Thursday, May 31, 2012

Magic Town, Chapter 8

Jeff, finds himself in Atlanta wanting to get out of the hotel on a Friday night. In the Atlanta Underground he meets up with Pick, a sly con man who takes Jeff around the Underground ending up at the notorious Magic Town strip club. There’s only one problem: Jeff is the spitting image of a corrupt congressman! Nancy, the beautiful FBI agent with the golden eyes takes Jeff on the ride of his life. With three climax scenes, this story will make you want to get to the next page!


Chapter 8 of Magic Town ...

Saturday, 8:17 AM: What a Mess

Jeff finds himself in the house they were watching––with three murdered people and the congressman shot! The chaos of agents running in and out of the house leaves Jeff baffled as he sits on the couch as Shonna instructed him. He notices a sport coat exactly like his, pulls it over reaching into the pockets he discovers it’s the congressman’s jacket! Inside he finds all sorts of printouts that describe a criminal enterprise of enormous proportion, and in the side pocket Jeff discovers a gun! Back at the hotel they pore over Jeff’s discovery piecing together the scale of this criminal enterprise ...

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Thanks for taking time, and enjoy!
- Chris Lamela



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Author contact: Chris Lamela, chris@chrislamela.com, 707-566-8790 PST

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           Magic Town, Chapter 8

