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by Jayne Blue


  Rush would be quizzing him on what steps he’d taken to try to save the station, so he’d have to go through the motions and at least attempt to rehabilitate the place. That meant hiring the best news consulting firm in the country, American News Consulting and Research. They were effective, even if expensive, but if his father questioned what he’d done to fix WLUV, the consulting firm would be his answer.

  He called out to Mrs. King, his 200-year-old secretary who’d been at the station since the beginning, “Mrs. King, make sure that Bernie greets the consultant and brings him up here.”

  He heard wrinkled fingers on a hunt-and-peck expedition on the computer.

  “Mrs. King?” He wasn’t sure she could hear anything.

  “Yes sir, I’ll tell Bernie to bring the consultant person here to you,” she yelled back to his office.

  Wes put his head in his hands. For some reason he didn’t have the heart to force Mrs. King into retirement. She was eligible for sure, 50 years of service. She was in her seventies, and had no ability to use any modern office software. Even the facsimile machine was too complicated for her. But she did a good job answering regular phones and taking messages for him, he’d give her that.

  And to be fair, what she lacked in technological know-how she made up in bakery skills. She brought baked goods to the office for holidays that only she knew existed, and had a “Happy Birthday” sign in the lobby for whichever of the station’s 100 or so employees was celebrating that day. She also knew to whisper the names of the employees into his ear—even if she did it too loudly, since she could hardly hear. Other than that, he had no idea what Mrs. King actually did in her 50 years at WLUV. He made a mental note to ask his dad the next time they talked.

  Bernie Manfred was another old-timer, a news man who’d had every job in the station at every other station in Grand City. Wes wondered what the consultant would think of this mixed bag of employees. Working at WLUV was either the start of a person’s news career or the end of it. Either way, the ax was going to fall for some of them.

  This firm, American News Consulting and Research, was known to suggest drastic measures and, from what he could see, WLUV needed it. He did not have a soft spot for lost causes. If the experts thought it was time to fire, cut, or close up, Wes had no problem with it. Still, he resolved to make sure the old-timers had a soft landing with good retirement packages. He put in a call to Thompson-Hardaway’s main offices to get the wheels in motion for anyone with 15 years or more at WLUV.

  Chapter Two

  Macy decided it was important for news organizations to see what a professional network broadcaster looked like close up. She maintained her whip-it thin figure mainly because she’d lost her appetite for food last year during her humiliating fiasco with Phil, and it hadn’t returned. There was an upside to heart break, apparently: she could slide into a size 6 black designer business suit without too much trouble, despite being 5’6”.

  She’d chosen a red silk blouse with a sharp collar to go underneath. These days she had to dye the hair at her temples because gray hair peeked through what used to be all auburn. Now pushing 40, it took more and more time to look the way she used to. If nothing else, she made sure she wore heels, even in winter. That put her at 5’9.” It was good to be taller than the people she wished to intimidate.

  Small markets needed to see how to pull it together, and she was a walking, talking example of what American News Consulting and Research expected. It helped to put the local on-air talent on edge a bit. Her appearance put egos in check. If they understood that she wasn’t just preaching to them, that she herself could step in and do their jobs – blindfolded if need be – a little humility entered the picture and the reporters and anchors were more receptive to her coaching.

  The lobby area was staffed by a college-aged kid who looked Macy up and down and then let her stand there with her coat in hand. After buzzing someone named Bernie the girl proceeded to ignore Macy and attend to chewing gum and texting.

  Well, Macy thought, best to start with this kid.

  “What’s your name?” Macy asked.

  “Brittany.” Of course it was.

  “Brittany, from now on, when a guest enters the station, you’ll take their coats, offer them coffee or water, and then let them know you can get them anything else they may need. You are WLUV’s first impression, and so far it’s not a good one.”

  The girl blinked her eyes as though stung by the words. Then she walked over and took Macy’s coat, “We don’t have coffee brewed, it will be a minute.” Brittany said.

