The blurb:
Life after college graduation is not at all what twenty-one-year-old Bree Logan expected. Unable to find a professional communications job, dumped by the guy who was THE ONE, and stuck with a pricey city apartment she can’t afford, Bree ends up moving back home with her parents in the suburbs and working as a cocktail waitress at a posh Chicago hotel.
Life after college graduation is not at all what twenty-one-year-old Bree Logan expected. Unable to find a professional communications job, dumped by the guy who was THE ONE, and stuck with a pricey city apartment she can’t afford, Bree ends up moving back home with her parents in the suburbs and working as a cocktail waitress at a posh Chicago hotel.
In a desperate attempt to get a fresh start, Bree goes to a hip salon and requests that the first available stylist chop off her long dark hair. Alarmed when the stylist suggests “The Rachel,” after the famous haircut from the show Friends, Bree is hesitant, but decides to go for it when she is assured it will be a “fresh, modern adaptation” of the infamous 90’s cut. Unfortunately for Bree, it turns out to be exactly the same cut, but with horrific heavy bangs added to it. Hideous doesn’t even begin to describe it.
Bree is convinced nothing will ever go right when she meets neighbor Jack Chelten, a twenty-five-year-old German translator. Not that Bree is looking to date anyone, but there's something quirky and intriguing about his freckle-splashed face and blue eyes. And suddenly Bree finds herself seeking out different opportunities and challenges . . . as well as the boy next door.
In her new adult life, Bree learns that sometimes you have to go through crises to get to where you need to be. And if you can survive The Rachel, you can survive anything, right?
Chapter
One
Drastic
times call for drastic measures.
I
wrinkle my nose as I stare at my reflection in my mirror. Okay, so that might
be a wee bit dramatic on my part, but I do feel the need for a change.
Like
a haircut.
A
serious haircut.
I
remove the rubber band holding my long, jet-black locks in place and shake out
my hair, which I haven’t changed since college.
Nothing
screams “I’m a woman ready for change” like an entirely new hairstyle.
And
if anyone needs a change, it’s me, Bree Logan.
I
study myself in the mirror. My green eyes stare back at me, and I think of how
my summer can be recapped into three
major events. First, I graduated with honors from the University of Arizona,
but I can’t find an entry-level job in advertising. Next, my boyfriend Alex—who I thought was The One—dumped me after
graduation and bailed on our apartment in Chicago. And due to lack of
gainful employment and my stupid ex-boyfriend not giving me any money toward
breaking the lease, I had to move back home with my mom and dad.
I
bite my lip for a moment. Okay, yes, that’s my crappy summer. So if anyone
needs a haircut to signal change, it’s me.
I’m
ready to start over.
I’ll
keep looking for a break in advertising while working as a cocktail server at
the Bradley Scott Hotel downtown. I’ll pay off the money I borrowed from my
best friend, Avery Andrews, to break the lease of the apartment in Lincoln Park. Then I’ll save up so I can move back
to the city and have that post-graduate life I dreamed of and planned for.
Suddenly
there’s a rap on my doorframe. I turn and see my mom standing there with a
bottle of water.
“I
thought you might need another one after unpacking these boxes,” Mom says,
stepping around the boxes that I have piled in my room.
I
turn and smile gratefully at her. “Thank you.”
Diva,
my mom’s toy Pomeranian, is right on her heels and begins barking and growling
at me.
“Now,
Diva, Bree isn’t a guest, she’s home now,” Mom says soothingly, picking her dog
up and cradling her to her chest. “You need to get used to that, Precious.”
I
almost laugh. Leave it to the dog to remind me of my inability to pay rent and
land a professional job.
“I’m
thinking of cutting my hair,” I announce, unscrewing the cap on the bottle of
water and taking a sip. “Maybe go into the city this afternoon and get it done
by some cool professional.”
“Oh,
Bree, are you sure, sweetheart? Maybe you should start with more layers or
something? I don’t want you to do anything you’ll regret.”
“No,
I’m ready for change in my life,” I say honestly. “I feel like this is symbolic
of that change, you know?”
Mom
sits down on my bed, next to a box of pictures. She puts Diva down and begins
to sift through them.
“I
can understand that,” Mom says. “Oh, I love this picture of you and your
friends.”
I
smile as Mom shows me a picture taken in July at Wrigley Field. It’s me and
Avery, my best friend since middle school, our mutual friend, Emma Davenport,
Avery’s boyfriend, Deacon Ryan, and his brother, Zach.
“That
was a fun afternoon,” I say, smiling at the memory.
Mom
sifts through a few more and then glances
up at me. “I notice there are no pictures of Alex in here.”
