Todd Wednesday, March 5; New York, New York "You are such an asshole." Her face had gone from red to white as she pulled her naked legs from under the sheets. Retracing last night''s steps from the living room to the bed, she collected the trail of discarded clothing in her arms. Todd reached for the remote and turned on MSNBC, hoping the sound would drown out the awkwardness. He hated morning awk‑ wardness. The girl came back into the room and started rummaging through the sheets for her underwear. "I just don''t ." she started, looking at him.
"I just don''t understand why you''re so afraid of commitment." "I''m not afraid of commitment," he said simply, pretending to be absorbed in the television where two commentators were discussing the latest scandal at L.Cecil, involving traders who allegedly peddled two hundred million dollars of shares they knew were overvalued to unwit‑ ting investors. Todd made a face at the television: that better not affect his bonus. The girl pulled her skirt over her thin hips and refastened her push‑up bra; she had a nice rack, but her thighs were too big and she looked like the type who was going to balloon when she hit thirty‑five. She was an 8 out of 10 on an attractiveness scale, which was where Todd liked to play: Eights were hot, but insecure about not being tens, so they worked hard to please. Right now, though, she was barely scraping by as a six with her smudged eyeliner and greasy blonde hair. "Then what''s so wrong with taking me to dinner?" she said softly, still for the first time since she''d left the bed.
"Because that''s not what you are to me," he answered honestly. "Then what am I?" Her voice was even softer. Her fingers clenched the sheets as she waited for the answer she didn''t want to hear. "Listen: we''ve had a really good time. Why ruin it?" Todd said, meaning it. Her jaw set and her watery eyes shimmered. "You mean I''m the girl you fuck." Todd didn''t say anything.
He needed to get to work. "Do you know I went to Penn? Like, I''m not some bimbo idiot. I work at a top‑tier law firm: I''m the girl you date, not some stupid hookup." "Maybe you''re right." "So let''s go to dinner!" she said, exasperated. "I don''t want a girlfriend." "Then why did you--" "You." Todd cut her off, his patience exhausted.
" You contacted me, drunk, at a bar at two a.m. after you put your profile on a location‑based dating app. What did you expect?" She didn''t break her gaze. "Hook is a tool for meeting people. You''re on it, and you''re presumably normal. Why does my being on it make me a slut?" "I didn''t say you''re a slut. I said you sought me out in the context of a late‑night booty call, and that''s the implicit arrangement we''ve got.
" "But that was four times ago," the girl protested. Todd didn''t want to hurt her, but he also really didn''t have time for this kind of drama. All of his focus needed to be on his career: having just celebrated his thirty‑second birthday, Todd was all too aware that he had twelve months to make a serious deal happen at L.Cecil''s invest‑ ment bank if he still wanted to reach his goal of being the youngest‑ever managing director in the prestigious Wall Street firm. "We''ve gotten to know each other since then." She kept talking, refusing to let it go. "We talked about your job and I told you about my family and I was late to work last week because I know you like morning sex." Her lip was trembling.
"I didn''t ask you to do that." Her cheeks went red, knowing it was true. "I can''t believe this is hap‑ pening." She turned and finished dressing, abandoning the search for her thong. Todd continued watching the television, where it was agreed that, while not illegal, the fact that L.Cecil traders knew that what they were selling was crap made it unethical and worthy of fines. It was a bullshit argument--the role of a trader was to facilitate trades: it was up to the investor to determine whether or not the trade was worth putting his money behind. Todd waited for the front door to slam and got out of bed, stepping his six‑foot‑three‑inch, former‑Division‑One‑water‑polo‑player frame under the waterfall showerhead.
The question of whether to bring a girl back to his place or go to her apartment was a perpetual conundrum for Todd. On the one hand, the expensive minimalism of his spacious one‑bedroom guaranteed any girl he brought back would have sex with him, even if she''d been committed to prudishness up to that po∫ on the other hand, away games had the advantage that he could leave on his own terms. He should have gone to her place last night, given he knew she''d fuck him, but he''d had one too many tequila sodas at Monkey Bar and wasn''t thinking clearly when he''d written her a message on Hook. Todd shaved and put on his standard uniform--bespoke suit, Herms tie, Armani socks, Gucci loafers. He used the Uber app on his phone to order a car and glanced approvingly in the mirror before heading downstairs. When he exited the front door of his apartment building the girl was standing by the door, blowing into her hands to ward off the March breeze. "Jesus Christ," he whispered under his breath. She saw him and bit her lip apologetically.
"I''m sorry," she said. "I really didn''t mean to be dramatic, it''s just I think this could be more. I mean, I could be more--I am more--than that girl in the Hook profile." He put his hand gently on her hip and kissed her cheek softly. "It''s okay," he said, "but I''ve got a lot going on, and what we''ve got now is the most I can do. If you want more, I respect that, but I can''t give it to you." She nodded and looked at the ground. "Will I see you again?" she asked softly, without looking up.
"I''m not going anywhere," he said, dodging the question. "Can I help you find a cab?" She shook her head. "No, I''ll walk." "Okay. Have a good day, all right?" he coaxed, making his blue eyes smile. "Okay." She headed down the street, her four‑inch stilettos and tangled hair a scarlet letter on the Wednesday morning sidewalk. Todd climbed into the black car, and navigated to his list of "Favorites" on Hook.
What was her name again? A‑something. Amy? Allison?Amanda. Right. He found her, and promptly deleted her profile. Block user? The app asked. He tapped "Yes." Leave a review? "No." She wasn''t worth any more of his time.
The BlackBerry he used for work buzzed in his pocket and he exchanged it with his iPhone, scrolling through the twenty‑six new e‑mails he''d received overnight. There were the normal morning blasts: the Asian market update, the FX daily forecast, an e‑mail from Cathe‑ rine Wiley, the president of the investment bank, providing a compliance‑ approved stock statement to feed to clients who asked about the L.Cecil trading scandal. And then: an e‑mail from Josh@hook.com. Todd--Have decided to go public. Want you to do it. JH Todd almost choked; he read it again.
He looked up at the driver, as if the man might understand the significance of what Todd was holding in his hand. Todd could feel his heart racing: Josh Hart was CEO of Hook, the app that had not only made his sex life considerably more efficient, but which was also the hottest company in Silicon Valley. An IPO on that app wouldn''t just make a lot of people a lot of money, bringing it into L.Cecil would solidify Todd''s promotion. Fuck managing director--a deal this big might propel him to group head status. Todd scrolled to the e‑mail signature and dialed Josh''s number. The phone rang and he glanced at his watch, realizing it was only six fifteen in San Francisco, but Josh Hart picked up on the third ring. "Hello?" "Josh!" Todd exclaimed a bit too enthusiastically.
"Josh, it''s Todd. Todd Kent. I just got your e‑mail and--I''m sorry, is this a good time?" "It''s fine." Josh''s voice was like a robot''s. "Listen, I''m ." Todd struggled to find his composure. He raced to remember the last time he''d actually talked to Josh Hart: it was two years ago in Las Vegas, at the Consumer Electronics Show, when they''d met at a strip club. Josh was a pasty white computer dork with dark circles under his eyes and boyish curls that clung to his head.
He''d been wearing a hoodie and pleated khakis. Todd had spotted him across the room and beelined for him--for a guy to get into the club looking like that, he had to be important--and invited him to his table. Josh had sat studying the dancers as if they were aliens, tw.