After the Bighorn Chapter Four by Tracker.
Council of War
While I was waiting for the
strategy meeting with Wyandotte Frick and a horde of Frick cousins to begin, I
read the local newspaper, the Post-Gazette.
I am fascinated by the differences from city to city, in layout and organization,
each city thinking its way is normal and the way other cities’ papers do things
slightly off. The Post-Gazette had an
old fashioned news round-up column of strange and off-beat stories from around
the world; “World’s biggest cucumber grown in Swansea, Wales. That sort of thing. Today the second last item was from Montana,
the Bighorn country in fact.
It was that Dateline that got
me to read further.
Evidence of Old Cowboy Feud. University of Montana archaeologists
have discovered evidence linked to legends of a feud between old west outlaw
gangs, The Hole in the Wall Gang and the Robber’s Roost Gang. Old West folklore has long held that a 1887
battle took place between the two outfits, but more sober historians, who
insist on evidence had pooh-poohed the tales.
Well now evidence has been found in the form of a burial pit inside an
cave on the Lazy F ranch by the Bighorn.
University of Montana researchers, consisting of Professors and students
found the cave with the aide of a foreman on the ranch, a man named Smith. Mr Wilson Frick provided funds for the dig,
the bones recovered will be housed at the U of M Frick Museum of Western
History. On a side note: four U of M
co-eds who wandered away from the dig-site are still missing, and feared eaten
by Bears.
I smiled. I did not think that the co-eds had been
eaten by bears. I believed that by now
the young women had begun a journey through space to a new life. From an
accompanying picture of the cave, I reconstructed what had happened. It was the same cave to which the Fricks had
carried the bodies of the slain mercenary contractors that had attacked the
ranch earlier in the summer in an effort to force its sale. Knowing nothing of
the Fricks, they had been surprised and overcome by the Fricks. Their bodies, now disintegrated, had been
recovered from the cave under the cover of an archeological dig and would rest
among the bones of thousands of others in the bowels of a museum.
Clever of the Fricks to remove
the evidence from their land in such a way.
There was also a lesson there for me. Do not take an enemy for
granted. I emailed my office, ordering
extra digging on Vincent VanRijn, his methods and resources. Do not prepare for what you think the enemy
might do, prepare for what they have the capability to do.
“Please, sir, you must help
me.” Of all the unnecessary
interruptions, Chelsea Savannah Frick was the most unnecessary.
“I apologize again for my
behaviour earlier, but I just lost my father, and then my birthright was stolen
from me.” I looked up. Today Chelsea was playing the innocent,
helpless waif, appealing for a man to protect her from the world. What a ploy, when from what I saw earlier,
she was as venomous as a snake. A very comely and fetching snake. Chelsea launched into a tale of woe, of being
thrust aside because she was a young girl, could I not be her knight and
champion her and other nonsense which I cut off swiftly.
“I am the lawyer for the Frick
Companies, I will not entertain any conflict of interest.”
Which launched Chelsea into a
tirade.
“I knew you were a weakling, a
weak puling man of Earth. Afraid to
stand up and fight for a lady. Weak. Weak. Weak. I will show you.”
I moved to the door and as I
was leaving, the she-snake went on, “that’s right, run away. You’re no good
anyway. I hope you lose, you chicken.”
Schoolyard abuse. The only thing I was afraid of was that
Woodrow or Zack Frick might resent it if I slapped a lady of House Frick, as
she deserved.
My first impressions of
Wyandotte Frick were not favourable ones.
Compared to the forceful man in the photographs that Mrs Magruder had
shown me, he seemed just an early middle-aged businessman in a grey suit. He was tall, and not pudgy, but did not have
the aura of danger that Wilson Frick, or Woodrow Frick had. But I knew that
appearances can be deceptive and that some snakes are even more dangerous for
not having rattles.
One of my recreations, before I
discovered the owning of enslaved women, was to read popular novels of previous
decades. Tai-pan, by James
Clavell, came to my mind. The
protagonist, Dirk Struan was a force of nature that forced his world to bow to
his will. His son, who grew up in the
great man’s shadow, never developed his own force and went down in history as
Culum the Weak. So often strong men do not develop strong heirs. It seemed
likely that this Wyandotte might prove a weak vacillating figure, a danger to
the strength of the Frick Family to which I had aligned myself.
Small talk was made while a
group of middle-aged and older men, men with little force or seeming
intelligence arrived in ones and twos.
