Jada
I slam into work early the next day and hit the ground runningâthe zipper samples for our Unicorn Wonderbag design.
Unicorn Wonderbag is a secret, off-the-books project that Renata and I have been playing with for a while now, and then we got Shondrella on board. Shondrella knows the fashion industry in and out, and she was thrillingly enthusiastic. Weâre going to slip it into our spring/summer lineup when itâs all worked out, specifically when itâs too late for Bert to doom the project.
Being that itâs October, spring/summer ordering is virtually here.
Unicorn Wonderbag can transform into three different modes, from elegant purse to sporty bag to shopping sack, and it can also be rolled up into a âunicorn hornâ for travel. The design is bold, and thereâs an enamel unicorn zipper charm.
Dave says theyâre going to close the company if we donât get enough orders in this accounting period, and this bag is our silver bullet. Weâre pretty sure we can sell it to Target and maybe even Walmart.
Itâs not until almost lunchtime that I notice Jack hasnât punched in, even though heâs been buzzing around, mostly doing stuff for the shipping guys.
When I see him up at reception with Varsha, I take the opportunity to stretch my legs and remind him of the rules. âYouâre supposed to punch in, Jack.â
âOh, right. I will.â
Varshaâs eyes widen. âYou have to punch in! Otherwise, youâre not technically here.â
âBert saw me,â he says.
âThatâll keep you from getting a demerit, but you wonât get paid if you donât punch in,â I say.
âIâm so touched that you care.â
âOh, I donât care,â I say.
âNot even a little?â
âNot even a little. We should be paid for putting up with you.â
Jack gives me a big smile-frown, then he strolls to his cubicle and settles in.
I head over right after him. He fires up the intranet and clicks the radio button to signify his arrival at work, then twists in his chair, all the better to address me annoyingly. âHappy?â
I pause over him. âHelp me out with a decision tree here. Are you incompetent or just indifferent?â
He leans back in his chair and crosses his legs. âIâm extremely competent at certain things. Very competent.â
Heat rises to my face. âI doubt that, party-shirt peacock.â
He grins at the name. âDo you, though? I donât think you doubt it. I think youâve been thinking about itâmore than you want me to know.â
âThatâs cute that you think that,â I say casually. âAnd what, pray tell, have I been thinking? What is this âitâ you think Iâve been pondering so hard? Please enlighten me with your sure-to-be-impressive revelation.â
âTo be honest, I think there are a lot of âitsâ that youâve been pondering when it comes to me.â
I shamble on a surprised face. âYou donât say!â Deep down, Iâm aware that Iâm playing with fire, but I canât stop.
âWell,â I say. âLetâs hear one of them. Just for entertainmentâs sake.â
âFor one thingâ¦â He looks over his shoulder.
I follow his gaze past the cutting tables, past the shelving systems that groan with binders of fabric samples and boxes of fixings, all the way over to a remote corner where thereâs a scuffed door that leads to a deep closet full of office supplies.
âThe office supply closet,â he says.
âAh,â I say. âAnd what about the office supply closet?â
âYou keep thinking about us in there, thatâs what. Youâre imagining us in it. Itâs outrageous and just wrong. You are my boss, after all.â
I snort. I should cut this off and get back to work, but I tell myself I need to know how far his arrogance goes. His arrogance is a phenomenon, an extra-annoying force of nature that must be tracked and monitored. âAnd whatever is it that Iâm imagining?â
âTwo words: hate fuck. Or is that one? I never really know.â
âThatâs what you think Iâve been imagining?â This like itâs so hilarious.
âAll-out, no-holds-barred hate fuck. Or is it no holes barred?â he says. âI never know that, either.â
My mind spins. âGuess itâs too much trouble for your lazy ass to google such a thing,â I manage.
âTrue, and also, why bother? A proper hate fuck would have no holes barred as well as no holds barred, donât you think?â
âOh-ho-ho,â I fake laugh.
He lowers his voice. âIâd hold you by your hair, thatâs a given. You know, a pretty little blonde bun isnât just for holding pencils anymore. Or maybe Iâd undo the whole thing so I can pull it a littleâor actually a lot. Iâd pull it pretty hard, I have to warn you.â
My mouth goes dry. âYou have quite the overblown sense of yourself for somebody who is so incapableââ
âThere a problem here?â Bert asks.
I straighten up. How did I not see Bert bumble into the design department? Was there a Bert alert I didnât hear? âNo problem at all,â I say.
Bert looks from Jack to me and back to Jack and then he walks off.
I turn to Jack. âYou need to stop distracting me.â
âI was distracting you? Iâm sorry, am I the one who interrupted an important exchange that I was having with Varsha and then hounded me all the way to my desk, trying to get me into a lurid conversation?â
I give him an indignant stare and point at the supply closet. âIn your dreams.â