Jaxon
There are always a number of urgent if not hyperventilating texts, emails, and voicemails regarding the Wycliff empire, as well as the various holdings I inherited, my social calendar, and random publicity matters. I ignore them all in favor of completing tasks from Varshaâs âgopher list,â a scrawled list of mostly restocking and delivery activities. She drew what I assume is a gopher up top and handed it over, seeming to marshal every bit of willpower to gaze at my nose and not my theatrical mole.
After I complete the tasks on the list, my overlords down in shipping have me run a few things across town, and suddenly itâs lunch.
Jada stops by my desk with a bag of microwave popcorn. âHalf a day with no demerits! Call the papers!â
Is Control Freak Barbie joking with me, now?
âCan you believe it?â I tease.
âWill you be getting lunch delivered by Papaggio again? That would probably do it.â
I produce the insulated bag that Arnold sent me with. âI brought a lunch from home.â
She tilts her head like she canât figure me out. She probably has a perfectly ordered and arranged world where everything makes sense. âDo you live near here?â
I lean back and cross my legs. âIâm staying at a place on West Seventy-sixth Street.â
âWow. Nice.â
âOh, itâs nothing special, trust me,â I say, wishing I hadnât divulged this bit of information. âWhere do you live?â I decide here to unpack my lunch as a demonstration of my regular guy status.
âA building on West Forty-fifth and Ninthâitâs the Times Square side of Hellâs Kitchen. Itâs a cool place. Well, not amazing on a physical level, but a lot of my best friends live there. I had a roommate, a dancer, but she moved in with a guy, and this tiny studio opened up on the top floor and I grabbed it, even though itâs way too expensive for meâ¦somehow I swing it, butââ She falls silent as soon as I pull out my sandwich. âWhat is that?â
âBarbeque chicken.â I open the plastic shell.
âYou brought that from home?â she asks.
âIt came out of a lunch bag from home, did it not? Is there some rule in the PDF about it? Because I honestly canât be bothered to read that whole thing.â
She blinks dramatically. âAre you being funny right now?â
I frown. Iâm used to being the amused one, not the amusing one. I give her a stern look. Sheâs just a poor girl with pencils in her bunâwhy do I care what she thinks?
Usually a hard look is enough to back people off, but not Jada. Also, what the hell is so funny, anyway? Itâs exactly the brand of sandwich she had.
âThat is your bag lunch from home,â she clarifies.
âObviously.â
âBut itâs a vending machine sandwich.â
What the hell is a vending machine sandwich? It doesnât matter. I sit up straight, giving her the lordly look that usually wilts people. âThis is the sandwich,â I bite out, âthat I brought from home.â
Jadaâs eyes glow with stunned amusement, which I find I like less than simple amusement. âWho would pack a vending machine sandwich in a bag lunch from home? Oh my god, did your friend Arnold tell you to do this? Tell me the truth, did Arnold give this to you?â
âI told him what I wanted, and he got it for me.â
âOkay, maybe you asked your friend Arnold for a sandwich to bring, but he got it in a machine, Jack. Heâs playing a joke on you, and itâs not even a funny joke. He got it in a machine.â
Dave comes by wearing a winter hat. âGot what in the machine?â
âThatâs the sandwich Jack brought as his bag lunch,â Jada says. âHe brought a vending machine sandwich from home.â
âDude! You brought a vending machine sandwich from home?â Dave puts his fists on either side of his head and then spreads his fingers, making an explosion sound. âThat is so meta, dude! Fucking meta!â
Jada frowns at the sandwich. âArnold is not a good friend to you. You need to understand that.â She returns to her desk.
âHey, Jack, you donât have to eat at your desk,â Dave says. âCome on.â
I want to stayâIâm feeling unfinished with Jada, but I remind myself Iâm here to ferret out the butt-dialer.
I follow Dave into the gloomy break room. Itâs here that I notice what I thought were display cases are machines that sell sandwiches like mine, along with other food items. These apparently are the vending machines.
