The V8 roared loudly as Michael turned off onto
the Vine Street Expressway, heading to Club CRASS from his haven in
Conshohocken. The flashing lights of the underpass gave his car a strobe
effect. He glanced to his left to check the lane next to him, noticing the
driver in the next car over had a look of bewilderment on his face. Michael
laughed.
The Falcon xB was an Australian automobile,
never manufactured in the States. Like cars built in Great Britain or Japan, it
had a right-hand side driver, meaning that Sarah sat on the passenger side
where an American driver would normally sit. A casual glance at her would
reveal to any observer her initially childlike appearance and probably make for
quite a spectacle: A 12 year old seemingly driving a car down the Vine Street.
Michael gunned the engine and roared off the
highway onto Broad Street, turning south towards South Street and his
destination. As he did so, he heard the road of another powerful automotive
engine, a possible challenge from a street racer who recognized his 70s-era
muscle car for what it was. Either that, or one of his allies had crossed his
path and recognized his unique car. The likely culprit for the latter was
Rebecca, driving down from one of her havens in the North Philly badlands.
Michael glanced about for his challenger. His
guess had been correct; the car he spotted was Rebecca’s late-90s Corvette. He
resisted the temptation to race, knowing Broad Street around City Hall was
always crawling with cops.
They drove in tandem the dozen or so blocks to
Club CRASS. Now November, work on rebuilding and repairing Studio Gothic had
continued apace for some months now, but it was a long way from finished. The
construction contractors estimated it would be done by early Spring. Until her own
club was finished, Rebecca bided her time at Club CRASS.
The Trinity walked inside the staff door in the
back to the pounding beat of some techno track Michael didn’t recognize, but
immediately liked. The club was lightly attended tonight, not surprising for a
Tuesday night. One attendee stood out: Damian Drake.
“What’s he here for?” Sarah wondered aloud.
“I’m more curious how he beat us here.” Rebecca
mused. “That kindred has a knack for showing up 5 mins after sundown wherever
he wants to be.”
“Denn die Todten reiten schnell” said
Sarah, quoting the famous line from Dracula as if it explained everything. “The
dead travel fast. Sometimes, we all have powers that are mystery even to one
another.”
“Especially one of the few supposedly surviving Tremere.”
Michael added. “Regardless, he’s here for a reason. Either way, let him sweat
for a bit then bring him up for an audience.”
---
Regulus Noble looked down over the table before
him. The room was dark; it’s only illumination was from a far-away table lamp
and the soft glow from the dozen or so glass orbs on the table in front of him.
Most them only glowed faintly with a soft yellow light. One was quite bright
with a prismatic glow that shifted color randomly.
“Only one.” said a voice in the darkness. “All
this time and we’ve only got one for our trouble.”
Regulus looked behind him and snarled a response
in frustration. “Yes, only one. You’d think with almost a dozen of us killed at
the Hell Hotel that night we’d have better luck with snatching their souls out
of that abyss.”
“We’ve murdered close to a thousand people in
that building since we took it over in 1948. We have all those ghosts to sift
through in order to find the Awakened among them.”
“We won’t be able to build much of a ghost army
with only one, Ariel.” replied Regulus.
Ariel Valentine wheeled out of the darkness.
Badly wounded in a battle with the Consilium several years earlier, he’d been
paralyzed from the waist down ever since. Since his wounds were of a magical
nature, medical science was unable to restore his body to wholeness. Even most
healing magic had proven futile. Thus, he spent most days in the darkened
chamber where the two wizards now stood, a secret facility deep below the unsuspecting
University of Pennsylvania above.
Cloistered as he was, Ariel had avoided the
disaster at the Hell Hotel and his sanctuary had proven a boon as a backup
headquarters for the wounded Brotherhood. But over the past five months since
the defeat at the Hotel, the efforts by the Brotherhood to repair their lost
strength had met with numerous setbacks, not the least of which was the dearth
of Awakened souls in the soul gems on the table before Regulus.
“We should perhaps seek out a different source.”
“I’m reluctant to give up scouring the Hotel.”
retorted Regulus.
