Jaxon
Iâm discreetly texting with Arnold, sending him some delivery stuff to collate onto a central Excel sheet. Naturally, heâs taking his own sweet time with it. I find this almost as annoying as the fact that nearly the entire office gang is gathered across the room by the windows.
The cool kids all gathered by the windows, I suppose you could say, or at least the pathetically struggling office worker version of the cool kids, which isnât all that cool.
As a man whoâs rather vigorously hated, youâd think Iâm used to being excluded from things, but in fact, itâs the opposite. People constantly invite me to their gatherings. My presence adds a note of controversy if not notoriety, a way to spice up an otherwise sure-to-be-boring event. I rarely show up, but Iâm always invited.
Not that I care about being excluded from whatever idiotic display it is Iâm seeing here. Some sort of meeting that seems to be led by our resident spitfire, pencil-bun Joan of Arc herself, Jada Herberger.
They chat excitedly in hushed tones; itâs quite the work family hoedown.
I focus back on the text, ignoring them. Ignoring her.
We honor our pacts and thereâs nothing you can do about it. Not one. Little. Thing.
Jada has no idea who sheâs dealing with. She and her mighty little attitude and perky posture and perfect little nose. She thinks she can stop me?
Jada looks happy and radiant, and she seems to be complimenting somebody, lovingly cooing over them.
I grit my teeth. Whoever could be the unlucky recipient of such an outpouring of love from buzzkill Jada?
Not that I care to be part of it. Itâll be a one-on-one thing when I find and break the weak link that I know to be here. Itâs not as if people divulge secrets when thereâs a group listening. Once I get the identity, Iâll determine next steps after that.
Somebody from shipping is suddenly in my face. âDo you have the stock level update?â
âWorking on it,â I growl.
He looks at my computer screen where a blue circle bounces around on a field of black. âWhen do you think youâll have it?â
Whenever my valet-slash-personal assistant finishes itâthatâs the real answer, but I donât need to be Workaday Wally to know itâs not the one to give. âYouâll get it when you get it,â I say.
âWhat does that mean?â he asks.
âSoon,â I say, watching the group. Who the hell is Jada so lovey-dovey over? Not that it matters.
âPleistocene era soon or today soon?â he pursues.
I grit my teeth. Life is so much easier when you can dismiss people, like clicking the X on an annoying pop-up window. âYouâll know when it happens,â I inform him.
He mumbles something and walks off.
Finally I canât stand it anymore. I stroll over to see what the fuss is.
Dave grins. âHave you met Keith yet?â
A snarl rises up from my chest unbidden. âKeith?â
âYouâd remember if you met Keith,â Dave assures me. âLet Jack see.â
People shift around. Jada and Shondrella the fiftysomething fashionista are kneeling on either side of a dead cactusâif you can call it that. Itâs more like a spindly, spiny six-foot-high husk that used to be a cactus. Shondrella is poking at the dirt with a toothpick.
âKeith the Cactus,â Jada says, beaming at the thing. âWe found him next to a dumpster down on the street and weâve been trying to rehabilitate him in this sunny window. Heâs totally getting better!â
Is this some sort of joke? Itâs obvious the thing is dead. âA garbage cactus,â I say.
âRescue cactus,â Jada says. âHe has his own InstagramâKeith the Rescue Cactus.â She puts on a baby voice and points at one of the protrusions. âLook at his little arm. He was all alone in the world, and nobody cared about him, but weâre saving him.â
âNot from the looks of it,â I say.
She glares at me, lips pursed into a luscious little rosebud of admonition. âLuckily youâre not the be-all and end-all of cactus knowledge.â
âIt doesnât take a be-all and end-all of cactus knowledge to see that itâs dead.â
âYouâre just saying that because you didnât see how he was before,â Jada says. âWe worked together to research food and pooled our money to get a light meter, and heâs respondingâsee? Come here.â Lacey shows me a smooth patch of green the size of a thumbprint. âThis was all brown before. Heâs getting better.â
âYou probably just rubbed off some dirt,â I say.
âNo, man, weâre helping him,â Dave says.
Iâm still eyeing Jada. âRhymes with bossed jaws.â
Jada looks confused, then she works it out. Her glare flares, connecting right to my groin. âNo cause is ever lost.â
I donât know why I should be so irritated by the fact that this womanâs ridiculously fierce loyalty extends all the way to a plant from the garbage.
âIt doesnât matter what you think, does it? Everybody can see heâs getting better.â
âDude,â Dave says. âHeâs bouncing back. But you canât tell Bert. Bert can never know about Keith. As far as Bert is concerned, Keith is just some sad office plant that we never think about.â
âWait, what? Bert thinks itâs a sad office plant?â I tease, but people arenât listening. As if they havenât irritated me enough, theyâre now literally breaking into song.
âGo Keeeeeith, go Keeeeeeeith, go Keeeeeeith.â
Theyâre moving their hands around, singing like the fucking Von Trapps, or Charleyâs family, singing Queen songs around the Christmas tree.
Itâs so sweet, so saccharine, it hurts my teeth.
It hurts my entire soul.