Like any good story, it dropped like a bomb.
Ezra watched as it rippled through the studio, the devastation unfolding in slow motion. The ring of alerts. Screens lighting up. Then their reactions. Eyes glancing down. Jaws dropping.
Ezra kept talking, feeling the white-hot lights above searing his skin. His eyes bore into the camera in front of him. "And in local news, a tragic accident leaves four dead..."
All ears ignored him as he relayed the gruesome details, everyone fixated on the horror story scrolling under their fingers. A key grip turned to whisper to his neighbor. A crew member put a hand to her mouth, gasping in disgust.
"The collision was captured by a security camera, which we're about to show you now. But we want to warn you viewers at home--the following may be disturbing..."
As they cut to a clip of a minivan careening into a sidewalk, Ezra scanned the room to watch his own disaster unfold. The studio was small but densely packed with aides and camera crew. And nearly everyone was looking down at their phones. Or at each other.
But no one dared make eye contact with him.
Fuck me, Ezra thought.
The monitor turned back to Ezra, and he tried to keep his eyes on the teleprompter as he continued to tell the story. But he could still see them out of the corner of his view. The whites of their eyes illuminated by their phones. The shock unfolding on their faces.
He kept his blinding white grin stretched tight across his face. So taut he could split a lip.
"But their families are certainly in our prayers. Well, we're going to take a quick break," he said, trying to keep his quivering leg in place as he clacked the stack of papers in front of him. "And please, remind your kids--don't drink and drive..."
Carrie raised her fingers. "And we're out in three, two..."
"We'll be back with more after these messages."
The live light switched from red to green, and Aguilar stood up straight, ripping his earbud out of his ear.
"What?" he bellowed. "What are you all looking at?"
For the first time in minutes, all eyes turned to stare at him.
Carrie held out a hand, the other one gripping her clipboard. "Calm down, Ez..."
"No!" he said, slamming his palm on the table, so hard the papers went flying. "I'm trying to do my job here. I don't know what all the rest of you think you're doing."
He stormed off the stage, out of sight of the camera. Carrie called after him.
"You better get your ass back here, Aguilar! You have four minutes, you hear me? Four!"
He burst through the studio door, into the blinding white hallway, tugging at his collar to remove his microphone. He stomped past the rows of framed posters, a wall of fame for Phoenix's most accomplished anchors--Lisa Lopez, Ethan Spalding, Kristen Cartwright. And his own stupid, happy grin.
He pulled his phone up to survey the damage. His stomach dropped. Eighteen missed calls. Fifteen texts. Twenty emails. And more coming. The dread started to well up inside him like a tsunami.
Then a news alert, tweeting innocently.
He could almost predict the headline word for word. Still, he felt a stab of nausea when he saw it, the wave breaking inside him. His worst suspicions confirmed.
Phoenix Today News Anchor Ezra Aguilar Accused of Sexual Misconduct.
He felt the blood drain from his face. He seized his temples, ready to tear his perfectly combed hair out by the root. But he let go, squeezed his eyes shut, and slammed his head against the wall behind him.
CRUNCH.
He cracked the glass on the portrait behind him and for a moment he saw stars. He crumpled to the ground.
You stupid fuck, he thought, staring into the beaming bright eyes of his own portrait directly across from him. What did you do?
Assistant producer Justin Chegal opened the studio door and leaned into the hallway. "Ezra? What the hell?"
"I'm sorry," he said, shaking his head, looking like he'd just stepped off the battlefield. "I can't go back in there."
"Aguilar, the show's still on. We need you in there."
"I don't care about the fucking show," Aguilar said, buring his face in his hands, feeling the misery exploding inside him. "Can't you see I'm a dead man?"
"Well, dead or not, the show's still live. And we need your corpse in that chair."
Ezra fumed. "Did you see the headlines?"
Justin nodded, biting his lip. "Yeah."