Stuck On You
Page 1
Stuck On You
Portia MacIntosh
For Aud - You're an amazing lady
Contents
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Acknowledgments
More from Portia MacIntosh
About the Author
About Boldwood Books
1
It doesn’t matter how many times you break up with someone, it never gets any easier, does it?
While I’m not actually sure whether or not there is a good way to break up with someone there are, without a doubt, a million terrible ways to do it.
Dumping someone by text – that has to be the worst one, right? Text, WhatsApp, Facebook Messenger, or any other kind of written digital communication is about as low as you can go. The absolute coward’s way out. And, sure, a phone call is better than a text but only in a similar way to how a broken finger is better than five broken fingers.
Break-ups must always be done in person, that’s just the way it is – they should probably make it the law, which might sound extreme, but I’m sure it would cut down on a whole host of angry follow-up crimes. I know a guy who got his car windscreen smashed after breaking up with a girl over e-mail – and I’d be tempted to say he deserved it.
Still, it’s not enough to simply say it to a person’s face, you have to say it right. If you’re wanting to do it as gently as possible there are many little sayings you can reach for. A classic ‘it’s not you, it’s me’ is a fine example. It’s a way to take full responsibility without saying anything negative about your dumpee – of course, we all know if it were true you wouldn’t be breaking up with them in the first place, but still, it’s a way to do it without actually telling the other person what you think is so wrong with them that you don’t ever want to see them again.
‘I think we’re better as friends’ or ‘I don’t want to ruin our friendship’ are other ways to try and edge away from things being romantic. Who the hell stays friends with an ex though, seriously? I honestly can’t think of anything worse than trying to stay buddies with someone who has seen me naked. While we’re making these break-up laws, perhaps we should draft something about how exes have to cease to exist, or at the very least move to a different country, after a break-up. I’m sure the world would be a much better place if we could all agree on that.
If I ever decide to get out of the art business and wind up in politics, I’ll start some kind of Ex-it movement where, if you want to leave a romantic union, one of you has to go and live abroad or something.
‘Hi, Sadie.’ I hear a bright, excitable voice coming from behind me. It snaps me from my thoughts. I was miles away. I guess I’m so used to sitting in noisy bars these days I don’t find it all that hard to let my mind wander.
I turn around to hug someone who clearly has no idea they are about to get dumped. This one is going to be an Ex-it Remoaner, I can tell.
‘Hello,’ I say with an equal, although completely put-on, enthusiasm. ‘Take a seat, I’ll grab us a couple of drinks.’
As I gently push my way through the crowd in the busy Belgravia bar I’ve been drinking alone in for the past thirty minutes it does cross my mind whether or not I’m doing the right thing, but the more I think about it, the more I don’t feel as if I have any other option.
So I buy our drinks, I sit down at the table, I take a deep breath and I give one of my break-up speeches – perhaps my best one yet. I allow myself to think this might actually be a straightforward break-up, until…
‘But things were going so well.’
Oh, God, I can’t handle those sad eyes. I was deluded to think this would be fine, because there’s always a ‘but’…
‘I know they were,’ I lie. I shift uncomfortably in my seat. ’It’s just, you know, things are so busy with work, as I said – no one has time for relationships at the moment.’
‘But we have to make time, otherwise no one would have relationships at all, no one would have kids, the human race would die out!’
I mean, what can I actually say to that? I’m kind of over a barrel. On the one hand, things are really hectic at work. On the other hand, working in the art industry is hardly comparable to people like doctors and firefighters who work crazy hours and still find time to have families. I’m going to have to change strategy.
‘It’s not you,’ I insist.
‘Oh, come on, don’t give me that. How often do we women have to hear that bullshit?’ she replies with a roll of her eyes.
Once again, she’s got me there.
I take a deep breath and psych myself up for my next play.
‘Listen to me, there is nothing wrong with you,’ I insist. ‘You are a beautiful, caring, intelligent young woman.’
‘If I’m so wonderful then why is he having you break up with me instead of doing it himself?’
I don’t have the heart to tell her it’s because he’s started having me break up with all of his short-lived relationships.
‘You can do so much better,’ I tell her honestly. ‘Seriously.’
She sighs, as though she’s resigned herself to what’s happening. Well, when someone sends one of their employees to break up with you, they clearly don’t care that much about you, do they? She seems more frustrated than she does upset, and I totally feel for her. When you’re dating, and things don’t work out, it’s always disheartening, even if you aren’t head-over-heels in love.
‘Yeah, well, so can you,’ she replies. ‘I highly doubt it is in your job description that you have to break up with women for your boss.’
