Philanthropic

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"... What?"

"Half a million dollars for your little wager. Enough money that all but the most financially well off would at least have to consider it, even if they decided to turn it down; that was your first miscalculation, wasn't it? The husband and wife that didn't go along with your game, because neither of them was desperate enough for the money." His sullen silence signaled assent. I already knew, but the confirmation that my intel was accurate pleased me.

"Add in another few hundred thousand between time off for employees, travel expenses, catering, and all of the other nonsense, and you're getting close to an even million. How many therapy sessions would that have bought? You could play your little game to 'save' one man from a bad marriage and destroy his family, or you could help dozens of families stay together, and which did you choose? It was never about 'the greater good,' Simon. It was always about your sick need to punish women that reminded you of your exes."

I let him simmer for a little bit while I drained his accounts. "Stop looking like someone ran over your dog. I don't have time to liquidate all your holdings. You're still going to be obscenely wealthy when I'm done. Maybe a little wiser, too."

Richards barked out a bitter laugh. "All this effort, and you're just a common thief." Tre winced.

I pushed aside the laptop. "Is that what you think this is, Simon? That I'm doing this just to steal from you? Trying to destroy your business like you destroyed the business of the man who took yours? Drive you to suicide?"

He was briefly hesitant, then the bravado took over again. "Of course it is! You won't get away with it, either. I'll have you tracked down in days, and the money will be returned to--"

"No you won't. The money is getting turned into crypto, then filtered out anonymously to charities: battered women's shelters, low income marriage counseling charities, substance abuse clinics, and so on. Folks that helped those that you've hurt. I can't fix the damage you've done, but I can help them help others. That's the greater good, Simon. Not replicating the same stupid game that broke you, changing the rules a bit, and slapping a big 'philanthropy' label on it."

I took a drag on my cigarette. "But that's what guys like you do, isn't it? Take an idea, change it just the tiniest bit to claim it's yours, and then turn it loose. Externalize all of the costs that you can. Settle out of court and slap NDAs on the people that get hurt by your greed. 'Disrupt' the market by ignoring any kind of licensing or safety boards, then count on public outcry and lawyers to get you out of any real trouble.

"Your useless fake philanthropy, your fauxlanthropy, does nothing but add the vaguest sheen of respectability to what you do. It doesn't fool anyone but the simps, Richards. But that's the only people it's supposed to fool, right? How hard do you laugh at the men you've 'helped?'"

Richards shouted, "I was doing a good thing! They needed to be out of their marriages! The whores needed to be punished!"

Then it was my turn to pause as an uncomfortable realization dawned. "You really believe that, don't you?" He looked away. "God, you're not just a sociopath, you're an idiot, too."

I leaned in close. "Hey, Simon, do you want to know the funny thing? The really, really funny thing?"

He spat out, "What?"

"You were right about Erin. I've had a year to think about this, and if you'd come to me and told me that was how she was going to act, I'd probably have believed you. Yeah, I would have tried to get us into counseling, but it likely wouldn't have helped. Of all the women you seduced, she was exactly the type of person that you thought she was."

Richards' expression was pure bewilderment. "Then... then why? Why are you doing this?" A glance at the screen told me everything had gone through. I picked up the weapon and leveled it at him. His eyes went wide with fear. "Please, don't--"

My eyes narrowed. My face twisted with rage. Only now did I let him see how much I truly hated him. "Because she was mine, and you took her." My finger twitched. A door slammed on the life of Simon Richards.

I'd never killed a man before. I hope I never do again. But in that moment, I felt no more for him than I would for a venomous serpent that I had to put down. He was a vile, dangerous thing that didn't deserve to live among decent people. Did taking his life make me somehow less human? Did it put a stain on my soul? Maybe. But better to risk an eternal reward than live with knowing I had the power to make the world a better place and didn't.

As I stood, I popped a flash drive out of the laptop, then grabbed a couple of things from the fridge. Tre watched with fear as I returned to him with a syringe filled with a clear liquid. "Look, man, I won't say anything, I--"

I tried to project calm. "Relax, Tre. If I wanted to kill you, I'd just use the gun. This--" I gestured with the needle. "-- is insurance for me and an alibi for you. Just a sedative; you'll be out for a few hours, and I'll be... well, you don't need to worry about that. Better you don't know." I held up the USB stick. "This has a bitcoin wallet on it worth about a million dollars, care of your former employer. When I'm safely away, I'll contact you with the password. All you have to do is take your medicine, have a nap, and then tell the cops that you were ambushed before you even got to the door. Someone grabbed you from behind, stuck you, and that's the last thing you remember."

The big man eyed me suspiciously. "Why? I worked for the bastard. Why would you let me go?"

I shrugged. "Like I said, you were the only person that treated me halfway decent on that island. That's not enough by itself, but it was a start. You tried to soften the blow, when everyone else tried to fuck with me. And you've got kids; that's what tipped the balance. You get to live because of them. You get the money because you ain't getting hired for this kind of gig again, and you have to provide for them."

