The behind-the-scenes of aย Labelย editorial photo shoot was exciting enough, interesting enough, to pull me out of my funk.
In front of me, five models preened and posed for the photographer on a set constructed entirely out of white boxes. Music thudded from overhead speakers. The contributing editor in charge of the shoot gnawed nervously on a pen cap behind the photographer.
There was a bearded dude in stonewashed jeans whose sole job seemed to be flipping a large piece of cardboard at the models to make their hair look windblown.
Linus snuck his phone out of his pocket and snapped a few pictures in rapid succession.
โWhatโs that for?โ I asked.
He checked his watch and nudged me toward the door.
โWeโre doing high-level babysitting,โ he explained, firing off a text and tucking his phone back into his pocket.
โYouโre reporting to Dalessandra,โ I guessed, taking a slurp of the cappuccino Iโd ordered myself on the company card. The caffeine and sugar made me giddy.
โThatโs right. I reassure her that everyone is doing their jobs so she can focus on doing hers. Usually itโs all lies, and weโre all just holding on by a thread.โ
I ducked as an assistant trundled a rolling rack between us.
When it passed, Linus was already halfway across the room. He snapped his fingers as he headed toward the door.
โWhere are we going?โ I asked, jogging to keep up.
He gave me a scornful head-to-toe look. โTo do something with that God-awful footwear. And maybe the pants if we have time.โ
A CAROLINAย HERRERAย skirt hit me in the face. I barely managed to catch the red, high-waisted pants that came next. We were in the area of the forty- second floor dubbed The Closet. It was a huge expanse of ruthlessly organized racks and shelves. Thousands of designer samples lived in this room.
My heart tapped out a happy little pitter-pat when I spotted the pair of leather moto leggings that I was positive Cher had been photographed in last year.
โThis, too.โ A gold corded belt flew in my direction. My arms were already full of luxury brand apparel, rained down upon me by a man whoโd apparently lost his mind.
Linus turned away from the rack and held up a creamy cable-knit sweater to my chest. โEh, close enough,โ he muttered
โWhat exactly is all this for?โ I asked, spitting green silk out of my mouth.
โFor you, Admin Ally with the wardrobe of a sad, poor teenager.โ
โI canโt afford any of these,โ I squeaked as he dropped a pair of slobber- inducing pumps in purple suede on top of the pile. I was starting to tip backward.
โThese are all seasons old. No one needs them. No one but you, Ms.
Thrift Shop 1998.โ
โLinus, I have zero money. Like โif I see a penny, I will pick it upโ have no money.โ
โDonโt be annoying. Iโm gifting these to you like a black, crabby Santa.โ
โAre you kidding me?โ Half of the items I was clutching fell to the floor.
He rolled his eyes and picked up a floral print dress. โTry to show Tracy Reese a modicum of respect.โ
โAre you messing with me right now because I have to be honest. If you tell me these are all mine for free, and then you turn around and say โpsych,โ I will cry and very possibly burn down your house.โ
โPsych?โ he repeated with disdain. โWeโll worry about your vocabulary later. For now, letโs focus on the more important. Your appearance.โ
A laptop. A smartphone. And a new designer wardrobe.
โIs it Christmas? Did I somehow stumble onto the set ofย Oprahโs Favorite Things?โ I asked, still afraid to get my hopes up.
โThese are not presents. I am not a benevolent lady billionaire. These are tools to do your job. I canโt have you waltzing around Central Park photo shoots looking like fifty-percent-off day at the second-hand church sale.โ
โYour words wound me, Linus,โ I said, drooling over the pair of to-die- for caramel suede booties he pointed to.
I wanted to make out with them.
โI donโt care. I just canโt take this shapeless sweater thing for one more second. Youโre making my forehead veins throb.โ
โYou donโt have forehead veins.โ
โThanks to BOTOX. Now donโt make my forehead veins pop through the botulism barrier. Go put on anything other than that outfit and grab one of the Burberry coats on your way out.โ
โYou donโt fool me,โ I told him over the armload of fashion. โI donโt know what youโre talking about,โ he sniffed.
