Chapter 1 – Two Johnsons

1301 Words
Eric hated introductions. They always started the same way: a list of names, a few polite laughs, and then that brief, awkward pause when people realized his last name. “Johnson? Any relation to—” He usually cut them off with a shrug. “Just a common name,” he would say. But this time, it was different. The lecture hall was packed, a hundred students crammed into steep rows of seats. Sunlight spilled in through the high windows and glinted off laptop screens. The air smelled of coffee, new paper, and expensive cologne. First day. First class. Corporate Strategy. Eric sat in the middle of the room, not too high, not too low. Invisible was safer. He had his notebook open, pen ready, schedule printed and folded in the front pocket of his hoodie. He’d arrived ten minutes early, like always. This was his chance. Full-ride scholarship. One of the top business programs in the country. Years of late nights and perfect grades had led him here. He could feel the weight of his family’s expectations pressing between his shoulder blades. Don’t waste it, his mother had said that morning over the phone. As if he ever wasted anything. The professor, a man in his fifties with silver hair and a navy blazer, cleared his throat at the podium. “All right, everyone,” he said. “Before we dive in, I want to get a sense of who you are. I’ll call your names, you say where you’re from and—” he smiled “—if you have any connection to the business world already. Internships, family companies, that sort of thing.” Eric’s stomach tightened at the words family companies. He told himself it was fine. There were thousands of Johnsons in America. Nobody in this room knew his story, or the old story behind it—the version his family told around kitchen tables late at night, when the bitterness came out with the coffee. The professor started reading from the list. “Ashley Clarke.” “Here.” “Diego Martinez.” “Present.” Names rolled by. Laughter, a few cocky comments from students who’d already interned at banks and tech firms. Eric kept his eyes on his notebook, letting the noise wash over him. Then: “Charles Johnson.” The room stirred. Several heads turned toward the right side of the hall. Eric looked up despite himself. A guy a few rows away raised his hand lazily. He wore a tailored jacket over a white T-shirt, a watch that probably cost more than Eric’s entire wardrobe, and a smile that said he’d never had to worry about tuition in his life. “Right here, Professor,” he said, voice smooth, almost amused. “Columbus, Ohio. My family runs Johnson Industry.” A ripple of recognition moved through the hall. “Johnson Industry?” someone whispered. “Are you serious?” “The Johnsons?” another voice said, impressed. Even the professor’s expression shifted. “Ah, Johnson Industry,” he repeated. “One of the pillars of our state’s economy. We’ll be using your family’s company as a case study later in the semester.” Charles grinned, used to this. “Looking forward to it, sir.” Eric felt something cold slide down his spine. Johnson Industry. Of course. Of all the schools, of all the programs in the country, he had walked straight into their territory. His pen pressed harder against the paper until the tip dug a small hole in the page. The professor moved on. “Eric Johnson.” The name echoed louder in Eric’s ears than in the room. For a split second, nobody reacted. The class was still buzzing with the mention of the billionaire Johnsons. Then a few students glanced around, curious. Two Johnsons. In the same room. Eric forced his hand up. “Here,” he said. The professor peered over his glasses. “Ah, another Johnson. Any relation?” A few people chuckled. Even Charles turned to look, eyebrows raised, interest flickering over his face like someone who’d just been told a joke. Eric met his gaze—and felt an unexpected punch of dislike. Too white teeth. Too relaxed posture. The kind of easy confidence you only got from growing up behind gated walls, with people telling you the world was already yours. “Just a common name, sir,” Eric said, his voice steady. He watched something like disappointment pass over Charles’s face, as if he’d hoped for a story—as if he were the only one entitled to the name. “Very well,” the professor said. “Where are you from, Eric?” “Maine.” He cleared his throat. “No family business. Just… hard work.” A couple of students smiled politely and turned away. The professor nodded and went on with the list. But Charles kept looking at him for a moment longer, curiosity sharpening into something else. Measuring. Evaluating. Eric looked back down at his notebook, pretending to take notes, heart thudding a little too fast. Johnson Industry. His father’s voice came back to him, rough with anger. They stole everything from us, Eric. Don’t ever forget that. Eric hadn’t. He just never expected to end up in the same room as one of them. Not this soon. Not like this. When the roll call ended, the professor launched into the syllabus, talking about case studies, group projects, end-of-term presentations. Eric tried to focus, but the words blurred around the edges. Group projects. He had a sudden, unreasonable vision of being assigned to work with Charles Johnson. Sitting across from that lazy smile in some glass-walled study room, pretending to talk about market strategies while both of them thought about something else entirely. No. He pushed the thought away. This was his chance to build something for himself, outside of the old stories, outside of Ohio. He wouldn’t let a rich heir with his family’s stolen name ruin that. When class finally ended and the room exploded in chatter, Eric took longer than necessary to pack his bag. Maybe if he moved slowly, he’d avoid any awkward small talk. No such luck. “Hey, Maine.” He looked up. Charles Johnson stood at the end of the row, blocking the exit with one hand on the seat in front. Up close, the expensive watch looked even more out of place in the scratched lecture hall. The guy’s smile was easy, but his eyes were sharp. “Eric, right?” Charles said. “Eric Johnson.” Eric straightened. “That’s right.” “What are the odds?” Charles chuckled. “Two Johnsons in the same class. Kinda funny, don’t you think?” “Yeah,” Eric said. “Hilarious.” Charles either didn’t catch the edge in his voice, or chose to ignore it. “You planning to go into corporate?” he went on. “Consulting? Finance? Or are you hoping to get into…” he tilted his head slightly “…family business?” The question hung there, light on the surface, sharp underneath. Eric’s jaw tightened. “I’m planning to earn my degree,” he said. “The rest is none of your business.” For a heartbeat, the smile on Charles’s face slipped. Something colder showed through. Then it vanished, replaced by an easy grin. “Relax, man. Just making conversation.” He shrugged. “See you around, Johnson.” He emphasized the last name, like he was trying it on. As Charles walked away with his little orbit of friends, Eric stayed where he was, fingers clenched around the strap of his backpack. He had come here to leave the past behind. Instead, it felt like he’d just walked straight into it.
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