After the meetings, we were divided into groups for our office tour. I stuck with Gabe and Teagan, trying to Xerox each person with my eyes, cataloging them one by one into a mental face book. Despite her five-inch Manolo Blahnik stilettos, Alida had a fiery-quick pace that was hard to keep up with in my studded ballet flats. I trailed her through the circuitous route around the high-ceilinged fashion zone as she gave us the lay of the land, like the bar scene in Goodfellas, minus the guns.
Gabe leaned in to whisper a hilarious running commentary, which had me in stitches. A crazy-looking woman stormed through the hall on her cell phone, ranting to Air France about lost luggage.
“That’s your boss, CeCe Ward, the model bookings editor,” he said, wincing. My heart suddenly sank. “The rumor is if you bring her a latte with one percent milk instead of skim, she’ll not only throw it at you but also puke up the forbidden sips she already swallowed,” he testified.
“Shut up!” I marveled incredulously. And horrified.
“Oh yeah,” added Teagan. “She supposedly fainted at Fashion Week backstage at Galliano ’cause she’d eaten one croissant flake in three days.”
I knew this world would be obsessed with image, but that was too much. I was in for it with this CeCe person.
“This is the photo department,” Alida said, pointing to a sunlight-filled studio with drafting tables and loops to study negatives from recent shoots.
“Pardon me,” said a voice behind us, interrupting my fascination with the flawless view of the Hudson River through the photo department’s panoramic window. I turned to find the most gorgeous guy carrying about five black briefcases. He was tall and thin, with brown hair and enormous caramel eyes flanked by the thickest eyelashes I had ever seen.
“So sorry, it’s portfolio drop-off today,” he added, smiling as he lugged the piles of slick portfolios over to a corner drafting table. He walked back to where we stood in the arched doorway. “Hey, sorry about busting by there. I’m James.”
He reached out to shake my hand, and before I even blurted out “Kira” I spied Gabe and Teagan nudge each other and smile. Alida had already moved on for the rest of the tour, and we hurried to catch up. We weren’t seven steps away when Gabe launched.
“Honaaaay, you were blu-shing! Is he a scorcher or what?” he razzed. “James Carlson. We met him yesterday and I almost collapsed. I mean, I almost needed a defibrillator like in ER. He’s the photo assistant editor. He went to Brown, and is Zeus come down from Mount Olympus. I mean, bring me that on toast points for breakfast any day.”
Shoot, I was blushing. My darn face always belied every emotion with a color—green for sick, yellow for tired, blue for cold, and red hot for the heat of embarrassment. “He is cute,” I admitted sheepishly.
“And, drumroll—” said Teagan, winking at Gabe. “He’s straight. Sorry, Gabe, he doesn’t play for your team, my sweet.”
“Alas,” mooned Gabe. “Thy speaketh the truth. He is as straight as the new Armani pencil skirts for fall.”
We arrived in a corner section of the office that looked a lot less glamorous than the labyrinthine lanes we’d walked to get there. There was a bullpen of cubicles, each with a phone and computer. Gabe and Teagan plopped down at their desks and showed me my station next to them.
“The Trumpettes got the best desks by the windows, naturally,” sneered Teagan.
“Big shocker,” added Gabe.
“The who?” I inquired.
“The Trumpettes. You know, Daphne and her gang. It’s the clique of heiresses who get jobs here every summer ’cause Daddy’s an advertiser or BFFs with Genevieve West—the editor in chief—or someone megawatt,” Gabe explained. “Band of beeyotches.”
“They all roll on in leisurely at like ten-fifteen on their studded cells with blown-dry locks. Total brats on parade,” said Teagan, rolling her eyes. “A bunch of years back, Cartier Trump had the gig thanks to her billionaire pop, and the name for their gaggle stuck.”
“How’d you learn all this stuff in one day?” I asked. Just then, the answer came around the corner.
“Hiiiiii, orphans!” squealed a gray-haired guy wearing a neck scarf and motorcycle boots. Someone actually topped Gabe in over-the-topness.
“Oh, you’re cute. You are rocking that belt,” he said, looking me over. “Richard Finn, accessories director.”
“Richard is the eyes and ears of this institution, like the janitor in Sixteen Candles,” Teagan said, “but without the broom. He filled us in on everything yesterday.”
“Oh, I got your broom right here!” he said, patting his pants.