โYouโre being nice and covering it up with charming mean.โ โBegone, Didnโt Wear It Better.โ
โIโll make you proud,โ I promised as I headed in the direction of the closest restroom.
โI doubt that,โ he called after me. โChange fast. You have twenty-three minutes for lunch and then dogs.โ
Iย RACEDย down to the cafeteria with my lunchโbeef fried rice from Mrs. Grosuโand threw myself into a chair next to Ruth.
โI have three minutes before I have to leave to go pick up four purebred Afghan hounds.โ
โThat sweater,โ Gola said.
โThose boots,โ Ruth breathed.
โI just told you Iโm running a dog trafficking scheme, and you want to talk fashion?โ I joked.
โWelcome toย Label,โ Gola snickered. โI once had to wait five hours in an emergency department to pick up half a dozen sweaters that a bike messenger was carrying when he got hit by a cab. Howโs life on the forty- third floor?โ
โColorful. Chaotic. We need to catch up,โ I said as I ripped the lid off my meal. I didnโt have time to heat it up.
โLetโs grab drinks after work,โ Ruth suggested.
โCanโt,โ I said through a mouthful of rice. โTeaching a dance class tonight.โ
โWhere? Weโll come,โ Gola said, perking up. โItโs not ballet,โ I warned them.
โIs it hip-hop?โ Ruth wanted to know. โCan I wear leg warmers? Iย live
for any excuse to wear leg warmers.โ
โLeg warmers are great. And itโs pop and hip-hop and R&B. Kind of like dirty dancing for fitness.โ
โYaaaaas!โ Ruth clapped her hands. โThis is the best thing Iโve heard all day.โ
โWine after,โ Gola decided.
โOur treat,โ Ruth said before I could remind them of my poorness.
โOne glass. I have to finish up a pitch on a freelance gig.โ One that would hopefully net me a few hundred dollars.
โDeal,โ Ruth said.
My lovely new phone made an angelic harp noise. My signal to hit the road. โShit. I have to go.โ I gathered my new coat, my old backpack, and the last few bites of fried rice. โLater, ladies.โ
โYou look great,โ Gola called after me.
I raised a hand in the air and plowed my way toward the front of the building.
I was delighted to find Nelson waiting for me at the curb. โMind if I sit up front?โ I asked him.
โNot at all,โ he said, opening the door for me.
We chitchatted on the drive. Nelson had a wife, two daughters, and three granddaughters. He spent his weekends at soccer games and science fairs.
The traffic gods smiled upon us. We were fifteen minutes early. I hopped out in front of a three-story brownstone and jogged up the stairs, my fancy new coat swirling around me nicely like the cape of a superhero.
Had I done a better job with my hair and makeup this morning, Iโd feel almost stylish.
Stylish, in control, and basically killing it at my new job. I pressed the buzzer and smugly waited to succeed.
โNELSON,ย WE HAVE A PROBLEM,โ I said, pulling the door shut and riffling through my bag for my phone.
โI notice you returned without any four-legged passengers,โ he mused.
โThere was a mix-up with the date. The dogs are at some fancy show in Connecticut.โ
โI hate when that happens,โ he said.
I found my phone and fired off a text to Linus.
Me: Thereโs a problem.
Linus: Do not bother me with problems. Dazzle me with solutions. Me: This is a big one.
Linus: Iโm deadly serious. Iโm up to my well-groomed eyebrows in disasters. How can three models have pinkeye at the same time? Never mind. Donโt answer. Just solve the problem or donโt bother coming back.
I was pretty sure he was going to regret that one. I could solve problems. But the solutions might not be up to his standards.
Me: Fine. The photo shoot. Whatโs the vibe?
Linus: Grey Gardens. Only less depressing and with more fashion. Now leave me alone.
I could work with that. โNelson, we need to make a stop.โ