“You were great,” Ruth declared.“Like a young Scott Baio.Before he lost his damn mind.”
“Thanks,” I said, hoping that was a compliment.
Brian shook my hand again.Still clammy.
“We’ll add graphics, maybe some b-roll of detention centers or...I don’t know, locked doors.”
“Sounds cheerful.”
They both waved me off, and I headed for Brooke’s office.Still fighting a grin, still tasting laughter in my mouth, and thinking for maybe the tenth time that morning how stupidly grateful I was not to be doing this whole mess alone anymore.
Brooke’s office looked the same.Part DMV, part guidance counselor’s lounge, part minimalist panic room.The walls were a sad beige, the desk was metal and probably from the Reagan era, and the only personal touch was a mug that said“Ask Me About My Trauma Response”holding a few chewed-up pens.
She didn’t even look up when I walked in.
“Close the door, Mitchell.”
I shut the door behind me and dropped into the chair across from her desk, which creaked like it resented my existence.Brooke scribbled something on a file—probably “Subject may have laughed too much in PSA.Potential sociopath.”
Then she looked up, resting her chin in her hand.“So.Filming go okay?”
I nodded.“Yeah.I channeled my inner troubled teen.Think I’m ready for a reboot of Scared Straight.”
She cracked the tiniest smirk.“You weren’t late.You didn’t show up high.And Brian hasn’t stormed in here crying.So… that’s a win.”
“I try to set the bar low,” I said.“That way, I surprise everyone.”
She flipped a page in my file.“Let’s talk about the last week.Any incidents?Fights?Weird behavior?Drug use?”
“I did emotionally spiral after a bukkake shoot,” I offered, “but I think that’s within the realm of normal.”
She blinked at me.
I blinked back.
“…I’m not gonna ask,” she said eventually, flipping another page.“What about drugs?Anything harder than ibuprofen?”
“Nope.I haven’t touched anything.Oh, sorry.I took another um, performance-enhancing drug for um, my job.But it’s perfectly legal.I’ve even been trying oat milk, if that counts as punishment.”
She checked a box.
“Police contact?”
“Nope.”
“Travel outside the city?”
“Only in my dreams.”
Brooke leaned back in her chair and let out a sigh that sounded like she’d aged two years since I walked in.Then she gave me the Look.The one that came right before a stern speech or a surprise drug test or a laminated brochure on anger management.
“Look, Bradley.You’ve been doing noticeably better.But don’t mistake forward motion for invincibility.”
“I don’t,” I said.“I’m not trying to screw this up.”
“I believe you,” she said.“But belief doesn’t count for shit if you break the rules.”
There it was.The Parole Talk™.