  “It’s okay, I don’t need any. My job is to take things up a notch or two around here, and you happen to be first person I’ve met. I think you’re going to be a fabulous receptionist but you need to put the gum in the trash and the cell phone down.”

  Brittany fled down a hall. Macy figured her coat would be flung on a floor somewhere.

  A paunchy, balding man emerged from the same hall, Brittany-in-flight barely registering with him.

  “Ms. Green, hello. I’m Bernie Manfred, Executive Producer here.” Bernie extended a hand past his rotund belly.

  “Macy, call me Macy.”

  “Macy, I was an admirer of your work at WNS. You were the real deal.” People recognized Macy less and less these days; the public memory was short. Usually it was old-time news people –like Bernie, she figured – who appreciated the hard news and investigations she’d done in her decade at the network.

  “Thank you.”

  “Now you’re an evil consultant, almost as bad as going into pee-arh.” Bernie laughed as he said it, but really he’d nailed down the general feeling about news consultants— that they were to be hated and distrusted. Macy didn’t expect her arrival to be met with good cheer. She was there to change things and hold some feet to the fire.

  “I’m too blunt to be in public relations, which you’ll discover quickly.” She thought she heard a faint groan of pain as Bernie led her up a winding staircase in the center of the lobby to the station’s second floor. Were the stairs hard on his knees, or was it the idea of the consultant picking apart the station that had him groaning? Maybe both, Macy thought.

  “The upstairs is sales and management. The first floor is our studio, newsroom, and editing suites. We also do our commercial production in there,” Bernie explained as they walked.

  “Ya like the wall paper? We’ve had the same stuff since 1978.” It was a Brady Bunch orange pattern, but Macy didn’t care about the décor. She cared about the on-air product.

  “Hi Mrs. King,” Bernie addressed the secretary outside the owner’s office.

  “He’s in there waiting.” Mrs. King didn’t get up but waved them to the office door.

  “Mr. Thompson?” Bernie offered a courtesy knock but since the door was ajar he just pushed it open the rest of the way.

  Macy tried not to let her jaw drop when she got a look at Wes Thompson. She’d expected a middle-aged, overweight white guy in a crappy suit, or a weak-chinned son-of-a-great-man.

  Wes Thompson was none of the above; in fact, he looked more like a well-built George Clooney. His crisp white dress shirt fit perfectly over his muscular shoulders, and it was tailored so it skimmed his trim waist. Thompson threw a distracted smile at Macy as he finished his phone call. Her mouth went dry.

  “If you could just get that sorted out, I’ll be in touch in about a week.” He hung up with no further pleasantries. He was used to issuing orders.

  “Hi there, you’re the consultant?” Thompson stood up and offered her a hand across his desk, locking his gorgeous blue eyes on hers. She would kill for his lush eyelashes. But they were the only soft thing about his face. From his strong jaw to his aquiline nose, Macy was afraid she was staring.

  She’d seen thousands of attractive television faces but Wes Thompson’s rugged good looks put them to shame. This man was quite possibly the best-looking man she’d ever seen—but he wasn’t pretty in the slightest, not like Phil. She estimated hi
m at a couple inches over six-foot, since he was a head taller than she was in her intimidating “network heels.”

  Macy struggled to put her girlish reaction on lockdown. She had a job to do and mooning over Wes Thompson was not on the WLUV rehab plan. She felt a few flutters and clenches in places she didn’t want to think about while at work, places that had been dormant for months...

  Why did she make a point of noticing he had no wedding ring on? The very last thing she needed was a romantic complication in her life. She put her coldest consultant face back on and got to work. She decided it was best to barrel ahead with her plan of attack for WLUV.

  “Hi. I’m Macy Green and I’ll be with you for about six weeks. The normal way we operate is to come in and out,” Macy winced internally at her own choice of words. “But since you’ve contracted with us at our gold tier of service, I’m here to help you really get things ready for February sweeps and then throughout the duration, if you like what you see.”

  “I’m sure I do,” Wes said.

