Read Parker 05 - The Darkness Online
Authors: Jason Pinter
a million dollars minimum. And this real estate market
isn't going up anytime soon."
Morgan felt the eyes of the room locked on to him, but
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when he met their gaze he saw there was no condescension, no patronage, no disdain. Instead there was pity. And
Morgan smiled when he saw his fellow brothers, knowing
they were right there with him.
"In the past twenty-four months," Leonard said, standing straight up and walking back to the front of the room,
"I have made two point three million dollars. Twice as
much as I ever made on Wall Street. And that's in the
worst economy in decades."
Morgan could tell his eyes were just one of a dozen
pairs that went wide when hearing that sum.
Leonard continued. "And that's after taxes."
A few hushed whispers now rose through the room, including one person who said, quite audibly, "Bullshit."
Leonard locked eyes with the speaker, a bald, black guy in
his early thirties. "Two point three after taxes, that's, what,
four million before Uncle Sam takes his cut?You're telling
us you went from being broke-ass on the street to making
seven figures after taxes in two years? In this economy?"
Leonard nodded. "Welcome to the new America," he
said.
"How?" Chubby said, suddenly springing to life.
"How," Leonard said, rubbing his chin as though debating the question. "That's the key. How. And I'm guessing not just how, but how can you do it, too. That's kind
of a multipart answer. And let me tell you this. If you
aren't comfortable with the first part, you won't be right
for the rest of it. Ready? Here goes. You will make money.
You will also file a W-2. You will do everything a good
taxpaying citizen of this great country does, including
paying state and federal income tax...only what you will
be doing to earn that money will not be legal."
"The money is illegal?" Nikesh said.
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"Money itself is never illegal," Leonard said. "It's how
you obtain it that determines the legality."
"So what will we be doing, exactly, that determines the
legality?" the black guy said.
"It's actually very similar to what you've all done
throughout your entire adult lives," Leonard said. "What
is finance? What is the stock market? It's a drug. It's
gambling. It's doing something that feels so right, that can
change your mood, change your mind, change your
outlook on things. Just like a drug, the stock market can
either expand your mind, or make you lose it. It all
depends on who's doing it and how responsible they are.
You're all pretty responsible guys, it's not your fault you
found yourself on the sole of God's shoe. So you'll be
doing exactly what you've done, and what you're good
at. Selling people things that make them feel good."
"Drugs," Morgan said.
Leonard cocked his head. "That's right."
Nikesh said, "I don't understand. If you sell drugs, how
can you file taxes on it?"
"That's for us to know and you not to worry about.
Once you come on board you'll file your taxes just like
anyone, and through our company, 718 Enterprises,
you'll be just like that waitress on the corner. Nobody
looks at her tax return, and nobody will give yours a
second glance either."
"What do we need to do?" Nikesh said.
"Simple. Every morning, you will arrive at a predetermined location at eight o'clock. You will be given different items in different quantities. You will dress the same
way you did today--like a businessman. You will carry
on you a cell phone that will be given to you on your first
day of work. Throughout your shift, you will receive calls
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on your cell phone, alerting you to the location of your
next customer. We will also tell you what the customer
requires, and how much. You will go to the customer's
location, exchange money for goods just like anyone,
and leave. At the end of each day, you go home. Eighthour days. None of the ten, twelve, fourteen-hour crap
you're used to. The next morning you'll come back, drop
off all the money you received the previous day, fill up
your bags and start again. The faster you are, the more
runs you'll be given throughout the day, the more money
you will make. Those of you who prove that they can
handle a lot of runs will be promoted to later shifts. More
action, more money. At the beginning you will work with
a partner. This is for trust. You are your partner's eyes,
and vice versa. But you are also our watchman."
"Watchman?" Chubby asked.
"This business is built on trust," Leonard said. "Because of the sensitive nature of our business, we cannot
take risks. We thoroughly check out every single person
before we bring them here. We know everything about
you. Your background, your families, brothers, sisters.
Your son, Greg."
The black guy swallowed.
"If you do your job, you will make money. If you
decide you do not want to continue, that is your prerogative, provided you give us the customary two weeks'
notice. But if you decide that you suddenly want to, say,
alert anyone outside of our employ as to your job activities, you will be reprimanded. Severely. There are no
second chances, no third strikes. You are not in kindergarten. If you make your bed, you lay in it, and your first
offense is a punishable one."
"Punishable by what?" Morgan asked.
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Leonard stopped. Looked at Morgan. "Let's hope I
never have to answer that question for you." Morgan said
nothing. "If you agree to be a part of our company, you
will start this Monday. You each came here with a
sponsor, and that sponsor will call you Friday night with
the location where you refill and drop off your merchandise and money. Work that starts Saturday morning. Yes,
Saturday. Your sponsor put their reputation on the line
bringing you here. Don't embarrass them. In a short time,
we will be starting an initiative that has the potential to
bring in even more revenue than I've already discussed.
But you only get to be a part of it if you start now. So if
you want to be a part of our organization," Leonard said,
"stay seated. If you decide this is not right for you, I'm
sorry to have wasted your time."
Nobody moved. Chubby had forgotten all about his
cuff links. Nikesh was absently rubbing his back pocket,
where his wallet was surely kept. Greg looked at the
table, briefly, considering the offer, then looked right
back up at Leonard. His eyes said that he was in.
