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    Little Pink Slips

    Page 6
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      lia hated the sound of her own voice, although she wasn’t surprised

      Bebe would be taking this step, with her ratings slip-sliding away. She hadn’t made the list of Fortune’s wealthiest women in the universe for the last four years by being a pea brain.

      “We’ll see,” Bebe said, popping the last raspberry in her mouth.

      “I’m looking at a lot of opportunities. Maybe open my own ashram.

      Or a chain of foot reflexology salons.”

      “If we’re lucky enough to get you on board, is there anything you like and would want to keep from the current Lady?” Magnolia ventured, hearing her voice squeak, but feeling incapable of lowering it.

      “Well, it’s clever the way you do the product endorsement thing,

      your seal of approval.”

      “That’s Good Housekeeping.”

      “And I like that column, ‘Can This Marriage Be Saved?’ Read it all

      the time at the podiatrist’s.

      “That would be Ladies’ Home Journal.”

      “You ladies, you’re all alike.” Bebe snapped, although Magnolia had

      to admit that she’d heard the exact remark many times in focus groups. Which was why she’d planned a redesign of Lady with Harry James. She could feel her temples throb at the epic injustice of the

      whole situation.

      “I’m sure we can work out any little details later,” Darlene broke

      in. “This is just get-acquainted time. Felicity, do you have anything

      you want to ask?” Felicity’s voice was low, her manner confident, and her accent,

      decidedly northern English.

      “Only if Magnolia thought there would be anything unusually dif

      ficult about doing a magazine this way?”

      Magnolia wasn’t entirely sure what answer she could cough up,

      other than that handing over the magazine to Bebe and/or Felicity

      was the worst idea since bald guys with ponytails. “Typically, a maga

      zine’s editor in chief is a benign dictator,” she responded. “What she

      says, goes. For better or worse, it’s her vision, her success if the maga

      zine’s a hit, her disaster if it bombs. In this case, the vision would be

      Bebe’s. It’s an unorthodox arrangement, but I’m sure there’s a way to

      work it out.”

      “Dictator?” Bebe said. “Sweet.”

      C h a p t e r 7

      Marshmallow and Mademoiselle

      Manhattan offered far posher nail salons than Think Pink, where the only frills were a bowl of miniature Snickers and two

      jade plants in the jaws of death. What the establishment lacked in lux

      ury it made up for in location, which was equidistant from Magnolia

      on West End and Abbey on Central Park West. The real draw, though,

      was its owner, Lily Kim, the mother of Ruthie Kim, Magnolia’s fash

      ion director.

      In Korea, Lily had been a midwife. Here, she labored seven days a

      week in her shop, her real mission being to make sure that her daugh

      ter Ruthie achieved profound success. The tutors who helped Ruthie

      get into Stuyvesant High School—the Ferrari of New York City pub

      lic education—paid off when Wellesley gave her a full scholarship.

      While picking clothes and arranging fashion shoots wasn’t quite what

      Lily had projected for her daughter—her ambition ran along the

      superhighway of concert cellist–Olympic skater–McKinsey consult

      ant—Lily had accepted Ruthie’s choice. Now she made it her business

      to know Nina Ricci from Narciso Rodriguez, and she never hesitated

      to offer fashion advice or to comment on the appearance of Ruthie—

      or anyone else. “Maggie, you look tired,” Lily announced, as she arranged Magno

      lia’s polish shades: Marshmallow and Mademoiselle, one coat of each,

      to create the subtle pink of a blushing bride.

      “Week from hell,” Magnolia responded. She had to be careful what

      she said, since every detail would bounce back to Ruthie. “But it’s been

      worse for Abbey.” She turned to her friend. “What’s the late-breaking

      news?” she asked. This much Magnolia knew: as of 11:30 last night,

      Tommy was still MIA.

      Magnolia thought it a testament to the donation of her precious

      Ambien stash that Abbey had even shown up today for their weekly

      manicure. She’d bombarded her with calls to make sure she wasn’t still home in her nightgown on a sunny afternoon watching You’ve Got Mail, which every single woman in Manhattan could lip-synch.

