Chelsea had long fantasized about the day she’d leave Winterstone’s frosty employ. Oh, the upbraiding she’d give him in her exit interview! Afterward, she’d hop the evening flight to Maui, where she’d spend two weeks on the beach sweating out all his poison.
Her wildest imaginings involved her knocking out company security cameras and luring into the man’s suite a rhinoceros from the Los Angeles Zoo. She’d bolt his doors, disable his phones and then simply listen to how the two got on.
But long before she’d quit or Winterstone would be tossed about his enclosure by a giant horned beast, Chelsea assumed the man would simply just leave. She’d been waiting for years for news of his being tapped to handle black ops for a crooked president or plucked for a leadership role at the Fed. A psychotic break wasn’t even on her list.
The hyenas in these corner offices will eat him alive, she thought to herself, surprised at feeling a little sad for the devil. He was clearly in a state. She’d always suspected that on some level – microscopic or perhaps philosophical – Winterstone was probably human. If she could help, the assistants’ code held, she should. Chelsea surprised herself once more by standing. She smoothed her skirt and cleared her throat.
“Rough weekend, sir?” she said.
“It’s too much!” the man wailed, suddenly bursting into tears. “Too great a burden.”
Ah, Chelsea thought, so it was cancer. Inoperable. Or maybe another wife was dragging him into divorce court. Costly, even for him, a man with yachts on both seaboards. Either way, Chelsea felt oddly warmed by the situation. This was the most the two had spoken in years.
“May I lend you a hand?” she said.
“Have you eyes, secretary? Gaze upon me.”
The man had a calculator taped to the top of his mask.
“The skies have reached down to touch me, bestowing upon me a wondrous and terrible power,” he continued. “Behold.” He held out a hand that looked as though it had been singed by fire. “Give me a hundred.”
“A 100-dollar bill?”
He looked at her, standing before him in her Jaclyn Smith ensemble. “Ah, right,” he said. “A quarter, then. Whatever you have on your person.”
She ducked back in the cubicle to grab her purse. She yanked out her pocketbook, which held only her cards and the picture of Kirstie Alley she’d cut from People to encourage herself to eat more healthily. She turned her bag upside and shook it.
In his suite, Winterstone banged his arm upon the desk.
Chelsea flung open a drawer and found a nickel.
Winterstone took a deep breath, squared his shoulders and squeezed his eyes shut. Then he closed his charred fingers over the coin.
“2.2 Indian rupees,” he murmured.
“Sir – ”
“.34 Chinese yuans. 3.67 Algerian dinars,” he continued. The sums spilled out of him in rapid-fire succession. “.068 Brunei dollars.”
Spent, he collapsed onto the desk. “Great heaven help me,” he moaned, “for this is the awesome gift I have been given. Place any currency in my grasp and I can tell you its worth that second in Rangoon, New York, London or Borneo. This world is forever changed. I have been made god!”
Chelsea stared at the man, brow furrowed, before making an elaborate examination of her nails.
“If that’s all, sir,” she said.
“All? My darling girl, I reveal to you a power unprecedented! I shall reshape the world.”
“It’s just that you kind of had me set up for … I was expecting something … I don’t know what I was thinking.”
“Yes, well, I’m sure you can understand how important it is that the details of my personal life remain hidden from humanity. The people cannot know my true identity.”
“Your secret’s safe with me,” she said. She pantomimed locking her lips and tossing away the key.
“Another thing.”
“Yes.”
“Calculo.”
“I believe you’ve stapled it to your head, sir.”
“Chelsea,” Winterstone said importantly, “I am Calculo.”
“You know my name,” she said, flabbergasted. “You actually called me by my name.”
“Forgive me – my former self – for not using it more often. It’s priceless,” he said. “A Chelsea bun is a type of cake, you might be interested to know. It’s formed in the shape of a spiral and made of a yeast dough with a sweet glaze. I should have sent you out to purchase one for yourself as a birthday gift from me.”
“Your worth is beyond measure, my spirited girl. Never doubt that. Inestimable is the value of your soul.”
She began slowly backpedaling. “I’ll just,” she said, “close these doors, sir, to give you a little privacy.”
“But your nickel.”
“Keep it,” she said, before shutting him inside.
Chelsea walked slowly back to her desk. She scrubbed all Winterstone’s meetings for the week. Then she looked up the extension of her human resources specialist. Just like that, she realized, she was free.
Come the noon hour, though, Chelsea was still on the job. She brought Winterstone a sensible meal of salad and SmartWater. She remained behind after delivering the food to help the hero wrestle with his mask, the mouth and eye openings of which were so small that only every third forkful was reaching his lips. Chelsea caught the dressing that had dripped onto his cat suit but left the croutons that had collected in his verdine lap.
“What happened out there on the sea? You were in that boat race, weren’t you?” she asked.
“It was the most astounding thing,” Winterstone began. But just then, the device atop his head blinked into life. Chelsea gave a start.
He stopped chewing. “What is it?”
“Your, um, thing.” She pointed to his crown.
He put down his fork. “Holy God. What does it say?”
“It says BOOBS, sir.”
“You’re looking at it upside down. You mean 58008,” he said, “my signal with the SEC.”
He leapt to his feet and wheeled to face the window. He threw open the drapes and stared intently into the smog. “Something’s going down at the regional office,” he said, gravely. “I must be off.”
He was off, alright. Chelsea took him in for a long moment. Then she looked at her watch. “You’d better go, then, sir,” she said. “I’ll call for your car.”
She dashed out to her desk. After a moment, she returned with her bag. “Wilshire will be messy this time of day, Calculo. Permission to ride along? I’ve a feeling you may need someone with the power to put on some speed.”
This is how Dickens did it, you know, stringing everyone along. I meet the ship from London at the dock in anticipation of the next installment.
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