By Meara Kincade
The door falls shut behind me, an ominous sound sealing the fate of businessman Edward J. Wyles.
âFarewell, Miss Grieves,â his secretary chirps, unaware of what transpired in the office behind her.
Barely acknowledging her words, I stride from the room, my right hip dipping every step thanks to this cursed limp.
I enter the elevator at the end of the hall and press the lobbyâs button. After the doors shut, the elevator plummets fifteen floors. The higher they are, the harder they fall.
Once on the sidewalk, I fade into the crowdâjust another peon escaping her cubicle during lunchtime. At precisely 12:50 p.m., I sit on a wire chair situated outside a Parisian cafĂ©. A newspaper rustles as the man across from me flips a page. âReport.â
I examine my nails. âCrumbled like a house of cards.â
âWell done, daughter.â
A waitress sets a steaming cup of coffee before Father, and he stops reading to retrieve a sweetener packet from the container in his left breast pocket. I should have him change the containerâs locationâheâs being too predictable.
And in our business, you canât afford that.
âYouâll help Ritchie with his first job.â Fatherâs spoon clinks against the cup as he stirs in the sweetener.
I raise an eyebrow. âHeâs joining the family business?â
âYes.â
At his dismissive tone, I stand.
âAnd Ethel?â
I pause.
Father meets my gaze. âDonât let him shame the Grieves name.â
A smile forged from steel forms on my lips. âUnderstood.â
***
Standing at the corner of Anderson and Elm, I scowl at my watch as Ritchieâs car pulls into a nearby alley twenty-seven minutes after our meeting time.
âYouâre late.â I spice the words with a pinch of reproach once Ritchie joins me. âAndââI scan his Hawaiian shirtââoddly dressed.â
He slaps my shoulder playfully. âYouâre the oddly dressed one, cuz. I thought the first rule was to blend in.â
âDonât quote the rule book to me. I wrote half of it.â I limp after him to the entrance of a bar called The Yodeling Monkey.
What idiot named this place?
âYou distract the bartender; Iâll get the goods.â
Before I can reply, he steers me inside. âHey, Jimmy!â
Two dozen people, including the bartender, look at us. Goodbye, subtlety.
Ritchie half-drags me to the bar where a smiling Jimmy greets us. âWhat can I getchya, Ritchie, my man?â
âAfraid I canât stay for a beerâIâve got just enough time to whip the boys at cards before my cousin and I are due for family dinner. Put anything she gets on my tab, will ya?â
âOf course. Go get âem.â Jimmy nods seriously.
Ritchie claps him on the shoulder. âYouâre the best.â
Seconds later, Ritchie disappears among the other patrons as he strides to the far front corner of the building.
Resigning myself, I climb onto a stool.
âYouâre his cousin, huh?â Jimmy looks skeptical.
Join the club.
He shrugs. âWhat can I getchya?â
A different mission. âNothing.â
Only a fool would compromise her mental capabilities during a job.
Glancing around, I notice people playing games, drinking beer, and laughing uproariously.
Tapping my fingers on the counter, I ask, âHow long have you owned this establishment?â More like a madhouse.
Jimmy leans against the bar. âGoing on three years now. Named after my dear Caroline.â
âCaroline?â
âMy monkey.â
I freeze for a moment. âMonkey?â
âYep.â He drags a cloth across the counter. âSeemed appropriate since sheâs always believed I could run a business.â
This guyâs nuttier than the bar peanuts.
âUsually, she greets the guests, but she has Wednesdays off, so sheâs upstairs resting.â
Or not. Behind Jimmy, I spot a rather suspicious-looking Ritchie lugging a furry lump toward the kitchen. How is no one else seeing this? Oblivious idiots. And idiotic cousin for not being more covert.
Jimmy glances at the peanut boat in front of me. âNeed to refill this.â
He grabs it and turns toward the kitchen doorâwhich will take him right to Ritchie and the kidnapped Caroline. Not on my watch. âHow does a monkey greet guests?â
Jimmy sets the container down, distracted for now. âSits on a stool by the door and yodels at âem. On Saturdays, she performs her greatest hits.â
Hurry up, Ritchie. âHow⊠delightful.â
âCustomers seem to think so,â Jimmy replies obliviously as he fills a customerâs glass.
Ritchie, you owe me. As if summoned by my thought, he materializes at my side, and I level an icy stare at him.
Ritchie ignores me. âThanks for looking after her, Jimmy.â
âNo problem. Howâd it go?â
Ritchie shakes his head. âCanât win âem all. Anyway, gotta runâcanât keep our family waiting. See ya!â
Jimmy waves as we leave. Once outside, Ritchie leads me into the alley where he parked his car.
âSo?â I hiss.
âSheâs in the car.â
Stepping around him, I spy Caroline bound and gagged in the backseat. She glares at me as I climb into the passenger seat, and I maintain eye contact until she looks away. âYouâre holding her for ransom?â
âYep.â He slides behind the wheel and turns the ignition. âNothing personal, Caroline. Just business.â
We used to be a respectable crime syndicate. âHowâd you capture her anyway?â
âIt involved a highlighter, a kitchen sinkââ
I hold up a hand. âNever mind.â
Ten minutes later, Ritchie pulls into the back parking lot of his apartment building.