      “Got a message last night,” Abbey said. “The prick’s alive.”

      Anger, Magnolia thought. Excellent. Abbey’s still alive, too. “Where

      is he?” she asked.

      “Hiding in cyberspace,” Abbey reported. “That’s all I know.” She

      blinked away a tear. Clearly, wrath was only a topcoat on a fragile base

      of fear, hurt, and anxiety.

      “What did he say?” Magnolia pressed on, while Lily quietly began

      filing her nails, not too long, square with rounded edges. The Satur

      day afternoon opera played quietly on a boom box.

      “Needs time to think,” Abbey reported.

      “Code for ‘I will take my own sweet time to fuck around while you

      squirm and writhe,’ ” Magnolia said. She couldn’t remember the last

      time any woman benefited when a man got to thinking. “What are

      you going to do?”

      “Throw myself into work,” Abbey said. “Become the world’s most

      prolific jewelry designer. I was up all night sketching. I’m seeing

      lizards, lizards everywhere. Lizards with slinky diamond bodies.

      Lizards with cowardly topaz stripes. And strangely, these lizards have

      no balls.”

      While Abbey and Lily debated the anatomy of scaly reptiles, Mag

      nolia tried to ignore the fleeting thought that Abbey might actually produce one of these critters for her birthday—preferably in a size big

      enough to make a statement around her wrist. “Did you read your

      husband the riot act?” Magnolia asked.

      “My estranged husband?” Abbey asked. “Not in so many words. I’m such an ass. I was actually relieved to hear from him.”

      “Did you e-mail back?”

      “Told Tommy to get his butt home,” Abbey admitted.

      Magnolia thought Abbey might have asked a few more questions.

      Like where was he? Who was he with? What were his intentions?

      Why did he think he could treat her this way? She knew it would be up to her to play rottweiler. “If he writes back—correction: when he writes back—give him a deadline.”

      “I hope you never put his name on the lease,” added Lily, ever the

      pragmatist, as she warmed Magnolia’s hands with a steamy towel.

      When they married, Tommy had moved into Abbey’s rent-stabilized

      apartment. For the cost of a Queens studio, the couple luxuriated in six

      rooms and nine-foot ceilings capped by dentil moldings, a butler’s

      pantry, enough closets to hide a family of fugitives, and a view of the

      park. The desire to keep a real-estate jewel of this caliber had kept

      many a faltering New York marriage together forever. Lily had clearly

      hit a nerve, and Abbey gave both of them her look that telegraphed:

      “Back off. This isn’t a drug intervention. I am not the idiot wimp you

      think I am.” Directed toward Magnolia, the look seemed to also say,

      “I’m married, even if my husband’s not exactly around. You, on the

      other hand, are single. Perhaps terminally.”

      “Enough,” Abbey said.


      “Natalie loves your jewelry—especially the pieces she heard

      Bergdorf’s commissioned” was all Magnolia could think to say.

      “But of course Mrs. Simon would know this,” Abbey said. “Is there

      anything she doesn’t know?” She could not forgive Natalie for never

      remembering her name.

      “She doesn’t know who I am bringing to her party next week,”

      Magnolia said. “Because I don’t know myself.” Magnolia’s social life

      had gone into remission five months before when she broke up with

      Alec the architect, who had long black hair and an inability to hit an ATM. When he asked for her to pay his car leasing bill, Magnolia

      ended it, finally accepting the fact that he’d been as stingy with emo

      tion as he had been with cash. “If I don’t come up with someone—

      and you know she’ll harass me about it all week until I do—Natalie

      will remedy the situation herself.” As a matchmaker, Natalie believed

      in the classic combination of beautiful women and rich, ugly men,

      although for her, another rule applied: Natalie’s husband happened to

      look like Jeremy Irons’s baby brother.

      “In that case, we need to be creative,” Abbey said. “What about

      Cameron in your office? I’ve always loved him.”

