1
Taylor cracked the seal on the bottle of Redbreast 12 Year that he'd bought for just this occasion. He held the bottle aloft as he twisted the cork free. A new town, a new place, a new job. Relief, heavy and pure, melted over him.
Taylor swirled the whiskey in a glass he'd bought just for swirling whiskey, and sipped deeply, gagging momentarily at the unmistakable taste of nail polish remover. A handful of ice was added on top, and Taylor blinked the fresh inklings of moisture from his eyes. He sipped gently, and breathed in the smell of fresh air and cardboard boxes. It smelled like freedom. The walls were still bare and gray, the boxes along the walls still unpacked, the furniture still en route. But, with the light shining in above the river outside, and the cold drink in his hand, it was feeling pretty damn peaceful.
And the quiet. My God, the quiet, he thought.
After his childhood home, then university, and then back with his mother in the townhouse, this was absolute bliss, Taylor decided. Absolute bliss.
The sun was fully gone by the time he started looking for dinner, his eyes flickering up and down the screen of his phone as the options scrolled by. D.C. had a hell of a lot more to pick from than Dansville, NY, where his father had kept the family stashed away for nine months out of the year (valiantly protecting them from the press, "so they could live a life of normalcy").
...And to keep his mistresses and wife as far apart as he could, without suffering through too long of a flight back home.
Taylor swirled the dwindling ice cubes around in his glass, gulped down the last of it, and set it aside. It would be easy to be bitter and cynical, he knew. His friends from college had also grown up with some wealth, and they had all run with that idea. To be angsty young men growing up in their fathers' shadow, to bear the burden of expectations and privilege, to have nothing required of you, and no attention paid... The call to whine a lot about it was understandable, but it had never quite interested him. There were too many exciting avenues left to explore. He was too busy. His father had his life, Taylor had his. Even his mother, he supposed, might have her own things to be caught up in. It all worked rather well for all of them.
Exactly one pad Thai and two more drinks later, his mind was gently twirling, and he collapsed onto his boyhood mattress, which lay unceremoniously and unevenly on the hardwood floor of what would be his new bedroom. Stars shone down through high, wide windows above him.
For the first time in a very long time, the weight of the world slipped gently from his shoulders, and he fell right to sleep.
2
"This is your office here. You'll be sharing it with Dave, Karen, and... Damiqua?" the man attempted, nodding at three young people they had found huddled together in the small back room. A small, darker woman cocked her head in confusion, but the tour continued onward before she could respond.
"You'll have a chance to swing back in here before lunch," his new employer said, shutting the intern's office door behind them, "but we're gonna be throwing you into the thick of it after that. You up for it?"
"Yes, sir," Taylor threw back promptly, instinct forcing a smile. His guide hadn't introduced himself yet, or asked Taylor for his name, but the man had been waiting at the entrance for him, and presumably he knew what he was about.
He was an older, balding man, quite short, and quite overweight, but he had a friendly enough face. He made the effort of eye contact and made sure Taylor was actually following along with his explanations, which was more than he had come to expect from a low-level job like this. Copy rooms were pointed out, a supply room was explored and pillaged, lunch was secured in the appropriate fridge.
"You'll be happy to know you won't be fetching any coffee, or anything like that. We have food services for that. No printing, or copying either, we can manage that ourselves. In short -nothing an intern might have done in my day." The guide grunted and wiped the sweat from his brow as he pulled open another heavy, wooden door, Taylor nodding along behind him. "And now we're right back to the start, with your office down the hall, and mine beside us," he said flicking a finger from one side of the hall to the other.
Taylor glanced at the name placard on the door. "David Kosslings" was embedded in a plastic plaque. He willed his brain to remember it, but felt it slipping away already.
"Before you go to lunch, just make sure you can get signed into your laptop. If not, one of the other interns will take a look with you, or find me. For now, though, I need you on my laptop, so I can show you how this all works, and what I'll need you to start on. Ready?"
Taylor was ready with another "Yes, sir," and then they were off.
And then immediately delayed, as his new boss took one phone call for a full fifteen minutes, and then a second as Taylor stood awkwardly in the corner, waiting to begin, and too anxious to do anything but wait.
The program and the task sounded straightforward. His boss, clearly, was uncomfortable with the technology, and adamant that they walk through each case together. It bordered on painful, to watch fingers struggle slowly to find the right place, to watch his boss -David (?), be somehow less familiar with the system than he was. But after a full two hours of demonstrations, Taylor was able to dash back into his office to begin in earnest.
The other interns shots their heads up as he entered, cellphones hovering beneath their desks, with their screens blinking off. They relaxed quickly when they saw who it was. He waved a hand in greeting.
"It's not Damiqua, is it?" he asked. The woman in the corner shook her head gravely. "It's Monica."
The rest of the day went quickly. The work was finished before lunch, but Kosslings had no time to meet with him again, so instead he finished the day by playing on his phone and waiting for the door to open. If the others were as bored as he was, they hid it better. They kept their heads down and their brows furrowed, occasionally sprinting out the door to disappear and reappear looking even more concerned.
"You ready?" the others asked, just before six P.M., as they shouldered their bags in unison and made their way to the exit. It was the most they had spoken to each other since lunch, which they'd spent huddled over their computers, coordinating some higher project they'd apparently been pulled into, nibbling cold sandwiches in-between. The others nodded and finished tapping out the last of whatever they were working on. Taylor followed closely behind. The day hadn't exactly been exciting, but it had gone by quickly, at least.
"So, how did you get by today?" Monica asked, as they started down the hallway.
"They, uh, didn't give me much to work on..." Taylor started, trailing off as he spotted Kosslings' bald patch through the window to the man's office. He looked busy, typing away as he cradled a phone against his shoulder.
Don't look up, don't look up...
Kosslings' eyes flickered up to meet his as they passed. Then, with a plummeting feeling in his stomach, Taylor saw a single index finger raise upward. Wait, the gesture meant. The others waved, and Taylor waited behind.
Time stretched on indefinitely. His eyes glazed, starring into nothingness. The internet had long since run out of interesting content to explore. Nothing remained but the wait. The fact that he wasn't even hourly hovered over him like a rain cloud. "I want to go home and assemble my dresser" was the only coherent thought he could cling to. The longer he waited, the more certain he was that he had been forgotten, and that his boss long ago left him behind. After a time, none of these thoughts could even stir his anger Only boredom existed now.
The door knob clacked and the door swung open, catching him off guard as he laid his head against the table. He jerked upright, blinking his eyes back awake.