The Committee (15 page)

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Authors: Terry E. Hill

BOOK: The Committee
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Camille feared her legs would give way under the weight of the revelation.
This can't be!
she thought steadying herself on the wooden box.
Sheridan would never do that to me.
“We're sorry to have to tell you this,” Lazarus said, “but it's better you find out now, before we precede any further with our relationship.”
Lazarus stood from the couch and walked to her side. “Are you all right? I know this must be difficult. Even powerful people are hurt when they're betrayed by someone they love.”
“I'm fine,” she said bravely. “But you still haven't given me any proof.”
Lazarus reached into the breast pocket of his suit, pulled out a photograph, and handed it to Camille. “Is this proof enough?”
Sheridan's face was buried deep between the legs of Gloria Vandercliff. His pants were around his ankles, and she was contorted in ecstasy. Camille saw the Rolex watch she bought him the previous Christmas on the hand used to prop her legs in the air.
She looked expressionless at the picture.
“The woman your husband is performing cunnilingus on is Miss Gloria Vandercliff,” Lazarus said. “Apparently, he is quite well known in certain circles for this particular skill. In this instance, he provided the service as incentive for her to sell him the Playa de Rey property. He's a liability, Camille. You will never be president if he remains in your life.”
“What are you saying?” she asked. “Divorce him?”
“No, no,” Lazarus said with disdain. “That would be worse than a scandal over his business dealings.”
“Then what are you . . .” she began.
“You can't be serious?” she asked looking from Lazarus to Isadore, then back again.
“It's the only way,” Isadore responded.
“You're insane,” she interrupted.
“Are we, Camille?” Lazarus said leaving her side. “I want you to think about it before you decide.”
“There's nothing to think about,” she said indignantly.
Lazarus looked down at his watch and exclaimed, “Oh my, Isadore, would you look at the time. I think we should be getting Camille back home now. We have taken far too much of her time already. I did promise she would be home in time for work this morning. If she leaves now, we can have her back in LA by 8:00 a.m.”
“Of course, of course,” Isadore said jumping from the couch and taking her hand. “Camille, think about what Lazarus said,” he advised with compassion. “When you get back to LA, talk with Gillette. I'm sure the two of you will figure out the best way to handle this.”
“Squawk!”
Chapter 8
It was a stormy night at sea. The water thrashed with deadly force. Violent winds whipped the waves into cyclones almost reaching the heavens, and then cascading down currents only to be spewed up again by the spiteful ocean. A million stars looked down helplessly from the black void with pity for the souls who would soon be subjected to the wrath of the angry sea.
Hattie stirred restlessly in her bed. It was just after 3:00 a.m., and sleep had not come easy. The shallow slumber offered no refuge from the dream brewing over the tempestuous sea.
“Don't go out there,” she mumbled. “It's not safe.”
The sea grew angrier with each word muttered from behind the thin veil of sleep.
“No one should be out there. It's too dangerous,” her almost inaudible ramblings continued.
Hattie's hands jerked in the air over the bed as if warning someone to stay away. A tress of grey hair fell from beneath her nightcap as her head rolled from side to side. Again her hands jumped into the air. “Don't go any closer.”
Then she saw them. Six mounted horsemen began to rise from the sea in the eye of the cyclone. She couldn't make out their faces, but saw that the riders had human forms.
“Who . . .” she gurgled and stammered. “Who are you?”
Her body tensed watching the slow rise of the six figures from the sea. The waters calmed as if in deference to their presence. Hattie's head lay still, and her arms became rigid. The figures glowed in the starlight.
Hattie craned her neck from the pillow to get a closer look. But she couldn't see their faces.
“Who are you?” she muttered again. “Show your faces.” Hattie's words were clear and distinct even in the stormy sleep.
The figures ignored her command and continued their slow rise from the deep. They released a mist that danced above their heads. The sea became deadly calm. The waves subsided and the ocean surface was now a glassy platform with only ripples around the horses' restless hooves.
Hattie waited patiently for whatever was to come next. Then, out of nowhere, a seventh figure appeared directly in front of the equestrians. Hattie saw clearly that it was a woman. She could see the features of her face and intensely green eyes. Even though there was no wind, her flowing hair danced in time with the vapors around her head. Hattie knew immediately it was Camille Hardaway. The energy emanating from her was unmistakable, regardless of how the form manifested.
