Tanked -
Karma stared at him for a long, slow ten seconds. Then she reached under the counter and pulled out a ring of rusted keys that looked like medieval torture devices. “I’m not letting you in,” she said. “I’m coming with you. I’ve been waiting six years for a reason to ruin Chet Marlin’s day.” The storm drain was cold, wet, and smelled like old secrets. Karma moved with a surprising grace, her boots splashing quietly. Barn followed, clutching a butterfly net and a Tupperware container.
Barn watched Reginald perform a perfect, slow-motion backflip off the plastic arch. “Most people don’t have a shrimp with a better agent than they do.” Tanked
Chet lunged. It was not a strategic lunge. He tripped over a box of single-use ramekins and went sprawling. The aquarium net flew from his hand. In that split second, Barn saw his chance. He didn’t go for Chet. He went for Reginald. Karma stared at him for a long, slow ten seconds
Chet Marlin stepped out from behind a pile of napkin dispensers. He was a small, sweaty man in a too-tight chef’s coat. He was holding a aquarium net like a sword. “I knew you’d come, Barn. Your emotional attachment to a decapod is your greatest weakness!” “I’m coming with you
“Five grand.”
The ransom note was written on a napkin from a rival truck, “The Gilded Grouper,” and pinned under a salt shaker. $5,000 or the shrimp gets the big sleep. No cops. No crustacean psychics.
“Because you’re the only person I know who has a key to the storm drain system,” Barn whispered. “Chet keeps his backup lobster tank in the basement of The Gilded Grouper. The drain access is right outside. I need you to let me in.”