The John Milton Series Boxset 2

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The John Milton Series Boxset 2 Page 67

by Mark Dawson


  He used his instinct. His gut. It had always served him well, and it didn’t fail him now.

  He waited until eleven thirty, and then he pulled the trigger.

  Using the money that he had made when he sold the first shares at the top of the market, he started to buy back into the company again. Each share had been worth three dollars when he sold, but now three dollars bought ten shares.

  He had ten per cent of the company.

  Then he had twenty.

  He authorised massive spending, using the war chest that the company had acquired over the years for precisely this purpose.

  The stock he had offloaded this morning now bought him thirty-five percent of the company.

  He kept buying.

  Forty-three per cent.

  The plight of the corporation became one of the big stories of the day. Reporters had been dispatched to Morgan Construction’s headquarters in Lafayette, where they had interviewed stunned personnel as they clocked off from the early shift. Efforts were made to speak to members of the board, but requests were turned down. The whereabouts of Pierce Morgan were debated. One rumour was that he was flying the country from investor to investor, trying to persuade them that the run on his company’s shares was false. It wouldn’t have made a bit of difference. By the time the original story was debunked, the plan had acquired too much momentum to stop.

  Babineaux reached over and tore off the claws of the lobster and used a nutcracker to break off the tip of the larger section. He prised out the meat. He pushed his forefinger into the opened tip of the claw and out of the larger open end. He discarded the antennae, antennules and rostrum, and then forked the sweet meat into his mouth. It was delicious.

  His private phone bleeped. He wiped the grease from his hands, picked up the phone, and put it to his ear.

  It was Dubois. “Jackson?”

  “Tell me.”

  “Fifty-one per cent. Congratulations. You are now the majority owner of Morgan Construction.”

  Babineaux wouldn’t have been able to suppress the beam of pleasure that he felt even if he had been minded to try. “Very good,” he said.

  “What would you like me to do?”

  “Set up a meeting with Morgan tomorrow. Tell him I’ll fly to Lafayette.”

  “You think he’ll see you?”

  “He will.”

  He activated the speaker, rested the phone on the table, and then picked up the tail of the lobster with one hand and the back with his other. He twisted the two sections apart, and then used his finger to push the tail meat out of the open end. He peeled off the top of the tail, removed the digestive tract, and scooped out the rest of the meat. “What else have you got for me?”

  “I’ve spoken to the men about Salvation Row.”

  “And?”

  “They’ll be intimidating.”

  “Enough to get rid of them?”

  “I think so.”

  “They better be. Now that Morgan is out of the way, there’s nothing else to stop the project. We need to see that they accept the offer. If they don’t, they need to know that things will get unpleasant for them.”

  “I know. It’s in hand.”

  “When’s it happening?”

  “Tonight. I’m on top of it. You can leave it with me.”

  “I know I can.”

  Babineaux turned his attention to the carapace and picked out the small chunks of meat around the gills. He picked out the roe and ate that, too. He knew the value of things, and he didn’t like to leave waste. Those last small flecks of meat, only consumed by the most intrepid diners, tasted the best of all. He loaded the last morsels onto his fork and slid them into his mouth, sucking the juices off the tines.

  Today had been a good day. The takeover could have failed at any number of moments, but he had planned it with his usual care, and it had been executed with aplomb by an expensive team of professionals upon which he knew that he could rely. What remained to be done was grubby and unpleasant in comparison, but just as important.

  Babineaux knew that different tasks required different approaches.

  Different tools.

  Morgan Construction had been skewered by clever stock market manipulation.

  Salvation Row would require something else.

  He had tried to be civilised with the inhabitants of that street, and they had shunned his entreaties. That was their choice. America was a free country, and they could do whatever they wanted. Of course, by setting their faces against his generosity, they had narrowed the range of options available to him. Now he had a smaller selection of tools from which to choose. He had tried magnanimity, and he had been rejected.

  Now he would use force.

  Chapter Eighteen

  MELVIN FRYATT brought the car to a stop and flicked off the lights. Chad was in the seat next to him. The two of them had met while they were doing time together. They had been in Angola, both of them up on drug charges. They were in the same cell and, given that Chad had a little bit of the feminine about his appearance and manner, Melvin had decided that he’d take him as his sissy. Chad had taken a little bit of persuasion, but Melvin had made it clear that he was acting in the boy’s best interests. A pretty guy like him, it was inevitable that he was going to get taken by someone, so he promised that he’d make it a whole lot easier than some of the sharks who would’ve gone harder on his skinny white ass.

  “Which one is it?” Chad asked him.

  Melvin squinted through the darkness and saw the number that had been fixed to the side of the door. “That one,” Melvin said. “Number two. In there.”

  “How you want to play this?”

  Melvin sucked his teeth, a habit he had when he was giving things some thought.

  “We go up to the door, lay it out all nice and clear. They accept the offer for the house and move out.”

  “And if they don’t?”

  “Then we make it plain that they don’t have no choice. They move out, or we move them out.”

  Chad nodded, looking anxious, his big Adam’s apple bobbing in his throat.

