: Chapter 3
It’s Just Business
Thatâs it. Iâm done.
Done with men. Done with today. Just done.
It took all of a single minute walking as quickly as I could down the crowded street before the tears started falling. I didnât even try to stop them. I cried for the wasted time with Evan, the unexpected and public heartbreak, and the loss of the future I thought I had on lock with him. I cried for bombing my important meeting, losing any chance at the job with Sharpe, and for the interview turning into a request for a semi-date situation. Thankfully, the tears stopped before I made it to the subway, replaced with anger thatâs carried me the rest of the way home.
âFuck it all!â I growl as I unlock my front door, struggling with the key like it wants to let me down too. Down the hall, Mr. Anderson, our neighbor who seems to spend all of his time in the combination of sweatpants and a bathrobe regardless of the time of day, the time of year, or what he might be doing, shoots me a judgmental glance. âWhat?â I bite back, not interested in his opinion of me at this moment.
âNothinâ,â Mr. Anderson says, even though the scowl of moral high ground is still firmly in place. âJustâ ââ
âIn this city, the word âfuckâ is heard more often than âthank youâ, and Iâve had a rough day, so can you give me some grace?â Finally getting my door open, I step inside, and before he can answer, I slam it closed behind me. The sound is as final as my chances with Sharpe.
Laughter and chatter in the living room stops instantly, all eyes landing on me and my loud entrance. Maggie and her best friend-slash-sorority sister, Ami, are sitting at opposite ends of the couch, wine glasses in hand. They both work remote jobs, based around deadlines rather than hours, but itâs unexpected for them to be here mid-afternoon. Itâs like they were waiting on me, ready to toast my new job the moment I walked through the door. Too bad thatâs definitely not happening now.
âWhoa, whoa, whoa,â Maggie says, holding a hand up dramatically. âWhat happened?â
I canât even begin to process how to explain what happened, so I start by hanging up my bag and slipping my heels off as I mumble to myself.
How could I have been so blind? How could Evan break up with me so⦠easily? So cruelly? And to twist the knife even deeper, heâs been cheating on me for who knows how long with his secretary? And he did it all today, of all days. I canât get over that, either. Heâs cost me years of my life.
Because instead of getting the job I would be perfect at, Iâm offered a fucking date instead. Bullshit!
I wish I were dreaming. I wish this were all a nightmare I could wake up from. I pinch my arm, but no luck. Maggie and Ami both look at me like Iâm crazy.
âRaven?â Maggie says, her voice gentled in concern.
âYou okay?â Ami asks. âYou look like youâve been crying.â
Amiâs tall frame and straight blonde hair are at complete odds with Maggieâs perfectly curled reddish brown, but both look back at me with matching widened eyes and worry.
âI⦠Iâ¦â I start, but before I can form a full sentence, Maggieâs right there, hugging me.
âShh, come on, whatever it is, youâll be okay,â she says, her chin digging into the top of my head. Iâm not short by any means, but sheâs model-tall so she can tuck me up under her chin in a motherly way I didnât know I needed right now. âCome here. The couch has a spot with your name on it.â
I nod. âOkay⦠yeah,â I whisper, and I can see Maggie and Ami exchange looks. Without a word, Ami pours me a glass of her white wine, bringing it over and handing it to me before sitting on the floor so I have room on the couch. âThanks.â
âWe were ready to celebrate, but we can commiserate too,â Maggie says, sitting down next to me. âWhat happened?â
I take a deep breath, and a sip of wine. It helps, but I set the glass back on the coffee table to tell them everything. âWell, I got to Lionfish with about five or six minutes to spare, and got seated just fine when⦠Evan showed up.â
âEvan?â Ami asks, her eyes narrowing. Her tone turns harsh. âWhat the hell was he doing there? He knew how important that meeting was to do on your ownâ¦â
âHe was there to⦠he was there to break up with me,â I tell them, waiting for the tears to fall. But for some reason, they donât. I mean, I still feel like Iâve been socked in the gut, but I donât feel like crying. Iâm more angry than anything else. âHeâs been cheating on me with his secretary.â
âThat fucker,â Maggie hisses quietly. âI knew he could be an asshole sometimes, but⦠shit. I didnât know about Elise, Raven. Swear to God.â
Maggie and Ami are from families that do well, but nothing like Evanâs family, who reign from the tippy-top of the hierarchy. Still, those circles can be interwoven, especially when you take into account that New York City is smaller than people think, and you typically donât need six degrees of Kevin Bacon to find a connection with anyone.
