meâyouâll be typing up the memos. If you canât take the heat, youâd better get out of the kitchen, Magenta.â
âI can take it.â Yes. Yes ! Oh boy, could she take it. This was an incredible turnaround from the most intransigent of men.
âGood, because youâll be adding all this new work to your regular duties.â
Would there come a point where she crumpled beneath the pressure? Well, if there did, Quinn wouldnât careâso she had better not. Getting that break for the girls was the only thing that mattered.
Magenta could barely wait for Quinn to leave the room before flinging the protective sheet heâd handed her into the air with a whoop of excitement. The next step would be planning a new ad campaign with her team.
Â
The girls were giddy with excitement just at the thought of being taken seriously. The sexism and chauvinism in the office knew no bounds and Magenta could hardly believe that such intelligent and vital individuals had been disregarded solely on the basis of gender. How could these women have been kept down for so long, subjugated by the men? How could any manager afford to waste such a valuable resource?
Having assured her new colleagues that their ideas really were going to be listened to, she got down to writing up her report and delivered it to Quinn before lunchtime as instructed. To her amazement, he handed her a typewritten sheet. âMy report,â he said.
âThank youâ¦â Perhaps they were getting somewhere afterall. Holding the sheet of folded paper close, she left the room feeling warm inside. And, yes, even a little triumphant. If all the battles ahead of her would be so easily wonâ¦
âLeave my door open, will you?â Quinn called after her.
âOf course.â
Quinn wasnât so bad, Magenta decided, settling down at her desk. He just needed handling. She was in charge of collating the results for the trials and, now she had Quinnâs report, she could make a start.
Studying the sheet of paper heâd given her, Magentaâs eyes widened.
Dinner tonight , Quinn had written. Pick you up at your place at eightâno excuses.
It was less of an invitation and more of an instruction.
Magenta tensed. Reports forgotten, she stared into space. Kisses were one thing, but anything more⦠She had just experienced a prolonged sensory experience with Quinn and now he was calling her bluff. Was she up to a one-on-one meeting after work?
âDid you want to talk business tonight?â She turned with the note in her hand to speak to him through the open door.
âWhat else?â Quinn said impatiently, waving her away.
A business meeting. Well, that was all right, and would give her a chance to learn more about Quinn. She felt a thrill of anticipation. Of course she could handle it. She was a big girl, wasnât she? She could always say no. How could she turn Quinn down without offending him? That might put the girlsâ future prospects in jeopardy, which she would never do.
Turning in her chair, she flashed Quinn a faint smile and a nod. It didnât do to look too eager.
Â
Hemlines were getting shorter, according to the fashion magazines the girls kept around the office. Venturing into one of the tiny boutiques, that had sprung up down a street Magenta knew would one day be turned into office blocks,was a temptation she couldnât resist. Armed with cash from her wage packet, she was ready to shop. The chance to wear one of the daring outfits for Quinn being showcased in the shop windows was slightly less appealingâsheâd feel safer in a sackâbut she guessed he might baulk at that for their evening out.
Swinging London was the first headline she noticed on a news stand as she walked along, together with a picture of the Beatles. She definitely had to make some sort of effort to be stylish. Dragging her gaze away, she saw a hairdressing salon and decided to
Jo Walton
D.W. Moneypenny
Jill Shalvis
Stand to Horse (v1.0)
Matt Christopher, Paul Mantell
Amanda Quick
Max Allan Collins
Rachel Francis
Arlin Fehr
Jane Cousins