John Gilstrap - Nathan’s Run

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Wrongly imprisoned at twelve years old, Nathan Bailey kills a guard in self-defense, escapes, and finds himself on the run from the police, the Mafia, and a county prosecutor determined to stop him at all costs.

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It had all seemed so simple then. Who could have guessed how complicated it would all become?

None of it was his fault, of course. If he’d gotten the same respect from dear old Dad that Steve had, then Mark would never have had to seek quick cash. When his old man told him that his inheritance was contingent upon finishing college, Mark never thought for a moment that he was serious. As much of a cantankerous old fart as he was, Mark never dreamed that he would disinherit his own blood for something as trivial as a piece of paper from some snotty ivy-covered building. But he’d been serious, indeed. Serious as a heart attack.

When the old man died, his will became cast in iron, unchangeable. Steve had everything. Mark had nothing. Even Nathan got a big chunk, but not Mark. Nope, he was just a doormat, and who ever heard of leaving money to a doormat?

But then, Steve had always been the talented one. No one could suck up to the old man quite like old Steve-o. Butt-buddies to the end.

Yes sir, Dad sir, I’d be happy to shit all over Mark, sir.

What, sir? Mark got a “C,” sir? Why, that’s terrible, sir. Have you seen my straight A’s, sir?

So Steve and his seed got all the money and Mark got fucked. What else was new?

Once, when times got tough, Mark actually tried a little sucking up to the master himself, but all he got from his dear rich brother was a lecture on how he should get some “focus” in his life. Shithead.

Instead of sharing, Steve invested everything in real estate and in his practice. Then, two months after the real estate market collapsed, Steve-o became Jell-O at a railroad crossing.

When you’re a survivor, you become adept at finding the opportunity hidden in the disguise of adversity. Now that there was a new orphan in the world, Mark had naturally figured that there would be money to support him. Dear old Dad’s money at that. The irony was delicious.

Except there was no money. Steve-o’s fortune had evaporated when real estate collapsed, and Nathan’s funds were tied up in a trust managed by some hotshot lawyer in New York. Even Nathan couldn’t touch the money until he was eighteen. The kid whined constantly, grew like a weed, and ate nonstop. That all cost money. Lots of money. Old Steve-o would have done well to concentrate more on the present than the future. An insurance policy would have been nice. Sure, there was that one policy for a quarter-mil, but that went pretty fast. That was when Mark was in his pimping era. Nasty little business, managing whores. Bad crowd, too. For the life of him, he had no idea where all the money went.

The real cash, he found, was in the import business. Through some friends, he came to meet people who knew people. If he could cough up $500,000 and make a trip to Colombia, he could be set for life. That five hundred thousand could become five million, and with $5,000,000 in the bank, Mark could be anything he wanted to be. Poor alcoholics were bums; rich alcoholics were eccentric. All he wanted was respect.

That’s where Pointer and Mr. Slater entered the picture. Mark had heard about their “bank” through street sources. It took all the salesmanship he had to leverage the cash—a thirty-day loan at 20 percent interest. But what was a hundred grand when you were looking down the pipeline at five million?

On May 27th, his hired pilot took off in a hired airplane to make the buy that would make Mark a rich man. When the son of a bitch failed to return, Mark’s troubles began in earnest. Some speculated that the pilot was killed in a sudden storm over the Gulf, but Mark knew better. He knew that somewhere someone was spending his five million dollars, having never had to invest a penny of his own money.

Thirty days to the hour after he had borrowed the money, Pointer showed up at his door demanding payment. In retrospect, Mark knew that he should have told the truth in the beginning, but it just was not his nature. He stalled for time. There were some problems getting the stuff cut, he explained, smooth as silk, and Pointer gave him an extra day. Even Mark thought it sounded like the truth.

But the clock kept spinning. His plan was to withdraw the last of his insurance money—twenty thousand dollars—and offer it up the next day as a down payment.

By the thirty-first day, though, Pointer had discovered the lie, and when Mark offered the twenty grand, Pointer laughed like it was the funniest joke he had ever heard. No, it wouldn’t do, he said. Suddenly the Hit Man had lost all interest in why Mark couldn’t repay his debt, replaced instead with a well-developed plan to introduce Mark to whole new worlds of pain. Kidneys seemed to be an especially favored target, though Pointer was equally talented with gut punches. And when he drove that bony knee of his into your balls, well, that was a really special adventure, too.

The beating lasted off and on for the better part of a half-hour before the Hit Man said anything of substance.

“You know, Mark,” he had said, lounging back on Mark’s sofa as he methodically unwrapped a stick of gum, “I did a little research on you, buddy. You come from money. It pisses me off that you’ve got millions in the family, yet you expect Mr. Slater to believe you can’t pay back a mere six hundred thou. Oops, this is Thursday, isn’t it? Make that six twenty-five. Now, before I rip out your windpipe, you want to tell me why you’re holding out on us?”

Though a month had passed, Mark still felt the pain of that afternoon; how new jolts of agony would self-generate from various bruised organs without Pointer laying another hand on him. He could still remember the Hit Man’s exaggerated patience as he waited through the whole story of his banishment from the family. When Mark was done, Pointer had seemed genuinely disappointed that there really was no choice but to cut his throat.

It was the sight of the straight razor that made Mark think the unthinkable.

There was a way, he’d gasped hurriedly as Pointer prepared for surgery. Mark had remembered a clause in his father’s will—a paragraph that had caught his eye years before, during the first reading. Dear old Dad had established a trust for his grandkids, of which Nathan was the only one.

Valued at just over three million dollars, the trust was supposed to send the grandkids to college and then to give them a jump-start on their lives. But there was a back door. As he lay there on the floor, sucking in carpet dust, he’d been able to remember the clause with perfect clarity. Looking back, he felt ashamed.

“In the event that any grandchild dies prior to his thirtieth birthday and prior to having completed an accredited course of study as defined in Paragraph 8(A)(c)(ii) above, the bequeathed amount shall be distributed to the child’s father, or, if such distribution is not possible for whatever reason, said share shall be distributed among my surviving progeny, per stirpes.”

When the unthinkable had first occurred to him in the lawyer’s office, Mark had seen the potential, but Christ, he’d have had to kill the whole family. Nobody needed money that bad.

Not until you’d spent some time with a pain expert, anyway. Jesus, that razor looked sharp.

It turned out that Lyle was a survivor, too, with a keen eye for his own pocketbook. Within a minute of hearing about the backdoor clause, Pointer had developed a plan. Mark would be allowed to live a while longer, for the sole purpose of killing his nephew and taking delivery of the inheritance money. Pointer, meanwhile, would shelter Mark from the wrath of Mr. Slater in return for a $200,000 fee.

The details were left up to Mark, but Pointer made it clear that he expected a clean job. Recognizing that details can be expensive, he had even returned the twenty grand down payment.

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