Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 167. Eavesdropping What They’re Discussing... And It from My Netori Life With System: Stealing Milfs And Virgins, a Fantasy novel by TheOneAuthor.

Gerald went slightly quiet.

"Your na is on the maintenance records," Big G said. "Her na is on the lease agreent and the property title."

"I know the building, Gerald. We know all the buildings in this district."

"Then you know it has value," Gerald said. "You know the inco from it is reliable."

"I know a lot of things," Big G said. "What I know right now is that you owe twelve thousand Dollah and Wednesday is four days away, and your wife doesn’t know you’ve been using your casino winnings, when you have them, to pay back a portion of what you owe us."

He stepped forward, not far, just enough to change the geotry of where Gerald was in the alley. "She doesn’t know about us at all, does she?"

Gerald said nothing.

"No," Big G said. "She doesn’t..."

"Because if she did, you’d have had a different conversation than the one you’ve been having, and you’d probably have found the twelve thousand a different way."

"She would’ve helped," Gerald said, quietly, to himself as much as to Big G. "If I’d told her in the beginning... She would have helped."

"Maybe," Big G said. "But you didn’t tell her in the beginning."

"So that’s a theory now."

"What do you want to do?" Gerald said. "Tell exactly what you want to do, and I’ll do it."

"Wednesday," Big G said. "Twelve thousand, cash."

"Everything we discussed. After that, we revisit the arrangent."

"And if I can’t get twelve thousand by Wednesday."

Big G looked at him for a mont in the way that contained its own answer and did not need to be made explicit, the look that people who operate in certain kinds of arrangents have developed because explicit is legally inconvenient.

"Then we have a different conversation," he said. "About the building."

"About what the building is worth to us as a different kind of asset."

"She has nothing to do with this," Gerald said. "Petricia has nothing to do with any of this."

"She lives in the building," Big G said. "She runs the building, and that makes her part of the asset."

"You’d go after her for sothing I did," Gerald said. It ca out with more disbelief than he probably intended.

"Gerald," Big G said patiently, "we don’t go after people."

"We collect on arrangents, but if the arrangent gets complicated, we simplify it. That’s all."

"That’s not all," Gerald said.

Big G looked at him without changing his expression.

"Wednesday," he said. "Don’t make say it again."

’This fucking bum... I can’t believe it that he can’t man up to this fucking gang mber.’

’Let just... cook.’

Mike pulled the fire exit door open.

He ca out into the alley with his hands loose at his sides and his pace easy, like soone who had pushed a door open without thinking about what was on the other side of it, which was the safest possible version of appearing in a space where you were not expected.

Both n looked at him.

Mike looked back at them with the particular quality of uncomplicated innocence, the expression of a person who has walked into sothing and not yet understood what it is.

"Sorry," he said, and he said it in the tone of soone who genuinely was. "I was looking for the street exit."

"I must have taken the wrong door."

Big G studied him for two seconds. His assessnt was quick and professional, typical of soone trained to identify potential threats.

What he noted was a dium build, empty hands, and eyes that seed slightly unfocused, likely due to the poor lighting. There was no visible indication of anything other than a person who had simply taken a wrong turn.

"Back inside," Big G said. "Street’s around the front."

"Right," Mike said. "Thank you."

He t Gerald’s eyes for a fraction of a second. Gerald’s face did the specific thing of soone encountering the unexpected at an extrely inconvenient mont, and then Mike looked away from it before the recognition could land in Big G’s peripheral vision.

He pushed the door back open. He did not go all the way through it.

He let the door settle to three inches open and positioned himself in the gap with his back against the wall inside.

The conversation in the alley continued. Big G reiterated the figure for Wednesday, and Gerald confird it. The nature of his confirmation reflected a person uncertain about how they would accomplish the task but agreeing nonetheless, as the alternative to agreent felt even worse.

Then Big G muttered sothing too quiet to be understood, and Gerald responded with a hesitant yes. Big G let go of Gerald’s shoulder and stepped back.

Gerald began to walk toward the chain-link fence at the end of the alley, moving with the deanor of soone who had just endured a close call and was uncertain about what had just happened.

Mike pushed through the fire exit and ca out into the alley.

Big G turned. He was three ters away.

His expression moved from the blank professional neutrality of a man finishing a transaction to the much less neutral expression of a man who had been alone in an alley and suddenly wasn’t.

Mike said, "Gerald."

Gerald stopped walking and turned around.

"Ah," Mike said, performing perfectly calibrated surprise. "I thought I recognized you."

"Sorry, I didn’t realize you were talking to soone."

Big G looked at Mike. Then he looked at Gerald, who had turned the color of soone facing an impossible social situation and was processing it quickly.

"You know this man," Big G said to Gerald, and it was not a question.

"He’s my tenant," Gerald said. "He lives in our building."

Mike looked at Big G with the particular expression of soone who has wandered into sothing they don’t understand and is being extrely polite about it.

"I’m sorry to interrupt," he said. "Gerald, I was just coming to find you."

"Petricia wanted to—" He stopped. Frowned slightly, as though recalibrating. "I’m sorry, are you in the middle of sothing?"

Big G was looking at him with the flat assessnt again, and this ti it was longer.

"Sir," Big G said to Mike. "Go around the front."

"This is a private conversation."

Mike looked at Gerald. Gerald’s eyes were doing sothing that was very clearly trying to communicate several things at once, and what they were trying to communicate was please leave, please don’t ask questions, please for the love of anything go.

What they were also communicating, underneath that, was "you have no idea what this is."

Mike nodded at Gerald with the nod of soone who has understood a social signal and is responding appropriately.

"Of course," he said. "I’ll wait inside."

He turned back toward the fire exit and got two steps before Big G said, "Actually," and Mike turned around.

Big G had shifted. The shift was small, a rebalancing of weight and attention, but it was the kind of shift that changes the texture of a space.

"You live in this man’s building," Big G said.

"I do," Mike said.

"Since when?"

"About a week ago," Mike said. "Why?"

Big G studied him for another mont. He had the quality of soone running a secondary assessnt, the first one having been for imdiate threat, this one for longer-term relevance.

Mike held the expression of mild curiosity without pressure, the face of soone who had asked a reasonable question and was prepared to wait a reasonable amount of ti for an answer.

"The building on Harwick," Big G said. It was not a question either.

"That’s the one," Mike said.

"What are you there for... student?"

"Postgraduate," Mike said. "Valcrest."

"Moved in last week, like I said." He paused, just long enough to land the next part correctly. "Is there sothing specific about the building I should know?"

"Because Gerald’s been very helpful so far, but if there’s a tenant orientation I missed—"

Big G’s expression did not move, but his attention redistributed slightly. The tone was wrong for a man who had been frightened off.

He had sent this man back inside, and when he returned, he was asking questions with the unhurried quality of soone who had not realized he was supposed to be sowhere else.

"Nothing you need to know," Big G said. "Landlord stuff."

"Right," Mike said. He looked at Gerald. "Gerald, I’ll wait in the bar."

"Take your ti."

You are reading My Netori Life With System: Stealing Milfs And Virgins Chapter 167. Eavesdropping What They’re Discussing... And It on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

Walker Of The Worlds cover
Trending now

Walker Of The Worlds

Grandvoiddaoist ·Action

LinMuwasacommonboylivinginasmalltown,ostracizedbythetownsmenbecauseofamistakehemadeduringtheharvest,hishouseseizedtocompensateforit.Forcedtofendfor...

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.