Jada
It hadnât occurred to me until now that his style is as deliberately obnoxious as some of the things he says. Iâm sure he has access to all kinds of nice clothes. His friend Arnold wore a normal outfit the other day. Arnold probably has a closet full of stylish clothes, not a loud print shirt to be found among them. If Arnoldâs bringing him money, heâd surely be up for giving Jack a few cast-offs.
Jack sits there so suave and cool, but I know Iâve hit a nerveâI can see it in his sly sideways glance. âI strive to appear repulsive,â he says in an amused tone. âIs this some kind of reverse psychology where I insist itâs not my goal to look repulsive? And I rush to accept the makeover?â
âNo, itâs more of an observation. My point is, he doesnât want a makeover,â I say to Renata. âLet it go.â
Jack gives me a lazy smile, that one dimple in full flare. His phone pings and he shuts it off without even checking to see who it is, eyes fixed on mine the whole time. âLet me offer another theory,â he says.
âOh, this should be good.â
âYou donât want me to have a makeover because you want me all to yourself.â
âHah!â
âJada would never do that,â Renata assures him. âShe cares about others first. If she was in an airplane that was in trouble, sheâd make sure everybody else had their oxygen masks on before affixing her own. She would give you the shirt off her back before sheâd be selfish like that.â
I cross my arms, daring Jack to say whatever bullshit comment heâs thinking of.
He just smiles, of course.
Renata glances at her own pinging phone now. âDamn.â She goes back to her cubicle, because unlike Jack, she cares about the texts that come in.
âYou so want me,â Jack says.
I move around the opening of his cubicle and press my finger into his chest. âI so have your number.â
He grabs my finger and a whoosh of excitement flows over me. âMy number? Meaning that I make myself look repulsive because otherwise predators would surely hunt me for my meat? Which is so delicious that I need two layers of defense, spines and camouflage as a sour fish? Is that what youâre saying?â
I lean in nearer. âThat would be the least plausible of several explanations.â
âThe truth is, I am quite delicious,â he says.
âYou think youâre delicious? Thatâs interesting that you would know that. With an unfortunate mental image to go with it. Are you an acrobat, Jack?â
He keeps hold of my finger, sitting up now, bringing his face near to mine in the confines of his cubicle walls. âIâve been known to create that impression.â He angles his gaze in the direction of the supply closet.
I hold my ground. I know heâs trying to corrupt me, but itâs unbelievably enjoyable. I suppose thatâs the point.
âYou have no idea,â he whispers.
âYou shouldnât oversell things like that,â I say.
âIâm underselling it.â
âYou are the worst,â I say.
âThatâs part of the fun.â He smiles.
Renataâs swearing at her screen in the background; usually Iâd be involved by now, but the office is a million miles away and this sexy reality with Jack is a respite, a secret oasis in the middle of the dusty, war-torn reality of SportyGoCo.
He comes in closer. I can feel his heat, his strange allure. Heâs so much more than he seems. âThe experience of my spiny protrusions, you have no idea.â
âOh my god!â I yank away my finger. Iâm just laughing now. What is he doing to me? Iâm trying to save this company, to save my work family, and heâs making me forget it all. âDonât you have something to do in shipping?â
He grabs his phone and takes a look. âApparently so.â
âSo theyâve been texting you this whole time and youâre ignoring it?â
He sighs. âA heroâs day is never done, thatâs for sure.â With that he takes off, still wearing our department hat.
I go over to where Renata is stressing out over the small selection of sample clasps we can get in time to make a Wonderbag prototype. âWe could go to MayRay Fashion but look at this price.â
I press my palms to my eyes, trying to think of a new option.
âWhat is up with you two?â Renata asks.
âOther than him being a freak?â
âYes, other than that,â she says. âYou guys seemed intense.â
âBecause heâs intensely jerky.â
âCheck it out.â Renata shows me her phone with a stealth shot of Jack. Heâs leaning against the side of his cubicle, talking to somebody outside the frame. The shot captures everything dorky about his styling, and everything nice about him, too, except that you canât see his eyes through his famous skinny glasses. Then she flips to another picture where he has his glasses off. Then another where heâs at the watercooler laughing with Shondrella. âWhat do you think?â she says. âI bet my friend would literally pay him to appear on her channel. The transformation, if he were to allow it, would be staggering. Iâm not giving up. He could be so doable. Maybe Iâd even do him.â
âYou canât!â I say.
âWhy not?â she asks.
âHe said no,â I say. âHey, can you forward those to me, though?â
âSomething for the spank bank?â
I give her a playful glare. âMy roommates were asking about him. Deliberate or not, his style is definitely in the you-gotta-see-it-to-believe-it category.â
âNo shit,â she says, staring at the laughing photo.
âDouble-lock closure ahoy!â Shondrella says, beelining over to us with a small box. âThree sizes!â
âThis has gotta be our answer,â I say. âPlease let this work.â
We race to the back of the table to try this new closure with the design. Itâs a Velcro alternative.
Shondrella gets one of the prototypes out. Renata lines up the strips to sew.
âBase too big.â I fly to my computer to redo the dimensions. We decide to try it in two different ways. Naturally, just as Renata starts cutting, Lacey tells us that the yoga pants fit session got moved up with our size twelve fit model.
âYoga pants first, then Wonderbag,â I say. âWe can do this!â
Varsha takes over the cutting while we hop onto the yoga project. We skip lunch, making headway.
And then Bert arrives and announces that everybody needs to do a CPR training.
âWhat the hell?â Varsha whispers.
âSince when do we need that?â Shondrella whisper-squeaks.
I speak up. âEvery one of us? Would there be any exceptions outside of a current CPR certification?â I ask, laying a little trap.
âNo exceptions outside current certification,â Bert says.
I try to look sad. âWell, my certificate is good for another year. Anybody else?â
âSorry, Iâm shutting off the system,â Bert says. âIâm shutting down the office and turning off the intranet and locking up.â
âBut since I have my certificate and we have our fit model onsiteâ¦â
âNope.â
âMaybe Iâll just take a half-day,â I say. Because I can finish the bag at home, not that Iâd say that. I have a lot of days stored up, being that I never take them off.
âHalf-days require notice,â he says. âIf you arenât going to be in the training, I need you to go with Jack on his deliveries for the rest of the day and confirm heâs following the company guidebook on customer courtesy. Heâs also been having challenges filling out the paperwork correctly,â he says.
âShouldnât somebody from shipping do that?â I protest.
âIs that a no?â Bert asks. âYouâre one of our top people on protocol. And you seem to be interested in his poor work habits.â
Jack puts on a face of mock surprise. I grit my teeth. Bert definitely overheard my useless comment from back when Jack started.
People are filing out, heading down to the space we use for trainings, the space we used to use for parties and fitness breaks when this was a great place to work.
âWhy would Jack be exempt from the training?â
âSo that you can do this errand,â Bert says with a completely straight face. âLeave the project here. Itâll be there in the morning.â