“No need. I know how badly you want to imprison
and enslave Zao. But we know where others of our kind have fallen. Numerous
sites around the university here perhaps. And there’s that curious death some
months ago at Temple. The male student torn apart by a wild beast in a lab
room. I believe he was a Consilium mage, was he not?”
“Slain by a companion, I believe. Another mage.”
“Such a tragedy would likely bind one to the
other.”
“Quite true.” said Regulus with a smile crossing
his lips.
“It’s not as good as Zao, but there is a certain
irony to turning the dead of the Consilium against them, don’t you agree?”
---
“Police report over a dozen arrests last night
in a sting operation against North Philadelphia’s criminal gangs....”
Michael raised the remote to press stop on the
VCR recording. The news report had come earlier in the evening. He’d recorded
it not long after he awoke and brought the tape along, using it as a reminder
for himself. Now it served as a bludgeon against Damain Drake and his
complaint-du-noir.
The gang in question was the Angeles, allies of
his allies in the Carthian Core and the “administrators” of his North Philly
prostitution racket. The raid was one of many over a series of months on his
operations. His allies in the Tongs were feeling the heat as well and his
attempts to move in on the Italian mob in South Philly to take over their
prostitution operations had been stymied. Michael knew it was Prince Walsh
flexing muscle and doing what he could to avenge the near-destruction of the
Dark Brotherhood.
Damian Drake watched the video dispassionately.
“Your point?” He growled at Michael.
Michael leaned back in his office chair. Sarah,
who was standing at his left, gave him an affectionate and supportive rub down
his arm. He smiled. He liked the stagecraft of this setting. Sarah to his left
and Rebecca standing behind him at his right. Two beautiful women, both deadly
and powerful in their own ways. Despite the bad news plaguing his operations,
he felt strong. Triumphant even. In fact, Michael wagered in his own mind, this
might have been the first time when he had Drake at a disadvantage instead of
the other way around.
“As you can see, you are hardly alone in having
these sorts of problems.”
“The difference is yours are because of your
continued defiance of Prince Walsh. Mine are because of you.”
“I beg to differ. It’s not my fault you’ve made
the mistakes you’ve made, Damian.”
“You snatched my pets right out from under me.
TFV was MINE!”
“It’s not my fault you underestimated Agent
McCoid. He discovered that you were a vampire and, despite the fact that you
knew he knew, you chose retaliation because he followed my lead on Hell Hotel
instead of yours. Did you honestly think a seasoned hunter like him wouldn’t
have put in place a contingency if you tried to lean on him? You’re usually
smarter than that, Damian.”
“My entire network in TFV is now compromised.
The whole damn agency knows what I am.”
“And you should consider yourself lucky they
haven’t dispatched a team to take you down. And then there’s the fact that I
could nail your ass to the wall for a major Masquerade violation on top of all
that. Prince Walsh is bloodthirsty enough of late. I doubt he’d mind much that
you’re not me.”
“You wouldn’t dare.”
“No, I wouldn’t. As much as I hate to admit it,
I need you. I’ll do you a favor. Consider it repayment on all those ‘favors to
be named later’ that I owe you for your support through the years. I’ll get
McCoid to back off. I don’t control him in the usual sense, but we’ve bled
together and that buys me some leverage. For your sake and mine, I want your
ATF and FBI connections intact. If McCoid’s people keep digging into your
network, there might be more trouble. In turn for this, you leave McCoid and
his people alone. No more retaliation. Is that clear?”
“Perfectly.” grumbled Damian reluctantly.
“Good. I’m glad we understand one another. You
may go.”
Damian started towards the elevator. About
halfway there, he paused and looked over his shoulder at Michael. “You know,
over the last few years, I’ve humored your ambitions, Michael, never really
believing you could pull off what you intend. It was amusing to play along,
especially when it hurt people I wanted hurt. But after tonight, I think you
might be able to pull it off after all. Well played.” With that, he exited.
“High praise.” noted Rebecca.
“I’ll never have Damian’s affection, but somehow
having his respect is even scarier. He’ll not underestimate me again.” mused
Michael.
“He’s the weak link in your operation.” said
Sarah. “You might do well to destroy him along with Walsh.”
“I could still have Walsh do it for me.”
commented Michael. “But I won’t reneg on my word. But why are you so determined
to end him?”
