I hatedย these kinds of meetings.
This whole face-to-face brainstorming thing was bullshit. How the hell was I supposed to know what designer should
dress our models for a fall office fashion shoot? Or what makeup products were at the center of a social media maelstrom?
Photo shoots and everything leading up to them were more politically fraught than a UN meeting. Designers that clashed with models. Photographers that wouldnโt shoot certain designers. Inventory miscommunication. Too many editorial opinions. Sales reps who made promises they shouldnโt. Last-minute location disasters.
And I was expected to make the most diplomatic decisions.ย Ha. Some fucking joke.
โYou ready?โ Linus, the snarky production manager, asked joining me in the hallway. He adjusted his glasses
โIโm ready.โ
I hated not being good at something. At the age of twelve, Iโd been tossed out of a baseball game for hurling my bat over the fence when Iโd struck out yet again. Baseball hadnโt been my game.
My dadโa high school baseball star of his own time who, for some inexplicable reason, actually made it to the game that dayโtold me I should focus on something I was good atโฆ like watching TV or whining.
Weโd had a similar conversation when Iโd told him I was taking his position here. Heโd given me the same sneer of disdain and wished me luck
filling his shoes. Iโd told him Iโd rather burn his shoes and everything that was in this office to the damn ground.
It wasnโt a healthy sense of competition that drove me in this position. No, it was a pulsing need to prove to myself that I was better than the man whoโd never earned the loyalty Iโd once so freely given.
Thatโs what Iโd done with baseball. I practiced every damn night. Spent hours in batting cages and running drills. In the end, Iโd gotten good enough to earn a scholarship offer to play in college. Something my father hadnโt managed in his own life.
That was a good enough measure of success for me. Challenge conquered, point proven, Iโd quit and never picked up a glove again.
Iโd do the same here. Force myself to rise above an innate inability, do my fucking best, and when it was all over, never ever look back.
โRemember what we talked about,โ Linus said, pausing outside the conference room door.
โYeah,โ I said. Then for some stupid reason remembered Allyโs passionate exit speech at the restaurant. About people deserving better treatment and all that garbage. โThanks,โ I said.
Linusโs eyes widened a fraction behind his tortoiseshell glasses. โYouโre welcome?โ he said after a beat.
I called it Proof of Asshole. It was something I tallied up on occasion. When someone looks at you cross-eyed for saying thank you because apparently youโd never said it before? Definite Proof of Asshole.
I stopped abruptly inside the door.
Sheย was there.
Arranging coffees and pastriesโthat no one was going to eat because carbs were evilโlike it was her job and not some cosmic joke.
Everyone else was already settled around the table and conversations came to a halt. I had that kind of effect on a room.
Ally looked up and didnโt bother hiding the eye-roll. โOh, great,โ she muttered under her breath.
Yeah, well, I wasnโt happy about seeing her either.
I ignored her and took my seat at the head of the table. โThanks for being here,โ I said gruffly. โLetโs get started.โ
From the looks I got around the table, none of these people were used to the โtโ word coming out of my mouth either. I bit back a sigh.
Ally planted herself at the foot of the table behind some ancient dinosaur of a laptop. She was wearing a cropped mock neck sweater in cheery fuchsia over black pants. She wore bracelets made out of some sort of fabricโmaybe denimโwrapped up her right wrist.
โWeโre interested in your input on the fall makeup tutorials,ย Mr. Russo.โ Beauty editor Shayla was baiting me again.
Ally lifted a questioning eyebrow as she typed. Our gazes met, and I knew sheโd noted the tone too. The last thing I needed was two of them.
โLetโs take a look,โ I announced.
Everyone scrambled through their handouts to the spread that was up for discussion. I didnโt bother flipping to it. Iโd been coached.
โI think the bones are good, but youโre missing the mark not including some kind of bronzer. Itโs a transition season, and all women arenโt necessarily ready to let go of the sun-kissed look.โ
Both of my evil little notetakerโs eyebrows winged up in surprise. Shayla played it cooler. โDo you have any suggestions?โ
โThatโs not my area of expertise,โ I reminded her. โIโm sure whatever you choose will be fine.โ
Fine. Not โgood.โย These subtle little digs back and forth were boring, annoying. In my old job, weโd lock ourselves in an office, yell for twenty minutes, and move forward with a solution. Here things just festered. The bottom line was it didnโt really matter if Shayla wanted me here or not because Iย wasย here, I was in charge, and we all had to deal with it.
โMoving on,โ Linus said, smoothly steering the meeting back to the agenda.
I found myself watching Ally throughout the meeting. She seemed to find it impossible to hold still, typing while swaying side to side ever so slightly to a beat only she could hear.
Our eyes met and held over the gigantic laptop screen several times.
No messages passed between us. No โfuck youโs. No thinly veiled insults. Just long, shared looks. Her eyes looked more brown than gold in this lighting. Her hair, even though it was tied back in a short tail, still had that just tousled by a manโs hands look with the waves escaping around her face. And those lips seemed to be permanently quirked as if always ready to smirk or smile.
I didnโt trust smilers.
She stuck her tongue out at me.
