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Gibson's Girl
Gibson's Girl
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Gibson's Girl

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She looked astonished. “Why?”

The innocence of her query stopped him dead. “Because... because...” Because he didn’t want an assistant like her—an innocent from Iowa, for heaven’s sake! New York was a rough place, a hard place. A person needed to be sophisticated to survive. Chloe would get eaten in a matter of minutes.

“It wouldn’t work,” was all he said.

“You don’t think I can do it! You think I’m incompetent.” Her eyes accused him.

Gib scowled. “I do not! I’m sure you’re very competent—”

“I am.”

“—and I’m sure you’d make a fine assistant—”

“I would.”

“—but I don’t want an assistant!”

“You need one,” Edith said.

Both Gibson and Chloe snapped around to stare at the older woman sitting behind the reception desk. She gave Chloe a little nod and Gibson a benign smile.

“You need one,” she repeated.

“I have...what’s her name...?” He could never remember their names. They didn’t last long enough for him to bother to learn them. “Frosty?”

“Misty,” Edith said patiently. “And she’s about as reliable as her name.”

“Right. Misty.” He tried to make her sound tough and competent. She was neither. Misty was the latest in a long line of what Gibson called his “girls.” The young women who schlepped and carried, set up lights and reflectors, ran errands, loaded film and lugged power packs.

“Girls.” Edith sniffed every time he used the term. “That is totally politically incorrect.”

“So sue me,” Gibson muttered.

They were lucky he even recognized them as members of the species. Misty and her forerunners—he was sure there had once been one called Frosty—came in all shapes and colors and sizes. They also invariably came with nose rings, spiked hair, black leggings and very little brain. They had the half-life of a loaf of bread. And were as memorable.

Gibson figured he’d remember Chloe for a good long while.

“We’re going to need someone reliable,” Edith reminded him, “because I’m going to Georgia’s next week.”

Gibson scowled. He didn’t want to think about that. He relied on Edith for everything unconnected with the actual shooting of photos. She ran the studio, kept the ad reps at bay, dealt with the agencies, the caterer, the legion of bike messengers who rang the buzzer in the middle of his work. She was the person who kept him sane. He’d been appalled when she’d asked for a month off.

“A month?” She hadn’t taken more than a week at a time in the last ten years.

“A month,” she’d said firmly. “At least. I’ll need it to help Georgia with the babies.”

After fifteen years of a childless marriage, Edith’s daughter, Georgia, had picked this summer to be inconsiderate enough to have triplets!

“Three?” Gibson had been aghast when Edith had told him. “What’s the matter with just one?”

But apparently the quantity hadn’t been up for discussion.

“We’ll take all we can get,” Edith had said cheerfully. She was over the moon about going to North Carolina and helping out with her first grandchildren. In fact she could hardly wait.

Gibson hadn’t been able to say no. He knew she would have simply quit if he had. So he’d said, all right. But once he’d agreed, he’d shoved the thought right out of his mind.

“Get someone to take your place,” he’d finally told her yesterday when she’d asked if he had someone in mind.

“I think Chloe will do fine,” Edith said now.

“What?” Gibson practically shouted.

But Edith just smiled her I’m-going-to-be-a-grandmother-and-all-is-right-with-the-world smile. “She looks sane and sensible and responsible. And if your sister trusts her...”

“My sister—”

“Is a good judge of character,” Edith said firmly. “If he doesn’t want you as his assistant, you can take over for me all right?” she said to Chloe. Then she looked at Gibson “Do you want her?”

A damned unfortunate choice of words.

Gibson felt his tongue tangling with his teeth. No, dam it, he didn’t want her! Not in his studio every day. Not ever in his reception room. And not just because his body had had an inconvenient reaction to her, either.

But he knew he was stuck. Gina proposed, Edith dis posed. And he, heaven help him, was caught in the under tow.

But he wanted one thing understood. He turned on Chloe “I won’t be responsible for you!”

She looked at him, startled. “Of course not!”

He poked a finger under her nose and waggled it. “ won’t fight your battles for you or protect your innocence or mollycoddle you in any way!”

“I never asked—”

His finger stabbed the air, making his point. “I just wan it clear. If you stay, you’re on your own!”

She stood her ground, drat her. She even looked muti nous. He thought she might bite his finger.

“Yes, certainly!” she agreed. As he turned away, she asked almost belligerently, “Is there anything else?”

He whirled back. “Yes! You’ll damned well keep you clothes on!”

CHAPTER TWO

OF COURSE Gib had to find her a place to stay. Gina reminded him that he’d told her he would.

“I did what?” he yelped.

She had called late that evening just to “check on things”—to see how “darling Chloe” was, and to find out where he’d arranged for her to stay.

“You said you’d find her a sublet,” Gina told him.

He was sure he had done no such thing. “I said I’d find her a sublet? I said that? In those words?”

