Jaxon
Four Weeks Later: London
Workers scurry around, packing up my parentsâ London residence. Charleyâs sprawled out on a priceless couch heâs thinking of taking for one of his residences. Arnold comes in with a large, framed photo.
âChristieâs,â I say.
âJaxon, no!â Charley says. âItâs the first signed print. Iconic Danbery. And look how happy you are!â
I glower at the photo that fooled the world, taken by a celebrity photog my parents hired at great expense. Mom and Dad and me on a picnic blanket, the three of us smiling out at the world. The richest little richie-rich boy with his doting parents, the splendidly groomed grounds of our Türenbourg castle unfolding in the background.
Totally fake.
Arnold comes in with an original oil painting of my parents in their prime.
âChristieâs,â I say.
âIf nothing else, keep it for your kids,â Charley tries.
âAs if I would inflict the Von Henningsly bullshit on another generation.â
âMark my words, youâll want a family someday.â
I point. âChristieâs.â
Charley still believes in the fairy tale. His entire family does, a fact that I witnessed over the many Christmases I spent there. Always laughing and clinging to each other and creating their own traditions. Theyâd put an old Dolly Parton doll on the top of the tree and then do this whole dance to the song âWe are the Champions.â They always watch scary movies on Christmas Day, huddled together. The ridiculous lore and traditions they developed over the years seemed to create this illusion of togetherness that they cling to.
Who can blame them? Youâre born alone and you die alone. Itâs not an easy truth to face.
Charley sighs and leans on a nearby wall, watching Arnold place the portrait to be crated for auction. âCongrats on getting the share prices back up, by the way,â he says. âThat pompous speechwriter, though.â
âNever again,â I say. âShoot me if I sound like my father ever again.â
âWill you be selling Wycliff now?â
âEventually. I still have to destroy the butt-dialer.â
âWhat?â Charley pushes off the wall, straightening up. âI thought you dropped that whole sordid thing.â
âOf course not. Management hasnât been able to identify the offender, so Iâll be taking the investigation into my own hands. Iâll take a position there under an assumed identity and find the perpetrator myself.â
Charley blinks at me, confused. âA position?â
âA position at the company,â I explain. âAs in job. If you want a thing done right, you have to do it yourself, it seems. Iâm having Soto arrange it.â Mr. Soto is my business guy. My parentsâ guy, Barclay, quit soon after the conference call.
âThatâs madness,â Charley says. âYou canât take a job.â
âWhy not?â I say.
He stares at me as though he canât get his mind around the question. âForget the company. Come out to my villa, Jaxon. You can clear your head there. The sudden loss of both oneâs parents is huge, whether youâll admit it or not.â
âSoto lined me up with a position already. Office-gopher-slash-delivery assistant. Iâll be undercover.â I grin. âWhat do you think?â
âYouâre not thinking straight,â Charley says. âYou donât know how an office works. You have no actual skills. Youâve never held a job in your life.â
âThatâs not true,â I protest. âIâve had a job.â
âMotorsport is different from a job,â he says.
âWhat do you mean? I built a team and showed up at a specific time to do a specific task.â
People thought I didnât have the discipline to become a driver for a Formula One team. I was too unruly, too hotheaded, not disciplined enough for the long hours on the track and in the gym, but I proved them wrong.
âYou got booted out for fighting,â Charley reminds me.
âGundrun deserved it,â I say.
âA lot of people deserve it. You go to some office and youâre gonna find a lot of people who deserve to be hit. You might even end up with a boss who deserves to be taken down a peg or two, but guess what? Youâll have to sit there and smile. No brawling allowed. You wonât last a day.â
âSo little faith. When I set my mind on something, I typically do it,â I say.
âAn office worker? People arenât stupid, Jaxonâ¦â
âIâm not going there to work. Iâll socialize with people until I get my answer.â
âAnd what if somebody recognizes you? Your picture is everywhere. Americans have tabloids too, you know.â
âIâm not the sort of person that American tabloids track. American tabloids are all movie stars and British royals, not minor continental celebs. They probably think the Grand Prix is a bike race.â
âFormula One racing is growing in popularity over there.â
âWell, they werenât paying attention ten years ago,â I say. âIâm a historical figure. Iâm Herbert Plumer.â
âPeople still share the clip of the fight.â
âTheyâre not looking at my face, theyâre looking at a brilliant and well-deserved left hook.â
âYou lived in Manhattan on and off. You still know people.â
âI havenât been back since I was twelve. Youâre not talking me out of this.â
âNew York is an international city. You canât tell me itâs not international. Get one person whoâs spent any time in Monte Carlo nightclubs, and youâll have a pack of paparazzi on your ass.â
This gets me thinking. The next time Arnold comes by, I instruct him to send for somebody who can change my looks.
