Read Hostile Takeover Online

Authors: Patrick E. McLean

Hostile Takeover (14 page)

"Topper?" said Edwin.

"Yeah," said Topper, because what else could he say?

"Why didn't you come to me?"

"Because I didn't think you would listen."

And right there. In Edwin's pause, in an instant that seemed to stretch into eternity, Topper felt that there might be hope for Edwin's soul after all.

"I would have listened," said Edwin. "I just wouldn't have agreed."

His hopes dashed against the rock of Edwin's stoicism, Topper hung his head. "Yeah, that's what I meant."

For a long time neither of them said anything.

"Is that how you really feel?" asked Edwin.

"No, no, I mean, NO! I was drunk. That was the booze, it wasn’t me. Of course you are right. Business, all the way, 110%"

"That is how you really feel." Edwin said.

"Are you gonna have me killed?"

"No, Topper. I'm not."

"But I know all your secrets. I mean, how…are you going to do it yourself?"

"No, Topper. You can claim attorney-client privilege. So they won't come after you."

"Yeah," said Topper, "I mean, of course. I would never rat you out, Edwin. It's just..."

"Yes?" asked Edwin.

"There's more to life than this. You're working yourself to death, and for nothing."

"It's my life's work," Edwin said, as if that put paid to every argument Topper could ever construct.

"There's more to life than work. Even that sweet old broad Agnes knew that."

By the look on Edwin's face, Topper knew he had made a mistake by mentioning Agnes. Edwin's lips grew thin and he heard his breath escaping between them with a hiss. For a moment, Topper feared that this would be the explosion that had to be inevitable when any person represses that much emotion. But it was not to be. Edwin mastered himself and said, "I'm sorry Topper, I'm going to have to let you go."

"What! You're firing me? You can't fire me, I'm your partner!" Topper protested, but his heart wasn't in it. It was the reflex of a lifetime spent arguing.

"You were. And I shall always be grateful for the help you have given as I have started this great endeavor. But, I am afraid, it is time for the adults to take over."

"Fine! FINE! If you're gonna make height jokes. Then I hope your ridiculously tall head gets caught up by a low-flying traffic 'copter."

"Topper, you don't mean that," said Edwin magnanimously as he reached to shake Topper’s hand. "Now let's make a clean break of it."

"YES, I DO mean that. You're so tall, the FAA regulations say you should have a flashing light on your head. I should know, I'm your LAWYER."

"You were my lawyer," said Edwin, retracting his hand.

"GODDAMNED RIGHT!" said Topper as he swaggered towards the door. Daniel stepped aside and let him pass. When he was out of the office, Topper turned around and said, "And don't you get any ideas about having me knocked off. 'Cause if you do—I'LL SUE YOU IN HELL!"

Topper slammed the door and was gone.

CHAPTER EIGHTEEN

"So, I quit," said Topper. "It was a hard thing to do, but I'm a man of principle, and it just wasn't working out anymore."

"You were fired," corrected the interrogator.

"Who told you that? Who TOLD you that? You are misinformed, my friend. While we did have a difference of opinion, technically I released myself on my own recognizance. I quit. Excelsior was fired."

"Excelsior was fired?"

"Oh, yeah, that guy? He was fired. He came in draggin' ass after our night out, and Edwin read him the riot act. When he sassed back, Edwin shitcanned him. Yup, Edwin fired the most powerful man in the world. Told him that he didn't have what it took to be Evil."

"Then, why did…"

"Ah, I'm getting to that part. Besides, this story is taking a very disturbing turn away from me. You're just like everybody else. You always overlook the little guy. Sure, it's more interesting to pay attention to the Big Sexy Hero. Or the Really Tall Villain. But what about the Tiny HardWorking Hench-lawyer? The hardworking little guy who always gets the shaft? Do you have a thought for him? Do you?"

The interrogator thought about responding with the time-honored, "I'm the one asking the questions here," but he had spent enough time with the little man to realize it was best just to let him talk. Who knew what else he might confess to?

