Title: THE DESIRE CARD
Author: Lee Matthew Goldberg
Publisher: Fahrenheit Press
Pages: TBA
Genre: Crime/Suspense
BOOK BLURB:
Any wish fulfilled for the
right price. That's the promise the Desire Card gives to its
elite clients. But if the Card doesn’t feel like they’ve been justly
compensated, the “price” will be more menacing than the clients could ever
imagine.
Harrison Stockton learns this
lesson all too well. Harrison has lived an adult life of privilege and excess: a
high-powered job on Wall Street along with a fondness for alcohol and pills, and
a family he adores, yet has no time for. All of this comes crashing
to a halt when he loses his executive job and discovers he has liver cirrhosis
with mere months left to live.
After finding himself far down
on the donor list, Harrison takes matters into his own hands. This decision
sparks a gritty and gripping quest that takes him to the slums of Mumbai in
search of a black market organ and forces him under the Desire Card’s thumb.
When his moral descent threatens his wife and children, Harrison
must decide whether to save himself at any cost, or do what’s right and put a
stop to the Card.
THE
DESIRE CARD is a taut international thriller
that explores what a man will do to survive when money isn’t always enough to
get everything he desires. It’s the first book in a series followed by PREY NO
MORE that focuses on other people indebted to this sinister organization, where
the actual price is the cost of one’s soul.
PRAISE:
"Careful what you wish for,
especially from a nefarious shadow organization, in this gripping start to Lee
Matthew Goldberg's fast-paced, highly compelling, buzz worthy new series. If
you love characters morally compromised, richly drawn, and constantly
surprising, you'll love THE DESIRE CARD. I burned through the first book and
can't wait to get my hands on PREY NO MORE to see where this endlessly exciting
story takes me next! Loved it!” - Daniel Palmer, critically acclaimed suspense
author
ORDER YOUR COPY:
Amazon
Chapter 1
HARRISON SAT OUTSIDE THE OFFICE OF THE MANAGING DIRECTOR AWAITING HIS
FATE. The end of the month meant slash and burn time, but he had successfully
avoided the axe for twelve months now. Something told him this wasn’t going to
be lucky number thirteen. After almost twenty years of dedication, he swore he
wouldn’t beg, wouldn’t give that fucker Thom Bartlett any satisfaction in
letting him go. Thom, with his faux British accent even though he lived in the
U.S. since he was two, his nose up the CEO’s ass at every chance, his
chastising of Harrison’s “extracurricular activities,” even though Thom was
just as guilty of similar vices. Harrison stared at this fucker’s door, as if
by monitoring he could will it to stay closed and ensure that he’d forever
remain a part of Sanford & Co.’s Mergers and Acquisitions team.
A sharp pain in his abdomen
caused him to pitch forward. His stomach churned as a flood of bile crept up
his throat. Thom’s door now appeared so out of focus that for a second Harrison
forgot where he was.
“Bad lunch?” his buddy
Whit whispered, from a nearby seat.
Thom’s ancient secretary
glanced up at them from her fury of typing and went back to punishing the keys.
Harrison clutched his stomach
and let out a stifled belch. The air now smelled like he’d been dining on
garbage. His chronic halitosis had only been getting worse. He could barely
recall the last time he’d kissed Helene like when they were young with an
appetite to devour. At most he received a peck while she held her breath. It’s
not like her body hadn’t also changed, and yet he still found her a knockout:
whip-smart and sophisticated, alluring whenever she was in deep thought and
chewed on the earpiece of her reading glasses. Only once had he participated in
a particular “extracurricular activity” outside of their marriage. It was
something he instantly regretted—but she had been treating him like a pariah in
the bedroom for almost a year, and he found himself in the arms of another. So
now he let her give those little digs about his hygiene, one of the small
pleasures she seemed to have during the scant few hours a day when he was home.
Whit seemed to inch his chair
away from Harrison’s death burp and occupied himself with the new Breitling
hanging from his wrist. Here the two were about to be sliced up and gutted and
Whit had spent last weekend dropping $10K on a watch. Sure Harrison indulged in
more luxuries than most and hated his old Tag enough to go splurging, but
unlike Whit, he had two kids in uptown private schools to worry about.
“Drinks at Mobeley’s later
tonight?” Whit asked, placing his hand on Harrison’s shoulder. “Whatever the
outcome of this summons might be?”
Harrison nodded with tired
eyes.
“You’re a VP here, Harry.
Higher up on the rung than me. You’ve got a better chance of surviving.”
Whit’s hand still massaged
Harrison’s shoulder, but his encouragement was not convincing. He had probably
expected a similar consoling reply, except the room was spinning too much for
Harrison to care.
