Noble Windmills
For two decades, Milo Peters successfully scales a twenty-billion-dollar corporate ladder, largely ignoring the unseemly compromises and steady erosion of principles that his climb to the top entails. He can't allow himself to think about such things; it hurts too much. Everything changes with a promotion to corporate headquarters back in Chicago, home to countless painful memories: of his father and old world values ... of a young woman and a relationship squandered ... of all the things Milo Peters had meant to be. What better setting for a midlife nuclear meltdown? Nursing another hangover, Milo heads to Ashton's, the diner where he and his friends had gathered every week during college. There, he runs into Luke Papadakis, his closest childhood friend. Amid the multiplying uncertainties in his life, a dose of Luke is exactly what Milo needs. However, this meeting is no chance reunion. Luke works for the government and is part of a secret investigation into financial improprieties inside Milo's corporation. He wants Milo to become an informant-a whistleblower-and sacrifice everything he has spent his life working toward. Milo faces the most difficult decision of his life, and the ramifications of his decision will prove to be more devastating than he could ever anticipate.
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Noble Windmills
For two decades, Milo Peters successfully scales a twenty-billion-dollar corporate ladder, largely ignoring the unseemly compromises and steady erosion of principles that his climb to the top entails. He can't allow himself to think about such things; it hurts too much. Everything changes with a promotion to corporate headquarters back in Chicago, home to countless painful memories: of his father and old world values ... of a young woman and a relationship squandered ... of all the things Milo Peters had meant to be. What better setting for a midlife nuclear meltdown? Nursing another hangover, Milo heads to Ashton's, the diner where he and his friends had gathered every week during college. There, he runs into Luke Papadakis, his closest childhood friend. Amid the multiplying uncertainties in his life, a dose of Luke is exactly what Milo needs. However, this meeting is no chance reunion. Luke works for the government and is part of a secret investigation into financial improprieties inside Milo's corporation. He wants Milo to become an informant-a whistleblower-and sacrifice everything he has spent his life working toward. Milo faces the most difficult decision of his life, and the ramifications of his decision will prove to be more devastating than he could ever anticipate.
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Noble Windmills

Noble Windmills

by Mitch Engel
Noble Windmills

Noble Windmills

by Mitch Engel

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Overview

For two decades, Milo Peters successfully scales a twenty-billion-dollar corporate ladder, largely ignoring the unseemly compromises and steady erosion of principles that his climb to the top entails. He can't allow himself to think about such things; it hurts too much. Everything changes with a promotion to corporate headquarters back in Chicago, home to countless painful memories: of his father and old world values ... of a young woman and a relationship squandered ... of all the things Milo Peters had meant to be. What better setting for a midlife nuclear meltdown? Nursing another hangover, Milo heads to Ashton's, the diner where he and his friends had gathered every week during college. There, he runs into Luke Papadakis, his closest childhood friend. Amid the multiplying uncertainties in his life, a dose of Luke is exactly what Milo needs. However, this meeting is no chance reunion. Luke works for the government and is part of a secret investigation into financial improprieties inside Milo's corporation. He wants Milo to become an informant-a whistleblower-and sacrifice everything he has spent his life working toward. Milo faces the most difficult decision of his life, and the ramifications of his decision will prove to be more devastating than he could ever anticipate.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781450243285
Publisher: iUniverse, Incorporated
Publication date: 07/21/2010
Pages: 232
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.49(d)

Read an Excerpt

Noble Windmills


By Mitch Engel

iUniverse, Inc.

Copyright © 2010 Mitch Engel
All right reserved.

ISBN: 978-1-4502-4328-5


Chapter One

At six thirty on a frigid Saturday morning in Chicago, even the sun has the good sense not to be up yet. My third full week back in town already had been enough of a blur, but then came the tapas, tequila, and more tequila at Friday night's festivities. As a card-carrying captain of industry, I couldn't allow myself to succumb entirely to human frailty. I figured I at least should muster the energy to crawl out of bed and tackle a week's worth of unread Wall Street Journals. Of course, I chose Ashton's. Sliding onto the red vinyl of that window booth under the "L" tracks on Franklin meant I really was home where I belonged. There I could enjoy some time alone with a couple of over-easy, bacon grease, and another hangover. Ashton's always had been the perfect place to pull myself together.