Saturday, 8:17 AM: What a Mess

      She flung the binoculars onto the back seat, it clanked against the camera as she started the car flooring it leaving a long trail of skid mark and smoke behind the car the car screamed toward the yellow house, driving up over the curb onto the scrabbly little bit of lawn in front of the house careening sideways stopping just three feet short of the building.
     Shonna leapt from the car, Jeff saw a flash of Shonna running around the car holding a pistol in her right hand with Jeff wondering where the hell she had a gun this whole time.
     Timidly, Jeff opened the car door stepping out needing to stretch from having been in it so long. Slowly he walked up to the opened house door peering inside. There was nobody in the small living room. Suddenly he heard Shonna screaming, “OH MY GOD! WHAT THE HELL IS THIS! PERKINS WHAT HAPPENED!”
     Slowly Jeff crept through the living room looking carefully around him. There was a coffee table in the living room strewn with coffee cups. A sport coat lay across the back of the couch. He stepped to the left, poked his head into the kitchen seeing a coffee pot half-filled with the warmer still on, a couple dishes in the sink.
     He crept slowly toward the bedroom hallway. Just as he got to the hall, Perkins appeared in front of him looking down at Jeff startled, dumfounded he took a step back, his jaw dropped.
     Jeff looked up at him wondering what was going on, “Perkins right?” The bouncer looked at him blankly, barely nodding. “What’s the deal?”
     “You, you––” Perkins stuttered like he was trying to catch his breath, Jeff could see he was struggling for some reason trying to gain composure.
     Shonna stepped out of the bedrooms, “Perkins, this is a mess and I’ve got to figure out what to do here, but there’s gonna be police and you shouldn’t be here.”
     “Okay, miss Shonna, but––” motioning to Jeff.
     “Perkins, go!”
     “Okay if you say so, theys nothin’ you need from me?”
     She reached up touching him on the shoulder, “No, I’m sorry you had to see all this, but I really need to call the police, it would be bad for you to be here, don’t you think?”
     He nodded, thanked her, turned, walked out of the house, she followed him. Jeff watched her standing at the door. He could hear Perkins’s car start up, pulling away as she stood at the door with her back to Jeff. A few seconds after Perkins drove away he watched, Shonna crossing her arms stiffly across her chest without saying a word.
     Less than five seconds later Jeff heard what sounded like two cars with high-powered engines screeching to a stop only feet from the front of the house. Four men ran in behind Shonna, she passed quickly into the house, across the living room heading to the bedrooms, snapping to Jeff, “Stay out here, the couch!” he nodded, they sprinted into the bedrooms.
     Jeff sat down on the couch with elbows on his knees, his head spinning, tightness in his stomach like cramps. It was full daylight outside. He glanced around him seeing the sport coat hanging over the back of the couch. Impulsively, he reached around him picking up the coat to inspect it. It reeked of aftershave or cologne; he couldn’t place the smell or the brand. He looked at it closely, holding it to the coat he was wearing. An exact match. He looked at the label. Calvin Klein. Jeff laughed to himself, pulled open his coat seeing Calvin Klein, “Jesus, I wonder what brand of underwear he wears!” He laid it over his knees, began going through the pockets.
     The right inside pocket had a money clip with a wad of twenties. He very gingerly pulled two of the twenties out of the bundle being careful not to touch the gold money clip. There was a Mount Blanc pen. Using the twenties as gloves, Jeff pulled off the cap seeing blue ink on the tip. There was a gold business card case embossed with the Congressional logo, filled with cards, Honorable Frank Schedz, United Stated House of Representatives. There was one of his business cards loose in the pocket with blue pen writing on the back, what looked like initials and numbers with a percent sign next to each set of initials. The lettering was very neat block printing in blue ink, carefully done like it was the writer’s habit.
     Using the two twenties over his fingers, he gingerly pulled out a neatly tri-folded set of papers from the other pocket, maybe twenty five pages he guessed. The first page looked like some kind of a summary with a column of dates going back to the first of November, to the right of each date were dollar figures which he guessed averaged about a hundred thousand dollars a day. The next page looked like a more detailed account with a date on the top, the top page having a date from two days ago. There were columns on each page with a sum on the bottom of one of the columns. The next page was in the same format with another sum at the bottom. Each page was in the same form with the dates going back one day at a time, twenty days to the first of November. The summary page had a bottom number of just over two million dollars for the twenty days. He flipped through the pages realizing that the summary page had the sum numbers with the dates for each of these single-day reports.
     “Wow,” he said to himself, “That’s three million dollars a month,” with a low whistle, “nearly forty million dollars a year!” Jeff thought about what that kind of money can buy here in 1994. This is a staggering sum!
     Jeff sat back realizing that this stack of papers was the evidence of all the corruption that Shonna told him about.
     He looked back at the summary page seeing that every other number was circled in blue ink with lines leading to the letters ‘FS $1.12 M’ in the right border, written in the same neat block printing on the back of the card. “FS is Frank Schedz,” he said softly out loud, “he’s taking half! Or maybe he wants half?”
     There was one more single sheet, with a series of two letters in a column, percentage numbers next to each one. Jeff looked at the writing on the back of the card, saw they were some of the same initials that appeared on the page, the page had a big X scratched across the page in the same color ink as the writing on the card, obviously saying that this page was no good. The page had crinkled stretches like it had been pulled on from two sides, pulled between two competing hands. He couldn’t help saying out loud, “Someone pulled this out of someone’s hand. There was anger here!” He tried to think what this all meant.
     Oh, my god, he was really in it, just like she said! He sat back recalling all the things that Shonna told him, mulling the conversations they had as they watched the house this morning.
