Read Parker 05 - The Darkness Online
Authors: Jason Pinter
Theo told him. According to his partner, this stuff, the
Darkness, was the most potent and addictive substance
to hit the populace since opium. It was cheap, it was
strong, and it gave you a rush every single time.
Morgan had no desire to try the stuff. Theo didn't seem
to care either. When you had a good thing going, like they
did, you didn't gum up the works by losing your head.
At the end of their first day on the job, Morgan and Theo
had sold nearly ten thousand dollars' worth of product.
Over a full year, that amounted to well over three
million dollars.
And they were just one team out of God knows how
many.
And they were working, according to that Leonard
guy, the slow shift.
If all his calculations were correct, and this enterprise
had as many teams as Morgan supposed they did--then
this was a billion-dollar industry.
To be a part of something like that, with potential for
rapid growth, you didn't take any chances.
It was unbelievable to think that Ken Tsang, who was
a relatively smart guy as far as Morgan was concerned,
would be stupid enough to rat out his partner. At first,
when Morgan found out he was dead, there was a fleeting
moment of remorse, of sadness. Now, he thought of Ken
Tsang like a homeless person you saw on the street.
Nothing more than pity, nothing less than scorn because
whatever predicament they were in, it was most certainly
of their own doing.
Morgan's tongue tasted nothing, and he laughed, realizing he'd finished his beer several minutes ago.
For the last few months, Morgan Isaacs had spent his
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nights on the couch, sitting alone, tipping back beers and
watching basketball games with teams he didn't give a
rat's ass about. The nights usually did not end until around
three o'clock in the morning, when, tired of infomercials
and out of snacks, Morgan would pass out on his sofa,
covered in a thin blanket, where he would sleep until the
sun woke him up midday.
It was a sad, dreary existence, but Morgan felt to some
extent that this was his penance, a punishment for not
living up to the promise he'd seen in himself.
How could he be a confident boyfriend--or lover at
all--with no income? How could he buy a girl a drink
knowing that he was three months behind on his credit
card payments? How could he buy his buddies a round
when there was a chance the card would be declined?
None of that existed anymore.
Morgan's first paycheck would give him more than financial breathing room. It would give him his life back.
Morgan picked up his cell phone, scrolled through
his address book until he found her name. And then
Morgan smiled. Svetlana. When in doubt, go with the
Russian model.
Svetlana was beautiful and nearly six feet in heels,
with jet-black hair, legs that were longer than a New York
City lamppost, and a body that would make Putin himself
kneel and beg for mercy.
She was a tough one. Her father was a doctor, and he'd
been killed recently or something, and Svetlana refused
to ever discuss it. Not that Morgan minded; if anything
he preferred that they keep their relationship as uncomplicated as possible.
The sex was freaking mind-blowing, and damned if he
didn't miss that the most. And now that he could treat her
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again like he did in the old days (well, at least he was
getting there), he felt that sizzle, that confidence that had
been robbed from him all coming back.
He dialed the number and held it to his ear, praying
that she wasn't somewhere without service or, God help
him, with another man. If she was, Morgan might just
have to kill him.
"Who is this?" the female voice said on the other end.
It wasn't said with any sort of real curiosity, but with
anger because she knew exactly who was calling.
"It's me, babe," Morgan said. "What are you doing
right now?"
"What am I doing?" she said. God, he loved that
accent. "I am sitting on my ass because my worthless
friend Sabina decided to go on a date with some lawyer.
So I was about to open a bottle of wine when you called.
Why the hell are you calling, Morgan?"
"What are you wearing?" he said.
"What am I wearing? What the hell is wrong with
you? Why does that matter?"
"Because I want you to pick out your hottest outfit
right this minute, put it on and meet me at the Kitten Club
in half an hour."
"And why would I do that?" she asked, her hesitancy
melting.
"Because I'm back, sweetheart, and I'm going to get
us both wasted and then I'm going to make you thank
God you were born a woman."
"Morgan?" she said.
"Yeah?"
"I'll be there in fifteen."
34
She didn't remember the drive taking this long. Maybe
because last time, time was of the essence. Or maybe last
time there was an excitement about seeing her daughter
for the first time in months.
As the yellow lines sped past in a blur, as the trees on
I-95 merged into one long emerald line, Paulina thought
about those days nearly twenty years ago when she first
held Abigail in her arms. She was so tiny, so fragile, and
Paulina remembered breast-feeding her, thinking that this
small person was dependent on her for love, for life. And
though she'd never wanted that feeling to die, it had done
just that a long time ago.
Paulina had never wanted to be one of those corporate
mothers who took a week off for maternity leave, was
back in the office like nothing had ever happened while
her child was raised and cared for by nannies with calloused hands and heaving bosoms. She never wanted her
daughter to grow up hearing somebody else's voice read
her bedtime stories, never wanted her daughter to feel the
same sense of loneliness that Paulina had as a little girl.
Abby would be her daughter forever, and she would
not let her daughter grow up without a true mother.
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Of course, life didn't work out that way. As soon as
they wanted her to take on bigger stories, she jumped at
the chance. Paulina told herself that it was only for a
short period of time, that she would make money and
make a name for herself so that when she finally stepped
back from the job, she would have created a better life
for Abigail.
But Paulina never stepped back.
