Son lawyer recently ran for this position of Environment Overseer in the elections. His name was buried in the pile of indiscriminates on the back of the ballot that are hardly ever read and less often marked. The position is one that less than three percent of the population has any care about and, to top it all off, his was the last name on the list.
Going into the elections he knew that he was unlikely to win based on voting trends and statistics on how locals know almost nothing about their local elected officials. However his father spent hours creating visually appealing advertisements for the local papers, meticulously editing slogans, making phone calls and collecting a band of voters to back his son. Lawyer Jr.'s mother made buttons that she distributed to her friends and placed in buckets on the counter at her nail salon and dry cleaner. This was a family affair which, by some unfair default, I was dragged into. Apparently the position of "Receptionist" has no clear limitations or boundaries. Several hours of my time on the clock in the law office were spent stapling signs to metal stakes to be stuck on corners around town. One morning of sign construction I was even chastised for placing my staples too far apart. "Do you think those will really hold up?!" Lawyer Sr. asked me exasperated. Good grief.
He took the day off on November 4th to campaign at the polls on the outskirts of town. The two paralegals and I waited with bated breath for the results.
He didn't win. I came in a few minutes before nine on Wednesday morning and Rene told me he'd come in second out of four with twenty-seven percent. The other guy got thirty-four. I was surprised by my own disappointment. It was raining too, and cold.
At 9:45 he came into the office, a few minutes before his first appointment of the day. He was red-faced and his short hair was pressed down matted on the left side. His collar was flipped up on one side revealing the neck of his striped tie.
"Morning," I said kindly, quietly. He responded with a somewhat spastic hello and he seemed flustered. After getting a brief summary from Rene, he retreated to his office. Nobody had mentioned the election. Everyone knew he'd lost. It was bizarre, a big fat orange elephant in a very small parlor that had, over the past thirty-six hours, grown in importance to everyone. Everyone, that is, except Lawyer Sr., to whom the election had always been of the highest importance.
His first appointment was a no-show, so he stayed in his office. At one point I poked my head into his door to ask him about a file. As I left I said, "hey, sorry about the election."
"Oh! It's okay! Those things happen, you know? That's just the way it goes sometimes!" He exclaimed it like a city hot dog hawker selling lunch to passers-by. I was startled and nodded, eyes wide.
A gentleman came in not long after that. He walked through the door regally, though his clothes were worn out with his rumpled white hair. He walked right up to the window and said, "Is Mr. Lawyer Jr. in today?"
His confidence took me back, considering most of the people who come to that window are generally beaten down and pretty miserable. He asked if he could see Lawyer Jr. and I asked if he had an appointment.
"Oh, no appointment necessary! I just wanted to commend him on the election! It was a good race, commendable."
I went back to the office and pushed the door open.
"Wil," I said, "an old client of yours is here. Says he wants to commend you on the election."
He did come out of his office to the window and that old bankrupt businessman shook Wil's hand and told him what a fine job he'd done running for the position and what a fine man he was in this community of Winston-Salem. And all Wil could say was "thanks" and nod his head. But when the man walked out the door and Wil walked back to his office, it finally felt like the tension had broken. Wil even made a joke about having fewer meetings to worry about. Of course, when his father came in I thought he might just break down into tears. But I guess there are some things that just have to be left alone.
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