“I’ll have to check into that,” Muffy says stiffly. “But I can assure you, President Allington is very concerned about—”
“Not concerned enough, apparently,” Sarah goes on, loudly enough to drown Muffy out, and cause every microphone in the vicinity to swing back toward her. “He’s apparently willing to let students at his own college suffer through the last six weeks of their semester without assistant teaching instructors, security guards, and trash removal—”
“That’s not true!” Muffy cries shrilly. “President Allington is totally willing to negotiate! What he won’t be is held hostage by a group of radical leftist socialists!”
I know even before Sarah sucks in her breath that Muffy’s said exactly the wrong thing. The reporters have already lost interest—the networks have moved on to their mid-morning programming anyway, so they’ve begun to pack up their equipment. They’ll be back—maybe—for an update at noon.
But Sarah’s already rallying her troops.
“Did you hear that?” she roars at her fellow picketers. “The president’s spokesperson just called us a bunch of radical leftist socialists! Just because we want fair wages and a health care package! What do you have to say to that?”
There is some confused muttering, mostly because it seems to be so early in the morning, and no one really knows what they’re doing yet. Or possibly because no one heard Sarah properly, on account of all the noise from the news teams packing up. Sarah, apparently realizing this, jumps off the wooden platform she was standing on and heaves a megaphone to her lips.
“People,” she cries, her voice crackling loudly enough that, over in the chess circle, the old men enjoying their first game of the morning hunch their shoulders and glare resentfully over at us. “What do we want?”
The picketers, marching dolefully around the giant rat, reply, “Fair wages.”
“WHAT?” Sarah yells.
“FAIR WAGES,” the picketers reply.
“That’s more like it,” Sarah says. “And when do we want them?”
“NOW,” the picketers reply.
“Holy Christ,” Muffy says, looking at the picketers in a defeated way. I can’t help feeling a little sorry for her. The rat—which has painted-on drool dripping down from its bared, yellow fangs—does look really intimidating, as it sways gently in the soft spring breeze.
“Hang in there,” I say, patting her softly on the shoulder.
“This is because they arrested the kid,” she says, still staring at the rat. “Right?”
“I guess so,” I say.
“But he had a gun,” she says. “I mean… of course he did it. He had a gun.”
“I guess they don’t think so,” I say.
“I’m gonna get fired,” Muffy says. “They hired me to keep this from happening. And now I’m gonna get fired. And I’ve only had this job three weeks. I paid twenty grand in broker’s fees for my place, too. I sold my wedding china for it. I’ll never see that money again.”
I whistle, low and long. “Twenty grand. That must have been some wedding china.”
“Limoges,” Muffy says. “Banded. Eight-piece settings for twenty. Including finger bowls.”
“Man,” I say, appreciatively. Finger bowls. I don’t know if I’ve ever seen a finger bowl before. And what does banded mean? I think, dimly, that this is stuff I better start learning about if Tad and I are going to… you know.
This thought makes me feel a little nauseous. Maybe it’s just all that whipped cream on an empty stomach, though. Or the sight of that enormous rat.
That’s when I notice something that makes me forget about my upset stomach.
And that’s Magda, hurrying out of Fischer Hall in her pink smock, and inching her way across the street through the backed-up cabs and toward the picket line, carefully balancing a steaming mug of coffee in her hands…
… which she presents to a picketer in a gray New York College security guard’s uniform, who stops marching, lowers his The Future of Academia Is ON THE LINE sign, and beams at her appreciatively…
And whom I realize is none other that Pete.
Who is not behind his desk like he is supposed to be.
Instead, he is standing in the park. ON A PICKET LINE.
“Oh my God,” I race up to him, completely forgetting Muffy, to shout. “Are you insane? What are you doing here? Why aren’t you inside? Who’s manning the security desk?”
Pete looks down at me calmly from the mug of Fischer Hall’s finest he’s delicately blowing across.
“Good morning to you, too, Heather,” he says. “And how are you today?”
“I’m just peachy,” I yell. “Seriously. Who is manning your desk?”
“No one.” Magda is looking at me with strangely arched brows. Then I realize her brows aren’t arched on purpose. They’re just newly waxed. “I’ve been keeping an eye on it. Someone from the president’s office has been sniffing around. He says they’ll be sending some people from a private security firm over. I don’t know if that’s the best idea, though, Heather. I mean, someone from a private security firm isn’t going to know about the attendants, you know, for the specially a bled students in the handicapped accessible rooms? And how is someone from a private security firm going to know it’s not okay to let the kids sign in the delivery guys from Charlie Mom’s, or they’ll stick a menu under every single door in the entire building?”
I groan, remembering my conversation with Cooper from the day before. He’d been totally right. We were going to get mob-run security and custodial replacement staffs. I just knew it.
Then I blink at Magda. “Wait a minute—how come you aren’t striking?”
“We’re with a different union,” Magda explains. “Food services, as opposed to hotel and automotive.”
“Automotive?” I shake my head. “That makes no sense whatsoever. What’s an automotive union doing, letting academics into—”
“You!”
We all jump as Sarah’s voice—made ten times louder by the megaphone she’s speaking into—cuts into our conversation.