At such an ungodly hour, I hadn't expected any familiar faces, especially not Luke's. It had been four, maybe five or six years; I'd lost track of the time since I last saw him. But there he sat at our table, the table where our mongrel gang had gathered so often in college. The table where Carly and I first had realized we were becoming more than just friends. The table where Luke would join me a few years later, after Carly had told me we should try to remain good friends. The table where the others had joined me on the morning after my father's funeral. I always could count on this table to help bring clarity to my life, so it was only fitting that Luke be sitting there when not much of anything seemed clear anymore.

"Peters, I'd heard you were back in Chicago and figured if I ever wanted to see you again, coming here was my best shot."

"Luke, I was planning to call you next week, I promise. It's been way too long and that's my fault ... but, man, you look awesome."

"Don't sweat it. You've been busy doing the Lord's work ... you know, single-handedly ridding the world of sloth."

Then he flashed that grin of his and I knew I'd been forgiven. Once more. Years of built-up guilt, instantly absolved by his welcoming eye contact. Since grade school, Loukas Alexio Papadakis had been cutting me slack. After all this time I still couldn't hold up my end of a lifelong friendship. When he and Natalie had celebrated their big Greek wedding twenty years earlier, Luke could have asked any one of his numerous close friends or relatives to stand up as best man. Instead, the privilege had been mine-and still I managed to shirk almost every responsibility by not arriving until the day before the ceremony. I'd allowed the latest round of important meetings in my life to take precedence. At the reception I at least did remember to make a toast, though I hadn't bothered to prepare any comments in advance. I spoke what was in my heart and watched in amazement as Luke arose from his chair at the head of the bridal table so that everyone in attendance could see the tears streaming down his face like badges of honor. If I'd gotten around to marriage, Luke for sure would have been the best man, by every definition.

Age forty-four definitely looked better on him than on the narrow, sagging face I'd seen in the bathroom mirror that morning. His curly black hair might have been slightly thinner, with perhaps a hint of gray around the edges. The beaming smile probably exposed an extra crease or two. Otherwise, Luke looked the way he always had. Dark skin, hulky shoulders, shirt-sleeves rolled up above the elbows of his thick hairy arms. It was great to see him sitting there, even if his positive influence was sure to pull me out of the unprecedented level of self-disgust toward which I'd been working myself. I wasn't going to settle for a mere midlife crisis; I'd been gearing up for a midlife nuclear meltdown.

In theory, I should have been happy as a lark, or clam, or any of those other allegedly elated fauna. The latest promotion had put me on the executive committee of a $21-billion-dollar holding company, a respected publicly held corporation. I was one of only four direct reports to the CEO. My new responsibilities entailed a relocation to our vaunted corporate headquarters, which overlooked Grant Park and Lake Michigan. After more than two decades of chasing roadmaps, my mailing address finally was back in my hometown of Chicago. Not since college days at DePaul had I been able to experience the perennial disappointment of the Cubs and Bears in person. To top it off, I was making more money in a year than that skinny middle-class kid from the suburbs had thought he might earn in a lifetime. So where was all this fruit I was supposed to be reaping? The clover I was supposed to be rolling in? Where was the faintest twinge of satisfaction for what I'd accomplished?

Throughout the years I'd convinced myself. The hard work, the sacrifices would pay off. The compromises and misplaced allegiances. The manipulation. The disingenuousness. On the way up the mountain, the trade-offs had seemed such a natural and integral part of the climb. But a steady erosion of principles can lay one barren. It's no surprise that so little grows above the tree line.

I should have been gratified that my new corporate staff had hosted a welcoming bash the night before. But it wasn't like any of them had been forced to dig into their own pockets; the company picked up the tab and the costs would get thrown against my P&L. All the officers and managers who now reported to me had gotten a free dinner and drinks out of the deal. Sure, some of them might have given up a Friday night with their wives or families. But what choice did they have? I was their new boss. It was my turn to place unrealistic demands on each and every one of them and then freeze their salaries at the first sign of a tough year. I'd be the next forked tongue in their lives to spew whatever was necessary to justify another inane approval procedure or the next round of cost cutting. They knew it and I knew it, yet with each tray of shooters we'd high-fived and fist-pumped like we really intended to perform like some cohesive team. I abhorred such hypocrisy ... and really abhorred being one of its poster boys.

I should have been touched by the glowing tributes included in Wilson Delaney's remarks. After all, he was our CEO and the person most responsible for my swift ascent through the ranks of the corporation. Problem was, I no longer could stomach being in the same room with this Machiavellian snake. Nonetheless, I'd plastered on my best exaggerated smile and embraced him with my manliest man-hug.

