I frown down at the design sketches weâve received from the Exciteur graphics department. Jenna and Toby are sitting opposite me at the table in my office, the glass surface covered in graphic profiles, color schemes, and logo designs.
âItâs not right,â I say. âItâs way too traditional.â
âItâs what they say they want,â Toby says with a shrug. âEvery single part of the brief has the word âtraditionalâ in it. I think I counted it sixteen times.â
âYes, but I donât think theyâve fully thought that through,â I say. âLook at this color scheme. Itâs stunning and elegant in the New York location where you have a century-old building and legacy power. But can you picture a gold brocade sofa in the hotel lobby of a newly built hotel in Santa Barbara?â
âNo,â Jenna says. âOr rather, I can, and itâs not looking good.â
âThis needs to be fresh and exciting, and modern.â I drum my fingers against the table. âWe have four weeks left until the pitch.â
âAnd a lot of work to do,â Toby says. âDid you see the shortlist of architecture firms I sent over?â
âYes, and theyâre excellent⦠for the traditional vision. How about this? We create two pitches.â
Tobyâs eyes widen. âTwo separate pitches? In four weeks?â
âYes,â I say and shuffle the papers in front of me. The color schemes arenât bad, but they arenât excellent, and weâre paid for excellence. âOne pitch based on their specifications. But the second pitch? Thatâs for us. I want it to be modern, innovative, and elegant. It should reflect the Winter spiritânot the actual color scheme of its New York location.â
âIâm all for it,â Jenna says. âThe only way to convince them that their way is wrong is to show them the opposite and have these side by side.â
Toby laughs and takes off his designer glasses. He cleans them against the sleeve of his cashmere sweater. âSometimes, I think youâre crazy, Sophia. CorrectionâI think youâre crazy most of the time.â
âThank you,â I say and grin at him.
âThatâs why I like working with you. Weâve never, not once, taken the easy road.â
âNo,â I say. âBut clients donât hire Exciteur for easy. You both know Isaac Winter is an important friend of the CEO.â
Both Jenna and Toby nod. Exciteur is strongly performance-based and performance-review driven, and thatâs reflected in promotions⦠not to mention bonuses. âSo, we pull out all the stops,â I say. âTheyâre hiring us to do the thinking for them. So, letâs think big and blow them away at the pitch.â
âI can get to work on the modern pitch right away,â Jenna says and starts to scoop up the papers. Her love of yellow is reflected in a thin belt today, wrapped around a black dress. âIâll separate what we already have into folders and get the graphic department on board. Iâll commission second options for all of this.â
âPerfect. Toby? Can you continue working on the traditional pitch?â
âRight,â he says and looks between us. âBecause Iâm such a boring traditionalist and a beacon of conventionality?â
Jenna and I laugh. âYes,â she says and leans her shoulder against his. âWe didnât want to tell you, but thatâs the exact reason.â
He shakes his head in mock sadness. âIf only Iâd known,â he says. âIt would have made my high school years so much easier.â
The work day runs away from us after that, like it so often does. The opportunity to be creative and business-driven is one I love, and as I work on the Winter project, I can see the lobby in my mindâs eye. I picture the spa, and The Ivy, and Isaacâs deep voice telling me about every aspect.
After work, I have a headache from the hours spent in front of a screen. I pop an Advil and grab the tennis bag I keep in my office. It always has a fresh change of clothes and the keys to my locker at the Grandview club. My membership lasts until the end of the year, and Iâm determined to make the most of it, uncomfortably familiar faces or not. Itâs a wonder Iâve managed to avoid Percy for so long.
Which isnât, strictly speaking, true. Itâs just very good planning on my part. I know how that man operates, and I know his schedule. I spent years living my life by it.
Marisol is an excellent tennis trainer. She cuts me no slack, standing on the other side of the net and hitting shots my way. âForehand!â she screams. âKeep your side angled toward the net! Connect with the ball earlier! Donât forget the speed!â
We drill, and we drill, and we drill, and at the end, we play a set like we always do.
And it ends the way it always does.
I collapse on the bench and reach for my water bottle. âI almost had you on the last one,â I say.
Marisol grins at me. Sheâs forty-seven to my thirty-three, but sheâs also a former Olympian, and her skills are unmatched. âSure,â she says. âLetâs say you were close.â
I roll my eyes, and we both chuckle. Mineâs significantly more tired than hers, age difference or no.
âSame time on Thursday?â she asks.
I nod. After the divorce, this sport had become my lifeline. I need the distraction and the constant, steady improvement of skill. Something to throw myself into thatâs mine and mine alone.
