Part 15 (1/2)

”I'm sorry. It seems she's in a meeting.”

”I'll wait.” Laura sat on the leather bench with a seat higher than any other bench she'd sat on. She could only guess it was because of the height of the women coming through there. She texted Roquelle: -I'm in recep. Need 2cu re a White Rose girl Then she waited. Thomasina stared at her, and Laura imagined the snarl turning into as much of a smile as one could get from a giraffe within ten feet of a camera. The smile said, Your sister fell in love with me, and she didn't even tell you. She was scared of you. She did whatever I told her. She dropped all that work in your lap because she was with me. And I was with someone else, too. Because I could.

The taunts were circular, running from subject to subject, and cause to effect, and cause to cause in no productive order. In fifteen minutes, Laura went from hating the heiress, to feeling sorry for her, to being mystified, to curious, to disgust, to rage, to sympathy, to intimidation, to intimacy, and all the way back again.

And where it landed was: You should have seen it, but you were too busy working.

She hadn't been too busy to miss a new pair of shoes, however, especially not a pair of Jimmy Choos on Ruby's very own living-off-her-savings feet. They weren't a pair of vintage Choos, either, but that season's, spanking new from not even the back of Otto Tootsi Plohound on Fifth where the size elevens went to die.

Laura had stopped being surprised or excited when Ruby walked in with some new, wildly expensive accessory, so she just looked at her and said, ”Nice Choos.”

Jeremy followed from the hallway with a fabric swatch for a stretch panel and glanced at the expensively shod feet. ”You got the red,” he said, tossing Laura the fabric. She caught it in midair.

Ruby tilted her leg so Laura could see the shoe from the side. It was a stiletto, naturally, with straps shaped like an art deco window panel and a heel curving at an angle made possible by some technology that had been unavailable two years before. ”The black was too serious,” she said.

He stepped behind her and looked from behind. He and Ruby had developed an odd relations.h.i.+p, like siblings who tolerated each other because Mom was watching.

”There were five pairs of those in the entire city,” he said, ”in your size, I mean.” That was a lovely taunt. Ruby wore size eight and a half, big even for her height at five-seven, which Jeremy knew from the gold shoe-buckle incident six months prior. ”Did you hear?” He slipped the pattern Laura was working on across her desk. ”Dymphna Bastille had them special ordered, and Thomasina Wente went to Plohound and managed to get them instead. There was a scene at Grotto.”

Laura spread out the foot-square of fabric. He stretched the fabric, and she measured it, punching the number into a calculator.

”Oh, a scene at Grotto,” Laura said dryly. ”Imagine.” She handed Jeremy a ruler.

He measured across the widest point of the bust. ”I don't know how either one of them got the spoon out of their nose long enough to fight about shoes. Add another quarter here, and I think we're okay.”

Ruby chimed in, ”Don't say stuff like that.”

”She not bothering with the spoon anymore?” he asked.

”It's not right, Jeremy. You shouldn't spread rumors.” Ruby's sense of social right and wrong wouldn't let it drop as a joke.

Laura glanced at Jeremy, hoping he wouldn't make another cutting remark because she couldn't stop her sister from being who she was. Laura needed his help, and she needed things to be pleasant between the two of them. He took a second to regard Ruby, looking at her a little sideways, pursing his lips slightly as if he had to keep words from tumbling out.

Laura couldn't stand the silence. ”Oh, Ruby, come on! You know Thomasina gossips with the worst of them and spends forever in the bathroom like all the other girls. And Jeremy, you know better than to say anything to Ruby about her friends. I mean, my G.o.d, just try and say anything bad about me, even if it's true, and she'll take your eye out with one of those heels. Now, get out of here. I have work to do.”

Maybe that last bit took it too far. He didn't like being told what to do even if she was half-joking. Or maybe she'd given him the moment he needed to think of a way to make his point and, quite possibly, he was making that point for her benefit, because she was blind, dumb, and tired.

”Thomasina's an eight and a half, isn't she?” Without waiting for an answer, he winked at Laura before heading back to his own factory floor, which she knew he managed to keep going by taking handfuls of drugs while no one was looking and maintaining a five- to ten-mile a day running habit to strengthen his lungs.

He had been trying to tell her something. Either Ruby was borrowing Thomasina's shoes, or the model had snapped them from under Dymphna because Ruby couldn't afford full-price limited-run Jimmy Choos. Nor did her sister have the connections to get them. Anyone could see that. Anyone could see that the relations.h.i.+p between the designer and the supermodel had gone rogue, except Laura. She had just put her head back into the pattern and thanked the stars above and the G.o.ds of geometry that the tension had left the room.

