Page 1 of Latke'd and Loaded


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Chapter One

“And whose daddy are you?”

Jonah shifted his knees in the general direction of the voice. Hard to be suave when he’d had to practically fold himself in half just to fit behind a school desk, last in the back row of the classroom. The high tech venture CEO, in her power pantsuit and out of her C suite, was giving him a hungry once-over. She’d gone up right before the firefighter in full turnout gear, who had then given up the floor to the zookeeper and her bearded dragon. That little dude had received just as much applause as the freakin’ NBA point guard who had started out Career Day in Ms. Klein’s fourth grade class.

What the hell had their teacher been thinking, asking him to present last? Accounting wasn’t exactly headlining material. Then again, this same teacher had once swapped Double Stuff Oreo filling with toothpaste and had given it to Jonah as an afterschool snack, so…

“Nobody’s daddy…just doing my big sister a favor.”

His pantleg brushed against something bumpy and sharp under the desk that he sincerely hoped was a piece of fossilized chewing gum and not some kid’s booger, circa 1995.

Julie had told him to dress “profession appropriate.” Now, he wished he was wearing the hazmat suit of the guy reaching for high fives down the aisle after finishing a speech about being a forensic CSI like the ones on TV. The charcoal-gray suit Jonah had pulled out of his closet before making the thirty-minute trek up to Riverdale was Brooks Brothers…but probably wasn’t made for whatever toxic science project was growing under that desk. CSI guy bumped his fist against the hard meat of Jonah’s broad shoulder.

“You’re up, man.”

Jonah heaved to his feet, making sure to duck so his head wouldn’t get tangled in the papier-mâché solar system hanging from the drop ceiling.

Time to half-ass it.

Literally. His left butt cheek had fallen asleep crammed onto the tiny chair, and he half-hopped, half-limped to shake the pins-and-needles feeling. Can I fake a war injury? Shark bite?

Anything but the “boringest” job in the world. Which was what his niece Avery had groaned during dinner last night when Julie proposed he fill in last minute for Libby, who was supposed to talk about her path to pastry arts before a sweet job came up in Palm Beach that she couldn’t refuse.

“Not a real word,” Julie had informed her daughter. “And not really Uncle Jonah’s fault. You should thank your lucky stars I would never force practical, stable jobs on you like GiGi and Bap did to us growing up.”

Now, his big sister was giving him an encouraging “don’t fuck this up” smile from the front of her classroom, where she commanded thirty ten-year-old maniacs on the daily. Her job was hard as hell in addition to practical and stable, but no one would ever call it boring.

“Hey, guys. I’m Jonah Klein, and – ”

A hand in the front shot up. “Why do you have the same last name as our teacher?”

Another hand. “Are you two married?” Kissing noises ensued.

Gross, dude. I’m her brother.

Jonah cracked his knuckles. He wasn’t beyond grade school double-dog dares, and these kids had probably never experienced the exquisite humiliation of an atomic wedgie.

“Jonah’s my baby brother,” Julie interjected before he could get a word in edgewise. The kids giggled. At six-foot-four, he towered over their teacher. He even had a few inches on the NBA dad. “And his job is related to all the other careers you heard about today, believe it or not.”

Everyone simmered down, probably contemplating what the hell the guy standing in front of them had to do with New York’s Bravest, Finest, the Brooklyn Nets, Bronx Zoo and a Fortune 500 company.

Jonah prided himself on being the funniest, fastest thinker on his feet in Thursday night improv class, but there was no joke in the world with “accountant” as a punchline that was going to get any laughs today.

“So, yeah – everyone here, once they get a job, has to, uh…pay taxes.”

Another hand waved frantically. “My dad called taxes the F-word once.”

More laughter ricocheted off the classroom walls. “Vincent…” Julie used her best teacher warning voice.

Jonah raised his brow in a sheepish grin, nodding. “Your dad is right, Vincent. Ffffinance is ffffancy. Like…Bianca Bonet’s gold-plated hot tub, fancy.”

Dropping the trending hip-hop artist’s name wrangled them back in with hushed gasps.

“You wouldn’t believe how much she spent on that thing. I know, because…taxes. You see, I’m an accountant, but…” He leaned down toward the front row of desks, like he was telling them a juicy secret. “I’m an accountant to the stars.”

Now, even the grown-up high-achievers in the back row were invested.

Jonah knew in the grand scheme of things, his wasn’t a lifesaving job, or nearly as interesting as the rest of his Year Course friend crew. Or as lucrative, since he did some of their taxes, too.