Read Parker 05 - The Darkness Online
Authors: Jason Pinter
That's when Morgan knew he had to jump in.
When you introduced a new product to the marketplace, you didn't trust it to people who couldn't sell it,
who couldn't get the job done. A new product has an extremely narrow window of opportunity to work, and
while that door is cracked open, you needed to wedge everything but the kitchen sink in there because once that
sucker closed up, it wasn't cracking open again.
Morgan sold to people. Plain and simple. He sold them
investments in their future. He sold them the belief that
if they did not trust him then they were putting their
family's stability at risk.
Was this any different?
Morgan had done a few lines in his day. A night out at
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the strip joint with his buddies, a bump or two in the
bathroom to make those lights flicker just a little faster.
He didn't quite have the taste for it, though, felt if you
needed an external force to get high you were simply
doing the wrong drugs.
Not that he judged them. Most people were simply not
born with the same drive and instincts Morgan had been.
His parents were blue collar all the way, but had good
enough credit to get him a decent financial aid package.
Morgan knew a lot of kids from his hometown that
weren't so lucky.
They were the ones who filled up his tank at the gas
station. They were the ones who sprayed perfume on his
mother when she went to the mall. They were the ones
who needed something to take the edge off the real world,
because if they spent too much time with their own life
and their own thoughts eventually it would occur to them
what they had never become.
So this new product, Morgan guessed, was just one
more thing to take the edge off. And that was fine. He
trusted these guys. Jeremy was a message. Like no limit
hold 'em, you're either all in or you fold.
Jeremy folded. Morgan's stack of chips wasn't as high
as it used to be, but what was that great line from
Rounders?
Kid's got alligator blood.
Morgan liked the sound of that.
When the caller told him the address, Morgan was a
little surprised at first. He'd actually been there once
before, a few years back when he'd first started dating this
French model named Claudia who was in town for some
photo shoot where she was supposed to pose in a pink tutu
atop the Brooklyn Bridge.
Morgan never really understood art.
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She'd insisted that they go to the Kitten Club, the rationale being more along the lines of it being a trendy
hotspot rather than a place where actual enjoyment
could be had.
Morgan remembered that the music was deafening,
the light show transfixing, and the drinks ridiculously
overpriced.
And then that rich diva Athena Paradis got killed there,
and somehow the Kitten Club became even more popular.
Now why Morgan was supposed to be there at seven
o'clock in the morning, a good sixteen hours before the club
even opened its doors, was beyond him. But it was his first
day. And Morgan knew well enough not to ask questions.
He took the subway downtown, then walked to the
meatpacking district where the Kitten Club, and its
brethren, served generous amounts of alcohol to hip,
young New Yorkers seven days a week. At midnight, you
couldn't walk down the block without having to cut
through any one of a number of long lines dedicated to
keeping impatient drinkers outside until the Lord of the
Velvet Rope decided it was time to allow them entry.
The Kitten Club used to have one of those large neon
signs above the awning, this one depicting a feline in
naughty attire sipping from some sort of pink cocktail.
The lights were arranged so that it looked like the cat
was tipping the drink back. As the glass hit the cat's
lips, the drink actually appeared to disappear down its
furry throat.
If you had enough money, you could get anyone to
make you anything.
As Morgan approached the entrance, the front door
opened up. He immediately recognized the man who
held it open.
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"Morgan, good to see you," Chester said. "Feels good
to be up bright and early, doesn't it?"
Chester said this with the slightest air of contempt, as
though he knew that Morgan hadn't needed to wake up
before noon anytime in recent memory. Though he felt
his cheeks flush slightly red, he did feel a bit of pride in
rejoining the workforce.
"If it's worth getting up for, there's no such thing as
too early."
"Words to live by," Chester replied. "Come on in."
Chester held the door ajar, and Morgan slipped
inside. He couldn't help but find it funny that for the first
time he hadn't needed to wait in line to enter a club.
Maybe he needed to go clubbing at seven in the morning
more often.
Chester led Morgan through the club, the earlymorning sun peeking through black-tinted windows,
casting an eerie glow on a floor that seemed ghostlike
without the cavalcade of dancing, drinking bodies. The
first floor of the Kitten Club was essentially one large
open space, nearly the length of a football field.
At either end was a bar, about thirty feet long, that
housed four different bartenders in order to make sure
drinks were served promptly, and that every penny was
squeezed out of every patron.
Large birdcages hung above the floor, with doors big
enough to fit the dancers who gyrated inside them all
night. Morgan could see a pulley system keeping them
high, attached to a chain that could be lowered. Still, the
dancers had to keep going all night. Made you think twice
before entering a giant birdcage.
Chester led Morgan across the first floor, toward a
sign marked Restrooms. Morgan followed, but slowed
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down when Chester turned toward the door to the women's bathroom.
"Um, dude, you can't go in there."
Chester turned around, looked at Morgan like he'd
sprouted another head.
"You're really going to question me? Now?"
Morgan felt a chill travel down his spine. He simply
shook his head, and whispered, "Sorry."
Stupid, Morgan thought. His gut reaction, of course,
was to question why the hell they were going into the
ladies' bathroom in a nightclub at seven in the morning.
On the surface, not the most egregious question to be
asking. But Morgan should have known better.