I laughed, blushing again.
“So, Kira, right? Aiiight, baby, we’re gonna throw you to the wolves today, baptism by fire, best way to learn.”
Gulp. I just hoped I wouldn’t get burned.
As Richard walked away, we all bemoaned the fact that we were not going to be working for someone like him.
“It’s so effing unfair that those little heiresses can pick and choose who they want to work for,” lamented Teagan. “What a bummer that Daphne Hughes’s mute idiotic friend got Richard for a boss!”
“I know. It would have been the best. He seems so nice. And so is Alida,” I added.
“They know who is nice and who is mean. That’s why they snag all the good spots,” said Gabe.
“And do no work,” said Teagan. “We heard they take two-hour lunches, which cost more than the editors make in a week, and then bail early to get ‘manis’!” she mocked with finger air quotes.
I was neither a wealthy socialite who could call my own shots at Skirt nor a punkish rule breaker determined to make a statement, like Gabe and Teagan seemed to be. I guess I was somewhere in between. I had always thought I had killer style—in school, when all the girls in my class took to wearing exactly the same outfits that Jessica Simpson and Nicole Richie were wearing on the opposite coast, I didn’t let that influence me. I scavenged flea markets and vintage shops, raiding my great-aunt Mimi’s closet (she was something in her day, according to her, anyway), and put together a look that I felt was distinctly me. This was no Sienna Miller copying Kate Moss situation. I had my own thing goin’ on. My friends, while telling me I looked cool, all admitted that they would never have the nerve to wear the clothes that I did. Translation: Some of my stuff is semi-weird. Leg warmers in April? Vests over T-shirts? True, it all sounds pretty heinous when you dissect it like that, but the overall effect was pretty chicadelic, I swear. I felt that my fashion style is what separated me from the crowd, allowed me to express my individuality and all that new-agey stuff. (Paging Dr. Phil.)
But that all came to a screeching halt last night when I arrived in New York and headed for my hotel, where I’d stayed for a night before moving into the apartment I’d share with Gabe and Teagan. When my taxi pulled off the FDR Drive into the East Village and I glanced out the window at the people on the street, I was shocked. I was—gulp—not that original. Those leg warmers that I thought so chic and unusual? I saw four people wearing them in a one-block radius. And I guess vests weren’t my reinvention, ’cause I spotted a gaggle of girls prancing around in them. Yikes. Was my eclectic-style persona fading away? Was I just not that interesting anymore? Maybe what was edgy in Philly was not so slick in the grit-filled Big Apple. It started to slowly dawn on me that this was New York—Manhattan—and what was innovative in Philly was totally common here.
Suddenly, as I sat there at that cubicle, the summer seemed like it would be very long and lonely. Would I become friends with any of these people? Or was I going to be hanging solo, counting the days until it was all over? I didn’t know. But out of nowhere, the face of James, the guy from the photo department, came into my mind. He was hot, and he definitely seemed nice. Maybe he and I would be friends. Maybe more. And before I knew it, my mind was racing with thoughts of James and me dining at sidewalk cafés and going to see Woody Allen movies at small alternative theaters. But okay, full disclosure. I am a pretty confident girl, not cocky or arrogant. I have always aced school, had a sense of self and strength to conquer whatever I put my mind to—except maybe when it comes to the opposite sex. I kind of still haven’t mastered that one, and am often confounded as to what drives these beings, or how we’re supposed to relate to them. Sure, I’ve dated, had a boyfriend or two, but I’ve never yet really connected to any of them.
“Yoo hoo, earth to Kira?” Gabe’s voice interrupted my glum reverie of solitude.
“Sorry,” I said quickly.
“We’ve got to go report for duty. You coming?” he asked.
“Yeah,” I said, following him and Teagan.
We walked down a long hallway, turned a corner by the Xeroxes, and were suddenly face-to-face with Daphne and James. Huddled together. Intimately.
“Hey,” said James.
“Hi,” we all mumbled.
Daphne just looked at us from top to bottom, smiled, and said nothing.
We kept walking. When we were out of earshot, Teagan leaned over and whispered to me, “I forgot to tell you, I overheard an editor talking in the bathroom. Hot James? He’s Daphne’s boyfriend.”
Good thing she was in front of me and didn’t see my face turn purple. I winced as my flickering Manhattan montage of courtship faded to black.