Jaxon
The PR people are overjoyed with the speech; everybody isâeven Arnold and Charley.
Barclay looks on approvingly, thinking, perhaps, that the bad seed son has decided to change his ways and pretend to be good.
Because you never want to show you care, I stare down at my phone, scrolling a lot of nothing, but really, Iâd like to put an ice pick through my ears. One for each ear, preferably continuing on into whatever part of my brain remembers things. Or maybe a good old-fashioned frontal lobotomy would do the trick.
Itâs that Türenbourg lawn photograph all over again.
One moment of weakness. I shouldnât have agreed to itânot any of it. Letting myself get boxed in like this.
Itâs then that the feed fires back up with a series of clicks and an overseas-sounding ring. Voices blare out over the speaker.
Specifically, a womanâs voice.
âPlease square your shoulders and wash away adversity as I wash my teeth with my silver toothbrush!â
Barclayâs looking around the room, confused.
The voice goes on about Grey Poupon. Is somebody making a comedy routine out of the speech?
The voice has an accent now, going on and on.
âQuick, bring the servants, I shall need some smelling salts. Where is my cravat? Where is my Foppish Ascot? If I cannot drive my Foppish Ascot 3000 in the NASCAR race, I will truly despair!â
âWhat the hell?â I say.
âI donât know whatâs happening.â Barclayâs stabbing buttons on the phone as the voice goes on. Itâs almost an out-of-body experience. âSeems to be a phone number in the US.â
Arnold simply unplugs the whole system.
Dead quiet.
People stare at me, waiting to see what Iâll do. People are always staring at me, wondering what terrible thing Iâll do.
Finally. Iâm feeling like myself again.
Arnold tries a tentative smile. âA bit of joviality,â he tries.
Barclay waves away the mocking voices. âThe call was a great success. Iâm already getting messages and texts congratulating and thanking you.â
Iâm shown said texts and messages, and it appears that the whole world loved the speech.
Except for the Grey Poupon woman.
Charley stands. âI, for one, am ready for a cocktail.â
âMe too,â I say.
âAs for whoever that was, naturally, that person will be ferreted out and fired,â Barclay says.
âNo need. Iâll handle it,â I say.
Everybody stares at me, dumbfounded.
âWhat?â Charley says.
âFind out who it is. Iâll take it from there,â I say.
âWhat do you mean?â Barclay asks.
âI mean, identify the person and tell me who it is,â I say. âAnd Iâll take the punishment from there.â
Charley looks baffled. âWhat are you going to do?â
âWhatever I damn well please,â I say casually.
âNo doubt that it was clear insubordination,â Barclay says nervously. âMisguided if not deeply insulting, no doubt about that. But to go to such lengths to personally fire herââ
âI didnât say Iâd fire her,â I say.
Barclay looks relieved.
âI said Iâd punish her. I may have her drawn and quartered. Maybe strung up by her thumbs. And thereâs always a piranha pool. There are many ways to destroy a person. Get me a name, Barclay.â I head out the door.
Charley catches up to me. âCome on,â he says.
I give him a look and keep on.
âYou get the name, and then what? Youâre not really going to destroy this poor woman?â
âWhy not?â I say. âMy scheduleâs clear.â
âItâs not enough that everyone on the continent hates you? You have to go pick fights with the Americans, too? Listen to yourself, Jaxon. Going after this woman would be despicable!â
âYou donât have to sell me on it, Charley, Iâve already decided to go.â
He snorts. âYouâre grieving, Jaxon. Petty distractions like this wonât make your grief hurt less.â
âConsidering my grief over this is zero, can you hurt less than zero?â I ask him. âWould a negative number of hurting be the same as pleasure? Anyway, dragging my familyâs name through the mud has always been one of my favorite pastimes. I canât take an axe to Wycliff just yet, but this works.â
âThink what youâre doing. Canât you just say, âWho cares about this random snarky person? Iâm gonna live my own life.ââ
âAnd the fun in that would be what, exactly?â
His mouth forms into a grim line.