Jaxon
Jada snorts and leans in closer, the maddening coconut and lilac scent of her washing over me. âSo full of yourself.â
Sheâs so excruciatingly proper and perfect, and god, all of her disdain for me. And her bossy ways and her taunts and her workaholic pencil bun. And all I want to do is kiss her. I came for the butt-dialer, but I canât stop with Jada.
And I have so many questions about her. Like what drives her to work so hard? Does she have hobbies? Favorite shows? A life outside of work?
âThe big, bad villain and all his wrongness,â she says.
I lower my voice to a deeper register. âWhat fun would it be without villains like me? There would be nobody to hate on, nobody to talk about. Nobody to imagine doing wrong and outrageous things within the supply closet. The pleasure of forbidden things.â
âActually, Iâm thinking about the pleasure of preventing you from ever knowing the identity of the butt-dialer. The sheer enjoyment of it.â
âYou donât have a prayer.â
She leans in. âOh, I have more than a prayer. I have my intention to personally stop you. Iâll do what it takes to protect and lift this family. Iâll play dirty if needed. Iâll bring you to your entitled Don Juan delivery driver knees if I have to.â
âOh, Iâll go on my knees for you any day of the week. And Iâll lick you so good and so hard, youâll be screaming.â
âWith laughter.â
I smile. It occurs to me that thinking of her in doll terms is all wrong. She comes off as this perky, doll-like creature with pretty eyes and rosebud lips and proper fashion workwear and it makes people underestimate her. They donât see her scrappy edge. Her steely spine. Her fierceness. Sheâll do what it takes.
It makes me want her all the more. Iâve never wanted a woman so much.
âYouâll laugh and youâll cry,â I whisper, pulse racing. âThatâs how hard Iâll rock your world.â I show her my finger and my thumb. âAnd this finger and this thumbâyou know what Iâll do with them while I take that pretty little pussy of yours? Can you guess where theyâre gonna go? Do you have any idea how hard Iâm gonna own you down there?â
She leans in closer, infuriatingly sexy. âPretty little pussy? Somebody watches way too much low-rent porn.â
Energy flows through me.
For no reason at all, Iâm remembering the speech I read to the Wycliff corporation after my parentsâ deaths. Those asinine words echo through my mind unbidden. We must soldier on. Look to the future.
The butt-dialer cut through that speech like a hot knife through butter. Did an imitation that had everybody guffawingâat great personal risk to herself. Probably was angry that work got interrupted.
My mind starts spinning. What am I not seeing? Was I wrong to rule her out as the butt-dialer?
âThatâll be all,â she says to me suddenly. âYouâre dismissed.â
I blink, uncomprehending. âWhat was that?â
âThatâll be all. Youâre dismissed.â She grins.
Nobodyâs ever said that to me. Nobody ever would. I can barely process the cognitive dissonance of it.
Renata and Dave have wandered over. âHey! Both of you! Youâre dismissed!â Renata says.
âNo!â Dave fake punches Renata in the arm. âYouâre dismissed!â He turns to me. âSorry, no disrespectâit was so savage when you said that to Bert. Truly savage, my friend.â
Jada snorts. âActually, I meant disrespect!â Sheâs glowing, cheeks pink. âI meant so much disrespect, itâs not even funny.â
âYou have to admit it was hilarious you said that to Bertâon your first day,â Dave says. ââThatâll be all. Youâre dismissed.â Bert didnât know what to think!â Theyâre all laughing. âItâs in my top three favorite SportyGoCo moments of all time,â Dave continues. âEverybody has been dismissing each other around the officeâhavenât you heard? Itâs our new way to say fuck off.â
Laceyâs there suddenly. âThatâll be all, Dave. Dismissed.â
Theyâre dismissing each other.
What the hell? Itâs so strange to hear other people say it. Strange that such a thing would become part of the fabric of this office. Part of the family lore. It makes me feelâ¦oddly choked up.
âNot so sure how I feel about you all using my phrase,â I say breezily.
Jada is just laughing. âIn that case, youâre double dismissed.â
âYou canât double dismiss,â I say.
Lacey crosses her arms. âIs a double dismissal a âcome hitherâ?â
âNo way,â I say. âDoubling it emphasizes it.â
âOh, sorry to say, but itâs the equivalent of ânot no,â which is yes. So dismissing that notion.â Jada pokes my chest.
âIâm sorry, whose phrase is it?â I grab her finger and the jolt of our contact rocks me. âMine.â I force myself to let her go.
âYou donât own it!â Lacey protests. âIt belongs to all of us now.â
Jada has fallen uncharacteristically silent. Sheâs looking over my shoulder. Everybody has fallen silent. Everybody is staring at the doorway. Bert must be back, I think.
Bert caught us screwing aroundâme and my two demerits.
Iâm thinking Iâll be fired, and I find that I donât want to be fired. I donât want to leave.
And then I turn, and something inside me collapses as I make sense of who Iâm looking at.
Itâs been twenty-some years. Her dark hair has gray streaks and her face is thinner, more defined, more regal somehow, but she still has the same warm eyes.