The stories got bigger and bigger, and the chase became intoxicating. And when her name didn't grow at the
pace she wanted it to, she left the
Gazette
and took a job
at their rival. And now, finally, after so long in the
trenches of this industry, Paulina was a name, a brand,
making the kind of money that she always hoped to.
Some people said newspapers were a dying industry,
but if you wrote what people wanted to read, they'd never
bury you. There was always a medium.
And then one day, Paulina looked back and realized
that Abby was gone. A grown woman, a college student,
with her own hopes and dreams and desires and loves.
And Paulina had not been there for any of it.
Which is why this drive felt like the longest hours of
Paulina's life. Because just as she'd reentered Abby's life
the other day, today she was going to pull the shade over
a part of Abigail's life that Paulina had been too busy to
realize had even felt sunshine.
She arrived at the dorm as the sun was setting, casting
a beautiful orange hue over the treetops and green grass.
The red brick of the dorms looked radiant in the glow, and
for a moment Paulina had to stand and watch them.
Then as shadows began to creep across the grounds,
Paulina locked the car door and prepared herself.
She walked up to the front door and dialed Abby's cell.
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She had no idea what her daughter's schedule was,
whether she had evening class, what time she went to
dinner, if she had plans to see a movie tonight.
It didn't matter. She'd wait at the door all night if
she had to.
Fortunately Abby picked up right away.
"Hello?" she said.
"Hey, Abby, it's your mother."
"Oh, hey, Mom." Abby laughed and continued. "You
know when you said you'd try to call more I didn't think
you meant it."
"Oh, I meant it," Paulina said. "In fact, would you
mind buzzing me in? I'm downstairs."
"You're what?"
"I'm downstairs. In front of your dorm."
"Why are you..."
"Just let me in, it's important."
"All right, fine, hold on a second."
The buzzer rang, and Paulina entered. She made her
way to Abby's dorm room and knocked on the door.
Abigail answered, wearing a green tank top and shorts.
A bowl of popcorn was on the coffee table and the television was on. The menu of a DVD was on the screen.
And sitting on the couch was Pam Ruffalo.
Her brown hair was done up in a ponytail, and she was
wearing socks without shoes. Her legs were crossed
underneath her on the couch. She munched popcorn, then
swallowed it when she saw Paulina standing there.
She coughed out a kernel and said, "Hi, Ms. Cole."
Paulina looked at her. Her eyes widened, and she
turned to her daughter, pleading.
"We need to talk alone."
"You don't even say hello back, Mom?"
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"Hi, Pam. Can you ask her to give us a few minutes?"
"Why? What the hell is going on now?"
"Please, Abby, don't ask me to..."
"You asked Pam to leave the first time you came here,"
Abigail said, "and I agreed. I don't answer to you and I
never have, so whatever you say to me you can say to her."
"Abby, she really shouldn't..."
"Mom, I love her. She has a right to know whatever
you have to say to me."
Paulina stepped back, her breath caught in her throat
for a moment. She looked over at Pamela, a massive grin
on the young girl's face at that statement. Abby had a look
of pride, both at her love for this girl and her confidence
in telling her mother off.
"Fine, Abby, if you want to do this by your rules, so
be it. But remember I asked for privacy."
"I'll remember to tell that to the judge," Abby said.
Pam laughed. Paulina had to struggle not to shoot the girl
a dirty look.
And then she looked at her daughter, her young, beautiful vibrant daughter, who might never speak to her again
after today.
"I found out more about that...issue I talked to you
about the other day."
Abigail placed her hand against the door frame. It
was clear she'd tried to put it out of her mind, and
from the change in her stance it looked like she'd succeeded until now.
"What did you find out?" Abby asked, almost perfunctorily.
Paulina looked at Pam again, then back at her daughter.
"Last chance," she said.
"Spill it, Mom."
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"Okay then. I had some friends look into the photo
and the album it came from. Did you know Pam here
had a blog?"
Abigail smiled, turned to her girlfriend. "Of course I
did. She showed me every posting before it went up."
Pamela blushed and said, "At first I wanted to make
sure Abby was okay with it. Then she just trusted me."
"How sweet," Paulina said, her voice emotionless.
"Do you know a girl named Samantha Isringhausen?"
Abigail squinted, trying to figure her mother out.
"You're talking to me like a reporter," Abigail said. "Asking
me all these questions like you're going after a story. 'Do
you know this person? Have you heard of such and such?'
Be an adult, Mom, and tell me what the hell is going on."
"Fine," Paulina said, "but if I'm going to talk to you
like an adult, you're going to have to act like one when
I'm done."
"I'm sure that won't be a problem."
"Your words," Paulina said. Then she nodded at Pam.
"Your girlfriend there sold you out."
"What?" came the confused cry from both girls.
"You heard me," she said.
"Mom, I swear to God, you and me have never really
gotten along, but if you ever want to talk to me again
you'd better have a damn good explanation for this."
"I do," she said, "and take a second to look at your
'girlfriend.' She doesn't seem that angry."
They both turned to Pamela. The girl's mouth was wide
open, but it was more out of protest than surprise. "I don't
know what the heck she's talking about," Pam said.
"Samantha Isringhausen," Paulina said, "took those
photos at the beach. You then posted the album online.
All except for one photo. The photo that man showed me
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the night he threatened your life and burned me to drive
his point home."
"Burned you?" Abigail said. "What are you talking
about?"