“Are you here to socializeor make socialchange?” Sarah demands of Pete.
“Not concerned enough, apparently,” Sarah goes on, loudly enough to drown Muffy out, and cause every microphone in the vicinity to swing back toward her. “He’s apparently willing to let students at his own college suffer through the last six weeks of their semester without assistant teaching instructors, security guards, and trash removal—”
“That’s not true!” Muffy cries shrilly. “President Allington is totally willing to negotiate! What he won’t be is held hostage by a group of radical leftist socialists!”
I know even before Sarah sucks in her breath that Muffy’s said exactly the wrong thing. The reporters have already lost interest—the networks have moved on to their mid-morning programming anyway, so they’ve begun to pack up their equipment. They’ll be back—maybe—for an update at noon.
But Sarah’s already rallying her troops.
“Did you hear that?” she roars at her fellow picketers. “The president’s spokesperson just called us a bunch of radical leftist socialists! Just because we want fair wages and a health care package! What do you have to say to that?”
There is some confused muttering, mostly because it seems to be so early in the morning, and no one really knows what they’re doing yet. Or possibly because no one heard Sarah properly, on account of all the noise from the news teams packing up. Sarah, apparently realizing this, jumps off the wooden platform she was standing on and heaves a megaphone to her lips.
“People,” she cries, her voice crackling loudly enough that, over in the chess circle, the old men enjoying their first game of the morning hunch their shoulders and glare resentfully over at us. “What do we want?”
The picketers, marching dolefully around the giant rat, reply, “Fair wages.”
“WHAT?” Sarah yells.
“FAIR WAGES,” the picketers reply.
“That’s more like it,” Sarah says. “And when do we want them?”
“NOW,” the picketers reply.
“Holy Christ,” Muffy says, looking at the picketers in a defeated way. I can’t help feeling a little sorry for her. The rat—which has painted-on drool dripping down from its bared, yellow fangs—does look really intimidating, as it sways gently in the soft spring breeze.
“Hang in there,” I say, patting her softly on the shoulder.
“This is because they arrested the kid,” she says, still staring at the rat. “Right?”
“I guess so,” I say.
“But he had a gun,” she says. “I mean… of course he did it. He had a gun.”
“I guess they don’t think so,” I say.
“I’m gonna get fired,” Muffy says. “They hired me to keep this from happening. And now I’m gonna get fired. And I’ve only had this job three weeks. I paid twenty grand in broker’s fees for my place, too. I sold my wedding china for it. I’ll never see that money again.”
I whistle, low and long. “Twenty grand. That must have been some wedding china.”
“Limoges,” Muffy says. “Banded. Eight-piece settings for twenty. Including finger bowls.”
“Man,” I say, appreciatively. Finger bowls. I don’t know if I’ve ever seen a finger bowl before. And what does banded mean? I think, dimly, that this is stuff I better start learning about if Tad and I are going to… you know.
This thought makes me feel a little nauseous. Maybe it’s just all that whipped cream on an empty stomach, though. Or the sight of that enormous rat.
That’s when I notice something that makes me forget about my upset stomach.
And that’s Magda, hurrying out of Fischer Hall in her pink smock, and inching her way across the street through the backed-up cabs and toward the picket line, carefully balancing a steaming mug of coffee in her hands…
… which she presents to a picketer in a gray New York College security guard’s uniform, who stops marching, lowers his The Future of Academia Is ON THE LINE sign, and beams at her appreciatively…
And whom I realize is none other that Pete.
Who is not behind his desk like he is supposed to be.
Instead, he is standing in the park. ON A PICKET LINE.
“Oh my God,” I race up to him, completely forgetting Muffy, to shout. “Are you insane? What are you doing here? Why aren’t you inside? Who’s manning the security desk?”
Pete looks down at me calmly from the mug of Fischer Hall’s finest he’s delicately blowing across.
“Good morning to you, too, Heather,” he says. “And how are you today?”
“I’m just peachy,” I yell. “Seriously. Who is manning your desk?”
“No one.” Magda is looking at me with strangely arched brows. Then I realize her brows aren’t arched on purpose. They’re just newly waxed. “I’ve been keeping an eye on it. Someone from the president’s office has been sniffing around. He says they’ll be sending some people from a private security firm over. I don’t know if that’s the best idea, though, Heather. I mean, someone from a private security firm isn’t going to know about the attendants, you know, for the specially a bled students in the handicapped accessible rooms? And how is someone from a private security firm going to know it’s not okay to let the kids sign in the delivery guys from Charlie Mom’s, or they’ll stick a menu under every single door in the entire building?”
I groan, remembering my conversation with Cooper from the day before. He’d been totally right. We were going to get mob-run security and custodial replacement staffs. I just knew it.
Then I blink at Magda. “Wait a minute—how come you aren’t striking?”
“We’re with a different union,” Magda explains. “Food services, as opposed to hotel and automotive.”
“Automotive?” I shake my head. “That makes no sense whatsoever. What’s an automotive union doing, letting academics into—”
“You!”
We all jump as Sarah’s voice—made ten times louder by the megaphone she’s speaking into—cuts into our conversation.
“Are you here to socializeor make socialchange?” Sarah demands of Pete.