      Everyone did. “Next,” Magnolia said.

      “J-Date,” Lily insisted. “You need Jewish man.” She gave the same

      advice to her own daughter.

      “Find a guy online?” Magnolia responded. “What kind of loser do

      you think I am?”

      “The kind who got no man,” Lily said with a laugh. Lily and her

      manicurists were always cracking up. Either they found the world

      infinitely amusing or their customers, imbeciles.

      “You shrews take it down a notch,” Magnolia said. “What you

      don’t know is that this week a gentleman sent me flowers.”

      Abbey and Lily swiveled their creaky vinyl chairs to face Magnolia. “The designer I worked with on the Lady redo sent me a magnificent orchid in a tasteful white china pot.”

      “He’s looking for more work,” Lily said. “Doesn’t count.”

      Magnolia hated that Lily might be right.

      “Is he interested in Magnolia the delightful divorcée, or Magnolia

      the on-the-rise editor?” Abbey asked.

      “I’m trying to decide whether I should find out. When we finally

      spoke last night, he suggested meeting for a drink.”

      “You accepted?” Abbey asked.

      “Gave him the ‘I’m on deadline.’ “

      “Technically, he’s not your employee,” she pointed out. “You

      should have said yes.”

      “Okay, I’ll ask him to join me at Natalie’s party. It’s a business thing,

      so I can’t embarrass myself that badly.” In fact, bringing along Harry, who’d only recently moved here from London, might even elevate her

      stock. He was a hot design consultant, and Americans always thought

      anyone who sounded like Ralph Fiennes was profoundly intelligent.

      Lily gave Magnolia’s fingertips a final coat. Abbey’s nails were now

      a shiny crimson, as they sat at the dryers at the far end of the shop. Magnolia noticed the latest Lady, along with any number of tattered Peoples. “Good, we’ve escaped Lily,” Magnolia whispered, as she began thumbing through her own magazine. As soon as Lady was printed, she always found at least two dozen things she wished she’d

      done differently. “I’ve hit a little, ah, speed bump at work.” She filled

      her in on the Michael’s breakfast.

      “She brought a cat to a midtown restaurant?” Abbey asked.

      “That was the highlight. This whole Bebe thing is spiraling out of

      control. Very soon it’s going to be the cheese stands alone, and I will be a

      piece of very stinky Limburger.” Magnolia tried for breezy, but she

      knew Abbey would see straight through to the hollow spot inside of her

      that exposed her worst-case scenario. Humiliation! Loneliness! Finan

      cial ruin! That’s what she saw for herself if Jock pulled the plug on her

      magazine. Working didn’t just pay the bills—it made her whole.

      “You’ve got to talk to Jock,” Abbey insisted. “Get him to see reason.”

      “Natalie thinks that’s a vile idea.”

      “Natalie? The only good advice she ever gave you was never to

      incriminate yourself in e-mail. If your magazine turns into Bebe

      Blake’s Christmas letter, Natalie has nothing to lose. Fight!”

      “Jock’s totally dollar-happy,” Magnolia said. “I’m afraid his mind

      is made up. He thinks going with Bebe is a blue-chip deal.”

      “How can you be sure?” Abbey asked.

      Magnolia didn’t know whom to believe. Her friend’s love was never

      in dispute, but she thought like an artist, not a corporate strategist,

      while Natalie had stayed at the top of her game for close to twenty-five

      years, when some colleagues as young as forty were already roadkill.

      “I say, ‘Feed me,’ ” Magnolia said. “Omelets at Nice Matin?”

      “Bye, Lily,” they shouted. “See you next Saturday.”

      “Don’t forget your newspaper,” Lily called out.

      Magnolia had almost left her Post behind. “Hold up, guys. Let’s see what Miss Universe has in store for me today.”

      Can you trust other people’s advice? Today’s stars warn that not even close colleagues and confidants can be relied upon to share good information. They may not be trying to deceive you, but how do you know that they themselves have not been deceived?

