Chapter 30

Chapter 30: PR Problems Moana

When I woke up the following morning to the sun streaming in through my window, Edrick was alreadygone. Yawning, I sat up and threw the covers off of myself before swinging my legs over the edge ofthe bed and standing.

Ella was already wide awake when I left my room. In fact it seemed that the other ser vants were alsowide awake, and all of them were standing in the living room with their wide eyes glued to thetelevision. I furrowed my brow as I approached, replaceing this behavior strange — especially for Selina,who was nervously clutching her apron.

“What’s going on?” I asked as I joined the group. Amy merely raised her finger to her lips, then pointedat the television screen. I followed her finger, my own eyes widening as I saw what was beingbroadcasted.

On the screen was a reporter standing in front of a crowd. Behind her, the crowd was marching backand forth with picket signs that depicted anti-werewolf sentiments, as well as images of bothWereCorp’s logo and Edrick’s face with big, red X’s painted over them.

“As of right now, WereCorp’s youngest CEO, Edrick Morgan, has not made an official statement aboutthe unequal pay between human and werewolf employees,” the reporter said, holding her finger to herear and shouting over the din of the protesters behind her as they chanted “Equal pay for equal work!”

The reporter continued: “According to recent speculation, there are reports that werewolves are beingpaid ten percent more than their human counterparts, in both the offices and the factories, for the samework. Some even believed that the Alpha CEO deliberately made a large donation to a local orphanagejust yesterday in an attempt to assuage these claims and create a positive image for the company, butthe footage from earlier this morning has completely turned that attempt on its head.”

Just then, a video clip popped up on the screen. It showed Sophia and the children from the orphanagestanding outside the WereCorp headquarters; Edrick walked past with his briefcase, completelyignoring them. One of the children tried to reach out and give him a handmade thank-you card, but hedeliberately moved out of the way, as though the child’s display of appreciation disgusted him, thenpulled a w*d of cash out of his wallet and tossed it at the child’s feet. The footage cut out just as asecurity guard stormed out the door and began to usher the children away from the door, with the videopausing for several moments on one of the children’s scared, crying faces.

Suddenly, the TV screen went dark. I looked up to see Selina holding the remote, her lips pressed intoa thin, hard line.

“Get back to work, you two,” she said, addressing Amy and Lily. “No more of this nonsense. It’s noteven nine o’clock in the morning.”

Selina was right; Ella didn’t need to be seeing this sort of thing at her age, and especially not first thingin the morning.

“Come on, Ella,” I said, reaching out to take the little girl’s hand and leading her to her room. “Let’s getyou a bath. If you’re good, we can have crepes for breakfast.”

I led her to her room, where I closed the door tightly behind us and walked over to the adjoinedbathroom to start running the bath. While the tub began to fill with steaming hot water, I returned to herroom to open the curtains and the windows and to let some fresh air in.

“Is my daddy gonna be okay?” Ella asked. Her voice sounded even tinier than usual; I could tell alreadythat what she had seen on the television scared her.

“Yes, sweetheart,” I replied, walking over to her and crouching to her level to take her into my arms.“He’ll be fine. It’s just business; the news always makes everything look worse than it really is.”

Ella sniffled on my shoulder, and when I pulled away, I saw that she was crying. Her sweet little cherub-like face was twisted into a grimace, and her cheeks were red as apples. “I’ll tell you what,” I said,brushing a bit of hair out of her face, “after your bath, we’ll call your daddy if you’d like. I’m sure hearingyour voice would make him feel better, too.”

I kept my promise; after Ella’s bath, she called Edrick, who reassured her that everything would be fine.I even kept my promise to take her downstairs to the bakery for crepes, which seemed to lighten hermood, but as the hours ticked on and Edrick didn’t come home at his usual time, we all started to growworried. After I put Ella to bed with a glass of warm milk and a lullaby to soothe her nerves, even Selinashot me a concerned glance before disappearing into her bedroom for the night.

For some reason, I couldn’t sleep. After tossing and turning for almost an hour in my bed, I finally gaveup and decided to head to the kitchen for my own glass of warm milk. I crawled out of bed and slid myfeet into my slippers before quietly retrieving my milk and settling into the big armchair in the livingroom with a book.

Just then, the elevator doors slid open and out stepped Edrick. His face appeared almost gaunt, andhis eyes looked hollow; he was so tired, in fact, that he didn’t even see me as he came in. I watchedsilently for a moment as he tossed his briefcase down on the floor and shuffled over to the bar to pourhimself a drink before I jumped up and grabbed the whiskey bottle out of his hands, causing him tojump with surprise.

“Drinking will not help you right now,” I said, keeping my voice low so as not to wake Ella and holdingthe bottle out of the way as he tried to take it back from me. “Your daughter was worried sick all day. Sowere the rest of us.”

“I told her I was fine, didn’t I?” Edrick asked, giving up on the whiskey bottle and reaching for a vodkabottle instead.

I frowned. “What would you do if she woke up and came out here to see her father stumbling aroundthe apartment, drunk, after telling her that he was ‘fine’?”

Edrick shrugged. I could tell that he was struggling to come up with an answer, but his brain was tootired from stress to spit out the right words; in fact, as I watched him pour vodka into his glass and walkover to the couch before slumping down into the c**hions, I actually started to feel a small amount ofpity toward him. I sighed, setting the bottle of whiskey down, and grabbed my glass of warm milk beforewalking over to him.

“What are you doing?” he asked as I took the vodka out of his hand and replaced it with the warm milk.I got down on my knees in front of him then, not answering, and slipped off his shoes.

“You know,” I said as I began to rub his feet, “if you’re trying to create a good image for your company,scaring little children who are trying to show their gratitude won’t help any,” I said.

Edrick was silent for a few moments. I didn’t look up, but I could feel the tension releasing in his feet asI rubbed them, followed by the sound of him swallowing a mouthful of warm milk.

“I know,” he replied. His voice was low and gravelly from exhaustion. “I should’ve just taken the d*mncard.”

I nodded. “Yes, you should’ve; but you didn’t. So, what are you going to do to make up for it?”

Edrick simply shrugged.

Sighing, I set his foot back down on the floor and looked up at him. I was surprised to see that he waslooking at me, and his gaze didn’t have its usual bitterness behind it.

“Here’s what you’re going to do,” I said, standing. “You’re going to go to the orphanage tomorrow — inperson — and you’re going to publicly apologize to those children. Then, you’re going to take somenice photos to show that you might actually have the tiniest drop of compassion in your body.”

Edrick’s gaze widened for a moment, but then surprisingly, he nodded. “Alright,” he said, then pausedfor a moment before speaking again. “You know the director, right?”

I nodded in response.

Edrick took another sip of his warm milk. “Then you have to come with me.”

Tip: You can use left, right keyboard keys to browse between chapters.Tap the middle of the screen to reveal Reading Options.

If you replace any errors (non-standard content, ads redirect, broken links, etc..), Please let us know so we can fix it as soon as possible.

Report