âNot what I was imagining,â Charley drawls unhappily.
A theatrical costumer named Bev shows up a few hours later. She suggests a new haircut with a center part.
âI want a disguise, not a new style, Iâm an American who works at a wage job.â I search American hair fashions, and soon find myself on a website called Sav-R-Mart fashion fails. âHere we go. This.â I point at a picture. âGive me this.â
âNo, Jaxon!â Charley says.
âThis is not a current hairstyle,â she says nervously. âGelled spikes with frosted tips hasnât been popular since the nineties.â
âPerfect. Youâll give me the hair. I want those tinted rectangular glasses and the short-sleeved shirt, too. What is this shirt? Men actually wear this?â
Arnoldâs back with another heirloom I donât want. He peers at the screen. âIs it a Hawaiian shirt?â
Bev looks, too. âNo. Hawaiian shirts have flowers. I would call this a 1990s party boy shirt.â
I take a closer look. Itâs a neon-blue button up shirt with lots of pink and yellow triangles and squiggly lines on it.
âGet me some shirts like that.â
Staff is dispatched to shops. I take a seat and instruct Bev to begin.
With trembling hands, she drapes a cape over my shoulders and then pauses, looking upset.
âWhat is it?â I demand.
âBleaching the ends of your hair, Mr. Henningslyâ¦I donât recommend it.â
âAll the better. Do it,â I say.
âI just want you to know, I am advising against it.â
âAre we going to start anytime this century?â
An hour later, the hairstyle is complete. Bev steps back, looking uncertain. âIâm sorry, this is what you asked for,â she says.
Charley is just laughing. âHelp! Iâm having NSYNC flashbacks!â
Bev hands me a mirror. I look like a different personâalmost. âI love it.â
Bev grins, surprised.
âItâs not enough, though. You make up people for the theater. Do you have fake scars or something to try on?â
âCan I suggest you try on a different bizarre and disturbing obsession?â Charley says.
âWe can give you something more.â Bev roots around in her cases, sounding braver now. âA disguise has two partsâwhat you cover and what you offer up as a distraction. This might be a little extreme, but if you truly donât want to be recognized, you have to give them something else to look at.â She extracts a black thing the diameter of a pencil eraser and affixes it to my cheek. âThere we go. Itâs a stage mole, designed to be seen from the audience.â She steps back. âItâs a lot.â
Charley is just shaking his head. âItâs too much!â
âBut it does draw the eye and give his face a different character.â
âItâs not realistic at all!â Charley says. âNobody has a mole like that!â
âYouâre rightânobody has a mole like that. Itâs a stage mole. Itâs not designed to be realistic, but people will accept it,â Bev says. âPeople are a lot more focused on themselves and schooling their own reactions than you might realize. And if they focus on the mole, itâll be to make stories to explain it.â
âLike why he didnât remove it,â Charley says. âMost people would remove it.â
I hold up the mirror. Itâs huge and extreme, but I find I like it. âI wouldnât remove it,â I growl.
âOf course you wouldnât,â Charley says. âYouâd give it a name and put it up for knighthood.â
The rest of the accessories have been delivered by now, and I try on the whole ensembleâthe glasses from two decades ago, the obnoxiously bright shirt. I fluff up the hairstyle that everybody seems to hate.
âYet somehow these things arenât ruining your looks,â Charley complains. âThey should ruin your looks more.â
âI donât give a shit about my look. I donât want to be bothered, thatâs all. Letâs give it a spin.â I grab my phone and head downstairs, girding myself as I usually do when I go outside, ready for people to get in my face or try to get a quote or a picture. Or if Iâm in a hat and sunglasses, for people to recognize it as a disguise and try to penetrate it with varying degrees of success.
I walk the block without being noticed. Some people stare at my mole and then look away. Some glance over me briefly and carry on. I donât know if itâs the hair or the glasses or the shirt or the mole, or maybe itâs the whole thing, but people are avoiding my eyes. Iâve never experienced anything like it.
Itâs as ifâ¦Iâm invisible.
I stroll around the block, reveling in it.
âI love it,â I say when I get back.