     He felt the rest of the coat thinking there would be nothing because his coats always had the outside pockets sewn shut, he felt a heavy bulge in the right outside pocket, reached in pulling out a thirty-eight snub-nosed revolver, holding it gingerly with one of the twenties. It was a Colt Cobra, a small handful of gun with a tiny short two-inch barrel. He half-smiled because he once owned one just like it but sold it because you can’t hit the broad side of a barn with it. He looked into the cylinder, there were bullets in the four positions he could see. He laughed to himself, “I guess a guy can’t be too careful!” He put it back into the coat’s side pocket, folded all the papers together putting them, the card case, pen, single card back into the pockets they came from.
     He heard loud talking in the bedrooms, people walking back and forth between two doors. He couldn’t see into the rooms from where he sat.
     Soon Jeff heard the rushing of cars outside. Somehow he was expecting lights and sirens. No lights, no sirens. In a minute three men rushed in, one in front, a gurney being pulled and pushed by the others. They were nearly running. He stood up to look after them when Shonna came out into the living room.
     Jeff looked at her hearing his voice sound almost panicked, “What’s going on?”
     “Okay, time to get you the hell out of here. Come on, let’s go.” Without another word she nearly ran out of the house, Jeff started to follow her when he had a second thought running back to scoop up the sports coat. Soon the car was speeding down the road. Jeff looked at his watch, nearly nine o’clock.
     “Where’s your hotel?”
     Jeff directed her to the Sheraton near the airport. When they reached the hotel twenty minutes later Shonna drove around the building away from the frontage road and freeway, without a word parked, got out of the car. Jeff grabbed the smelly coat following her up to a back door. He reached into his pocket fumbling for his hotel key, turning the lock he opened the door. Shonna scanned the parking lot, following Jeff inside.
     Jeff turned to Shonna as they walked along the hotel hallway, “So did Perkins know you as Shonna back there?”
     “That’s all he knows me as.”
     “Why did he think you came there, I mean wouldn’t that be confusing to him?”
     “He set up the meeting because I told him that I needed to talk to the congressman, he didn’t know what the meeting was about. Of course nobody knew that all those people would be there. I guess he showed up without knowing all those people were there, he went in expecting to see the congressman and a couple other people.” She shook her head, “Instead he walks in on a murder. Poor guy.”
     “Murder? There were dead people in that house?”
     “Yep.”
     “How many?”
     “Three dead, the congressman was still alive.”
     “Wow,” Jeff wondered sitting back. Murdered while he was sitting in that car watching the house with Shonna. He felt a cold chill rush up his spine.
     Jeff turned to her, “Did he tell you why he took so long in the house?”
     “He said he was trying to render assistance. That would make sense. Maybe he panicked a little.” They came to the elevators, he leaned forward pressing the button. “He’s not the brightest bulb in the pack, so I’m sure he was really confused. It was a hell of a scene, pretty nasty. I’m really glad you didn’t have to see it.”
     After a short elevator ride they walked down the fifth floor hallway toward Jeff’s hotel room door. He stepped over a copy of USA Today on the hallway floor, opened the door, Shonna followed scooping up the newspaper, next standing in Jeff’s room. It was surreal to be back in his room, all nice and tranquil, bed made neatly, his suit case sitting on the stand, ironing board out from him pressing his shirt yesterday afternoon before heading down to the shuttle.
     “What do you have there?” She reached out for the coat.
     Jeff started to hand it to her, instead he laid it out on the bed, pulled the twenties out of his pocket, gingerly using them as gloves to empty the contents of the coat’s pockets onto the bed. She gave him a quick smile, “Smart, no fingerprints.” Shonna sat down on the bed, reached into her purse pulling out a little plastic packet, ripped it open with her teeth, spilling out white light-fabric gloves onto the bed. She put them on, began studying the papers. She picked up the card with the scribbles on back shaking her head. “Jesus, the total smoking gun.”
     Jeff looked over her shoulder, “Are those initials?”
     “You sure you didn’t get your fingerprints on this stuff?”
     “You will find my prints on these two twenties and nothing else.” He smiled proudly waving them clutched in fingers, “Sherlock Holmes!”
     She turned around, studied him, burst out laughing at Jeff holding the twenties in his fingers, laughing again even harder, laughing so hard tears appeared in her eyes, started rolling down her cheeks. Jeff couldn’t help start laughing himself, that contagious effect plus they were so exhausted that it felt like that’s all they could do at that moment.
   Finally she caught herself. “Oh, yes, yes, yes, Jeffery, you are my Watson, aren’t you?”
   Jeff smiled, wiping tears from his cheeks. They both felt better.
   She turned, started looking through the ledger pages glancing up at him with a questioning expression. She began to paw again through the ledger sheets, “These are my accounting sheets, the ones that I did in that damned room in the basement of the club.”
     “They were in his coat pocket.”
     “These are definitely mine, see the little black pen scribble initials on the bottom? They required me to do that as a way to somehow make sure they are authentic, from me.” She flipped between the pages making note of the dates on top of each, “They’re out of order, that’s good, that means they’ve been handled, that’s really good. God, I’ll bet these are a harvest of finger prints!”
    She paused looking at the whole stack. “But how did the congressman get these?”
    “When you do your accounting, where does your stuff go to?”
     “Antonio.”
     “Antonio? Who’s Antonio?”
     “The owner of the club.”
     Shonna stood up reaching for the phone, “I need to use your phone, but you need to step out. Go get us some coffee, be back in ten minutes.”
   Jeff stood up, feeling a wave of tired as he drifted to the door, back ten minutes later with two coffees and four pastries.
     He took a sip of the coffee, two bites of a donut, slumped into the stuffed chair in the corner.
     Shonna was just finishing a call, “Okay, you set up the first for five downtown, I’ll set up the other for tonight. You can arrange all that? At ops?” she scribbled in her notebook. “No, no escort, I got him. Could use a guard in the hotel hallway here.” Listening to the other end. “You know how dangerous this is, right? If something happens to him we are so screwed.” She glanced over her shoulder to Jeff, listened. “Yeah, a score for sure. Okay, he’ll get some sleep, then we’ll come see you there.”
     She hung up turning to Jeff. “Okay, we figured out what to do with you.”
     He looked to her questioningly. She smiled.
     “Welcome to the United States House of Representatives!”

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NOW READ THE NEXT CHAPTER IN
MAGIC TOWN !

http://chrislamela.blogspot.com/2012/06/magic-town-chapter-9.html


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