“Hello. I am Teacher James. What’s your name?”
“My name is Kobe.”
“Excellent, Kobe. How old are you?”
“I am eight years old.”
The Aide walks past the child sitting at a table that could eat him up if it wanted to. It could fold into eight or even sixteen parts and leave no trace of the child left. No custom-made Off-White boiler suit and Louboutin trainers. The things that would help you recognize an average eight-year-old child.
The child’s eyes are fixed to his tablet and the bespectacled face and peculiar curly hair of his evening English teacher. The Aide did not know the child was called Kobe. He wanders past, heading towards where his colleagues are, contemplating two questions. One is why do parents choose such ridiculous names for their children. To strengthen or cripple them? Or is it because the teachers are too thick to pronounce their real names correctly.
The other Aides are sitting in the corner of one of the living rooms. On the floor. There are two chairs in the very center of the room. These cost more than the Aides would earn in ten years. They are made from a particular tree that has just recently gone extinct in the Amazon. The Aides are forbidden from sitting on them. A Rothko and some British artist’s work which cost 47 million dollars on the room’s west and east walls. The north and south are all glass, looking out to the dark. No stars to be seen, which is understandable given the air pollution levels grow by the day like it is an unspoken competition amongst all the cities inhabitants to see how high it can go. The Aides only have the birds and helicopters for company.
There is only one plug socket in the cavern that those in the know have described as their bosses’ minimal monastery’. So, they tend to orientate themselves around this life source. They huddle around it each day, like early man and the fire that kept the monsters at bay. They make do with their surroundings. One time, an Aide brought an extension cord in, but the Industrialist’s husband lost his shit about it, saying it ruined the aesthetic. The Aide in question works somewhere in Influencer PR now. Their boss could buy half of Latin America but scrimps on electricity bills.
The Aide sits down. Opens the laptop and starts skimming emails. Tapping on keys. The Aides rarely speak to one another. Unless there is something that needs six eyes rather than two. They work through time zones. They siphon through what-ifs. A terrorist attack in a third-world country, maybe not of interest. But in London and New York, the money gets quacking, and property value starts plummeting. Elections, Famines. Fury. Monopolies rise and fall. Anything happening that The Industrialist may find illuminating.
Currently, however, the inbox marked potentially problematic has been growing alarmingly. The Aides think that she is aware of these and have tried to raise their heads above the parapets subtly, but The Industrialist does not seem to care.
The Aides have taken the pulse of the city and country. The press, the people, the tentacles and demands for oversight are tightening the noose on people like the Industrialist. Desperate for the people’s support, the politicians turn on those who put them in their positions. This is how the Aides perceive it, sitting above the city. This worries the Aides. Not in a life-or-death way, but more all this expensive education and expensive contacts for what? Those hours spent learning enough Bengali to negotiate acres, fridges, ships, and if they want to build an island in their territory, who the fuck’s business is it?
“This place has changed quite a bit.” The Aide offers to the others, seeing if they will take the bait.
Surprisingly, the most experienced Aide responds, eyes never leaving the screen, “Yes, her husband has become obsessed with getting a feature in AD. He’s had me organize a lunch with Advance Publications to get it done.”
The Aide replies, happy for the dialogue, “Don’t you remember when it was all gold and ceramic tigers everywhere?”
The most experienced Aide speaks, “He’s become obsessed with this Danish thing, Hygge I think it is called. He says he wants a cosy home, white, clean looking. Thinks it is very vogue.”
“Yeah, minimalism and functionality suit a 10,000 sq.m2 palace in the heavens. It looks like the aftermath of the Romanovs. Everything’s been plundered.” The Aide says tongue loose through lack of use.
“Whatever keeps them even.” The most experienced Aide retorts, the tone indicating that it may be wise if this conversation ceased.
Silence. And the tapping again.
A reminder pops up on all three Aide’s computers.
“I’m going now.” The most experienced Aide says. The other two say nothing. The experienced Aide gets up, closes the laptop, places it in a bag, and leaves the tapping and silence behind.
The Aide walks back through the apartment. Sounds of a child saying Big A, little a, fade from earshot and then a man’s voice screaming at something that had not quite worked out. Another day’s problem. The Aide sees a trench coat and momentarily contemplates taking it for the journey. Then remembers they are going by helicopter. The Aide does not want to feel cramped against a seatbelt and in a heavy, heady silence amidst the clouds with the Industrialist’s breath circling. The Aide takes the stairs up to the helipad. No elevator. The Aide does not want to get trapped and delay the Industrialist.
