VIOLA Amber is gone. She left me her uniforms as she promised and refused to take money for them since they were already used. I arrive home feeling disappointed and envious at the same time. I deposit the uniforms on my bed. Iâll have to get dressed in one soon for my first shift.
Iâm disappointed that Amberâs gone but itâs selfish of me to wish that she would have stayed. Iâm envious because I wish I was headed back to Los Angeles.
If you want to go back you better work for it and start contacting people, I tell myself. I have some friends but most of the work-related acquaintances are from the wedding industry like me. Iâm not sure if theyâd be interested to help me.
If you donât try, youâll never know, I tell myself. Youâre right, I answer myself as I get in the shower. I vow to start contacting people tomorrow before my shift.
The evening shift passes quite uneventfully. Itâs quiet for a Monday night and there are a few customers that pass through. I talk to a few, asking their names, how often they pass through the truck stop, what they haul in their trucks.
Most open up easily. Theyâre only too happy to talk about what they do. Maybe theyâre just happy to have someone to talk to after driving those long distances with no company. None of them try to hit on me and I try to remember everyoneâs names. Iâm not sure Iâll remember them next time they come around but I sure wonât forget their faces. I never forget a face.
My approach seems to be a hit with the clients. It seems no-oneâs ever shown as much interest in them as I do and Iâm glad. When I go home, Iâm confident that Iâve won some customers over and that theyâll be back next time they pass this way. I donât know if Iâll still be here though. But I donât let my thoughts get ahead of me and take it one day at a time.
The morning passes faster than I expected. Iâve made good progress with my search for work back in Los Angeles. I donât really know what else I want to do besides being a wedding planner. I know it will be difficult to get back in the game but Iâm hopeful anyway.
The friends I contact all say they donât know of any jobs but will definitely refer me if they hear of anything. I hope for the best but canât help wondering if my contacts are simply saying theyâll refer me if they hear of anything as a gentle letdown instead of telling me that I must be crazy thinking I can get back into the game.
My old assistant Jessica is glad to hear from me.
âHey, where are you now?â
âBack in my hometown,â I reply.
âWhat are you doing there?â
âI had no idea where to go. At least thereâs something of a home here.â
âMy heavens girl. Youâll dry up and blow away there! You have to find something new back here.â
âIâm trying.â
Jessica pauses. I can tell she is thinking. âWhat about out of the industry?â
âI donât know. What could I do? I donât know if anyone will think Iâm suitable for anything or not.â
âIâll tell you what. Send me your resume. I know a recruitment consultant. He might be able to help. In fact, Iâm sure heâll be able to help.â Jessica says it like she knows something I donât.
âHow well do you know him?â I ask.
âWell enough to know he likes me,â Jessica replies.
âOh, so youâre going to dangle the carrot over him?â
âSomething like that.â
âDonât go selling yourself for me girl,â I say.
Jessica laughs. âNo. Itâs nothing like that. I know he likes me and I kind of like him too but I donât think heâs worked hard enough yet to get my attention.â
âOkay,â I smile. âWell I hope he helps me well enough to earn a date with you. Your standards have always been so high.â
Higher than my heels,â Jessica jokes. Sheâs referring to her incredibly high heels that she loves to wear. How she does it I donât know. âBut, itâs the job he gets you thatâs going to determine if he gets a date with me or not.â
âThank God Iâm not dating you,â I say. âBut thanks anyway.â We speak a bit longer before we end the call. I send Jessica my resume and leave for my shift.
Jessicaâs friend calls me the next morning. Iâm taken aback at how quickly heâs working. He must really want that date with Jessica. His name is Clark.
âWhat job are you looking for?â Clark asks. His voice is strong, masculine and I canât help but wonder what he looks like. Jessica always gets the most handsome men. How she never holds on to the them I really donât know. Or maybe they canât hold on to her.
âLet me be honest Clark. You might have heard about a big wedding fiasco recently where the bride caught the groom in the bathroom with the maid of honor at their reception?â
âI recall something like that,â Clark replies.
âOkay. Well you might also remember that the wedding planner took the heat for everything that happened there because she used a wedding whisperer?â
âOh. Yes. I remember that clearly. Whatâs that got to do with...â
âI was the wedding planner.â
âOkay,â he says slowly. I can hear the uncertainty creeping into his voice. I can practically hear him thinking, why canât anything ever be easy?
âI wanted you to know that because anyone you talk to who realizes who I am is going to expect you to know it too.â
âGot it,â Clark replies. The tone of friendliness seems to have waned.
âOkay, so, I would love to get back into the industry. I canât run my own business but I do have skills and I am damn good at it. So, I can be a good employee for any wedding planner looking for an assistant. I do recognize though that just maybe no-one wants to have anything to do with me so I will consider other jobs. Perhaps in event planning, interior decorating, or something secretarial. Just keep in mind that I am not in LA and if I need to come for an interview, I need time to get there. Two daysâ notice will do just fine.â
âOkay. Got it,â Clark says. I donât like that his answers have become very short.
âHave you got anything that you think might be a good fit for me right now?â I ask.
âThere may be a few secretarial jobs around. Iâll check the database and send you a few. Let me know what you think is more up your alley.â
âIâll appreciate it,â I say and then add, âJessica said youâre great and Iâm sure youâll be able to find me the right job.â I want to remind him of Jessica and whatâs in it for him just in case heâs forgotten because Iâve told him who I am.
We end the call and I say a silent prayer before sending Jessica a message to tell her that weâve talked. I suggest she pushes Clark as well.
I donât feel too confident after the call. Maybe itâs just me. Maybe Iâm just being sensitive. After all, I wasnât that famous outside the wedding planning industry was I? What I had done was no crime. It was merely intended to help people get over their last minute jitters and go through with their Cold Feet ï¤Chapter 19 Thrill Of The Hunt ï¤Chapter 97: 98 Mistake divorce: Please marry me again ï¤Chapter 113: Diary wedding instead of calling it off and wasting thousands of dollars if they cancelled at the last minute. Who could blame me if they divorced later? It was up to the couple to make it work. The choices any couple makes after theyâre married are all their own. Including the decision to divorce.
The thought of divorce reminds me of Rick. I recall how I cut him off and stopped returning his calls and answering his messages. I feel bad about it and scroll through my address book. I find his contact and think of contacting him. I decide against it. Whatâs the point? Iâm hundreds of miles away.
Itâs not like Iâm going to see him again. Besides, heâs probably moved on by now.
Iâve been a bitch, not answering his calls and messages. Why would he want to be in touch with me at all now? Besides, as good looking as he is, heâs not into long term relationships so what would the point be. If we ever got together I would simply be waiting for him to break my heart. I donât need nor want that. I put my phone aside and get ready for work.