: Chapter 4
The Risk (Briar U)
I can usually hold my own in most situations. Iâve never suffered from anxiety, and nothing really scares me, not even my father, whoâs been known to make grown men cry with one look. Thatâs not hyperboleâI saw it happen once.
But this morning my palms are sweaty and evil butterflies are gnawing at my stomach, and itâs all thanks to this HockeyNet executive, Ed Mulder, whoâs been off-putting from the word go. Heâs tall, bald, and terrifying, and the first thing he does after shaking my hand is ask why a pretty girl like me is applying for a job behind the camera.
I hide a frown at the sexist remark. One of my TAs at Briar, Tristan, used to be an intern here and he warned me that Mulder is a total jerk. But Tristan also said none of the interns report directly to Ed Mulder, which means I wonât need to deal with him past this interview. Heâs just one obstacle I have to get through to strike internship gold.
âWell, as my cover letter stated, I eventually want to be an on-screen analyst or a reporter, but Iâm hoping to build experience behind the scenes, too. Iâm majoring in Broadcasting and Journalism at Briar, as you already know. Next year Iâll be doing a work placement atââ
âThis isnât a paid internship,â he interrupts. âYouâre aware of that?â
Iâm caught off-guard. My palms feel slippery when I wring them together, so I place them on my knees. âOh. Um. Yes, Iâm aware.â
âGood. I find that while male applicants come in knowing the details, the female ones often expect to get paid.â
Heâs gone from vaguely sexist to obscenely so. And the comment doesnât make much sense, either. The job posting on the HockeyNet site clearly specified this was an unpaid internship. Why would men expect one thing and women expect another? Is he suggesting that the women didnât read the posting correctly? Or that we canât read at all?
Beads of sweat break out at the nape of my neck. Iâm so off my game here.
âSo. Brenda. Tell me about yourself.â
I gulp. He called me Brenda. Should I correct him?
Of course you should correct him. Screw this guy. You own him. Confident BrendaâI mean Brennaârears her spectacular head.
âActually, itâs Brenna,â I say smoothly, âand I think Iâd be a good fit here. First and foremost, I love hockey. Itâsââ
âYour father is Chad Jensen.â His jaw moves up and down, and I realize heâs chewing gum. Classy.
I answer in a careful tone. âYes, he is.â
âA championship-winning coach. Multiple Frozen Four wins, right?â
I nod. âHeâs a great coach.â
Mulder nods back. âYou must be proud of him. What would you say is your biggest strength, aside from having a semi-famous dad?â
I force myself to ignore the snide note in his inquiry and say, âIâm smart. I think on my feet. I thrive under pressure. And most of all, I genuinely love this sport. Hockey isââ
Annnd heâs not listening to me anymore.
His gaze has shifted to the computer screen, and heâs still chewing his gum like a horse chomping on some oats. The window behind his desk provides a fuzzy glimpse of the reflection from his monitorâ¦is that a fantasy hockey lineup? I think itâs the ESPN fantasy page.
He suddenly glances at me. âWhoâs your team?â
I wrinkle my forehead. âMy college team orââ
âNHL,â he interrupts impatiently. âWho do you root for, Brenda?â
âBrenna,â I say through gritted teeth. âAnd I root for the Bruins, of course. What about you?â
Mulder snorts loudly. âOilers. Iâm a Canadian boy, through and through.â
I feign interest. âOh, thatâs interesting. Are you from Edmonton, then?â
âI am.â His eyes flick back to his screen. In an absentminded tone, he says, âWhat would you say is your biggest weakness, aside from having a semi-famous dad?â
I swallow an angry retort. âI can be impatient at times,â I confess, because thereâs no way Iâm doing that cheesy bit about how my biggest weakness is that I care too much or work too hard. Gag.
Mulderâs attention is once again diverted to his fantasy hockey team. Silence falls over the spacious office. I shift irritably in my chair and examine the glass case against the wall. It displays all the awards the station has won over the years, along with signed paraphernalia from various pro hockey players. Thereâs a lot of Oilers merch in there, I note.
On the opposite wall, two big screens are showing two different programs: an NHL highlights reel from this weekend, and a Top Ten segment counting down the most explosive rookie seasons of all time. I wish the TVs werenât on mute. At least then I could hear something interesting while Iâm being ignored.