We were served more coffee and breakfast pastries, while I hankered for
something more substantial after my overnight flight. Almost last to arrive was
Woodrow Frick from the Lazy F, a breath of fresh air after these fusty
non-entities. I tried to get near him to
talk, but about half the grey suited men crowded around him, seeming to court
his good opinion, while the other half avoided Woodrow as though he had a
disease. Change has come for the Fricks,
I thought. Wyandotte Frick was watching the group of courtiers around Woodrow;
he did not appear pleased, but he had not been happy since I had met him.
Young Zack Frich opened a pair
of double pocket doors that led out of the parlor and invited us to follow
him. Beyond the doors was a dining room,
with a large mahogany table and chairs.
Wyandotte nearly sat in the chair next to the chair at the head of the
table, but at the last moment, took the seat at the head of the table, he
seemed ill at ease there. Half the
grey-suited men sat near Wyandotte, half around Woodrow near the other
end. Two kajirae I recognized from the
Lazy F ranch, Tiffani and Fliss, wearing black silk tunics placed water carafes
on silver plates on the table and then knelt by another set of doors which I
assumed led to the kitchen. Woodrow
nodded at them, which recollected Wyandotte to the fact that he was Master in
this House now.
“You are dismissed”
They rose and left. Juli is
graceful, but I see now she needs more training to become as graceful in
movement as the House Kajirae of the Fricks.
Thoughts of my girl almost overwhelmed me, she has grown so much in my
affections since I put my collar on her.
Zach Frick closed and locked
the kitchen doors, then took a seat by the doors to the parlor. He did not join the rest at the table. I was at one end facing Wyandotte Frick.
He made some welcoming noises,
Chamber of Commerce style, paying tribute to my talents, thanking me for coming
etc. I preferred a more direct style of just getting down to business, but
Wyandotte needed to talk, I suppose. My
mind wandered a bit.
Finally, we got down to
business with my dismissing from my mind all thoughts of Fliss and Tiffani and
their grace, my speculations regarding the suitability of Scarlett the flight
attendant for the collar, and Leigh for a free woman’s clothes. Free Woman’s clothes led my thoughts to the
tight ‘mourning’ outfit of Chelsea Frick, which led my thoughts to her kneeling
naked next to my Juli, both in collars.
Finally to business. I laid out the history of Vincent
VanRijn. His family had settled in New
York with the Dutch and had been unscrupulous landlords and merchants for
generations. They had moved to San
Francisco in gold rush times, after their family estate of Dragonwyk had been
burned out during the Land Wars. He made
his money squatting like a troll on other people’s inventions, claiming
defective patents or dubious infringements.
Poorly capitalized companies ended up losing everything, other people
mostly paid him to go away.
I laid out for them the legal
options. VanRijn really had no case, but
paying him to go away was the cheapest option.
Endless discussion ensued. Most of the cousins favoured this option, but
wanted the money to come from Wyandotte and Wilson, and certainly not from
them. Finally Wyandotte asked what other
options there were.
I explained they could fight a
long-drawn-out legal battle, countering every argument as he put it forth. It could go on for years and might never
reach a decision. The last option was
the most expensive and risky. Put his
claims to the test, challenge everything pre-emptively, Crush arguments he
hadn’t even raised yet. It would mean
demanding large amounts of discovery from him, hours of sifting through
papers. The Fricks would either lose or
win swiftly.
There was, of course, more
discussion. To my disappointment but not
surprise, Wyandotte did not lead the discussion but listened to all points.
Finally Woodrow weighed
in. He scared them, he pointed out that
with the family weakened by the death of Willard and his removal from the
Council, the Family must appear strong.
The attack on the Lazy F must be hidden, wealth could not be drained
away in payoffs, “for blackmailers always return again for more. Like a disobedient slave-girl this VanRijn
must receive a strong chastisement now.”
The majority were afraid of a
fight, afraid of any confrontation.
Mostly they supported the middle option, don’t pay, but let the matter
drag on indefinitely, the worst option.
Finally Wyandotte called for a
vote. Two or three were for biting the
bullet and making a payoff; the majority were for fighting on the cheap and
over a long time; entering a quagmire..
Woodrow voted for the Intense
Fight Back option. To my surprise, so
did Wyandotte.
“I am Head of the Family, we
need to fight, we need to project strength and confidence. Patrick Masters will
lead his team, and our corporate counsel will support.”