  Macy was pretty sure she was hearing things. Did he just go right for double entendre? “What you see on the air, that is,” she clarified.

  Bernie coughed a few times, and she thought she heard him chuckle. This was not going exactly right. She stiffened her spine. Macy’s efforts were always focused on things going exactly right.

  “Yes I told Dave Raynes we’d need the best and that there’s a lot of work to be done here.” Apparently Wes and Dave Raynes, the co-owner of ANCR, were acquainted. Macy reported directly to Raynes; she could not afford to botch this job.

  Bernie piped up, “I was going to give her the ten-cent tour.”

  “Actually Bernie, I’ve freed up my schedule this afternoon so I’ll do the honors. I’m sure Macy here has a lot of questions and I know you need to get back to the newsroom.” Wes effectively dismissed Bernie, and Macy thought she saw the older man’s eyebrow lift as he turned to walk out. Even for a washed-up newsman, he didn’t miss much.

  “Yep, time to feed the news hole. I’m sure I’ll see you later Macy. I’m at your service, consultant lady.” Bernie waddled out of the office.

  A small finger of panic arose as she realized she was now alone with Mr. Wes Thompson. She’d never been so physically affected by another person in her life. It was distracting, and it left her off balance. This is what she got for living the life of a nun for the last year—she had the internal reactions of a teenager when faced with a handsome man.

  Edit that, a handsome, sexy man. No, no, a handsome, sexy, muscular… Macy had to force herself to focus. She needed her brain right now and it appeared her libido had taken control of the ship.

  Wes walked from behind his desk and towards her. She took a reflexive step back, but he put his hand on the back of her shoulder to gently pivot her focus to the wall of the office. Her nerve endings all jumped in response. What was her problem? She couldn’t really feel his fingertips through her suit coat and her silk blouse, but she swore each finger sent a jolt to her skin. Out of nowhere, and instantly, this man thawed what she’d had packed away in the ice box for ages. Since leaving Phil she had no interest in any entanglements.

  Wes’s light touch moved to her shoulder blade to guide her to where he wanted her to direct her focus. “Here, these pictures on the wall will give you a little bit of history. My dad was the original owner, but things have gone to pot. I’d really like to see if there’s something to salvage here, if WLUV can be profitable.”

  Macy looked at several framed black and white pictures on the wall. A kid’s clown show, a cooking show, a weather man doing his forecast outside on a chalkboard, a couple of white guys with giant collars and mustaches… either these were all nostalgic photos from the early days, or they were photos of the cast of Anchor Man. “Great pictures, I can see why the station is important to you and your family.”

  She knew she needed to minimize alone time with this man if she wanted to stay in control. And she very desperately wanted to stay in control. “Why don’t I get that tour that you mentioned? From there I can watch tonight’s evening news product and see where to start.”

  Wes directed a devastating smile in her direction, “Right this way.” He shifted the pressure of his hand on her back while making a museum tour guide gesture with the other.

  Warning bells went off in her brain. Danger, danger, Will Robinson! Wes’s sexy smile was clearly capable of melting even the coldest corporate consultant’s heart. Macy feared that the tenuous grasp she had over her new life was just waiting to unravel, and all he had done so far was smile and touch her shoulder.

  She hoped Wes Thompson would be too busy to spend much time with her in the next six weeks. Surely the station owner had better things to do…terror gripped her chest when she realized he was looking at her like he was starving and she was a juicy steak. Did he look at all women that way? Probably. And it probably worked like crazy.

  But if there was one thing she knew how to do, it was ignore distraction and perform. She’d done live shots in battle zones, on the side of highways, and even once while a steer took a shit behind her at the county fair. She had a lot of work to do in this small-market disaster, and she could perform the role of a cold-hearted consulting bitch no matter how steamy this man was making her feel.

  Hopefully Wes was a hands-off kind of boss and she wouldn’t see too much of him. Except she also hoped she’d see all of him. Somewhere inside, her subconscious was banging its head against a wall.

