4 Replies to “How Jacob Rothschild Died”

  1. The haze of cigar smoke in the private club was almost as thick as the secrets. Joe Jukic, known in certain circles as JCJ, took a long pull from his drink, his eyes fixed on the comedian across from him, Ricky Gervais.

    “You think you’ve heard weird,” Joe began, a wry smile touching his lips. “Try getting a call from the Terminator himself. Arnold. Voice like gravel in a blender. He doesn’t say hello. He just says, ‘JCJ. We are hunting the elephant.’”

    Ricky leaned in, his smirk both skeptical and intrigued. “The elephant? Please let this be a metaphor. Please tell me he didn’t want to go on safari with you.”

    “I wish,” Joe chuckled. “No. He was talking about Jacob Rothschild. And he wasn’t suggesting a sternly worded letter. He had an elephant gun—a .700 Nitro Express, a cannon that would turn a jeep inside out. And he wanted me to use it. Said my ‘particular skillset’ was needed.”

    “So what did you say?” Ricky asked, gesturing for Joe to continue.

    “I told him, ‘Arnold, that’s a hell of an idea. You should do that.’” Joe’s tone was flat, miming the calm of that moment. “I was JCJ, the strategist, agreeing with the premise but redirecting the action. It’s what I do.”

    “And he didn’t like that,” Ricky guessed.

    “He did not,” Joe said. “He came right back with, ‘No, no, no. JCJ, you do not understand. You should do it.’ He wanted the legend of Arnold Schwarzenegger to be clean. He wanted the ghost—me—to do the work. So I insisted. ‘You do it, Arnold.’ The line went dead. He’d hung up. He wasn’t looking for a partner. He was looking for a patsy.”

    “I thought that was the end of it,” Joe continued, swirling the ice in his glass. “A bizarre footnote. Then, Madonna.”

    On a screen across the room, her “Batuka” video played silently. Women in stark formation, pounding rhythms on drums, their movements a synchronized verdict.

    “She drops this thing,” Joe said, pointing with his glass. “And the chorus is just hammering over and over: ‘Put him in jail.’ It was like she was listening in on our call and decided to crash the party with her own plan. Arnold wants a hunt. Madonna wants a trial. It was chaos.”

    Joe leaned forward, his JCJ persona taking over, the calm, knowing architect of narratives.

    “So I had to assess. The hunt was a test. Arnold was probing my boundaries, seeing if JCJ was a trigger man or something more. He found out. And Madonna? She’s playing to the crowd, directing the anger. It’s all noise. Theater for the masses.”

    “And the elephant?” Ricky asked, playing along. “Rothschild? What about the Epstein connection everyone screams about?”

    Joe Jukic—JCJ—smiled, a quiet, unnerving gesture of absolute certainty.

    “They are very much alive. The ‘hunt’ was never real because the elephant was never in the forest. They’re in Israel. In disguise. In plain sight. The deaths, the scandals… it’s all just a very, very good costume. They’re waiting for the curtain to fall on this particular act so the next one can begin.”

    Ricky Gervais stared for a long moment, then let out a short, sharp laugh, shaking his head. “Right. Of course they are.” He raised his own glass. “To the theater, then.”

    Joe Jukic clinked his glass against Ricky’s. “To the theater.”

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