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Chapter 62: [2.35] In Which I et the Unfortunate Cousin of Big Bird

I followed Felix’s Range Rover through midday traffic with the growing suspicion that I’d made a catastrophic error in judgnt. The kind that ranks sowhere between "letting Iris cook unsupervised" and "taking investnt advice from a Fortune cookie."

My phone pinged with another ssage from Felix:

"Don’t worry! This is going to be AMAZING! You’re about to experience FASHION, my dude!"

Those capital letters contained multitudes of terror.

We pulled into a parking garage in SoHo where the hourly rate cost more than dinner. Felix bounced out of his vehicle like a labrador that had just spotted a tennis ball, practically vibrating with excitent.

"Isaiah! My man! My guy! Are you ready for your glow-up?" He slapped my shoulder hard enough to make

reconsider our friendship.

"This isn’t a glow-up. It’s just clothes shopping."

"Not just clothes shopping. We’re talking transformation. tamorphosis. Rebirth!" Felix spread his arms toward the exit. "Out there, my friend, is the temple of style, and we have been granted unlimited access to its holy treasures!"

"It’s a credit card with soone else’s na on it."

"It’s a black card with no spending limit! Do you understand what that ans?"

"That I’m about to watch you try to bankrupt a billionaire family?"

"That we are unfettered by the constraints of re mortals!" Felix grabbed my arm and pulled

toward the elevator. "Co on, we’re burning daylight!"

I let myself be dragged into the elevator, then onto the street. SoHo on a Thursday afternoon was what I imagined a Paris runway might look like if everyone was pretending they weren’t on a runway. Beautiful people walked past storefronts that seed to display exactly three items each, their faces all wearing the sa expression – like they were perpetually slling sothing unpleasant but were too polite to ntion it.

"This," I said, "is where money cos to die."

Felix ignored , pointing excitedly at storefronts. "Look at that! Balenciaga just dropped their new collection. And over there – that’s the new Com des Gar??ons pop-up! Oh! And that’s—"

"Felix."

"What?"

"I need professional clothes. For business etings. With adults. Not whatever that mannequin is wearing."

The mannequin in question was dressed in what appeared to be a toga made from aluminum foil, paired with platform shoes that would require an oxygen tank to safely navigate.

"You need to make an impression! These are fashion people! They’ll judge you if you look boring."

"They’ll judge

anyway. I’d rather be judged for looking normal than for looking like I’m auditioning for a sci-fi movie."

Felix sighed dramatically. "Fine. We’ll start with sothing more... conservative." He grabbed my arm again and pulled

toward a store with a single jacket displayed in the window. No price tag. Bad sign.

Inside, the boutique was aggressively minimal. White walls. Concrete floor. Five shirts hanging on a rack like they were afraid to touch each other. A salesperson with hair cut at angles that shouldn’t exist in Euclidean geotry looked up from their phone and assessed

in less than a second.

I could read the verdict in their eyes: Scholarship case. Probably touched the display items with dirty fingers. Will ask about sales.

Felix, anwhile, was greeted like a returning hero.

"Felix! Darling!" The salesperson air-kissed sowhere near Felix’s face. "We haven’t seen you in ages!"

"Margot! Divine as always. I’m on a mission today. My friend here," he gestured at

like I was a stray he’d found, "needs a complete wardrobe overhaul."

Margot’s smile didn’t waver, but their eyes perford another scan, this ti with slightly more interest. The black card I was holding probably upgraded

from "security threat" to "potential commission."

"Of course. What sort of look are we going for?"

Felix didn’t hesitate. "Avant-garde professional. Edgy but refined. He works for the Valentine family."

Margot’s eyebrows shot up so fast I thought they might achieve orbit. "Valentine? As in Camille Valentine?"

"The very sa," Felix said, clearly enjoying their reaction.

"I’ll bring out our designer collection imdiately."

As Margot disappeared into the back, I turned to Felix. "What exactly does ’avant-garde professional’ an?"

"It ans you’ll look rich, but in an interesting way."

"I don’t want to look interesting. I want to look competent."

"Sa thing in fashion."

Margot returned with what could only be described as the physical manifestation of a bad decision. They held up a shirt – if you could call it that. It had what appeared to be three extra sleeves dangling from random locations, an asymtrical hem, and was constructed from a material that looked suspiciously like an upscale trash bag.

"This just arrived yesterday," Margot said reverently. "One of only fifty made worldwide."

Felix gasped. "It’s perfect. The Valentines will love this."

I stared at the garnt, wondering if this was so elaborate practical joke. "It looks like sothing a cult leader would wear before the Kool-Aid cos out."

Felix rolled his eyes. "That’s the point. It’s a statent."

"The statent is ’I have more money than sense.’"

Margot’s smile tightened. "Perhaps sir would prefer sothing more... conventional?"

The way they said "conventional" made it sound like "pedestrian" or possibly "tragically basic."

"Sir would prefer sothing that doesn’t require an instruction manual to put on," I replied.

The next hour was a blur of increasingly terrible options. Felix pulled

from store to store like we were on so kind of luxury scavenger hunt. Each location featured its own uniquely terrible items, all presented with the reverence normally reserved for religious relics.

In a high-end footwear boutique, Felix held up a pair of bright yellow loafers made from what I could only assu was the skin of Big Bird’s unfortunate cousin.

"Italian. Hand-stitched crocodile. Limited edition."

I peered at them. "They look like I skinned two cartoon characters and put them on my feet."

The saleswoman helping us coughed to cover a laugh.

At a designer knitwear shop, Felix presented

with a sweater that appeared to have lost a fight with a lawn mower.

"Vintage-inspired. It’s about deconstruction." He ran his hand over the fabric like he was showing

a Rembrandt. "Feel the quality."

"My sister has clothes in better condition that she uses for painting."

By the ti we reached the denim store, my patience had reached its limit. Felix pulled out a pair of jeans that were pre-ripped in places that made no logical sense, covered in what looked like intentional coffee stains, and cost eight hundred dollars.

I stared at them, then at Felix, then back at the jeans. Without a word, I turned and walked straight out of the store.

Felix followed

onto the sidewalk. "Dude! What’s your problem? It’s not even your money! Just buy sothing!"

I stopped and turned to face him. "I can’t."

"What do you an you can’t? You have the card!"

"I an my hand physically will not let

give soone a credit card for a shirt that costs more than my monthly rent. It’s not about being difficult. It’s a psychological block. My brain refuses to process that this is real."

"But it’s not YOUR money!"

"That makes it worse! I’m supposed to be responsible with soone else’s money!"

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