That New York Minute. Abby Gaines
she’d admit. Perhaps she should start calling herself … The Terrier.
Didn’t have quite the same ring to it.
A glance at the numbers above the elevator door revealed they were at the twenty-fourth floor.
“I guess Tony had his reasons for inviting you to attend this morning,” she said, “but, Garrett, you won’t win. Why put yourself through that?” Perhaps she could convince him to get out on fifty-four.
He didn’t say anything. Tension flattened his lips and he obviously had a pounding headache. Drawing his dark eyebrows together in that thunderous way wouldn’t help the pain. He must realize, in his heart, that she was right. He was an outsider, and everyone knew that outsiders seldom won. Rachel’s shoulders relaxed. She could almost feel sorry for him.
Maybe that’s why he was drinking alone last night. Out of a sense of inadequacy.
She ignored the fact that the word didn’t gel with anything about him.
“It’s not about you,” she assured him. “I’ve been at KBC eight years. Around here that counts for something.”
His expression lightened, as if he’d heard her entirely reasonable explanation and discounted it. Rachel shifted uneasily as he scanned her, top to toe, lightning fast.
“You must have joined when you were twelve.” His tone was chatty.
Garrett Calder didn’t make idle conversation.
“I was eighteen,” she said warily. “I started in the mail room.”
“She Worked Her Way to the Top,” he intoned.
“You bet I did.” Her response was clipped—he didn’t get to mock her achievement.
“So, it’s your eight years versus my eight gold CLIO awards,” he mused, sounding a whole lot more cheerful. “Think they might count for something?”
Eight gold CLIOs! It was practically obscene, how successful he’d been in the advertising industry’s equivalent of the Oscars. But those awards came while he was working at five different companies. And he’s made more enemies than friends. Making partner was about loyalty and long term. Rachel was about loyalty and long term.
She dismissed his awards with a pff. “Style over substance.”
The Shark bared his teeth. It might have been a smile. Then again, he might have been anticipating dragging her beneath the surface and chomping on her drowned body.
Rachel folded her arms across her chest, realized she looked defensive and dropped her hands to her sides. Surely we must be nearly—nope, only the thirty-sixth floor.
“I have an excellent track record, and that’s how I’ll get the partnership,” she assured him.
“Right,” he said encouragingly.
He clearly meant Wrong.
“Do you know something?” she demanded.
He closed his eyes. “You’re shouting again. And I’m having a bad week. Bad enough that I might take off this stupid tie and gag you with it.”
He was a jerk. Jerks didn’t make partner at KBC. It was different at some other agencies, but not here.
He’s a jerk with eight gold CLIOs.
She shouldn’t bother explaining, but the urge to convince him he was wasting his time was overwhelming. “It’s not just the eight years. I’ve put in more hours than anyone, I’ve won more pitches …”
“You’ve won a bunch of clients too scared to do anything interesting,” he said. “Your work is tame.”
Rachel clenched her jaw to hold back her outrage. Tame! She prided herself on her ability to take clients beyond their expectations.
“Do you want to know what your weakness is?” Garrett asked.
“No.”
“It’s those eight years,” he said. “You’re relying on past experience, but everything can change in a heartbeat around here.” He folded his arms, and on him it didn’t look defensive. “In a New York minute, you could say.”
She’d never liked the song “New York Minute,” with its suggestion that everything—business, family, life—could be turned on its head any moment.
“Your weakness is that you don’t think on your feet,” Garrett said. “Reacting to those moments of insight, freeing yourself from reliance on what others have told you, is what drives creative power.”
As if she would trust the impulse of a moment over a carefully crafted solution. Her hands fisted at her sides. “You don’t get to waltz in here with your Dom Pérignon hangover and your eight CLIOs and your custom-made suits and your fancy cologne—”
“I don’t wear cologne.” He spread his hands, palm out, as if declaring himself innocent of some heinous crime.
Wow, The Shark sure knew how to zero in on the main issue.
“Uh-huh. So you just happened to sleep on a bed of—” she sniffed “—pine needles and citrus peel.”
Ever so slowly, one corner of his mouth kicked up.
The effect was more potent than any full-throated laugh. It was that stupid Shark thing, Rachel thought crossly. It gave him an aura of power.
“Whatever it is you’re smelling, Rach, it’s all me,” he said. “Cologne is for sissies.”
No way a man could smell this good without help. “Rachel,” she corrected. “Strange, I don’t remember that sissies line from your award-winning Calvin Klein Fragrance campaign.”
“That was last year. I believed in cologne last year.”
Typical of his here today, gone tomorrow style. “Whereas I prefer to take a long-term, truth-based approach,” she said. Which did not mean she was tame.
Garrett gave her a pained look through half-closed eyes. “Integrity in advertising,” he said. “Interesting concept. But not, I fear, a partnership-winning one.”
Floor fifty-one. Nearly there, thank goodness.
“Who else do you think will be here this morning?” Garrett asked abruptly.
No thinking required. “Just Clive.”
“That’s what I figured.”
Clive Barnes was the only other executive creative director, the same level as Rachel and Garrett. His seniority meant he had to be on the partnership shortlist. But…
“Clive’s a nice guy,” Rachel said.
“You know what they say about nice guys.” Garrett’s white teeth flashed.
Out of loyalty to Clive, who’d been at KBC almost as long as she had, she sent him a disapproving look. But she didn’t consider Clive a threat, either.
The elevator dinged to indicate they’d reached their destination. Finally. She couldn’t wait to get out of here and spend a few minutes alone, restoring the calm confidence she would need during breakfast. She stepped toward the doors, but they didn’t open.
Garrett pressed the open button. Nothing happened.
“Come on,” Rachel muttered.
Garrett was already stabbing at the intercom. It rang three times—prompting more wincing from the hungover Shark—before an operator answered.
“We’ll have you out of there in a jiffy, sir,” the woman chirped, once she ascertained how many people were in the elevator and that no one needed medical treatment. “Well, when I say a jiffy … hmmm … okay, we have a software glitch, but don’t you folks worry about a thing!” She hung