“The powers that be want you on it,” Lane said. “You've done a lot of vertical work, right?”
Billie nodded grudgingly. “That's pretty much all I did at my last firm. I think my first act would be to call my contacts at the FTC and get this deadline extended.”
“Gil already tried,” Lane said. “Didn't work.”
Gil Anderson was general counsel at Agencis. He was a powerful, influential guy. If he couldn't use his influence on the FTC, she had little hope of doing so. The timeline was very tight to work with, so she would give it a try. It was possible that she had a way of going about it that Gil didn't know.
“What firm are we hiring?” she asked.
“Well, your old firm is the best in the business,” Lane said.
Billie knew that was coming. Her old firmâthe one where she ruined her careerâwas, in fact, the best at this kind of law. However, that would be very awkward.
“They are the best,” she agreed. “Do you want me to call them?”
Lane laughed. “Are you kidding? I think that would be awkward for you. For all of us.”
Billie sighed, happy she wasn't the one to bring it up. “Not to mention that they probably wouldn't do it. I didn't leave on the best terms with them, so I doubt they'd want to take orders from me.”
“Don't sweat it,” Lane said. “Gil is working on finding another firm. He knows what he's doing.”
“Wow!” Billie didn't hide how impressed she was. “That's actually amazingly cool of him not to want me to be in a complicated position.”
“Don't think too much of it,” Lane said. “That was just one consideration. Gil likes to get the job done. If he thought your firm was the only one to do it, he'll just tell you to suck it up. I don't think he likes some of the partners at your firm. He mentioned something about hating them since being classmates at Harvard Law.”
“So, who is he considering?” Billie asked.
“Well, that's what I came to tellâ”
Before Lane could finish his sentence, there was a knock on the door. It was Evelyn returning, but this time with a bouquet of flowers in her hands.
“These are for you,” she said in an excited voice as she laid them down on the desk.
The flowers were a beautiful mix of stark blue and white orchids.
“Here you go.” Evelyn handed Billie the card, before turning to Lane. “Gil wants to see you now. He's been looking for you.”
“In a second,” Lane answered.
“Fine,” she said, “but he seemed pissed.”
Lane groaned, as if he'd already dealt with a pissed-off Gil that day. “I hate Mondays. Glad you're here, though. We'll talk later?”
“Sure.” Billie waved good-bye.
Evelyn followed him out of the office and closed the door behind her, but Billie didn't think a closed door was a good look on a first day.
Before she got up to open it again, she opened the card. She was admittedly nervous. The last time she'd gotten a bouquet of flowers on her first day of work, they were from her ex-husband, Porter. It was just another passive-aggressive way of him letting her know he knew all about her life and he wasn't going anywhere.
But the flowers weren't from Porter. She didn't know if this was much better, but she still smiled when she read it:
Hope I get a third chance to make a first impressionâMichael Johnson.
Â
Erica had just taken her purse out of her desk drawer and was ready to lock everything up when Caroline sauntered out of her office and over to her desk. From the satisfied look on Caroline's face, Erica knew the older woman was about to give her some shit. Erica wasn't in the mood; she had something very important to get to.
“What are you doing?” Caroline asked.
“It's five.” Erica pointed to the clock on the wall. “I'm going home.”
“Not today,” Caroline said. “We've got to prepare for the Bring Your Child to Work event. We've got a lot of work to do.”
“I'll do it tomorrow,” Erica said, standing up.
“You'll do it when I say,” Caroline corrected, placing a skeletal hand on her hip. “I've been approved for overtime all week, so it's really my say.”
Erica wasn't about to get into it with this lady. How could she possibly have known that today, of all days, Erica couldn't work late?
“Sorry, Caroline,” she said as politely as she could. “But my brother is coming in on the train tonight from New York. He's been gone for a long time and I'm picking him up.”
“Last I checked,” Caroline interjected, “your brother was an adult.”
“Last time you checked?”
Erica asked. “What the hell does that mean?”
“Watch your tone with me,” Caroline warned, pointing a finger at Erica. “I'm your boss. I can write you up.”
Erica took a deep breath, trying to stay calm. “Caroline, I can stay late the rest of the week, but not today.”
Today was too important. After Nate got involved with drugs last year, Erica, with Jonah's help, was able to get him into the best rehab facility in the country. Unfortunately, that was in New York. After getting out, Nate had decided to stay with some friends he'd met in rehab. Erica wasn't happy about it, but she needed a break from the difficult year they'd had. She knew that Nate wasn't her baby brother anymore; he could do what he wanted.
Eventually he tired of New York and announced that he wanted to come home. A friend of his who ran an electronics store in the Friendship Heights neighborhood offered him a job when he got back, much to Erica's delight. She was excited to have her brother, her only real family, back. And even though he'd already told her that his goal was to get his own place, he was moving back in with her for the time being. Things could be like they used to be. Well . . . almost.
“Your brother is a grown man,” Caroline said, with a stone expression on her face. “He can catch a cab. We'll be here till nine, probably.”
Erica gasped as Caroline turned and started to walk away. Her blood began to boil over at this woman's audacity. She'd had enough.
“I'm going to pick up my brother,” she stated in a very certain tone. “I'll be in at nine tomorrow and will work late then.”
Caroline swung around, her face turning as red as wine. “How dare you? I told you that you have to stay. Do you want to keep your job?”
Now it was Erica's turn to laugh. Her laughing only incensed Caroline more.
“That's funny to you?” Caroline asked. “You're in for it now. I'm writing you up. And if you walk out of here, you shouldn't bother coming back.”
“Do you really expect me to believe you can fire me?” Erica asked. “Your poker face is awful, Caroline. I'm done playing along.”
