I feel suddenly so spoiled and decadent when I slide into the front passenger seat of the shiny chrome-and-black BUG 1 Malcolm gave me the keys to. It smells divine, looks divine, and Iâm horny just thinking about driving the fucker.
I exhale as I close the door, and click the ignition button.
The motor rumbles and scares a little laugh out of me. Holy crap.
The wheel slides under my fingers, the seat hugs me, vibrating with the rumble of the motor. This car isnât a bug, itâs a beast.
A beast that should be driven at breakneck speed and Iâm cautiously driving at half the speed limit to a thousand envious stares of those passing.
An old man passes by with a grin and Iâm glad he got to feel superior today.
After a quick pit stop at home for a fresh set of clothes, I walk into Bluekinâs kick-ass downtown offices in Chicago. Iâm running on adrenaline.
The thing I most love about this place is . . . well, hell. Everything. Their covers are usually hand-drawn sketches, and somehow this allows for a very ample diversity to the content inside. If anyone colors outside the lines, itâs Bluekin.
Their pieces on human interests are always real, sober, and very heartwarmingâbut thatâs not all they feature. They have everything from funny articles to the most somber articles, covering every topic under an umbrella that they keep making wider and wider.
Iâm rather blessed to be interviewed by Mr. Charles Harkin today, a very well-respected member of the company who used to work at a big New York magazine.
âThe CEO is an acquaintance of Saintâs. He was impressed by how thoroughly you seemed to grasp him, and especially how brave you were in your honesty. You should be very proud of that piece.â
Fuck me. Does everyone have to mention that or know Malcolm? I hear him say âSaintâ and I canât stop the reaction: visceral. Like an elephantâRosieâjust kicked me in the heart.
Sleep deprivation weighs on me, but I feel as relaxed as if I were buzzing with alcohol. What swims in my veins is better than alcohol. Intoxicating. Itâs pure beautiful torture to remember last night. He told me I wouldnât forget spending the night and heâs right. I feel . . . possessed.
I exhale. Forcing myself to get out of his penthouse and come back here, to the HR department and the interview I never thought Iâd want until the sacrifices I made for a career I loved brought too many complexities to rein back under control.
âSometimes the good pieces are the ones that take the most from us,â I finally tell the man on the other side of the desk, admitting to myself that, well, that piece took so much from me Iâm still not fully recovered.
Heâs a nice, unassuming man, but behind the glasses, his gaze is shrewd and admiring. âIn a way, I can relate. The hardest things to do are sometimes the ones that prove most meaningful, but not necessarily the ones we remember most fondly.â
We share a smile and then he reviews the pages before him. âIt says here youâre interested in covering serious topics.â He nods approvingly. âWeâre definitely looking to bring someone like you on board, whoâs not afraid of taking risks.â
I wait and try to settle down my nerves as he reviews the paper again.
âSorry for going into territory which might seem personal but . . .â he adds, âweâd like our reporters to gain their reputations for their pieces, rather than who theyâre involved with. And dating such a figure in this city, well, itâs got to be tough. Saint is a man known to overpower what he wants and weâre surprised youâd be interviewing here . . .â he admits.
I smile a little. âHe respects my career choices, I assure you.â
âHmmm . . .â he says.
I start getting the feeling theyâre somehow concerned that hiring me will piss off Malcolm.
âSo youâre not interested in even partly writing on your previous subjects?â He looks down. âYour column usually discusses the trends around the city, though lately youâve seemed to be steering onto dating advice for women.â
âYes. But Iâd like these new pieces to involve me a bit more with the communityâhelping share the stories of people who donât have a voice yet.â
He jots down notes. âYou have vision and ambition.â He taps his pen to the paper where heâs writing stuff. âAnd your output is impressive in your amount of time at Edge.â He nods, then seems to drop the mask as he takes off the glasses.
âLook,â he folds his hands on the desk and looks me in the eye, âIâm going to level with you here. The bosses, theyâre friends of Saintâs. Youâre brave, which they love, edgy, but theyâd need to be very sure you are here for the long term.â
âI am.â
âAre you really?â He leans back then, a challenge as he crosses his arms. âMalcolm Saint . . . he knows about this interview?â
âYes.â
âBut isnât Interface starting a news department . . .â he trails off meaningfully, because of course the implications are where Saint could hire you?
âYes, but I want to work my way up.â
Something akin to admiration appears on his face. âOkay then. Well.â He claps his hands and rubs them, as if thatâs that. âIâll put in a good word for you.â
âThank you. Thank you so much for your time.â Feeling a little sinking sensation in my gut, I sense this is goodbye. I pump his hand effusively and smile anyway.
Itâs a smile that leaves me the moment I exit the building. Sighing, I lean against the exterior. I groan and shake my head because I donât think it went well at all. I sense they believe that Iâll start here and then be lured into the Interface news arm.
Will they all be afraid of Malcolm reaching out to scoop me up under his wing?
Crossing the street, I go buy a copy of the Chicago Tribune from the nearby newsstand and carry it back into the underground parking lot, tuck it into the front passenger seat of Saintâs Bug, and when I slide into the front seat, I set my forehead on the wheel and sigh.
Okay, Rachel, itâs just one interview. One. And not the only one.
I absently run my hand over the dashboard, enjoying the smooth luxury of all the sleek black leather and chrome.
The next interview will go better.
It has to.
