Jaxon
Arnold opens the door and takes my coat as I step out of the elevator of La Manche House, my familyâs Upper West Side residence. âTheyâve delivered the weight room equipment, sir, and weâve already put it up top. Iâve been assembling the furnishings to sell in the second-floor day room, but youâll need to make a few decisions on the more prominent pieces.â
âAll the stuff from when I lived here goes,â I say.
âNevertheless,â Arnold says. âA few things need your review, and Chefâs got fresh-caught tuna. Is six good?â
âSeven. I want to get in a workout.â
âVery good, sir.â He hesitates. âAnd did you get the answer you wanted? Regarding the caller?â
âNot yet, but I will.â
I head up to the top floor, a former ballroom. I recall it as cold and cavernous, but itâs smaller than I remembered. I instructed Arnold to have the window coverings removed from the windows, so itâs quite sunny now.
I peel off my mole, scrub my face, and change into my workout gear.
Arnold appears while Iâm doing squats. âSo youâll be going back, then? To yourâ¦new job?â
âYup.â I grab the jump rope and start jumping. âThey donât want to break ranks and give me the answer I need. But they will.â
Arnold looks baffled. âYou worked the job all day?â
I keep jumping, whipping it under my feet. âToday was mostly training. Tomorrow Iâll have duties. Thereâll be deliveries, I imagine. Somebody mentioned filing.â
Arnold nods. âAnd the people accepted you as a fellow employee?â
âWhy not? But the Papaggio delivery? That was all wrong.â
âI tried to warn youââ
âYeah, yeah, yeah. Itâs fine. It was funny, actually. They thought it was a joke, and the senior designer, Jadaâ¦â I grin. Do you not take anything seriously? âSheâd like to have a word with you. She found it to be a very cruel trick.â
âOh, no,â Arnold says.
âSheâs so serious. Sheâs not the butt-dialer, but sheâs so intense about rules and the team and pulling together. Youâve never met such a little Joan of Arcâthe shining warrior, fighting the good fight with pencils stuck in her bun.â I grab a towel and wipe my face. âShe keeps looking at my eyes when she talks to me instead of staring at the mole or averting her gaze, treating me with respect and dignity. God, people can be so fucking irritating.â
âIs this truly the best use of your time, sir?â
What is this? The day of everybody in the universe questioning me? I give him a stern look.
âAll of this focus on a workplace issueâ¦your parents only just diedâ¦â
I snort and throw the towel over my shoulder, which is more than that comment deserves. âIâm going to need to bring a lunch like other people bring. The people like to bring their lunches in molded plastic containers with specific labels. I donât know where they get them, but Iâll be needing one for tomorrow.â I grab my phone, text Arnold the photo I discreetly shot of Jadaâs sandwich packaging, and then my minute break is over, and I start up the jump rope again.
Arnold furrows his brow at his phone. âAre you sureâ¦â
âOf course Iâm sure. Bringing the same sort of food as they bring will show them Iâm one of the gang. Itâs like a rugby jersey. Once they see me wearing the team jersey, theyâll pass me the ball.â
âYes, Mr. Henningsly.â
I keep hopping. âDo you know a computer program called Excel?â
âI do indeed, Mr. Henningsly.â
âYouâll teach it to me after dinner.â
âItâs a bit complex, sir.â
âI need to know it,â I say.
âVery good, sir.â
Excel continues to be maddening. It seems to have a mind of its own, and you have to create an elaborate formula just to ask it to do something. âWho designed this, Satan himself?â I complain.
Midway through the torture, Arnold gets an email from the tech team. Theyâve enlarged the label image of Jadaâs sandwich and figured out where to get oneâat the airport. A courier has been dispatched.
âDo you have a preference between egg salad and barbeque chicken?â
I frown. The airport seems a bit of an odd place to shop. Itâs not as if these people are going to the airport for their sandwiches. They must have another source for them. âThe chicken, I suppose.â
âVery good, sir.â