Revolt of the Rats - Reed Blitzerman (early readers txt) 📗
- Author: Reed Blitzerman
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“Yesterday was bad.”
“-and not even a phone call. I tried you at your office....”
“We were at the Marriott. It was important.”
“Colby’s important. We’re important. Those are fucking strangers. I think you’re fighting for the wrong thing, just watching the line go up, hoping Jones Wentworth makes you a partner. That’s an empty life, Wesley. You were a better man when we had nothing and you were folding towels at the Boston Club.”
Had to remind him of where he came from, did she? Bring him back down to Earth. In spite of himself he was sneering. “Poverty doesn’t make you noble.”
She took a shallow breath and he could see it coming. Something she had saved for him, rushing out like a freight train. “Oh yeah? Well, money doesn’t give you class.”
He’d gone too far. Already at the precipice, he could feel the ground give way. “We could go back.”
‘I’ve had enough, Wesley. I’ve tried. I’ve really tried. Back is gone. Just like me.” She pushed past him then, shielded by her hair brush. “And don’t worry about picking up Colby. I’ve got someone important taking care of it.”
The custody hearing had been brutal.
“He’s neglectful. He couldn’t tell money from love.” She’d stared at him as she said it, making sure the words found their mark. “I’m not a possession. I fell in love with Wesley when we had nothing. I thought he understood. But I was wrong.”
“No....” He’d said it softly. He doubted it had even carried across the room. It had been a mistake to have a corporate attorney there. He knew that now. He’d wanted to tell the truth then. To pour his heart out. Status be damned. He’d mouthed it. But the words were known to him alone. All I have I’ve given. If you leave there’ll be nothing left.
He could see the corporate attorney from his seat without turning his head. He was frowning. His head tipped almost imperceptibly to the side, a negation interrupted. He knew how skittish the board was about his divorce. He bit back his honeyed words.
The gavel struck.
“I award full custody to Maisie Stratford.”
Full custody? That was unheard of. And she’d already gone back to her maiden name. It was betrayal, plain and simple. Maybe he'd never been family.
The years returned in a moment: her father’s hand on his shoulder, her mother’s encouraging smile, their first date. Drifting in the boat in the evenings, talking until the moon was full, blighted by swooping bats. The birth of their child. The first fever. The first step. The first argument.
Her father had been there at court, wrapped in a charcoal grey suit. Not a word had escaped his lips. He'd stared at Wesley for two heartbeats and then looked away. Erased. So many mistakes.
“HOW WE LOOKING DOWN there, George?” Wesley’s voice expanded from the speakerphone, filling the room.
“Almost done, boss. Give us another thirty minutes.”
The line was still open. Wesley paused, distracted by the view. From the 30th floor, Chicago (there were no penthouses in Frampton) was perfect. The distance made the grit invisible. Traffic crawled along the edge of the lake in orderly strings. Brick apartment buildings teeming with roaches were picturesque from here, their arched facades thrusting out of the snow. Skyscrapers saluted, dressed in straight lines.
Wesley fidgeted with his tie. “You know Frampton’s got to make schedule. They’re fifty percent of our volume.”
“Yeah, boss.”
He’d fought his way from a tenement dweller parsing Warren Buffett’s annual letters, to Motomax CEO at forty-three. His tattered originals were long gone, replaced by handsome bound copies and a master’s degree in accounting from Westlake, a school out east. He talked in numbers, relied on numbers, and trusted numbers. That’s how things were done.
“It’s been three years since I took Motomax public. The time for missed commitments is over. Frampton needs to turn the page.”
“We’re with you, Wesley.” George was one floor below, where accountants and analysts checked and double checked the numbers from desks in their glass-walled cage.
“I’ve got a reputation to uphold after all,” Wesley said. “I need to know there’ll be no more mistakes.” Like keeping Bodge. All the angels in heaven but that had been a doozy.
Months ago he’d toured Frampton with Bodge and the engineering manager, a human mole named Oroszco. They waded on safari through clouds of oil, pointing out various processes, the stroke of stamping presses forming a drumbeat in the roots of his teeth. Black liquid condensed on his arms and neck, like an army of leeches slithering across his skin.
Wesley had asked one question. “Are you going to make your numbers this month?”
“That depends, sir. The devil’s in the details.” Oroszco said it plain as giving the weather forecast in Tibet. Insubordinate.
He’d already looked at the details back in civilization, at his desk. When were these guys going to wake up? Lazy. These two were lazy. His ears were hot. He couldn’t fire Bodge, but he could send a message.
He stuck his index finger in the human mole’s face. “That’s not true. The devil’s in the numbers and I had those in Chicago. Give me your badge, Oroszco. Bodge, walk him to Rick in human resources. He’ll know what to do from there.” Oroszco had gone the color of lard and then shuffled off, threatening to teeter into stacks of stamped parts. That had been difficult.
