Here is the writing exercise for this week:
“And now, Mrs. Wilson, Carly’s mom, will share with the
class. Welcome, Mrs. Wilson.”
“Thank you, Mrs. Casters,” I said, although I wanted to be
anywhere but in Carly’s class that morning.
When Carly had told me about career day a month ago, I was
excited. I wanted to enlighten young minds on the wonders of accounting. I was
looking forward to telling them why accounting was important and that it was a
fulfilling, well-paying occupation.
It was still all those things, but, unfortunately, not for
me. Not only was I fired yesterday, but I was looking down the barrel of a full-fledged
investigation into all my clients’ records.
If I could just get through career day, I planned to explain
what happened to Carly and prepare her for what lay ahead.
“Hello, class. I’m here today to talk about the profession
of accounting. I’ve been an accountant for twenty years and find it very
rewarding.”
“Working for the mob usually is,” someone called from the
back of the room.
Before I could gather my wits again, Carly had rounded on
the heckler with a vengeance. “You take that back, Mark Johnson,” she ordered,
her little fist inches from his nose.
It was then that I recognized Trent Johnson’s son. Trent was
our local sheriff and the one who was looking into my case.
“What’s the matter, Mrs. Goody Two Shoes; you don’t want
everyone to know your mommy works for the mob?” Mark teased.
“Does not!” Carly insisted.
“Does too!”
“Shut up, Mark, or so help me you’ll be sorry.”
“Make me!” Mark challenged.
Mrs. Casters was struggling to keep the two children apart
while they continued to argue. I knew I had to put a stop to things before my
child was beat to a pulp. I just wasn’t sure how. Carly solved the problem for
me, although not in a way I would have preferred.
“Tell him, Mom,” she screamed across the room. “Tell him you
don’t work for the mob.”
I was happy I didn’t have to lie.
“I do not work for the mob,” I informed the class and my teary-eyed
daughter.
“Not anymore,” Mark said, and then at my indrawn breath, he
added, “She was fired yesterday.”
4 comments:
In my mind, you are the Queen of Flash, but this piece, while cute, is lacking believability in that the mob usually uses the barrel of a gun to end an employee's job. This is a perfect example of the old rules of writing fiction: write what you know, or else learn about things through a little research....
I'm sorry you didn't like it, but the mob didn't fire her. She worked for an accounting firm that fired her. The kid just believes the mob is one of her clients. Maybe I should have made that part more clear.
I disagree with Robert. Theoretically, if she worked for the accounting firm and was using it to funnel mob clients, she would not have been fired by death immediately.
It's only flash fiction, so the story is incomplete. I'm sure once the "news" of the investigation is out, the mob will realize they are not compromised and perhaps THEN solve their issues with a bullet.
Yeah, I probably should have said that she didn't actually work for the mob, but an actual accounting firm. Sometimes I leave to much to interpretation, thinking people will just get what I'm talking about.
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