in person? What if I crammed my application inside the box and she didnât check? What if it got stuck to the side of the box, like a chewed piece of gum, and was never seen again? Just in case, Iâll take the extra two minutes, thanks. âI prefer to introduce myself.â
She tilts her head and smiles. âArenât you a go-getter! Iâm Dorothy. Nice to meet you.â
We chitchat for a few minutes about school, and I peek inside her office while she turns on her lights and boots her computer. I give her my application, then shake her handâfirmlyâand say goodbye.
In the elevator I glance at my Rolex. I meet my Block in an hour! The back of my neck tingles with excitement. I canât believe this day is finally here. Iâm going to be surrounded by kindred spirits. Imagine, networking every day. These are the people who will help me find jobs, help me move up the corporate ladder. These are the people who will one day rule the world, the people who will one day hire my children who will one day rule the world.
These are my people.
I stop at the admissions office to pick up my schedule. I already reviewed it online, but I want to have the original hard copy to post in my new room.
The next time I glance at my watch, itâs nine-twenty. Forty minutes! Iâd better get a move on if I want to get a good seat in orientation. I stop at the womenâs bathroom, which isnât coed and therefore less germ infested. The bacteria propagation is the one thing Iâm not looking forward to about the coed dorm. Iâve never shared a toilet with a man, and Iâve heard itâs not a pleasant experience. When I lived at home, my mother always complained that my father had lousy aim. Good thing they have his and hers bathrooms. And a housekeeper who takes care of the spills.
I squat over the toilet so I donât have to touch the seat. Who knows how often theyâre disinfected? Then I flush with the heel of one of my new Prada shoes. I wash my hands, retie my long blond hair into a pony off my face and take a paper towel to protect my hands from the microorganisms on the door handle.
Last week I did a virtual âFirst Dayâ walk on the LWBS Web site, so I know precisely where the orientation is being held. Room 107. The door is open, the ten-row auditorium empty. Eager to begin this next stage of my life, I sit in the front row and set my plastic name card at the front of my desk.
Â
âWas that online Economics workshop really, um, necessary? Because I didnât do it.â
I do not believe the guy in the back row. Isnât it a little late to be asking a question of that nature? I did the workshop back in June. And it took me thirty-three hours. Poor boy. Heâs going to be so lost.
The second-year student leading the orientation fingers the mole on his cheek. âItâs a good way to brush up on your skills,â he says. His voice cracks like a twelve-year-old muddling through puberty. âBut I donât think itâs something that will be tested.â
Oh. But still. Iâm glad I did it. I learned a lot, and thatâs the point.
âIf you have no more questions,â our mole-leader says, âweâll move on to the get-to-know-you exercise.â
Yes! At last, an activity designed to help us bond with our classmates. I wish I could have been here for the beer bash last night, but one of my best friends back home was having a birthday party, and I couldnât miss it. So I drove in late last night, and went directly to my room to start decorating. I hope my fish, Martha, likes her new home. I put her right by the window so she gets lots of sunlight. Yes, I named her after Martha Stewart, and I donât care what anyone says, Iâll defend her innocence to my death.
The second-year leader walks through the rows, passing out index cards. âPlease write down your name, where youâre from, where you
Ben Aaronovitch, Nicholas Briggs, Terry Molloy