And she’s right again. It’s a shame he’s dumping this one; she really is intelligent. He usually dates models, and while the stereotype that they’re all dumb isn’t exactly true, it isn’t always exactly false either.
‘I’m really sorry,’ I tell her. ‘And he is too. I’m here because he didn’t want to upset you.’
While it may be the case that I have to do whatever my boss demands of me if I want to be able to keep paying my bills, it has crossed my mind whether or not I should be protesting against having to break up with women for him, but I soon realised that I do a much better job of it than he does anyway, so it’s probably for the best. It was my boss who got his car windscreen smashed by an angry ex, in case you haven’t guessed. At least I can be tactful and gentle. And if I ever do get lucky enough to meet a man I like, and a time comes when I might need to dump someone for myself, at least I’ll be well-practised.
‘There’s something wrong with him,’ she tells me. ‘He has intimacy issues.’
I’m absolutely certain he does.
My boss is the famous portrait photographer, Damian Banks. Well, he’s famous if you know portrait photographers. So, while he’s definitely met and hung out with Harry Styles, I doubt their fanbases are
going to have any crossovers any time soon.
Damian is thirty-five years old. I’d say he was newly single were it not for the fact that he probably wouldn’t have considered himself taken during the time he was dating this woman anyway.
If I were to speak ever so slightly in defence of Damian, his high-profile job has left him wondering who he can trust. On the other hand, he does lap up the attention.
Damian has models constantly throwing themselves at him, bombarding him with risqué pictures, showing a keen interest in him. He doesn’t know who is an opportunist hoping to be shot by the great Damian Banks and who is actually genuinely interested in him, but the fact they are all models isn’t lost on him. Eventually, he decides all of his dates have an ulterior motive and that’s when he dumps them. Or that’s when he gets me, his assistant, to dump them anyway.
‘Are you OK?’ I ask.
‘Oh, I’ll be fine,’ she says. ‘It’s you I worry about, Sadie. Damian doesn’t value you. He doesn’t value anyone. The only person Damian Banks cares about is Damian Banks.’
What can I say? She isn’t wrong.
‘Stay and have a drink with me?’ she asks. ‘I’ll get us a bottle of something. I can start the healing process right now.’
I smile. This is always so much easier for me when they don’t cry. Some girls will cry, beg me – as though I can do anything about it – one of them even flirted with me once. No idea where she thought that would get her.
‘OK, sure,’ I reply. ‘I’ll just nip to the loo.’
I fight my way through the crowd to get to the other side of the bar where the toilets are. It’s busy here tonight – as always. The place is overflowing with a mixture of cool arty types and high-flying business execs. It seems like a weird combination, but the two crowds aren’t all that different. You’re not going to find some creative, fresh off the train, who has come to London hoping for their big break in the art world. Any arty type in here is already a big deal. Already a businessperson. They just don’t have to wear a suit. And then, of course, there are people like me, who work for the kind of person who belongs here, and the occasional girl who would get to come here with people like Damian. It only feels right to me that I give them their marching orders here, allowing them one last taste of the Damian Banks lifestyle. Plus, this is Damian’s local, sandwiched somewhere between his apartment and his office, so it’s the easiest place for me to complete my unorthodox overtime.
As I wash my hands, I look at myself in the mirror – I mean really look at myself. How the hell have I ended up here? How is this my life? Something must have gone so wrong, somewhere, if the closest thing I have to a love life is dumping people for my boss.
I did everything I thought I was supposed to do, to land myself my dream career as an art curator, and everything had been going so well. I left the tiny northern seaside town where I grew up, I went to university where I got my BA in art and history, then I moved to London to try and bag myself a job. The problem was that it is such a competitive industry, so I had to work my way through a variety of jobs, some only loosely related to what I wanted to do, but it all felt like progress. Still, I didn’t feel as if I was getting anywhere until I saw the job listing seeking an assistant for ‘the great Damian Banks’ – to give him the full title people so often refer to him by. I was blown away when I got the gig. Little did I know back then that I would only be assisting Damian with his private life, because his working life has been very much absent recently.
