Monday, March 28, 2016

1-800-Henchmen: First Shot

1-800-Henchmen is a novella series that I started writing about two years ago and it is the first thing I have ever self-published. There are four books in the series that follow Alfie Vihar, a 18 year old high school graduate who stumbles into a job as a professional henchman. He is put on a team with some colorful characters and goes on adventures that his small-town upbringing did not prepare him for. 

I really enjoyed writing Alfie and his team because they are funny, unique, smart, and bad-ass. 

1-800-Henchmen is available on amazon.com and the first section of First Shot, the first in the series, can be found below. Enjoy!
******


             Alfie looked up from the ad he had clipped out of the classifieds to the large, futuristic looking building in front of him in disbelief and back down to the ad. Its lettering was tiny, minuscule in fact, and left much to be desired. He couldn’t help but wonder why it was such a cheap, obscure ad when the offices looked like they were in George Jetson’s building.
            “Ah hell, whatever. I need the job,” he muttered and walked through the glass door into the sunlit entry way.
            “Welcome to Resources, Inc.! How can I help you?” A cheerful, pretty blond receptionist greeted him from her place behind a stainless steel and glass counter. She was wearing a Bluetooth headset and was typing on her keyboard without looking at the monitor that was recessed into the desk.
            “Uh, hi. I’m Alfie Vihar. I-”
            “Yes, Mr. Vihar. Take the elevators to the fifty-third floor. Misha will meet you there.” With a smile and not another word, the receptionist answered the phone with the same cheery tone as she had addressed Alfie.
            He stared at her for a long second, unsure what to do. She jerked her head to the hallway behind her without looking at him and he leaned over so he could see the elevators around the corner. He nodded his thanks and walked around the desk toward the polished steel doors. One opened as he approached so he stepped inside and pressed the button for floor 53. The doors closed and opened mere seconds later. Alfie stared in surprise at the different floor and glanced up at the digital screen above the door to make sure he was where he was supposed to be.
            “Mr. Vihar? I’m Misha.” Another pretty blond in a pantsuit waited just outside of the elevator for him to disembark.
            “Yeah, sorry.” Alfie finally stepped onto the floor and looked around. There were rows of glass-walled cubicles filled with suited people working at their desks. He felt very underdressed in his khakis and polo as he followed Misha down the aisle between the glass cubicles and the floor-to-ceiling plate glass windows that illuminated the floor. He looked out the windows and could see half the city laid out below him and the ocean beyond.
“That's a pretty prime view. There are people who would pay seven digits or more for it.”
“Oh, yes. It is quite lovely.”
Alfie frowned at her back, confused. It was seriously the best view he had seen in the city and she acted like it was just a solid wall in a nice color.
            “Mr. Kadish is waiting for you.”
            “Oh, sorry. Am I late?” Alfie silently cursed himself. He needed the job and didn’t want to be counted out because he was late for the interview.
            “No. You are early, actually. He is simply waiting for you.”
            “Oh.” Alfie bit his tongue so he wouldn’t say how weird that was to him.
            “Here we are!” Misha announced cheerfully as she stopped in front of the door to the corner office. Alfie looked through the glass door with trepidation. He could see a man with steel-gray hair sitting with his back to the door looking out the window. The man’s glass-topped desk was empty except for a large flat-screen monitor that sat on the corner and a Newton’s cradle moving where Alfie expected a name plate to be.
            Misha knocked gently before pushing open the door. She motioned for Alfie to follow her in. “Mr. Kadish, Mr. Vihar is here for his interview.” She said cheerfully.
The man suddenly swung his chair around. Alfie’s jaw dropped. James Bond was sitting there with a welcoming smile on his face.
“Thank you, Misha. Mr. Vihar, would you like anything to drink while Misha’s here?”
“What? Oh, no. Thank you.” Alfie barely sputtered out. He cringed to himself. Nothing like making a good impression. At least he had spoken in passable English. The last interview he had, he got nervous and started throwing random insults out in different languages. He obviously didn't get the job when the interviewer coldly told him that she spoke German and didn't appreciate being called a 'malformed trout biscuit'.
“Alright. That will be all, Misha. Thank you.” Mr. Kadish dismissed the woman and motioned to the empty chairs in front of his desk.