“You’re not looking well,”
Whit said. Thom’s secretary seemed to glance up from her typing again to nod in
agreement. The two of them caught each other’s eye, as if they were conspiring
against him. Well, we couldn’t all look like Whit. Just a few years younger but
still with a full head of thick black hair only slightly graying at the temples,
something that made him appear even more distinguished. Pecs and abs that he
never shut up about. A terror on the racquetball courts who slaughtered
Harrison every time. The son of a well-known surgeon at N.Y.U Medical with a
hot Japanese wife barely out of her twenties whose goal in life was to be at
his beck and call. Whit had been made an Associate two years earlier than
Harrison and was able to maintain a rapport with the higher ups that Harrison
could never manage: calling the CEO Dougie to his face instead of Mr. Sanford
and still having a job the next day.
The secretary picked up the
phone on her desk while still typing away.
“Certainly, Mr. Bartlett,” she
chirped into the receiver, and then turned her disapproving gaze to Harrison.
“Mr. Bartlett will see you now, Mr. Stockton.”
Harrison gathered up his
briefcase and overcoat. He had to hold onto the seat as he stood, his feet
pivoting and almost sending him to the ground.
“Gotta watch those martini
lunches,” Whit said, slapping Harrison on the back and pushing him toward his
doom.
Harrison put one foot in front
of the other slowly, avoiding Thom’s inevitable decision for as long as
possible.
Even if he wound up getting
let go today, an outsider looking in might assume that his life was still going
well: two decades of marriage, healthy kids, and a fantastic New York
apartment; but he felt like he’d just been going through the motions for too
long. A major chunk had been missing, a spark of excitement, adventure, and
meaning. He couldn’t put his finger on what it was, just that he desperately
longed for it to exist.
As he put his hand on the
doorknob and turned, he tried to think of what would make him happy, something
he wanted more than anything that would cause him to shoot out of bed every
morning with a smile.
He squeezed his eyes shut,
willing this desired vision to appear, but all he saw was darkness.
[]
Who in their right mind didn’t covet Thom
Bartlett’s office? High floor with downtown skyline views, fluffy clouds
outside of the windows, a wet bar that Harrison eyed. Some good Scotch had
already been opened. Harrison had forced himself to keep sober during a gobbled
lunch of an Italian sub without his trusty flask to chase it down. Now his
hands trembled at the thought of that Scotch burning his throat.
“Can I offer you something?”
Thom asked, indicating the bar with a grand sweep of his arm, as if to say, yes,
I have a bar in my office, which you, dear sir, never had here and regrettably
never will.
“I might as well,” Harrison
coughed, scooting over and pouring two shots worth into a glass. He sat across
from Thom and put the comforting drink to his lips.
Thom fiddled with a stack of
papers in a folder on his desk. He looked up at Harrison through the thick
frames he kept low on his sloping nose, almost touching his top lip.
“So Sanford & Co. has
become swollen lately. We’re too big for our own good right now and need to
restructure–”
“Just spit it out,” Harrison
said, knocking back half the glass of Scotch.
“I’m sorry, Harrison. We’re going
to have to let you go, effective today.”
Thom delivered this news while
fixing his Windsor knot, which Harrison figured had taken him numerous tries
that morning to perfect. Harrison wanted to grab him by that knot and choke his
tiny little bird head until it popped off.
“I’ve given practically twenty
years to this firm,” he said, running his hands through his thinning hair. “I
sleep here, I eat here. I barely exist at home anymore.”
“It’s the same for all of us,
mate.”
“I’m not your fucking mate,”
Harrison said, finishing the rest of the Scotch and starting to sway.
“Old boy, I am not the villain
here. Every firm on the Street has been feeling this strain since the economy
collapsed. Now we are offering you a solid severance package, which I think is
more than generous. I’ll also save you the spectacle of having security escort
you out.”
“What was Sanford’s reason?”
Harrison asked quietly, not wanting to hear the answer but knowing that he’d be
unable to leave without one.
Thom had already started
pushing the folder across the desk, shutting Harrison up, getting this over
with. His face looked exhausted from delivering executions.
“We’ve heard from some
clients,” he said, taking off his glasses and pinching the bridge of his nose.
“Heard what…?”
“Have you looked at yourself
in the mirror lately, huh, Harry?” he asked, his voice rising to the level of
an uncomfortable squeal. “Your skin, mate…sorry, but you’re looking rather
yellow, and your eyes, well there’s this permanent creaminess to them… I’m just
using the client’s words–”
“Which client?”
“Which one hasn’t mentioned
this is more like it.”
Harrison went to respond but
now Thom was on a roll.
“As a VP, this is a
face-to-face business. I go for manicures, mate, you think I like it–it’s a
requirement. Maybe if you cut back on the drink….”
“I’ve advised some huge
mergers here over the years.” Harrison pointed at Thom with his empty glass. “I
didn’t realize this was only a pretty boys game.”
