I feel like I’m drowning.
The thought came to Angie out of the blue as she drove back to the office after an appointment with a client. It was sudden, and it was frightening.
At work. At home. She couldn’t keep her head above water. She was going under. It was just a matter of when.
She thought about work, how it was the same shit, only worse and worse each day. Mr. Guelli had retired last year; Jeremy was running the show.
“Little bastard,” she muttered as she braked for a light.
As if a twenty-five-year-old being handed a thriving business wasn’t enough to make Angie grind her teeth with envy, Jeremy had decided a bunch of new requirements and procedures should be put into place. Some made sense to Angie—hell, they should do, they were her ideas—like regular, weekly sales meetings and more visits by suppliers. Others were making everybody cranky and irritated. Weekly quotas were his newest baby, and in many sales companies, they were perfectly practical. But in this business, sales came and went with the seasons. It didn’t matter if you wrote only a few orders in October because in November and December—when companies were buying holiday gifts for employees and customers—you were going to crush it. Jeremy didn’t seem to get that. He chalked up the complaints of his veteran salespeople to general laziness and his uncle letting them “get away with too much for too long.”
He was also requesting quote sheets. Any time a salesperson quoted a price to a client, they had to write up the details and e-mail them to Jeremy so he could keep track of what was being closed and offer his help as needed. That part made Angie roll her eyes. Offer his help? He was a baby. “I’ve been in sales since Peach Fuzz was in grade school,” Hope had spat angrily when she read the memo over Angie’s shoulder. “Peach Fuzz” was the current nickname she had for Jeremy. It was much less colorful than her previous ones. “That little egomaniac had better stop insulting us.”
Angie wasn’t really in any danger. She’d been at the game long enough to know how to hedge her bets. She could finagle things if she had to in order to keep Jeremy happy—and not looking too closely at her. She saved orders from last week and included them on this week’s quota report. She wrote up quotes after she actually closed the orders.
“I can play that little game,” she said to the dashboard.
But she could also manage the sales staff so much better than he could. She knew it, but there was nothing she could do about it. So she went along, playing the good employee to Jeremy, playing sounding board to her fellow employees. Keith was spitting nails. He’d been at his job for ages and he was the most successful salesperson in the company. Everybody knew it. Common knowledge. Keith brought in more sales than Angie, Hope, and anybody else in the office, combined. The smart thing for Jeremy to do would be to leave Keith alone, let him do his thing, and reap the rewards.
“Dad always said if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it,” she said as she turned into the parking lot of Logo Promo.
Unfortunately for Jeremy, he had the tendency to let his power go to his head on occasion. Not all the time. He wasn’t a bad kid. Angie actually kind of liked him, would like him a lot more if not for the fact that he had ripped the job she had her heart set on right out of her grasp without her ever seeing it coming. But every once in a while, he’d do something stupid, something that jeopardized the good of the overall business.
Saddling Keith Muldoon with meaningless paperwork that pissed him off was jsut one case. Which planted a seed of an idea in her head that she decided to let germinate. She grabbed her briefcase from the back seat and headed inside.
In the meantime, Angie was torn between requesting a meeting with Jeremy to give him an ‘annual report’ that was really a tactful assessment of how he’d been handling things over the past year, maybe offering up some advice on how to handle certain people and/or situations, and sitting back, crossing her arms, and watching the whole thing crumble. Not that that’s what would happen. More likely, the old-timers like Keith would move on to another company, Jeremy would bring in fresh blood, and Logo Promo would think it was just fine without them . . . though it wouldn’t be half the business it was before.
She reached her office, dropped her briefcase, and flopped back into her chair, suddenly exhausted. “Christ, I’m forty. I am too old for this shit.”
At home, she was just as frustrated. Jillian seemed to always be just a little bit annoyed with her. She never remembered her partner being demanding, but lately, that’s how it seemed. Hell, they’d been together for sixteen years; it seemed kind of late for a new personality trait to rear its head, but that’s how it felt. Angie couldn’t do anything right. She worked too much. She drank too much. She didn’t do enough around the house (she’d been scolded last night for leaving dirty dishes in the sink . . . again). She never wanted to talk. She wasn’t interested in sex. She’d become boring.
