It had all happened so suddenly.
The small party at the McDonnell's uptown penthouse suite had been in progress for roughly two hours. Fourteen people -- all executives of Osterman's International Consulting Firm or their spouses and guests -- had been mingling, drinking, and occasionally acting foolish, thoroughly enjoying themselves and the lucrative lifestyle their employment had provided them. Stout, gregarious, and bustling Barbara McDonnell acted the proper host, while her twenty-year-old daughter -- equally stout, gregarious, and bustling -- lent a hand wherever she could. Mrs. McDonnell's husband was still in Kuwait and hadn't been able to get back in time, but he urged his executive team to attend the get-together at his penthouse anyway. His wife was familiar with all the guests, and she loved a good party, so he knew she wouldn't view it as an inconvenience.
And then, all hell broke loose.
At first, the guests didn't see anything out of the ordinary. A pair of black men in business casual appeared in the kitchen, smiling warmly at the hostess and making small talk. Everyone thought they were guests too.
Then a few more appeared, accompanied by what appeared to be their wives. Some at the party felt there was something 'off' about them, though. One of the guests -- the firm's financial officer -- leaned in to whisper to the company's foremost corporate lawyer.
"Do you recognize them?" he asked.
"No," she replied, casting a puzzled frown at the black folks mingling through the group. "Maybe they work for those private contractors McDonnell likes to use?"
Fifteen minutes later, all the newcomers were pointing guns at the McDonnell guests.
**********
"A'ight, ya'll," a large, bald black man yelled over the frightened babbling. "Listen up!"
The guests had been herded into the spacious main floor with its open concept design, massive blue-green sectional couch, and luxurious floor coverings. The anxious attendees were crouched on the floor or sitting on the couch or one of the two love seats, surrounded by over a dozen grim intruders holding guns. Their captors were hard-faced men and women, all dressed in expensive clothes -- well-groomed and menacing. They held their weapons confidently; it was abundantly clear that they knew their way around a gun.
"Ya'll can call me Mr. Trevor," the spokesman said, grinning. "Now, before ya'll freak out and do something you shouldn't do, let me say it loud n' clear -- we will shoot you if you give us a reason. Ya feel me?"
Total silence.
"Good. Now, me and my crew, we got a job to do here tonight. You folks are the job. Ya feel me again?"
Lisa Carlyle, the ranking executive among them, her long black hair flecked with bits of white, spoke up. "I'm afraid I don't understand," she stated calmly. "If you are here to rob the place, we aren't-"
Mr. Trevor burst out laughing. "Rob the place? Are you shittin' me? Do we look like a street gang to you, lady?"
Lisa Carlyle glanced quickly around at the other members of Mr. Trevor's crew. "No, I guess not."
"It's 'cuz we black, right?" Mr. Trevor chortled. "Black folk with guns. They must be here to steal our watches and wallets, is that it?"
A few of his men smiled, amused. Near the kitchen, three of Mr. Trevor's crew were unpacking large, heavy bags and setting up some sort of equipment, but the guests were only passingly curious about it. Their attention was riveted on Mr. Trevor and all the guns around them.
"Goddamn, that's funny," Mr. Trevor said to no one in particular, and then he crouched down to get face-to-face with the group's spokeswoman. "No, we ain't here to rob you, Lisa Carlyle, Chief Operating Officer of Osterman's International Consulting Firm. No, we're here for something else."
The woman's expression was still calm, but her eyes narrowed.
"I see the light dawns," Mr. Trevor chuckled, standing back up. "Yeah, we know who you folks are -- Gary Peterson, Chief Financial Officer at Osterman's; Debra Simmons, Chief Human Resources Officer; Barbara McDonnell, wife of CEO Carter McDonnell, and their daughter Rebecca; James Paige, Chief Administrative Officer; Penelope Stone, Osterman's hot shot lawyer; and on and on it goes. Eight of you here represent most of the leadership of Osterman's, the other six of you are either related to, guests of, or married to one of these muthafuckas."
The group shared nervous glances.
Mr. Trevor's face turned deadly serious. "Naw, we ain't no common thugs," he intoned ominously.
Silence descended again, finally broken by Lisa Carlyle. "What do you want, then?" she asked simply.
Mr. Trevor cocked his head, a faint smile on his face. "You're a cool customer, ain't ya, lady? Well, it's real simple: we've been hired to do a job here tonight. We're supposed to 'send a message' to the people who pull yo' strings -- your Board of Directors and your absent CEO. He lucky he ain't here."
"You see, yo' company has been pissing people off, and not just here in the States. Probably got something to do with that shit your contractors pulled in Kuwait and Dubai. Who knows? The point is.... some angry folks with a lotta money gave us one helluva paycheck to come here tonight and make sure you people back off."
"Now, normally, we'd just take the lot of ya in a truck somewhere and that would be all she wrote. Make ya vanish. It sets just the right tone, because yo' superiors be looking over their shoulders for months. It throws them all off -- they shittin' their pants wondering when they goin' be next, and their key people are out of play, so their plans are thrown off, too."
"But I don't think we need to do that here tonight," Mr. Trevor smiled benevolently, and a few of the guests breathed a sigh of relief. "I still got to send that message, though. We ain't gonna kill ya, but we gots to do something to ya."
A loud crash startled them, causing everyone to jump and look behind them. Cursing, one of the men in the kitchen retrieved the hefty film camera he had dropped, shrugging an apology to Mr. Trevor. A series of tripods mounted with digital cameras had also been assembled and stood in a row like silent, judgmental sentinels.
"Now," Mr. Trevor clapped his hands, drawing their attention back to him. "I'm gonna give you folks a choice. You can decide for yourself how this all plays out tonight."
"What do you mean, a choice?" Jim Paige asked, confused. A wide-eyed woman, the stereotypical blonde and busty trophy wife, huddled behind him.
"Well," Mr. Trevor grinned, relishing the moment. "Option number one is we beat the shit out of all ya'll. And I don't mean a few bruises here and there. I'm talking broken bones, bust up faces, and time in the hospital."
A frightened hush fell on the group.