Topper continued, "No! You don't. So consider how screwed I was. Edwin wasn't fooling anybody. I knew my days were numbered. In his mind, I had betrayed him."

"But you had."

"Ah c'mon, if you keep interrupting me, I'll never get through all of it."

"Hadn't you?"

"Well, that depends on your definition of the word ‘had’. Or the word ‘betrayed’. Or any word at all. See, I was trying to look out for him. Anybody that serious—anybody who works that hard—is going to pop sooner or later. There's a lot of life that goes on, and Edwin was missing all of it. In a way, and I'm just realizing this, I had the same problem that Edwin always had: Ya can't teach somebody who thinks they know it all already."

"So none of what happened was your fault?"

"Exactly. It was like gravity. It was like water flowing on its way to the sea. I was just swept along. Well, at that point, anyway. But then I start thinking, I gotta look out for myself! And Edwin, he's a bad man, maybe the baddest man. And now I'm on his bad side."

"So what did you do?" asked the investigator, getting caught up in the story in spite of himself.

"I sprang into action. Now, understand, I'm not a planner. Not like Edwin. I move on instinct. I'm lower to the ground see? Harder to spot. I move fast, stay under the radar. I can hear them coming. And all my instincts pointed in the same direction. Never in my life had I been so sure of the right thing to do."

CHAPTER NINETEEN

Topper climbed up the barstool like a commando scaling a seawall at the spearhead of an amphibious landing. He spread his arms as far as they would go and dropped them on the dark wood with a thump. "Lloyd, you set 'em up, I'll knock 'em down. Bourbon, in tiny little glasses."

"My name is John," the bartender said.

Topper ignored him, "The glasses don't even have to be clean."

The bartender shrugged, and set a line of shot glasses on the bar. As he did, he dusted off a reasonable facsimile of concern and asked "What happened?"

"Nothing," Topper snapped defensively, "I just need to think."

"Did you lose your job?" he asked as he filled the shot glasses in their row along the bar.

"I QUIT!"

"Good for you," muttered the bartender and then he wandered down to the other end of the bar.

When Topper stumbled out of the bar, he was knocked backwards into a snow bank by a taller person who hadn't seen him.

"Hey, asshole, I'm walking here!" Topper cried. The man didn't even turn around, he just hurried off through the cold. Topper extracted himself from the snow.

The pain of soon-to-be-frostbitten feet and the wind clawing its way underneath his collar sobered him up quickly. Jesus, he hated the winter. It brought clarity. Topper's native season was the bloated days of summer that fuzzed the edges of everything. When it was warm and the living was easy and without consequence. "I gotta pull it together," he mumbled into the gusting wind. Even as low to the ground as he was, he found it difficult to walk into the wind. He held up his arm like a shield, and leaned into the air that howled like wolves between the high buildings.

As any nature documentary will show, wolves always go for the smallest, weakest members of the herd. Usually, that meant getting a meal with the least amount of effort. Topper compensated for his lack of size with a cunning viciousness. But, it didn't change the principle. If you were small, the wolves were always coming for you. But if you were big...

Why was it that the tallest guy was always in charge? What was so great about being tall? Why were they qualified? They're farther away from the ground. From the struggle. Where it happens.

An then he realized Edwin's problem. He was just too distant from everything. Above it all. He couldn't see the strains of an organization he was too distant from. He didn't know what it was liked to get walked on. Sure, he could understand intellectual reasons why people should do something. But Topper knew that wasn't how to motivate someone. Fear worked, of course. People will always respond to fear. But then you've always got to be on them. It was too much effort.

He turned a corner, and suddenly the wind was at his back. His steps were lighter and he felt the pressure compelling him forward. Why not the little guy, for a change? Couldn't Topper run things? Wouldn't it be better for everybody?

For the first time, he saw a way that he might inspire others. Inflame their passions. Make them feel loved, and they would love him in return. Fun. Hell yeah. Why couldn't work be fun? Just because you took a large group of people and put them together didn't mean it had to be so, so, so, corporate.