“He’ll be a threat in the future. You’ve
embarrassed him, first by noticing his error, second by exploiting it. He’ll
not forget that and will look for a way to double cross you one day.”
“A leopard does not change its spots. I’m
counting on it. But I’ll worry about that when it comes. It won’t be tonight.”
Michael hit the remote again and the VCR’s second drive began playing “Macross:
Ai, Oboete Imasu ka” (aka “Do You Remember, Love?”)
“No time for anime tonight, I’m afraid.”
interjected Rebecca.
Michael let out his breath in frustration. “We
just got here less than an hour ago. Who else?”
“Don Cruez came in about ten minutes ago. I’m
sure he’s here to talk about what happened last night to the Angeles.”
Michael groaned. “I was hoping for a quiet
night. Send him up. Sarah, if you would...”
“I call McCoid. May as well get him here tonight
as well. Rebecca should be the one to fetch the Carthians. She is their
primogen, after all.”
“Get to it then. Thank you both.” said Michael.
With that, Sarah grabbed the cordless phone and headed off into a corner to
make the call, while Rebecca headed to the elevator.
A few minutes later, Cruez and a couple other
Carthian vampires marched in Michael’s office with swagger and bravado, typical
of gang members trying to look scary and tough. Michael ignored the show of
testosterone and said nothing.
“We do what you ask. We play nice. We cut down
the protection racket. We pay the girls better. We start taking care of the
tenements. And for what? They still fuckin’ sold us out to the cops.” said
Cruez angrily.
“You know how the mafia got its start? Back in
the old country, people used to go what they called ‘men of honor’ to solve
their problems. When they came to America, Italians felt they couldn’t trust
the cops or the government or pretty much anyone else but their own, so ‘men of
honor’ emerged here to take care of the community. That’s what I’m trying to do
with you folks. In every way, you’ve treated your turf better than the Ninth
ever did. But you’re still a gang and people ain’t going to trust you
immediately. It takes time.”
“And what about my consorte in jail? I
don’t need no fuckin history lesson.”
“You honestly expected this sort of thing would
never happen?”
“Prince is leaning on us because he can’t get to
you.”
“Absolutely. But you don’t exactly have room to
complain. You went from 10 blocks of turf to 30 in the last year, thanks to my
aid. You’re making more money than ever, even after my rules and my cut. So you
ain’t exactly hurting right now. The arrests are a setback, yes. But they ain’t
the end of the world.”
“I still ain’t heard what you’re going to do
about them.”
“And here you are again asking for my help. I
suppose that makes me your ‘man of honor.’ See how it works?” teased Michael.
“I’ll put up bail money for your people. Of course, I’ll be out all that when
they don’t show up for trial and the bounty hunters are going to come snooping
after that. I suggest you start recruiting.”
“That ain’t all we got to worry about.” said one
of the other Carthians.
“What else?” said Michael.
“The Ninth is moving in. It seems they ain’t so
dead after all.”
“They hit one of our tenements on the edge of
what’s left of their turf. Beat the landlord to a bloody pulp and just moved
in. Our people weren’t even in the police van before they hit us.”
“They knew some shit was going down.” mused
Michael aloud. He glanced over his shoulder to Rebecca.
“They got a new leader. Says he’s a cousin to
Jamal, who you whacked. His name is Shameek Willis. They call him ‘Suits’
because he tries to dress all respectable.” explained Rebecca. “I haven’t said
anything about him because up until this, the Ninth have behaved themselves.
Laid low. Haven’t made any moves. Kept to what’s left of their turf. This
report is news to me.”
“They ain’t gonna stop. They took an inch. The
mile’s coming next.” said Cruez.
“Sounds to me like Mr. Willis has some friends
in high places. Him getting aggresive is a big mistake. We can’t hit the cops,
but we can hit him.” Michael dug into his desk and pulled out a city map. On
it, he’d made some rough outlines of the gang neighborhoods. North Philly was
split right down the middle with the black gangs like the Ninth on the west
side (probably not coincidentally) of 9th Avenue and Latino gangs like the
Angeles on the east side. “Trying to reclaim the street of their namesake.”
“I’ll pay him a visit.” said Rebecca.
