The Million Dollar Demise

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The Million Dollar Demise Page 1

by RM Johnson




  ALSO BY RM JOHNSON

  The Million Dollar Deception

  Do You Take This Woman?

  The Million Dollar Divorce

  Dating Games

  Love Frustration

  The Harris Family

  Father Found

  The Harris Men

  Stacie & Cole

  THE MILLION DOLLAR DEMISE

  RM JOHNSON

  Simon & Schuster

  1230 Avenue of the Americas

  New York, NY 10020

  www.SimonandSchuster.com

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  Copyright © 2009 by R. Marcus Johnson

  All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever. For information address Simon & Schuster Subsidiary Rights Department, 1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020.

  First Simon & Schuster hardcover edition September 2009

  SIMON & SCHUSTER and colophon are registered trademarks of Simon & Schuster, Inc.

  For information about special discounts for bulk purchases, please contact Simon & Schuster Special Sales at 1-866-506-1949 or [email protected].

  The Simon & Schuster Speakers Bureau can bring authors to your live event. For more information or to book an event contact the Simon & Schuster Speakers Bureau at 1-866-248-3049 or visit our website at www.simonspeakers.com.

  Designed by Nancy Singer

  Manufactured in the United States of America

  10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Johnson, RM (Rodney Marcus)

  The million dollar demise : a novel / RM Johnson.

  p. cm.

  Sequel to: The million dollar deception.

  1. African Americans—Fiction. 2. Triangles (Interpersonal relations)—Fiction.

  3. Revenge—Fiction. I. Title.

  PS3560.03834M545 2009

  813`.54—dc22 2009004615

  ISBN 978-1-4165-9626-4

  ISBN 978-1-4165-9992-0 (ebook)

  To my niece Portia, and Jeremy.

  Congratulations on your new life together.

  THE MILLION DOLLAR DEMISE

  1

  Since he had been thrown out of his house, Freddy Ford had barely been able to hold anything in his stomach. He had lost almost ten pounds off of his already thin frame. The T-shirt he wore now hung loosely on him. His jeans dropped from his narrow hips, and his hair had grown long and unruly.

  He looked over his shoulder again after ringing Nate Kenny’s doorbell. None of Mr. Kenny’s neighbors were around.

  Freddy heard the door unlock.

  He quickly reached behind him, pulled the gun from the waist of his jeans, and pointed it at the door. When it opened, Mr. Kenny stared straight into the barrel of the weapon.

  “Freddy,” Mr. Kenny said, all cool, like there was nothing wrong. “Our business is done. I told you that three weeks ago.”

  “Step into the motherfucking house,” Freddy said.

  “Freddy—”

  Freddy cocked the gun.

  “Fine.” Mr. Kenny turned, walked back into the house. Freddy walked behind him, the gun pointed between his shoulder blades.

  Images popped into Freddy’s head. He shut his eyes, trying to black out those images. He saw his mother crying, as the sheriffs had all their furniture dragged from the house and thrown to the curb. An image of his girlfriend raced through his head, her feet in stirrups, an overworked doctor in the middle of performing the abortion, slicing his unborn baby into pieces and sucking it out of her.

  When Freddy opened his eyes, the stain of those images still soiled his thoughts.

  It was this man’s fault, Freddy told himself, the gun shaking in his hand. He had to pay.

  All of a sudden Mr. Kenny spun around. He was smiling. “I tell you what I’m gonna do.”

  Without a thought, Freddy squeezed the trigger of his gun and shot Mr. Kenny in the chest.

  Then he shot him again, in the stomach. There was something comforting about the gun going off in Freddy’s hand, something calming. Freddy fired two more times, his arms absorbing the shock of the small piece’s kick, a lifeless expression on his face— once in the thigh, and again in the chest.

  Mr. Kenny staggered back, horror in his eyes, bloodstains blooming large on his white shirt.

  There was a scream.

  Mr. Kenny turned and yelled, “Monica, no!”