I'd lost count of the empty shot glasses we lined up. I normally wouldn't drink that much with business associates ... I did my best drinking alone. But I'd needed to show them what a regular guy I could be. Teambuilding can be selfless on occasion, so I kept right on drinking until the last few stragglers crammed into a taxi. After they cleared out, I kept drinking purely for myself, trying to dislodge a disdain for everything I'd become. Luke shoved a heaping stack of pancakes aside to offer me his full attention. "How's your mom doing, Milo?"

"Great ... gets around amazingly well for almost eighty. Still misses my dad, though."

"What's it been, eleven years?"

"You're something else, Luke. You never forget."

"Hey, your parents were like second family to me."

"Yeah, we had some amazing times growing up, didn't we?" My mind started drifting back to a treasure of memories, but he apparently wanted to keep me in the present.

"Please give your mom a hug for me."

"Sure ... I've promised to take her to dinner as soon as I get more settled in." I was tempted to pull out my BlackBerry and send myself an e-mail so I wouldn't forget. "So how'd you know I'd be here this morning?"

"Just a hunch and I decided to take the chance. We always ate breakfast here on Saturdays." He seemed eager to change subjects. "What do you hear from Hilpert or Jenkins?"

"Luke, you know me ... I'm lousy at keeping in touch."

I thought he might be a little relieved to learn that I hadn't been any better at staying connected with the others than I had with him. Instead, there was a trace of disappointment before he quickly moved on. "What about Carly?"

"Seems to be doing fantastic. Married, two kids, still living in Cincinnati. She jumped law firms last year as a senior partner. I knew she'd become one heckuva litigator."

Luke's attention perked up. "So at least you've been talking to her?"

"Nah, I Google her name every now and then. She's been featured in a few articles that always come up."

Carly was the kind of ex-girlfriend with whom a guy could maintain a genuinely amicable relationship and should want to. Yet somehow I'd never found or made the time to pick up the phone. My loss and I knew it. So did Luke, but he wasn't one to pile on.

Reunited for less than five minutes and already we'd whisked through some of the foremost individuals on my lengthy guilt list. But indeed, confession must have been healthy for the soul because even these feeble acknowledgments of my self-absorption were starting to assuage the angst I constantly lugged around. Luke was just plain good for me and always had been ... and I could use any available assistance to feel a little less shitty about myself.

The repugnance had built over years of career obsession. Despite repeated lofty intentions, I'd been unable to pull myself out of the spiral. Success in the business world was too intoxicating. Victories kept trumping virtues in the race to get ahead. With each passing month, the emotional burden had grown weightier from the pillars of my youth. My once deep-rooted convictions and the people most important to me now stood in stark, tortuous contrast to the shallow man I'd become. The foundation had been so rock solid. Those formative years were chock-full of principled loved ones and nurturing role models. I'd launched into adulthood with such dead aim on the sanctity of friendships and family and human compassions but then so carelessly misplaced my priorities. All these years later I was empty inside. I couldn't remember the last time I'd really put myself out for someone ... or the last time I'd even had a genuinely good time. How had I allowed myself to veer so far off course?

Exiting Ashton's, I tossed the unread Journals into a trash can on the sidewalk, a symbolic act of my renewed commitment. Now that I was back in Chicago, I would bring my life into a proper balance. This time I could do it. In this city of broad shoulders and second chances, I'd be able to discover that born-again decency. Absolute faith in myself was a long way from being restored, but my oldest and closest friend had provided enough encouragements to help me believe I wasn't a lost cause quite yet. The atrophy wasn't total. Luke's presence and affirming personality had rekindled a long dormant optimism.

Chapter Two

Since childhood, Luke had insisted that our friendship was solely attributable to his beloved Greek ancestry. I could close my eyes and still hear him making his case in the school cafeteria. "Sure, those teachers can pretend English is based on some Latin alphabet if they want to, but any true scholar knows that the lousy Romans lifted most of their letters from us ... that the Greeks came up with the original alphabet."

As a point of fact, our tight friendship had been a direct result of the alphabet and a first-grade teacher in Park Ridge who seated us according to it. Back then I was Mikey rather than Milo, and one Michael Peters had been assigned the desk directly behind one Loukas Papadakis, who immediately turned and started talking to me. So naturally, I started talking to him, at least whenever I could get a word in. Only thirty minutes into our elementary education, that teacher already was threatening to separate the two of us. But for the next dozen years, Luke and I weren't separated very often. Even our decisions to attend different colleges hadn't kept us too far apart. We both chose to stay in town-Luke accepting his full academic scholarship to Northwestern, me graciously allowing my parents to foot the bill for DePaul.