Morgan did not move. The money seemed too good
to be true, but he knew Ken Tsang had fallen on hard
times and had gotten out of it. And if things didn't work,
he could always quit. But the opportunity was too good
to pass up. This was Morgan's way back in the game.
Suddenly a chair squeaked. Everyone turned to the
back of the room to see a short, balding man stand up.
He waved his hands, as though trying to explain a crime
he hadn't committed.
"I...I'm sorry," he said. "I can't do this."
Leonard tilted his head, a look on his face like a parent
who's been disappointed by a child they've put so much
effort into. "Jeremy, are you sure?" Leonard said.
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"I--I'm sure. I can't be a part of this." He moved to
the back door, still wringing his hands.
"You've disappointed us," Leonard said, motioning to
the rest of the room, still riveted to their seats. "One last
time, Jeremy. Stay. You heard what I said to everyone
about our rules."
"I know, I...I heard you, but...I'm sorry, but I have
to go. Good luck, guys," Jeremy said, and he reached
for the door.
"Good luck, and farewell, Jeremy," Leonard said.
Then, lightning quick, Leonard reached into his waistband and pulled out a gun. And before Morgan even knew
what was happening, a crack echoed throughout the
room, and Jeremy's head erupted in a spray of fine pink
mist.
The dead man's body slid to the floor, leaving a grotesque red trail from the gaping wound in his skull.
Morgan recoiled, nearly tipping back in his seat, and
when he righted himself he shivered when he realized that
the conference room was dead quiet. The eyes that had
bugged out of their sockets were now growing accustomed to the violence that had just taken place. The heads
slowly began to swivel from the body back to Leonard.
He watched them do this, a look of apathy, a look of
simple
that's what happens
on his face. Morgan recognized
that face. He knew the emotions. He couldn't help but smile
when he realized who it reminded him of. His old boss.
"There will be no dissent," Leonard said. "There will
be no second-guessing, and there will be no turning back.
Every one of you came here for one reason, and that's to
regain some of the respect you had for yourselves. Jeremy
did not have this self-respect, and now he's dead. But
before you start thinking to yourselves that I'm some
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kind of monster, let me tell you that if Jeremy had stayed,
like every one of you is going to stay, you will make every
penny you did at your old jobs. There will be no layoffs,
no cutbacks, no downsizing. If anything, your earnings
will grow at a faster rate than they ever could while you
sat in some wretched cubicle or soulless office. We will
be introducing a new product in the next few days that
promises to help you erase all those debts. Keep making
those mortgage payments. Keep driving that Lexus, keep
that sweet Russian girlfriend who wants to spend five
grand a month at Chanel. You'll have all of that--and
enough just in case you want to throw a dime on the football games on Sunday. Now, you can either take Jeremy's
way out, the coward's way out, or you can get back to
work and stay the man you were supposed to be. So,
men, are you in, or are you worthless?"
Morgan stood up. He felt a surge of energy through his
veins, his skin felt like it was on fire. "I'm in," he said.
Within seconds, every other man in the room stood up
and joined him. Leonard's eyes met each recruit as they
pledged to be a part of this. Morgan looked at each one
of them, silently bet himself that he would outearn each
and every one of them. And he knew from the way their
eyes met his that they were thinking the exact same thing.
Morgan Isaacs smiled.
Let the games begin.
"No second chances," Leonard said. "I'll see the rest
of you on Monday."
21
Amanda had just settled down on Henry's couch with a
glass of Pinot Noir, and the first sip tasted better than
anything she'd eaten in weeks. She'd skipped dinner, but
hell, wine had nutrients, didn't it?
It had been one of those days that never wanted to end.
Her feet felt like they'd been trapped inside thimbles and
she needed something to take the edge off. She'd been
with a client at the office until nearly eight o'clock, and
Amanda had come to the pretty secure conclusion that
humans were not meant to wear high heels for twelve
straight hours. So by the time she got to his place, weary,
weak, her dogs barking like nobody's business, she
wrenched that cork from the bottle faster than Pamela
Anderson dropped her drawers around a rock star.
And while all those excuses were reason enough to
have a drink--whether or not she continued with the bottle
depended on several factors--another reason was Henry.
Things were going well. They'd endured more rocky
periods in their relationship than the next twenty couples
combined, and she fully believed they'd come out stronger than ever. She never doubted his love for her. Even
when that brain of his got in the way, which it often did,
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she knew it was only because he could be torn between
the right thing to do and the smart thing to do. It still surprised her how rarely those two choices were one and the
same.
Still, she'd learned a long time ago that trying to
change him was not only impossible, but defeated the
purpose and would undermine their entire relationship.
Henry was relentless. That was the bottom line, and God
did she love him for it. As much as her heart pounded
during the times where he scared her half to death with
his latest bit of reckless behavior, it was that full throttle
stopatnothingishness that made him a great reporter and
a great partner. Sure he did stupid stuff. He was a guy;
that was embedded in the DNA.
For every time he brought home flowers, he would
leave his underwear hanging from the bedpost. For every
time he said "I love you," he would chew with his mouth
open. But that's what made them so great. He wasn't
fake and didn't pretend to be perfect. Amanda had met