“More?”
Her eyes widened. “A lot more. Daddy wants this to be an ongoing feature for the magazine. He wants you to follow the Alpine Hotshots through fire season.”
“But if you hire someone else, then what?”
Jojo rolled her eyes. “Who are we kidding? Daddy isn’t going to find anyone. I’ve been doing it for this long. I can wait until fire season is over. You have to do this, Ellie. It’s going to be amazing.”
“I … don’t know what to say,” I said, both unsettled and flattered.
“Say bye,” Wick said. “I want you back out there starting today. We’ll need a continuing story for next month. We’ve already cleared it with the superintendent. Pack your bags. You’ll be bunking at the Alpine’s dormitory until October.”
“Oh, thank God,” I said, closing my eyes.
I could practically hear Jojo smiling. She had no idea I was going to be kicked out of my parents’ home next month. I had barely saved enough for my cell phone bill, much less a deposit and first month’s rent, even on houses or apartments up to half an hour outside of town. Shadowing the hotshots until October gave me six to seven more months to figure out living arrangements. Even if I was sleeping in a truck or tent most of the time, it was preferable to moving into a shelter.
“We knew you’d be happy! I told you she’d be happy, Daddy.”
“Am I done?” Wick said.
Jojo sighed. “You’re done. Go back to resting your feet on your desk.”
I pulled out my phone and texted Tyler.
Did you hear the news?
Just now. I’m your official babysitter. Pretty pumped.
Thanks for the flowers. They’re beautiful. ?
It took a while for Tyler to respond.
I didn’t send you flowers. I can’t decide if I feel like a dick or if I want to kill whoever sent them.
You didn’t send the flowers?
No. There’s no card?
No.
I wanna know who sent them.
Me, too.
Not for the same reason.
… which is?
I’m having violent thoughts. All I can say.
Quit.
I have a bad temper in general. Sending my gf flowers is not a good idea.
… I am not your gf.
Yet. You’re not my gf yet.
I set my phone to silent and put it in my drawer, shaking my head, a dozen conflicting emotions swirling in my head and heart, including curiosity about the flowers. Who else would send them but Tyler?
“Ellie?” Jojo’s voice came over the speaker, and I jumped. “You’ve got a call on line one.”
“Is it a guy?”
“Yes.”
“Is his name Sterling?”
“No.”
I pressed the button for line one and picked up the phone, fully expecting Tyler’s voice to be on the other line. “This is Ellie.”
“Bunny?” My father’s deep voice boomed through the receiver, so loud that I had to hold the phone away.
I slowly pressed it against my ear, speaking softly. “Daddy?”
“I heard the news. I’m so proud of you,” he said, his voice breaking. “I knew you could do it.”
“Th-thank you. Daddy, I can’t talk right now. I’m at work.”
“I know. I spoke to Wick this morning. He’s impressed with you. He says you’re the best assistant he’s ever had.”
Wick didn’t tell him about the assignment.
“I actually just got a raise, so I’ll um … I’ve found a place. I’m moving out this week.”
“Nonsense, bunny. You’ve proven yourself. Maricela is packing for you now, and your passport and plane ticket is at the house. We want you to join your sister in Sanya. Your plane leaves in the morning.”
“Who’s we?”
“What’s that?”
“You said we want you to go to Sanya.”
He cleared his throat. “Your mother…”
After a short scuffle, my mother had possession of the phone. “Really, Ellison, you couldn’t have found something less … desperate?”
“Excuse me?”
“A secretary? For J.W. Chadwick, no less. That’s just embarrassing.”
The blood beneath my cheeks began to boil. “You didn’t really give me a choice, Mother.”
“You’re going to thank them for the opportunity, and you’re going to meet your sister like your father wants, and then you’re going to start with his company, under Finley. Do you understand?”
“Is this what Sally wants?”
Mother sighed. “Your father felt Sally was too … restrictive.”
“What about the contract?”
Mother chuckled. “Well, it wasn’t a legally binding contract, Ellison. It was more of an agreement on paper.”
I took a deep breath, relieved that I could be lying on the back of a rented yacht in thirty-two hours, soaking up the sun and drinking mimosas and eating my weight in lobster and Peking duck. The question was whether Finley wanted me there.
“Have you told Finley?”
“Not yet. It’s the middle of the night there.”
“You just decided this morning that I wasn’t dead to you?”
“Honestly, Ellison. Don’t be so dramatic. We forced you to get a job, you did, so you’re being rewarded for your hard work, and then you’ll work under your sister. No one’s dead.”