“Will that make you happy?” Michael glared at
Cruez.
“It’s a start.”
“Good. Now get out. You’ve got 30 city blocks to
run and you can’t do that down here on South Street.”
Cruez and his companions marched back out. Sarah
walked back over from the corner and tossed Michael the cordless. He returned it
to its cradle with a single fluid motions. “Yes?”
“McCoid’s on his way. Seems he was planning to
see you tonight anyway.”
Michael let out his breath. “Wonder what that
means.”
“Good news, we can hope.” said Sarah, ignoring
Michael’s impatience and frustration. “Perhaps he’s gotten a lead on a
Brotherhood mage.”
In the five months since the raid on the Hell
Hotel, tracking the last handful of surviving Brotherhood mages had become
quite the chore. They’d kept a very low profile and Michael suspected strongly
that they’d called in every favored owed them by the werewolves, changelings,
and vampires of the city (including Prince Walsh) to keep their movements and
activities secret. Michael knew darn well that they’d not stopped their plans
for the “Light of God” and the Comcast satellites. Even the tiny handful that
remained could do considerable damage to the city.
“Perhaps.” Michael turned to Rebecca. “So, the
Ninth are resurgent.” He looked down at the map.
“They’re proving more resilient that we’d
hoped.”
“Funny how that works in North Philly. You told
me that Walsh gave Tiberius and Cruez the North neighborhoods to keep the black
gangs in check back in the 1970s; The Bloods and The Crips and others were all
moving in at that time. In the 80s, the Latin Kings popped up to the East. But
Cruz and the Angeles were only able to carve out a small niche in the middle of
the city....”
Rebecca finished for him. “...because Walsh and
the College were supporting those same gangs from the neighborhoods surrounding
their turf, Manayunk on the West and Port Richmond on the East. It was some of
the same strategy he tried with you trapping you in Conshohocken when you
arrived. Your use of gun and blade proved lot more effective than Tiberius’ use
of scandal and criminal accusation.”
“Regardless, Cruez was stuck until ‘the Hitman’
came along and took out Jamal and 3/4 of the leadership of the Ninth, leaving
those central blocks almost entirely his. Now the Ninth is back to challenge
them. That’s not coincidence. Neither is their timing.”
“Someone in the College is pulling their
strings. They know the Carthian are your allies and they know the Carthians
derive their power from the Angeles gang. But I have an idea. Maybe we could
turn it to our advantage.”
“Oh? How so?”
“Bring the Ninth into our fold. We’d broaden our
territory. Not every problem need be solved with the barrel of a gun.” Rebecca
reached down to the crotch of her jeans and rubbed herself provocatively. “You
can’t resist this. What makes you think he will?”
“Walsh. Doesn’t matter how charming you are, my
dear, you’re not getting through a thrall bond.”
“Then I’ll fuck his #2 and arrange a coup. Walsh
ain’t going to bond the whole damn gang. Or I’ll pay a visit to a Chinese
pharmacist. Either way, problem solved.” She paused. “Think about it. Over
these last thirty years, the Angeles and the Ninth have gobbled up every
smaller local gang that popped in that boundary land: the Red Boys, the Diamond
Dogs, all absorbed. Only the Ninth and the Angeles remain, and the Angeles
nearly fell apart after Tiberius died. Makes me wonder if he wasn’t pulling
some strings too. But now we can create a single united block to stand against
the outsider gangs. That gives us a good shot of taking all of North Philly.
Walsh fears us enough as it is. What happens after our coalition controls a
third of the city’s physical geography and a third of its populace?”
Michael smiled “I love your ambition.”
Rebecca leaned down and gave Michael a peck on
the cheek. “I think you love my pussy more, but let’s not split hairs. I’m
going to head up and see if I can talk to this Suits guy. No time like the
present to get started. I trust you can handle McCoid by yourself.”
“Sarah’ll be here. Besides, as crazy as it
sounds, I trust that hunter.”
“He’s the only mortal that’s even came close to
matching you in a fight. I’d not forget that.”
“He’s not a threat.”
“At the moment, but once you run this city, I
wonder if his opinion will change. He’d be the perfect one for Walsh to turn against
us.”
“I’ll worry about that if it happens. For now,
we work well together.”
