The Devil's Copper Jamie Crothall (i like reading books TXT) đ
- Author: Jamie Crothall
Book online «The Devil's Copper Jamie Crothall (i like reading books TXT) đ». Author Jamie Crothall
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âI prefer âJack,â to be honest.â
âJackâ told me he was lucky I had chosen that day to visit his office; he typically spent most of his time at his day job.
âNormally, my employees double as an answering service. But Mike is off sick today, and quite frankly, I needed a break.â
Honestly, I donât think I really took in any of that at the time. I was too busy getting lost in his eyes. Oh shut up; I know thatâs a clichĂ©. But every good clichĂ© starts its life as a general truth. I am not one to go boy crazy. Never have been. But something about Jack caught me off guard. And not in the same way his time traveler did. It wasnât down to his appearance, though there was little to complain about in that department, but rather in his sincerity. Trust me, you donât go through life the way I have without noting a sincere lack of compassion and overall empathy in people, to the point where when it does rear its head you gather a bit of a sixth sense about it. Jack had it in spades â he didnât look through me, he didnât look at me, he just...looked. And listened. Yeah you wouldnât understand, but donât misunderstand either - I wasnât completely malleable in his presence. I mean, he wore a suit, and most people donât wear a suit unless they want to sell you something, so that had me put up a few defenses. Cults are formed by people with a certain amount of charm, after all. I had to snap myself out of it and give him the same amount of critical observation that I did his employee.
âI had a visit from one of your people two days ago,â I said, bolstering my professional bravado. âI just wanted to ask you some questions about it.â
âSure,â he said.
He offered me a seat across from his desk. He only sat when I sat. There were also no pictures of a wife or children on his desk. Oh shut up, Billie!
âCan I ask you a question first?â he asked.
I nodded.
âWere you inspired?â
I opened my mouth to speak but nothing came out. âHuh,â I muttered. I looked back up at him. âI mean, I never believed it. Not for a second.â Okay, maybe a half a second. âHoweverâŠI walked away from the encounter thinking about getting back into it.â I looked at the wall. I looked at the ceiling. I looked back at him. âOh my god youâre a master manipulator.â
He laughed as he shook his head. âIf I was out to manipulate someone Iâd be hiring actors to gather peopleâs social insurance numbers.â
âBut why do it? It seems a bitâŠspecific.â
âYouâd be surprised. Weâve had a few jobs so far, weâre a bit new, but weâve encouraged people to get back into acting, singingâŠâ He was counting off on his fingers. ââŠwriting, gardeningâŠâ
âGardening?â I asked, an eyebrow raised.
âA Sudbury green-thumb helped the city win the best public park award in 2010, which is the only reason the Queen decided to set up her retirement residence here in 2021. Or at least thatâs what her great grandson came back to tell her when she felt like giving up after her husband died.â
âFascinating.â
âOf course she didnât believe it, but it did give her the push to continue on.â
âHas anyone believed it so far?â
He shrugged. âHard to say. My actors normally leave before any more can be said. I like to do a little follow-up with the people who hire us though, just to see if they were satisfied. Iâm proud to say weâve not pissed anyone off yet.â
I smirked and nodded. âA good benchmark for a growing business.â
âAbsolutely.â He looked me up and down, then at some papers on his desk. âElizabeth Turner?â
Like a waif, my heart fluttered when he said my name. How utterly embarrassing, even if he couldnât see it. âYes.â
He withdrew a scrap of paper from a file. It was crumpled, covered in black dust, and had the word âBillieâ signed on it. âWith your permission Iâd like to frame this and have it on my wall.â
âFor when Iâm famous?â I asked wryly.
âYou donât have to be famous for me to be proud of this,â he insisted. âI like to keep track of my successes.â
âWell, weâve established Iâm not successful yet.â
âYes you are. You have been for quite some time, Iâm sure. Youâve just never realized.â
Even with my sincerity radar, I was taken aback. I wasnât expecting him to look at me like that. No one ever looked at me like that. It was something I was thoroughly unfamiliar with. He looked at me as though I mattered. Iâd embarrass myself if I explained how unusual that was for me. I scrambled to find some snarky comment - my
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