  Chapter Three

  The scent and sight of Macy Green stunned Wes. He smelled Chanel No. 5 and something else, something uniquely her, as she walked in with Bernie. She was fucking sexy as hell with a coiled up tension he hadn’t seen from anyone he’d encountered in this sleepy town – or anywhere, really – in years. She was sleek and professional in a business suit, but he was focused on the button of her blouse straining in just the right spot across what he was sure were beautiful breasts.

  His jaw clenched as she sat opposite him and talked about her time commitment to the station. He wasn’t exactly sure what she was saying and tried not to notice her skirt hike upward a bit as she sat down. Who was this vision?

  Wes had been described as a playboy in his day, but Macy was not his typical curvy little bombshell; she was something else entirely. He reacted instantly to her face, he wanted to touch her hair…and God help him, he wanted to release that button struggling against her breasts. It was an unfair burden to put on one little button. He fought to repress the thoughts and urges that had been ignited within just two minutes of meeting Macy Green.

  When Bernie explained he was going to give the lovely Macy the tour Wes decided that would be his job instead. He’d planned to let the news consultant handle the newsroom and then meet with him a couple of times a week as the term of the contract progressed. But the “he” turned out to be the most delicious “she” he’d seen in years. After laying eyes on her, Wes mentally rearranged his schedule so he could take a much more hands-on role with his new consultant.

  As Macy gazed toward the pictures from the 1950s that adorned Wes’ office he had the urge to plunge his fingers into that lush auburn hair. Oh yes, he was going to be sure to work very closely with her. It was good to be the boss for so many reasons, and right now Wes was relishing the fact that he’d get to decide what to do with Miss Green‘s time— at least, he hoped it was Miss. He glanced quickly at her hands. Likely, a woman who could drop everything and live in another town for two months was unattached, but he didn’t need to deal with that obstacle.

  No ring. Ah ha.

  Instead of enduring the coldest February in years at the hands of his controlling father perhaps he’d have something much hotter, in the form of Macy Green. WLUV was looking like it may turn into something much better than the exile he’d anticipated.

  Not that he was looking to complicate his life. He had proven to be a preoccupied husband, and made a much better ex-husband. But his interest in young curvy blond
es had waned in the last few years. Despite being single, he’d lost interest in the women who constantly fawned all over him. This woman was clearly not a fawner. He noticed, in fact, that she purposely conveyed a no-nonsense style. It was admirable; she was focused on her job. It was a job that would fail here at WLUV, ultimately, but she didn’t have to know that.

  As he walked Macy through the studio and the control room he contemplated all kinds of things about her, like what color bra she was wearing...

  “Do you one-man band it here?”

  He heard her cultured and intelligent voice ask him the question and he snapped out of his dirty thoughts. “Yes. We’re a small operation so it makes financial sense.” A lot of stations had taken to combining the photographer and reporter position so the reporter shot their own material. It saved a lot of money on staff.

  “I see a lot of resentment from staffers in one-man band shops. It really isn’t the best in terms of quality or news product. We’ll need to talk about that.”

  Great, she already wants to spend money at a station that’s bleeding out. Of course. Why did women always want to spend his money? Maybe Miss Green was just a higher-class version of the women he’d grown tired of, the ones who liked him to buy them things.

  Wes ushered Macy through a narrow hall and a producer ran towards them. It was getting close to news time, and the pace was picking up around them. The narrow hall meant that Macy had to press close to Wes so as to not impede the frenzied producer. He pivoted her into an edit bay in one swift move to avoid a collision. They were nose to nose in the small dark space.

  “Whoa! I guess we’re almost to deadline,” she laughed, “I like the intensity of some of the people here. That’s good. It’s half the battle sometimes, getting that intensity.”

  Wes watched Miss Green’s lips as she formed the word “intensity.” It was a good description for her energy, actually. He wondered what it would be like to be inside that intensity, and pretended not to notice the more pronounced way her chest rose and fell while they were squeezed together in the tight space.

 

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