“Alright. See you later.” With that, Rebecca
departed.
“Bet you wish you could follow. You’d love to
watch her take that big black...” teased Sarah.
“You have a pornographic mind, my sweet.”
interjected Michael. “Or are you deliberately trying to arouse me?”
Sarah gave Michael a coy smile. “Once McCoid is
gone, I’d like you in the mood. Something crazy. Pull me off the dance floor,
drag me into the bathroom, bend me over the toilet, and go to town.” She leaned
in and whispered in his ear. “Think you can manage that once your meeting is
done?”
Michael chuckled his assent as Sarah walked to
the elevator.
----
“Look, I know you want the space as open as
possible, but there simply isn’t a way to remove the load bearing beams without
completely compromising the space. The columns have to stay.”
Shameek “Suits” Willis frowned. This was his
baby, his pet project, his headquarters. He’d bought a dive bar in the center
of Ninth territory and had spent most of the last three months renovating it
into a nightclub for the locals. He’d torn out most of the upper floor. Made
space for small, but functional, VIP lounges. Created an office for himself.
Now he wanted a dance floor, but an architectural problem had emerged.
“Maybe you could pretty ‘em up, Suits. Call the
place ‘Pillars,’ or something. Make ‘em look Roman or something.” suggested one
of Suits’ bodyguards.
Suits began to smile. “Now that I like. How
about African?”
The architect nodded. “Sure. We we’re going to
have to put a facade on them no matter what. Maybe I can see if a local artist
can do something with those facades. You got a preference? East Africa?
Southern?”
“Just as long as it says ‘black’ to everyone who
walks in.”
“Hey, Suits, some white bitch here to see you.”
The bodyguard ushered in Rebecca. She
immediately took stock of the room. It was well furnished, a nice contrast to
the rough construction around it. Leather sofas. A well appointed desk. A small
liquor cabinet. Behind the desk was a framed poster of the 1970s cult film “The
Warriors.”
“What you want, bitch?” growled a massive
bodyguard who shot to his feet. He was easily 6’6” and very overweight even for
his height. He was huge and intimidating, easily twice the size of average
height and weight Rebecca, but she didn’t flinch. Instead, she directed her
attention to the two men in business suits near the window.
“I’m here from the Angeles.” She said.
The architect began folding the drawing in his
hands and made to leave. The other well-dressed man moved towards the desk.
“Sit down, Fat Daddy.” He said calmly to the giant. The bodyguard did as he was
directed.
“You’re here from the Angeles.” said Suits as he
took his seat. His voice had a tone of incredulity. He then chuckled. “This is
the respect I have. They send a little girl, not even a Puerto Rican, but a
white girl to talk.” He shook his head in disgust.
Rebecca ignored the disdain. “And yet, you got a
poster with a whole bunch of white faces staring down on us.”
“You know the movie?”
“Seen it many times. Great flick.”
“Cyrus.”
“One hundred thousand strong. Outnumber the cops
five to one.” said Rebecca, quoting the film’s tag line. “And you in charge.”
“Precisely.”
“Then why attack the Angeles instead of making
them an offer?”
“Respect.” said Suits. “Strength. Power. Money.
I can’t make a claim to rule without them.”
“So you think wiping out the Angeles will get
you those things?”
“They’re the ones that stole our turf after
Jamal died. They’re the ones who are sitting on blocks that belonged to us for
years. And they’re the ones the pigs are targeting right now. They’re weak.” He
paused. “They’re the ones that sent you to beg for peace.”
“Beg?” Rebecca scoffed. “For someone as smart as
you claim to be, Suits, you ain’t thought this through. Where do you think they
got their power? How do you think they hit Jamal? Or do you really think the
timing of it all was just coincidence? They have a backer. A powerful one.”
Suits frowned and said nothing.
“By dawn, nearly everyone arrested yesterday is
going to be out and back on the streets. The money’s already been put up. And
the hitman who took out Jamal and his bodyguards at the Ebon Pussy brothel? We
have his number.” She pulled out her flip phone and spun it in her hands as if
for emphasis.
“Is that a threat?” Suits reached under his coat
and drew out a handgun. His bodyguards, almost in unison, did likewise.
