Read The Plan Online

Authors: Qwen Salsbury

The Plan (12 page)

BOOK: The Plan
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My mouth opens, but I don’t really even know what to say. Out of the loop here.

Madeline rolls closer to me and whispers conspiratorially, “We have a betting pool for how long Canon’s assistants last.”

My head pulls back. That
is
rather cold-hearted. Bert fans through several large bills.

Cold-hearted…and profitable. I have loans to pay. Shoes to buy.

Heels on Deals. Pumps before Chumps.

“How does this work?” I ask, but suddenly everyone seems to have heard some cue that I’ve missed. They straighten and begin a flutter of activity.

Self-preservation instincts are not kicking in; I stand up to see what’s going on. I imagine that I stick out like a sore, red thumb over the tops of everyone else.

That is when I see him.

Whoever he is.

Except, I know.

I just know.

Oh, my good God.

There are not enough words.

Beautiful.

Ineffable.

Utterly F-able.

He’s a few feet from a set of large, dark wooden doors in the far corner. The desk outside that office is empty. He moves smoothly past it and scans the room.

His eyes fall on me. I’m incapable of movement under his gaze. Held. Matador. Bull.

He straightens his collar, never falters in his long strides. Looks away from me.

And then he’s gone.

Everyone resumes their normal lives and conversations, and I’m left standing still and dumbstruck while the world happens around me.

S
HAKING
F
REE
O
F
T
HE
M
EMORY
, I speed the treadmill up.

I will feel better for this. Definitely. Maybe. Definitely maybe.

I sit at work all day and study all night. It’s not going to do me any good to finish school if I keel over dead.

Runs in the family.

This is the problem with treadmills. Too much time to think.

6:00 a.m.

*
Breakfast
: Arrived 15 minutes ago. Gone.
*
Hair
: French twist.
*
Clothes
: Beige suit. It’s like keeping a little piece of my room with me all day.
*
Coffee
: Blue Mountain Jamaica. Freshly brewed. Go, me.

C
ANON’S
B
REAKFAST
A
RRIVES
as I exit my room. The server smiles at me; he knows he’ll be getting a stellar tip for splitting the delivery.

He knocks, and the door opens as if by magic. I duck in behind the cart, hot coffee in hand. Not that I have to sneak in. I have a key.

Clangs emanate from the bathroom while the table is set up, and I make quick work of the sugar and cream.

“Will there be anything else, sir?” The server speaks loudly to a closed bathroom door.

Canon dismisses him with something muffled I can’t quite make out. There hasn’t been any water running. I don’t really know what I will encounter when that bathroom door opens. He may be fully clothed.

He may regenerate suits like a T-1000.

But the distinct possibility he may appear in some stage of undress exists.

Alaric Canon. With skin exposed.

Must focus.

Focus, focus, focus.

He said to be here at 6:00 a.m.

I’m here at 6:00 a.m.

Do what he says when he says. Even though it doesn’t make sense to me.

Some items still need packing up. Chargers and files. His laptop.

Not a chance in hell I’m going to do that now and rob myself of something to concentrate on when he walks into the room.

Be calm. Cool.

Cool as a cucumber…which sets my mind skipping down a dirty little path…

Sweet Baby Moses in a reed basket, it’s happening now. The door is opening, and I don’t know whether to sit or stand or turn around or look away or jump out the sliding door and hole up in a log cabin in the hills.

Calm. The. Fuck. Down.

This might be the closest I will get to the upper hand.

You’re a reasonable man, Mr. Canon. You don’t tolerate mistakes, Mr. Canon. When you set a time, it’s not an approximation, Mr. Canon.

I breathe. Deeply.

It’s like a dance, but I’m leading this one. I know why I’m here. I’m justified in being here.

One long leg breaks the threshold. I force myself to turn at what feels like half-speed. I’m ramped up on nerves, and moving too quickly will show it.

The leg and its friend are in black pants. I’m a bit more disappointed than I expected.

Bullshit. I’m super fucking disappointed.

But the point is, I’m not showing it.

He turns toward the main part of the room, toward me, and I begin wrapping the cord around his charger.

Hoping my movements still look natural and unaffected—like hanging out in a hotel room with one’s potentially half-naked boss is a regular occurrence—my eyes flick up to see Canon stop mid-stride.

His shirt is open. The man is wearing a white dress shirt, unbuttoned, cuffs loose. Pretending not to notice has just become a Herculean effort.

“Explain yourself.”

I barely glance up, even though staring would have been worth getting fired.

I start to pack up his laptop. I’m all business.

Pretending to misinterpret his words, I continue packing up as I rattle off the itinerary and my role in it. I’m to take notes, hand him hard copies or access reports as needed, watch for discrepancies. I omit “glorified nanny.”

A few times it seems he’s about to say something, to redirect me back to the situation at hand, but I plow through. Finally I close with describing the food that better not have gotten cold.

He nods once, mouth a thin line. The shirt is buttoned and tucked in now. I have missed the show.

“You failed to mention the dinner meeting tonight. I presume you brought suitable attire.”

“The little black dress. Perfect for all occasions.”

“Hopefully not too little,” he says under his breath. He may have even rolled his eyes.