âWhatâs the plan to sneak in?â
Without hesitation, he says, âIâll need a rubber ducky, a chinchilla, and a clown outfit in your size.â
My glareâwhich makes mob bosses cowerâdoesnât faze Ritchie. âItâd be simpler to blow a fuse.â
âBut thereâs less pizzaz.â
I huff. âShow me the breaker box.â
Thirteen minutes later, despite grumblings about my lack of style, weâre toting Caroline up the back stairway while the building manager fixes the fuse box. As Ritchie peers into the fifth-floor hallway, I shake my head.
The things I do for family.
âJimmy looks skeptical. Join the club.â đ€Ł Loved this story, Meara! Ethelâs thoughts had me rolling.
Yay! I’m so glad you enjoyed it. :)
To me I could see you used some family things but maybe I’m seeing more than what is really there. Can’t wait for your next one. Good way to start out your career.
Aw, thank you so much! I’m glad you liked it. :)
You two are up early – but I must agree that I too really enjoyed the intrigue and twists in the story. Meara, keep up the wonderful creative works that you do – story wise and music wise.
Thank you so much for reading and commenting, Ms. Janet! I’m so glad I got to share this with you. :)
This one leaves me hanging on for more. I am locked in on the fifth floor with Caroline waiting to see what’s next. And maybe, I ‘ll start yodeling.
Hehe! I’m glad you enjoyed it. :)
Very well written. I am ready for more of this story!
Thank you so much!
I really liked this story. I would like to read the beginning and ending of the story. It drags you into the story leaving you wanting to know more…the rest of the story….
Thank you! I’m so glad you enjoyed it. :)
Monkey business – I’ll say! Keep adding to this one as I know your followers will want to know how things PAY out.
Thanks for reading–I’m glad you enjoyed it! :)
What happened to Edward J Wyles? What happened to her leg? Why is her cousin stealing from his friends? Why is it surprising that they are cousins? How different do they look from each other? What happens next!? I’m not good with suspense and you did a great job of twisting in a lot of open ended whats? I’m sure kidnapping a monkey is not a great idea, I expect a comedy of errors comes next. How much can a guy whose only owed a bar for 3 years really pay up in ransom? Maybe this is a dumb way to wet your feet in the family business. What exactly is the family business? See…I’m not seeing you the author behind the story and questioning your logic, I’m in the story questioning the character’s logic and their backstory. I want to know more. This is good, you did a great opening. Now I’m going to spend the rest of the day muddling over whats and whys in my head while I’m doing mundane tasks like I always do when I’m caught in the middle of a story.
Hehe! I loved hearing your thoughts–thanks for commenting! Unfortunately, I’m afraid there’s no more answers I can give you. Pretty much, all I know is what was written out above–the characters don’t even tell me everything. :D
Oh I can so see this vividly playing out before my eyes and I am a fly on the wall of Ethelâs mind. Richieâs initiation to the biz is a doozyâŠfor poor cousin Ethel. And Iâd have paid money to watch that stare down between her and Mad Caroline! Congrats darlinâ on your first published piece, Iâm very proud of you.
I loved the personalities you created! Very fun story.
Thank you so much! I’m glad you enjoyed it. :)
By definition, it’s not possible to kidnap a monkey. But you can kidnap a goat.
Hehe! True, true. Thanks for reading!
“We used to be a respectable crime syndicate.” Hahahaha…
I love that line too. Thanks for reading! :)
I enjoyed reading this, Meana. I like your writing style.
Aw, thank you so much! :)
I Enjoyed your story and would love to read more.
I’m so glad! Thanks for reading! :)
Fun style, very high twist per word ratio.
I’m glad you enjoyed it. Thanks for reading! :)
Great short storyđ!! Leaves me wanting more story for sure! What is the familyâs main business or front? How did Ethel get her limp? Love that it is a monkey being held for ransom, at the same time Iâm worried for Caroline, poor monkey!! And the bar name cracks me upđ! Would love to read how bigger story would play out! Keep up the great workđ
Thank you! I had so much fun writing about Ethel, Caroline, and Ritchie, and I’m glad you enjoyed it. :)
Wow MEARA! WHO KNEW??!!! Very good read-Truly keeps you wanting more!! Kudos to you! So proud to be able to say âyes, I knew her whenâŠ.âđ©·
Aw, thank you so much! Iâm glad you enjoyed it. :)
Very nice. Thank you for sharingâ we should see you all in a couple weeks.
Loved it! Left me wanting to know what happens next, so proud of you Mearaâ„ïž keep letting those thoughts flow from your pen!
Very good story. I just donât think Ritchie is cut out for the family business. It was great that you were able to share it with everyone.
Great story Meara! I really enjoyed reading it!
Good job cuz
Great odd pairing of characters. It really elevated the humor.
Thank you! I had a lot of fun playing their personalities off each other. :)
This reminds me of the old anime Lupin III. Great job.
Thank you! :)
I enjoyed reading your story, always let me know when you have written more.