Freudian Slip. Erica Orloff

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unbelievably handsome. He was going to be famous someday. And she was positive this next book was it.

      They hadn’t gotten involved until the first book went to press. But the attraction had been there all through the editing process. Everyone in the office felt it. Leslie, her best friend and fellow editor, told her she was the luckiest book editor in Manhattan getting to work with someone who looked like a Brooks Brothers model—with a brain. The chemistry culminated in a celebratory dinner after his first reviews came out—all positive. They’d been together ever since.

      The elevator doors opened, and Kate walked to 7B. She put her key into the lock and entered his apartment. His style was, she teased him, “elegant bachelor,” all dark, sleek wood and clubby brown leather, accented with black-and-white photography on the walls in silver frames. The place was dimly lit and she wondered if he was even home. She was about to call out his name when she spotted it. An opened bottle of Kristal champagne. Two crystal flutes, nearly empty, the last champagne bubbles drifting lazily in the remnants. One glass emblazoned with lipstick on the rim. Red. Not her shade.

      Feeling like her knees might buckle, she told herself there were a million possible explanations. His childhood best friend, Judy, could have come into the city for dinner. He could be entertaining his sister. But what blared through her head was what she had told him that morning as she left his place. I can’t see you tonight. I have to work late and then meet with an agent for cocktails.

      But then she ran into the editor of Gotham, who handed her a crisp copy of the issue. After drinks with the agent, on the spur of the moment she decided to cab it up to his place.

      Shaking, feeling like a fool, she stumbled, almost blindly to the bedroom. And there he was, naked, half-erect and hurriedly putting on his boxers. And there she was, frantically shoving her black-lace bra into her purse.

      Leslie.

      She turned, bile rising in her throat, and ran.

      “Kate…Kate…wait!” He chased after her, grabbing her arm. “It’s not what you—”

      She shrieked, not even recognizing the voice that came out of her own mouth. “Not what I think? Don’t patronize me! You bastard!”

      “I thought—”

      “I was working late? Had drinks scheduled. Couldn’t see you?” She felt tears streaming down her face, and she thought she was going to vomit. She wrenched her arm free and reached into her oversize purse to pull out the magazine. She flung it, as hard as she could, at his face, where, thanks to her high school softball career, it landed perfectly, smacking him on his perfect nose. “I ran into the editor of Gotham and wanted to surprise you.”

      The magazine landed on the floor cover-side up. One of the heads read, “America’s Best New Writer.”

      “Kate.” His face was pale, and he shook his head. “I was drinking. I…”

      With all the fury and hatred she could muster, Kate glared at Leslie who stood, teary, in the doorway of his bedroom. Kate swallowed hard. “You two deserve each other.”

      She opened the apartment door and fled down the hall. Over and over, in her mind, as if she were unable to control her own brain, the image of Leslie, topless, in his bedroom, came back to her. In slow motion. In fast motion. In frozen images.

      She whispered a prayer, “Please let the elevator come right away.” Thankfully, it did. She stepped in and punched the button for the lobby, jabbing it three, four, five times, willing the elevator doors to close faster and deliver her even quicker to the ground floor and away from him. From them. Running out of the lobby, past Henry’s concerned gaze, she stepped into the hot night. She tried to gulp in fresh air, but it felt like breathing in a sauna.

      She just wanted to go home and shower off the ugliness she just saw. She wanted to be alone. She turned to hail a cab and saw the cab she had taken not ten minutes before, with his “off-duty” signal, sitting parked on the street.

      Wiping at her tears, she walked to the cab and bent over to peer in the window. Sure enough, it was the same bobblehead dashboard. Her turban-wearing cabbie. He waved and rolled down the passenger-side window.

      “What is the matter, my someday-famous friend?”

      “Surprising him was not a good idea.”

      An expression of immediate comprehension crossed his face. “Let me drive you home.”

      Grateful for his kindness, she again climbed into the backseat of his cab.

      “Thank you,” she whispered, looking more closely at the name on his license, clipped to the viser, trying to discern the pronunciation—it had six syllables.

      “You may call me Mo. That is what my American friends call me.”

      “Thank you, Mo. I’m Kate.”

      He turned to look at her. “I am very sorry. You tell me where to take you.”

      She gave him her address and leaned back, shutting her eyes. A tiny sob escaped. Maybe she wanted conversation. Something to drown out that image seared on her brain.

      “Why were you still here?” she asked. “I thought I was going to have stand out there and try to find a cab, and there you were.”

      “Something very, very strange. I had to listen.” He pointed at the radio.

      “To the sex-crazed DJ?”

      “Yes, yes. He was shot.”

      Kate opened her eyes wide. “Shot?”

      “Yes. He is a crazy man, my new friend Kate, but someone else was even crazier. Someone tried to kill him.”

      “That’s New York.”

      “No, that too, is America,” he said sadly.

      As he pulled onto York, Kate watched the bobblehead. The Buddha seemed less merry now, like he was mocking her.

      With each nod of his head, the Buddha told her, “You should have known. You should have known. You should have known.”

      CHAPTER TWO

      JULIAN SHAW EXPECTED a long tunnel. Then a white light. Or at least his dearly departed Grandma Hannah.

      Instead, he got Gus.

      “Listen, old boy, try not to panic” was Gus’s advice, delivered in a clipped British accent.

      “I’m too confused to panic,” said Julian, but then he spied his body in the hospital bed, and panic struck him like the shock of a defibrillator.

      “Remember not to panic,” Gus urged, but it was far too late for that. Julian let out a Friday the 13th shriek, and frankly, Julian didn’t even care that his scream sounded like a girl’s—like the time he dropped a toad down his cousin Tori’s shirt the year she got a training bra.

      “What the hell is going on?” Julian looked down at his body, which had a frightening assortment of tubes protruding from just about every orifice. Bags of dark blood and assorted other fluids hung from IV poles surrounding

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