He slowly nodded. "Okay. Alright." He shifted his arm around as best he could, given that he was cuffed to the radiator. It amused me when he winced as the needle went in. "'I do not envy the headache you will have when you wake, but in the meantime rest well and dream of large women.' Goodnight, Fezzik." Tre quietly laughed as he nodded off.

I smashed Richards' laptop with a hammer, disassembled my weapon, and left my apartment with those items plus a small suitcase. A quick drive to the river and the evidence went into the water. Another quick drive, this one to a private airfield, and I was off to a country with no extradition, complete with a new identity.

Why didn't I punish Erin? Her existence was her punishment. Richards had clocked her: she'd never be happy with enough, only with more. Between that desperate, greedy existence and the fact that the companies Richards acquired were inevitably drained of resources and shuttered, she'd have enough setbacks in the next couple of years to last her a lifetime.

And me? I was an anonymous American on a beach with enough money to not have to answer questions. I found love after a time; Quang provided me with a happy marriage and three beautiful children. I never doubted her fidelity or her affection for me. Sure as hell beats living a life in constant pursuit of revenge.

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206 Comments
Elias1Elias118 days ago

You are a very good writer on here.... this story Erin should have suffered a little more IMO ... write more....

ThatNewGuyThatNewGuyabout 1 month ago

Here's how I imagine it sometimes goes down:

NTH walks into the LW Tropes store. The shopkeep glances up from his magazine.

"Help you?"

"Just browsing."

NTH strolls the aisles, examining the fine porcelain figures that line the shelves. He pauses next to a piece that catches his eye and rests his index finger against its dull surface.

The shopkeep smiles. "Good choice. Very popular."

NTH returns the smile. The item begins to inch toward the edge of the shelf.

The shopkeep's brow furrows. "Careful, now. That's been around a long time."

NTH holds the shopkeep's gaze as the item continues its steady, lemming-like march.

"Hey! What are you---"

A cacophony of exploding procelain cuts the question short. The shopkeep tosses aside his magazine and strides toward the mess. "What'd you do that for?"

By the time the shopkeep reaches the aisle, NTH has somehow reassembled every piece of porcelain into a new figure. It looks nothing like the original. He slides it back onto the shelf.

"No one is going to want this," the shopkeep says. "It doesn't look the same at all!"

NTH claps a hand on the shopkeep's shoulder and grins. "Trust me."

Accord6666Accord6666about 1 month ago

You are a damaged-well-beyound-repair person.

WilCox49WilCox49about 1 month ago

A very unpleasant story--but a very good one. 5*, but I kind of wished I'd stopped reading on page 1.

AnonymousAnonymousabout 2 months ago

So no retribution against Duncan. He's a loose thread that needs tidying up.

nixroxnixrox3 months ago

5 stars - I would have done something like this, if I were to have a similar experience.

However, the torture would have lasted for days and days, and he would have begged me to kill him.

tralan69ertralan69er3 months ago

No talent?

Debatable for sure. I haven't read a story of yours that I didn't like. Good job and thank you.

sbrooks103x

"Spouses were required to attend in order for the employee to come, according to Erin. But I'd noticed pretty early on that several wives somehow didn't get that note." - He had to be there so that he could be cucked.-- You are really good at understanding some things.

\

"Adam, please. It's going to be okay." - Why do they always say that when he TOLD her it wouldn't be okay? -- Could it be the money? Like I said some things.

\

"It was all I could afford" - I thought Richards was going to give him the half million after the divorce? He's spent MONTHS on his "research," yet Richards is only now coming round to give him his money? -- It is after the divorce.

TrainerOfBimbosTrainerOfBimbos3 months ago

I think some people commenting are mistaking legality for morality. Everything Simon did was legal, but it was immoral. Inversely, when Adam killed him, he did something illegal - but he also did something very moral. He didn't just punish someone for ruining and ending the lives of innocents, he prevented that same person from inflicting more harm. It's the same reason why we have prisons - part of it is punishment to act as a deterrent to bad behavior, but part of it is also to keep society safe from sociopaths and murderers. Furthermore - I would say that if Adam wanted to prevent Simon's game from killing any more people (and Adam makes it clear that people DID die, innocent people - children, relatives, etc) he really had only one choice because what Simon did was legal and he'd never be punished for it or removed from society for it to protect the rest of us from his psychopathy. So, as a moral person, what choice did Adam really have? Personally I don't think Adam's rage at Simon was solely focused on his ex-wife Erin. I think that was the kernel of his anger and it grew and bloomed the more Adam learned about what Simon had done, until it reached a peaked crescend that confirmed to him that he had no choice but to rid the world of a literal monster. It was a good story, I liked it quite a bit and I give it a solid 4/5.

oldpantythiefoldpantythief4 months ago

Justice served or justice over done? Guess it depends on how you look at things. I'm thinking it was well deserved, if the MC's research was correct. Playing god with people's lives isn't something a person should do as a hobby or pastime. Some readers feel Simon Richards should have been made to suffer, but that would have been to messy. Best to delete the bastard and get on with your new life knowing he won't be coming after you later. As for Erin, yes, I think she got off too easy, even if it may take time for karma to visit her. Good story with some great payback.

AnonymousAnonymous5 months ago

Not bad for a no talented hack. More please. You weave a mean story.

LA

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