The Fixer: New Wave Newsroom

The Fixer
New Wave Newsroom
Jenny Holiday
Contents

T
his book is
a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

Copyright © 2016 by Jenny Holiday. All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce, distribute, or transmit in any form or by any means. For information regarding subsidiary rights, please contact the Author.

The Fixer originally appeared in
'80s Mix Tape
, an anthology published by Pink Kayak Press.

Edited by Gwen Hayes. Copy edited by Polly Watson. Formatting and cover design by Zack Taylor. Cover photo by alla_iatsun via Deposit Photos.

First edition, September 13, 2016

ISBN 978-0-9950927-1-6

F
or ZT
, former college newspaper editor, current everything.

Chapter One

S
pring
1983

Jenny

I am going to save the art building.

I am going to save the art building.

I am going to save the art building.

I let the words become a mantra, encouraging them to spiral through my mind, hoping that if I whispered them enough times as I trudged across campus to the newspaper office, I might actually be able to do it.

Because God knew, the art building wasn't going to save itself.

You know what else wasn't going to save the art building? An impassioned series of editorials in the student newspaper. Oh, those meticulously researched arguments delving into the history of the Gothic Revival beauty that had housed Allenhurst College's budding artists for more than a hundred years! It killed me, but they weren't working.

It wasn't like I was so idealistic and/or naïve that I thought I could single-handedly make the administration reverse its demolition decision with the power of my words. But I had kind of thought that the articles would bring the issue to the forefront of campus politics. Maybe just enough that people would come to the sit-in I had organized in the president's office last week.

Nope. It had been just me and my roommate Vanessa and a handful of the
Allenhurst
Examiner
staff who, frankly, were jockeying for the editor-in-chief job that would fall vacant when I graduated this spring. We tried to take up a lot of space in the president's suite of offices, but mostly his staff just walked awkwardly around us until someone called the campus cops and Officer Artie talked me into closing up shop. “Come on, Jenny,” he'd said. (Officer Artie knew me well.) “You can't save everything.” (But obviously not well enough.)

So, okay. It was time for Plan B.

I just didn't know what that was yet.

“Morning, you guys,” I said as I dumped my stuff on my desk in the newsroom. We had an editorial meeting this morning, so pretty much everyone was in.

Vanessa, the production coordinator—and my roommate—flashed me a tired smile from the large worktable in the center of the space. The paper came out twice a week, and Nessa was in charge of the pasteups. That meant late nights before we went to press for our Tuesday and Thursday editions.

Occasionally, she pulled all-nighters in the office, though in my two years as editor, I had made it a mission to streamline operations so that everything was more predictable. You couldn't control the news, of course, but processes could always be tweaked and made more efficient. There was always room for improvement. The Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism wasn't just looking for good writers: they were looking for people with vision to lead newsrooms.

So when Vanessa called last night to say she wouldn't be coming back to our room because the mechanicals had arrived late, I only pretended to believe her. If she really had been working on pasteups late into the night, we both knew I would have been there with her.

Which meant we both knew she had spent the night with her loser boyfriend, Royce. It almost made me shudder. But, hey, as Nessa had pointed out several times in recent (increasingly tense) weeks, I was not her mother.

If only the college administration would turn its attention to getting rid of Royce Waldorf with the same vehemence with which it was attempting to destroy the art building. Unlike Royce Waldorf, the art building had never done anything to hurt anyone.

But one cause at a time.

I shed my jacket and moved over to the dusty blackboard on which my section editors had already scrawled their proposed lineups for next Tuesday's paper.

“What's this?” I said, trying to keep my tone casual as I pointed at an item that said, “Editorial: National Drinking Age Act—anti.”

No one answered. No one met my eye.

“Seriously? You're proposing an editorial defending the rights of teenagers to drink?” I wasn't a Pollyanna—at least not a
total
Pollyanna—but really? That's what they thought was important?

“It's not about drinking, Jen,” said Beth, a freshman reporter who was pretty much my smartest staff member. I respected the heck out of her despite her relative inexperience. “It's about civil liberties, the nanny state.”