“No, a reminder. Shooting me won’t change any of
that. If anything, it’ll guarantee all of it will come down on your head. Never
a good idea to shoot the messenger.”
“Is that what you came here to say?”
“No.” said Rebecca. “I came to make an offer.
The Angeles secret backer, he likes your vision. The gangs united, running the
show. That’s what he wants.”
“All well and good, but what are you going to do
to prove it? I don’t know you, little girl. For all I know, you making all this
shit up. How do I know you’re even from the Angeles?”
“You don’t. But I’ll prove it to you.”
“One more thing. I won’t answer to nobody.
Especially not some white man in a tower downtown who thinks he can rule the
streets. I’ll take his support, but I run things my way.”
“Move east and the Angeles will support you.
Turf you take is yours. We’ll throw in material support: Guns, money, maybe
even a call to our hitman if you give us a good enough target.”
“You want us to take on the Latin Kings and MS
13?”
“Why not? Neither are local and neither are as
strong as their reputation claims. Together, we can push them out and claim
Philly for Philly. We want the city to be ours, don’t we? Besides, you show the
locals you can set aside your differences for your Cyrus-like vision.”
Suits nodded in thought. “And what’s in it for
you and yours?”
“Peace with our biggest rivals. Ain’t that
enough? That and a small percentage of your profits.”
“Of course.”
“Once you’re making money like the Angeles, you
won’t even notice it’s gone.”
“Yeah, we’ll see about that. All sounds too good
to be true.”
“I’ll be back with my ‘proof,’ a showing of good
faith from our soon-to-be mutual benefactor. Once you see what he’s willing to
front to see things come about as you wish, you’ll not be so skeptical.”
“Fine. Until you come back, I ain’t changing
nothing. The Angeles are still in my crosshairs.”
----
Alex McCoid walked into Michael’s office with
the clipped professional march of a true soldier. It was an interesting
contrast to the swagger of Michael’s previous visitors. Under his arm, he
carried a dossier folder. “Funny how Sarah called. I was on my way over here
anyway.”
“I have a favor to ask, which is why I wanted to
speak to you.” said Michael.
“And I have something of mutual interest to the
both of us.” he said, dropping the dossier on the far end of Michael’s desk. It
landed with a slap, but did not open, nor did Alex make haste to reveal its
contents. “You go first.”
“I’d like you to back off on Damian Drake.”
“Oh, the infiltrator of our merry little band.
You do realize what a risk it is for TFV to become the puppet of one of your
kind?”
“As opposed to the partner of one?” Michael
pointed out.
“There is a difference. I retain the power to
say no to any request you make of me that I find unreasonable. With Drake
hiding behind the power and authority of my superiors, how am I to know when
orders are legit or just him playing out one of his vendettas?”
“I get it, Alex, I do. But you’ve flushed him
from TFV. Let that be enough.”
“That vampire’s like an octopus. He’s got his
tentacles all over the Federal government.”
“Yes, and that’s useful to me. And in many ways
to you.”
Alex’s eyebrow went up incredulously. “How so?”
“TFV exists to protect the nation from
supernatural threats. Part of that job is, much as we do in our society, to
keep people in the dark about those threats. Control of law enforcement is one
the key principles we both use to keep knowledge of our kind from the public.
Damian serves a useful purpose for our society. I’d rather not lose him.”
“Alright, I’ll see if I can temper or call off
the investigations into his ATF and FBI connections. In return, I expect you to
keep him on a shorter leash.”
“Gladly. Keep your friends close... and all
that. So what do you have for me?”
“Well, as Halloween approached, a whole bunch of
punk kids decided to see if they could break into the Divine Lorraine. Typical
teenage dares. Sleep in the haunted house and all that. Most of them regretted
it, but it is still a crime scene. So we set up a camera system to monitor
incursions onto the property. And look what we found.” At that, Alex opened the
dossier. Within it were a series of grainy photographs taken from a video
camera.
Each one showed an individual standing outside
the building, arms held outward as if in prayer. The distance from the camera
and the lack of resolution made identifying each individual impossible, but it
was clear these were not all the same person.
“Their pose is ritualistic. Makes me wonder
if...”
“...it’s some kind of incantation. These are
mages. Any idea if they’re Consilium or Brotherhood?”