âSo meta,â Dave says, feeding a bill into a slot. He pushes a button and a bag of pretzels falls down. He bends down and takes it from a small door, then moves to another machine, this one for soft drinks. âYou ever try this?â he asks, sitting down and ripping open the bag. âPepsi with Snyderâs Pretzels. It canât be Coke, though. The sugariness of the Pepsi contrasts with the salty.â He takes a bit and a swig. âMmm. Otherwise,â he adds with his mouth still full, âIâm gonna recommend Cheez-Its and Cherry Coke. Savage flavor bomb. Savage.â
I spread a paper napkin on my lap. âThanks for the tip.â
âDonât mind Jada. She can be intense, and she works like a maniac, but I guess we should be thankful. This department wouldnât function without her.â
I nod, wishing people would stop talking about Jada. Itâs like this whole place is the Jada show where you canât stop thinking about her, even when sheâs not around.
âSounds like somebody needs to get a life outside of work,â I say.
âAnd whatever you do, donât insult this place. Sheâll go ballistic,â Dave warns. âThis place is everything to her. Donât get me wrong, I donât want this place shuttering, either, but Jada would shoot herself out of a canon in a flaming barrel if it kept this place open longer.â
I sit next to him. âWhy bother? Itâs just a job that doesnât produce much beyond misery for people in cubicles, as far as I can tell.â
Dave nearly chokes on a pretzel. âDo not, I repeat, do not say that in front of Jada.â
I make a note to repeat exactly that in front of Jada. I canât wait. Sheâll get that frown and stare pretty daggers at me.
âPromise,â Dave says. âOh, alsoââ He holds up the pretzel bag. âThese pretzels with the saltwater taffies that Varsha keeps in a bowl at reception? Killer combo. Her family has a saltwater taffy shop in Atlantic City, and she brings them for us special.â
âSo whatâs your job here exactly?â I ask.
âAccounts receivable and payable.â Dave pulls out a Tupperware of something that might be gazpacho. âBilling specific to the design department. Itâs just a stepping stone while I go to night school. Iâm working to be a CPA. A good CPA is worth their weight in gold.â
âSoâ¦three million and some?â
âExcuse me?â
âYou weigh what, one sixty? A pound of gold is twenty thousand. Last I knew.â
âHuh.â Dave stirs his cold soup. âI suppose thatâs a good fact to know. Strange but good.â
âA stepping stone to where?â I ask, pulling the bread off my sandwich and looking inside. There is no way Iâll be eating this sandwich.
Dave takes off his hat and sets it aside. Everybody here seems to have the same clumsily knit hat in the same shade of royal blue with a big pom pom on the top.
Dave tells me about his dream job. Heâs speeding up his plans due to âWycliff-pocalypse,â as he calls it. He promptly launches into a lot of bad Bert stories, which gives me the perfect segue.
âI hear there was a butt-dial incident during a company call. And Bert was lividâ¦â
âThat was hilarious. Justâ¦wow.â He tosses a wrapper into the garbage. âYou wouldâve loved it. I mean, the guy deserved it. Some pompous jackalope who never worked a day in his life telling us how to feel.â
âAnd somebody wasâ¦making fun of the guy?â
Dave snorts. âIt was savage. You wouldâve loved it.â
âI love it,â I assure him. âWho was it?â
Dave turns to look at me now. âIâd tell you if I could, but then Iâd have to kill you. And then people would kill me.â He snorts. âBert was pissed, though!â
I give him my best conspiratorial smile, the conspiratorial smile that has pried bits of gossip from tight-lipped royals and coaxed the primmest of socialites into outrageous misbehavior. âNow I have to know.â
âDude,â he says. âI canât.â
âJust between us,â I say. âRenata?â I try. âShondrella?â
âThere was a pact.â He shakes his head. âI canât.â Like heâs powerless over the whole thing.
âI wonât tell,â I say.
âWe said it wouldnât leave the room,â Dave says.
I canât believe how intent everybody is to uphold this ridiculous pact. âIâm so curious now. Come on now,â I say breezily. âDonât be boring!â
âSorry.â
I study his face, shocked. Iâm used to people falling all over themselves to anticipate my needs and desires, to give me what I want before I can even ask.
Now suddenly Iâm in this opposite world where these people are withholding information for no other reason than their little pact.
Never mind.
Nobody keeps secrets from me for long.