Absolute Being: I Am Nothing Chapter 59

The heavy silence was finally broken by a sharp, nasal sigh from the far end of the table. All heads turned.

Donald Trump Jr. leaned back, the legs of his chair groaning. He’d been quiet so long some had almost forgotten he was there. A bad sign.

"Okay. Great. Beautiful plan, really," he said, his voice cutting through the quiet like a buzzsaw. "We see you. We don’t understand you. We want to coexist. It’s a Hallmark card. It’s weak."

The steady-eyed man didn’t flinch. "It’s not about strength, Don. It’s about accuracy."

"It’s about perception!" Trump Jr. shot forward, planting his palms on the table. "You think this guy respects ’accuracy’? He just blew up several armed forces of the world! You know what that tells me? He respects power. He respects people who aren’t afraid to say what they want."

The woman who’d argued against speeches massaged her temples. "And what is it you think we want, Don, that we haven’t already said?"

"A deal!" he said, as if it were obvious. "A arrangement. You go in whispering, begging just to exist, he owns you forever. You walk in, you look him in the eye—figuratively, or whatever—and you say ’Listen. What happened, happened. We’re not here to cry about it. The world’s different now. My question is: what does a man of your... talents want from it? And what do we get for being... accommodating?’"

A colder quiet settled over the room.

The older woman in the corner spoke, her voice like dry ice. "And what, precisely, would we be ’accommodating’?"

"Whatever he wants!" Trump Jr. threw his hands up. "Within reason. A place to live? We give him an island. Privacy? We make sure no one bugs him. He wants to be left alone? We pass a law. He’s a guy. He’s going to want things. We find out what those things are, and we provide them. And in return, he provides... stability. A guarantee."

"A guarantee of what?" the steady man asked, his voice dangerously calm.

"That he doesn’t do it again!" Trump Jr. said, looking around as if they were all slow. "That he doesn’t get bored one Tuesday and decide to flip the Atlantic Ocean into pudding. We get a promise. He gets... whatever. It’s a transaction."

The tired man by the window let out a hollow chuckle. "A transaction. You want to contractually obligate the guy who tore up the old rulebook. What’s he gonna sign it in, blood?"

"It’s not a literal contract," Trump Jr. sneered. "It’s an understanding. You create a relationship. A mutual interest. Right now, we have zero leverage. We’re just ants hoping the boot doesn’t come down. I’m talking about giving the boot a reason to step somewhere else."

"You’re talking about feeding the tiger," the woman said, her voice tight. "And hoping it decides it likes the food enough to not eat the zookeeper."

"Better than just hoping it’s not hungry!"

The steady man held up a hand, stopping the back-and-forth. He looked directly at Trump Jr. "Don. Think it through. We offer him things. Material things. An island, a law. He says yes. Then what? Who enforces it? We do. We become his... groundskeepers. His concierge service for reality. The minute we can’t deliver something—the minute some activist group storms his island or a country breaks the ’leave him alone’ law—we have broken the ’deal.’ We have given him a specific, measurable reason to be disappointed in us. We have turned our vague, terrifying situation into a simple broken promise. That is not safer. That is infinitely more dangerous."

Trump Jr. waved a dismissive hand. "You’re thinking like a lawyer. You’re thinking about breach of contract. I’m talking about building rapport. Goodwill."

"You cannot build a business partnership with a tsunami," the older woman said flatly.

"He’s not a tsunami! He’s a man! He answered a phone!"

"And what did he say on the phone?" the steady man pressed, his voice dropping. "Did he ask for a real estate deal? Did he ask for a treaty? No. He listened. Then he hung up. He has not asked us for a single thing. That is the core of our problem. He has no needs. Your entire strategy is based on filling a need. What if there isn’t one?"

For the first time, Trump Jr. looked slightly off-balance, but he covered it with a shrug. "Everybody wants something."

"You’re projecting," the tired man muttered.

"I’m being realistic! You guys want to go in with your hands up and your heads bowed. It’s a loser’s mentality. We look weak. We’ve looked weak for years on the world stage, and now you want to do it on the cosmic stage? No. We go in. We acknowledge his power—flatter him, even—and then we talk about the future. Like adults. Like players."

"There is only one player at that table, Don," the woman said, her exhaustion finally showing. "And it’s not us. We are the table. We are the chairs. We are the rug on the floor. Our only goal is to not be noticed enough to be rearranged."

"So we just hide forever? Hope he forgets we’re here?"

"No," the steady man said. "We demonstrate, through absolute, quiet, non-threatening consistency, that we are not a variable that needs to be solved. We are part of the background. A constant. You don’t make deals with the background. You just let it be."

Trump Jr. shook his head, a condescending smile on his face. "Background. You hear yourselves? The United States of America. The greatest country to ever exist. And you’re volunteering us to be... wallpaper."

"Yes," the older woman said from the corner, her single word final.

The word hung there.

Trump Jr. looked around the table. He saw no allies. Just pale, strained faces, all pointed away from his brand of logic. He leaned back again, the defiance cooling into a simmering frustration.

"Fine," he said, picking at a non-existent thread on his sleeve. "You do it your way. You send in your best quiet mouse to whisper nice nothings. But when it doesn’t work—when he gets bored of the quiet—you remember there was another option on the table. A strong option. You’ll remember I said we should have acted like we still had a pair."

He fell silent, a brooding presence at the end of the table.

The steady man let the comment dissipate into the air, untreated. He looked back at the group.

"We’ve settled on the approach," he said, not as a question. "The next question is the person. It needs to be someone he has no history with. No political baggage. A clean slate."

The selection process began again, flowing around the sullen presence of Donald Trump Jr. as if he were a rock in a stream. He listened, his jaw tight, as they discussed profiles, psychologists, retired diplomats known for their patience.

He didn’t speak again. But his silence was loud. It was the silence of a man watching what he believed was a terrible, cowardly mistake unfolding in slow motion, convinced he was the only one who could see the cliff they were walking toward.