Jada
Renataâs at the worktable looking morose the next day. Even her rockabilly polka-dot scarf seems to droop.
She tosses me a Wonderbag prototype. âThe new closure sucks.â
I try it out. Sheâs right.
âShondrella tracked down a claw buckle at a warehouse in Brooklyn. She got her man to do a pick-up.â
âNice,â I say, trying to sound enthused. Jack doesnât seem to be in yet. Why bother being on time when youâre the owner?
Renata half-collapses on the table. âA clasp is not the answer, and we know it,â she moans, and I feel this rush of love for her. Sheâs been by my side here for so many years.
I want to tell her what I know about Jack, but this isnât the right time. Sheâll freak out, and possibly even confront him. Everybody will find out, and there will be tears. Anger. And how would Jack respond? Will he shut down the whole place once heâs had his fun? Send us all home? The last day of our SportyGoCo family?
I need to keep it to myself until I figure out what to do.
âWhat?â she asks.
âWe should have a drink after work,â I say. âWe donât do that enough.â
Her face brightens. âI have derby practice all this week, but next Monday?â
âPerf.â
We pick back up where we left off when Bert shut things down for CPR training, and Shondrellaâs excited about the new closure.
Lacey arrives looking extra goth, or maybe itâs just fatigue. She asks about my afternoon of babysitting Jack.
âWorst employee ever,â I say. âIs he not even in yet?â
âShipping,â Lacey says.
âHmph,â I say, feeling a little stung that he didnât even bother to say hi. And then Iâm angry at myself, because seriously? Iâm mad because heâs not doing a good job of pretending to be my attentive new fling?
Iâm eating lunch at my desk when he finally makes his appearance in the design department. I concentrate on my work even though heâs making quite the production of his arrival back there, clearing his throat and sliding his chair around.
âYou guys get that snafu handled?â Renata asks him.
âBest itâll get for now,â he says.
The two of them chat a bit and I get this warm, syrupy feeling inside from hearing his voice.
I close my eyes, hating life. What is wrong with me? I was such a pushover with my brothers, letting them play video games while I spent those crucial years after high school working my ass off on their behalf. It was a big thing to me that Iâd sworn off lazy, entitled men after that. An important promise to myself, and whoâs lazier and more entitled than a billionaire heir who only wants to drive and fight?
I need to re-swear them off, clearly. With a solemn flag ceremony and a ten-gun salute. I like hardworking men who strive for things they believe in. I need to write that a zillion times on a chalkboard, and maybe on the insides of my eyeballs.
âHey,â Jack says. âCatch any double-parkers lately?â
I spin around. He has his feet up on his cubicle desk and heâs just sitting there, smiling, hands behind his head. He probably looks like that when heâs on his stupid yacht. âNo, I have not.â I go back to work.
Of course he comes over. âSomething wrong?â he asks in a low voice, concern written all over his face.
âJust not a fan of double-parkers at the moment, thatâs all,â I snap.
âOh my god, right?â Renata says from behind.
I look right at Jack. âThey suck,â I say.
âHave double-parkers done something to upset you?â Jack asks.
âUmm, Iâll take this one for five-hundred, Mayim,â Renata puts in. âUtter pieces of shit who sadly exist in this world?â
âAnd that would be your opinion, too?â Jack asks me.
âDo you not have anything to do?â I ask him. âBecause we are trying to make things right here.â
âNot untilâ¦â He draws his brows together in this face of concern.
âDo I need to assign you a task?â
âDepends,â he says, and then he flicks his gaze at the supply closet.
I grit my teeth. âYou want a task? Iâll give you a task.â I jerk open my desk drawer and get out my box of Q-tips. âHold this.â
He complies, standing there holding the box, watching me, all smiling eyes and solo dimple. âA task?â Because naturally heâs thinking thisâll be a sexy task.
âFollow me.â I storm into the breakroom and grab a mug from the cupboard and fill it with a little bit of water. I go around to the dark corner where poor Keith is.
âKeith has gotten dusty. Youâre going to clean him.â
âCome again?â he says.
I ignore his stupid double entendre and kneel next to Keith. I dip a Q-tip into the water and then I roll it against my finger so that itâs merely damp. I use the tib to rub the dust off the parts of Keithâs fragile cactus skin.
âYouâll get every bit of dirt and dust off. See how carefully and gently Iâm doing this? Youâre gonna need to be careful not to press too hard. Avoid the prickersâsome of them are fragile, and if you hit them, they can fall out. Especially on the brown parts like this. See? I go around it.â