  Freddy whirled around and blindly fired the gun.

  A single bullet tore into the side of the forehead of the woman who was standing by the bedroom door wearing only a bath towel.

  It was Monica, Lewis’s old girlfriend.

  The towel fell, leaving Monica naked—her body dropped to its knees, then fell flat on its belly.

  By then Mr. Kenny had fallen across the sofa. Freddy could see they were both dead.

  Freddy hadn’t meant to kill the woman, but maybe it was for the best. After another moment, he turned and was about to walk out of the house when he heard movement behind him.

  Freddy turned again, the gun pointed in front of him.

  “Mommy. Daddy.” There was a small boy standing in the entrance of the kitchen. The child ran to his father and pulled on his bloody arm.

  Freddy walked over to the boy, stood over him, and pointed the gun into the child’s face.

  This must be Mr. Kenny’s boy.

  The nagging image of Freddy’s unborn child forced its way into his brain again. If it wasn’t for Mr. Kenny, Kia never would’ve aborted their child.

  Freddy moved the gun closer to the little boy’s face. The child was bawling and seemed oblivious to the gun.

  An eye for an eye, a child for a child, Freddy thought, applying pressure to the trigger.

  Freddy envisioned the bullet ripping through the child’s neck, dropping him to squirm in his own blood and die. He pulled on the trigger a little harder, but hesitated slightly.

  “Do it, dammit!” Freddy grunted.

  But he could not.

  He lowered the gun, shoved it back into his jeans, then turned and walked out the door, hearing the sound of the wailing boy.

  2

  Again, Brownie knocked at Daphanie’s bathroom door.

  “Girl, if you don’t tell me what it says, I’m gonna kick this damn door down. Are you pregnant or not?”

  Inside the bathroom, Daphanie stood with her back pressed against the wall. She stared down at the pregnancy test wand sitting on the edge of the sink, but she had not read the results yet. Daphanie let her mind wander back to a month ago.

  She had arrived in Chicago late, on a weeknight. She rented a car, drove over to her boyfriend Nate’s house, and, using her key, let herself in. Daphanie didn’t know what it was, but the moment she softly closed the front door behind her, she knew something was terribly wrong. Most of the lights were out in the house, save for the lamp in the front room.

  She climbed the stairs, wanting nothing more than to take off all her clothes, climb in bed, and just be with her man. But when Daphanie gently pushed the bedroom door open, the faint moonlight that filtered in through the bedroom drapes exposed another woman’s body in the bed.

  She knew her eyes were deceiving her. It was the flight home.

  She walked farther in, stood in the center of the room at the foot of the bed, and saw, for sure, there was another woman sleeping beside Nate. Tears came to her eyes. Daphanie was about to leave when all of a sudden he rose in bed. She froze. Nate s
aid nothing. He wiped at his eyes with his fist, then lay back down as if he were not awake at all. He probably had no idea that Daphanie was even there.

  That’s what Daphanie banked on when she saw Nate the next day.

  When she returned, he hugged her, told her how beautiful she looked, and that he liked her new hairstyle.

  Daphanie told herself that the woman he had been in bed with could’ve been a one-night stand, an old acquaintance— anything. She’d been gone for two weeks. What man can go without sex for two weeks? She told herself if that was all it was, then she would never mention it to him, and things could go on as before.

  But Nate had realized that she’d been there. He said he thought he’d been dreaming. He admitted that he was just as much asleep as he was awake that night, but the perfume, one that she had never worn before, that she had actually bought in Europe, he could not forget.

  “Who is she?” Daphanie asked.

  “My ex-wife.”

  Daphanie told Nate that if it was just the one time, if he could promise never to see her again, then they could forget it ever happened.

  He looked as though he were considering saying what she wanted to hear. She truly hoped he would. But he did not.

  “I still love her,” Nate said. “We should end this.”