I
sit down on the other side of the box and frown. “I got rid of all of them,” I
admit. “Looking at them was like being reminded how stupid I was to even think he could have been The
One.”
“Sweetie,
you were a young girl in love for the first time,” Mom says soothingly. “Don’t
be so hard on yourself.”
I
flop backward on my bed and groan. “Oh, but Mom, I was so blind. There were
so many red flags. Like how he never wanted to do anything I wanted to do, we
always did what Alex wanted to do. He was
never interested in what I had to say. We always had to party when I
wanted to go get a Starbucks some nights. And I
was always driving him around because he got so drunk all the time. What
did I see in him? How could I ignore all that?”
Mom
drops the pictures back into the box. “You were in love with him. And sometimes
that can make you blind, Bree. But you’ve learned from this, and that’s a good
thing.”
I
sit back up. “Oh, yes, I’ve learned all right. My next boyfriend isn’t going to
be a selfish partying jerk.”
“So
are you ready to date again?” Mom asks in a hopeful tone.
I
see she’s grinning at the prospect, no doubt eager to start finding potential
men for me.
“No.
The last thing I need is to be dealing with dating when I’m trying to get my
career off the ground.”
“Are
you sure? Have you seen the Cheltens’ grandsons, Jack and Eric, yet? I keep
telling you to go over next door and introduce yourself. They are such nice
boys and they are your age, Jack is the older one, he’s twenty-five, and Eric
is—”
“Oh
no. No, no, no. I know what you’re thinking. No.”
“What
am I thinking?”
“That
I’ll end up dating one of them,” I say, giving my mom the suspicious eye.
“Well,
Eric is very charming and available,” Mom declares.
I
furrow my brow. “How do you know?”
“I
asked.”
“Gah,
Mom,” I wail, putting my hands over my
face. “Please tell me you didn’t.”
“Of
course I did,” she explains. “It’s called making conversation.”
No,
it’s called scouting the field for your daughter.
“Well,
I’m not interested. I’m not ready.”
“That’s
too bad, because that Eric is so cute. Jack is, too, but Eric is just
charming,” she says as she stands up. “Well, I’m going out to the garden. Lots
of work to do. Oh, by the way, your father and I have plans for a movie and
dinner tonight. If you are home by five, you can join us.”
Good
lord. I thought being a third wheel with
Avery and Deke was bad enough, but resorting to being a third wheel on my
parents’ date?
That
is a whole new level of hideousness I do not want to experience.
“Um,
thanks, but I think I’ll just stay in tonight,” I say honestly. Which appeals to me. I haven’t had a Saturday
night off in forever, and I want to order a pizza and have a movie marathon.
“All
right,” Mom says. “Come on, Diva, let’s go outside.”
Diva
barks happily and follows my mom out the door. I pick up my phone and do a
search for some modern, hip, downtown Chicago salon. City chic, that’s what I
want. I scroll through suggestions from Google until I see this:
Fringe
Chic Spa & Salon—Modern Hair for Chicago’s Modern Woman
Perfect.
I
call the salon, hoping against hope there might be a cancellation or opening today.
“Fringe
Chic Spa & Salon, how can I help you?” says an utterly bored-sounding
woman.
“Erm,
yes, I’m calling to see if it is possible to get a haircut today?” I ask
hopefully.
“Frederic
is booked solid for months. So are Javier and Orlando,” she says as I hear
keystrokes on her keyboard. “But you can have an appointment with Marcolo if
you can get here in one hour.”
One
hour? It
takes about 45 minutes to drive there if traffic is awesome.
“Okay,”
I say as if suddenly this haircut is the
most important thing ever. “Um, how much
is a haircut?” I ask as I realize I
neglected to look at the prices on the website.
“$70.”
Wow?
That’s not bad at all for a downtown salon.
“For
the cut,” the receptionist says haughtily, interrupting my thoughts. “If
you want it dried and styled, as I am sure you do, that will be an
additional $120.”
Shit.
“Of
course,” I say, mentally calculating cut + style + tip + parking downtown and the slim availability left on my MasterCard . . . and I’ll just make it.
By
five dollars.
The
receptionist takes my name, says they’ll see me at two o’clock, and hangs up. I
frantically toss on a coral-colored maxi dress. I slide into my flip-flops and
hesitate as I glance down at my toes. Crap, my pedicure looks like hell. I
ditch those shoes and put on some espadrilles instead. Better.
I
grab my purse and dash down the stairs. I slide the patio door open and pop my
head out. As soon as I do, Diva begins barking and growling at me again.
“Mom,”
I say over the barking, “I’m going into the city to get my hair cut.”