I look into my own eyes in the mirror, narrowing them as I mentally tell myself I can do better. I can find a better job. If I had more time I could probably try and have a love life too. I’m only thirty-three, that’s still young, and I take pride in my appearance. My long, slightly wavy, honey-blonde hair passes my waist, in a sort of arty, boho way. As for my style, well, I’m just a bumpkin managing to pass as a cool wanderling. I fit right in here, with the cool art kids, but only in the sense that everyone looks so individual, so no one looks uncool. Everyone here looks as if they travel the world, for fun, probably on their parents' money. Of course, I know that’s not true for me, but I do my best to have my own look. My eccentric outfits are mostly pulled together from items I picked up in vintage or charity shops. I’m no stranger to an Oxfam, with a keen eye for spotting a rare work of art, whether it be a loud pair of trousers or a delicate lace dress. I’ve also, over the years, curated myself one hell of a chic wardrobe from items of clothing that my mum and gran were about to throw out because they were old-fashioned. It’s hard, doing what everyone else does on a much smaller budget, but by the time I make items my own, and load myself up with accessories, I feel as if I’ve created something truly unique. I am my own walking piece of art… although I suppose to everyone else I just look like a bit of a weird hippie.
I can do better. I need to do better. But not tonight. Tonight, I need to have a drink with the girl whose heart I just broke, and then tomorrow I need to be up bright and early to turn up for work, for the man who made me do it.
I used to think that each day was a blank canvas, when I was young and naive, but these days I feel as though I’m aimlessly completing the same dot-to-dot puzzle, just going through the motions, following a path I can’t deviate from. Still, at least I didn’t just get dumped, hey? I’d have to have a love life for that to happen…
2
I used to think that working in a creative industry would make every day a little brighter, that the world would seem more beautiful, that each day would be different.
I grew up ‘up north’, with a dad who used to command soldiers for a living and a mum who used to (even worse) teach children; routines and rules were always at the heart of everything I did. I reckoned, in that way you do when you up and leave your home town, that I was moving to somewhere better, to live something different. I thought that art was creative, that artists were such free-flowing people who moved in whatever direction life took them, that I would be the same if I could just surround myself with them.
With Damian I have the worst of both worlds. I have the routine and the chaos, because somehow Damian is both impulsive and unpredictable, all the while still being so completely boring to work for. I always know what my days will look like. Other than a handful of occasional events, I know that most of the time we work out of Damian’s apartment, or wherever he wants to go, apart from two days a week when we work here, at his office. The days that I’m here, I am bored beyond belief, because lately Damian isn’t actually doing all that much work.
I pull myself up the stairs to Damian’s loft offices, meaningfully grabbing at the wooden bannister, yanking myself up as though my life depends on it. This strange old building is a real labyrinth, a complicated mashup of corridors and staircases, far too complicated for a lift to have ever been installed. It doesn't even have one main stairwell, meaning you have to cross the building from one set of stairs to another about halfway up.
Damian's studio is made up of three rooms. There is his private office, the small room I work in right outside his room, and then there’s the general office where the actual studio space is, the rest of the staff work, visitors are greeted, etc.
As far as staff goes there aren't that many people working here on a daily basis. There’s Karen, the office administrator, and she really is a Karen. A middle-aged boomer with a can-I-speak-to-the-manager haircut who has lots of opinions about lots of things but none of them feel all that well thought out. At the other end of the scale, we have Ollie, the ultimate millennial, who handles the more techy side of the business. Then we have Colin, a chap in his forties who handles the business side of things – including planning trips and schedules (jobs I assumed would be mine when I started). Most other employees are only here as and when, for photoshoots or business meetings, and Damian does have a manager/agent-type person, but I don't see much of her.
I’m glad that I'm only here two days a week, and that I work in a small room on my own, because Karen, Ollie and
Colin have Damian pegged as this nightmare boss and they see me as an extension of him. So, they don't make me coffees when they turn-take making the hot drinks, they don't show me photos of their kids or tell me about their holidays. I don’t suppose I mind too much, but it does make my in-office workdays very boring.
I say hello to everyone as I pass through the room, heading for the kitchen area where I make myself a coffee. I don’t ask if anyone else wants one because, not only can I see that everyone already has a mug in front of them, but they barely look up when I speak to them anyway.
You’ve probably already worked this out for yourself, but Damian is not a popular boss – not with me or with anyone else in the office. You would think this would create a sense of solidarity amongst the staff but, with me being Damian’s right-hand woman, they treat me with a similar level of coldness. Except it’s worse for me, because I’m not their boss, so they don’t even have to pretend to respect me.
I head for my private office and plonk myself down at my desk. I mean, I say it's my private office, but it’s purely circumstantial. It’s not my office, it’s just an office that no one else happens to be sitting in whenever I’m here.
I know that Damian is here – he’s always the first one here, on the days when we’re working in the office. There’s post on my desk waiting for me to open it. I can see the little light blinking on my phone, alerting me to the voice messages – and there are always lots of voice messages. But despite all of that I do what I always do first. I open my desk drawer and see what’s waiting inside for me.