Jaxon
I flick on the shower and pull off my clothes, still wired from my time with Jada.
Itâs an unwritten rule that guys who head out for a night or weekend with me can expect a whole range of outcomes, from outrageous bar tabs and gambling debts to being chased by packs of paparazzi to ocean-ruined clothes, transport to other countries, police records, involvement in brawls, and/or unwise sexual escapades.
Women who date me get their own version, minus the bills and the brawling, of course.
Iâm the one you hang out with if you want to roughen up your squeaky-clean image. Iâm the one you go to when you want to upset the family or make sure the tabloids havenât forgotten about you between films or coronations or whatever it is that gets you in the papers.
Pushing people past their limits and getting them to go against their better judgment has been my thing for as long as I can remember.
But pushing Jada past her boundaries was something different altogether.
It may have looked like I was pushing and corrupting her, but in truth, it was my soul getting taken apart. It was my heart getting twisted into new shapes.
I stumble in under the hot water and press my forehead to the rough stone that forms the mosaic on the shower walls, probably created by a team of artisans flown in from lord knows where.
I grab hold of myself, letting the water rush over the back of my head and stream down my cheeks as I jerk off to the memory of her expression when I took control, and the way she watched me as I fingered her. Just the wild intimacy of it, something Iâd normally find cringy.
I come in a torrent of heat and euphoria.
Iâm addicted to her pleasure, but itâs more than that. Itâs her. Everything about her.
I let the water rush over me as one single realization dawns: I need to tell her who I am.
Itâs messed up Iâve let it go this far. Jada admires honesty and hard work and people who believe in things. Sheâll hate that I posed as somebody else. Past me wouldâve found it funny. Current me doesnât see anything funny about it at all, because over the course of the weeks, Iâve come to care about her opinion. Iâve come to care about her.
Caring and concern. Jesus Christ, no wonder Iâve avoided it for so long. And now Iâm twisted around like a motherfucker.
Iâm gonna go on record here and say that itâsâ¦fun. Unusually hot, in fact.
Unusually hot. Thatâs how she asked for it. So Jada. No-nonsense, straightforward Jada, blown away by a few bits of gold in some ice cubes. I get this streak of irrational anger for the jackasses she grew up with here, even though I might be the worst jackass of them all.
After my shower I do a punishing workout. Not the best order of activities to go in, but Iâm not exactly the picture of mental health at the moment.
Afterwards I place a call to Soto, whoâs supposedly on the West Coast at this point.
âWhat do you have? I have a lot of changes to make.â
âYeah, about thatâ¦â The way he says it, I know Iâm not gonna like it.
âSpill it.â
âYour hands are absolutely tied when it comes to Bloxburn. And Bert Johnston is a direct employee of theirs.â
âI donât care. Iâve documented at least four instances where heâs directly working against the interests of the company. The only way heâs doing a good job is if theyâve put him there to screw things up.â
âYeah, but hereâs the problem. Your parents got into some sort of hassle with the owners of SportyGoCo. They bought SportyGoCo specifically to destroy it.â
My blood goes cold. âThey bought it to destroy it?â
âThatâs right. Iâve spoken with a few of the Wycliff executives. Your parents were angry with the owners. I have no idea what about, but they apparently went through a great deal of trouble to force those owners to sell. I gather that SportyGoCo was a labor of love for those ex-owners.â
âMy parents bought it out of vengeance.â
âYes.â
My blood goes cold, thinking about Jada, about how much she loves the company. The whole crew loves that company. They have all of those hopes and dreams for Wonderbag. The shipping team has been working so hard to improve the systems. The people here consider each other to be family, what with the cookies and the hats and all the rest of it.
âWaitâI donât understand,â I say. âIf they wanted to destroy SportyGoCo, why keep it running? Why not shut down the business once they had control? Why did they bother keeping it running?â
âVengeance,â Soto says. âThe owners loved their employees. So part of the idea is to make their people miserable. Also, money. If they can force people to quit or fire them for disciplinary reasons, thereâs a payroll cost savings associated with that. Iâve been told that Bert has until the end of this accounting period to make people quit or fire them, and to otherwise destroy the value and reputation of the company. Iâm guessing that inflicts maximum pain on those former owners, but itâs also better in terms of a loss. For tax purposes.â
âHurt the people, kill the value, get a tax write-off,â I say.
âYeah,â Soto says. âWhatâs more, it appears that Bloxburn specializes in that sort of thing.â
âSo it was their bully company,â I say. It makes sense. The whispered name. The sense of anger and grievance swirling around it.
âExactly,â Soto says.
âWell, I donât want them managing SportyGoCo anymore. Canât I pay them and tell them to go away?â
âThereâs no way. No ability to cancel the contract once signed, no kill feeâtrust me we looked. We had a guy back channeling to Bloxburn, even floated a bit of bribery, but itâs not something theyâre interested in. Apparently theyâve got other accounts watching this account. SportyGoCo is a showcase for them. A case study in how much damage they can do legally. Bottom line, theyâre very invested in destroying this firm, and thatâs exactly what your parents hired them to do.â
âThis is unbelievable. Thereâs nothing I can do. Me. The owner of this entire corporation. A man worth billions. Just nada.â
âThatâs right,â Soto says. âThey have about a month to run the company into the ground.â
âAnd theyâll write it off as a Wycliff loss.â
âTechnically, a Wycliff sub-brand loss.â
âI wonât accept this. Give me one way to void the contract.â
âFine. If at the end of this accounting period the company is profitable, they would be in breach.â
âWhenâs the end of the accounting period?â
âEnd of this month. You wonât make it. The hole is too deep.â
I go to the window and look down at a horse and buggy parked in front of the entrance to the park. Itâs a misty, foggy night, and the lights have come on, lending things an otherworldly look.