There is a waterfall running down the middle of the spiral staircase, accompanied by rubber trees and passion flowers, and Bromelia always seeming to be in bloom. The Macaw that used to call this home got sliced up by the helicopter rotor a couple of months ago. It was replaced by Sulawesi Bear Cuscus’s, which were an absolute pain to import and required several greased palms. They shit everywhere.
Why are they taking the helicopter again, the Aide wonders. They once heard the Industrialist and her husband discuss how being stuck in traffic is a poor person’s problem. And until the Government gives the go-ahead for the super expressway for select clientele, which the Industrialist has been demanding built. Especially since a friend of hers was carjacked when she was made to slum it with the pond scum. When that is built, and the Industrialist has received the money from the building contracts, they will stop taking the helicopter around the city.
The Aide opens the door to the night. The Aide is not a massive fan of heights and moves swiftly to the helicopter’s relative safety. If the building explodes, at least the Aide has a shot at survival if inside the aircraft. The Industrialist is already inside the helicopter. She is just staring out the window. The Industrialist says nothing as the Aide sits down, buckles up, and opens the laptop. The meeting that has been called is a bit last minute, but everyone knows it has been on the cards for a while. There has been no desire from the Industrialist to prepare any think points, any requests for cold statistics, or silent calls to allies or possible enemies. The Industrialist is quite decent like that the Aides think. She at least allows her enemies to kowtow gracefully rather than see the family dirt spread across the sixteen tabloids the Industrialist owns globally. Nothing but decent.
The pilot joins them and the co-pilot too. They do not turn around; they get on. The Industrialist is still focussing on the nothing outside her window. The Aide texts the group chat.
Off we go. See you afterwards.
Two immediate blue ticks.
The helicopter lifts off the building.
The Aide has been in the helicopter many times but will never stop loving the view of the city beneath them. Towers everywhere. Flashing in every which color. Surrealist tourist traps that look like floating turds and homes continually growing upwards, like NBA stickmen centers, all gangly and uncouth. People are moving around, doing whatever, unimportant really, behind their double glazing. Every question, strain, and issue are now at a meaningful distance for the Aide, a chance to relax momentarily.
There is not much traffic tonight.
The Industrialist sips on water, unaffected by the skyline. The skyline that she forged out of dust and barren land. You would have thought there would be a touch of pride as she surveyed her city, but her face is sclerotic. It has been seized in an uncompromising pinch, pursed lips, no sign of life, anger, love, nothing. How can she care when her life exists solely in the clouds? She only returns to the squabbling masses to take something she wants or to face down a threat.
The Industrialist wished to kill someone this evening. She had thought about it as the rage grew and grew inside of her, it would be possible, and she would probably get away with it as well.
How dare they?
The cancer at the centre of the country veiling their greed and fear because that is what tonight is about, the Industrialist is sure of this, behind the high-minded declarations and noble soundbites. Preserving their weakening hold on the people by clinging to nationalistic pride and the belief ‘the country’ should be the number one priority. Nation-states, fuck them.
They pass fifteen miles of new residential areas and business districts. Lazy in creativity but full marks for functionality. These buildings just spring up, no one knows who commissions them or who they belong to, they just appear. Ready for another family, another new business to take over its lease. And then the helicopter veers left towards the core of the city. Towards the parks and monuments that the Industrialist paid for. No cars are allowed in this area. The rarefied air aplenty. A decree of the government to protect the virgin lungs of the princelings and tycoon’s daughters who live and school here. The future must be protected at all costs. And screw the rest of the inhabitants, let them suck on the exhausts.
The Industrialist looks down. She hates this part of the city.
She sees where their exulted leader summoned all his sycophants to plant Macondo trees commemorating the glorious new age they were embarking upon. The Industrialist used to sit beneath them on summer days when life was far simpler. The leaves of the Macondo and the Sun, splitting the minuscule gaps between the leaves, made the Industrialist feel like she was under the most wonderful patchwork quilt in the sky. All golden light and deep green. The Industrialist opens the window and spits.