Frustration climbs up my spine like ivy and tightens around my throat. He isnât paying a lick of attention to me. Either heâs the worst interviewer on the planet, a rude jackass, or heâs not seriously considering me for this position.
Or maybe itâs D) all of the above.
Tristan was wrong. Ed Mulder isnât a jerkâheâs a mega asshole. But unfortunately, good, hands-on internships at big networks like HockeyNet donât come along every day. Itâs slim pickings out there in the internship market. And Iâm also not naïve enough to think that Mulder is a special case. Several of my professors, both male and female, warned me that sports journalism isnât the most welcoming field for women.
Iâm going to face men like Mulder during my entire career. Losing my temper or storming out of his office wonât help me achieve my goals. If anything, itâll âproveâ his own point in his misogynistic head: that women are too emotional, too weak, too ill equipped to survive in the sports arena.
âSo.â I clear my throat. âWhat would my duties be if I got this internship?â I already know the answerâI practically memorized the job posting, not to mention my CIA-worthy interrogation of Tristan the TA. But I might as well ask some questions, seeing as how Mulder isnât interested in returning the favor.
His head lifts. âWeâve got three intern slots to fill in the production department. Iâm the head of that department.â
I wonder if he realizes he hadnât answered the question. I draw a calming breath. âAnd the duties?â
âHighly intensive,â he replies. âYouâd be required to compile game highlights, assemble clips packages, help to create teasers and B-roll. Youâd attend production meetings, pitch ideas for storiesâ¦â He trails off, clicking his mouse a few times.
AKA, the perfect job for me. I want this. I need this. I bite the inside of my cheek, wondering how I can turn this disastrous meeting around.
I donât get the chance. Thereâs a loud knock on the door, and it flies open before Mulder can respond. An excited-looking man with an unkempt beard thunders into the office.
âRoman McElroy just got arrested for domestic abuse!â
Mulder dives out of his leather chair. âAre you fucking shitting me?â
âThereâs a video of it all over the Internet. Not of the wife-beating, but the arrest.â
âHave any of the other networks picked this up yet?â
âNo.â Beard Man is bouncing up and down like a kid in a toy store, and he canât be a day younger than fifty-five.
âWhich talking heads do we have on set?â Mulder demands on his way to the door.
âGeorgia just got hereââ
âNo,â the boss interrupts. âNot Barnes. Sheâll try to give it some sort of feminist bullshit spin. Who else?â
I bite my lip to stave off an angry retort. Georgia Barnes is one of the two female analysts at HockeyNet, and she is amazing. Her insights are topnotch.
âKip Haskins and Trevor Trent. But theyâre doing a live segment right now. The Friday Five.â
âScrew The Friday Five. Have Gary write up some copy, then get Kip and Trevor to debate the fuck out of it and break apart the arrest video frame by frame. I want a whole segment on this McElroy thing.â Mulder skids to a stop in the doorway, suddenly remembering my existence. âWeâll finish this on Monday.â
My mouth falls open. âIâm sorryâwhat?â
âCome back Monday,â he barks. âWeâre dealing with a monster exclusive here. The news waits for no man, Brenda.â
âButââ
âMonday, nine oâclock.â With that, heâs gone.
I stare at the empty doorway in disbelief. What the hell just happened? First he opened the interview with a bunch of sexist comments, then he didnât listen to a word I said, and now heâs abandoning me mid-interview? I understand that a professional hockey player being charged with abusing his wife is big news, butâ¦I canât come back on Monday. I have classes. Tristan warned me about Mulder, but the man was even worse than Iâd expected.
I angrily gather up my purse and coat and rise to my feet. Fuck that. Iâm not returning on Monday. Iâm not letting that assholeâ
Dream internship, I remind myself, then repeat the phrase over and over again in my mind. ESPN and HockeyNet are the two biggest sports networks in the country. And ESPN isnât hiring.
Thereforeâ¦
I guess Iâm skipping school on Monday.
Rochelle, Mulderâs cute blonde receptionist, glances up from her desk when I walk up. She officially reschedules the interview, and I leave the HockeyNet building with the worst feeling in the pit of my stomach.
For the first time in ages, itâs not raining, so I arrange for an Uber and stand outside by the curb. I call my cousin while I wait. âHey,â I say when Tansy picks up. âMy interviewâs over.â
âAlready?â
âYup.â
âHow did it go?â
âIt was a total disaster. Iâll tell you about it later. I just ordered an Uberâcan I still head to your dorm?â The plan was for me to hang out there alone while Tansy is in class.
