Read The Boy Who Came in From the Cold Online
Authors: B. G. Thomas
dressed, his scowl vanished and was replaced by an insincere smile. “Oh. Hello, Sir. Howz can I help you?”
Gabe fought to keep from shuddering. “Are you the manager of the Dove?”
“The what?” the man asked, piggy eyes blinking.
“And there is a Todd Burton living here?’
The man’s eyes turned guarded. “Who wants to know?” For some reason the man was pissing Gabe off already. Of
“So Mr. Wagner’s firm has decided to represent Mr. Burton in his eviction.” The lie came abruptly and completely out of Gabe’s lips before he had a chance to think it through.
The man took another step back. “That little fucker hadn’t paid his rent in two months. I did what I had to do. There are lots of people want to live here.”
Gabe raised his brows at the words that proved the manager could lie just as easily as he could. “Oh, really? Then that apartment is already occupied?”
The man looked back and forth several times, then gave a quick nod. He backed up and waved Gabe in.
As if it were a palace instead of the “roach-infested firetrap” it is
, Gabe thought.
The place was worse than Gabe had imagined. He actually saw a cockroach run away as he walked into the squalid room. There was trash, empty pizza boxes, and crushed beer cans on every surface as well as the floor. Dirty clothes lay in heaps and over furniture. The air reeked of cat urine so foul it made Gabe’s eyes water. It was all he could do not to gag. Sit down? He’d asked to sit down? Was there any place to even sit down beside a recliner that was obviously the “manager’s” favorite? The dent was so deep, Gabe was disinclined to even think of sitting there. But it seemed to be the only place.
The fat man leapt forward, surprisingly quickly considering his bulk, and shoved a pizza box, a huge pair of underwear, and a sock off the couch. He indicated the free spot with a wave and Gabe stood there staring at it. He spotted some relatively clean newspapers, picked them up, and placed them in the “empty” spot before sitting.
Ala cockroach?
Gabe wondered.
No thanks
. He opened his briefcase and pretended to ruffle through it, then pulled out a file— opened it. “According to Mr. Burton’s testimony”—was that the right word?—“you never gave him notice of his impending eviction.”
“But did he get a written notice?” Gabe asked.
As if you could write
, he wanted to say.
“Sure he did.”
“Yes,” Gabe said. He turned pages in his file, pages concerning the small but growing company called AbledRides. “According to this copy of the legal agreement with Mr. Burton, he should have had one more month to pay his rent before you seized his assets.” It was a lie. A complete and total fabrication, but just as he had surmised, he saw total confusion on the man’s face. Did the manager not even know what the lease said? “What did you say your name was?”
“Yes…. That’s just what I have here,” Gabe said, poker-faced. Racine wiped sweat off his forehead.
Nerves. Interesting.
“Please, Mr. Racine, tell me the fate of Mr. Burton’s belongings.”
“Huh?” Racine scratched his balls.
“Excellent!” Gabe smiled graciously, even though it took control. Control was what he was good at, part of why he got paid the big bucks. “I knew that. My associates were worried you might have done something stupid—”
“—but I told them you wouldn’t be an apartment manager if you were stupid.”
“Yeah! Right. I ain’t stupid. You tell ’em that too!”
Something was up, and Gabe’s instinctive distaste for the obese man intensified. He hadn’t planned on lying like this, but then he often flew by the seat of his pants. Went with the intuition that Peter had encouraged and nurtured in him since they met that dreary, yet ultimately comedic, night.
Gabe smiled even wider, letting good will positively pour from his eyes. “I am here to say that the legal firm—Baily, Cranston and Watch—is willing to forget any legal action as long as Mr. Burton’s belongings are released to him.”
Gabe studied him. Could Racine be any trouble? Who knew how the legalities stood on this? He wasn’t sure just how the law worked on renters and weather. Gabe wasn’t a lawyer, and he was misrepresenting himself—letting this man think he was part of a law firm. Racine very well might have quite a legal leg to stand on. Who knew what Todd had signed? Why take a chance? And just what the hell was he doing here in the first place? “How much do you show Mr. Burton owes you?” he asked, plunging ahead.
“Twelve thou—.”
Gabe fixed Racine with a steely gaze.
“Nine hun’ert. That should cover it.” Racine gave him a look, daring Gabe to object.
Gabe didn’t. He wanted this over and done with. He wanted to get away from this gross and unpleasant man. He wanted away before the troglodyte got it into his feeble mind that there was something rotten in the state of Denmark. Or in this case, Missouri.
“May I write a check?” Gabe asked.
Surely you’re not writing a company check?
Of course not. I’m paying this myself.
“Ah… sure. A check’ll do.” Racine wiped at his upper lip.
Gabe pulled a checkbook out of his briefcase, made a great show opening it, turning to the right place, raising a pen, then…. “Naturally, I will need to actually
see
Mr. Burton’s belongings,” Gabe said.
“Ah, Mr. Racine. This isn’t personal. It’s nothing but a formality,” Gabe said, voice calm. “I trust you implicitly.” He didn’t, obviously. What he really wanted to do was punch the man. But that would be a bad move, wouldn’t it? Totally unproductive. So far things really couldn’t be moving along any better. “Why don’t you take me up now?”
Racine nodded and left the room.
What are you doing?
Helping out my fellow man.