My
mom glances up from the rose bush she’s pruning. “Okay, good luck.”
“All
the way to the city for a haircut?” my dad asks. “That sounds extreme.”
“I
want it to be chic,” I explain.
“They
can’t cut chic hair in the suburbs?”
“Dad,
I want it done in the city. So I’m going now,” I yell over Diva’s
yip-yap-yip-yapping. “See you later.” And with those words, I bolt out the door.
Luckily
traffic into the city isn’t bad, and I pull up to the valet stand with a few
minutes to spare. After I hand over my keys, I step inside the posh salon. It’s
all black and white and silver, with funky light fixtures hanging down from the
ceiling. I see Chicago’s elite drinking champagne and being fussed over by
stylists all dressed in black. The music is edgy sounding. Everything, in one
word, is incredibly hip.
Hip. That is who the new Bree
is going to be. Edgy and hip and ready to reclaim her life.
I
approach the receptionist, who appears just as bored in person as she sounded
on the phone. She is texting on her iPhone and only looks up after I clear my
throat.
“Hello,
I’m Bree. I have an appointment with Marcolo,” I say.
The
girl nods. She punches a button on her headset and speaks into her mic.
“Marcolo, your appointment is here.” She disconnects and shifts her attention
back to her iPhone, not even glancing at me. “He will be right up.”
Alrighty
then.
I
take a seat in a sleek black and chrome chair and restlessly tap my foot. I’m
excited about this. I haven’t deviated from my style much since college, and
this will give me just the boost of confidence I need to go out and attack the
advertising job front again.
I
see a young man with a bright pink Mohawk approaching me. He’s very tall—about
6’4—and rail thin. He is wearing all black, of course, and has piercings in his
nose. And tattoo sleeves.
Perfect, I think happily. He’s cool
and young and will totally be able to give me an awesome new hairstyle.
“Bree?”
he asks in a high-pitch feminine-sounding voice.
I
stand up and smile. “I’m Bree.”
“Hello,
I’m Marcolo,” he says, extending his hand. “Pleased to meet you, Bree. Come on
back.”
I
nod and follow Marcolo to his station. I slide
into the chair, and he lifts up my hair. “What can I do for you today?”
“I
need a change,” I say. In more ways than one. “I’m open to anything.”
“Ooooh,
I love that,” Marcolo says excitedly. “Tell me about yourself. Your interests,
what you do, so I can create a vision for you.”
Wow,
Marcolo is going to create a vision? I totally lucked out getting in to see him
today!
“Well,
I recently graduated from the University of Arizona,” I start out, meeting
Marcolo’s eyes in the mirror. “I want to work in advertising, as an account
representative.”
“Mmmmmmm,
what about your interests?” Marcolo says, playing with my hair.
“I
like being outside,” I say. “I like taking nature walks. I love good
conversations, whether over a glass of wine or a cup of coffee. I love shopping.
And I’m obsessed with the show Friends. I know every episode by heart.”
Marcolo
stops playing with my hair. “Interesting. Who is your favorite Friends
character?”
“Oh,
easy. Rachel. I love Rachel Green.”
Marcolo
spins the chair around, so I’m facing him. “I’m inspired. I have a
brilliant idea.”
Yes!
I’m going to look fabulous when he’s finished;
I can just tell.
“Really?”
I ask, smiling at him.
“Let’s
give you a modified Rachel cut.”
I
pause. “Do you mean The Rachel?” I say, referring to the haircut that
exploded during the 90’s when Friends came on the scene.
“Yes.
But with an edge.”
I
bite my lip. “But . . . that cut was popular a long time ago. I’m not
sure about all those layers.”
“This
is not going to be that cut,” Marcolo explains excitedly. “Fewer layers,
some bangs. It will be fresh and sexy.”
“I
don’t know.”
“Bree,
you said you wanted a change. I’m offering you something fresh and familiar at
the same time. What do you think?
Marcolo works at one of the
best salons in Chicago. He wouldn’t lead me wrong, right?
I
take a deep breath and nod excitedly. “Let’s do it. Give me the modern Rachel.”
And
with those words, I put my faith in Marcolo’s vision—and his scissors.
***
I
sit in my car and stare at my reflection in the mirror on the driver’s side
visor.
My
hair does not look like a fresh, modern, version of The Rachel.
It
looks exactly like The Rachel.
Which might be awesome if it were 1994.
But
it’s not.
Arrrrrrrrrrrgh!
Oh, but I don’t just have The Rachel. I have one with heavy bangs cut in,
Marcolo’s “modern” twist.
My
beautiful black hair is now in that infamous, choppy cut. Looking incredibly
old and dated. And the bangs make it extra hideous.
