“Who did you talk to? Some guy at a dealership?”
“The sales manager.”
Bette Wu clears her throat. Then slips out from the table bench and walks over to the centerpiece tangerine tree, loaded with late October fruit. “May I?” she asks, hand raised.
“Go for it.”
“You, too?”
“For sure.”
“How many?”
“One.”
Bette takes her time, reaching up, fingering one tangerine after another. Casey pushes his suspicions of her as far away from his brain as he can get them. Enjoys a long, beautiful minute during which she has nothing to do with shark-finning, or dognapping, or real estate hustles, or arson, or trying to snake her way into his meager fortune. For that minute, doesn’t even try to derail his attention away from her.
Finally she’s back, sets four perfect tangerines on the table between them, and sits.
“You don’t ask for as much as you should. Because you are polite and thankful. Considerate and shy. And that’s why you need me as manager. To get what you are worth.”
He peels a piece of the fruit, smells that unmistakable, sweet, heavy scent. They’re seedless so he eats it in two bites. His favorite, ever since he was a kid and Grandpa Mike picked him and Brock tangerines off his tree up in Bluebird Canyon. They used to collect and juice them with Jen’s blender, and sell them at the pullout on Laguna Canyon Road where the tourists got traffic-jammed on their way out of town in summer. Set up their card table near Rashad, the Persian rug dealer who sold from his van, and Libby, the Protea girl. Made some good coin.
“Casey? I want you to listen to me now. There is a
“I know there’s a way to get money for all that, but I’m not sure how. A little confusing.”
“Which is why you need me. Then, there’s the non-social media — your television ads and billboards — your handsome face and perfect body, your magazine covers, everywhere people look, there you are. Casey, you need Seiko, not Locomotive! You need J.Crew, not Dream Coast Clothing. You need Lucky Jeans, not World Statement Denim. You don’t need Ripley’s Organic Bakery, you need Dunkin’ Donuts — life-sized posters of you in every store in your surf trunks drinking coffee! You need to make money on CaseyWear, not lose money. And
“What’s wrong with CaseyWear?”
“It’s boring and too on the nose.”
He shrugs. Doesn’t really mind the CaseyWear handle at all.
“Look, Casey, I took film and business, and I know people in the industry, so I know how it works. Based on my Books into Film class, you should have gotten five times that advance for your book, twenty times the biopic option. Someone has to make these people feel
Casey’s brain whizzes with all this information, speculation, and what sounds like real opportunity. Makes him want to take a siesta. The five-thousand-dollar biopic option on his unwritten
“Here,” says Bette.
She draws another document from the briefcase, this a much shorter, stapled Agency Agreement Form from Bette Wu and Associates, an LLC with a Long Beach address that Casey recognizes as that of King Jim Seafood.
“Please do read it. If you have questions, I have answers.”
“No, Bette, I’m not going to sign this.”
“But then I wouldn’t be your agent.”
“I still don’t trust you. Mae. The Barrel. A week ago you were finning sharks and now you want to run my life.”
“I was
Casey takes a moment to look at Bette Wu, let his thumping heart settle some.