Font Size:  

I linger and let her leave the conference room first. Then I let out a whoop of celebration. I’m so happy, I feel as though I can fly. I can’t wait to get started but first, I fish out my phone to text my best friend Chris. I need to share the good news and I need someone to take me shopping. He’s a photographer and never passes up an opportunity to take pictures.

***

“I’m acquainted with one of the brothers,” Chris says later, leaning against a clothes rack in the department store. He wanted me to splurge and shop in a designer store but I had to make him see sense. Sure, the magazine was paying for it but I’m pretty sure they didn’t mean designer clothes for my new wardrobe. Chris is from a wealthy family and I’m not surprised that he’s acquainted with the Anderson family.

“I photographed the first brother’s wedding,” he says. “Alec is his name. Solid guy and a surgeon.” He pats at his spiky hair although there’s nothing wrong with it. The thing that Chris loves after his camera is his hair.

“And the other one, Jace?” I leaf through the clothes. A plain black pencil dress catches my eye and I sling it on my left arm to try on later. It will be perfect for those days when I don’t feel like going to a lot of trouble to dress up. I anticipate plenty of those days.

“I’ve seen him from a distance,” Chris says. “Serious dude, the kind that doesn’t take crap. Makes sense. He has run that clinic and done superbly well since his parents retired.”

I stop listening at “…the kind that doesn’t take any crap.” My insides shudder. This is becoming real and scary. The threat of being fired on my first day if very real. He’ll probably see through me as soon as we shake hands.

Chris stops talking when he realizes that I’m not listening. “What?”

I recount for him the conversation I had with my Amelia. She had meant it when she said that if I fucked up, my job would be on the line. I love my career but Amelia takes it to another level. She lives for that magazine. She wasn’t joking. I’m not exactly irreplaceable. Maybe in a few years, but right now I haven’t made a name for myself in the world of journalism. The way to do that is to carve out a niche for myself. I inhale deeply and remind myself that’s the reason why I’m going to The Anderson Clinic as an undercover reporter.

“If Jace Anderson is the boss from hell, what chance do I have?”

“Relax,” Chris says. “I didn’t say that he was the boss from hell. I only said that he was serious. But Liv, so are you. You’re the most focused person I know.”

It’s not exactly an achievement to be the most focused person that Chris knows. Out of all his friends, he’s probably the only one who takes his work seriously. Chris is a freelance photographer and quite a celebrity on social media. He’s got several million followers and he has a deal with a luxury bag brand.

His friends, people he has known all his life are from his circle, spoiled with wealthy parents and trust funds. When my friends meet Chris, the first question thing they want to know is where we met considering I was in and out of foster care all my life.

“Don’t worry about Amelia,” Chris continues. “Besides, you can always go freelance.”

I shudder and shoot him a look of horror. I admire freelancers. They can pick and choose their assignments and, not for the first time, I wish I was brave enough to do freelance work. My job is my security. It makes me feel safe the way a warm blanket feels wrapped around you on a cold, winter evening. I like knowing that every two weeks, on a predictable date, my paycheck will show up in my account. Money aside, I love having somewhere to go to every morning and having a structured day.

“I know, I was kidding.” He pulls me to his side for a hug. “You’ll be fine.”

I grab several pairs of pants and pencil skirts in a variety of colors. A store assistant offers to help but I assure her that I’m okay. The fun starts in the changing room. I try on the first outfit and come out to pose for Chris. He discreetly takes pictures before I try on the next outfit.

“You look hot in that one,” he says. “You should wear it for the interview.”

I turn to stare at myself in the mirror. I look different than my usual casual ensemble. The peach-colored blouse has a deep v-neck that shows a hint of cleavage and the pencil skirt shows off my figure. It’s definitely not the look I usually go for but I need all the help I can get.

“I really do look nice,” I say.

Chris comes to stand next to me. A sales woman walks by and does a double take, looking at him again. Chris is gorgeous. He’s well over six feet, with sandy-colored hair and beautiful green eyes. We’ve always been friends, right from the beginning when we first me. But there’s never been any chemistry between us and I like it like that. He said the same thing to me during a drunken weekend after we graduated from college. I was the sister he never had and he liked knowing that he didn’t have to hit on me. I was safe.

He was single and for as long as I’ve known him, he’s never been in a relationship for longer than three months. He says that he gets bored easily but my theory is that he backs off when things get serious. I’m no therapist but his parents have a weird open marriage, something I’ve never heard with couples from their generation.

“Nice? Jace Anderson won’t know what hit him,” Chris says building my confidence.

I really hope I get that position. I have a feeling that it’s the stepping stone I need to show Amelia what I can really do. I try to limit how much I buy as I haven’t gotten the job yet, but I still end up with almost a full wardrobe.

I pay for my purchases and we lug them to Chris’s car in the basement parking.

“Want to go for an early dinner?” Chris asks.

“Sure, why not?”

Chris drives us to the private club where he and his family have been members for decades. I got free private tennis lessons, courtesy of being friends with Chris. We head to the dining room and pick a table that overlooks the garden.

“It always feels like coming home,” Chris comments.

He spent more time at the club than at home when he was growing up. I admired him for that and only years later did I realize how lonely he was. He probably just wanted to be home with his parents, just like I did.

Source: www.allfreenovel.com
Articles you may like