looked up, as if making sure Annie intended to replace him as Mae’s companion
that night. His fears confirmed, he walked under the awning of the Dark Ages. He tried
to open the door, but couldn’t. He pulled and pushed, but it would not budge. Knowing
they were watching, he made his way around the corner and out of view.
“He’s in security, he says,” Mae said.
“That’s what he told you? Francis Garaventa?”
“I guess he shouldn’t have.”
“Well, it’s not like he’s in se
cur
ity-security. He’s not Mossad. But did I interrupt something you definitely shouldn’t
be doing on your first night here you idiot?”
“You didn’t interrupt anything.”
“I think I
did
.”
“No. Not really.”
“I did. I know this.”
Annie located the bottle at Mae’s feet. “I thought we ran out of everything hours
ago.”
“There was some wine in the waterfall—by the Industrial Revolution.”
“Oh, right. People hide things there.”
“I just heard myself say, ‘There was some wine in the waterfall by the Industrial
Revolution.’ ”
Annie looked across the campus. “I know. Shit. I know.”
At home, after the shuttle, after a jello shot someone gave her onboard, after listening
to the shuttle driver talk wistfully about his family, his twins, his wife, who had
gout, Mae couldn’t sleep. She lay on her cheap futon, in her tiny room, in the railroad
apartment she shared with two near-strangers, both of them flight attendants and rarely
seen. Her apartment was on the second floor of a former motel and it was humble, uncleanable,
smelling of the desperation and bad cooking of its former residents. It was a sad
place, especially after a day at the Circle, where all was made with care and love
and the gift of a good eye. In her wretched low bed, Mae slept for a few hours, woke
up, recounted the day and the night, thought of Annie and Francis, and Denise and
Josiah, and the fireman’s pole, and the
Enola Gay
, and the waterfall, and the tiki torches, all of these things the stuff of vacations
and dreams and impossible to maintain, but then she knew—and this is what was keeping
her up, her head careening with something like a toddler’s joy—that she would be going
back to that place, the place where all these things happened. She was welcome there,
employed there.
She got to work early. When she arrived, though, at eight, she realized she hadn’t
been given a desk, at least not a real desk, and so she had nowhere to go. She waited
an hour, under a sign that said L ET ’ S D O T HIS . L ET ’ S D O A LL OF T HIS , until Renata arrived andbrought her to the second floor of the Renaissance, into a large room, the size of
a basketball court, where there were about twenty desks, all different, all shaped
from blond wood into desktops of organic shapes. They were separated by dividers of
glass, and arranged in groups of five, like petals on a flower. None were occupied.
“You’re the first here,” Renata said, “but you won’t be alone for long. Each new Customer
Experience area tends to fill pretty quickly. And you’re not far from all the more
senior people.” And here she swept her arm around, indicating about a dozen offices
surrounding the open space. The occupants of each were visible through the glass walls,
each of the supervisors somewhere between twenty-six and thirty-two, starting their
day, seeming relaxed, competent, wise.
“The designers really like glass, eh?” Mae said, smiling.
Renata stopped, furrowed her brow and thought on this notion. She put a strand of
hair behind her ear and said, “I think so. I can check. But first we should explain
the setup, and what to expect on your first real day.”
Renata explained the features of the desk and chair and screen, all of which had been
ergonomically perfected, and could be adjusted for those who wanted to work standing
up.
“You can set your stuff down and