DeVille's Contract. Scott Zarcinas
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Название: DeVille's Contract

Автор: Scott Zarcinas

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Контркультура

Серия: The Pilgrim Chronicles

isbn: 9780987249548

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ It’s kind of refreshing. You’ll like it. It was the look of a lizard trying to coax a fly onto its forked tongue.

      One of the VP’s on Johnny’s immediate left, Louis’ right, cleared his throat and took a sip from a glass of water. It was the Irish kid he had employed on Johnny’s advice a few years back; a clever mathematician who had already made an impact by halving company tax, but had all the social skills of a frightened guinea pig. He took a long swig and then began to gag on something, turning red in the face as if someone had snuck from behind and started throttling him. Nobody moved to slap him on the back or do anything to help. Nobody did anything except stare. The kid brought his hand to his throat, gagging and gasping for air, and Louis could actually see his temple veins beginning to throb like engorging bloodworms. Then, just when his face was turning deeper crimson, he spat the offending item across the table. An ice cube slid across the mahogany and landed in the empty seat directly opposite, the seat normally occupied by the financial advisor from Morgan Divott. All the VPs watched the ice cube hit the leather upholstery, stunned into frigid silence.

      Louis, too, watched the ice cube’s route. He wasn’t thinking the tax whiz lucky not to choke on a frozen piece of H2O; rather he was thinking it completely unlike Herbert Grimsby to miss the board meeting. The closet faggot was usually the first to plunk his scrawny ass in his seat. That’s what Louis had initially liked about the guy; eagerness, promptness, willingness (not his cutesy-wootsy ass), qualities he wanted – no, demanded – from someone in control of the company funds. Why he wasn’t in attendance, he didn’t know. Neither did anyone else. Not at that moment, anyway.

      All the VPs around the table turned and faced Louis, including the kid who had spat the ice cube across the table. His color had mostly returned, but his mouth was gaping and his eyes were bulging, not quite believing what he had done in front of the boss.

      “What, not exactly?” Louis said to the lizard at the end of the table.

      Johnny’s expression hadn’t changed. In fact, now that the atmosphere inside the hothouse had chilled to something like the ice-cube, he didn’t like the expressions on most of his subordinates. They looked like members of a jury not sure which way the evidence was pointing, evidence that could send him all the way to the gallows. It was like that movie, Twelve Angry Men, his VP’s turning on him like the jury who wanted to hang the kid. Something was up. Something rotten. He could smell its stench like Peterson could smell a bribe.

      No, he reckoned, it’s not Twelve Angry Men. It’s The Dirty Dozen.

      “Are you going to tell me what this is all about?” he said to Johnny, and glared at the rest of them. They all averted his gaze, apart from Johnny, who maintained his stare but still couldn’t say what was on his mind. Except he didn’t have to; Louis had a pretty good idea what was going down, and company protocol wasn’t going to save him. “Go on!” he said, almost growling. “Be a man. Have the balls to say what you want to say.”

      Johnny glanced at the empty chair, the one in which the accountant’s cutesy-wootsy ass should have been parked. The ice cube had begun to melt in a little pool of water.

      So that was it, Louis thought, he’s stalling for Herbert. Johnny wasn’t the leader in all this. That rat from Morgan Divott was, but he wasn’t here, was he? Something had happened, something the rest of them hadn’t planned on, especially Johnny. That’s why they were stumbling all over themselves, why Johnny had taken it upon himself to take control. Thrust the first dagger, so to speak. They had meant to catch him by surprise (and they had, hells bells yes they had), but he’d had a little slice of luck; their leader had gone AWOL, and just for the moment the mutineering sons of bitches didn’t know what to do. Goddamn it, the company was his, and his alone, and he wasn’t going to let some lizard-kid come in and steal his baby from under his nose.

      “There… there’s a significant majority of the board…” Johnny began, once again glancing at the empty seat.

      Here it comes, Louis smirked. Et tu Brutus?

      Perhaps he should have seen this coming. When he had employed Johnny straight out of law school his grades hadn’t topped the list of candidates, not even in the top ten, but his ambition had stood out like the only vacant seat at the table. Ambition was a two edged sword, though. Louis knew that more than anyone. It could get you where you wanted to go, and fast, but it had its price. In that way, ambition was more like rocket fuel than a sword. Lots of fire, lots of power, but burned out quickly, more than often in a spectacular ball of flames. He had tried to bring Johnny under his wing and control his ambitious nature, help the protégé learn his trade while he climbed the corporate ladder. That was his second mistake, after trusting him. You can’t control rocket fuel. It just burns until there’s nothing left.

      “What significant majority?” Louis said, bluffing. He could see around the table that most had already turned against him. He clenched his fists and rested his knuckles on the table. “You’d better have two thirds. You’ll burn in your own fire if you don’t.”

      Johnny’s expression steeled. His eyelids hooded and his lips pursed. Coldness emanated from him. The lizard was back. “We’ve got it,” Johnny said.

      The kid who had nearly choked to death on the ice cube cleared his throat again, reached for the glass of water, then withdrew his hand. Others around him fidgeted with their ties and scratched imaginary itches on their scalps and noses. Louis had to act now.

      “Then call your vote.” He undid his top button, hooking down the knot of his tie with his finger. He thought of sitting, then decided against it. If they were going to bring him down, they would have to do it with him looming over them. He needed every advantage he could get, even if it was a psychological one. He knew his size was daunting, but was it enough? He needed to scare the willies out of a few of them, cause them to doubt which way they would go. One vote might be enough to swing it. He only needed one third, or four of the twelve. In fact technically, although Herbert’s absence annulled his vote, it worked in the CEO’s favor: it counted as a no vote. He only needed three to cling to power.

      Louis could tell Johnny knew that too. The rat’s absence had made the count closer than he had wanted. Johnny was gambling. He probably had six definites, seven including himself, bought them off with false assurances of pay rises and promotions when the old weasel had been cast out and all the blood had been washed from the boardroom walls. Would probably get rid of the majority within a year if he won, just maintain a handful of trusted friends at his side (and, oh, wouldn’t he learn the hard way; there’s no such thing as trust in this world) and bring in a fresh group of young lawyers and accountants straight from college, kids that wouldn’t dare challenge his power, at least not for seven or eight years. But now he needed two more to be safe, and that was just the problem. He didn’t have them.

      “I… uh… I need to go to the toilet,” the Irish lout said. He pushed his chair back and stood up.

      “Gregory, sit down,” Johnny said, still as cool as a lizard. “You said you were in.”

      Gregory’s face went as red as it had earlier. “No… uh… to be sure, I never said that, not really. I said I’d think about it.” He glanced at Louis, eye-to-eye, and visibly cringed. For someone pushing six foot two, Louis thought, he was kind of weak at the knees. Gregory returned to Johnny and stepped back from the table toward the door, hands flicked up at the wrist, as if in surrender. “I… I don’t want to be a part of this anymore.” Taking another step back, he glanced over his shoulder at the door, then back at Johnny. “I… uh… I really must be going.”

      “Gregory, if you don’t sit down now your career’s as good as over.”

      Gregory СКАЧАТЬ