Do I seem like some sort of tart? Is this because I’m in his room? He shouldn’t have told me to be here and given me a key then.

He takes a sip of the coffee, and the look is priceless. He was so ready to bitch and moan, and I have kept him from it. Despite the fact that he had to realize I’ve checked off all the boxes this morning, he remains somber.

“If orange juice is not okay, I can get you something else.” Prune juice perhaps?

“A good rule of thumb,” he says as he polishes off the eggs, “is not to make offers one cannot complete.”

“Agreed. Thank you for imparting your expertise,” I say. “By the by, I have grape, apple, and cranberry juice in my refrigerator, if you should feel so inclined.”

He stops mid-bacon-chew. I think I’m getting addicted to flustering him.

If I can’t be a blip on the radar, I will settle for being a fly in the ointment.

4:47 p.m.

*
Location
: Office of Lawrence Peters, World’s Most Tedious Man.

I F
IND
M
YSELF
T
HINKING
about that scene in
Raiders of the Lost Ark
when a female student blinks at Indy, and her eyelids have words on them that read “I Love You” in black eyeliner. Maybe I can do that but make it look like my eyes are open. Even if I weren’t already sleepy, this company’s CEO would do me in.

He is ether in human form. I could easily keep up even if I hand-wrote everything.

In calligraphy.

Mr. Peters, on the downward slope to retirement, does not self-edit. Interspersed with the incredibly slow-spoken actual negotiations, we get it all. Some of it twice. The kids. The grandkids. The basset hound.

They’re a hardy breed, seventeen years old before Peters had him put down last week. He will be missed.

Peters has prostate issues as well. Nothing’s off limits, it seems.

During this, Canon doesn’t even bat an eye. One would think he might be concerned about the health of his own prostate, given that it has been cohabiting with a very large stick.

He makes notes of this minutia as though it’s as vital to closing the deal as the fine print in licensing our intellectual property rights.

Canon has remained stoic. Begrudgingly, I must admit I’m impressed.

Warm afternoon sun beats down on me from the window. There’s a sunbeam on the carpet near my chair. I want to curl up in it like a tabby cat.

The morning was less trying. Three other executives had livened up the discussion. One was even lively enough to check out my ass. A pen jab to the leg he just happened to keep bumping against mine under the conference table seemed to give him the message that he was not my type.

“I must say, you have thought of everything. What do you need me for?” Peters chortles. Yes, chortles.

Canon smiles and raises his eyebrows infinitesimally; he doesn’t need this guy in the least, and I’m fairly certain Peters is going to be enjoying his retirement sooner than planned. Mr. Peters doesn’t notice and excuses himself to make a call. His meandering trek to the door takes about five minutes.

We’re alone for the first time since his hotel room this morning. Canon takes out his phone then returns it to his pocket almost immediately.

I turn, shifting toward him just a little. I’m sure my eyes are a bit wider than normal due to my struggle to stay alert.

Our eyes meet, and I must be punch-drunk from sleep deprivation and three hours of Peters’ monologue because I can’t help the smile that takes over my face and, just when I think I might be able to rein it in, one corner of Canon’s mouth turns up too. The shock wave ruptures the dam, and I can’t help a single laugh escaping. He looks at papers he’s holding, but even in profile I can see tell that his smile is bigger. Oh, good Lord, we have both been tortured for hours, and he’s just better at hiding it. I clear my throat and shake my head, trying to resume professional behavior.

Not much longer. About 45 minutes, tops. Though it will seem twice as long since this Peters guy has tortoise nervosa.

“What?” Canon is looking at me.

The filter is broken. I’ve said that out loud.

Oh, crap. I’m mocking a potential business partner. I am so fired.

I own it. I repeat myself.

And Canon laughs. Hard.

Holy shit. I have actually fallen asleep on the job. Or died.

I hear myself laugh, too. It is a bit nervous and hollow. I need to get out of here. “May I get you a drink, Mr. Canon?”

He nods repeatedly, pointedly avoiding eye contact, regaining composure.

“Take a chance with their coffee or just a Coke?” Caffeine on an IV drip?

“Coke is fine.” He clears his throat.

Over thirty minutes later, our drinks are gone and Peters has yet to materialize.

“Do you suppose he’s left?” I break the silence. I’m concerned about running late to dinner; I had planned on being back at the hotel by now, and I need time to change.

I bet this is killing Canon, this waiting around.

“We will give him two more minutes, then we will leave.”

I’m in the shower when I realize Canon said “we.”

7:54 p.m.

*
Location
: Sierra De Touro Churrascaria.
*
Itinerary Item
: Dinner meeting with 4 top execs.
*
Dress
: Black. Littlest one I brought. Worn intentionally. Don’t judge me.

T
HE
F
OOD
I
S
A
MAZING
. Freshly grilled meat straight to the table again and again. Salad bar with items I can neither recognize nor pronounce.

We’re dining with the comptroller and three VPs. There appears to be a shit ton of suits at this company; thinning the herd seems to be in order.

My recommendation is that we begin with one Diana Fralin, VP of Marketing. Tits on display and blatant, just blatant, flirtation attempts with the males. She’s the embodiment of every negative connotation with female executives. Giant step backward for the women’s movement.

BOOK: The Plan
10.84Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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