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CHAPTER ONE
Jackie Dunn needed a
change, and she was about to get one. For four years she had worked in
the same bile-yellow cubicle, listening to her officemate hum flat tunes over
the partition. She had slogged through twelve-hour days, translating page
after page of legalese that scrambled her brain. She had taken contracts
home over weekends and holidays. Now all that work was about to pay
off. Today, at four o’clock, she would meet with the partners, who would
give her the promotion she’d been desperate for.
She had the whole day planned for weeks. First, the purchase of her
celebratory coffee a half hour before her meeting with the partners to allow it
time to cool to the perfect temperature. That first sugary,
whipped-cream-and-chocolate sip would taste particularly good when the partners
told her the international liaison position was hers. Then, she would
sign the new contract, which promised not only her own office—complete with hum-silencing
door—but also a hefty raise and frequent trips to Spain, Chile, and Argentina
to meet with the heads of the companies her firm did business with. On
those late evenings when she thought she couldn’t work another minute, she’d
used the dreams of sprawling on sunny Chilean beaches or late dinners at the
Ritz-Carlton Madrid to propel her forward.
The icing on her perfect day’s cake would be leaving the office a few minutes
early to zip down the highway to her ten-year high school reunion. She
picked out her favorite blue dress and brown wedge boots and wore them to work
so she wouldn’t have to stop by her condo on the way to the school.
Jackie could envision herself, clad in the perfect outfit, greeting old friends
and not-so-subtly slipping in news of her promotion. Her classmates would
have to be impressed at how perfectly her life had come together.
The partners announced the month before that the choice was
between her and one other candidate, Walker Melton. She absolutely had
the advantage. As far as she could tell, the most Walker Melton had
contributed to the office was a tendency to tell off-color jokes at the worst
possible moment. She hadn’t been sure the promotion was hers until that
afternoon, though. The partners went in for their meeting to discuss the
candidates, with Jackie’s boss, Tyrone, in tow. Jackie searched Tyrone’s
face for a sign, and he grinned and winked. She took the look as a green
light to run to Starbucks for the seven-dollar calorie bomb she never would have
allowed herself on a normal day.
At last, the electric-blue clock on her desk clicked over to four
o’clock. Jackie closed her laptop, grabbed the coffee, and walked down
the plush carpet to the conference room for her meeting. Tyrone and the
partners were already assembled, standing beside the round oak table. Her
grin wilted a little. Shouldn’t they sit down to sign the contract?
Her stomach dropped. A quick glance at their hands told her no one had
papers of any kind.
Mr. Houston, the short, bald senior partner, nodded at her.
He offered her a tight smile. “Good afternoon, Jackie. Thanks for
meeting with us.”
“Thank you, Mr. Houston.” She went to take a seat in one of
the high-backed leather chairs, but he held up a hand to stop her.
“This…this won’t take long.”
Oh, no. Jackie placed a
hand on the back of the chair, in an imitation of nonchalance, but the wheeled
chair shifted and she had to do a quick sidestep to keep her balance.
Tyrone stepped forward. “Jackie, you know we appreciate how
much you do for this company. This was a really tough decision.
But, in the end, the partners and I have decided to go with Walker.” He
smiled a little. “Something good will come up for you soon, I’m sure.”
Jackie gritted her teeth, but the words still screamed in her
head. But my office! With a door! The
Ritz-Carlton! The beeeeeeach. She took a deep breath and
nodded. “Right. Well. Thanks for considering me,” she said,
gripping the coffee in both hands. She turned to walk out, and Tyrone
followed her back to her cubicle.
“Try not to let it get to you,” he said.
“You know I do twice the work he does.” Jackie leaned
against the wall. “I basically did the entire last contract translation
by myself.”
Tyrone held up his hands. “It’s true. You’re a real team
player. But you have to take into account that Walker’s kid was sick
those two weeks.”
“I thought the kid just had the chicken pox.”
