Angel Mary Clare Bradford, Angie to her
friends, looked over at her assistant, who
was stacking rolls of colored ribbon onto
spindles. Satisfied that the rolls of ribbon
were aligned to match the spindles of
wrapping paper, she turned away to survey
her domain.
The thirty-foot-by-thirty-foot room with
its own lavatory was neat as a pin because
Angie Bradford was a tidy person. The room
she and her assistant, Bess Kelly, were
standing in was known as the Eagle
Department Store gift wrap department.
Eva Bradford, Angie’s mother, had a
lifetime lease on this very room, thanks to
retired owner Angus Eagle, something that
rankled the current young department store
head, Josh Eagle, Angus’s heir.
Angie and Josh had gone to the mat via
the legal system on several occasions. Josh
wanted the lease canceled so he could open a
safari clothing department. He claimed the
paltry, three-hundred-dollar-a-month rent
Angie paid for the gift wrap space was
depriving the Eagle Department Store of
serious revenue. Another set of legal papers
claimed his father had not been of sound
mind when he signed the ridiculous lifetime
lease.
Angie countered with a startling video of
Angus playing tennis and being interviewed
by the New York Times talking about politics
and his philanthropic endeavors on the very
day he signed the lifetime lease. In a
separate filing, Angie charged Josh Eagle
was a bully, and presented sworn testimony
that he repeatedly turned off the
electricity in the gift shop as well as the
water in the lavatory just to harass her. On
occasion the heat and air conditioning were
also turned off. Usually on the coldest and
hottest days of the year.
Josh retaliated by saying Angie should
pay for the electricity, water, heat, and
air-conditioning. He said there were no free
lunches in the Eagle Department Store in
Woodbridge, New Jersey.
Judge Atkins had glared at the two
adversaries and barked his decision: Josh
Eagle was not to step within 150 feet of the
gift wrap department. Angie was to pay an
additional thirty-dollars-a-month rent for
the utilities, and a new heating unit was to
be installed at Eagle’s expense.
At that point the Eagle-Bradford war
escalated to an all- time high, with both
sides doing double-time to outwit the other.
The present score was zip-zip.
“So, are you going to the store meeting
or not?” Bess asked as she gathered up her
purse and jacket.
“Nope. I don’t work for Josh Eagle or
this store. I work for my mother. I’m just
renting space from Eagle’s. It was toasty in
here today, wasn’t it?” Angie asked. It had
been unseasonably cool for September.
Bess eyed her young employer and laughed.
She’d worked for Eva Bradford for twelve
years before Eva turned the business over to
her daughter, 110 pounds of energy who was
full of spit and vinegar, five years ago.
Angie had jumped right into the business,
played David to Josh’s Goliath, and come out
a winner. At least in Bess’s eyes. With the
Christmas season fast approaching, Bess knew
in her gut that Josh Eagle would pull out
all his big guns to try to get under Angie’s
skin and make her life so miserable she
would give up and move out. She laughed
silently. Josh Eagle didn’t know the Angie
Bradford she knew.
“Come on, boss, I’ll walk you out to the
parking lot. How’s Eva today?”
Angie slipped into her jacket and hung
her purse on her shoulder before she turned
off the lights. She pressed a switch, and a
colorful corrugated blind came down, totally
covering the entrance to the gift wrap
department. She waited a moment until she
heard the sound of the lock slipping into
place. She’d installed the sliding panel at
her own expense, much to Josh Eagle’s
chagrin. She then locked the walkthrough
door to the gift wrap department. Not just
any old lock, this was a special lock that
Josh Eagle couldn’t open with the store’s
master keys. She’d also installed her own
security system with the ADT firm. Josh had
taken her to court on that one, too, and
lost, with the judge saying Angie was
protecting her investment and as long as she
wasn’t asking him to pay for her security,
there was no problem. Back then the score
had been one-zip.
“Uh-oh, look who’s standing by that big
red X you painted on the floor!”
Angie looked ahead of her to see Josh
Eagle glaring at her. “You’re late!”
He was good-looking, she had to give him
that. And he had dimples. Right now his dark
brown eyes were spewing sparks. He was
dressed in a power suit and tie, his shirt
so blinding white, it had to be new. It was
all about image with Josh Eagle.
Angie looked down at her watch.
“Actually, I’m leaving right on time, Mr.
Eagle. My lights are off, the heat has been
turned down, the security system locked and
loaded, and my door is locked. It’s one
minute past six. The store closes at six.”
“I called a meeting for six-fifteen for
all department heads. That means you’re
supposed to be in the conference room
promptly at six-ten. You’re still standing
here, Ms. Bradford. What’s wrong with this
picture? Well?”
