t work. Neither did using the letters before or after. Grrr. Why did he have to make it so difficult? She didn’t have time to finish decoding Julius’s fucked up encryption when Seri interrupted.
“What are you doing?” Seri wanted to know, with a curious expression as she crumpled up the paper and closed the laptop.
“Nothing, leave me alone,” she demanded.
“What’s wrong? Your mom thinks she made you mad.”
“She is not my mom. She did not make me mad. She doesn’t hold that power over me, and she needs to just go fuck her boyfriend.”
“Quill! What the hell? You need to stop this. You’re just making it hard for everyone around, including yourself.”
“Fuck you, Seri, I don’t need you. Why don’t you just go back to wherever it is you came from?”
“Talk to me, Quill. What’s going on?”
“WHAT’S GOIN ON?!? WHAT’S GOING ON!?! Surely you’re not that fucking stupid. What’s going on is you guys fucking shot my father, you made Julius run from me, and now this fucking stupid ass bitch thinks I am going to high school and be her little cheerleader or some shit. That’s what’s going on, Seri.”
Seri locked the door, walked over, and opened the window. Aquilla quizzically stared. What the hell was she doing? She watched her take a small plastic container from her purse.
“Get over here,” Seri demanded.
“Why?”
“Because, I am going to help you settle down. Get over here.”
Aquilla cautiously made her way to the window.
“If you tell anyone about this, I promise to kill you,” Seri threatened, holding up a thinly rolled joint.
“I don’t do drugs,” Aquilla protested, taking it from her.
“It’s weed, it’s not going to hurt you. It’ll mellow you out a little. Lord knows you need it.”
“I never pictured you to be a druggy.”
“I’m not, I have a prescription,” Seri smirked.
“You’re such a liar,” Aquilla accused, taking the green lighter from her.
Aquilla coughed the smoke out the window into the back yard. She coughed hard. Damn, that burned. She didn’t need that shit, no way.
Seri laughed and took the joint from her. “Don’t take such a big hit, and don’t you dare tell Monica that I let you do this. She will kill me.”
“Does Monica smoke weed?”
“I can’t tell you that.”
“You just did,” Aquilla accused, taking a smaller hit from the joint. She didn’t feel anything after four hits. She thought it was stupid.
“Had enough?” Seri asked when it was half gone. Seri had enough. She was suddenly paranoid. What the hell did she just do? This girl was only 17. Her mind was screwed up the way it was, and she goes and gives her a mind altering drug? She needed a vacation. She needed to get away from Aquilla and her good looking dad. Jesus Christ, what the hell has gotten into her?
“I don’t feel anything,” Aquilla admitted.
“Just wait a couple of minutes. It’s not going to do much to you, just smooth your rough edges a little.”
Fuck, she could feel it all of a sudden, and was sure that her new buzz had just done something to her brain. She knew what the numbers meant. She knew how to crack Julius’s encryption. There were five numbers, five numbers when used with the correct letters spelled I LUV U. It had nothing to do with that. QUILL, that’s what it was. She stared out into the back yard, decrypting the letters into numbers. 17-21-9-12-12. That’s it, that had to be it, Seri needed to leave.
“I’m fine now, can I be alone for a while?” Quill asked.
Fuck.
“Don’t open the door,” Seri demanded when they heard the knock. Ah man, this was bad. Her parents were going to smell the weed. She would be looking for a job by the end of the day.
“Yeah?” Aquilla called through the closed door.
“Your dad picked something up for you while he was out, can we come in?” Liz called.
“I’ll be down in a minute,” Aquilla called back. What the fuck? She didn’t want gifts from him or her.
Seri grabbed her chest and sunk to the bed with a relieved breath of air. “Jesus Christ, Quill. Forget I did that. I’m never letting you do that again….What?” she asked, looking at Aquilla’s constricted eyes, boring into her.
“You’re a hypocrite.”
“Why? Because, I like to smoke a little weed? I didn’t go after your father or Julius because of weed, Quill. They were smuggling some pretty fucked up shit.”
“Like what?”
“Well, the vessel that we busted was carrying a LOT of cocaine.”
“And you’ve never done cocaine?”
FUCK!!!!
“I have, a long time ago, that’s sort of how I ended up working for the FBI.”
“How?”
Shit, she was going to have to tell her about it. Aquilla wasn’t the type to mind her own business. Why the hell did she let her smoke weed?
“Let’s go see what your parents have for you. I’ll tell you sometime.”
“You already know what he bought, you were with him. And I am holding you to that, I want to know.”
“Here, put this in your eyes. Your eyes look like they are bleeding.”
“So do yours,” Aquilla assured her as she squirted the red-out into her eyes.
Seri used it too, spritzed a couple squirts of body spray on them both, and followed Aquilla out.
“Seri,” Aquilla whispered, as they descended the stairs.
“What?”
“I’m hungry, did you buy bananas?”
Seri laughed. “You’re not hungry, you’re stoned, and yes, I bought bananas.”
Aquilla was so confused. Why?
“Your dad thought maybe you would want a new phone, now that you were home,” Liz spoke, pointing her eyes to the new iPhone 5 lying on the table. Who the hell was she going to call?
“Um, thank you,” she said. What the hell was she supposed to say?
Manny was the one to laugh. “Don’t worry about it. You’ll have so many numbers in there by the time you finish your senior year of high school, you won’t know who is who.”
Great, let’s discuss the high school that she would not be attending again.
“This thing will do more than call people; you can watch movies, read, download music, text, video, and I’m sure a lot more that Reese can teach you,” he assured her, reading her mind.
TEXT! Yes, she could text Talin. She opened the box and powered on the phone. Hmm. It was very nice. Maybe this wasn’t such a bad gift after all.
“I hope you’re hungry. Your dad bought enough fish to feed an army,” Liz alleged.
Aquilla smiled. “Thank you, is it okay if I go to my room and try it out?”
“Yes, go ahead, I’ll call you when it’s time to eat.”