They are nearly there. The Aide sees the nondescript building calling to the helicopter. You would think they would have done something to improve it, the Aide wonders. But they like it like that; no one asks questions about boring places or what goes on there. The Aide tightens, bracing herself, straining as if she was the helicopter landing on the concrete tarmac of the roof. The helicopter lowers, lowers and settles onto the roof: no pop, no bump, no recoil, no whiplash. The rotor starts to slow with nowhere to go. The Aide waits for the thumbs up from the Pilot. It comes, the doors open. The cold night air invades the helicopter. The Aide gathers the things whilst the Industrialist is already out the door and walking towards the rooftop entrance of the building. The Aide must jog around the front of the helicopter to catch up. The thump of the Industrialist’s footsteps on the stairs suggests there is no waiting around. The Aide tries to compose herself, less jogging, wheezing mess more confident business professional, taking the stairs two at a time, trying to compel the body that is far too human and as such limited in its capabilities, to catch up with the Industrialist. It takes three flights of stairs to catch up with the Industrialist. They get to another door and enter a hallway. Red carpet, spotless, washed and ironed this evening: trim hedges, green life, line either side. There is nothing on the walls, no windows, no sounds but the Industrialist’s purposeful steps and the Aide’s scurrying to maintain a respectful distance between them both.
The Aide does not have a clue where they are going. But the Industrialist seems to. She has made this journey before, clandestine chats, favours cashed in and rewarded, information acquired, dragged out of its possessors like a babe, feet first.
They turn left, not a sharp left like those seen in a rabbit warren but a gradual one, a slow change of direction, their bodies leaning into the shift. At the end of the stretch is a door.
“Write down a list of everyone you see at this meeting.” The Industrialist speaks to the air in front of her, and the particles of speech are dragged backwards to reach the Aide’s ears. The Aide nods. They get to the door and pull. Security guards rise, hands move somewhere threatening. The Aide’s heart always goes funny in these instances, and to appease the fears, the Aide’s brain seeks to admit to anyone with the slightest whiff of authority of buying coke semi-regularly. The Industrialist walks in-between the guards, ghosting past like they were nothing. Which for the Industrialist is nearly everyone she comes into contact with. She passes through the room and into another. Gone from the Aide’s view.
The Aide smiles at the security guards who seat themselves. A coop of Aides. The Aide recognizes some of them socially, some from boarding school, one or two are the children of prominent individuals who have been touted as potential matches for marriage. All were carrying the coats, bags, and various shit of their lieges in the next room.
The Industrialist is in a room of people who all know one another, but no one speaks. Associates, you could call them, all belonging to the same exalted category of class. The Untouchables. Some she has known for a long time, worked with, made billions with, hated, betrayed, fucked, loved, just the once, and that was a childish crush. Others, she is surprised they even got through the front door. Yokels from the sticks lucked out one day digging for shit in their backwater villages where incest is a viable life choice and found some minerals that go in all our electronic devices. The Industrialist hates these nouveau hicks. There is a solemn awkwardness amidst all these individuals who make up some of the most influential companies and organizations the country and the world has ever seen. They are all waiting to hear news and have their knuckles smacked like they were all still in school. The Industrialist stays standing and stares out the window. Awake for all extents and purposes to the rest of the world. But her brain is in a state of nothing.
The door opens, and a slim, balding man enters. He looks leaner, more athletic than when she last saw him. His skin taut, the frame of a long-distance runner, with a slightly bouncy walk. He looks like he does not eat anything but dry porridge all day. They went to the same school, the Industrialist, and this gentleman, and looking around the room and in the children’s pen in the accompanying space, accounts for two-thirds of the people summoned to this meeting. Their families were friends, and they would sometimes holiday together in the summer and spring and go skiing when they had the time. He was the youngest of three boys. The Industrialist was the second of four. There is always a healthy disregard for the youngest at gatherings of young people. The endearing image the Industrialist has of this impressive government official, now going through the room, telling these CEOs and visionaries to humbly stay seated whilst loving their fawning and the fear they have of him, him being at the helm of the biggest, nastiest beast who could mince them all into nugget matter, is him weeping under a table. The Industrialist keeps staring at this impressive man. The Official had gone to retrieve a napkin that he had dropped during one of those laborious Sunday family lunches. Once he had gone under the table, he had experienced a barrage of kicks delivered with such venom by all those seated at the children’s table; he broke down and cried. His parents did not care. His Dad complained that he was a constant source of embarrassment. The Industrialist felt no guilt about her participation. She would hate if it were one of her children taking the hits, but she knows they would bite any legs that even dared to look at them funny. In any social setting anyways, there is always one who must be targeted to establish hierarchy. The Official was at the bottom. The Industrialist considers if this experience drove him to get to where he was today. To eradicate that sense of powerlessness, you climb to be something or become a serial killer.