No one else said anything, but I knew what they were thinking. We'd already devoted three editorials to the art building. That was a lot of real estate for one topic. But if I could save the building with the newspaper, my chances of getting into Columbia for grad school would skyrocket. Heck, they'd probably give me a prestigious fellowship.

But, I reminded myself, great editors didn't use their papers to further their own agendas. And the drinking-age editorial was topical and just controversial enough that it would get people talking. I sighed, the fight leaving me. “All right.”

“Maybe we can think of something else for the art building,” Nessa, ever the people pleaser, said. “An editorial cartoon, maybe?”

“Or maybe you need to think outside the confines of campus,” our photographer, Tony, suggested. “Are there any celebrities you could get on board with your cause?”

It wasn't a bad idea. “Are there any alumni who have gone on to be successful artists?” I wondered aloud.

“Emmanuel Curry,” said Tony, who was minoring in art.

“Never heard of him. But that doesn't mean anything. I'm not much into art.”

“Just art
buildings
,” Nessa teased. “I've heard of Emmanuel Curry. I saw some of his stuff at the Met last summer when I was in New York.”

I
had
heard of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Hmm.

“Well, good luck with Curry,” said Dawn, our gossip columnist and occasional entertainment writer. “He supposedly never does media. I've been trying to get him to agree to a profile for the entire time I've been on staff.”

All eyes swung to Dawn, whose column was our most popular offering, much to my chagrin. She'd built kind of a cult brand on campus with Dish with Dawn. I was surprised to learn that she'd been chasing someone like Curry for a serious profile. But maybe I shouldn't have been, because her social connections had yielded a huge story for us last year, when she'd reported on a football player who date-raped a bunch of freshman girls.

“Anyway,” she went on, filing her nails and oblivious to the collective bewilderment in the room, “he never replies to my letters, and his agent keeps saying no.” She stared into space and sighed. “It would be so gnarly if we could just get him. You always see him in those nightlife pictures at Danceteria with Madonna and New Order and stuff.” She sniffed. “Though I have to say, he dresses atrociously.”

Ah, that made more sense. The fact that Curry was hanging out with Madonna explained Dawn's interest in him.

“What about that Matthew Townsend kid?” Tony said. “They say he's some kind of prodigy. Like, the art department is losing their shit over him, he's supposedly such a phenom. Dawn is right about Curry—he has a reputation for being standoffish—but somehow the art department managed to get him to agree to mentor Townsend. All the majors have to have a mentor to advise them on their senior portfolio.”

“Matthew Townsend.” I let the name roll off my tongue slowly, considering.

A “prodigy” art major with a pipeline to a famous alum?

I had found Plan B.

Matthew

There were two more messages taped to my door when I got back early that morning.

“Jenny Fields—867-5309,” said the first one.

The second: “Call Jenny. IMPORTANT. 867-5309.”

This chick didn't know how to take a hint, apparently. She'd called yesterday, too. Jenny, whoever she was, could eat my shorts. If it wasn't Curry or the registrar's office calling about a bounced tuition check or some shit, I didn't want to talk. Not that I
wanted
to talk to Curry or the registrar's office. But they were necessary evils, and so for them—and only them—I would drag my ass to the pay phone in the common room. I didn't have time to dick around. I had four courses and a job, which wasn't anything new. But this semester I also had a senior portfolio I seemed maddeningly incapable of producing to Curry's ridiculous standards—and I wasn't going to graduate without it.

So, yeah, unlike the rest of the rich dweebs at this school, I could not afford to waste time chatting on the phone.

So then why the fuck had I gone out again last night? Did I
want
to flunk out? To spend the rest of my life flipping burgers? Was eighteen hours a week for the past three-plus years not enough burger flipping to last a lifetime?

I dumped my backpack on my bed, and the remorse came flooding in as it always did once I was back in my room. My shame was never strong enough to deter me, though. Even as I wallowed in it, letting it sink its persistent claws into my exhausted limbs, I unzipped my portfolio and removed last night's stencil—of Ronald Reagan wearing Mickey Mouse ears—and slid it behind my dresser to keep it safe and out of sight.

I knew I would be back out there. Not tonight. Not even tomorrow night. But within a week, guaranteed.

