Total pages in book: 135
Estimated words: 134706 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 674(@200wpm)___ 539(@250wpm)___ 449(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 134706 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 674(@200wpm)___ 539(@250wpm)___ 449(@300wpm)
I shake my head. Why am I not surprised by his attitude? “I will.”
We glare at each other.
“Don’t tell my mom that I came here today.”
I frown. “She doesn’t know?”
“No, and I would appreciate it if she didn’t find out.”
“Why didn’t you tell her?”
“I was going to surprise her if I got the job.”
I stare at him as I process his words. “Why wouldn’t you tell her you were going for this? Applications have been going on for months.”
His eyes drop to the carpet. “I didn’t want her to be disappointed when I didn’t get it.”
“She wouldn’t be disappointed if you didn’t get the job. I know that for a fact.”
His jaw clenches as he stares at the carpet in front of us.
“Why would you want this job?” I ask.
“I want to learn what to do and take over Anderson Media.” He pauses. “So she doesn’t have to work so hard.”
I stare at him.
“She does enough.” He scuffs his shoe on the carpet. “I don’t want her to have to worry anymore.”
My heart drops. “You think you have to protect your mother?”
“I don’t think it; I know it.” He stands. “It’s okay.” He exhales deeply. “I won’t waste your time.”
He’s right; he does have to protect her. She’s worth protecting.
I watch him for a moment, and I hate to admit it, but I’m strangely impressed by his loyalty to Claire.
“Sorry about your ankle,” he says.
“Are you really?”
“Nope.” He stares at me. “Don’t tell me you wouldn’t do the same if you found someone’s underwear in your mother’s bag.”
“No, actually, I wouldn’t,” I mutter dryly. “Because . . . I’m not psychotic.”
He rolls his eyes. “Whatever.” He walks toward the door.
“Intern interviewees usually shake my hand,” I call after him.
“Not this one.” He turns and leaves. The door clicks quietly behind him.
I stare at the door he just left through for a moment, and then finally I push the intercom. “Sammia, send in the second interview, please.”
“Sure thing.”
My eyes drop to look at the interview-rating-system sheet in front of me, and I exhale heavily. How the fuck do I even rate that?
I stare at my computer screen. It’s been five days since I interviewed the three finalists. Five days of me fighting myself over who I want to hire.
Rebecca is fantastic. She would be an asset to any business, and I will be offering her a position regardless of whether she gets this role.
Joel, the other candidate, was perfect on paper. His psychometric testing was spot on, and he blitzed every question with a practiced perfection.
Then there was Fletcher Anderson. He didn’t even want to do the interview. He wouldn’t shake my hand and near fucking killed me with barely an apology. He’s crazy and wild and everything I don’t have the time or energy to train.
He also had more passion in his little finger than the other two had combined.
No matter how hard I try to talk myself out of it, he’s the one I keep going back to. He’s the one with loyalty to family, albeit. . . mishandled. Media is in his blood, and he has a real opportunity to take over Anderson Media one day as the CEO . . . that’s if the company holds out that long. I know it will. Claire’s got this. With his passion and temper and the right training, we could make him the best damn CEO in New York.
I exhale heavily as I go over the pros and cons of each candidate again, hoping by some miracle to find something good about the other two—and there is, but there’s just an untapped quality that Fletcher has. But then he has major anger issues, and I will perhaps be forced to fire him down the track anyway.
Two steps forward, one step back.
I even tried to call Rebecca to offer her the position yesterday, but when it came to making the call, I couldn’t do it.
My head says he’s too hard and to let it go; my gut is telling me he’s the one.
Decisions, decisions.
Claire
Patrick lies on my bed as I fold the washing and stack it all around him in piles. “Read that line again, Paddy,” I say.
“The house was in the ha . . . ha . . . ha . . .” He frowns as he concentrates.
“Sound it out,” I remind him.
“Ham-p-tons.” He accentuates the s at the end.
“Yes, you got it.”
He smiles proudly and keeps going. Patrick has just this year been diagnosed with dyslexia. And to be honest, once we got that diagnosis, it was a huge relief for me. His teachers and I couldn’t work out why he couldn’t read and why some tasks at school were so hard for him when he’s obviously so bright. In the end, I took him to a therapist, and she discovered it.