Chapter 59 Cord

Cord

Cord found a half bottle of Harveys Bristol Cream, which he drank from his grandmother’s sherry glasses as he munched on Cheetos (when had Charlotte bought Cheetos?).

He lay on a chaise longue and watched people play golf from Charlotte’s patio.

Did he care what they might think of him in his mother’s pink bathrobe?

He did not. He brought all of the old photo albums outside and paged through them, sipping daintily.

One of the newer albums was a testament to his own career.

Charlotte, it seemed, had cut every clipping ever printed about Cord’s VC firm.

Snorting, he read an interview where he explained, “My father died of a sudden heart attack.” After Winston’s death, Cord told the interviewer, he’d learned to multitask to help his mom and siblings, and this attention to detail had served him well in the tech sector.

Lee and Charlotte had kept Winston’s suicide a secret for decades!

It was fucked-up and unhealthy, but also (honestly) impressive.

The women in his family were fierce as hell, stubborn as mules.

Charlotte had even cemented her fake narrative in a Walgreens photo album. Charlotte was a piece of work!

In the kitchen, Charlotte’s wall phone rang.

Cord knew it was creditors. He ignored it.

Cord refilled a sherry glass and gazed at his mom’s ancient magnolia trees.

It was true that his nervous nature made him a good businessman.

If you can’t rest, you won’t fuck up. Cord had made a work life where everyone and everything depended on him. Until this week!

His mind returned to the glow he’d felt earlier when he’d examined the pictures of Regan looking at him proudly. I was such a good big brother, he told himself sadly, drunkenly. Something about working through sherry in his grandmother’s tiny crystal glasses made him especially maudlin.

The wall phone would not stop ringing! Cord heaved himself up from the chaise, went inside through the screen door, and picked up the receiver. “Hel-lo?” he said.

“Hello?”

“Regan?” Cord felt a shock of joy hearing his little sister’s voice. “Regan!” he said.

“I need to come home now,” said Regan, her voice a frightened monotone.

“What’s going on, Reeg?”

“I’m done now and I need a ride home.”

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