One of the horses broke rank and stepped forward. The rider was also a woman and clearly the most powerful of the group. She held a crown in one hand. Camille moved to the side of the horse and bowed her head as her hair continued in the windless dance.
The powerful rider paused with the crown directly above Camille's head and said words Hattie couldn't hear. She slowly lowered the crown onto Camille's head. Upon contact, the crown began to glow, and the powerful figure returned to her place in the line of six.
The air responded with a violent gust. Waves crashed and whirlwinds of water formed once again. The storm returned angrier than before.
Hattie's body reacted to the crowning with a sudden jerk of her chest into the air.
“No!” she cried out. Hattie bolted upright in bed, breaking the binds holding her in the dream. “No!” she screamed into the quiet Los Angeles night.
 
 
“Where the fuck have you been. Do you know how worried I was?”
Camille entered the master suite still wearing the aqua gown from the evening before. The flight home from New Orleans was awash with anger, fear, and hope. Polite offers of tea, coffee, and freshly powdered beignets from Angel were greeted with a curt, “No, thank you.” She also refused offers for sleep and instead spent the four-hour flight simmering in a stew of outrage and betrayal. Even the prospect of becoming president was overshadowed by thoughts of Sheridan's deception.
Another black Escalade greeted Camille in the hanger in Long Beach and swiftly drove her home. She calmly climbed the stairs of the mansion and saw Sheridan pulling up his boxers upon entering the bedroom. She stood framed in the doorway and simply stared at him.
Sheridan rushed to her and embraced her rigid body. “I was worried out of my mind,” he said nuzzling her neck. “Where were you? I didn't know if you were dead or alive.”
Camille looked coldly over his shoulder and said nothing.
“Where did you go? Are you all right? What's wrong?” he asked sensing something was amiss. “Talk to me.”
Camille removed herself from his embrace. She walked to the bed, tossed her clutch onto the mattress, turned to him, and said, “I am going to ask you a question. If you lie to me there will be serious consequences.”
“What is this all about?” he asked innocently. “I've never lied to you.”
“What is your connection to KeyCorp Development?” she asked succinctly.
Sheridan froze when he heard the question he'd hoped would never come from her lips.
“KeyCorp? What are you talking about?”
“It's a simple question,” she said firmly. “What is your connection to KeyCorp Development?” His stunned expression answered her question.
Sheridan braced his body and cocked his head to one side. “It appears you already know the answer,” he replied calmly. “How did you find out?”
“How could you do this to me?” she asked.
“I did it for us. Where do you think the money for all your designer gowns came from?” he asked defensively. “The cars, the jewelry, the trips around the world. Don't you see, I did it for us? For you.”
“You fool. You idiot! I could go to jail. I could lose my office. You fucking, stupid idiot.”
“You're overreacting. Who else knows about it? The feds?”
“No,” she snapped.
There was a hint of relief on his face. “Is it someone we can pay to keep quiet?”
Camille laughed and said, “You don't have enough money to pay these people off. But you won't have to because they will never tell anyone.”
“Then what's the problem?” he asked, closing the distance between them. “If you trust whoever it is, then everything will be fine.”
Camille raised her hand and slapped Sheridan hard on the cheek. His head lurched sideways from the blow.
“I'm going to let you have that one because you're upset. But if you ever raise your hand to me again—”
Camille responded to his incomplete threat with another slap landing even harder than the first. Sheridan immediately lunged at her, gripping her neck with both hands. She landed on the bed with him on top of her squirming body.
She scratched and clawed at his bare back and yelled through the pressure of his grip, “I'll kill you. You fucking idiot! I'll kill you!”
Their bodies wrestled and twisted in the fabric of her dress as they toppled off the bed and hit the floor with a loud thud. Camille landed on top. Rage exploded onto her face as she pounded his head with her tightly clinched fists. Sheridan tried to protect his face, but the assault was relentless. He bucked his hips upward and sent her flying onto her back. Then he scrambled to his feet and wrapped his powerful arm around her neck from behind. Camille's diamond earrings whipped from side to side, and her hair became a jumble of silk strands as she struggled for freedom.
Sheridan was careful to not strike her face. She was much too beautiful to damage, even in the height of anger.
“Stop it, Camille!” he yelled as she violently struggled in his arms. “That's enough. Do you hear me? That's enough!”
