Young faces now dead or gone.
Rebecca Hart sat on the sofa like she didn’t mind the worn fabric.
Dr. Reed stayed standing for a second, looking around slowly, taking in the room with the kind of careful silence that made Jim uneasy.
Then the doctor sat too.
Jim lowered himself into the recliner with more noise than grace. Diesel jumped into his lap like that had been the plan all along.
“All right,” Jim said. “Talk.”
Rebecca opened a leather folder on her knees but didn’t pull anything out yet.
“Mr. Lawson,” she said, “do you remember a boy named Tommy Bell?”
Jim frowned.
The name hit someplace dusty.
Not gone.
Just buried.
“Tommy Bell,” he repeated.
The doctor leaned forward.
“He would’ve been around twelve when you knew him.”
A pressure moved behind Jim’s eyes.
He stared past them for a second, not at the wall, but through it.
A school hallway.
Lockers.
A skinny kid with glasses too big for his face.
Fear.
Then chrome.
Then thunder.
Jim looked back at the doctor.
“Small kid,” he said slowly. “Real thin. Smart mouth when he wasn’t scared. Black boy. Thick glasses. Liked science stuff.”
The doctor swallowed.
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