“You’ve let some messy
pitchbooks slide through recently, as well.”
“Shouldn’t the analysts be
blamed for creating them?”
“Don’t think they haven’t been
dealt with, too.”
“So maybe I’ve gotten lax with
a couple of pitchbooks for smaller clients, but never any of the big ones.”
“When…was the last time you’ve
been to a doctor, Harry?”
“Doctors,” Harrison said,
brushing them all away with a flick of his wrist. He had always believed that
no matter what, doctors tried to find something wrong with you so you’d give
them more business. And yeah, his skin had developed a yellowish hue as of late
and sometimes his gut felt like it was rotting. Varicose veins had multiplied
along his thighs and there were moments when he’d lose balance and have to go
and dry heave in an empty stall once no one else was around, but he was a
professional drinker just like his dad had been, and that son-of-a-bitch had
put back a liter of gin and a pack of smokes a day up until the ripe old age of
eighty-eight. Hell, who needed to live longer than that anyway? Life could be
brutal, and if some booze, some smokes and some pills provided a relief from
the banality of it all, then screw any doctor who’d tell him otherwise.
Thom tapped on the folder to
indicate that it was time to wrap this up.
“I have to make sure that you
understand what’s in the package,” he said, pushing it closer to Harrison until
it practically fell off the desk.
Harrison opened it up and
flipped through: six months pay, benefits as well, blah, blah, blah. He closed
it shut and went to throw it in his briefcase.
“Tut tut,” Thom said, wagging
his finger. “There’s something you missed that Mr. Sanford wanted to make sure
you saw.”
Harrison re-opened the folder
and spied a card clipped to the first page.
[]
“What the hell is a Desire Card?”
Thom reached over and
un-clipped the card.
“You have been a valued
employee here. Mr. Sanford wanted to make sure you understood that we’re not
parting on bad terms. This is what’s best for everyone.”
Thom handed him the card.
Harrison turned it over and over with his stubby fingers.
“It’s like…a phone or
something too?”
“Of sorts, just to keep their
network as secure and exclusive as possible. We didn’t include this in
everyone’s package, so you know. This is an organization that Mr. Sanford has a
long history with, very hush-hush obviously, very elite. If you want something…anything…they
have the power to make it happen.”
“Can they get me my job back?”
“Cute, Harrison, don’t ever
lose that charm.”
Thom reached over to take the
empty glass away.
“So tonight, Harry, instead of
drowning your sorrows in a bottle, give the Card a try and have them ring you
up a girl I guarantee you’ll enjoy. Or whatever else you wish. We promise we’ll
give a glowing report to any future job prospects so consider this the start of
a paid vacation.”
Thom stuck out his hand to
shake, the nails manicured, no rogue cuticles to speak of; but the hand was
delicate and unassuming, not someone with the power to hold Harrison’s life in
his palm, just a meager messenger. Harrison slipped the Desire Card in his
pocket and shook Thom’s hand, squeezing hard as Thom grimaced.
“And see a doctor,” Thom
replied, giddy now that this ordeal was over.
“Watch out, you’ll be gutted
next,” Harrison said, rising and feeling his legs give out. He collapsed back
into the chair as Thom let out a spurt of a laugh.
“You all right there, mate?”
“Piss on England.”
Harrison gave standing up
another try. He gripped Thom’s desk for support. Thom looked worried that
Harrison might take the whole desk down with him, but Harrison was doing his
best to maintain even though it felt like he was viewing Thom through the wrong
end of a telescope.
“You can go ahead and send Mr.
Carmichael in,” Thom said, fixing his Windsor knot again that had become
slightly askew. “Best to Helene and the children.”
Harrison slung his coat over
his arm and gripped his briefcase as he headed for the door. After a few steps,
his vision became cloudier and he could feel the creamy tears falling from his
eyes. They stung his cheeks as he grappled with the doorknob and lurched into
the hallway.
In the front office, Whit was
leaning over the secretary’s desk; the two engaged in hushed words that stopped
once Harrison emerged. Harrison ran his finger from one side of his neck to the
other. Whit gave him a solemn nod back, but Harrison couldn’t hold it in any
longer and puked up the barely digested Scotch.
“Oh my!” he heard the
secretary say.
He stared at his sickness
bubbling on the floor, a mix of half-chewed capicola and salami in an amber
soup with specks of dark red blood throughout, the clots of blood so dark they
looked like tar. He wiped his mouth and trudged past all the onlookers toward
the elevators outside, glad that a part of him would remain embedded in Sanford
& Co.’s carpet.
As the elevator arrived and he
stepped inside, he wished for the undoing of everyone involved in his
termination, knowing that only their collective downfall could get him to shoot
out of bed with a smile.
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