|
There was
a palpable sense of tension when Sacha pushed open the door of the
magazine's office the next week and ascended the staircase. She
was once again facing off against the deadline for her weekly column;
yet the tension in the room when she climbed out of the dark stairwell
and into the spilling light of the office above it was something
else: something external.
Where normally
there would be a hushed buzz in the room, occasionally broken by
somebody's raised voice, now there was only the hush: the quiet
tapping of computer keys and the humming of the machines themselves.
Sacha scanned the room for Rona: she didn't yet know anybody else
there well enough to approach them unannounced. She saw Rona hunched
behind a laptop near the centre of the room.
"What's
up?" she asked.
"I'm
still pissed off about that dickhead for standing me up last week"
explained Rona.
"Oh,
I see." It wasn't actually a response to the question Sacha
thought she was asking, but now she realised why everybody else
there was so quiet: Rona had them all under the thumb at the best
of times, so now that she was in a bad mood it must have been enough
to make some of the magazine's regular writers almost fear for their
safety. Sacha glanced around the room again, to confirm this, but
nobody met her eye: those few people who were in the office had
their heads down, buried in their work. She supposed that was confirmation
enough.
She tactfully
left Rona alone and walked over to a table near the doorway where
the booking sheets for the computers were kept: the next free slot
was in half an hour; she put her name down and then sat down on
an old sofa that somebody had scavenged during hard-rubbish week
long before Sacha had arrived at the magazine. The sofa was angular
and uncomfortable, with too many soft spots in some areas and not
enough in others; but it was all there was, so she couldn't really
afford to be picky.
Likewise
with how she entertained herself while she waited for the computer
to become free: Rona clearly wasn't in a mood to be conversed with,
so Sacha resigned herself to picking distastefully through the old
magazines stacked up on the table in front of the sofa. It was like
being in a doctor's waiting-room - and she made a mental note to
herself that that was yet another thing she had to do now that she
was no longer living at home: find a good doctor.
As she
leafed through the glossy magazine, which was more ads than content,
she took an obstinate pride in the fact that she didn't know who
any of the people mentioned in it were. This was no exaggeration
either: literally none of the names were familiar. She would be
the first to admit that her celebrity knowledge was low to non-existent,
but even so she thought she should at least be able to recognise
some of the names. But the magazine she was half-heartedly
glancing at was strangely devoid of any of the "big names".
It mystified her: perhaps they hadn't been doing anything interesting
in the past month. But when did they ever?
She noticed
that somebody had gone through the magazine with a black biro and
written neatly at the bottom of a number of the photos the word
"Photoshopped." She squinted at the photos, but even with
her glasses her eyes weren't trained enough to recognise which images
had been altered and which hadn't. At least now she knew what was
meant by the piece of graffiti on the bathroom wall which read:
"Who is the Photoshop bandit?" Or she thought she knew,
but she couldn't really be sure. Sometimes she got the feeling -
and writing a column about blogs, of all things, only reinforced
it - that great swathes of contemporary popular culture had passed
her by. But then, when she flicked through the magazine, she realised
that this wasn't something she felt especially concerned about.
She dropped
the magazine wearily back on the table. Just reading it was enough
to make her feel like she had some kind of parasite in her brain.
But there was nothing else to look at: it was still twenty minutes
until the computer was due to be hers, and that was assuming the
written schedule would be adhered to. Gazing with boredom at the
stack of magazine in front of her she noticed a corner of paper
sticking out from beneath the pile. With curiosity she moved aside
the magazines - they were surprisingly heavy - to reveal the paper.
It was an A4 sheet, marked by at least half a dozen different pens
and hands, and across the top, in neat block capitals, was written:
"WORD ON THE STREET: STAFF BIRTHDAYS." She looked
at it with surprise: nobody had told her about this list, and it
looked like it had been buried beneath the magazines for some time.
At the top of the sheet was the date of Rona's birthday.
|