  Daphanie couldn’t believe what had happened. Only the day before she’d thought she was in a beautiful relationship, one in which she had allowed herself to fall in love. Not only with Nate but with his adopted three-year-old son, Nathaniel. And she fell hard, telling Nate that she loved him after only a month. She wasn’t lying. She sincerely loved him, and she could tell, when he told her back, he felt the same.

  They even talked about having a child together, had unprotected sex several times, telling themselves that if they were blessed enough to get pregnant, then they’d happily welcome the child into their lives.

  A child that he had fathered—it was what Nate said he had always wanted, ever since he was a child himself. Each time after they made love, Nate would lie in bed with Daphanie, gently smoothing his palm over her belly. He never spoke a word about the possibility of her getting pregnant on those nights, as though it made no difference, but he always seemed disappointed when Daphanie told him her period had come.

  Everything that was happening had led Daphanie to believe they would marry somewhere down the line. The rest of her life was written, and she was overjoyed at what lay before her.

  And then Nate told her he was still in love with his ex-wife.

  Tears running down her cheeks, she threw what few garments she kept at Nate’s house in a bag and rushed out of there. Driving much faster than she should have, Daphanie dialed the last man she had been intimate with before Nate. His name was Trevor. He was an attractive man—tall, brown-skinned, black wavy hair, and a perfect smile. He and Nate bore an uncanny resemblance. After two months of dating and having sex, Trevor had told Daphanie how much he wanted her to have his child. She would’ve agreed, considering how much she liked Trevor and how much she wanted children. That was until, almost in the same breath, Trevor told Daphanie he was married.

  “My wife doesn’t want children. She never has. I thought I could deal with that, but I can’t,” Trevor admitted.

  “And if you got me pregnant, then what the hell would happen?” Daphanie asked, just to see what ridiculous plan he had in mind.

  Trevor hunched his shoulders and said, “I don’t know. We’d work it out. But I really want a child.”

  Daphanie had four words for Trevor: “Get the fuck out!”

  But that day a month ago, when Daphanie had gotten her heart broken by Nate, she was speed-dialing Trevor. “Meet me at my place,” she ordered when she got him on the phone.

  Daphanie wanted sex. She needed to be wanted, to be loved. And she wanted everything Nate had promised her. She wanted that child. She wasn’t thinking about what Trevor’s wife would think in nine months. She just wanted to be pregnant.

  Now, a month later, Daphanie snatched the wand off the edge of the sink, opened the bathroom door, and held it out to her best friend of nearly twenty years, Brownie.

  “Well, what does it say?” Brownie asked.

  “I’m scared to read it. You do it.”

  Brownie squinted, looking at the tiny box in the wand, then said, “Girrrllllll, you are prego.”

  3

  As Freddy stood outside the house, the gun was still warm in his fist. He wasn’t shaking anymore. A strange calm fell over him. He was surprised that it was just as calm outside. None of Mr. Kenny’s neighbors were wandering among the mansions wondering where the gunshots had come from. There were no police sirens in the distance. Nothing.

  It was late evening. The sun was down as Freddy gazed up the block.

  Not four weeks ago, Freddy had been just trying to do right by his pregnant girlfriend Kia and his moms. He was working on getting them out of the ratty old house they lived in. He was trying to move them from that horrible, crime-ridden neighborhood. And he had been on his way to achieving all of that.

  He’d had a plan. The house that he and his best friend, Lewis, had rehabbed was going to sell. The two of them would make a nice little penny, and continue to flip houses till they were wealthy. But that bastard Mr. Kenny had his investigator, some lady named Abbey Kurt, act like she was going to buy the house.

  Abbey Kurt had Freddy go to Mr. Kenny’s office, thinking he was about to make a real sale, when all Freddy got was a proposition—help Mr. Kenny blackmail his best friend, Lewis, or Mr. Kenny would take away the very house Freddy and his family were living in, that he had lived in all his life. Mr. Kenny informed Freddy that his mother had not paid the taxes on the house in years. Mr. Kenny had bought those taxes out from under them. That gave him ownership of the house, and he was threatening to have it demolished.