Angie sighed. “How many times do I have
to tell you, Mr. Eagle? I do not work for
you. Judge Atkins sent you papers to that
effect. I have copies in case you lost
yours. What part of
I-am-not-one-of-your-employees don’t you
understand?”
Josh Eagle looked like he was about to
say something, then changed his mind. Angie
started walking again, and when she got to
Josh and he didn’t move, she stiff-armed
him.
“You touched my person,” Josh said
dramatically as he pretended to back away.
“Will you get off it already! Do you sit
up there in your ivory tower and dream up
ways to torment me? I did not touch you. I
put my arm out so you wouldn’t touch me. In
case your vision is impaired, I have a
witness. Now, I suggest you get out of my
way and don’t come down here again with your
silly demands. This shop is off-limits to
you!”
“Just a damn minute, Ms. Bradford. If you
want to go to court again, I’m your man. I
want to know what you’re going to do about
wrapping my customers’ Christmas gifts this
year. That’s the main topic to be discussed
at tonight’s meeting.”
“We’ve had this same discussion every
September for the past five years. You had
the same discussion with my mother for the
five years prior to my arrival, and the
outcome has always been the same. This year
is no different. Pay me to wrap your
customers’ gifts, and we’re in business. If
you don’t pay me, I cannot help you. I’m in
business to make money just the way you are.
Try to wrap your feeble brain around that
fact, then get back to me or have your
lawyer call my lawyer. Good night, Mr.
Eagle.”
Outside in the cool evening air, Angie
dusted her hands together. “I thought that
went rather well.” She sniffed the air.
“Someone’s burning leaves. Oh, I just love
that smell.”
Bess opened her car door. “I think you
enjoy tormenting that man. I agree he’s
sorely lacking in the charm department, but
my mother always told me you can get more
flies with honey than vinegar. The guy’s a
hottie, that’s for sure.”
“Ha! Eye candy. The man has no substance,
he’s all veneer. On top of that, he’s greedy
and obnoxious. With all that going against
him, I wonder how he manages to charm that
string of women he parades around all the
time,” Angie sniffed.
“His money charms them. Josh Eagle is
considered a good catch. You know, Angie,
you could throw your line in the pond. You
reel him in, and all this,” Bess said,
extending her arms to indicate the huge
parking lot and the department store, “could
be yours!”
Angie started to laugh and couldn’t stop.
“Not in this life time. See you tomorrow,
Bess.”
“Tell your mother I said hello.”
“Will do,” Angie called over her
shoulder.
Angie sat in her car for ten minutes
while she played the scene that had just
transpired back in the store over and over
in her mind. Would Josh Eagle drag her into
court again? Probably. The man had a hate on
for her that was so over- the-top she could
no longer comprehend it. In the beginning
she’d handled it the way she handled every
challenge that came her way: fairly and
honestly. She fought to win, and so far
she’d won every round. Remembering the look
on Josh Eagle’s face, she wondered if her
luck was about to change.
Well, she would think about it later.
Right now she had to stop for pizza and go
to the rehab center on New Durham Road,
where her mother was waiting for her.
Angie reached for her cell phone to call
Tony’s Pizza on Oak Tree Road. She ordered
three large pepperoni pies and was told they
would be ready in ten minutes. That was
good, the pies would still be hot when she
delivered them to Eva and the other patients
at the rehab center.
On the ride to the pizza parlor Angie
thought about her mother. A gutsy lady who
had worked part time to help with the family
bills. Back when she was young, with a
family to help support, she’d worked three
days a week for Angus Eagle, a man her own
age whose wife deplored housework. Her
mother had cooked and cleaned for Angus, and
in doing so they had forged a friendship
that eventually resulted, one Christmas
morning, in his turning over the gift wrap
department at his store to her with a
lifetime lease.
Her mother never tired of telling her the
story of that particular Christmas that
changed her life, even though Angie, who was
fifteen at the time, remembered it very
well. Angus’s wife hadn’t wanted to be
bothered wrapping presents for Josh and her
husband, so she’d turned the job over to
Eva. Each time her mother told the story,
she would laugh and laugh and say how
impressed Angus had been at her flair for
gift wrapping.
It was always at times like this, when
Angie grew melancholy, that she thought
about her own life and why she was doing
what she was doing with it. She’d gone to
work on Wall Street as a financial planner,
but five years of early mornings, late
nights, and the long commute was all she
could take. Then she taught school for a
couple of years but couldn’t decide whether
or not teaching was a career to which she
wanted to commit herself. Five years ago,
she’d happily given it up without a second
thought when, after her aunt Peggy got into
a serious automobile accident in Florida,
her mother suggested that Angie take over
the gift-wrapping business. Eva had rushed
down to care for Peggy, knowing she was
leaving her little business in good hands,
and was gone four years.