Kate was starting to feel more and more like London was a black hole that she was going to perpetually be sucked into until she eventually keeled over and died. She’d been contacted by some members of the press from
Oui this month to attend an award show and be honored, and not wanting to reject a potential career advancement or tarnish her reputation that had
already been through the wringer the last several months, she’d agreed.
There were going to be thirty awards, all for women under thirty, to celebrate their particular decoration and abilities in their fields. Seemed lucrative enough from the outside, but Kate knew the press were vultures on most occasions and she’d have to be watching her back to prevent any disasters.
Kate’s long, dark hair was pulled up into an elegant bun, not too tight, with tendrils hanging down across her cheekbones to frame her face. She was wearing some high heels to give her the stature she needed to pull off this
dress-- it was long, white, and backless. Simple and sexy, to the naked, unknowing eye, but while shopping for something to wear to this event, it had been difficult for Kate not to go slightly crazy. At every other event, almost, she’d taken Charlie with her to the boutiques to gauge his reaction to each and every outfit and even after marriage, had to deal with some degree of gatekeeping from him.
She didn’t want to show up erroneously overdressed, but she had wanted to go slightly out of her comfort zone(and to prove something, whether that was to herself or other people, she didn’t know) and a relatively plain gown without a back and a pretty bow to cinch it all together seemed pretty reasonable. The only jewelry she wore were a pair of diamond earrings, given to her for her twentieth birthday by her father. Her fingers felt particularly empty.
The actual ceremony was a mess. The presenter, who had given her a miniature statue to commemorate her achievements as the most promising young executive in the music business, hadn’t pulled any punches insulting her, though it had been expertly and passive-aggressively masked as a compliment, as many “compliments†in the business tended to be.
Kate knew that many people expected she had gotten her job due to nepotism, from both sides, and she wasn’t obtuse enough to completely discredit this assumption. However, she considered herself pretty good at her job--she’d broken her back for several years for Banshee, night and day, and they were bigger than they ever had been. Their talent was the main driving factor, but they weren’t particularly skilled managers of said talent. That was where she’d come in. Kate almost wished that her parents had nothing to do with the music business, but that felt ungrateful as soon as the thought entered her mind.
Directly after the presentation of awards, she’d made a beeline for the open bar and hoped, no, prayed to mother Mary that nobody she knew was here or had seen her. She’d stared at the exit sign in the back of the room instead of the crowd in front of her while she’d given her acceptance speech for a reason.
It would have been personally smart for Kate to just leave right afterward: the free alcohol was enticing, sure, but she could afford as much alcohol as she wanted. Business smart thing to do, though, would be to stick around and show her face for as long as possible, so as not to appear ungrateful. She wondered how this spread in the magazine would end up. She ordered a double of tequila and a skinny margarita on the rocks, and the shots came first. A year ago, there wouldn’t have been any way she could’ve downed a double in one, but three seconds later, as the empty glass clacked back onto the granite, she was impressed with herself.
Kate felt someone come near to her, probably just to order a drink, but she accidentally looked at him anyway and realized who it was. Ah, shit. She was sure she’d seen some stupid thing or other about Harlan Bellamy and his recent fling with Charlie’s ex-girlfriend in the papers, but maybe she’d hallucinated that. The brunette frowned as he spoke, trying to place why he was talking about Audrey that way and then it-- oh. Audrey Beauchamp. Formerly Audrey
Bellamy. She pinged and made the connection as soon as the editor’s name popped fully into her head.
“Not your fault,†Kate offered with a smile. “She’s your sister? I know how they can be, I have one myself who’s a little… uhh. High maintenance.â€