Nanny Jenny.
I swallow.
âJaxon?â she says with a faltering smile.
Like a ghost, Iâm moving toward herâif nothing else, to get her out of the office. âWhat are you doing here?â
âI had to come see you. I needed to see you. I wanted to explain things.â
âThereâs no need,â I say in a calm voice, even as my belly twists around like a pretzel mobius.
âOf course there is,â she says.
I look behind me. People are resuming their positions in their cubicles, trying to act like theyâre not paying attention, but weâre right there in the office doorway, so of course theyâre paying attention. Varsha is typing away, also paying attention.
âCome on.â I lead Jenny out of the office and down the hall toward the open-air space thatâs actually the rooftop of the neighboring building. Iâm thankful nobody is out here at the picnic table or in the smoking corner. âDid Arnold call you? There really was no need.â
âOf course there was a need! You never even got the cards.â Sheâs staring at the mole. I can tell she wants to ask about it. She blinks, thinking the better of it, I suppose. âYou probably thought I abandoned you without a second thought, Jaxon, but thatâs not how it was. I never wanted to leave. I hated to!â
âThen why did you? Without so much as a goodbye,â I say before I can stop myself, because supposedly I donât give a shit. I straighten up. âI understand that I was just a job to you, but it was bad form, thatâs all. Itâs customary to say goodbye.â I manage all of this quite unemotionally.
âArnold told me the whole story. How everybody said Iâd run off to join a boyfriend in a band on a world tour or something like that.â
I gaze out over the dirty facades of the buildings that line the street. It looks like a tunnel with no top from here.
âHe told me how youâd refused to believe it. And then they agreed to put their private investigator on it to track me down to get you to stop worrying and that the PI confirmed the story of the boyfriend. But it was never true, Jaxon. They made you think Iâd left without a second thought. But there was no boyfriend in a band.â
My blood races. âI see.â
âJaxon,â she says, and she waits until I look up to her, all the better to fix me with the gaze that I remember so wellâfrank, open, and loving. Iâm flooded with the memories of how it was with her. She was always so honest with me, always interested in what I thought about things, though Iâm sure I was insufferable. Weâd have long conversations, Jenny and me. We were curious about the world together. She was sad when I felt sad, and it made me feel less alone in that empty Manhattan townhouse. Or the times when we got dumped off in Monaco. Or worse, the summers in Türenbourg, the small principality in Central Europe where they bought the drafty old castle.
âYou probably donât remember Donnie, my twin brother,â she says. âHe came by a few times when we were in town. He met us out at the zoo one time.â
I nod. Of course I remember Donnie. I was fascinated by Jennyâs family. I wanted to be in Jennyâs family. I wouldâve traded it for anything.
âWhen you were around nine, Donnie became extremely ill with a neurological condition that the doctors could never diagnose, but one thing that we did know is that he benefited from some very expensive medicine and the kind of twenty-four-seven care that I couldnât give him. One day your father came to me with an offer to pay for his treatment and round-the-clock nurses.â
âThat doesnât sound like Dad.â
âIt was severance pay for my resignation, effective immediately. On the condition that I had no more contact with you.â
I turn to her. âWhy?â
âYour father and I had a few confrontations,â she says. âI never knew exactly what was happening between you and your parents, but it wasnât right, the way they treated you.â
Sheâd confronted him? Sheâd stood up for me? My blood races. âThey never could stand it when somebody saw through their philanthropist bullcrap,â I say.
Jenny saw through it. Jenny knew. I thought I was the only one.
No wonder they dismissed her.
âYou deserved better. You had such a big heart,â she whispers.
Iâm feeling unmoored, suddenly. She knew. She was with me. Iâm a puddle of emotions. I need to reorganize myself, somehow. I open my mouth, thinking to back her off with something pithy and scathing, maybe even a simple âthat was then; this is now,â but the words donât come.
âYour heart was too big,â she says. âThatâs why you had to cover it.â
I finally get ahold of myself. âI was a child, Jenny. That isnât me anymore, and really, this is all pointless.â
âYou havenât changed either,â she continues. âSo headstrong and full of feeling. You were the most sensitive, passionate boy I had ever met, much as you tried to hide it.â
âPeople grow up,â I grumble.
She fixes me with that frank gaze. âI had to take the offer. Donnie would have ended up homeless or worse. He was my twin, and I couldnât turn my back on him. He was my heart. But you were my heart, too.â
I nod, mouth dry.
âI wrote those cards because I wanted you to know that somebody was thinking about you out there. Somebody loved you. I loved being your nanny. I followed your career. Your parents kept me away, but I was always there. I was at one of your racesâthe one they held in Austin, Texas. They threatened to have me charged when they found out.â
My pulse whooshes in my ears. Sheâd attended a race?
âIâm so sorry, Jaxon. And Iâm so sorry that they died,â she says.
âWell, you of all people should know what a non-tragedy that was,â I manage.