“Meeting adjourned”
So, the right decision. But if Wyandotte had been more decisive, we
would not have wasted two and a half hours.
But one of the querulous old
men spoke up. “This is the wrong
decision. You cannot risk the future of
the Family in this way. You are as bad
as Willard Frick, taking too much risk.
We must conserve our resources, temporize, compromise, beg our way back
on to the council. I demand you reverse
this decision. The money you are using
for this fight, the money you are risking in general, comes from our trust
accounts. You cannot be allowed to do this. I demand you make peace.”
He took a gun, a pistol, from
his pocket.
Wyandotte looked up, he did not
stir.
“Demand, you cannot demand, you
live on the funds of the family without contributing anything. You are cast out from the family. Dismissed. Disowned.” His voice when handing down this sentence was
no different from when he was delivering the platitudes at the start of the
meeting.
The man with the gun
wavered. Woodrow Frick knocked the gun
from his shaking fingers, sliding it along the table to stop in front of
Wyandotte. The mass of the grey men,
muttered and looked down, not daring to either look at Wyandotte or the
condemned man. Those who looked at
Woodrow Frick quickly looked away.
Wyandotte got up, and left the
room, followed by the rest of the Frick council. The man who had confronted Wyandotte started
to leave, but was stopped by Woodrow placing a hand on the arm of his grey silk
suit. As I left the room with Zach
Frick, the grey man sank back into his chair.
Woodrow stopped by the end of the table, where Wyandotte had left the
pistol.
“Franklin Atherton Frick, you
know what you have to do.” He then slid
the gun down the table to in front of Franklin Frick, joined me by the
door. We went through into the parlor,
Woodrow closed the doors. As we walked
over towards the coffee service, we heard a shot from the Dining room where we
had had our council.
Nobody moved towards the Dining
Room. I knew though that the Fricks had
plenty of experience in dealing with removing embarrassing bodies.
************************************************************************
Another three quarters of an
hour was wasted getting the old cousins out of the house. They wanted to talk and talk about how good
the old times were, and not face the dangerous future. Finally, they were gone. While Wyandotte and Woodrow talked, I was
left to chat with Zach.
“You did not give anything away
during that long conference, I can’t read you when you want to shut down your
face”
“I could not really interfere
with the decision, I am you lawyer, not your boss.”
“And what were you really
thinking about”
I deflected, I did not want to
tell him about my encounter with Chelsea.
“Mostly Fliss and Tiffani, a
bit about Angela, the running of a big house, the management of the household
duties. I need more help than I expected
running Drysdale House.”
Zack surprised me by mentioning
his cousin himself.
“Did you know that Cousin
Chelsea had snuck into the parlor and was listening at the door?”
He grinned at my surprise.
“She has not given up, that
one. She wants things she can’t have;
things that don’t suit her.”
“Have you told Wyandotte, or
Mrs Magruder?”
“No, I will keep that to myself
for now. No need to bother Wyandotte, he
has enough on his mind.”
I contacted my office and spoke
to Billy Purden, the managing director of resources. He was to get a team out
here to Pittsburgh as soon as possible to liaise with the Frick corporate
lawyers and go through their patent files.
Juli’s Narrative.
I shelved books last night for
three hours. Without direction, I am
sure I am doing things wrong. Now he is
my Master, Patrick can whip me if displeased.
And I cannot keep up with the cleaning, and my stitching, I am sure is
not yet good enough. Additionally, the
automatic feeding machine does not add the flavour packets to the Nutri-girl
and so I live on unflavoured mush. With
all the work, no company and no slave orgasms, the life of a slave whose Master
is away is very miserable.
I dread going to Master
Patrick’s office now that he has left for Pittsburgh. Even before he left, it was hard after I was
collared. Even without knowing my
changed circumstances, the people at the office treated my differently than
they had when I was free. Before when I
went to his offices, at reception, it was always, “Good morning Miss Chen”, or
at the very most, “Hello, Juliet, go right back.”
But now that I am barely
dressed, I am always made to wait, “I will check if Mr Masters is available to
see you, Juli.” They have picked up by
the change in Master Patrick’s attitude towards me that I am less than a free
woman. I am due less respect. Miss Jane Bennet and Miss Caroline Pomerantz
are particularly nasty. Miss Pomerantz
is very prim, while Miss Bennet only pretends to be, while both treated me with
respect before, now I only feel their contempt.
Going there without Master Patrick’s protection frightens me. Even on Earth it seems that Free Women fear
and despise kajirae.
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