After a peaceful night, Lille got moving early the next morning with Matt.
The first step was to establish contact among the landlords.
Humans have created skyscrapers hundreds of meters tall, can kill tens of thousands of lives instantaneously with weapons of war, and can flee this 6 sextillion ton planet beneath their feet to fly into space.
But a single human can easily be tripped by a small stone and die from the fall.
The more scattered and suspicious of each other we are, the easier we fall right into the enemyâs hands.
"...Mr. Rigordo, incidents like yesterday are bound to happen many more times, but if we unite, we can certainly curb those ruffians."
Mr. Rigordo was in his fifties with salt-and-pepper hair, but he was in good shape.
It was clear from that day he nearly fought with the thugs that not only was he tough, but he also had a fiery temper.
Mrs. Rigordo seemed to have passed away early due to illness, but he still had a young sonâ
Unfortunately, the boy wouldnât listen to reason and got mixed up with a gang; the father and son hadnât been in contact for a year.
"You talk like my father, but youâre just a kid whose hair hasnât even grown in properlyâyou probably havenât seen the news..."
"Iâll be the president of the landlordsâ association; I can take this risk, and Iâve also hired Attorney Murdoch as our legal counsel."
Rigordo looked at Lille with surprise: "Kid, your mom still owes me three monthsâ rent. Where did you get the money?"
"Uh..." Lille was embarrassed, "I convinced him to be our legal counsel for free.
As for the rent, Iâll pay you back. If you donât mind, I can clean for you every day to make up for the interest."
Rigordo took a sip of tea, glanced at Matt beside him, and sized up Lille again:
"If you had only said the first part, kid, I might have considered kicking you and your mother out tomorrow.
But forget about the cleaning, it would be troublesome if you worked yourself to death.
Whatâs your plan?"
"The first aim of increasing numbers is to put pressure on the NYPD. With incidents like yesterday, if thereâs only one caller, the NYPD can completely ignore it.
But if everyone in the apartment, even everyone on the street, calls together, itâs a different story."
"Naive..."
"Plus, if there are many of us, we can certainly catch those ruffians. In fact, thatâs exactly what I plan to do; Iâll handle the evidence, and Attorney Matt will provide legal support."
Clearly, this was more to Rigordoâs interest; he swallowed back what he was going to say.
Yes, he just wanted to catch those thugs and give them a beating.
"Catching them is to raise their cost of deploying ruffians.
If theyâve bribed the NYPD with money, for every additional capture, the NYPD will demand more money from the enemy.
They use violence and fear to divide us, but we can use their greed against them."
Clearly Rigordo didnât want to hear this kind of strategic explanation, and seeing his landlordâs frown deepening again, Lille quickly said:
"And obviously, the ones they use to intimidate us are just ruffiansâtough-looking on ordinary days but they run as soon as they meet real resistance.
We take care of one, and more will want to band together; then they send more, and we continue to beat them up.
In short, we fight until theyâre too scared to come back."
"Thatâs the way to do it!" Rigordo breathed heavily through his nose, "Damn it, Iâve been pissed off at those bastards for a long time!"
As he spoke, Rigordo banged on the wooden stairs with a thud, thud, thud, sounding as if he were going to war.
"Everyone out! Everybody come outâI know youâre all home. Not one of you had the guts to stand up yesterday. Nowâget out here!"
The residents hesitantly opened their doors, and they all had families, men and women, and children.
Although it was working hours, they were still at homeâobviously, they were unemployed.
"Listen up, we canât ever let those damn thugs bully us again. From now on, Iâm joining Lilleâs tenantsâ association, and you should too."
"Donât think you can keep out of this like you did yesterday. If I really canât stand it and am driven out, youâll have to go too!"
"I might lose some money, but who else will let you stay on credit like this?"
"Nat, Facardo, John, Deanâyou lot of big men, so strong looking, yet as timid as women!"
Just then, the woman of the house spoke up, "Rigordo! Shut the fuck up, I told you we should resist! If it werenât for this coward holding me back, I wouldâve gone out and beaten those guys up yesterday!"
Her voice was as harsh as a gooseâs call, and the womanâs shoulders were almost as broad as her husbandâs. Her six-foot-tall husband looked more like her brother.
"Hmm." Rigordo laughed and gave a gentlemanly bow, "My apologies to you, my Natalia."
Now Nataliaâs husband, who seemed to be Latino, was displeased, "We have children, Rigordo."
"But youâre right; if things are as complicated as you say, we should band together."
"No, we have children!" someone retorted, "Have you forgotten last monthâs case?"
All of a sudden, Rigordo exploded at the frail Irishman, "Then you scram! We do the hard work, and you enjoy the good life? Thereâs no such thing in this world!"
The other person sulkily shut the door.
Thereâs no denying it, Rigordo indeed had some clout in there; Lilleâs ears were a bit sore from just a few shouts.
Lille knew it was his time to step up, "Everyone, Mr. Rigordo is telling the truth! If we donât stand up for ourselves, weâll end up homeless!"
"New York is a dump, but itâs our home. Right here, this is our home!"
"Think about it! Helping each other is the key to our survival!"
Without further ado, the stakes were clear, yet Lille knew they needed some time to digest everything.
Yesterday the thugs kicked in the apartmentâs main door; the day after tomorrow, they might break into their homes.
Lille didnât think they were unable to understand that.
"Thank you for your help, Mr. Rigordo."
"Hmph, a trifle." Rigordo took another sip of tea and then solemnly said to Lille, "But just like they said, they have families.
You have to promise me, youâll protect them."
"Of course." Lille raised his right hand, "I swear to protect them. In fact, weâll protect each other. Thatâs what mutual protection means."
"Hmmâmutual protection, you talk like...
Get to it; I imagine youâre not planning to just sit here and wait for someone to come knocking? If thatâs the case, I might as well take United Construction Companyâs money tomorrow and find a place to retire..."
Mr. Rigordo turned and went back to his own room.
Matt said, "All things considered, not a bad outcome. But convincing the rest of the community wonât be so simple."
"Right, thatâs why we need to get the word out and then ensure safety protocols are in place."
"How?"
Lille smiled slightly, "Technology changes lives. Weâll use the internet, but before that, we need to register a tenantsâ association.
Then I need to set up a company that provides community services so that I can offer some technical support to the tenantsâ association in an official capacity.
Like replacing all this old wiring in the apartment, and then rearranging the security system.
Iâm a legal illiterate; Iâll need to engage your firm for this matter."
Matt shrugged, "I was already decided on helping you. But youâre naturally quite commanding.
Give me some time. But honestly, Iâve never helped someone register a company before...
Do I count as having a big client now?"
"Not yet." Lille said meaningfully, "But you will in the future."