He knew the people who worked at Omdemnity Insurance. There was no reason their jobs had to suck their lives out of them. It could be different. It could be better. The only problem was that he didn't know how to convince Edwin. But maybe he didn't have to. Maybe he just needed to do it himself.

The thought scared him, made him feel alive. That spark was back. The swagger. He could still hear the wolves in the wind, but now they were howling for him. He was gonna do it his way. He was gonna stick it to the other guy. Bigger and badder than anybody had ever done it before. With his name in lights a thousand feet in the sky.

He didn't know how he was going to get there. But screw plans. He wasn't a 'plan' kind of guy. He didn't need the details. All Topper needed was the feeling. And out there, in the cold, cold wind of a hopeless winter, Topper saw a way to enjoy life again. He saw a way the little guy could be on top for a change.

When his spirits were highest—when he felt that he could do no wrong and that everything was coming his way—that's when the wind picked him up and lifted him into the air.

 

One minute Topper was walking along the sidewalk. The next he was high in the sky and rising. The wind buffeted him from all sides. It sucked the air out of his lungs and blurred his eyes. It happened so fast he almost had time to be afraid. Almost. When he tried to twist around, he realized that he was held fast in Billy's impossibly strong grip.

Billy was clearly upset. He was talking quickly and Topper would have guessed that he wasn't making any sense, but since he couldn't hear him, he had no way of knowing for sure.

"STOP! FRIGGIN' STOP!" he screamed at the top of his lungs. "I can't understand you."

But Excelsior went on and on, flying faster and faster in circles around the city.

"BILL-EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!" Topper shrieked.

With a suddenness that caused Topper's stomach to slam against his rib cage, they stopped moving. "There's no need to yell," said Billy.

"What are you THINKING?" asked Topper, kicking his feet and wiggling his arms.

"What? You said anytime I needed to talk."

"Talk. TALK? Moron! If I had a heart, you might have given me a heart attack."

"Sorry," said Billy, "I got excited."

"Now lemme go. LET ME GO!"

Billy shrugged and let Topper go. He dropped exactly like a stone, except that stones don't emit the high-pitched scream of a creature that knows, with an utter certainty, that its mortality has arrived.

Billy swooped down quickly and plucked him out of the sky. He giggled a little bit.

"Ah ahhh hahhh aahhh," Topper said, struggling to catch his breath. Unable to form a complete sentence, he settled for, "AH ah ah ah asshole. Ya ahh ahhh ahhsshole!"

"You said to let go."

"Well, I was MAD! Don't listen to what I'm sayin'. Listen to what I'm telling you!"

"What are you telling me?" Billy asked, genuinely confused.

"Put. Me. Down. Slowly."

Billy drifted towards the roof of an art deco building that was guarded by fearsome-looking gargoyles. When they had set down on the pebbled roof, Topper asked, "Now what the hell happened? Why are you so excited?"

"I quit."

"Hunh?" said Topper, overcome by the height and the cold.

"I told Windsor, I quit."

"You mean…?"

"I told him no. I told him I wasn't going to do it anymore. That I didn't want to work so hard." Billy flew in a tight circle of joy. "I'm a free man!" he yelled so loudly that the windows of nearby buildings shook.

"Well, how nice for you. Can you put me back down on the street now?" Topper said in a tone of voice one might use when talking to a small child. "Uncle Topper needs to do some more drinking."

"Yeah, it's great. I'm gonna be Evil. I'm going to do it all on my own. Only..."

Topper was looking for a stairwell or an elevator or a slide or any way off this roof, but when Billy stopped talking Topper looked at the ex-hero.

"I don't know what to do," Billy finished. "I need you to help me figure out what to do."

"How the hell do I know what you should do? Guy, if you haven't noticed, I'm barely holding it together myself."

"But you're a bad guy. And you know about fun."