  “What’s up with you, baby?”

  “Nothing.”

  “You look nervous.”

  “A little, I guess.”

  “You want something to help?”

  “You got anything?”

  “Come on. You know I do.”

  He reached into the pocket of his jeans, fumbled through the loose change and the junk, and pulled out the little baggie of coke that he had scored earlier that afternoon from a dealer he knew. He opened the top, unclipped his safety belt and leant forwards so that he could tip out a little onto the dash. He chopped out two fat lines, rolled his last twenty, and inhaled one of them. He passed the note to Chad and watched as he did his line. Melvin reached over and squeezed Chad’s leg. Boy was fine, he thought, kind of made it okay to ignore his good intentions to find a woman now that he was back on the outside again. He’d find a bitch eventually, that much was for sure, but there was no need to hurry about it.

  “Let’s go,” he said.

  #

  ISADORA HAD been in the shower for fifteen minutes, washing off the sweat and grime of another long and difficult day. Her body ached from the hours of hard work that she had put in. She washed her long hair, the dirty water trailing away into the drain.

  It was hard work, had been ever since she started the charity, but she had never been involved in anything that was as rewarding. It was a simple thing to look around and appreciate the things that they had achieved. There was the view out of the window, the row of beautiful houses that accommodated families who had gone through so much since Katrina had turned all of their lives upside down. And, as she drew her focus in, there were things in the bathroom that spoke of the attention to detail that pervaded the whole project: the perfect job that the tiler had done with the shower cubicle, the careful planning that had made the small footprint of the bathroom almost seem spacious. Everything she saw filled her with p
ride at a job well done.

  Almost made her forget about her brother.

  She dried herself and put on her dressing gown. She was brushing her teeth and gazing out of the window when she saw the car roll slowly down the street. It was an old Lexus LS400, dinged on the wing, and with the fender half hanging off. Her cautiousness would have alerted her to it in any event. They were probably gangbangers, rolling down the street looking for houses that might be suitable to burgle. Her phone was in her bedroom, but she hoped that it wouldn’t be necessary. The car would keep on rolling, and that would be that.

  But it didn’t.

  It stopped, right outside their house.

  She looked more carefully and saw the two figures inside. One of them leaned over until his head was over the dash and then the other did the same. Then, the driver’s side door opened and a tall black man stepped out. The passenger door opened and a skinny white guy followed. The driver looked up and down the street, said something to the passenger, and then both started up the short driveway to the front door.

  Isadora was tying the belt of her gown as she heard the knock. She opened the door and hurried along the landing, calling out, “I’ll get it,” but she was too late.

  Her father was already there.

  She heard the voice from outside. “Mr. Bartholomew?”

  “That’s right,” her father said as she turned onto the stairs. “Who’s asking?”

  “Doesn’t matter who we are. We’re here because someone wants to give you a message.”

  She saw her father’s stance change. He straightened his back and squared his shoulders. She panicked, flying down the stairs, her wet feet slapping on the treads.

  “They do, do they? Better tell me what it is.”

  “Someone wants to buy this place, right? You gotta accept the offer. It’s generous and if you don’t say yes, it’s off the table. Next offer won’t be as nice. You know what I’m saying, old man?”

  She came up behind her father and saw the man that he was talking to. It was the driver, the black dude. The white guy was behind him, shifting uncomfortably.

  “Papa,” she said.

  “I got this, baby.”

  “What you want us to say, old man? Yes or no?”

  “You tell that son of a bitch that he can shove his offer up his ass. My daughter built this house. This and all the other houses you can see, you look left and right. Only way your boss is getting me out of here is in a wooden box. You tell him that.”

  Izzy put her hand on her father’s shoulder, trying to gently manoeuvre him away from the doorway, but his blood was up and he wasn’t going to show weakness to the punks outside. He half turned to look at his daughter, started to say something to her, when the white guy pushed past the black guy and cold-cocked him with a hard punch to the side of his head. The man was skinny, looked like he couldn’t be more than a hundred and fifty pounds soaking wet, but he was built like a wiry Mexican featherweight, and he’d loaded his right fist with everything he had. Solomon’s legs crumpled and he toppled backwards, twisting at the waist, Izzy just managing to wrap her arms around his trunk so that she could lower him down to the floor.

  Elsie Bartholomew appeared in the doorway to the kitchen and dropped the plate that she had been drying. It shattered over the floor.

  Izzy stood up, stepping over her father to put herself between him and the two men outside. “Get away from him!”

  “You must be the daughter,” the black guy said.

  “Momma,” she called out. “Call 911.”

  The black guy chuckled. “Like five-oh is coming down here, this time of night. Even if they do, how long you think it’s gonna take? Long enough for you and me to get better acquainted.”

  She stood her ground. “You tell Babineaux we’re not going anywhere. It doesn’t matter how much he offers, no one on this street is moving. He wants to build his mall, he’s going to have to build it around us.”

  “I got a message for you specifically. That court case you got going on, it’d be better for you if you let that go. You want me to spell out what ‘worse’ looks like, sugar?”