âHypothetically,â I say, âwould it be okay if I brought someone?â
âSure,â she says. âYour sister coming to town?â
âNo. God, Rose would hate this. No, Iâm playing in the doubles tournament in a few weeks.â
Her eyebrows rise. âYou are? Iâll be judging it.â
âReally? Thatâs great!â
âDoesnât mean Iâll judge every point in your favor, Bishop.â
âOh, Iâm not hoping for an overt display of favoritism,â I say. âJust a small discrete one.â
She laughs. âIâll see what I can do. So, whoâs your partner?â
Itâs funny. Marisol knows almost everything about my life, and I know a lot about hers, all due to talking on and off the court in between serves and chatting with our water bottles in hand.
She knows about Percy. That, though, isnât entirely from me. Gossip travels quicker than light at this club, and heâs a staple here.
âItâs a new guy,â I say. âWeâre friends, and now weâre sort of dating, too.â
âSort of?â
âYes. Itâs early days still.â
âRight,â she says. âSo, you thought youâd introduce him to all of New York society by throwing him into the vipers pit that is Grandview?â
I laugh. âCan you imagine? No, heâs already a part of⦠well. This group of people.â
âOh,â she says. âHeâs one of them.â
I nod. Marisol and I had bonded early on about our small-town upbringings.
âYou could say that,â I say.
âWell, sure. Bring him along sometime and we can work on your game as a double.â
âThanks,â I say. âSee you Thursday?â
âYou bet. Iâll send you some videos about kick serves, by the way. I want you to study them.â
âGot it.â I throw my bag over my shoulder and wave at her. Sheâs staying on the court, a new client already waiting in the wings.
I walk home. Itâs a long way, but I need the air and the energy thatâs always present on the streets of New York. Thereâs a complete lack of it in my apartment, so Iâll take it where I can get it.
My phone rings about halfway, and I have to dig through my bag to find it.
Itâs Isaac.
Weâve never called each other before.
âHello?â I answer.
âBishop,â a familiar voice says. âFree to talk?â
âYes, absolutely. Is everything all right?â
âYes,â Isaac says. We havenât spoken since the benefit last weekend. Iâve been working at Exciteur, him at Winter, and there hasnât been a reason to. Professionally or privately. âThank you for the other night.â
âNo, thank you,â I say. âI had fun.â
Thereâs a pause on the other end, and I can hear the disbelief in it. âDid you?â
âYes. Well, before and after the⦠incident. Watching you win the prize youâve always dreamed of helped.â
The teasing breaks the formality between us. I can hear it crack. âThanks for reminding me about that,â he says dryly.
âNo problem.â
âWhat date is the doubles tournament?â
âItâs not this Saturday, but the one after that,â I say. âBut, Isaac, itâs completely fine if you canât do it, or if you donât want to. Iâm not expectingââ
âIâll be there,â he says. âText me the address and time.â
âAll right. I will.â A pulse of mortification sends heat to my face. Here I am, forcing him to play tennis with me all because I want to shove my exâs face in it. And heâs a client. Itâs so beyond anything proper that the embarrassment sinks down to my very toes.
âItâs actually a good thing,â he says, âbecause I have another favor to ask of you.â
âYou do?â
âYes. Thereâs a party in the Hamptons this weekend.â
âItâs late August,â I say. âThere are parties in the Hamptons every weekend.â
He snorts. âVery funny.â
âOne tries.â
âThere are, indeed, but thereâs one in particular that I need to be at. More members of my family will be there.â
âOh.â
âIf youâre able and interested, itâs this Saturday.â Thereâs a brief pause. âFood, drinks, and transport will be included.â
âItâs an all-inclusive offer?â
âYes. Iâll up the personal service, too. I know how you enjoy it.â
âI do.â Being his date to another party would lessen the debt Iâll owe him for the tennis. Weâd be even. âOf course, Iâll be there. Text me the details.â
âGood,â he says. âThank you.â
âIs it something I should be thanked for? Will your extended family pounce on me?â
âThey might ask you how we met,â he says, âbut we already have that story settled.â
I chuckle. âYes, on a tennis court at a club you donât go to. I didnât think that one through.â
âIt works as well as any other story might.â Thereâs a sudden increase in music playing on his end. It sounds classical.
âWhere are you?â I ask.
âThe opera,â he says. âIn Chicago. Itâs the intermission.â
âOh. Enjoy the performance,â I say. A business trip? Or a personal one? Heâd said he wasnât dating anyone, but itâs hard not to picture him standing in a tailored tux, phone to his ear, a beautiful woman waiting beside him to finish his call.
âUntil Saturday, then.â
âUntil Saturday,â I murmur. âDonât stay past midnight.â
âI never do,â he says. âAnd Sophia?â
âYes?â
âWeâll win the game.â