So when Chester pushed open the door to the women's
room, Morgan followed obediently behind.
The women's room was cleaner than most clubs, especially considering it was known for being a veritable
petrie dish of chemical indulgences. There was an irony
in that the club was owned by Shawn Kensbrook, who
was as clean as they came. Hell, the guy became a
regular on the
Today
show after Athena Paradis died.
One of those celebrities, like Puff Daddy or P. Diddy or
whatever the hell his name was now who skyrocketed
to fame after the death of someone close. And when
fame came knocking, the mourning period lasted all of
about two more seconds before the checks started
rolling in.
Kensbrook himself was clean, but the Kitten Club
itself was as dirty as a public restroom. And like a
public restroom, Morgan held his nose when he took
one whiff of the foul odor that permeated this particular restroom.
He couldn't tell where it was coming from, but got an
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idea when Chester walked over to a closed stall door
clearly marked Out of Order.
Morgan followed, peeking over Chester's shoulder as
he pushed the stall door open.
Yup, that was it. No doubt whatever had died had done
so in this stall.
The toilet seat itself was covered in a brown foulness
that nearly made Morgan retch. The wall behind it was
chipping, the plaster coming loose. The metal toilet paper
holder was rusted and gross, and the floor tiles had hints
of yellow that reminded Morgan of writing his name
without hands on snow days in his youth.
Without hesitation, Chester stepped through the rusted
door and stood over the toilet.
"Dude," Morgan said, "that's pretty nasty. I'm sure
there's a working one in here that doesn't look like something out of
Trainspotting.
"
Chester appeared to ignore him, instead leaning forward.
Morgan couldn't make it out, but Chester was apparently
doing something against the wall, either scratching it with
his fingernails or pushing on something, he couldn't tell
what.
Suddenly Chester stepped back, and Morgan heard a
brief clicking noise before the entire compartment--the
toilet and the wall behind it--simply slid backward, revealing a walkway behind it.
"You've gotta be kidding me," Morgan said. "Who
are you, James Bond?"
"Guess I got the blond hair right," Chester said. "Come
on."
Morgan stepped into the passageway. It was a long
narrow hallway, metal on both sides, no deviations. At the
end of the hallway stood a simple metal door. There was
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no doorknob, no metal slats. Nothing except two video
cameras perched above the doorway, each pointed down
to capture whoever was about to enter.
"Who's back there?" Morgan said.
"What did I tell you about questions?"
"Not to ask them."
"You're a quick learner."
Chester kept walking until he was standing directly in
front of the door. He looked up at the cameras. Smiled.
Morgan was about to ask if whoever was back there
could see him, but remembered the previous conversation.
"The cameras don't work," Chester said.
"Huh?"
"That's what you were about to ask. Do you see any
wires? Any outlets?"
Morgan eyed the cameras. "Nope. But there's a red
light on."
"Runs on a battery," Chester said. "Fakes out most
burglars and trespassers. You can buy these things at
Radio Shack for sixty bucks."
"So then how do they..."
"Trust me, security is a lot tighter than a simple
camera. Just don't bring any of your friends here. They'll
be dead before they count to five."
"What..."
Before Morgan could finish his question (something
he was thankful for), the metal door slid open. Standing
there was Leonard.
He was wearing black jeans and a green turtleneck. He
held a clipboard in one hand, and gripped the door's
handle with his other.
"Hey," he said to Chester. Then he looked at Morgan.
"Glad you could make it. You guys are late."
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"Traffic," Chester said.
"Of course." Leonard took a pen from the clipboard,
checked something on it and went back into the room.
"Come on," Chester said, and Morgan followed him
inside.
The room was fairly small, and resembled an atrium
of some sort. There was another door off to the side, and
that was all. The only light was overhead track lighting,
and Morgan noticed a dozen cameras pointed at different parts of the room.
The first person he saw was Nikesh. The Indian boy
was standing in the center of the room. He was wearing
a black pinstripe suit, with a red tie and wingtip loafers.
His hair was freshly cut, and Morgan noticed a small
shaving nick under his chin.
Nikesh turned around. He nodded when he saw Morgan.
"Hey," he said.
"Hey," Morgan replied, wittily.
Then Nikesh turned around, and Morgan saw that he
had a large briefcase slung over his shoulders. The bag
was full, but not overstuffed. There was a combination
lock on the front, and the clasp was done.
"Patel, you're finished here. Flanagan?"
The chubby white kid from the conference room
ambled out of the side room. He was also clutching a
briefcase, this one stuffed even more. Though the bag
looked ready to burst, Chubby--aka Flanagan--seemed
to have no trouble carrying it. Obviously whatever was
inside didn't weigh much.
"You two have your orders," Leonard told them. "And
you remember everything I told you."
Patel and Flanagan both nodded. They looked confident.
Whatever Leonard had told them, they remembered it.
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Leonard clicked something in his ear, nodded, then
motioned for the duo to follow him. He slid the door
open, revealing the corridor. When they'd stepped
outside, Leonard pulled the door back into place.
"Your turn," Leonard said. "Time for orientation."
Leonard walked over to the side door. This one looked
fairly standard, with a doorknob and everything. Leonard
simply turned the knob, pulled it open and beckoned
Morgan to follow him.
Tentatively Morgan came forward, surprised at first