Authors: Sally Koslow
Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Fashion Editors, #Contemporary Women, #Humorous, #Women's Periodicals, #New York (N.Y.), #Humorous Fiction, #Women Periodical Editors
good thanks. Let's start with the roasted beets with goat cheese ravioli
and toasted pine nuts. Or would you rather have the ratatouille
stuffed squid?"
"Beets, definitely," she said. To match my face.
"And for an entrée, I insist on the duck."
Magnolia studied the menu.
Slow rendered duck breast, braised sprouts and Aligoté in a caramelized red vinegar sauce.
Aligoté? She'd definitely missed the press release on whatever that was. Throughout
both courses, Jock kept their wineglasses filled as he nattered on about
his vacation to Dubai, Little Jock's thoroughbred, and paintings he
hoped to acquire at auction.
Magnolia responded in a language she was fairly sure was English,
but her head was on her job, which she now convinced herself would
be terminated by the end of the lunch. As galling as it was to have to
report to Bebe, and to be second-guessed by Felicity, to be tossed out of
Scary would be far worse. If she were to get a new job, she wanted it
to be on her terms, not Jock's.
Finally, Bebe came up.
"She's quite the girl, our Ms. Blake," Jock said. "We haven't seen
the end of this mess with that Fine boy. But at least we've put pressure
on the media to bury the story so we can try and settle out of court—
though Bebe's going to have to pay big, bigger than we will, to make it
go away."
He finished off his wineglass and refilled it. "The newsstand mess,
though," Jock said, "that's not a small thing." He looked as if his best
friend had just received an HIV-contaminated transfusion. "I've got it
at me every which way."
He's fattened me up for the kill, Magnolia thought. Here it comes,
the rubout.
"There's a lot of stress with being in charge," Jock groaned. Wait—
was he showing sympathy? Wrong. He was talking about himself.
The server came over to offer dessert: "Gingerbread pudding or
chocolate fig cake?"
"I couldn't possibly, thanks," Magnolia said.
"A double espresso," Jock said. "And chocolate fig cake."
"Sir, will that be with coconut ice cream or passion fruit sorbet?"
"Passion fruit." As the waiter walked away, Jock leaned in closer
across the small table and filled both their glasses with the last of
their second bottle of wine. "We're headed for some hairpin turns,
Magnolia. But you can help." He raised his glass, as if for a toast. "Do
you know you are a very beautiful woman?" he asked in a soft growl. He moved his face so near hers, she could smell the Cabernet
Sauvignon and she instinctively—though she hoped not noticeably—
backed away. This lunch was definitely not passing the sniff test.
"Why, thank you, Jock, you are very kind," she said stiffly.
"Relax," he laughed, and took her hand. "Have I been good to you?"
Yeah, Jock, you've been great. Murdering
Lady.
Demoting me. Importing my replacement. "Yes, Jock. I appreciate everything you've
done for me."
"Good. I've always thought the two of us could be a team. There's
something between us. I know you can feel it. And I like the way
you've at least tried to stand up to that bitch, Bebe. You've got, what's
the word you people like? Chutzpah." He took her hand and rubbed
his fingers slowly between hers. "What do you say?"
Coming on to her now, while a sexual harassment suit was
whizzing through the air? He must be totally disassembling. Magnolia shifted in her chair and backed away a little farther. I say,
Ewww
that's what I'd like to say. "I am so fucked" also comes to mind. She
considered telling a lie like "I'm very flattered, but I like the way
things are now, Jock—although if you were single and not my boss
and ten years younger . . ."
"Jock, maybe we should regroup when we haven't had two bottles
of wine" was the most authentic and politic response Magnolia could
muster.
"I know exactly what I'm doing," he said, trying to penetrate her
eyes with a look she was sure he imagined was seductive.
"I don't think you do. Do you really see this, of all times, as the
moment for you to start up with me?" she said, removing her hand
from his grasp. "Do you want more scandal, more items in the paper?"
"Magnolia, who's going to know?" he said, the words a threat.
"Everyone," she said. "Because I'll tell them."
Jock stared at her.
"I will," she said.
After an uncomfortable pause, he cleared his throat, adjusted his
glasses, and called for the bill. "I see," he said, putting on his coat
without helping her with hers. The two of them walked to the car. The ride back to Manhattan felt as long as a flight to New Zealand
and allowed plenty of time for second-guessing. What made her be so
harsh? Why hadn't she just manufactured a hidden fiancé?
Neither one of them spoke until they were just a few blocks from
Scary. "I'm considering a new position for you, Magnolia," Jock said,
"given everything that's gone down in that war zone between you and
Bebe. Yes, I'm definitely thinking about 'corporate editor.' " He was
staring straight ahead, delivering his announcement as gravely as if
he were informing the Vatican that the pope had died.
"Corporate editor?" Magnolia squeaked. In a few companies, cor
porate editor wielded heft. But more often, just like editor at large
translated to editor who's small, it was a hollow position. Jock might
give her projects—should this position come to pass—but unless they
came with his clear imprimatur, no one at Scary would take the
assignments seriously, despite her sweaty efforts to wield vigilante
authority. "Corporate editor?" It was like being named weather girl
for the three A.M. news telecast in Tulsa.