âYou never got a chance to come to terms with them. You never got a chance to make things right together. Donât pretend you didnât want thatâall children do. When I heard the news, I wanted to reach out to you. It was the first time I could reach out to you without worrying what would happen to Donnie, but Iâd never heard from you, not even as an adult. I assumed you didnât want contact with me. But then yesterday when Arnold called and told me the story, and that youâd never even gotten the cards I sent, I had to reach out to you.â
I canât process any more of this Jenny tenderness. Iâm a trapped animal, desperate for an exit from this conversation. âI need to get back,â I say.
She looks toward the door. âItâs nice to see you with your people. They obviously like and admire youâI could see from their faces, this found family of yoursââ
âThese people are not my family in any way, shape, or form. They barely know me.â
âI know what I saw,â she says. âThe laughter. The affection they have for you is written all over their faces.â
âProbably just gas.â
âOh, Jaxon.â She furrows her brow, and she swallows down whatever bullshit she was going to say next. Instead, she reaches into her bag and pulls out a red envelope, just a bit larger than the kind you mail, tattered on the edges. âI wanted to give you this.â
Warily I take the thing and peek inside. I only have to glimpse a corner to know that itâs the famous Türenbourg lawn photo featuring my parents and me, all fake smiles. I hand it back. âNo, thanks.â
âLook closer.â
âI know what it is.â
âLook, Jaxon.â
I slip it out of the envelope, surprised to discover it isnât the famous photo after all. Itâs one of the discarded shots. In this version, Iâm staring somberly into the camera. For much of the session that day, Iâd refused to fake smile. It was leverage, of sortsâa misguided attempt to keep my parents there, to keep us together. I didnât realize at that point that I was just a tool, a stepping stone. Eventually, my dad took me away for a talking-to that wasnât a talking-to, and when we returned, I had a fake smile on my face and a good deal of blood under my clothes. They flew out that night.
Iâm staring at it for an inordinately long time, this artifact from a lost history. The print is lower quality, or maybe my eyes are blurring. To think Jenny was there all that time, in my corner.
âThis is the authentic shot. You longing for something real. With a heart so bigâ¦donât let anybody tell you different.â
If she thinks sheâs gonna get a hug, she needs to get her head examined, because Iâm not the emotional chump she thinks I am. Iâm Jaxon Eadsburg von Henningsly. Has she not been following the tabloids?
âIâm not that kid anymore.â I slide it back into the envelope and hold it out to her with a shockingly steady hand.
She refuses to take it. âKeep it.â
âI gotta get back to work. Iâll walk you to the elevators.â
She says, âIâm heading to the Catskills with my son, but when I returnââ
So she has a son. Lucky for the son. Iâm leading her down the hall, the route out of this madness. Iâm focusing on the elevators.
âI know this is a lotââ
âI appreciate the visit.â I stab the down arrow. The thing opens almost instantly.
She gets in and turns, looking loving and concerned. The doors canât close fast enough, but eventually they do.
I stand there in the empty hallway, face to face with my blurry reflection in brushed steel, holding that fucking red envelope. Why did she have to come?
Itâs too much, too late.
I attempt to steady myself. Who is she, really? Just a woman who got paid to boss me around when I was a kid. She doesnât know anything.
She kept the reject picture.
I turn to go back to the department and thereâs Jada coming out the door, heading down the hallway toward me, concern all over her face.
More concern. Itâs the last thing I need.
âAre you okay?â she asks.
âWhy wouldnât I be?â
âYou looked stricken when that woman showed up. You still lookââ
âStricken?â I give her a fake smile. Itâs one of my best, designed to cover how hard Iâm reeling from Jennyâs pointless yet disturbing visit.
Jada comes to me. She reaches out and takes hold of my arm. Her hand is a hot brand on my arm and the ground seems to tilt.
Iâm a kaleidoscope of desire for her, the most infuriating woman on the planet. Sheâs everything I hate, everything I want, all perfect lips and that perky warrior spirit.
Iâll do what it takes to protect, to lift this family. Iâll play dirty if needed.
God, she wouldâve hated that pompous conference call speech more than anybodyâmaybe even more than I hated reading it into that microphone. The high-handedness of it, the hypocrisy, the work interruption.
âSeriously,â she says. âIf you want to talk.â
âWhy would I want to talk? Why would I want that?â I breathe in that coconut flower doll scent of hers. Iâm drowning in that scent, unmoored.
Itâs here that it comes to meâthis wild notion that flies into my brain from somewhere across the universe and takes hold of me.
I draw in closer to her, lost in her clear hazel gaze. âAnd by the way, I know who you are.â
She lets my arm go. Wariness suffuses her expressionâeyes a tad wider than usual, lips parted. Iâm onto something. My mind spins. Could it be?
âWhat do you mean?â she asks.
âYouâre the butt-dialer,â I say.
She covers her shock with a smile. Too late. âMe?â
Iâm sure of it, now. Jadaâs the butt-dialer. Iâm reeling with every kind of emotion. Ocean waves churn and roil where my brain once was.
Jada, the woman who torments me, fascinates me, and energizes meâsheâs the person I came to find and destroy.
âYou,â I say.