During high school and over breaks, I’ve always worked at my dad’s office (he’s a financial
advisor).
Every morning, he has his assistant email me a list of things to do. It was mostly
numbing, mindless work, but from that extreme mindlessness came some of my best ideas. I’d
zone out and plot stories in my head while inputting financial stats for hours. The thing is, I don’t
want to zone out here. I want to zone in.
I love the cool, modern office environment. Indie, alternative music plays lightly from Spotify
on an unmanned computer at the editing station in the center of the room. The editing station is a
group of five big Mac desktops grouped together. The cute, young male employee I noticed during
the tour works over there. He’s pale and skinny, with square black-rimmed glasses and curly
brown hair. I remember his name: Declan. Then there’s the pretty brown-skinned lady with long,
flowing locks who works at a desk adjacent to the editing bay: Donna. And across from her desk is
I
think the oldest man in here, George. He’s got pasty skin, round black-rimmed glasses, and a
receding hairline. Across the room are two other desks positioned back to back. One is Janet’s, a
petite black woman with cool red glasses and voluminous shoulder-length bronze curls, and the
other is Jamie’s: a posh,
fake-tanned, might be in her forties, intimidating, tall woman with
bleached, straight hair and bangs.
The boss, Wendy, stops by at the music computer every once in a while to switch up the tunes
before returning to her office. This morning, she announced that she loved Neon Trees, and we’ve
been listening to their music all day. Now I like them too.
At 3:30 p.m., Tracey finally comes over to my table with a task. I straighten excitedly as she
hands me a Post-it. It’s a grocery list. She wants me to pick up some groceries down at the
supermarket near Covent Garden.
It’s not magazine-related in the slightest, but I happily get the groceries, eager to be helpful.
When I return, Tracy tells me to search the internet for a creative-looking coatrack for the office. I
spend the rest of the afternoon gathering links to weird coatracks
and emailing them over to
Tracey. At 5:00 p.m., she gives me a bag full of packages and tells me I can go home after
dropping them off at the post office.
My shoulders slump as I thump down the stairs and out the door. That was not what I expected.
I felt more like a burden that no one knew what to do with today than any sort of assistant. On the
trek home, I try not to be disappointed. This was just the first day.
“I love my office!” Babe exclaims, as she drops a bag of food onto the kitchen table. “It’s covered
in Disney-themed things. Everyone has little Disney stuffed animals on their desk. Oh Mylanta,
it’s amazing!” The entire flat has congregated in the kitchen to discuss their first days at work. I
just finished up the shawarma I picked up on the way home; it’s not Shwednesday, but I was
craving it.
“I have to go back in to work in an hour,” Atticus calls from the couch. He’s typing away on
his laptop.
Atticus is always moving, juggling, multitasking.
“I ran errands all day: food, dry cleaning, groceries.” Sahra sighs as she puts a pot of water on
the stove.
“Yeah, I did data input on a computer,” Pilot adds as he unwraps a Byron burger.
“I researched artistic coatracks for a good two hours,” I tell everyone. I glance over at Pilot
sitting two seats away at the end of the table. He doesn’t meet my eyes.
“Coatracks?” Babe asks in disbelief.
I twist to look at her. “Yep, I really got an inside look at how a magazine is made.” Babe
laughs.
“Sahra and I have decided we’re hitting a club in Soho this Friday. You guys want to join?”
Atticus asks.
“I’m
staying in this weekend,” Babe answers.
“What about you?” Sahra points her wooden spoon at me.