Man of the House(48)
“Well, I hate to ruin the good mood, but we all need to talk.”
Mom raised an eyebrow at me and I just shrugged. “What about?” I asked.
“Our situation. We all might as well be involved in the discussion now since it affects all of us.”
“I wonder why,” Mom grumbled.
Carter ignored her. “Bruce Walker is behind all of this, and I’m betting that Cox is helping him. I assume Bruce offered Cox a lot of money. He recently stole a lot of papers and notebooks from me, which is both good and bad.”
“How is that good?” Mom asked.
“I can press charges if I can prove it, but I doubt we’ll get to that stage.”
“What are you planning on doing?”
“Right now, nothing,” Carter admitted. “We all need to lie low for a while, or at least until Bruce makes his move. Eventually he’s going to do more than just demand my resignation through threatening letters. I suspect he doesn’t want to embarrass the company, so most of his threats are empty.”
“How can you be sure?” I asked.
“I can’t be, but it’s my best guess. Why not just publish what he has instead of threatening me? That would destroy me well enough.”
“Good point,” Mom said. “He’s probably looking at the longterm survival of the company.”
“He wants to control it, but he wants to make sure it’s profitable still. He won’t shoot himself in the foot.”
I nodded. That made sense to me. This Bruce guy sounded like an asshole, but his self-interest meant that he couldn’t destroy the company by smearing Carter while he was still involved with it.
“So we sit and wait?” I asked.
“Exactly. I suspect it’ll happen soon.”
“I don’t like it.” Mom’s face looked stressed.
“I know you don’t. But we need to know what we’re dealing with before we can make any moves or make any real plans.” He pushed his chair back from the table and stood. “I should get going. Thanks for the dinner, you two.”
We all stood and exchanged goodbyes, but the moment was tense. Carter bringing up Bruce and the threats brought the good mood down. I knew we had to talk about it, but I wished we had some more time to enjoy that peaceful, happy moment.
I walked with Carter to the front door. “Are you okay?” he asked softly.
“I’m fine. You’re the one that just had dinner with me and my mom.”
He grinned. “You’re my two favorite women in the world.”
“I’m sure.”
He kissed me quickly again. “I have work to do. I’ll see you tomorrow?”
“You will,” I said.
“Good. Tell your Mom thanks.” He turned and walked off.
I watched him go, wondering what the hell was going to happen with all of this. From what I could tell, Bruce and Cox, assuming they were working together, had all of the cards. All of the pressure was on Carter. I didn’t know what he could possibly do to get us out of this mess.
He seemed calm, though, calmer than I felt. Even talking about it didn’t seem to ruffle him much, and he had every right to be pissed as hell. He was being attacked by people that he thought were his friends, or at least people that he thought were loyal. Bruce Walker was never his ally, but at least they worked together for the good of the company.
Now he was being forced out of the job he created, the world he built. I couldn’t even begin to imagine what he was going through.
As I walked back into the apartment, I decided that I was going to try and help him relieve some more stress the next time I saw him.
24
Carter
Just like I thought it would, the call came the very next morning. It was maybe a bit sooner than expected, but I knew they were going to get in touch sooner or later. There was just no other move to make.
“Hello, Carter,” Bruce said.
I frowned, leaning back in my office’s chair. It was around eleven in the morning and I was just thinking about lunch when my cell rang. It said the number was unlisted and unknown, and though I don’t normally answer calls from unrecognized numbers, I was in unusual circumstances.
“Calling from a pay phone?” I asked him.
“Something like that. Though I’m not sure those exist anymore.”
“They do. They’re just uncommon.”
“Well. I didn’t call to discuss phones.”
“I bet. Called to blackmail me some more?”
There was a short pause and then Bruce chuckled. He was one smug son of a bitch.
“Yes, something like that,” he said.
So, he was confirming it. He wasn’t even bothering to deny that he was the one behind the letters and the threats. He must have been very, very confident, that piece of shit.