“No clue. I was hoping you might be able to tell
me.”
“I suppose it's possible that Moseley’s people
might be trying to purge the place or something. But she doesn’t talk to me.
After Zao’s death, my connection to the Consilium has dried up. She won’t even
talk to Mitch and Anna is still too much of a mess to be of any use. If it’s
Brotherhood, what might they be doing?”
“If it’s Brotherhood, this gives us a chance to
finish them once and for all. They’ve come out of hiding.”
“Which means this is big and important to risk
discovery. I’ll get my people to start watching the sight in person.”
“Good. I was going to do the same, but my
superiors are keeping us close with the whole Drake debacle. I think they worry
we’ve compromised in other ways.”
“Then you took a big risk coming here tonight.”
“Not really. I’ve been at this long enough to
know how to shake a tail. No one knows I’m here.”
“Good. I enjoy our partnership, Alex. Especially
when the Brotherhood threatens everything.” Michael picked up the top photo and
looked at it closely. “One can hope we just got our most promising lead in months.”
---
A few hours later, Rebecca wandered back inside
Michael’s office. Life in the club below was beginning to wind down, as last
call was just a few minutes away. “Your haste is impressive. You find this
‘Suits’ guy already?”
“He’s not hard to find. I know where he hangs.
He’s been converting an old dive into a nightclub for about three months now.
He’s usually there, overseeing construction during the day and using it as his
headquarters at night.”
“Odd hours for even a gangsta.”
“A lot of the work is under the table, so some
of it happens after hours when the government inspectors aren’t snooping
around.” Rebecca plopped herself down on the sofa. “Where’s Sarah?”
“Hunting downstairs.”
“You up for a bite?” Rebecca asked, finding the
idea of hunting appealing.
“Not right now. I’m more eager to learn your
results tonight.”
“Your faith in my skill is probably a little too
strong if you think I can sway him with one unannounced visit. Besides, Suits
is going to be a tough nut to crack. He’s definitely one of these Black
Renaissance types. Black rule for a black city, or at least neighborhood, and
all that. He wants to be Cyrus.”
“Cyrus?”
“For someone as nerdy as you often are, I’m
surprised you don’t get the reference. The Warriors? Cult movie from the late
seventies about gangs in New York.”
“Seen it, but don’t remember it that well.”
“Well, Cyrus wants to unite all the gangs and
rule the city through them in the movie. That’s Suits.”
“Deluded little mortal, isn’t he? Still, I
suppose we can take advantage of his ambition.”
“I intend to, but making sure our strings are
kept invisible is going to be extra important. This guy’s not the type to be
eager to take orders from white folk.”
“Makes it unlikely he’s under Walsh’s
influence.”
“Directly, I’d agree. Doesn’t mean Walsh isn’t
involved other ways. Still, if we want to influence him, we’re going to have to
put up something concrete. My beauty and charm isn’t going to do the trick on
its own.”
“What did you have in mind?”
“One of Orlov’s caches would be wonderful.”
“If we knew where they were. Still, Zheng might
be able to spare a few dozen pieces from the Tong’s arsenal. With their numbers
down, they might be eager to liquidate some stock.”
“With you fronting the bail money for the
arrested Angeles tomorrow, how much liquid you got to throw around for these
little pet projects?” asked Rebecca, going for the practical question.
“Enough for the bail certainly. Zheng’ll take
credit, thanks to that wonderful little thrall bond he has.”
“I wouldn’t drag that debt out long.” cautioned
Rebecca. “Zheng’s position in the Tong is still precarious in the wake of Kuen
Yen’s assassination.” She paused. “I don’t normally question your strategies
and schemes, but I worry about overextending ourselves, especially when the
Brotherhood and Walsh are still out there.”
“All for the greater cause. Money is not a
problem. I’m clearing more than enough between the gangs and the club to have
built up a nice nest egg, even with the debts to the Sangiovanni. The bail
money will wipe most of that out, but I can get enough within a week or so to
cover Zheng’s guns. Can Suits wait that long?”
“I doubt he’s giving us any thought at all right
now. He’ll not take us seriously until something shows up.”
“Then we have the time we need.”
Next Chapter
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