  The porch light on Vinnie Hayles’ property flicked on and the door opened. Vinnie came out. “You all right, Izzy?” he called. Vinnie was a big man, played defensive end to a good standard when he was younger, and had run in the gangs himself until he had found God. He still looked like a player, with thick forearms and shoulders, an array of gang tattoos visible on his neck.

  The black dude looked over at him and then back at her. He was sucking his teeth, considering. Izzy could almost see the thoughts running through his head. If either of them were packing, she knew that this could get ugly. And fast. For Vinnie and then for them. But it could have gotten ugly if Vinnie had stayed inside, too.

  The black man turned back to her. “You got a date in court the day after tomorrow. You don’t want to go. Ain’t safe for you to be there, you feel me?”

  “I’ve called the police,” Elsie called out from behind her, her voice quivering. “They say they coming.”

  Her father was struggling to a sitting position behind her. She wanted him to stay down. The stress of what he might try to do if he got back to his feet made her feel a dozen times worse.

  The man nodded, a resolution reached. “You heard what I had to say. You got a day to change your mind. If you don’t, and we have to come back again, it’s gonna end different from this. Won’t matter who’s here, you get me?” He turned to the second man, said, “Come on,” and led the way back down the path to their car.

  Vinnie crossed the lawns and came over to the front door. He saw Solomon still dazed on the floor and helped him up.

  “What was that all about?” he asked.

  “That was Joel Babineaux,” she said.

  “They still want us gone?”

  “Looks like it.”

  “You know what I say?” he said, lowering his voice so that Elsie couldn’t hear him. “I say fuck ’em.”

  Izzy said that she agreed, but it was impossible not to think about the trouble that Babineaux and his money could cause. The court case was one thing. But this, hiring thugs and sending them to make threats, well, she thought, that was an escalation. She didn’t know how she could forestall it. Her mom and pops were old, and although she knew that they would back her—her father, especially, now that his dander was up—she knew it would be bad for them. She couldn’t put them through a battle like that, especially if it turned ugly.

  She started to wonder whether Babineaux’s offer, the money he would give them to move, wasn’t such a bad idea after all. Perhaps she could squeeze a little more out of him, find another spot of land, and start again. She looked around, at the tops of the wild trees that had claimed the plots around Salvation Row. Wasn’t as if there was a shortage of real estate.

  But then she saw the row of pretty little houses and thought of the sweat that had been invested in each of them, and she didn’t know whether she could do it to the people she would have to disappoint.

  She didn’t know.

  Chapter Nineteen

  MILTON HAD noticed a motel on the road out of New Orleans to Raceland as he drove west earlier. Now, heading east again, he took the exit ramp and pulled into the parking lot. It was a cheap looking place, with a row of rooms accessed by a covered veranda. He would have been surprised if the place had seen a lick of paint since the eighties. Alexander was snoring across the backseats, and Milton gambled that he would stay that way while he booked a room for the night. The clerk, a teenage girl who couldn’t have looked more bored if she had tried, chewed gum as he told her that he wanted a room.

  She didn’t take her eyes off the soap she was watching on a small portable TV. “Fifty bucks,” she said. “Up front.”

  “Can you let me have one with empty rooms on either side?”

  She turned away from the screen, regarding him with a perplexed look on her face. “Say what?”

  “I don’t sleep we
ll. Noises wake me.”

  “You ain’t gonna get no problem here,” she said. “We ain’t got anyone staying here tonight. You can have your pick.”

  Milton took the room at the end of the row and laid down two twenties and a ten. The girl took the money, slid it into the till, gave him a key with a bright plastic fob, and went back to her soap as if he wasn’t even there.

  Milton got back into the car. Alexander was still asleep. He drove into the empty lot, disturbing piles of rubbish and weeds that had erupted through the cracked asphalt. He reverse parked the car and went to check the room. It was cheap and threadbare, the furniture in need of replacement and with unpromising stains on the walls. At least it had a coffee maker.

  He went up and down the row, knocking on the doors to check that the rooms were all empty. It appeared that they were.

  Very good.

  He went back to the car. Milton decided that there was no sense in moving Alexander until he had to. He waited with him for another hour until he started to stir. The night had fallen properly now, the sun retreating to leave a woozy humid heat that radiated up out of the baked ground. Milton got out, opened the passenger door, and gently pulled Alexander until he was out of the car. He moaned, his eyes flickering open and shut. Milton dragged him across the lot, up the steps of the veranda and inside.

  He laid Alexander out on the bed.

  He shut and locked the door.

  Alexander groaned.

  Milton took a dusty glass from the bureau, filled it with lukewarm water from the tap in the bathroom, and put it on the bedside table next to his head.

  He came around slowly over the course of the next ten minutes.

  “Alexander.”

  “Shit,” he mumbled eventually, the consonants slurred.

  “Wake up.”

  “My head…”

  “Open your eyes.”

  He did as he was told, blinking in the dim light, and, as he saw Milton, he must have remembered it all.

 

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