I turn on the engine, the loud, rumbling roar scaring another little laugh out of me as the seat starts vibrating. God, if Sinâs car doesnât look good, smell good, and feel great. And isnât it great the man upstairs didnât see me in this, or heâd never even given me a chance to walk in the door.
I donât have the same luck in keeping the Bug out of sight at Edge, though. Our underground parking lot is minuscule and limited to purchased spots, and since I donât find any parking, I have to call Valentine. âVal, I brought a car.â
âYou donât have a car.â
âWell, I brought one. Please, please let me borrow your space? I canât leave this car out there at the mercy of the elements, itâs . . . youâll understand, I promise.â
âYou, woman, are in debt to me,â he declares, and hangs up.
He comes out, grumbling as he gets into his car and pulls it out of the garage, and I park with careâtriple-checking all my mirrors. Then do the same when I open the car doors and slide outside.
Valentine comes running back into the parking garage. He gapes. âWHAâ!â He cuts himself off with a breath.
âI didnât mean to bring this,â I promise, lifting my hands when he levels accusing eyes at me. âOtis is sick, I planned to take a cab to my interview, he said, âHere.â And when I left he said, âDrive it like you stole itâbut donât get caught.â Iâm nervous driving it. If someone scratches it Iâll die.â
âWhatâI cannotââ Heâs shaking his head and having a combustion. âDude, itâs a fucking BUGATTI! Itâs worth like two-point-three million dollars!â
âHush, itâs hard enough to drive it carefully without knowing that. Itâs responsive and energetic. You touch the pedal and the bastard just goes.â
â âCause itâs a V-sixteen engine and like twelve hundred horsepower. You . . . Bugattis shouldnât even be driven by women, dude, this is rude!â
âBug off, youâre gay, Val, youâre like half woman.â
âHoly shit, letâs see it inside!â
My excitement from holding Malcolm Saintâs key in my hand comes back when I let Valentine open the car and peer inside. âDude, holy shit! This sends a messageâheâs so pussy-whipped, man. Did people see you take this out?â
My lips curl. âA tiger doesnât lose sleep over the opinion of sheep. He doesnât care what people think.â
Valentine drools and moans and rubs it for a while. Then, âWhere did you interview?â
âBluekin.â My face crumples a little as I lock Malcolmâs baby and we head to the elevators. âI canât stay here, Valentine. Saintâs father is taking over, and my loyalty is elsewhere now.â
âI know, Rache, I canât sleep, I tell you. I donât even know what Iâm going to do either, but I should probably start looking too. Everyone says Noel Saintâs a fucking asshole. The only one who can take him on is his son and they say Saint is done with himârightly so. A manâs got to move forward, not stay with those who want to bring him to the pits.â
Completely unlike Valentine, he suddenly looks crestfallen. He sighs. âWhen new owners take over itâs like everyone will be canned, they like to start fresh, bring in their new blood, take care of any little mafias inside, purge it all. If you hear of anything where youâre going . . .â
âI will,â I promise as we hit our floor. âGood luck, Valentine.â
In the newsroomâwell, letâs just say itâs not called newsroom for nothing. It seems the little white Bug in the parking garage caused quite a stir.
Helen summons me to her office a few hours after I start jotting down my new piece, which I think will be called âWhat does your car say about him and/or you?â
âIâm kind of jealous of your position right now,â Helen tells me when I walk in.
âWhat?â
âYou look radiant. Look at you! Everyone is talking about you and your Saint. His car downstairs. Iâm becoming a bit of a Saint fan.â
âBecause weâre being bought by the dad?â
She zips her mouth. She grins. âTell me all the rumors are true. The three Sâs.â
âWhat?â
âSize, stamina, and seduction.â
âWho said that?â I roll my eyes. âStop talking about him.â
âSex symbols are objectified.â
âOff-limits to discuss here from now on, Helen. That piece should be enough. Permission to go work now?â
She waves me off with a chuckle, then calls, âRachel . . .â
âYes?â
âIs it true? Youâre looking?â
I realize she was joking with me, acting my friend and teasing, because she wants to know.
I look at her, suddenly feeling a like a complete deserter because Iâm leaving Edge. Like those rats who instantly jump and leave the sinking ship, rather than staying there and manning it. But Iâm so determined to work things out with Malcolm and staying here under his fatherâs thumb wouldnât help my cause in the least.
âI wonât work for Malcolmâs father,â I say.
âDoes your boyfriend know?â
âHeâs not my boyfriend. Weâre just . . .â I inhale. âEdge wonât be hurting my relationship this time around. I love it here but . . . my relationship with him now comes first. I really want to make it work, Helen. In my gut it just feels so right, if I let him go without a fight Iâll regret it for the rest of my life.â
Her eyes soften, then she shakes her head as if angry at herself. âEnough about this speculating! Get to work.â She snaps her fingers. âBut Rachel . . . I donât think the owners are going to let you go that easy. Noel Saint wants you at Edge.â
âWell, then thatâs even more of a reason to leave. He can go BLEEP himself for all I care.â
I go back to my desk and then text, People are dying at the office over my ride
I love it, he writes back. But paying for their funerals is going to consume so much of my time that Iâd rather spend it doing something else.
So when can I take your Bug back? You could play a little with me too if youâd like
OMG! Iâm such a slut. I did not text him that.
But I did.
I did and he answers, Iâm feeling rather playful. Sadly, 9:00 is the best?