Ever so casually, I raised my hand and rubbed at my eye with my middle finger.
She was definitely smirking now.
โExcuse me a minute,โ I said, interrupting an editor. โDo you mind typing just a little quieter? It sounds like youโre trying to stab your way through the table.โ
Everyone turned to stare open-mouthed at Ally.
She looked up. Smiled. And I suddenly couldnโt wait to see what sheโd do next.
โSo sorry,โ she offered sweetly. I was disappointed.
Momentarily.
As soon as the table returned to their debate whether peach or rose was a better background, Ally mashed her keyboard in an obnoxious crescendo.
Linus looked like he was about to swallow his tongue. Shayla cleared her throat and stared at the ceiling. The rest of the team around the table scooted their chairs as far away from Ally as possible as if they didnโt want to get caught in any crossfire.
โWould someone see about getting Sausage Fingers here a quieter way to take notes next time?โ I said to the room in general.
There were actual audible intakes of breath.
โAnd if someone could see about getting Charming here a nicer personality that he could try on for meetings, that would be great,โ she shot back.
Linus choked on his gum, and the rest of the room was turning blue holding their breath.
โMoving on,โ I said, feeling marginally more cheerful.
Conversation began again. I wasnโt sure if it was my imagination or not, but everyone seemed a little more relaxed.
Next on the agenda was a beauty brand that was jerking us around, demanding prime product placement after backing out of an advertising deal.
I nearly fell out of my chair when a junior beauty editor asked me, โDo you have any suggestions, Mr. Russo?โ
I took a breath and looked her dead in the eye. โCall me Dominic.
Please.โ
She blinked rapidly several times, looking stunned.
As a matter of fact, I did have a suggestion. This was my area of expertise. Risk assessment. Managing inflated egos. Applying the right pressure at the right time. I had plenty of personal experience with that.
โTell them weโve decided to go in another direction. Name drop Flawless,โ I said, mentioning another skincare company.
โWeโve had a relationship with La Sophia for years,โ Shayla reminded me. But she didnโt sound like she hated the idea.
โMaybe itโs time to break up,โ I said.
That got me an honest-to-God smile out of the woman. Sheโd looked at me with contempt, barely controlled her eye-rolls when I made stupid suggestions, or just frowned outright when we passed in the halls.
But this was a look of approval.
โIโve been wanting to do that for a long time,โ she confessed. โThen Iโll leave it in your hands,โ I said.
โDo you want me to reach out to Flawless or just say that I am?โ she asked.
โIf thereโs a brand you want to work with that you think would be a good fit for our readers, do it.โ
Shaylaโs smile got a millimeter wider, and I felt my Proof of Asshole score drop a few points. Not bad for a Tuesday.
A surprisingly spirited discussion broke out around the table about how best to illustrate the results of the magazineโs online polls rating what readers looked for in spring jackets.
โWhy donโt you put them in motion?โ an annoying voice from the far end of the table piped up.
โBecause this is a print magazine. That means itโs onย paper,โ I said heavy on the sarcasm.
Ally rolled her eyes. โYour sarcasm is noted, Dom. But I was talking about linking the print graphics to an animated one online. You want more crossover traffic between your print and digital content, right? You do something cutesy like thisโฆโ She stood up and walked to the whiteboard.
I divided my attention between two things. The way those pants hugged the curves of her ass and the competence with which she drew. She sketched out a rough trench coat with arrows pointing to parts of the construction and then another version mimicking motion.
It was fucking charming. That annoyed me.
โThen down here, you put a custom smart label that your reader can scan with their phone, and it takes them to the website. Link it to a cartoon or actual videos of models wearing each of the products, and break down the construction, best ways to wear them, where to buy at different price points.โ
Linus was pursing his lips and polishing his glasses, his tell that he liked an idea. โThatโsโฆโ
โNot a horrible idea,โ I filled in. โThanks,โ she said dryly.
โCan you do a mockup of the illustrations for me?โ Shayla asked her. โSomething in that style?โ
Ally shrugged. โYeah. Sure.โ
We wrapped ten minutes late. A first. Usually my meetings ended early because everyone was in a hurry to not be in the same room as me.
I took a moment to scroll through messages on my phone and purposely walked out behind Ally.
โSausage Fingers?โ she hissed at me.
I didnโt like her. But sparring with her made an otherwise interminable meeting slightly more interesting. Plus, there was somethingโฆenticing about that fresh lemon scent.
โYou type like a Clydesdale.โ
โYou know, youโd be a lot prettier if you smiled once in a while,โ she mused, fluttering her lashes.
No wonder women hated it when men said that. โI donโt have time to smile.โ
โI donโt have time to smile,โ she mimicked in an annoying voice. โYour maturity peaked in preschool.โ
โAww, did Pouty Man Face get his feelings hurt?โ โYouโre fired, Maleficent.โ
โGood luck with that, Charming.โ She headed off in the direction of the stairs.
โDonโt bother getting comfortable here,โ I called after her.
I didnโt realize until a makeup artist gaped up at me and then walked straight into a glass door when I passed her that I was actually smiling.