their report to shareholders, because the numbers didnât fit their projected sales targets.
She refusedâeven though sheâd spent four months meticulously designing the analysis, writing the code, building the program. During the meeting, the executives had exchanged extended periods of silent eye contact, and eventually shooed Jess out of the room, saying theyâd be in touch.
Was it stupid to be so inflexible with her biggest account? She couldnât shake a sense of panic. If she lost Jennings, she would lose a third of her income for the year. Juno might need braces, and sheâd be driving in eight years. What if she wanted to start doing dance competitions? What if she got sick? Nana and Pops werenât getting any younger, either.
Movement in her peripheral vision pulled her attention, and Jess watched Junoâs second-grade teacher, Mrs. Klein, and the principal, Mr. Walker, come to the front of the room. Mrs. Klein was dressed as some hybrid of a scientist and artist: lab coat, goggles, beret, paint palette. Mr. Walker was dressed as, Jess supposed, a kid: baggy shorts, knee-high socks, and a Padres baseball cap. They sat in chairs facing the assembled parents.
The principal-child crossed his arms and pouted dramatically, and the room fell to a hush. âI donât even get what a science-art fair is. Do I have to do it?â
âYou donât have to do the science-art fair,â Mrs. Klein said, hamming it up for the crowd, âyou GET to do the science-art fair!â
The room rippled with polite laughter, and the rest of the second-grade team passed out handouts with information as the little play went on. Jess scanned the stapled pages, skimming instructions forhelping the children find an art project that was based in some area of science: plant life, animal life, engineering, chemistry. A papier-mâché plant with various structures labeled. A painting of a dog skeleton. A house made out of Popsicle sticks. It was one of the things that Jess loved about this little schoolâthe creative curriculum, the emphasis on integrated learningâbut with the murmuring voices rising from the crowd, she was pulled out of her little bubble. In the seats all around her, heads came together in excited conversation. Husband-and-wife teams brainstormed fun projects for their kids, and the dread in Jessâs stomach curdled with loneliness. She was flanked by an empty seat on each side, a little buffer zone to protect the other parents from the infection of singlehood.
Mood still low despiteâshe had to admitâsome pretty solid jokes from Mr. Walker and Mrs. Klein, Jess practically crawled across the parking lot. Her car was parked next to a pearl-white Porsche that made her red 2008 Corolla look like an old roller skate missing its mate. Jess couldnât feel ashamed of the clunker, though; this car had driven her home from the maternity ward and then to her college graduation only a month later. It took them on various outings for Try Something New Sundays and road trips to Disneyland andâ
âJessica!â
She jerked around at the sound of a trilling voice and turned to find a tall, thin blond woman waving her down. Dawn Porter: PTA President, Mother of the Year, Zero Gag Reflex, probably. Jess braced herself to feel like a shitty mom for at least five minutes.
âDawn! Hey.â Jess winced in preemptive apology. âItâs been a long day andââ
âOh God, totally. I know youâreâlike, frazzled all the time. Poor thing. If I can just get one second? I wanted to check on the auction site you were going to build? The fundraiser for the new playground equipment?â
Crap .
The site Jess had been working on when Juno threw up at school and needed to be picked up, then when a client had a last-minute shareholders meeting and needed her to spend twelve hours in LA, then when sheâd been interrupted by a phone call