“Walker took on as much as he could, but his family comes
first. That’s just not something you have to worry about at this
point.”
Jackie threw a hand in the air. “And that’s what this is about, isn’t
it? I’m single, I can spend all weekend poring over work, right? No
kids, no sick days.”
Tyrone ran a hand over his shaved head. “Look, when you’re the one with a
family you’ll be glad this company takes that into account. Your day is
coming. It’s just not today.”
Jackie looked down at the formerly celebratory coffee and decided to
re-christen it as a comfort coffee. She raised it to her lips and tilted
the cup, ready for its warm reassurance. Instead, she felt a tap of
plastic on her nose, followed by a flood of liquid over her mouth and down her
dress. The lid, now resting in a brownish puddle on the floor, hadn’t
been on tight enough, and the entire drink now soaked through her favorite
outfit.
She squeezed her eyes shut for a long moment as coffee dripped
from her chin. When she opened them again, Tyrone stood staring at her,
his mouth slack and his brown eyes wide. She straightened her shoulders
and back, trying to reclaim what little dignity she could with a beverage
slopped down her front.
“I’m taking a personal day,” she said.
Tyrone glanced at the clock. “It’s four-fifteen.”
She dropped the empty cup into the trashcan and grabbed her purse. “Then
I’m taking a personal hour, I guess. See you Monday.”
“Wait,” Tyrone said.
Jackie turned back to him and fought the urge to scream. “Yes?”
He cleared his throat and picked up a file folder from her desk. “Any
chance you could take a look at the new contract this weekend?”
In the silence that followed, she could hear the drip of coffee from her dress
hitting the floor. Every muscle in her body felt like a rubber band about
to snap. Even her hair was tense. Tyrone raised his eyebrows.
Finally, Jackie held out a hand, and he gave her the file folder.
“Thanks,” he called over her shoulder as she sped down the hall.
On the way to the elevator, she ducked into the bathroom for paper towels, but
they did nothing to sop up the brown stain spreading across the dress.
The coffee did, however, make the outline of her bra and panties clear through
the thin fabric. She wiped the last of the coffee off her chin then sprinted
back out toward the elevator, holding her purse awkwardly across her front to
try to cover the mess. As soon as she hit the button, the elevator door
dinged open, and she breathed a little sigh of relief when she stepped
in. Maybe she could get to the parking garage without anyone seeing
her.
A hand appeared between the closing doors. They sprang open again and
Walker Melton stepped in, all goofy grin, bulging eyes, and a frat-boy sweep of
brown hair. The four-letter words bounced around in Jackie’s head so
forcefully, she worried they might project out of her eyes and onto the wall of
the elevator, like a vulgar PowerPoint slide.
“Hey, Jackie,” he said, as his eyes traveled down her front. “Whoa, did
you spill something?”
“No. Purely decorative.” She held her purse in front of her again,
jabbing the button for the parking deck five or six more times, until the doors
slowly closed. “I guess congratulations are in order.”
“Thanks. Not sure my wife is going to like the idea of all those trips
abroad. Maybe if I bring her along once in a while. Company’s
already paying for the hotel rooms, right?” He winked at her.
“Look at you, already embezzling like a pro,” she said.
His brow wrinkled, and he took on the faraway look of someone trying to do long
division in his head. “Ha, yeah. Anyway. You got anything
going on this weekend?”
The thought smacked her between the eyes: the reunion. She glanced down
at her dress, then over at the ring on Walker’s thick finger, glinting in the
fluorescent light.
“I’m supposed to go to my high school reunion, but…I’m not sure if I really
want to go anymore,” she said.
“You should go. Reunions are a blast.” The elevator doors slid open
and Walker stepped through. He waved goodbye and grinned at Jackie.
“Have fun.”
Oh
yeah, she thought as the doors slid closed. After a day
like this? Nothing more fun than a trip down memory lane.
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