I upended my backpack so I could refill it with the books and supplies I would need for classes and studio time today. Sorting through the pile of aerosol paint cans, I stashed the ones that were still good in the bottom of my closet. The two I'd used up, I stuffed into a garbage bag so I could throw them out in the Dumpster at work.

Then I crumpled up Jenny's phone messages and chucked those in too.

I
smelled
the pizza before I saw her. My stomach lurched when I caught a whiff of the garlicky, cheesy goodness. I hadn't eaten since last night's graffiti run, which was partly a function of my insane Tuesday schedule and partly a function of my broke-assedness. I had a shift behind the deep fryer at work tonight, though, and I'd be able to eat my fill then.

That's what I'd told myself, anyway. But then this girl appeared in the studio with a pizza box, waltzing right in like she owned the place. I was pretty sure she wasn't an art student. The art girls tended to sport more extreme looks, most of them somewhere on the spectrum between flirting-with-Goth and Bride of Frankenstein. The pizza fairy, though, with her teal-and-lemon-yellow-striped sweater and a huge, floppy, sparkly teal bow in her shoulder-length brown hair, looked like she'd been barfed up by Rainbow Brite.

“I thought you might be hungry,” my unnaturally perky visitor said.

I didn't say anything, just tried to figure out what the hell she was doing in my studio as I looked her up and down. She was wearing a pair of translucent teal plastic shoes. Who knew there was so much teal in the world?

“I'm Jenny. Jenny Fields.”

I raised an eyebrow.

“The editor of the
Allenhurst Examiner
?” she added, like I was supposed to know what that was. “The college newspaper?”

“Congratulations.” I turned back to my easel, hoping she would take the hint, but my stomach chose that moment to growl so loudly it made her laugh. I'd been penny-pinching even more than usual this semester, trying to skim a little off every financial aid check to save enough for a deposit on a place in Boston after graduation.

“I knew you were hungry! I've been waiting in the hall for you to come out for two hours. So I thought to myself, if he's been working all this time, he must be hungry.” She popped open the pizza box, and I almost groaned as she plopped it down on the table that held my supplies.

“What are you painting?”

I tried to move my body to block the easel but, man, she was fast.

“A telephone?” she said, squinting at the watercolor I had under way. Curry assigned me an exercise every week, and this one was to choose a mundane object and render it in every medium: oil, watercolor, acrylic, charcoal, pastels, yada, yada, yada. The cord in this version was giving me trouble, and it looked terrible. “And here I thought if you were working in here so diligently for so long hours, you were probably painting your own
Guernica
.”

I said nothing.

She sat down.

Well, hell. If I couldn't eject this ridiculous person, I was going to have a slice of her pizza. She'd ordered pepperoni, peppers, and onions, which, strangely, was my favorite. My stomach growled as I picked up a piece. “Unnhh.” I couldn't help closing my eyes against the wickedly good taste of that first bite.

She cleared her throat.

“So what can I do for you, Rainbow Brite?”

“Jenny. My name is Jenny.”

I nodded, folded my second slice of pizza in half, and shoved it in my mouth.

“I'm trying to save this building,” she said, looking around the run-down studio. When I didn't say anything, just kept eating, she added, “You've probably seen the editorials in the paper?”

“Nope.”

“Or maybe you heard about the sit-in we staged?”

I shook my head.

She opened her mouth, then shut it again, as if she'd thought better about what she'd been planning to say. Her forehead furrowed so deeply above her light brown eyes that she almost looked like a cartoon. Befuddlement was actually kind of cute on her. I would have laughed if my mouth hadn't been full.

“Well, anyway, I'm trying to get the administration to reverse its decision to tear down this building.”

I
had
heard about that. It wasn't happening until the summer, and I'd be gone by then, assuming I passed the goddamn senior portfolio. “You want some?” I nodded at the pizza, realizing that since I'd finished half of it in about thirty seconds, I should probably offer her some.

“It's a gorgeous old building.” She was clearly trying to engage me in conversation about the doomed structure.

“It's also poorly lit and falling apart, and the ventilation sucks,” I said, partly to be contrary but partly because it was the truth. “You're lucky I'm not working in oils, or you'd be halfway to passing out.”

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