Chapter 83
The Tech Billionaire's Assistant
At a small trading post on the border of two East African countries, Dr. Rhondelle Wilde sat under the makeshift reed structure, revising her notes for the day.
She was so focused on her scribblingânothing else around her registered in her head.
The motorcycles whizzing by, the vendors at the nearby fruit stalls calling out to buyers.
The chickens pecking at bits of food on the ground and erupting into a squawking flurry whenever anyone got too close to them.
All of this she didnât notice.
So it was understandable that she didnât see or hear the tall figure until he was standing right before her.
âDr. Wilde?â
She looked up. She squinted against the sunlight and pushed her purple glasses up her nose.
âYes? Who are you?â
Raemon held a hand out. âRaemon Kentworth.â
Dr. Wilde did not react in any particular way. But at the sound of his name, she shut her notebook.
âPleasure to meet you,â Dr. Wilde said, shaking his hand. âPlease. Sit.â
Raemon took a seat beside her on one of the long benches arranged in rows under the reed canopy. She noted his dusty, sweat-stained T-shirt and the safari khakis covering his long frame.
The backpack that he shrugged off his shoulders and let fall to the ground screamed, âTourist!â
âSo, Raemon,â Dr. Wilde said, âwhat can I do for you?â
Raemon took in his surroundings. There was a sense of turmoil about him.
âIâm in love with your daughter.â
âI suspected as much.â
âBut she doesnât love me back.â
âThatâs unfortunate.â
His eyes dropped to the dusty ground below them.
âI have to change that.â
âThatâs not the sort of thing you can change,â Dr. Wilde said, âIf there was some action people could take to make someone fall in love with themâ¦well, thereâd be a lot less songs on the radio.â
Raemon was silent. While he wrestled with his inner turmoil, Dr. Wilde observed him.
âTell me,â she finally said, âhave you told Octavia about your feelings?â
âYes.â
âAnd what did she say?â
âThat I wasnât good enough for her.â
âI didnât ask for what you think she said. What did she really say?â
âThatâ¦that she didnât know who I wasâ¦because there was no self for her to know.â
âAnd what did you come all the way here to find out from me?â
âI was hoping you might knowâ¦or have some idea on what I should do.â
âYou came all this way for life advice? Are there no self-help experts or spiritual gurus in your country?â
âNone that I can trust.â
âOh?â
Raemon looked up to meet her gaze.
âIâve spent years living as a person that Iâm not. I only recently became aware of this. Out of all the people I have known, the only one who was able to show me this was your daughter.â
Dr. Wilde smiled. âSounds like Octavia. What did she do? Did her condition kick in and she blurted out something brutally honest about yourself?â
âSomething like that.â
âWell, Raemon. It seems to me you have some decisions to make. Why do you want Octavia to fall for you?â
âBecauseâ¦I need her.â
âNeed? I thought you said you loved her?â
âI do. And I need her.â
âLoving and needing someone are two very different things,â Dr. Wilde said. âWould you want her to love you back or need you?â
Raemon did not respond to this.
âI can tell you right now sheâll never need you. Thatâs not how I raised Tavi.â
He directed a cynical smirk toward the dusty earth. âAs much as I would like thatâ¦I know sheâll never need me. Not in the way I need her.â
She gave him a quizzical look. âBut why would you want that? A person who needs someone else doesnât automatically want that person or love them.
âIf Octavia needed you, sure, she might be in your arms this minute. But would she want to be? Would she truly love youâ¦for the person you are?â
âSo what youâre saying is this is a hopeless case?â he said, cynicism poisoning his tone.
âNot exactly. She will never need youâ¦but she could want you.â When Raemon looked up to meet her eyes, she continued.
âOctaviaâs affections have always been based on who people are. Sheâs seen too many places and known too many different types of people to have any misconceptions about the worth of humans.â
A wistful smile tugged at Dr. Wildeâs lips. âI looked back at how I was raised, and I wanted something different for my daughter.
âI never wanted her to be a captive in her own bodyâ¦to be restrained by whatever expectations the world places on her.
âSo I tried to raise her as someone free to see things as they are. As someone who experiences life the way it is, not according to anyone elseâs agenda.
âHer sincerity is what draws people to her, I think. She is the kind of person most people want to be, deep down. She is liberated from so muchâ¦and just being with her is liberating for them too.
âTrust me, youâre not the first man whoâs come to me with this confession.â
A rickety van rumbled by with a man hanging out the window calling for prospective riders in his taxi.
Raemon winced as the driver nearly ran over a chicken as the car bounced along the road.
When the dust from the carâs creaky wheels had cleared, he realized a small part of the fog in his own mind had dissipated as well.
âThatâs it,â he said, âwhy I need Octavia to love me. If she doesâ¦it will mean that I am finallyâ¦someone.â
âAnd what does it mean to be a âsomeoneâ?â
Raemon lowered his eyes. âTo not be shaped by a string-pulling band of no ones, but an actual, thinking, human being. No longer ~the~ Raemon Kentworthâ¦just Raemon.â
âAnd how are you going to do that?â
âI donât know.â
Dr. Wilde smiled. âThe thing about life, Raemon, sheâs a wonderful teacher. You just have to be smart enough to listen when sheâs telling you something. Look around.â
Only then did he glance up and take in his surroundings.
Dr. Wildeâs voice was soothing and wise as she said, âThe world is full of people and places that all tell their own stories. You can start with that.â
She stood. âCome. Let me buy you lunch. I think we have a few things to talk about.â