”Laura Carnegie!” Roquelle interrupted her reverie, standing over her, a bit too close, with a smile a little too stretched. ”You left before the cleanup yesterday. I was looking for you.” To Sunny, she said, ”Push my nine up half an hour and s.h.i.+ft the rest. s.h.i.+ft my eleven thirty to tomorrow lunch and move that to the usual breakfast at Marlene X.” Without waiting for a response, she led Laura past reception, into the guts of the agency with its matching cubbies and equally well-coordinated a.s.sistants.

At the end of the line was an office. Unnecessarily huge, like an Escalade where an Accord would suffice, it had the look of a room that wasn't used fully. The wood floors weren't worn anywhere. The leather on the couches was pristine, and the desk looked as if nothing on it had been moved in months, except a duster flicking across it.

Roquelle sat on a couch and indicated for Laura to sit in the one opposite. The air had a sharp, distinct peppermint smell. On the table between the sofas, a tray was filled with hot coffee and tea, juice, rolls, and an ashtray shaped like a crescent moon. A turquoise globe was suspended above the ashtray by a bra.s.s rod the circ.u.mference of a pencil.

Roquelle pushed a b.u.t.ton at the top of the globe. ”Smoke?” The globe snapped open with a mechanical click, and a variety of cigarettes protruded like sunrays drawn by a meticulous child.

”No, thanks.” She was disconcerted by the cigarettes, a fact her host seemed to relish.

”I love showing off this thing. Nineteen twenties. Of course, it's illegal to smoke in here, but most of the new girls are from countries without uptight rules. It makes them comfortable when they see their brand in there.”

”It doesn't smell like smoke in here at all.”

”We keep after it. So. What was it you wanted?”

Laura, incapable of lying outright, had to find a way there by strategic use of the truth. She took out the White Rose brochure. ”I found this in my sister's things. This girl here, on the cover, I met her at Baxter City with Rolf Wente, but I didn't get her name. I want to use her, and I was thinking, if you could track her down or if you represented her or if you wanted to represent her, well, she's exactly the right thing.”

Roquelle studied the photo. ”A little pretty for your brand, don't you think?”

That actually was not an insult to the girl or the Sartorial brand.

”Maybe, but we're trying sweet-as-edgy instead of edgy-as-edgy.”

”Interesting, and is she represented?”

”Have you heard of the Pandora Agency? I think this might have been a Thomasina thing, and since she's not around anymore?”

Roquelle smirked. ”That's not a modeling agency, dear.”

Laura paused, cleared her throat, and ticked off everything she could have meant.

The agent cut off her thoughts with, ”Why don't you just use Rowena? She was fabulous for you, and she's an untapped commodity. Poor girl hangs with the other hopefuls at Marlene X every morning like a lost puppy. The other morning, she was hovering around Penelope Sidewinder, eating a creme brulee, and then she sat there, like she was saying, 'Look, I'm not puking.'” She laughed, then sighed.

”What kind of agency is it?”

”The kind with girls, dear. Pretty ones. Really, you can't be this naive.” She would not be sidetracked.

”So, you never saw her here? No headshot?”

”No, sorry. You can still run her through us if you find her. Better to have someone agented for all the usual reasons.” That was the common line. Using agented models protected designers from lawsuits and entanglements. It also protected them from worker's comp payments, insurance, 1099s, and other gnarly tax forms. Fifteen percent of salaries were lopped right off the top for the privilege. Over the course of a generation, designers, models, and magazines had bought the logic hook, line, and sinker without questioning what the occasional lawsuit would cost versus the additional salaries negotiated by the agents. There seemed to be entire economies built around middlemen and gatekeepers, but every time Laura tried to think of a way around it, the actual job of designing got in the way.

Roquelle stood up as if to let Laura know it was time to leave.

Just as she was thinking that had been the biggest waste of time of the week, she spotted a wet bar in the corner. On it were two upside-down chintz teacups with saucers leaning in tribute, and a pile of compacts and lipsticks. Roquelle was quite the klepto.

CHAPTER 15.

Laura exited the elevator in the 38th Street building, pa.s.sed Jeremy's showroom, waved to Renee, and turned a couple of corners to get to her own showroom.

She heard voices: Corky talking about dye methods he knew nothing about, a woman's mumble with a deep southern accent-must be Nordstrom's, their buyer was from Kentucky-and finally, Ruby's laugh as she reacted to whatever the Southern Belle had said.

Suddenly, Laura was sure she would die a thousand deaths if she went in there right then. She wasn't needed, only obligated. The elevator dinged as she rounded the bend in the hall, and a herd of giraffes poured out, all legs and necks and nice smells. She figured they must be there for a Jeremy fitting. His show was the next day. She caught sight of Rowena and Heather Dahl, and turned right around to head toward the bathroom.