âI know,â I say, reassuring her. Sheâs a good friend, and if sheâd had any clue about Evan, she wouldâve told me right away. âAnyway, after Evan breaking up with me exactly five minutes before my interview, I had to pull myself together. I still felt like a total mess when Mr. Sharpe walked over and introduced himself. It⦠didnât go well. He saw everything.â
Ami chimes in, âWhat the hell does getting broken up with have to do with stocks?â Her tone is full of indignation on my behalf. âItâs about how fucking hard youâve worked.â
Maggie agrees, and I take a deep breath. Instead of trying to explain more, I pick up the glass of wine and take a small sip, but Maggie upends it, making me gulp down the rest. âGood, now breathe,â she coaches helpfully.
âItâs going to be all right,â Ami says, trying to sound hopeful, but we both know the financial district eats hard cores for breakfast and flosses their teeth with the bones of the dead.
âSo,â Maggie asks, âhe didnât offer you the job, or do you just think that the interview didnât go well?â
âNo. I donât have the job, butâ¦â Something confusing stirs inside of me as I remember his offer.
Ami lifts an eyebrow. âBut?â
âHe said he saw what happened between me and Evan, and apparently, those two have history. He asked for details, and I was honest with him. Mr. Sharpe called Evan a fucking idiot.â A smile steals across my face, and then an unexpected chuckle escapes at the memory. Maggie and Ami snort out laughs of surprise as well. âI wasnât in the mood to object, obviously. But he said that I wouldnât be a good fit in his firm. He didnât give a reason, but I got the feeling that it was because of Evan, so I guess I can thank that asshole for that, too.â
âI officially hate that guy,â Ami declares. Sheâs likely planning a smear effort on-par with a political attack campaign, something sheâs entirely capable of spearheading.
Maggie holds up her hand in solidarity. âMe too.â Sheâd design, print, and distribute the Evan Sucks pins at every club in a five-block radius if I asked her to.
âWell⦠maybe thereâs something else,â I reply. âEven though he didnât hire me, he said he might have an opportunity for me.â As wary about the sound of that as I was, my friends raise their brows skeptically.
âI donât know if I like the sound of that,â Maggie warns.
âThis Friday is the Faulkner fundraising event, and he offered to take me as his plus-one.â
âHe asked you on a date?â Ami asks, horrified. âAre you serious?â
Sheâs offended on my behalf, and while Iâm grateful she has my back, and despite my thoughts initially being along the same line, Iâm not sure I have another option right now.
âItâs not a date,â I protest a little too vehemently. âHe basically said heâll introduce me to a colleague of his, someone who might have a position for me. Itâs networking. And a little bit of poking the bear on Dylanâs behalf, I think? He said something about knocking Evan off his pedestal.â I shrug, not exactly sure what he meant but pretty on-board with some pedestal crashing myself.
âUh-huh,â Maggie says, smirking. âAnd the fact that Dylan Sharpe is sexy as hell doesnât have anything to do with it?â
As part of my interview preparation, I learned everything I could about Dylan Sharpe and his firm. That may or may not have included showing Maggie some pictures I found of him online. To say heâs attractive is like saying the sunâs a little warm. More important to me, though, is his mind, and the man is whip-smart and a prime example of the trajectory Iâd like to follow myself, working up from the ground floor to create an empire. An evening picking his brain and watching him work is a wish come true.
âNot really,â I reply, my voice surprisingly steady. âThough the idea of showing up to Evanâs fundraiser with a man whoâs hotter and maybe even richer sounds⦠intriguing.â
âWhen you put it that wayâ¦â Ami says with a smirk. âBreak out the petty confetti! Iâm Team Raven!â
Maggie seems less sure but agrees reluctantly. âTeam Raven, all the way.â But after taking a sip of her wine, she warns, âBe careful, though, okay? Play it smart and do whatâs best for you, and not anyone else. I get the whole âget over one guy by getting under anotherâ vibe, but these arenât guys from Tinder that youâre rebound fucking. Youâre playing with the big dogs, and either of them, or both of them, could tank your career before it even starts.â
Sheâs right, obviously. And while Iâm not as experienced in chess-level maneuvers as Evan or Mr. Sharpeâno, Dylanâare, Iâm not completely without skills. I can attend the fundraiser, press palms to make the connections I need, show Evan that he didnât break me, and leave with my head held high.
âOr,â Ami drawls out dramatically, âyou leave Evan in your dust, make Dylan Sharpe fall in love with you, and get that big corner office in the sky.â
I shake my head. âThatâs not happening. I havenât even fully committed to going to the fundraiser yet. I told Dylan Iâd let him know by tomorrow so I didnât sound desperate.â
âYouâre going,â Maggie declares, seemingly reversing her previous doubts. âWhat other choice do you have?â
None. I have no other options, no more interviews scheduled, and only a couple of resumes I havenât heard back on yet. I wouldnât let that stop me, but a little shortcut to a possible opening at another firm is a gift I canât refuse. Even if it comes with complications, like going to my exâs family fundraiser on the arm of the man whose company I desperately wanted to work for.
âIâm going,â I agree. âIâll let him know tomorrow.â