âYeah, I left my key with my RA. Sheâs in room 404. Knock there first and get the key. Iâm in 408.â
âCool.â I glance back at the high-rise I just exited, with its sparkling windows, glass lobby, and massive white-and-red HockeyNet logo. A sigh slips out. âI hope youâre ready to get lit tonight, because I need to drink the memory of this interview right out of my head.â
âI hate you so much. How do you always manage to look so good without even trying?â Tansy gripes later that evening.
Weâre in her suite at Walsh Hall, one of the Boston College residences. Tansy shares it with three other girls, and bunks with a chick named Aisha, whoâs away for the weekend visiting her parents in New York. Aisha is a girl after my own heart, because she transformed her desk into a vanity. I wouldâve done the same thing to my desk at home, if I had one; Iâve always preferred doing homework while sprawled on my bed or couch.
I grin at Tansyâs reflection in Aishaâs huge mirror, then continue applying mascara to my upper lashes. âIâm putting on makeup,â I point out. âHow is that not trying?â
She makes a grumbling noise in her throat. âYou call that makeup? You put on a dab of concealer and a bit of mascara. That doesnât count as trying.â
âAnd lipstick,â I remind her.
âAnd lipstick,â she concedes. She rolls her eyes at me. âYou know colors other than red exist in this big, beautiful world, right?â
âRedâs my color.â I purse my lips at her, then smack them together in an air kiss. âMy friend at Briar says itâs my trademark.â
âIt totally is. I canât remember the last time I saw you without it. Maybe Christmas morning?â She pauses. âNo, wait, we both wore red lipstick that day. It matched our Santa hats. I looked awful, though. I remember that. I canât pull off red lips.â
âWe have the same complexion, Tans. You could absolutely pull it off.â
âNo, I mean swag-wise. You need to possess a certain amount of swagger to rock the red.â
Sheâs not wrong. Itâs a look that requires confidence. Ironically, itâs what gives me confidence. I know it sounds absurd, but I feel invincible every time I slather on some crimson lipstick.
âI can lend you some of my swagger if you want,â I offer.
Tansyâs nose scrunches up as she grins. The silver stud in her left nostril catches the light and seems to sparkle. âAw thanks, Bee. I knew there was a reason youâre my favorite cousin.â
âWell, the others arenât exactly prime candidates for that honor. Leigh and Robbie are too preachy about religion. And donât get me started on Alex.â
We both grimace. Alex is our uncle Billâs daughter and sheâs incredibly annoying.
I hear the chirp of an incoming message. âHey, can you check that?â I left my phone on Tansyâs desk, and sheâs closer to it.
She reaches over from her bed. âSomeone named GB says he misses you. He used about a hundred uâs and five, no, six, heart emojis. Oooh, and itâs the red heart. That means heâs serious. So. Who is GB and why havenât you mentioned him?â
I sputter with laughter. âGB stands for Greenwich Barbie. Thatâs what I call my friend. Summer. Sheâs a hot rich girl from Connecticut.â
âLiar. Iâve never heard you mention a Summer,â Tansy accuses.
âShe transferred to Briar at the beginning of January.â I stick the mascara wand back in the tube and twist it closed. âThis chick is insane, like in a good way. Sheâs hilarious. Always up for a party. I canât wait for you to meet her.â
âAre we seeing her this weekend?â
âNo, unfortunately. Sheâs performing her girlfriendly duty and supporting Briar at the semifinals against Yale tomorrow night. Her boyfriend is on the team.â
âWhy does she miss you?â
âWe havenât hung out since last weekend. And yes, I know a week is not a long time at all, but in Summer years thatâs a decade. Sheâs melodramatic.â
My phone chirps again.
âSee what I mean?â I chuckle, tucking my mascara and lipstick into the small makeup case I brought with me. âPass me my phone, will ya? If I donât text her back, sheâs liable to have a panic attack.â
Tansy checks the screen. Her shoulders stiffen slightly. âItâs not Summer,â she informs me.
I knit my brows. âOkay. Who is it?â
Thereâs a long pause. Something shifts in the air, and suddenly a cloud of tension settles between us.
Tansy studies me, wary. âWhy didnât you tell me you were still in touch with Eric?â