"Look," Mr. Cobb said with the sort of condescending tone you'd expect when a man in his 50's talks to a man in his 20's, "I understand you're trying very hard to cope with all all of this, but I'm telling you, you need to finance this money! It doesn't have to be through me. Open up a Roth IRA and pay up front. Then put a sizable majority in an ETF and you'll be twice as rich in ten years."
Aaron just rolled his eyes and glanced around Mr. Cobb's office. The oak paneling and lack of anything from the current millennium more than showed Aaron the man's complete lack of understanding.
"John," Aaron stared, using Mr. Cobb's first name to piss his off especially, "I understand you want the best for my financial future. But $250,000 is more than enough for me to cover my expenses to Los Angeles. I've already saved on a room on the train. They've got a program that lets me share the room for half the cost."
"Which I would be absolutely fine with," said Mr. Cobb, "If you were moving out there to find a STEM job."
Aaron rolled his eyes. ”Here we go again.”
"You know median income in the industry is in the millions, John." Spoke Aaron.
"You also know that for every success story there are a hundred failures?"
Aaron had no counter. The man was right.
"You already don't have a college degree," Mr. Cobb began, "And I know you should go at least pick up an Associate's, but believe me when I say that 2008's crash isn't over. You need a job in STEM."
Aaron hated that acronym. It just implied that if you didn't work in Science, Technology, Engineering, or Mathematics, that you were completely worthless. And sure enough, the good old family lawyer John Cobb was a big fan of talking about STEM and it's importance. Funny thing? He didn't even work in STEM.
"Thanks for the concern, but no thanks. The money is in the account in my name, correct?"
"Yes but--"
"And as a legal adult of 23, I have every right to the inheritance my parents left behind when they passed not 2 weeks ago, correct?"
Mr. Cobb sighed. "Yes."
"Then I'll call you if I need you," Aaron said as he stood up. Mr. Cobb rolled his eyes, and the two men shook hands. "I've got a train to catch.”
“My condolences, again.” Mr. Cobb muttered sincerely as Aaron nearly slammed the door on the way out of the office
"Thanks, man." Aaron said to his taxi driver as he finished paying him. The gruff man nodded and drove off, leaving Aaron and his two suitcases alone at Union Station.
Aaron bent down and took his backpack off. Inside he found his ticket; a one-way ticket to Los Angeles. The trip would take about 3 days; one day and night to Chicago, and another 2 to L.A. Based on his ticket information, the train left in an hour at 6:00PM. It would spend all day tomorrow traveling and arrive at 7:00AM to Chicago. He'd have about 12 hours to kill before making it to the 7:00PM train to finish the journey.
Aaron checked into Union Station and started heading downstairs, through the marketplace, to the actual tracks. He was entering the area for the train when he was stopped by a ticket man after he saw Aaron’s ticket.
"The train out to Chicago is running late, Mr. Wright,” the man said rather quickly; there was a line behind Aaron. "Wait upstairs for another 30 minutes. We'll make an all-call when it arrives."
"Can I at least leave my baggage around here?"
"Sorry sir. You'll have to wait."
Aaron rolled his eyes and made his way back through the shops. On his way upstairs he picked up a coke from the vending machine, and found a seat in the central lobby not too far from the center. It was a bench seat, and one of the last open. He sat to the left of the seat to make room and placed his luggage next to his side of the bench. He set his backpack down and prepared for a good wait. Train stations on a Friday night were busy, and Aaron knew it; his mom and dad used to take him on train rides all the time; using the metro to tour the capital. In fact, when Aaron was 16, the whole family went during spring break to view the capital from inside the White House. It was amazing how tight security was, and……..
"Stop." Aaron thought to himself. "Not here. Not now.
He wiped a single tear from his eye and quickly pulled out his phone, and opened the first app he saw. Some sort of game, it looked like. He drank his coke and numbed his eyes with the images on the screen. All he needed to do was make it on the train with his dignity. All he needed was a distraction.