Topper straightened himself up and stumbled a bit in the process. "Yeah, I do know about fun. I know a lot more about fun than a lot of people."

"See, that's all I want. Just a little help. To be bad. The fun kinda bad. Whattaya think I should do?"

"You got any money?"

"No, not a dime."

"Well, that's your first problem. When the good times roll, the wheels are definitely greased with money."

"Should I rob a bank?"

Topper squinted at him and weaved back and forth on the snow covered roof. He wasn't falling down drunk, but he realized he might just be falling-off-an-icy-roof-in-the-middle-of-winter drunk. The shot of adrenaline that this thought brought to his brain caused it to start working again. "No, not A bank. You should rob THE bank!" Topper realized as he shouted the words.

"What's THE bank?"

"First we have to talk about my fee."

"Your fee?"

"Yeah, if I'm going to be advising you, I'm going to need... 20% of whatever you bring in."

"10%!"

"Fine," snapped Topper, backing away from the ledge, "15% and that's my final offer. I don't care if you drop me off the roof."

"Okay 15%," said Billy. "Now what bank should I rob?"

"Fort Knox!" Topper shouted, working hard not to add the words "you big dummy!" on the end. "You should rob Fort Knox. All the gold, just fly right in there and grab it up!"

Billy smiled. "See, I knew you were the right guy to come see."

"But before you do, there's something very important you have to do first."

"What's that?"

"Put me back down on the ground. Gently."

When Topper was safely back at ground level, he realized that his delicately calibrated internal mechanisms were demanding more self-medication. His ordeal with Billy had reduced him to a level of sobriety that he could neither countenance nor endure. So he set off in search of a bar. It was, in fact, the best idea he could come up with. Which is saying something.

Head down, leaning into a cold wind, Topper put one slush-soaked foot in front of the other. For a man with short legs, a journey of even a mile feels like it has a thousand steps in it. And when the man with short legs is feeling sorry for himself, the journey feels even longer.

As he walked, a nondescript white panel van threw icy slush onto the sidewalk in front of him. He hated winter. He also hated white panel vans. If Topper had been in charge, any nondescript white panel van would be subject to immediate and unavoidable search. And they would never be allowed through security checkpoints. Sure, there might be a legitimate use for a white, windowless van, but Topper's suspicious nature couldn't think of any.

So when the reflected light of the nondescript white panel van's brake lights turned the flakes of snow red, Topper was not surprised. When he looked over his shoulder to see the van bullying its way through a U-turn on the busy city street, he knew what was up. Even before the van plowed through the drifts and onto the sidewalk, even before the paneled door slid open and the guys in ski masks jumped out, he knew what the deal was.

His inner rabbit-brain held a quick debate about the merits of freezing or running. Then something occurred to Topper. As ham-handed and obvious as this was, it couldn't be the Adjustors. They would have waited for Topper to drink himself unconscious and then quietly carried him off. No, there could only be one group so incompetent as to attempt a snatch and grab job after making a three-point turn through city traffic.

With that realization, he went white hot with anger and insanity. As the van bumped up onto the sidewalk, Topper ran directly towards it. His boozy logic went something like this: if they're screwing with me, I'm screwing with them.

"Outta my way! You're in my seat!" he shrieked.

When the door opened and the "Acquisition Team" jumped out, they didn't know what to do. Nothing like this had never happened to these men before. Inside their ski masks, their mouths hung open.

"OUTTA MY WAY! COMIN' THROUGH! OUTTA MY WAY!"

As he shoved his way through the door, Topper said, "Okay, seriously? Did I get the only team of deaf kidnappers in the whole world? Come on, make a hole."

Topper plopped himself down on a seat and said, "Were you raised in a barn? Close the damn door!" He looked around at the dumbfounded, would-be kidnappers—who were at that very instant wondering if you could actually kidnap the willing. "Now, which one of you guys got my blindfold? Come on, gimme the bag over the head! Gimme the bag!" demanded Topper.

So they did.

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