Getting It!. Rhonda Nelson

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Getting It! - Rhonda Nelson Mills & Boon Temptation

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just with the wrong guy.”

      She sighed heavily. “Not anymore. Rob cut and run after a couple of weeks of being unable to satisfy me. His fragile ego couldn’t take it.”

      “You’re better off,” Carrie told her. “I never particularly liked him.” Another unspoken rule—guys were liked until they were history, then instantly became pond scum. Solidarity, the glue that held their unique friendship together, Zora thought with a fond smile. Thank God she had their support.

      “Me, either,” Frankie seconded. She peeled the label from her beer. “His feet were ugly.”

      April winced reflectively. “Yeah, he did have ugly feet, didn’t he?”

      Zora had never noticed Rob’s feet, but felt compelled to add to the conversation. “They were hideous.”

      “Well, I’m sure that your, er…condition isn’t permanent,” Carrie told her.

      April grimaced, then took a drink. “I sure as hell hope not. Who’s next?”

      Frankie and Zora shared a look. “I think Frankie should go next,” Zora said. “I don’t mind being last.”

      Frankie pulled a negligent shrug. “Okay. I caught my dad eating a bagel today,” she said lightly.

      Carrie and April wore blank looks, but Zora knew the other shoe was about to drop.

      “What?” Carrie asked, seemingly baffled. “He cheated on Atkins?”

      “No,” Frankie replied tightly. “He cheated on my mother. The bagel was around the bagel girl’s breast.” Her words were surprisingly clipped, considering she’d uttered them venomously from between slightly clenched teeth.

      April gasped and Carrie inhaled sharply. “No!”

      Frankie smirked, proceeded to shred the label she’d removed from her bottle. “Yes.”

      Zora knew that there was some animosity between Frankie and her father—Frankie had worked for her dad for years, but didn’t seem to garner the same recognition a son probably would. Furthermore, her father’s penchant for infidelity wasn’t anything new.

      “Oh, Frankie, I’m so sorry,” April told her. “I know he’s your father, but—” She hesitated.

      Frankie laughed grimly, gestured wearily. “It’s okay. You can say it. He’s a bastard.”

      “He is!” Carrie wailed quietly. “What did you do? What did he do?”

      She pulled another lazy shrug. “I said, ‘What? No cream cheese?’ and turned around and walked out.”

      Despite the hell of her own day, Zora giggled. Couldn’t help herself. Now that was classic Frankie. She might have a short fuse, but it didn’t prevent her from thinking quick on her feet.

      “Honestly,” she continued. “What could I do? Like I said, he’s a bastard.” She smiled grimly. “But that wasn’t the worst part.”

      God, there was more, Zora thought. “What happened?”

      “Turns out the bagel girl’s a new graduate in need of a better job. So guess which one she got?”

      Zora felt her eyes widen. “No,” she breathed, aghast. It couldn’t be. Frankie’s dad couldn’t possibly have done that to her.

      Frankie smiled grimly and sadness haunted her dark-brown eyes.

      “The VP position?” Zora asked, her voice climbing. “Has he lost his mind?”

      Frankie snorted. “I imagine he planted it in the bagel girl this afternoon,” she said bitterly, then released a pent-up breath and looked up. “At any rate, I’m unemployed. I walked out today and I’m not going back.”

      “Then that makes two of us,” Zora told her. “We can look for a job together.”

      Carrie’s eyes bugged, April’s jaw dropped and Frankie blinked. “What?”

      “Unlike you, however,” Zora continued levelly, “I did not quit, but was fired.”

      “Fired?” they shrieked in unison. “For what?”

      Zora felt her lips form a brittle smile. “Officially? Insubordination. Unofficially? He’s boinking Carla the copy editor.”

      April gasped. “He’s not!”

      “Oh, but he is,” Zora insisted, comforted by their outrage.

      “That scum-sucking bastard,” Frankie hissed vehemently. “After all you’ve done. How could he—but he can’t—” Her face reddened with anger. “You helped make that magazine! He couldn’t have done it without you!”

      A balm and the truth, but there was nothing for it. Trent had always been her “boss.” It didn’t matter that as creative director she’d helped triple circulation, that she’d practically single-handedly turned Guy Talk around. The magazine had been struggling on the verge of extinction when she’d come on board and she’d managed to pull it away from the brink and make it thrive. All that mattered was that he had the authority to fire her, and he had.

      But he would pay.

      Zora didn’t know how or when, but at some point in the not-too-distant future he would pay.

      Carrie shook her head. “This is simply outrageous. I just—I just can’t believe it. What are you going to do?”

      Zora shrugged, resigned but not defeated. “Look for another job. In the meantime I’ve got enough in savings to get by for a while. I hate to spend it, but c’est la vie. That’s what it’s there for.”

      “Zora, I just don’t know what to say.” April shot her a sympathetic look. “It’s…It’s surreal. I thought Trent was the genuine article.”

      A painful lump formed in Zora’s throat, but she managed to swallow it before her eyes watered. “So did I.”

      “There’s no such thing,” Frankie countered cynically. “See, this is precisely why I’ve begun to think that all men are pigs. They can’t think past their dicks. They’re too busy sticking it to the bagel girl or the copy editor.” She harrumphed under her breath. “This would have never happened to you—or to me, for that matter—if a chick had been in charge.”

      Zora readied her mouth to agree, but a strange sort of tingle started in her chest, the kind that preluded creative genius, a brilliant inspired idea.

      She stilled and her gaze drifted to Frankie. “Say that again,” Zora said faintly.

      In the process of lifting her bottle to her mouth, Frankie paused and frowned. “This would have never happened if a chick had been in charge.”

      If a chick had been in charge…

      Frankie was right, Zora thought dimly as her mind spun with creative adrenaline. Women were bonders, nurturers, typically faithful

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