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Into the Fire - Leslie Kelly [4]

By Root 432 0
was part of the reason circulation had skyrocketed.

Seeing no one waiting outside the powder room, Lacey walked right past it, down a long corridor. When she heard voices in a nearby room, she ducked behind a piece of pricey statuary. Hearing the voices recede, she dashed by the doorway, trying to stay on her toes to avoid letting her heels click on the floor.

"Hide and seek," she whispered, knowing she was probably being juvenile and not really caring.

It wasn't just the aura of sex appeal on every page of Men's World that bothered her. She also didn't like Nate Logan's smart-ass tone, his flirtatious, irreverent writing style. She certainly didn't like his advice. But his readers obviously adored him. He'd even been given an unprecedented second column, "Nate's Notes on the Nice and the Naughty."

"Notes from Nate the Nitwit," she muttered sourly.

She had to admit that she'd been somewhat amused by his observations. But when he'd started getting a little too obnoxious, she'd reacted. She was only human, after all. Since he seemed to delight in targeting her sex, well, what else could a fair-minded woman do but defend herself?

Once, he wrote a column about the way women couldn't keep secrets. His theory was that a woman didn't make a single decision regarding career, life, love or sex without consulting her gaggle of girlfriends. He went on to use as an example the way women went to the ladies' room together at restaurants. His assertion? They were flipping a coin to see which one would sleep with her date and which would come down with a headache.

That, probably, was the first time Lacey had responded on the pages of For Her Eyes Only. She'd fired a mild shot about the way men felt it necessary to touch each others' butts during athletic events.

The battle had gone on from there. He'd claimed women's so-called emotional loyalty to each other disappeared whenever three females were together, since as soon as one left the other two dissed her awful shoes, tight dress or bad hairdo. Lacey retorted that the buddy syndrome was the way men got close to other men's girlfriends in order to hit on them.

He said women sent mixed signals, demanding equality yet having a fit and refusing sex if a man didn't always pick up the check for dinner. She said women wanted to be treated with respect, courtesy and graciousness, not like walking sex toys.

He said women drove men out with their demands. She said men walked out wide-eyed when a good set of legs happened along. He said women were untrustworthy. She said men were dogs.

He said. She said.

On and on the Ferris wheel turned in their undeclared war between the sexes. Their readers followed along in amusement, driving up circulation, ad revenues and publicity.

Lacey and Nate Logan had been invited to appear together on a nationally televised morning show. Lacey had refused, as always being careful to guard her privacy. She wouldn't have gone anyway. Sharing a magazine rack with Nate Logan was bad enough. Sharing a TV stage would be impossible.

If Lacey hadn't been too excited about her sudden notoriety, J.T. and the other higher-ups had been absolutely thrilled. So here they were, about to be toasted, together, by the publisher of both magazines they worked for.

"Unfair," she muttered as she made a few turns, passing J.T.'s private office and his wife's art studio. Lacey wasn't ready for this evening.

She could admit that it wasn't really the Nate Logan situation. The main problem tonight was the personal issue. The issue of Lacey Clark—who she really was, where she'd really come from. She'd pleaded with J.T. not to go ahead with the announcement he planned to make at the party. Not unexpectedly, he'd ignored her, caring only about the circulation numbers, not about personal feelings. Not even hers.

Lacey's high heels clicked loudly on the polished floor as she walked toward her destination. There was one spot where she knew she could be alone. She couldn't escape the inevitable forever. But she could at least take some time to prepare for the evening she faced.

Thirty

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