The shout was so loud that Jessica flinched and dropped her purse. Mark was trembling violently, his knees weak. He tried to stammer an incoherent excuse. “No, sir. I just… this was planned a long time ago. It wasn’t my intention.” Those stupid excuses sounded even more pathetic to everyone’s ears. Mark tried to grab Mr. Harrison’s hand to plead for understanding, but Mr. Harrison snatched it away abruptly, as if Mark’s hand were something disgusting. Shut up, Mister. Harrison yelled again. I don’t need your excuses. I thought you were an upstanding and decent employee, but you’re nothing but a human being without a conscience. You have tormented your grieving wife to satisfy your pride and vanity.
You forced her to prepare a party before her tears had even dried. Mr. Harrison looked around the room at the guests who now bowed their heads in shame. And all of you have eaten and drunk heartily in a house of mourning. Where is your conscience? The guests remained silent. Shame and guilt struck them. The party had turned into a moral tribunal in an instant. The music had long been turned off. The laughter had vanished, replaced by a suffocating tension. I remained in my place, crying tears of relief, feeling that I had finally lifted that weight off my chest.
But I didn’t know yet that the real shock was about to begin. Mr. Harrison turned to look at Mark, who looked like a drowned rat. Mr. Harrison’s gaze suggested that for him, this was not just a moral issue. There was a personal anger in it. He took a deep breath, controlling his emotions before dropping the next atomic bomb that would destroy Mark’s life forever. “Mr. Evans,” Mr. Harrison said in an icy tone. “You may be proud of your new position. You may feel big in front of your friends, but you’ve forgotten one very important thing.” “Mister,” Harrison stepped closer again and whispered with a clarity that reached Mark’s ringing ears.