None of it was true. Well, okay, maybe the working part was true. And the drinking had been an ongoing issue, but she couldn’t help the fact that she was totally stressed out by her job. Coming home to somebody who did nothing but bitch at her didn’t help. Who wouldn’t want a beer or a glass of wine to calm her nerves? Jesus. She didn’t do much around the house lately; that wasn’t a total lie. But she was so damn tired all the time. That’s also why she wasn’t talking as much. She was on the phone all day at work. The last thing she wanted to do in her spare time was blather on and on. Not that Jillian blathered, but god, could she give Angie fifteen minutes to gain some equilibrium at home before launching into discussion?
As for the sex . . .
Angie sighed. She was tired. She was irritable. She was forty. Those were her excuses. Was her sex drive gone? Of course not. Was it the same as it had been when she was twenty-five? Of course not! That only made sense. Jillian had always had a higher drive, or more intense desire. But lately, she was making a connection between their lack of sex and Angie’s attraction to her, and there simply was no such link. Jillian was still the most beautiful, sexiest woman she’d ever met. Age had only improved her appearance, as far as Angie was concerned. The laugh lines around her eyes had become a bit more prominent and Angie loved them. Her tummy was a little less flat and Angie loved it. Her eyes were wiser, her voice was softer, her smile was gentler (except these days when she seemed irritable). Angie was drawn to all of those things. Nothing had changed but the urgency, and in Angie’s eyes, that was normal.
Jillian didn’t agree. Angie was fairly certain of that. Jillian could tell her exactly how many days/weeks/months it had been since they’d last had sex, and sometimes she would. It drove Angie mad. Jillian also told Angie that she felt old. She felt fat. She thought she was no longer attractive, and no matter what Angie said, Jillian didn’t seem to hear her. She seemed tense. Annoyed. And worst of all: unhappy.
I’ve been naïve.
It was a thought that had crossed Angie’s mind often lately. Was it common to assume your own relationship was the exception to the rule? That others may preach about how much work a partnership is, how many bumps there are that you don’t expect, but doesn’t everybody at one time or another think that’s rubbish? Doesn’t everybody, at some point during their own bliss, think, “That will never happen to us” or “We’re not like that”? Angie knew she was guilty of thinking such things. Yes, she and Jillian had an amazing relationship, had always had an amazing relationship, but she was a fool if she thought there were no problems. Her wife was unhappy.
That thought simultaneously angered Angie and scared the bejesus out of her, mostly because she had no idea how to fix things. And god forbid Jillian should actually talk to her about how she was feeling. Jillian kept everything inside, festering, until it exploded out of her. That impending explosion was something Angie dreaded.
Advice. She needed advice. But from whom? A number of people crossed her mind: her mother, Hope, Dom, Shay. The idea of talking in depth about her relationship—and more terrifyingly, her sex life—with even close friends made her feel jumpy. This stuff was private. Shouldn’t she be able to figure it out on her own without subjecting herself to embarrassment in front of somebody she cared about?
Her computer let out a ding, telling her she’d received an e-mail, but she ignored it. Her mind was anywhere but on work, even though that’s where it should have been. A lot of things were on her plate, a lot that needed her attention, but she couldn’t get past the niggling sensation in her brain telling her she was failing as a partner, as a wife. Jillian’s face from that morning filled her head now, the expression of disappointment and worse, resignation.
Was Jillian still in love with her?
The thought came unbidden, out of nowhere, and it jerked Angie upright in her chair. She sat ramrod straight, her palms flat on her desk. It was the first time those words had entered her thoughts; she’d never doubted Jillian’s love, never, not once.
Okay, this is ridiculous, she thought. I’m panicking for no reason. I need to get my shit together and stop this. Right now. Before I drive myself nuts.
They just needed to talk. That was all. Simple. She’d have to bring it up, of course, because Jillian never would. But Angie could do that. They’d talk, they’d get it all out on the table, and things would be fine.
There.
With a curt nod to the empty air in her office, Angie turned to her computer and proceeded to throw herself into her work.
It was what she did best.