This Little Piggy. M.G. Crisci. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: M.G. Crisci
Издательство: Ingram
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Жанр произведения: Биографии и Мемуары
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9780985991845
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      This Little Piggy

      Bizarre Wall Street Scheme Causes Unintended Consequences to a Man and His Family

      M.G. Crisci

      Inspired by Real Events

      Copyright © 2020 M.G. Crisci

      1-360686021

      All rights reserved,

      Including the right of reproduction

      In whole or in part in any form.

      Cover Art: M.G. Crisci

      Cover Design: Good World Media

      Edited by Holly Scudero

      Published by Orca Publishing Company USA

      ISBN-13: 978-1-4566-3259-5 (Amazon KDP)

      ISBN-13: 978-1-4566-3064-5 (hardcover)

      ISBN-13: 978-1-4566-3063-8 (paperback)

      Fourth Edition

      MC-Pen&Ink-2-lighter300dps.jpg

      Also by M.G. Crisci

      7 Days in Russia

      Call Sign, White Lily

      Donny and Vladdy

      Indiscretion

      Mary Jackson Peale

      Only in New York

      Papa Cado

      Papa Cado’s Book of Wisdom

      Project Zebra

      Salad Oil King

      Save the Last Dance

      She Said. He Said.

      This Little Piggy

      Learn more at

      mgcrisci.com

      twitter.com/worldofmgcrisci

      YouTube.com/worldofmgcrisci

      Facebook.com/worldofmgcrisci

      Money does strange things to people.

      The desire to become filthy rich

      does even stranger things to people.

      Chapter 1

      Johnny and Sydney

      LONG BEACH, LONG ISLAND, NY.

      Taking a journey to an unknown destination can be a trying experience.

      Driving forty-five miles in a heavy downpour from Greenwich, Connecticut, to Long Beach was not Sandra’s idea of a dream date.

      “If I didn't love you so much, I'd make Fatal Attraction look like a fairytale,” said Sandra. “You're telling me that space-cadet, Johnny Katz, is married to a woman named Sydney? Why would someone name a daughter Sydney?”

      Victor shrugged. “Ask her.”

      "What's she like?” Victor shrugged again. “Tell me we're going to a birthday party with a $250 bottle of wine, and you've never even met the lady.”

      Johnny and Victor Martini were strange bedfellows. When Victor was promoted to account supervisor at stodgy Arthur and James (A&J) Advertising, he needed an account executive to replace himself. After interviewing the available internal candidates, he decided he needed someone who was a more creative marketer, someone who could help him drive his client's business, not just a yes-man who sucked up. That was not Victor's style. Johnny Katz made his first interview a memorable feast — figuratively and literally. After exchanging pleasantries, Johnny pulled Victor's favorite sandwich out of his attaché case — lean pastrami and imported Swiss cheese on German pumpernickel, neatly wrapped in aluminum foil. Thirty minutes later, Johnny's self-effacing sense of humor and a few out-of-the-box business building examples made the job his.

      “Babe, I know you think Johnny a bit off there, but he's good people,” said Victor.

      Sandra glared. “A bit! Are we talking about the same person? The guy who works when he wants, pops joints while he’s meditating, and God knows what else?”

      “Trust me. I know what I'm doing.”

      ~

      As their car hydroplaned down the Cross-County Parkway in the heavy rain, a ping abruptly ended the conversation. The wiper motor died, and windshield wiper blades laid motionless. “Now what,” cried Sandra.

      Victor smiled, trying to make the best of an already tense situation. “Relax, Babe. We're not far from Johnny's. We’ll switch to manual mode.”

      “I can’t wait to hear this one,” replied Sandra skeptically.

      “I’ll attach my tie to the driver’s side blade, and your scarf to the passenger side. We’ll open the front windows enough so you can pull your wiper blade to the right and can pull mine to the left. Once we get to Johnny’s, I'll call the AAA.”

      The plan almost worked. The heavy rain poured through the slite in the window., soaking the couple to the bone.

      ~

      Lido Shores was an upscale maze of tinted glass towers sitting right on the beach at the eastern end of Long Beach. The door to the Katz apartment opened. A man with thick, bushy black eyebrows, wearing a colorful, floor-length kaftan and a trippy, drug-induced smile said, “What the hell happened to you, my man?”

      “Long story.”

      “Sydney, come here. You've got guests.”

      A tall, slender woman with long black hair to her waist stumbled to the doorway. She, too, wore a kaftan. Her eyelids were heavy from the weight of substance abuse. “I bet this is boss Victor and his lovely wife. Forgive me, but what was your name? No matter, welcome to Chez Katz. Our home is your home.”

      Sandra couldn't believe her eyes. In front of her was a large room covered with floor-to-ceiling printed fabric dotted with Persian figures and ancient allegories. The ceiling was tented with fabric and dotted with hammered tin candelas, the air thick with the smell of hashish and marijuana. Among the mellow bodies littered here and there were bongs on stands and a table with little clay pipes. Sandra wanted to leave then and there. An equally horrified Victor tugged Sandra's arm. “Remember, we need a little time. The AAA.”

      Sandra nodded and handed the wine to Sydney. "Happy birthday.”

      Sydney began to giggle. “Johnny, isn't this sweet? Our first beverage of the night. Why don't you have your friends put it on the buffet table with the other condiments?” Katz laughed and pointed to a table filled with pills and powders, some recognizable, some exotic, all certainly illegal.

      Two weeks after the party, Katz resigned from A&J via a handwritten note to Victor. It read simply, "Time to move on to higher pastures, filled with riches for the body and mind. Your pal, Johnny.”

      The envelope also included an ounce of grass and some Zig-Zag paper in a small Ziploc bag.

      Chapter 2

      Into the Abyss

      MALIBU, CALIFORNIA...about the same time.

      He disappeared in the middle of summer, in the middle of the night, in the middle of a decadent party.

      His 6,000 square-foot pile of reflective glass with bare white walls, trendy white pickled floors, and oversized white-on-white furniture, sat on the northern tip of Malibu, overlooked the Pacific Ocean.

      The invites looked and acted like a collection of early 80s sleazy Richard Gere clones, and the statuesque, heavily-perfumed women suggested the presence of $2,000-a-night call girls. Booze and drugs, littered tables, chairs, and ledges. Van Morrison’s Brown Eyed Girl blared in the background