I pull my phone out of my pocket and text my mother: Did Dad ever work on any Evelyn Hugo movies?
I see three dots start to appear, and I look up, only to find that Frankie is trying to get a glimpse of my phone. She seems to recognize the invasion and leans back.
My phone dings.
My mother texts: Maybe? There were so many itโs hard to keep track. Why?
Long story, I reply, but Iโm trying to figure out if I have any connection to Evelyn Hugo. Think Dad would have known her?
Mom answers: Ha! No. Your father never hung out with anybody famous on set. No matter how hard I tried to get him to make us some celebrity friends.
I laugh. โIt looks like no. No connection to Evelyn Hugo.โ
Frankie nods. โOK, well, then, the other theory is that her people chose someone with less clout so that they could try to control you and, thus, the narrative.โ
I feel my phone vibrate again. That reminds me that I wanted to send you a box of your dadโs old work. Some gorgeous stuff. I love having it here, but I think youโd love it more. Iโll send it this week.
โYou think theyโre preying on the weak,โ I say to Frankie.
Frankie smiles softly. โSort of.โ
โSo Evelynโs people look up the masthead, find my name as a lower-level writer, and think they can bully me around. Thatโs the idea?โ
โThatโs what I fear.โ
โAnd youโre telling me this because . . .โ
Frankie considers her words. โBecause I donโt think you can be bullied around. I think they are underestimating you. And I want this cover. I want it to make headlines.โ
โWhat are you saying?โ I ask, shifting slightly in my chair.
Frankie claps her hands in front of her and rests them on the desk, leaning toward me. โIโm asking you if you have the guts to go toe-to-toe with Evelyn Hugo.โ
Of all the things I thought someone was going to ask me today, this would probably be somewhere around number nine million. Do I have the guts to go toe-to-toe with Evelyn Hugo? I have no idea.
โYes,โ I say finally.
โThatโs all? Just yes?โ
I want this opportunity. I want to write this story. Iโm sick of being the lowest one on the totem pole. And I need a win, goddammit. โFuck yes?โ
Frankie nods, considering. โBetter, but Iโm still not convinced.โ
Iโm thirty-five years old. Iโve been a writer for more than a decade. I want a book deal one day. I want to pick my stories. I want to eventually be the name people scramble to get when someone like Evelyn Hugo calls. And Iโm being underused here at Vivant. If Iโm going to get where I want to go, something has to let up. Someone has to get out of my way. And it needs to happen quickly, because this goddamn career is all I have anymore. If I want things to change, I have to change how I do things. And probably drastically.
โEvelyn wants me,โ I say. โYou want Evelyn. It doesnโt sound like I need to convince you, Frankie. It sounds like you need to convince me.โ
Frankie is dead quiet, staring right at me over her steepled fingers. I was aiming for formidable. I might have overshot.
I feel the same way I did when I tried weight training and started with the forty-pound weights. Too much too soon makes it obvious you donโt know what youโre doing.
It takes everything I have not to take it back, not to apologize profusely. My mother raised me to be polite, to be demure. I have long operated under the idea that civility is subservience. But it hasnโt gotten me very far, that type of kindness. The world respects people who think they should be running it. Iโve never understood that, but Iโm done fighting it. Iโm here to be Frankie one day, maybe bigger than Frankie. To do big, important work that I am proud of. To leave a mark. And Iโm nowhere near doing that yet.
The silence is so long that I think I might crack, the tension building with every second that goes by. But Frankie cracks first.
โOK,โ she says, and puts out her hand as she stands up.
Shock and searing pride run through me as I extend my own. I make sure my handshake is strong; Frankieโs is a vise.