Jada
The next day, I head down the back hallway to storage and receiving to check for the package of zipper samples that supposedly arrived, and what do I see? Way down at the end of tall rows of shelving, thereâs Jack, playing wastebasket basketball with Nate from accounts receivable.
Nate is usually a diligent worker, but Jack has managed to corrupt even him.
They donât see meâthatâs how into it they are. Two grown men throwing wadded-up paper at a trash can theyâve put on a high shelf, all grunts and jump shotsâa full-on testosterone-fest.
I should tell them to get back to workâI really should.
Nate makes a shot and immediately looks at Jack, who tips up his head in a kind of reverse nod, showing his approval.
Nate smiles widely.
I roll my eyes.
Nateâs a workout machine, a man who moves boldly and heavily, with arms so muscular that they donât hang flush to his body. Jack, on the other hand, has got leopard-like grace; he shoots and pivots loosely, but he jumps with explosive power.
Nate makes a long-distance shot. Heâs acting nonchalant about it, but Iâm sure heâs thrilled to impress Jack, to move deeper into Jackâs rare and special orbit.
Itâs like Jackâs entire life goal is to be as distracting as possible to SportyGoCo workers. He is the worstâhe really is. In the fable of the ant and the grasshopper, heâs the ultimate grasshopper.
I despise grasshoppers.
Nate gets another reverse nod, and you can see him preen. How can Nate allow himself to be enchanted by this man?
And Jack. He thinks heâs so hot. The way he struts, youâd think heâs the most eligible bachelor on the planet.
I shake my head hotly, remembering his words. Of course, wrong has its advantages. There are scenarios where, it could be argued, the wronger, the better. If you know what I mean, and I think you do.
If my Jersey galpal, Mia, had been there when Jack said that, sheâd have kicked him in the ballsâWrong like this, you mean?
He wouldâve deserved it.
The wronger, the betterâ¦if you know what I meanâ¦and I think you do.
Who wouldnât? And yes, wrong things can be sexyâit doesnât take a rocket scientist to know that. And outrageously wrong things can be outrageously sexy.
I watch him shoot, thinking about wrong things. Things that would be offensive in real life, but sexy in sex.
Jack, of course, would be an expert in that, being such an all-around offensive man. He probably has whiteboards at home full of advanced mathematical formulas on how to increase his offensiveness.
But weâre in a workplace, I remind myself. Here in the workplace, wrong is not at all sexy.
He grunts, blocking Nateâs shot, all fancy footwork.
Not sexy.
Naturally, he would want to make sure all womankind is aware that he would deliver on wrongness and forbiddenness. He may as well walk around with a sandwich board sign. Ladies, whatever wrong thing youâre thinking? I will deliver.
So annoying.
He does this spin-jump and a wad of crumpled paper arcs into the air and lands in the wastebasket.
As if he feels me watching, he turns to eye me playfully with those burnt-butter eyes that probably melt other women.
Nate gets an alarmed look. âGotta get back.â He beelines up the row of boxes, not meeting my gaze.
Naturally Jack has no problem getting caught goofing off. He smiles. You can tell when itâs a genuine smile because the dimple on his left cheek fires away. Itâs a lopsided dimple smile that he has. âWant to play?â
Does he think he can corrupt me as easily as heâs corrupted Nate? âNo, I donât want to play.â
âWhy not?â he asks.
âWhy not? Because this is a sinking ship,â I say. âA sinking ship where weâre fighting for our lives.â
Jack Smith, insolent king of leisure and corruption, continues to smile. âAll the more reason to play.â He picks up a crumpled paper and shoots, giving it a little jump.
âDeliveries in the dock,â I say. âYou should get to them one of these days.â I donât know this for sure, but there always seem to be deliveries ready to go out.
He grabs a stool, ignoring my directive. God, what would it be like to not care about anything? To have all of that powerful charisma and use it almost exclusively for ill? He seems indifferent even to being fired. What kind of upbringing makes a man act like this?
âTo be so useless and so entitled at the same time!â I marvel.
âI aim to please.â
âAlso, Chris from shipping has been complaining that you were an asshole to him,â I say. âHe wanted a report, and you wouldnât give him a straight answer about when youâd get it.â
âHe was being insufferable.â Jack climbs up the ladder and grabs the wastebasket off the top shelf.
âYou were being insufferable,â I say. âHe asked you for something, and you treated him like he was ruining your spa day. Youâre here to support these people.â
He climbs down, looking amused. âSo Chris is my boss now?â
âIn a way, weâre all your boss. Youâre here to help when we request it,â I say. âBut more to the point, the desperate situation weâre in is our boss. Weâre all trying to work together to save this place that we love. You canât act put out when somebody requests something. Maybe youâve been in places where you werenât valued, but we value you and we really do need you.â
He looks concerned. Am I actually getting through to him?
âYou donât want people to think you donât care,â I add.
He puts the wastebasket back in the corner, sets aside the stool, then turns to me with a thoughtful look. âPeople will think I donât care?â
âYes.â
âWell thenâ¦â He gets this solemn look. âThey would be right.â
I narrow my eyes. âOh-em-gee, sooooooo hilarious.â
âI thought it was.â
I sniff in disdain. âHow about you go do your deliveries? And make it snappy.â
He saunters in my direction, which is also the direction of the door. Iâm all lit up and angry and strangely electrified.
I cross my arms, facing him square on. Iâm partly blocking the walkway out of here, and I donât care. He can turn and sidle around me. The sooner he realizes this is my house, the better.
He nears.
I stand my ground, face to face with his glittering gaze and villain eyebrows.
He stops in front of me and I breathe in his woodsy scent.
He says, âArenât you going to ask me how my butt-dial investigation is going?â
I smile coolly. âI know how itâs going, and I know how itâll end. Rhymes with pilarious pabject pailure.â
He looks surprised for a moment, and then he laughs. He didnât expect that out of me. He thinks I have no sense of humor. He thinks I have no teeth. He would be wrong.
He sidles around me like I wanted him to, but I didnât think it through.
I didnât think Iâd be forcing him to brush against me, chest to shoulder. I didnât think there would be any kind of frisson of feelingâeven through fabric. I didnât think how close his face would come to my cheek. I didnât think Iâd feel his breath in my hair when he leans down and whispers, âThe night is young.â