Alfie finally remembered his minimal interview skills and walked forward with his hand out. Mr. Kadish’s smile broadened as he stood to shake Alfie’s hand. “Welcome to Resources, Inc. Mr. Vihar,” Kadish started as they both settled into their chairs. “I see on your resume that you are fluent in four languages? That’s very impressive for somebody just about to graduate high school.”
Alfie felt the blood rush to his face. “I know three languages but I am not fluent in any but English and German, sir. I am fairly adept at conversational French and have just started studying Chinese.”
“Well.” Kadish’s smile dimmed slightly. “That is still impressive for an eighteen year old. What do you plan on studying in college?”
“I am planning on majoring in international business with a minor in human resources and foreign policy. That is why I applied here for a summer job. I thought I would learn a lot that would help me in the future.” Alfie finished his canned response, hoping it came out naturally rather than rehearsed.
Kadish studied him for a long minute with an unreadable expression on his face. “No.”
Alfie felt his heart plummet. “Excuse me, sir?”
Kadish smiled and rested his elbows on the arms of his chair with his hands crossed in front of his mouth. “The business experience is not why you’re here. Now give me the real reason.”
Alfie struggled to swallow the panic before he decided to throw caution to the wind. He slouched back in his chair in defeat. “I just need a job that pays more than fifty bucks a week like my last one. I want to backpack around Europe for the next few years and need the funds.”
“Okay.”
“Uh, okay?”
“Yes. Okay.” Kadish grinned at Alfie’s stunned expression. “Tell me about yourself. The real you. Not the you that wants to major in international business.”
Alfie sighed. He knew he already blew the interview, he figured he might as well be honest. “Mr. Kadish, I don’t want to major in international business. In fact, that sounds like the second most boring major possible. I want to write, which isn’t good enough for my parents so they and I are at an impasse right now. I figured a few years traveling on my own might help us get over that. I have spent my entire life in this corner of California and San Luca is beginning to feel like a prison. I played football and lacrosse in high school and I wasn’t half bad. I learned German because a foreign language was required. I learned French to impress a girl. I’m learning Chinese because it is used a lot in a T.V show that I like. I like shooting guns when I have the time, which scared off the girl I learned French for. My best friend is a girl who is nerdier and scarier with a gun than I am. And you look like James Bond which is freaking me out a bit.”
Mr. Kadish leaned forward, a gleam in his eyes. Alfie felt his stomach drop.
“What do you write?”
“I dabble in most genres. Haven't really found my niche. I've-”
“Where in Europe?”
“All over, focusing on Central Europe and the Mediterranean.”
“Get seasick?”
“Not that I know of.”
“Why German?”
“Hot German foreign exchange student sophomore year.”
“Sight of blood make you sick?”
“Not yet.”
“What T.V. show?”
“Firefly.”
“Siblings?”
“Two brothers and a sister.”
“Parents?”
“Two of them.”
“Favorite gun?”
“1911.”
“She wasn't worth it.”
“I know.”
“Friend?”
“Almost sister.”
“Shame.”
Alfie shrugged, breaking the rapid-fire Q&A Kadish had just thrown at him.
“What’s the first?”
Alfie frowned. “What?”
Kadish chuckled. “What’s the most boring major possible?”
“Oh.” Alfie laughed softly. “Anything involving math.”
“I agree.” Kadish stood up and came around his desk to lean against it right in front of Alfie. “Well, Mr. Vihar, I don’t think you are quite right for the summer internship program,” he began with a small smile. “But I think I have a better job for you. Show up at that address on Saturday at 10am.” Kadish handed Alfie a business card that simply had the company name and an address printed on it. “Thank you for coming in and being refreshingly honest. Most people don’t do that, even when I tell them to. They just say what they think I want to hear.”
Alfie slowly go to his feet. “Are you seriously giving me a job?”
Kadish laughed. “Yes, and it pays a little more than 50 dollars a week. It won’t be what you were expecting but I want you to give it a shot. Stay as long as you need to and then you can head to Europe.”
“Thank you!” Alfie sputtered as he grasped Kadish’s hand.
“You’re welcome!” Kadish motioned to someone behind Alfie. He turned to find Misha just opening the door to escort him out. “Oh, Mr. Vihar? Which Bond?”
“Uhh… does it matter?” Alfie stuttered.
“Well, I very much doubt I look like Daniel Craig. He’s a little too blond.” Kadish said with a chuckle.
Alfie laughed. “True. If I had to pick, I’d go with a cross between Sean Connery and Pierce Brosnan.”
Kadish thought about it for a long second and nodded. “I’ll take it.” Kadish shook Alfie’s hand one more time. “Don’t forget, Saturday at 10.”
“I won’t! Thank you!”

“This way, Mr. Vihar.” Misha guided Alfie out the door and back to the elevator. “Welcome to Resources, Inc., Mr. Vihar,” she said with a smile as the doors closed.
******

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