      Always with the questions, that witch. This mess, she could see,

      she’d have to figure out on her own.

      C h a p t e r 8

      Cleavage Never Hurts

      Magnolia had forgotten how much effort a woman needed to look good, really good.

      The week had been too busy for a fake-and-bake at Brazilian

      Bronze, so the night before Natalie’s party on Saturday, starting at

      midnight, she anointed herself with self-tanner, which dried while

      she fell asleep right before Ingrid Bergman discovers Cary Grant was actually single in Indiscreet. Fortunately, the next morning she awoke even and bronzed, not like the mutant tiger she’d feared.

      Magnolia ran at eight, the earliest hour Abbey deemed civilized for

      weekends. Her shiatsu massage guy, Eli Birdsong, showed up at 9:30

      for an hour of bliss-by-kneading. After a quick shower, she had just

      enough time to cab it to Frédéric Fekkai for an eyebrow shaping and

      blowout. Satisfied that her stylist didn’t completely obliterate the

      body in her hair—the ramrod-straight look made her nose look the

      size of a muffin—she tipped handsomely and walked up Madison

      Avenue, scoping out shops to see if she could improve on the clothes

      she’d laid out. So, of course, she was late for this week’s manicure.

      It was 4:30 by the time Magnolia got home. Biggie and Lola

      assaulted her, hyper and indignant—they’d been deprived of Saturday

      afternoon’s usual rampage at the dog run. One short whip around the block was all the time Magnolia could spare if she was going to detox

      even a little, look over a bit of work, and do her makeup right. She’d

      drawn the line at a professional job, even if Natalie’s guest list would

      feature a column’s worth of boldfaced names. In fact, now that she

      thought about it, she’d have to scratch the work. Harry was picking her

      up at 6:45.

      As she poured the last of her precious a
    nd now extinct Ralph Lauren

      Safari bath beads into the tub, the phone rang.

      “Running a tad late,” Harry said. “I’ll bring round the car and

      have the doorman ring up. Will you forgive me for being the kind of

      cad who expects a lady to meet him on the street?”

      I am such a sucker for a proper Brit accent, Magnolia thought. Give

      him a Hugh Grant stutter and I’d marry him even if he were a televi

      sion evangelist. “Take your time, Harry,” Magnolia said. “We’ll make

      an entrance.”

      She poured herself a glass of Pinot Grigio, switched on a Norah

      Jones CD, and let the glorious bubbles wash off the week, which she

      gave a B plus. On the upside, she, Cam, Fredericka, and the gang

      had—as of 10:59 the previous night—shipped the September issue.

      They’d needed to work late every night. September was always a

      monster—three-minute makeup, fall fashion must-haves, a sixteen

      page parenting section underwritten by Toys “R” Us, and one article she knew each Lady reader would memorize: the five secrets to getting a good night’s sleep. That last coverline alone would sell the

      issue. The women in America may as well have a big pajama party

      between three and five in the morning—the adult female half of the

      country was all up, ruminating.

      But the best part of the September issue was Magnolia’s off-the-charts

      cover girl: a sweeter-than-Krispy-Kreme portrait of Kate Hudson and

      her adorable, hipster toddler. Home run. Eighty percent newsstand

      sell-through, at least, maybe 85, plus she’d be the envy of every other

      editor.

      Magnolia had had to wait almost two years for that photo shoot,

      performing due diligence with Kate’s celebrity flack by featuring sev

      eral of her less fabulous stars—actresses way past their sell-by dates or no-name wannabes. It was a form of blackmail the industry

      shrugged off and accepted. The cabal of publicists who controlled

      celebrity coverage put all the magazines in a rotation. This meant that

      it would be at least nine months—when Kate’s next movie premiered—until one of Lady’s competitors would be allowed to feature her on a cover. That’s if the publicists were true to their word. Some

      times a promise was a promise, and sometimes just a suggestion. An

      editor could think her cover was locked, only to be told there were

      “extenuating circumstances” … which turned out to be that the celebrity preferred to be on Vanity Fair.

     


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