"Yes, everyone around here needs a change." Jock hopped out of
the car without saying good-bye. "Corporate editor. Magnolia, think
it over."
C h a p t e r 2 6
Pluck Sucks
"Run it by me again,"
Abbey said as they looped around the Reservoir. "When Jock said, 'You think it over,' was he talking
about that other job or the Hot Sheets Hotel?"
"I wasn't sure, but figured Hot Sheets was like an airline reserva
tion—forty-eight hours and the offer would expire," Magnolia said.
"Which I let it do, although I was dying to know what name he'd use
for reservations."
"So you have another new job?" Abbey asked.
"Scary's corporate editor," Magnolia said. "Last stop before obliv
ion." And for someone like her, who loved slaying dragons, living
death.
"Did you have a choice?" Abbey asked as they ended their run.
"I could have quit," Magnolia said. "Call me a coward. I chose pay
check over trying to prove sexual harassment."
"Jock's word against yours? I'm no lawyer, but it doesn't sound like
an airtight case," Abbey said. "Now tell me, what do corporate editors
do?"
"Look busy," Magnolia said. "The job doesn't come with a training
manual, so I'll have to write it myself. Jock will probably ask me to
interfere at the other magazines—critique them, submit ideas, sit in on meetings—and all the Scary editors in chief will despise and
ignore me." Magnolia realized as she was talking about work, she was
getting increasingly tense, even though she'd just finished a four-mile
run that was designed to obliterate stress. She knew she had to change
the subject.
"I want to hear about you and Tommy," she said. "Are you really
and truly over?"
"Done-d'-done-done," Abbey said. "I've sprinted through the five
stages of breakup—denial, anger, depression, reconciliation sex, and
Match.com."
"How goes online dating?" she asked as they walked into Abbey's
apartment building. Upstairs, Abbey began to brew coffee in her clut
tered but utterly charming kitchen with its checkerboard floor and
tall, glass-fronted cabinets filled with white china.
"Women lie about their age—for men, it's height," she said.
"Every guy I've met could be technically classified a carnival midget.
I definitely have to post my own ad." She handed Magnolia pen and
paper. "So I'm giving you an assignment. Be creative. Help me write
one."
"Ooh, fun. Give me a few essentials."
Abbey took out her notes. " 'Good listener,' 'great friend,' 'and
'compassionate'?" She looked for Magnolia's approval.
Magnolia shook her head. "That's fine if you want to head up the
Red Cross," she said. "Lead with your looks."
" 'Pretty' ?"
" 'Pretty' is code for 'not exactly hideous in the right light,' " Mag
nolia said. "Pretty is flowered dresses, jars of jam, Snow White,
granny quilts."
"Got it. 'Beautiful' ?" Abbey said. "As in 'my friends say I'm
beautiful'?"
Magnolia thought it over. "Beautiful scares the nuts off men," she
said. "Let's go with 'adorable.' And it's true. 'Adorable, sexy, artistic,
laser wit." Magnolia made a list. "Are you writing this for you or me?"
Abbey asked.
"Mine would say, 'Temporarily closed for renovation.' Back to you. 'Great with hands'?" Magnolia wondered. "Why not? Truth in adver
tising. Now we need something like 'more Guggenheim than Frick,' 'More
Breakfast at Tiffany's
than
Two for the Road
' ?" She drank half her coffee. "Think, Abbey."
" 'More Paris flea market than Bergdorf 's' ?"
"Perfect. Clever but not too. You don't want to come off too Maureen Dowd. Brilliantly cutting
and
movie star gorgeous. Talk about a killer combo—poor thing, we should invite her to brunch—she must never go out. Although it doesn't help to write a book called
Are Men Necessary?
"
"Enough words, don't you think?" Abbey asked. "Guys really don't
read that much."
"Or that carefully," Magnolia said. "You could write 'Man-hungry
hussy from hell looking for warthog to eat flesh' and you'll get
responses if your picture's hot enough. Show me what you've got."
Abbey pulled out her album. Many of the photos were neatly cut
in half, Tommy having been burned at the stake of Abbey's fireplace
the first night of Stage Two. Much of what remained was Abbey
snapped at black tie functions, where, given her love of vintage cloth
ing, it was hard to tell if she was wearing bag lady rejects or Yves
Saint Laurent.
Magnolia flipped through the album twice. "I think we have a
winner," she said when she got to one of Abbey in her Audrey sun
glasses and bikini top. "Can't wait to see who comes panting. If you
get a good response, I may run an ad myself."
"So are you still getting e-mails from Tyler?"
"Daily," Magnolia admitted. "They're dear. It's the purpose-driven
romance."
"Could it ever be the real thing?" Abbey asked. "He sounds awfully
sweet."
"Are you kidding?" Magnolia said. "He's a Lutheran minister in
Wild Rice, North Dakota, with a wife and two kids. I'm an ambitious,
divorced, Jewish Manhattan magazine editor who spends too much on
clothes. Do the math." She hugged Abbey and ran home.