Why,
why, why, did I agree to this? Why?
I
slam my visor up. I hear a driver leaning on the horn behind me, so I need to
focus and move.
Anger
fills me as I think about my hideous new hair. New, hip, edgy woman, my ass!
If I were to slap a denim vest on over a floral dress, I’d be a perfect
specimen from the Central Perk set on Friends in the 90’s.
I
groan aloud. Of course, I want to work in “Image is everything” advertising.
Who the hell is going to hire me with this outdated haircut?
Hmmm,
let’s see . . . Nobody!
I
fume as I navigate my way toward the expressway. And not that I’m remotely
ready to think about dating, but no guy is going to ask me out with this shitty
hair either.
A bit of
my anger dissipates with that thought. I guess that’s a bonus. Maybe by the
time all these freaking layers have grown out, I’ll be ready to go on a date.
There
is more traffic on the way back, but I don’t care. I have no plans for tonight,
other than to sit around with hair clips and try to figure out if there is any
way to fix Marcolo’s disaster of a haircut. Oh, yes. And maybe I’ll get a
bottle of wine and down a few glasses. Along with a box of Girl Scout Thin Mint
cookies that my mother keeps stashed in the freezer. Crappy haircuts call for a
crappy dinner.
I
park in front of the garage, then I make my way up the front steps and thrust
the key into the lock. Diva is already growling and yipping at the door. Ah,
yes, the perfect ender to the evening. Diva will probably bark more now because
I look scary with this stupid outdated hair, too.
I
open the door, and before I know it, Diva shoots in between my legs and down
the steps, and across the lawn to the Cheltens’ house.
“Diva!”
I scream, taking off after her. “Diva, come back here!”
I
watch in horror as she runs up to the neighbor’s porch. A young man is coming
outside and stops when Diva moves straight toward him.
“Stop
her,” I plead.
The
guy goes to shut his door, but Diva shoots right past him—and into his house.
“Hey,
hey, come back here,” he says, heading
back inside after Diva.
I
sprint up the steps and bound into his house after him, only to find Diva
running around in circles around his living room.
“What
is wrong with her?” he asks.
“She’s
insane,” I cry. “Diva, stop!”
Diva
jumps on a chintz couch to avoid me. I
dive toward her, but she leaps down onto the floor and under a dark,
cherry-wood table. Now the guy is trying to catch her, but he misses as she
dodges around a white Queen Anne style chair to avoid his grasp. Finally, she
stops. And pees all over his hardwood floor, narrowly avoiding the floral rug
that is the centerpiece of the living room.
“Oh
no,” I gasp, my hand flying over my mouth. “I’m
so sorry!”
I
turn to the guy, who is gazing back at me. For a brief second, I’m distracted
from the disaster at hand. His dark-blue eyes flicker at me, and I stare back
into his face, one filled with freckles. It’s an interesting combination—the
reddish-brown hair, tousled with gel, the dark-blue eyes, and the freckled face . . .
Then
I realize I need to clean up after Diva.
“Please,
let me get some paper towels so I can blot it up,” I say in an embarrassed
rush. “Then I’ll take Diva home, and I’ll come back to clean the floor for
you.”
He’s
silent for a moment. I’m waiting for him to explode, but then he simply clears
his throat.
“So
is this,” he says, sweeping his arm out toward Diva and her puddle, “how you
planned to introduce yourself to me, Breanna Logan?”
About The Author
Aven Ellis has been writing fiction since she was sixteen. She studied communications at a large Midwestern university, and after graduation, Aven worked as a reporter for a community newspaper, followed by a stint at a public relations agency.
But writing about city council meetings and restaurant franchises was not as much fun as writing for young women trying to figure out their careers and potential boyfriends. So Aven got herself a job in television that allowed her to write at night. Connectivity is Aven’s debut novel; Waiting For Prince Harry and Chronicles of a Lincoln Park Fashionista (New Adult romantic comedy) will be published next year.
Aven lives in Dallas with her family. When she is not writing, Aven enjoys shopping, cooking, connecting with friends on social media, and watching any show that features Gordon Ramsay.
But writing about city council meetings and restaurant franchises was not as much fun as writing for young women trying to figure out their careers and potential boyfriends. So Aven got herself a job in television that allowed her to write at night. Connectivity is Aven’s debut novel; Waiting For Prince Harry and Chronicles of a Lincoln Park Fashionista (New Adult romantic comedy) will be published next year.
Aven lives in Dallas with her family. When she is not writing, Aven enjoys shopping, cooking, connecting with friends on social media, and watching any show that features Gordon Ramsay.
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