“I’ve got a fucking bone to pick
with you,” Zafir yells as he storms into my office. Agitated, he stomps about
on his tree trunk legs, crushing the life out of my springy shag rug. Normally
my characters don’t bother me before 9 a.m. They know my brain just can’t
process anything before then and that likely whatever they do say will go in
one ear and out the other. I decide to make an exception: I know that with Z in
his current state of uproar he isn’t likely to remain quiet till then.
“I’m
listening,” I reply when all I really want to say is “can’t this wait?” I smile,
proud of myself for suppressing the usual venom that flavors my early morning
conversations. A snarky attitude is definitely not going to win me any points
with the mountain of muscle standing before me. I mean, Z could literally steam
roll me without even breaking a sweat.
“I
want a rewrite.”
“Oh,”
I say, perking up while my mind tries to flush out the mistake he’s obviously
come across. “Well okay. We’ve got some time. A Step Away isn’t scheduled for
publication until fall…” I pause, speechless, as he slowly shakes his head from
side to side.
“This
shit I’m talking about goes all the way back to the beginning.”
“Out
of Reach?” I glare incredulously into his flashing grey eyes. “What’s wrong
with it?”
“I’m
being misrepresented,” he answers smugly.
“You
most certainly are not!” I fight back, insulted by his proclamation.
He
scowls as he thinks for a second. “What’s the word that means the opposite of plagiarism?”
“Huh?”
The inelegant reply slips out as I sit there dumbfounded, unable to comprehend
where he’s going with this.
“Fine,”
he moves on, seeing how I’m unable or unwilling to help him. “I’m being incorrectly
plagiarized,” he explains. “People aren’t getting the real me.”
Not getting the
real you? I almost laugh out loud. I think I’ve done a rather good job
portraying the real Zafir, and believe me it wasn’t always easy. He snatches
the first hardbound copy ever produced of Out of Reach off of my shelf then begins
rifling through pages.
“Hey,
careful with that!” I yell.
“See
right here!” he announces triumphantly, turning the book around and sticking it
under my nose.
“See
what?” I ask as I lean back so that the small print isn’t blurry. Rolling his
eyes, he flips the book around and reads, “Just give me the short version.”
“Yeah,
you said that, so what?” I ask him while still struggling to see his point.
“I
did not fucking say that. Does that even sound like me?”
“It’s
basically what you said,” I answer, hoping to placate him.
“You
see, that is what I’m talking about. It’s misrepresentation. I remember very
clearly that I told Kade to cut to the fucking chase.”
“Really,
you’re mad because I took out an F-bomb?”
“It
wasn’t just one,” he grumbles, folding his arms across his chest.
“Flip
the page,” I instruct. “As you’ll see, you use the F-word at least three times
in the next passage.”
“What?”
he blurts out as he quickly scans through the next scene.
“You’ve
messed things up there as well. I won’t stand for this kind of censorship. It
violates my freedom of speech.” Dropping my head on the desk I keep my groan of
disbelief to myself: is this for real?
“Readers deserve
the real me,” he rambles on.
“Look,” I tell him, sitting up and taking charge of the conversation. “I’m sorry but you rely too heavily on the one word. It’s redundant and that kind of repetition wears on readers. Try throwing in a more descriptive adjective now and again.”
“Look,” I tell him, sitting up and taking charge of the conversation. “I’m sorry but you rely too heavily on the one word. It’s redundant and that kind of repetition wears on readers. Try throwing in a more descriptive adjective now and again.”
“What? Clearly you don’t understand the power
of a good fuck.”
“Clearly,” I
repeat, rubbing my temples in exasperation. Burning grey eyes rimmed with
electricity spark as he rests his hands on my desk and leans in close. Too
close. Gulping, I press myself back as far as I can against my chair, nervous
I’ve pushed him too far.
“F***, ****, ****,
****,****,” he chants, the inflection of his gravelly voice changing with each
expletive.
“You’ve
made your point,” I say and giggle, unable to keep a straight face. “You’ve
clearly demonstrated the versatility of the word.”
Leaning back
smugly he crosses his arms over his chest. “And…,” he presses.
“Fine,
you can curse more in the next book,” I capitulate, tossing my arms in the air.
Satisfied, he turns to go.
“Oh,
one more thing.”
“Yes,”
I grind out, more than ready to be left alone.
“Kade
and Ben get a lot of play so maybe you could get a little more of this in the
next one,” he winks as he strikes the classic Adonis pose.
“Get
out of here and let me finish my morning Coke!” I yell then toss a pen at him.
“Just
a thought,” he teases, finally exiting my office with all the humility of a
prowling lion.
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