When We're Thirty Casey Dembowski (the chimp paradox .TXT) đ
- Author: Casey Dembowski
Book online «When We're Thirty Casey Dembowski (the chimp paradox .TXT) đ». Author Casey Dembowski
âWhatâs up?â Hannah asked, smiling up at Riley.
âYou wanted to talk to me before I left for the day?â Riley said, bouncing between feet.
Fuck. This was not what she needed on top of everything else. âOh, right, yes.â
âGreat, I just have to pee... again. So meet me in my office.â
Once Riley was out of sight, Hannah made her way over to her bossâs office and took a seat on the couch. She flipped through a tattered copy of an old Spin edition on the tableâRileyâs husbandâs first coverâbut she couldnât focus. Instead, she leaned back and counted the cracks in the ceiling, trying to piece together what she had to say. Any way she phrased it, this was not going to be a fun conversation.
A few minutes and twenty-three ceiling cracks later, Riley ambledâwaddled, when out of earshotâinto the office. She patted her stomach, saying something quietly to the growing baby inside before easing herself into the oversized armchair sheâd forced her husband to drag up four flights of stairs during her first pregnancy. Hannah had been an intern then, just out of graduate school, and one of only three staffers at the yet-to-publish-an-issue Deafening Silence New York, the offspring of the small but well-loved Los Angelesâbased Deafening Silence.
That had been five years agoâfive years of New Yorkâs finest indie music scene. Since then, the staff had bumped up to ten. Hannah had gone from intern to staff writer to columnist, finally settling in as the Long Island section editor last year. It wasnât the most glamorous gig, but she had gotten to interview bands like Taking Back Sunday, Brand New, and Nine Daysânot that anyone remembered who they were until she sang the chorus of their single. It was a lot of growth for five years, and editor by thirty was nothing to frown at. Still, Hannah felt the itch for bigger things, better bands, and a salary that did more than keep the electricity on.
âWhat is it this time? Did Henry pitch the Halloween feature on the Amityville House again? Did Anita spell âHauppaugeâ wrong for the thousandth time?â Riley rolled her eyes, but her tone was endearing. âDo you need another intern?â
On any other day, these topics wouldâve sent Hannah straight to Rileyâs office. âNo, the team is fine. Iâm actually... well, Iâm checking in on what we talked about a few months ago.â
She didnât have to look up to know that Riley was wringing her hands. Her boss had done it the entire conversation last time while making promises they both knew she couldnât keep, both of them agreeing to believe the lie. Until today.
âNothingâs changed. The management team in LA is focused on starting editions in other regions, but we donât have the investors. Without investors, we canât expand to Boston, Chicago, Austin. And without expansion, we have no money.â
âWithout money, you canât fund health insurance.â Hannah sighed. Theyâd been talking in circles for a year. âI know all this, but itâs been two years already. Do you know how much I pay for the barest of minimum plans right now? If anything happened, I would be in serious trouble.â
âI know, Hannah. And I know I promised you I would do everything I could when we made you editor to get you insurance, but the higher-ups are just not... itâs not in the plan for at least the next year. Boston is their priority right now.â
A year. That meant another year of downing vitamin C at the first sign of sniffles, fearing that every ache would turn into something requiring medication, and forcing her knee into compliance with RICE.
When sheâd quit Starbucks two years ago to take on the more demanding columnist position, sheâd not only lost the extra income but the health insurance to go with it. As a staff writer, she hadnât needed to keep a second job, but Starbucks had kept her insured and supplied her with free coffee. It had also given her a built-in space to conduct interviews. But as a columnist, she couldnât manage both. Sheâd been on the cusp of leaving Deafening Silenceâeven going as far as to polish and preen her resume and collect writing samplesâwhen the editor position had come along last year. The pay increase had also helped convince her to stay despite the lack of benefits. She hadnât planned for a car accident and a bum knee.
âHow do they expect to hire a team in Boston without a competitive benefits package?â If things werenât so dire, Hannah would have rolled her eyes at herself. Competitive benefits package?
âTheyâll bring in people from the other editions, take on interns and freelancers,â Riley said, still wringing her hands, âjust like we did when we came to New York.â
âYou canât build a magazine on interns.â
Riley smirked. âBut we did, didnât we?â
The compliment warmed Hannah, even though she knew it wasnât the whole truth. Yes, sheâd done way more than any normal intern would have been expected to. Riley had thrown her into the Warped Tour press tent in her first week with a simple âHave fun. Donât act starstruck.â It had only gotten crazier from there.
âDeafening Silence wasnât built on me.â
âNo, not entirely. But without you, well... I probably wouldâve left a long time ago.â Riley sighed, and Hannah finally looked up. The tears sheâd heard in Rileyâs voice were real. Riley moved her hands to the right of her belly where she could feel the baby best. âWhich is why I shouldâve said this to you two years agoâwe canât give you what you need. If you have to leave, I can make some calls.â
She meant it. Hannah knew Riley, and though Riley didnât want to see her leave, she would help Hannah go. Deafening Silence New York
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