âAnd what will it take to simply buy these assholes?â
âBuy Bloxburn? I donât see how. This is a very large businessâI think itâs owned by Major & Bow. I donât see them letting it go. Itâs too deeply integrated with the rest of their businesses.â
âGet me a number.â
âAnd if they donât want to sell?â
âThen I buy Major & Bow.â
âNope. Too big even for you,â Soto says.
âAre you sure?â
Soto is silent for a while, probably looking at stock prices or who knows what. âFinancing would take too long.â Thereâs a pause. I hear his chair creak. âLet me think.â
I wait. Papers rustle. Heâs probably writing on a notepad. Soto thinks on paper. âYou could snap it up with a consortium. Itâs possible with a consortium. If you got Charley on board and maybe one of the Rheingold cousins and a few others. Marina Apondi. Of course Major & Bow would have to accept any offer unless you went in hostile. You could get what you want with a group. It could be a good investment for people.â
âSo basically, I go begging to everybody who I have a beef with, hat in hand.â
âThis is business.â
âBegging my frenemies, my haters, hat in hand.â Does he not get it? âThat sounds worse than plucking out my own eyeballs. More to the point, it wouldnât work. Nobody in their right mind would think itâs a good idea to go in with me, and I couldnât agree more. Iâm not the kind of man people partner with.â
âAre you so sure?â
âTrust meâIâm not.â I grab a glass and pour a scotch. âFind another way to break the contract that doesnât involve me asking for favors. I want control, and I want Bert Johnston gone.â
âThen weâre back to making the company profitable.â
âWhat if I buy all the merchandise?â
âWonât work. There are about five legal problems with that. You canât inflate your own profits by buying your own merchandise.â
We go on brainstorming. In the end, weâre back to the company having to be profitableâan impossibility, considering that Bertâs in charge, merrily sabotaging the operations. It all makes sense now. Jada thought he was trying to throw a monkey wrench into things, and I didnât believe her. But she was right.
âFind another way.â I hang up feeling unbelievably annoyed.
I head downstairs and pull on my coat and boots and hat.
âIs that a new hat, sir?â Arnold asks; due to his valet duties, heâs familiar with every piece of clothing that I have.
âSomebody at work gave it to me,â I mumble. âI should toss it, is what I should do.â
âDo you want a different one? We have a selection in the cedar chest.â
âItâs fine,â I bark.
Arnold hovers with a concerned expression.
âWhat? I can see you have something to say.â
âWhy not try to save the company, sir?â Because naturally, he heard the whole call.
âIâm trying. Did you not hear what he said? I canât cancel the contract or affect it in any way.â
âExceptâ¦you are currently an employee there, are you not?â
âWhat? I should hop onto the hamster wheel and run as fast as I can? Thatâs how you think I can save the company?â
âPeople do that sort of thing all the time.â
âThere are actual industry professionals about ten times as qualified as I am whoâve been trying to make SportyGoCo profitable. The problem is that the man who runs that place, the man who has the power to make all of the operational decisions, is dedicated to destroying the business. Itâs not feasible.â I button up my overcoat.
âBullshit, sir,â Arnold says.
This stops me. âExcuse me?â
âYou rose to the top in one of the most grueling sports in existence,â Arnold says. âYou worked out in the gym and on that track for longer hours than any of your opponents. You were in the garage, shoulder to shoulder with your mechanics. You put together a team that wouldâve killed for you. You kept your cool during that crash in Azerbaijan and you dominated for a good two years. Youâre telling me you canât take on some man whose main talent is to run companies into the ground?â
âI nearly got thrown in jail for assault, you forgot that part.â
âGundrun cheated and endangered your team,â Arnold says. âGive it a shot. This SportyGoCo bit. What do you have to lose?â
I grumble my answer and get out of there. As if thatâs the answer to my problemsâmore investment, more involvement. Itâs not bad enough that Iâm obsessed with a woman I canât have in the endânot once she knows the truthâbut I should work my ass off for a company I canât save?
A chilly autumn wind blows as I make my way up Seventy-sixth. Shop windows are starting to fill with orange lights and pumpkins, though some shops have skipped right to Christmas. Weâll have our first snow in a month or so. What am I still doing here? I got what I came forâthe identity of the butt-dialer. I could sell Wycliff and be done with the whole thing. The stock price has long since stabilized. Nobody will be jumping from the rooftops. I have a plane in a hangar out at Teterboro Airport, ready to take me to any beautiful place I choose.
Charley was right; coming here was a bad move.
I wouldnât have gotten involved in all of this.
I wouldnât be wearing this ridiculous hat.
I wouldnât be stumbling across Broadway, confused and alone, trying not to look at the fucking pigeons.