The Prof Croft Series: Books 0-4 (Prof Croft Box Sets Book 1) by Brad Magnarella (best business books of all time txt) π
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- Author: Brad Magnarella
Read book online Β«The Prof Croft Series: Books 0-4 (Prof Croft Box Sets Book 1) by Brad Magnarella (best business books of all time txt) πΒ». Author - Brad Magnarella
βIs it true?β Brie asked.
The words seemed to tremble past her lips. I set my leg back down and studied her again. Was I missing something? The two young women were among my more enthusiastic studentsβboth added after the ghoul operationβbut now their faces were taut and pale.
βIs what true?β I asked.
Denise took a folded newspaper from her bag and pushed it to the edge of her desk as though it were an explosive device. I broke my rule by looking at it and nearly choked at what I saw.
Above the side column that featured my headshot was a single-word headline:
TRAITOR
I lifted the paper from her desk and unfolded it. For a dizzying moment, I was in my motherβs staggering, bleeding body with that word, that awful word, being hurled at me from all sides.
NEW YORK - Everson Croft, the wizard consultant to Mayor Lowderβs ambitious eradication program, gave faulty information that led to the slaughter of three dozen NYPD officers, a credible source claimed.
The men lost their lives in last nightβs operation to clear the southern end of Central Park.
βCroft knew the Hundred would be overwhelmed by creatures,β the source, who asked to remain anonymous, said. βWhich was why he underestimated the threat. He wanted the operation to fail, and fail spectacularly.β
According to Police Commissioner Warren, the operation did not fail, thanks to the decisive actions of Captain Lance Cole. βHe made the right call, meeting the overwhelming force with attack helicopters and napalm,β Warren said. βIndeed, Cole may be the only reason the Hundred wasnβt reduced to zero.β
As for Croftβs motive, the anonymous source said the wizard is secretly working for the cityβs banking class.
βWith Mayor Lowder close to securing the federal bailout, the city will no longer be in the thrall of the big firms,β the source said. βThe firms know this. Theyβre fighting it. They need the mayor to lose his reelection bid, which means denying him any success. Croft was a plant to that end.β
Though the large firms, including Chillington Capital, have contributed millions to Lowderβs opponent, the source declined to speculate on whether Abby Azonka knew of the arrangement.
βBut thereβs something Azonka should know,β the source said. βSheβs accepting money from vampires, and I donβt mean the figurative kind. Letβs just say not all of the cityβs creatures hide underground.β
When asked whether Croft was one such creature, the source said, βNo, but he might as well be.β
The mayorβs office declined to comment on the story, declaring it under investigation.
In the meantime, the city is planning a dedication for the slain officers today at noon, andβ¦
I returned the paper to Denise and stepped slowly backwards until I was leaning against my desk. The room revolved around me. ββ¦bad information β¦ wanted the operation to fail β¦ a plantβ¦β My two students looked on worriedly as I choked down a surge of liquor and bile.
Last night Cole had said the mayor was meeting with advisors to determine the next step. Was this what the fae had come up with? Was this their solution to the bungled operation? To throw me under the bus?
Impossible, I thought. Caroline would never let that happen.
But was it impossible? Given the insinuations against Budgeβs opponent, the anonymous source had clearly come from the mayorβs office. And Carolineβs allegiance was to the fae now, to securing the portal in lower Manhattan. In the eyes of her race, the fate of someone like me meant nothing.
Hence, Carolineβs warnings, I realized.
But why make me a traitor? Why link me to the bankers?
Because the portal is located in vampire territory.
Securing Federal Hall, the building in which the lower portal was housed, was only half the battle for the fae. The other half was them being able to come and go as they needed. The vampires may have been making that difficult, demanding a hefty tribute or something. The solution? Poison my name to mitigate any political fallout from the operation and then put me in league with the vampire bankers, thus poisoning them too.
Two birds, meet one stone.
I raised my gaze to the students. βNo,β I answered. βItβs not true.β
Denise let out a relieved laugh. βWe knew it.β
Brie drew a finger through the mascara-tinted tears forming beneath her eyes. Her voice hitched as she spoke. βItβs just, youβre our favorite teacher, andβandβand everyone was talking like youβd done these horrible things. Andβand we just refused to believe it.β
βThanks,β I said, digging into my pocket and handing her a clean handkerchief. βThatβs really nice of you. Both of you. Class will be cancelled until we can get this sorted out.β
I spoke calmly, but my mind was scrambling like a spider in a glass jar. I needed to get out of here, needed to get to a phone. I would call Vega, even Budgeβsomeone who could tell me what in the hell was going on.
βIs there anything we can do?β Denise asked.
βMaybe donβt mention I was here?β I suggested.
Denise and Brie nodded as though taking solemn vows. That would help, anyway. As they collected their bags, I slung my satchel over a shoulder and retrieved my cane. I would go out the way I came in, don the sunglasses and beard to disguise me from a public that wanted my head on a pike, and go straight to a payphone.
Someone cleared his throat.
I spun toward the doorway. At first I saw only the backs of my departing students, but when they stepped around a diminutive figure in a bowtie and three-piece suit, my heart plummeted into my stomach.
βGoing somewhere?β my department chair asked.
βProfessor Snodgrass,β I said, then thought, please tell me you didnβt read this morningβs paper.
His triumphant grin suggested otherwise. βWhat did I tell you?β He took a jaunty step into the room. βI said this wasnβt over, that I was
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