As kids, if we caught the one traffic light correctly and ignored the two stop signs, we could travel the distance between our houses in under three minutes on bicycle. That trip was made thousands of times. We took up the same hobbies and played on the same sports teams. We registered for the same classes, watched the same TV shows, and dated the same kinds of girls. We were like brothers-except for the fact that his body reached maturity by summer of eighth grade, while my battle with puberty seemed to stretch on forever. Luke was five-ten, solid and stocky, dark-skinned, and able to sprout a full beard over a three-day weekend. I finally topped out at a lanky six-five with wispy blond hair and a mama's boy complexion. We rarely were mistaken for twins.

Ethnic heritage permeated each of our households and childhoods. Luke's grandparents had immigrated to Chicago from the Greek city of Larissa. Mine had left a small village in Serbia and ended up in Gary, Indiana. Growing up, we both were treated to authentic foods, massive holiday gatherings, and cherished stories about the old country. My visits to his house, or likewise his to mine, were greeted with a mandatory round of hugs and kisses from anyone in sight. In either home, the shows of affection were heartfelt and there was no such thing as inhibition.

The Papadakis bloodlines had remained purer since arriving in the States. Both of Luke's parents were Greek, and after dating dozens of all-American girls, Luke finally returned to the fold. Once we'd been old enough to journey out of Park Ridge on our own, he would drag a group of us into the city every spring for the Greek Independence Day Parade. Afterwards, we'd stop by his uncle's restaurant on Halsted, where IDs weren't required for friends of the family. To this day I still feel a need to keep an eye out for cops if I hear somebody order ouzo or Roditis.

During junior year of college, it had been love at first sight for Luke. The stunningly attractive Natalie Straka was waving from the last float of his beloved parade. Her embarrassment was obvious as she sat upon the towering throne, draped in robes, small children at her feet. It was a favor to her Greek father, an insurance agent who both designed and sponsored the tribute to Athena. Luke had been convinced that she was waving only at him and so struck up a conversation-or at least as much of a conversation as one can strike while jogging beside a flatbed truck for six-and-a-half blocks through Greektown. He somehow convinced her to meet us at his uncle's restaurant and the rest would be history. Like everyone else, Natalie was smitten by Luke's incorrigible charm and forevermore would be his Greek goddess.

On the other hand, I don't think I ever dated a girl with an ounce of Serbian blood-but in my defense, we Serbs didn't have the advantage of our own parade. In the Peters family, cross-pollinating wasn't unprecedented. My mother was a self-proclaimed "melting pot mutt"-part Italian, part German, part Norwegian, but no-part Serbian. However, she was all-parts devoted to my father and the family obligations that came as part of the marriage package.

Following their wedding, my mom moved into a household with my dad's mother and two brothers. My parents hadn't needed the family financial support that many newlyweds did in those days; it was the other way around. My dad had been supporting his family since he was seventeen years old, when his father, my grandfather, died during the overnight shift at a Gary steel mill. Speaking only broken English, my grandmother had taken in sewing and laundry but couldn't earn enough to feed and clothe three teenaged boys. My father was the eldest son of proud but uneducated immigrants, so in Balkan tradition he assumed the role of family patriarch and with it the responsibility of breadwinner. During his senior year of high school, he worked one job in the evenings, another on weekends, and still maintained high marks in the classroom. But any plans to enter college were scrapped because of the need to pursue full-time employment.

Once he'd earned his high school diploma, my father started catching the daily South Shore to Chicago before dawn. For most of the day he would pound the pavement, searching for a salaried position that might offer a career path. Then late in the afternoon, he would train it back to Gary for his night job. Nothing had materialized after more than a month; in fact, he'd rarely gotten past a receptionist. At the time, his name was Djorde Petrovic-and that time was 1947. Slavic stereotypes and prejudices being what they were, doors didn't open as easily as they might have. One morning he finally took the step he'd hoped to avoid. He marched himself and his two younger brothers down to Gary's City Hall and filed papers to legally change their names. With the stroke of his pen, each was officially anglicized. Eighteen-year-old Djorde Petrovic became George Peters, sixteen-year-old Tihomir became Timothy, and twelve-year-old Milorad became Michael.

(Continues...)



Excerpted from Noble Windmills by Mitch Engel Copyright © 2010 by Mitch Engel. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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