  But even knowing this, Freddy stood defiantly in Mr. Kenny’s office that day and said, “Fuck you! Lewis is my best friend.”

  Days later, Mr. Kenny walked Freddy through a brand-new town home. “Do what I ask and this house is yours.”

  The house was beautiful. It was just finished, in a quiet neighborhood. There were no gunshots, no car alarms going off, no people being killed two doors away. Freddy could raise his new child there and not worry about her being hit by a stray bullet. Freddy’s mother had been mugged not long before then, only a block away from their house. If he lived in the new neighborhood, he wouldn’t have to risk that again.

  He had no choice. Freddy did what Mr. Kenny asked of him.

  The plan worked as Mr. Kenny had wanted it to. Lewis lost Monica and was even taken off to jail. The only problem was that, before his arrest, Lewis caught on to the fact that Freddy had betrayed him. Lewis cornered Freddy in an alley and beat him until Freddy told him everything.

  Because of Freddy’s admission, Mr. Kenny reneged on the deal he had made to give Freddy the new house. He didn’t even give Freddy the old house back. Mr. Kenny had Freddy and his mother evicted and demolished their house. But what hurt even more was what Kia had done after Freddy told her he was going to set Lewis up in exchange for the new home. She had left, and then she had aborted their unborn child.

  —

  Standing on Mr. Kenny’s porch now, Freddy realized he had nothing. Kia, the woman he loved dearly, the would-be mother of his child, was gone. Freddy and his mother had no home and now he didn’t even have his childhood best friend, Lewis. This was the reason Freddy had come to kill Mr. Kenny. This was the reason he felt no remorse now. But as Freddy was about to walk away, he felt Mr. Kenny’s and Monica’s deaths weren’t enough. Freddy turned back and pushed through the door. He walked down the hall, into the living room. The boy was still standing over his dead father, pulling at his shirt, trying to wake him. Freddy walked over, reached down, and grabbed the child by his arm. The little boy screamed and clung tighter to his father’s blood-soaked shirt.

  “Come here!” Freddy yelled, snatching the kicking an
d screaming child off the floor, pressing the boy close to his chest, wrapping his arm tight around his little legs.

  Freddy looked one last time at the destruction he had caused, then stepped over Mr. Kenny’s lifeless body and walked out of the house.

  4

  Lewis Waters stood from the jail cell floor, stretched his arms. They were tight from the two hundred push-ups he had just finished. He grabbed his faded brown uniform shirt from his bunk, slipped his chiseled arms through the short sleeves, and buttoned it up.

  A metal mirror hung over the metal sink and toilet in the nine-by-ten-foot cell. Lewis walked over to the mirror, stared at himself. His hair had grown long, as well as the whiskers on his face. Over the three weeks that he had been locked up, he no longer cared about his appearance. He would shave tomorrow for his court date.

  “I spoke to their attorney last week, and he said they still plan on pressing the charges,” a short, boyish-faced, red-haired public defender had told Lewis earlier today. “So I figure you’ll probably get three to five years. Parole after two.”

  Slumped in his chair, Lewis had just looked at the man. When Lewis didn’t respond, the public defender—his name was Larry Charles—grabbed his briefcase, stood from his chair, and said, “Well, tomorrow. Bright and early. Any questions?”

  Lewis knew he was doomed. “There’s nothing more that you can do? You can’t get me parole now?” he asked anyway.

  “They have video of you striking that Kenny guy over the head with your gun. Tape of you taking fifty thousand dollars from his safe. No,” Larry had said. “It’s pretty open-and-shut. The only way you don’t do time is if the charges get dropped.”

  5

  Half an hour later, Tim Kenny, Nate’s younger brother, pulled his Saab to the curb outside Nate’s house. He had tried ringing Nate a couple of times to tell him that he was in the neighborhood, but Nate had been hard to get hold of.

 

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