The truth was, Magnolia had been enjoying their e-mailing more than she cared to admit. When she dated Tyler in high school, her father tried to discourage the relationship by quoting
Fiddler on the Roof: "
A bird can love a fish," he'd say, in his best Tevye imitation, "but where will they live?" Now, Magnolia could answer him. In
cyberspace. Every morning Hotmail would deliver a missive from
Preacherman8. She was getting as addicted to them as to cashews.
When she'd written him about her counterfeit promotion—
conveniently skirting what had inspired Jock's spite—he'd responded
with "If your boss doesn't know by now what you are capable of, he must
be blind or stupid or both. Don't try too hard to make sense of some
thing that is illogical." She wondered what Tyler would think of the
latest, which she'd e-mail him about tonight. Raven KensingtonWoods was replacing her at
Bebe.
And what would he think of her publisher Darlene's slobbery
send-off ? "Magnolia, I wanted to tell you how much I appreciate all
your hard work," she'd said in an audition for insincerity. "I've really
enjoyed working with you these past few years." So much that you
pushed me under a bus, Magnolia thought, her teeth grinding at the
other end of the phone. You probably flew to London and lured Raven
here with a trail of Prada.
Natalie—who'd been dodging Magnolia's calls—phoned yesterday
as well. "You've got to approach the new job with pluck," she advised
from her lookout atop Mount Success. "I've always believed power is for
the grabbing." This philosophy had sustained Natalie for decades, along with
you've got to be a little bitchy to be interesting. "Bebe
—let that be Raven's problem," Natalie added. "Has Bebe called you, by the way?"
"Not a peep, not a cuss."
"Felicity?"
"She's still smoking over Polo. And, hey, what's happening with
that?"
"They're settling out of court," Natalie said. "Let's just say that it's
likely Nathaniel will have his tuition and therapy paid for through
out the rest of his life, and still have plenty left over for beachfront
property."
Magnolia felt awful that Polo had been traumatized, which shouldn't happen to anyone, but she still couldn't help feeling she'd
pulled the short straw, especially on Monday, when she opened the
door to her corporate editor office. The walls hadn't been painted in
years, and she was greeted by two roaches, one dead, the other in vig
orous health. The office was tucked into the side of the executive floor
where people never wandered unless they were lost. Sasha helped
unpack her. Raven, Sasha's new boss, would be starting tomorrow.
"I'm never going to forget that you've kept my secret about the
Post,
Magnolia," Sasha said. "Good luck in this new job." Sasha surveyed the bleak surroundings. She didn't press Magnolia on what
she'd be doing, exactly, in her new job. The e-mail announcement had
been vague, though perhaps by now Sasha had learned to read sub
liminal messages whispered in corporatespeak.
Her second visitor was Cameron, who arrived with three dozen
pale pink roses. "It's going to be damn odd not working for you," he
said as he handed her the flowers and enfolded her in an enormous,
long hug.
"You, too, but you've got to be my lifeline to reality, promise? A
woman needs gossip to live." Isolation scared Magnolia as much as Fargo.
"Promise you will be my personal eyewitness and prognosticator?"
"Lunch, e-mail, hanging out whenever," he said, "I'm your man."
"There's no one left at
Bebe
who's going to appreciate how you keep that magazine moving, Cameron," Magnolia said. "You're its
central nervous system." She started to cry, had no idea where her tis
sues were, and wiped away the tears with her hand.
"I'm going to try not to feel too sorry for myself," Cameron said in
a serious voice Magnolia rarely heard. "Buck up. Keep your perspec
tive. It's just a job."
She wondered if he'd give her a hug—or at least a tissue. He did
not. Cam was halfway out the door when he turned. "I almost for
get—what's up with your friend Abbey? I read her personal online."
"You read the personals?" she asked, surprised. "I thought you had
a girlfriend."
"Katya moved back to Prague."
"Which one was Katya?" "Filmmaker. Leggy, blond. Not important. Not anymore."
For no reason she could explain to herself, Magnolia felt intrigued
to know this detail about Cameron. They were close, but only profes
sional-close. They'd often spent fourteen-hour days together. She
knew how he took his coffee and that he'd rather drink beer than
wine. Magnolia could predict what he'd wear to work the following
day and which movie he wouldn't see even if you tried to bribe him.
But Cameron cruising the personals? What kind of woman would he
be looking for? That she couldn't say.
"Who's your dream girl, Cam?" Magnolia asked.
"Maureen Dowd."
Shows you how little I know w
ent through Magnolia's mind. "So what do you think about Abbey? You've met her—she
is
adorable."
"I don't know. I don't think I'm either the Paris flea market or
Bergdorf's."
Magnolia could hear him chuckling as he walked down the hall.
She logged on to her personal e-mail. Anything from Preacherman8?
Just spam ads for drugs to make her penis bigger and a new diet pill
that promised to pop cellulite like a bubble and burn an extra 937
calories per day.
Where was her radio? This office was a tomb. Pluck sucks.