“You betrayed me. You made a fool of me,” she shouted in return. “I'll never forgive you for this.”
Camille gradually gave way to fatigue as she panted, cursed, and clawed at his face over her head. “Let me go, you bastard. Take your fucking hands off me.”
When her body went limp in his arms, he released her to the floor where she lay in a puddle of silk, panting and crying, “You bastard. You fucking bastard.”
Sheridan rested on his knees, but stayed on the alert should she leap from the carpet and continue her attack.
“You don't know what you've done,” she said with her face buried in the carpet. “You've ruined everything.”
“You said the feds don't know,” Sheridan panted.
“Fuck the feds. The people who know can do far more damage to you than the feds.”
“Worse than the feds?” he asked through labored breaths. “Who?”
“People who . . .” she paused and looked up at him. “You really fucked up, and I'm not going to cover for you. I have too much to lose, and I won't sacrifice one ounce of my future for you. You're on your own. Now get out!”
The governor's race of 1852 was disappointingly uneventful. After the death of Thaddeus Barrière, Jean-Luc Fantoché swept into office unopposed. The dead Barrière received a fraction of a percent of votes only because his name appeared on the ballot and there were people in the state, for their own personal reasons, who would rather see a dead man as governor than a living, breathing Fantoché.
Upon her master's untimely death, Black Dahlia was purchased by Juliette Dupree who immediately declared her a free woman. Dahlia moved to the mansion on Rue des Bourbon and worked as a lady's maid-in-waiting and for the first time in her twenty-five years earned a day's pay for a day's work. In due course she came to know the secret of the black candle. Keeping a full box of matches at the ready became the most rewarding part of living with Juliette Dupree, as was seeing the punishment meted out by the candle to some of the most ungodly creatures on earth.
Dahlia saw the destruction of mighty men and the propelling of weak men to unimaginable heights of wealth and power under the glow of the flame. Knowing its power reached far beyond what the eye could see, and was greater than any white man could even dream, gave her hope for the future. She was free, but her brothers and sisters still toiled in the burning Louisiana sun and cowered under the brutal Louisiana whip. Juliette assured her the candle would change all that. And from the extraordinary happenings witnessed behind Juliette's closed doors, Dahlia believed it was true.
Governor Fantoché soon came to know there was a cost for Juliette's love. “You killed him, didn't you?” he said to Juliette one starlit evening as he watched her standing by the fireplace. “With that,” he said, pointing over her shoulder to the candle. “I know you did it.”
Juliette owned his body and soul and found no need for deception or modesty. “Yes,” she replied. “Surely, you did not imagine you became governor on your charm and political acumen. You didn't know the capital of the state when I met you. I, and my associates, made you governor, and if you do as I say, we shall allow you to continue amongst the living. In the course of your term as governor you will abolish slavery in this state.”
The words landed so hard they almost caused Fantoché to lose his footing. “I thought you loved me.”
“In a time of war and suffering,” she said with a scowl, “love is a luxury I can scarcely afford.”
“And if I don't do as you say?” he asked with labored defiance. “What if I refuse? What if I take this house, the clothes, and jewelry away from you and throw you into the street?”
“Then you shall meet a fate far worse than that of Thaddeus Barrière. By nightfall tomorrow, I would have twice as much as you have given me, and the man who would replace you as governor would be in my bed. Do not underestimate the depth and reach of my power, Governor. I will destroy you as quickly as I made you. The candle is the deadliest bow in my quiver, but I assure you, there are others. I can cause your fortune to vanish in a day and leave you penniless in the street, begging for bread. Or afflict you with a slow-lingering disease, leaving you pleading for death to come. Or cause your rosy-cheeked children to die like weeds, one-by-one, at your feet. There are far more powerful men than you, Governor, who do my bidding out of love, but mostly out of fear.”
Juliette delivered the last blow with such brutal force it brought Governor Fantoché to his knees. His belly filled with anguish and despair and left no room for indignation at her insolence. He was the most powerful man in the state, but the beautiful Negress who towered over him was now in complete control.
Fantoché pleaded with his eyes, but she showed no mercy. His life and the life of his children, his fortune and all he held dear was now resting in her hand, waiting to be crushed. He had seen the destruction wrought by the flame and accepted the generous benefits it bestowed. He dined at the sumptuous banquet hosted by Juliette Dupree, and now, the time for payment had come.

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