“Well, if you’re going to sound like a lawyer about it,” Gina said huffily, “I suppose those weren’t your precise words. When we discussed it, I asked if you could find her a place to stay, a sublet or something, and you said sure, you guessed.”

“I never thought—” But he couldn’t tell her that he had come to count on her not following through. He owed her. A lot. And she rarely actually asked for anything.

Just this. Just...

Chloe.

“Nothing yet.”

“Nothing?” Gina sounded horrified.

“Yet, I said,” Gib muttered, beleaguered. “I’ll find something.”

“You won’t be sorry,” Gina said, all traces of huffiness gone at once. “I’m sure it will work out really well for both of you. Chloe was so eager to come. And she’s such a hard worker, Gib. There is nothing you could ask that Chloe wouldn’t do to help out.”

“You don’t say,” Gib replied drily, biting on the inside of his cheek to keep from telling Gina exactly what Chloe had already done.

She would be shocked. Hell, when he thought about it—about who she was—he was shocked. But he wasn’t going to mention it. Chloe Madsen, naked, was a memory he had no intention of sharing with anyone.

“She’s quite a good photographer in her own right,” Gina went on. “Oh, not in your class, dear. But she shoots wonderful photos for the Gazette.”

The Collierville Gazette was the local weekly newspaper. Gina was the business manager of the paper, so that was clearly where she and Chloe had connected. The photos Gib remembered in the Gazette’s pages were of local Pork Queens, fiftieth wedding anniversary celebrants, high-school football players who scored winning touchdowns and, for variety, artful “scenic” shots of acres and acres of corn and soybeans.

“And this inspired her to want to come to New York?”

“Not exactly.” Gina paused. “It had something to do with a nun, I think.”

“A nun!”

“For a story she wrote. Chloe, I mean. It sparked off something in her. She’s been a little restless, trying to figure out what she should do...”

Dance naked? Gib thought, smiling.

“She taught kindergarten for three years before she came to work on the paper.”

“Kindergarten?” He’d seen a kindergarten teacher naked !

Worse, at the memory, Gib could feel a stirring in his body even now. At least her being a kindergarten teacher explained the prim shirtwaist dress.

“She was wonderful with the children. She loved it, but she was a little restless there, too. She thought maybe it wasn’t what she ought to do forever, so she came to the paper last year.”

“And she still isn’t satisfied?” Gib asked.

“Well, I don’t know that she isn’t satisfied. But she’s lived in Iowa all her life. She wants to see what’s beyond the horizon.”

The more fool she, Gib thought.

“She won’t be able to cope with this,” he told Gina bluntly. “She’s too naive. Too innocent.”

“Well, she’ll have you and—”

“She damned well won’t have me! I’m not Mary Poppins, you know!”

“Of course not,” Gina said quickly. “I don’t expect that. Not...really. I was just hoping you’d be sort of...aware of her.”

Oh, he was that.

“She’s very eager to learn whatever you can teach her—”

Oh, cripes, don’t say that!

“—and you always seem to need a new assistant...”

Had she been talking to Edith?

“She’s exactly the sort of girl I wish you’d—” Abruptly, Gina stopped.

There was a long silence. A pregnant silence. A silence Gib was determined not to fill. One which he hoped Gina wouldn’t fill, either. He knew what she’d say if she did.

The girl I wish you’d marry.

It was no secret that Gina wanted him to get married and come back to Iowa. That was what she’d always hoped for, ever since he’d taken a summer internship with noted celebrity photographer Camilo Volante a dozen years ago.

At the time Gina had wondered why he would do something like that. “Celebrity doesn’t interest you,” she’d said.

And Gib had replied, “But people do.” It was people he wanted to photograph. Working for Camilo Volante had seemed like a terrific opportunity to learn from one of the world’s foremost photographers of famous people. Then he could take it from there, using what he’d learned, photographing whoever he wanted.

That had been the plan, at least.

He’d expected then that he would go back to Iowa.

But life had a way of changing those plans. And the summer job had turned into an autumn one. And after that, well, things had changed. Irrevocably.

And Gib had never come back.

Now Gina appreciated that he was a success as a fast-lane, high-style photographer of beautiful women. But she still never hesitated to ask what had happened to his dream of shooting photos of people from all walks of life. And she also never hesitated to say how much nicer she thought it would be if he would find a lovely young woman, marry her, come back to Iowa and take photos of farmers—and Pork Queens.

Or maybe, just this once, she did hesitate.

“I’m not interested,” Gib said firmly, in case she thought she had subliminally made her point.

“Interested? Oh, you mean... in Chloe?” Gina laughed lightly. “Of course not. And Chloe’s not interested in you, either. She’s only there for a break, Gib. Anyway she’s engaged. She’s getting married in September.”

Married? Chloe?

Gib felt oddly breathless, as if someone had punched him. It was the most unexpected feeling he’d ever had. It puzzled him. Why should he care?