“How dare you speak to me like that? I'm your boss!”
“I know what you've been up to,” Erica said. “You've been trying to get dirt on me to get rid of me. I never did one thing to you, but you've had it in for me ever since you showed up here.”
Caroline's mouth was agape. “What are you afraid I'll find out, Erica?”
“Nothing,” she said, “but I know what you've found out so far. You've found out that your power is bullshit here. You got your hand slapped for trying to screw me over and poke your nose where it doesn't belong. But you didn't think I knew, so you kept up this façade of having power over me.”
Caroline's mouth flew open as if she wanted to say something, but it wouldn't come out. She was clearly livid; Erica loved it.
“The truth is,” Erica continued, “you need to be thanking me. Because while you keep talking shit about getting me fired, I'm actually the one with the power here. If I wanted, I could snap my fingers and you'd be out of a job.”
“I have seniority here,” Caroline sneered between grinding teeth, her nose jutted in the air. “I have tenure. I've been here forever. People like me never get fired.”
“You're still just administration,” Erica said. “You're still replaceable. The people who keep slapping you down will do whatever I want, when I want. You think you're powerful, Caroline? You have no idea what real power is. If you don't stop fucking with me, you're going to find out.”
Caroline stumbled back a bit as if she'd had the wind knocked out of her. She looked as if she was a minute away from having a heart attack.
“I'm going to pick my brother up from the train and we're going out to dinner.” Erica leaned in, looking into Caroline's astonished eyes. “And that's the end of it.”
Caroline started vehemently shaking her head. Enraged, she yelled out, “No, itâit isn't! IâI . . . This is not the last of it. You just . . . You just wait, Erica!”
With that, she turned and stormed off to her office, slamming the door behind her.
Erica sighed, realizing just then how tense her body was. She took a deep breath as what had just happened settled into her. She'd lost her temper and let it loose. What had she just done? In her mind, she quickly reheard everything she'd said. She gasped at how revealing it was. She knew she'd done something really wrong when she ended up feeling sorry for Caroline.
How could she be so mean? How could she so easily flaunt an influence she was supposed to be ashamed of and wanted nothing to do with? Who was Erica turning into?
Â
“Sherise.” Billie used the most calming voice she could manage over the phone. “You need to calm down. This stress isn't good for the baby.”
“Are you listening to what I'm saying?” Sherise asked. “My husband thinks I got pregnant to trap him!”
As soon as Sherise had gotten home, she called her girls, but she had been unable to catch either of them. Billie finally called her back, and Sherise told her about the fight she and Justin had earlier that day. She was still sick over it as she lay in bed, waiting for him to come home and wondering what was next.
“He knows you,” Billie said. “I'm just being honest. You know I love you, and you know he loves you to death, but you play games, Sherise.”
“This is how you show your support?” Sherise asked. “I know I play games, but this is too much, Billie. I wouldn't bring a baby into this world to trap him. Besides, I didn't think trapping him was necessary.”
“It's not,” Billie said. “Justin is yours, and you know it. If he was going to leave, he'd have done it by now. The only problem is, he wasn't being as honest in therapy as you thought. He still has some trust issues, and this is just a shock to his system.”
“That's what I thought,” Sherise said, “but the look on his face today. It was like he'd already decided why I'd done this and wasn't even interested in hearing another explanation.”
“Or maybe he's avoiding this because he loves you and doesn't want you to hurt yourself or the baby.” Billie checked her watch. She loved Sherise and wanted to help her, but it wasn't a great idea to spend her first day at work on the phone with her friends.
“Look,” Billie continued, “it's just fear. He's scared. Think about it. You know this man. He isn't going anywhere.”
“It's not just about him leaving me,” Sherise said. “It's about him loving me and trusting me.”
“You doubt that he loves you?” Billie asked. “Come on, now.”
Sherise smiled. “I know he loves me, but I want everything to be right.”
“That takes time,” Billie said. “Clearly, more time than you thought. Sherise, you're going to have to accept that you can't have everything you want in the timeline that you want it.”
“And that little bitch working under him isn't making things better.” Sherise made sure to mention Elena to Billie as well. “I know she heard us arguing. She's going to use that.”
“You have no reason to believe she is after your husband,” Billie said. “Just because she's a pretty girl working with him doesn't mean she wants him. She might have a boyfriend or be after someone elseâsomeone without a wife and all the trouble that comes with that.”
“Did you have reason to believe Claire was after Porter?” Sherise asked.
That hit hard. Billie would love to forget that her marriage fell apart after Porter had an affair with Claire, a younger associate at his law firm. He later moved her into the home she had once lived in with him and Tara, even though he was still sleeping with Billie. Office affairs were common, and her marriage wasn't the firstâand wouldn't be the lastâdestroyed by coworkers who spent too much time together.
“You forget,” Billie assured her, “Porter is an asshole. He's always been an asshole. Justin isn't. Justin is a good guy who lost his way, and not completely from his own fault.”
This was true; it made Sherise feel a little better. One of the main reasons she married Justinâin addition to loving him and desiring the connections he had in
D.C.
politics and powerâwas that he was a genuinely good guy, one of those rare animals that seemed to be extinct. She'd never known a guy like Justin. Until she met him, she'd mostly known only thugs, playboys, betrayers, and abandoners. Justin wasn't perfect, but he was the best man she'd ever known.
“Leave him alone about her,” Billie said. “You don't need that extra stress between you two. Keep an eye on her, though. Use your contacts at the firm. You know Candy will tell you anything.”
“It's just one more thing for me to be worriedâ”
Suddenly her phone made a
pinging
sound and a text came up. Sherise read it and was horrified: Urgent! Matthews picks J. Nolan as VP! Call me now! LaKeisha.