Motomax needed more leaders like George Bristol. He’d boxed in college and remained punchy, a little distasteful really. But the analysts below him followed the rules. And he was loyal. There’d be no more betrayals. With George on the job, Motomax had started to hit their numbers.
Ahead of schedule, the lift doors pinged open. “Morning, boss. Just finished this.” George handed over two inches of printer paper bound with thick steel staples.
“George, my good man.” Wesley riffled the first three pages and frowned. He looked up.
“I know, boss. It’s bad. As goes Frampton, so goes Motomax. And Frampton’s in the shitter again.”
Wesley squeezed his eyes shut. He looked at the report again. Its numbers were not perfect, not even close. Much like last quarter. He broke out in an oily sweat. He’d have to swap out his shirt. Something had changed these last three months, but he was damned if he could put his finger on it. George needed to understand where they were at.
Wesley took a deep breath. “Wall Street analysts are like vultures. If profitability falls, they’ll swoop off a power line and tear our credit rating apart. Then they’ll start in on our stock price.”
He paused and thought about what he was going to say next. He trusted George. No one else had detected yet what he was going to say. “Somebody’s buying up the stock. As the stock price drops, the purchases are accelerating.”
George whistled between his teeth. “So who is it, boss?”
“We won’t know their identity until after they own five percent of the stock. At that point, they could request a seat on the board.” Control would be lost. Everything I’ve worked for would be gone in the blink of an eye. Wesley tucked the report under his arm and exhaled with effort. “Rumor has it the buyer is Dallas Haight.”
“You’re kidding.”
“I’m not.” Wesley tapped the report with an index finger.
“No one’s seen him in years.”
“That’s right. He disappeared after Bodge pushed him out.”
George set his shoulders. “What do you need me to do, boss?”
Wesley knew he’d picked the right man for the job. He’d be damned if some old man would take away what was rightfully his, founder or not. “I need you to find Dallas Haight.”
George re-entered the lift. Wesley started an email to Niles Bodge. He had to get those numbers back on the rise, and pronto. It was time for some stronger medicine.
“You still want to go to the fights this Friday, boss? I can get us a couple of tickets.”
Wesley looked up from the computer screen and leaned back in his chair. “Wouldn’t miss it. I’d like to see some blood.”
You let your feet run wild
Time has come as we all go down
Yeah but for the fall oh, my
Do you dare to look him right in the eyes?
Cause they will run you down, down till the dark
Yes, and they will run you down, down till you fall And Yeah so you can’t crawl no more
And way down we go
Kaleo, “Way Down We Go”
HIS BRUSH HIT THE CANVAS and for an hour his office was a studio. Niles concentrated on the couple in the foreground, loading the brush thick with paint. It danced hurriedly across the images, looser than his usual musings. He had to capture the moment before it disappeared.
The couple sat side by side, following passersby through a picture window, perched on spindly-legged restaurant chairs. Their evening finery glowed below the blaze of globed streetlights, painting the cobblestones outside yellow with reflected radiance. Trees framing the window were evergreen, frozen mid-wave. Across the street, shops of limestone brick served silent sentinels. Their arches framed a bakery crowned by a veranda of cerulean wildflowers.
For once, Niles felt satisfied. Today was like that magical first day of 3rd-grade summer school. It had finished with art class. He’d sat entranced with the other eight-year-olds, as the balding old man created a snowman for them to mock. There was a carrot for the nose, branches for the arms, and a striped hat hung to the side at a jaunty angle. When he got home, Niles presented his treasure to his mother in a small, dirty fist.
Her hand passed through shoulder length brunette hair, the cigarette ticking up and down between her fingers in time to her speech. “That’s good, baby. I like the colors.” She smiled then, the Queen to her Prince.
Her brown slacks whispered as she walked into the kitchen and put the first one on the refrigerator. Perhaps sensing his enthusiasm, the instructor had let him bring the paints home. Mom asked, “You gonna make me another one?” He did another, and she taped the second to the wall.
She regarded the pictures the way she sometimes did the electric bill or letters from the attorney. A divot formed between her eyebrows. “That’s got a good feeling to it.” She bent sideways at the hips, looking from the picture to Niles as if she were seeing him for the first time and asked, “Would you like your own set?”
They spent the summer in the living room. His little easel laid claim before the sleeping television. Mother decamped to the recliner, where study guides for the paralegal exam lay stacked on a TV tray. She passed it the following summer and got a new job. It was a nice raise over her take as a secretary. She used her first paycheck as down payment on a car.
They left the used car lot on a balmy June afternoon. His mother skipped first gear for second, sliding the station wagon off the cracked concrete pad and out into traffic. He was so proud of her. She looked as beautiful as the musicians on television in her brown-tinted sunglasses. It was the same color as the car’s fake wood paneling.
Mom spoke without looking away from the road. “We’re rolling now,
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