New chapter.
CHAPTER TWELVE:
Crowe Consternation
"Albert! Get your butt in here, you stupid waste of space!" Crowe said, in ringing tones.
Albert abided, and entered the room. In his underwear and baby-blue undershirt. Crowe wanted to make sure that Albert would not try to infect him with his little concoction. The humiliation was a bonus, and perhaps this would make Crowe's point
stick this time.
Albert did not speak. He knew that he was in deep trouble. Hutch Crowe doesn't make a point to make pointless meetings just to scare and intimidate his underlings. He sends his minions to do that. It was bad that he wanted to talk to Albert in person. In the dead of the night. When Albert was alone.
"I'm not happy, Bertie," Crowe said, rotund belly obvious. He seemed calm and composed, and Albert seemed to take a miniscule comfort in that fact. "Not. Happy."
"I haven't done anything --"
"
I DIDN'T TELL YOU TO SPEAK!!" Crowe snapped, before returning to his composed state with disturbing and unnerving swiftness. "You have too much faith in your stupid little bile concoction. I cannot tell if you're careless or just plain stupid."
"I'm not --"
"
DID I TELL YOU TO SPEAK?!"
"It's just --"
"
DO NOT SPEAK UNTIL I GRANT YOU PERMISSION, WORM!!"
Albert fell silent. He wasn't going to be able to defend himself, to explain his actions. It would be pointless, anyway. Crowe wasn't interested in hearing explanations. There was only one possible conclusion for this meeting. Albert knew what it was. He could do nothing but accept.
"That's better, Bertie," Crowe said. "You have not done what I asked of you last we spoke."
Albert kept his face blank, despite the conflicting emotions deep within -- fear, anger and rage, positon jealously, and more.
"You have not done anything I so nicely asked of you," Crowe repeated. "You continued to work on your pet project that very nearly got us noticed by the RAFians, the fly in our collective ointment. Our arch-rivals*."
Albert wished that Crowe would just get on with it.
"And," Crowe said, "then you lead them right to our hideout."
"I sprayed them!" Albert protested. He couldn't help himself. "They haven't any fear now!"
"And you think that that's a
good thing?" Crowe countered just as easily. "You have two RAFians that have no fear -- of
anything, mind you -- and they are free to go on a warpath? You have unleashed a plague on us --
all of us -- and you don't even
realize it!!"
"How do you even know that it was
two RAFians?" Albert countered.
"Do you think that I don't have all lower-ranking members of this cartel under surveillance?" Crowe snapped. "Why do you think that there have been no rats here as of yet? Just how do think we managed to stay under the radar for so long?"
Albert had nothing to say to that.
"And then you," Crowe said, genuine anger showing through, "you, a pathetic little maggot who knows
NOTHING, shows up thinking you know it all. Thinking that we actually
need advertising. Advertising! Seriously!"
Albert began to feel anger lick at his insides. This was already humilating. Crowe didn't have to pile more on.
"You get careless, and not only
let the RAFians bumble right to our doorstep, but you actually got some useless rugrat to do it for you, and she was a bigger
disappointment than
YOU are."
Albert clenched his teeth, and began to grind them.
"But I've had enough with your antics, Bertie," Crowe said, in summation, "good-bye."
A gunshot shattered the brief silence.
*And, yet, we didn't know about them, not really, before this.