“Please everyone be seated.” The Official smiles, and those who had remained standing so they could twitch in a more open space find a seat swiftly. The Industrialist, too, takes a seat, her eyes still directed to the life outside the window.
“It’s fantastic you are all here. Especially those who have had to travel most of today. We appreciate the respect you have shown.” Respect or fear of house arrest and the seizure of assets, the Industrialist muses.
The Official paces in an eight-shape on the floor, hands mechanically open, palms welcoming and a warm, gleaming smile. “We believe that the time is right to have a little chat with our esteemed business and industry leaders.” The Official breaking them into what is inevitably going to be a vigorous and distressing arse fucking.
“As you may have heard, we are embarking on a new trajectory. Disorderly capital expansion threatens our economy, the people and what we have all built. If this keeps going unchecked, it will push us off course for societal and technological progress.”
Some of the mineral farmers looked a tad unsure. All these big words have knocked them out of their comfort zone. The Official notes the faces, seeing how his audience is reacting.
“This meeting was called not to scare you all,” The Official laughs, like that would immediately dissipate the fears rich people have night and day when someone starts talking to them about taking their money away, “but to simply make you aware of a new perspective, which we are excited about.”
“We foresee coordination of industrial and competition policy. Bringing us and you all closer together. For the betterment of all.” The Official’s face beamed. The smile of an idiot man lost in his dogma. As he brings the hammer down on free enterprise.
“We want your help to drive our great nation to supremacy. To be part of a whole country effort to innovate. We do not oppose your accumulation of capital and power. But feel that your focus has been distracted by short-term profits. Understandable. But we believe that you would all be better served to help us become a scientific and technological leader.”
The Official had finished. The message delivered had been understood by all those present. What was being asked of them and the repercussions if the line was not toed. The Official’s smile kept growing.
The Industrialist spoke, “So, we build you, those you claim to represent, this country, and this is what we get? We put you on the map.”
The tigers and titans in the room sank deeper into their chairs. The snails retract into their shells to avoid being caught by the machetes whirring and thudding overhead.
The Official’s face has taken on an even madder look, the smile so far extended you think the skin around his mouth will rip with all this pressure. He is excited for the jousting which he hoped would come, to defend the Motherland. “No, not in the slightest. We are so proud of you all. See it as us channelling expansion in an orderly fashion. And enacting an industrial policy to take us into the next decade and beyond. Private and public forces united for the betterment of this great nation.”
“You mean stopping anything outside of your agenda.” The Industrialist does not want to stop. If she does not speak now, what was the point of everything? “You are reining us in. You advance, and we are left doing the heavy lifting for no gain. What do we get? Seriously. We spend billions already on your little pet projects, help you keep the public under lock and key. And I see no benefit to myself, my company or any of those around me today.”
The Industrialist keeps staring into the Official to look beyond the fanaticism in his eyes. “Without us, you would still be shitting outside, desperate for World Bank handouts. Let us grow, so when we think it is appropriate, we will share our hard work with the country. It is not the other way, I’m afraid.”
Those in the room look shellshocked. The Official wanders slightly and then calmly and slowly to ensure that the following words he utters are entirely understood by the recording devices currently taping the meeting. He speaks, “So, is this truly what you believe?”
The Industrialist, brash and tired of the child-friendly tone the Official has adopted, responds, “Wholeheartedly.”
The Official moves towards the door and pushes it open. His tone is as cold as an automated customer service system. “Well, on behalf of myself and my ilk, I would like to thank you deeply for your contributions and dynamism in bringing our nation a step closer to its rightful place. If you wish to leave, then you are welcome to do so. I’m sure we will be in touch.”
The Industrialist stands. She is aware that she may have just listened to her eulogy. Was it rash for her to speak like this? Those thoughts linger in the atrium of her brain. Doubt, confusion, anger. She tries to bring clarity to absolve her mind. She has done what she feels was right. But the doubt has moved to her whole body. She tries to carry her body with confidence and poise as she leaves her seat and walks past those cowed and ready to bend the knee at a moment’s notice. If one or two had raised their voice in agreement, something could have been done. But that is life. She leaves the room, strides past the Aides, her own desperate to keep up.