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Quinn

The night comes and goes but Esther doesn’t come home. The next day I can hardly drag myself out the front door and on to work, for what I want to do most is sit at home and wait for Esther. Forty-eight to seventy-two hours the 311 operator assured me, and Esther has only been gone for twenty-four. Seventy percent of missing people leave of their own free will; she told me that, too. I also know that Esther is on the lookout for a new roommate—one to replace me—and so I connect the dots in my head and easily surmise that Esther’s leaving has something to do with me and my laxity. I’m a lousy roommate; I get that. But still, whether or not it is my fault, it doesn’t make me feel any better. It feels like a kick in the teeth to me, the fact that Esther wants me out.

But I can’t sit home for the next two days and wait for Esther to magically appear. I have to work, and hope that if and when she does return, we can talk this out.

Monday morning I’m riding the 22 into the Loop in a short skirt for some ungodly reason. At every single bus stop—at every single intersection—the doors burst open and the nippy, November air rushes in to assault my bare legs. I have panty hose on, don’t get me wrong, but sheer hosiery does nothing to fend off the merciless wind in the Windy City. There are pumps in my bag, a pair of gym shoes on my feet: my working-woman image.

If only my mother could see me now! She’d be so proud.

I have headphones on, a tablet on my lap playing music so that—more than anything else—I can drown out the litany of coughs and sneezes and breathing of those around me. So I can pretend that they’re not here, though the crooning voice of Sam Smith begging me to stay isn’t such a bad way to start the day.

Some dunce has left a window open a crack so that the temperature on the bus can be no more than sixty-two degrees. I pull my coat tightly around me and snap at the itinerant man sitting behind me to stop touching my hair, please. This isn’t the first time he’s been on the bus with me. He’s a vagrant, the type of man who spends every last penny he owns to ride the bus. Not because he has anywhere to go, but because he doesn’t. He does it to stay warm. He rides as far as the driver will let him, and then he gets off. He begs for more money, and when another two dollars comes his way, he pays his fare and rides again. I kind of feel sorry for the man. Kind of.

But if he touches me again, I’m changing seats.

The Loop comes into view, the buildings rising higher and higher into the sky as we leave Andersonville and pass through Uptown, Wrigleyville, Lake View, Lincoln Park.

And that’s when it returns to me, as the 22 bus galumphs down Clark Street, gooseflesh on my skin, some creep to my rear fondling my long golden locks. I’m mad. Esther is trying to replace me.

It’s like stubbing your toe or passing a kidney stone. It hurts. Better yet, it’s like smashing your fingers in a car door. I want to cry out and scream. There’s this hollowness in my heart, this knowledge that I can’t quite wrap my head around. I hear that girl on the phone last night—Esther’s phone—the credulousness in her cheerful voice as she happily declared, I was inquiring about your ad in the Reader. The ad for the roommate.

Little does she know that in less than a year Esther might give her the boot, too.

I get off the bus and scurry to my office building, a high-rise on Wabash. It’s a tall, black building with fifty indistinguishable floors of office upon office. Its once-gorgeous view is now obstructed by the latest and greatest skyscraper monstrosity: ninety-eight floors of steel framework and curtain walls that popped up in the city almost overnight, smack-dab on the opposite side of the street from my place of employment. The lawyers who I work for, the ones with their panoramic office views and offices as big as my parents’ home, are peeved about it, about the fact that they no longer overlook Lake Michigan because some business tycoon and his superstructure has stolen their view.

First-world problems.

I take the elevator up to the forty-third floor, smile at the receptionist, who smiles at me. I’m pretty sure she doesn’t know my name, but at least she no longer asks to see my ID. I’ve had this job for an entire three hundred and sixty days. That’s a whole lot of Mondays. I don’t like the job one bit, a project assistant job that is lower on the totem pole than the janitors even, the men and women who wipe the floor and clean urine off the toilets.

The reason I wanted this job was that it paid. Not much, but it paid. And there wasn’t a whole lot I could do with a liberal arts degree from a crappy college. But this I could do.

The first thing I do when I arrive at work is try to find Ben. Ben, who never returned my call last night because he was too busy doing things with his girlfriend, Priya. But I won’t let my mind go there; I can’t. I don’t want to think about Ben and Priya right now, Ben and Priya and my insatiable jealousy. Instead, I focus on the task at hand. I have to find Ben. I have to talk to Ben about Esther.

And so I slip into the stairwell and start to make my ascent to Ben’s floor. Our firm, a national law firm with well over four hundred attorneys, occupies eleven floors of office space in the black building. Each floor is essentially the same, with the paralegals and project assistants like me shoved into small cubes in the interior of each floor, forced to dwell among the stacks and files and photocopy machines. Where we reside, there is no such thing as natural lighting, but rather fluorescent troffers, which do nothing for the tone of my skin or the shade of my hair. The lighting makes me look yellow and sickly, so one might think I’m afflicted with a serious case of jaundice, caused by some sort of liver or bile duct disease. Now that’s classy.

I work on the forty-third floor. Ben, the forty-seventh. I start climbing the steps one by one, trying hard to ignore the creepiness of the office stairwell. I don’t use it all that often, but there are times when a girl doesn’t want to be crammed on a small elevator with three or five or even one hotshot attorney, and today is one of those days.

When I get to Ben’s cube on the forty-seventh floor, it’s empty. His computer is on, and beside his swivel chair is a leather bag and a pair of black running shoes. I know that he’s here, somewhere—in the building—and yet he’s not here in his cube. I ask around to see if anyone has seen Ben, trying to mask the angst I feel with a weedy smile. “He was here,” some blonde paralegal tells me as she scampers by with a box in hand, her sling-back heels clickety-clacking down the wooden floors, “but now he’s not.” Obviously.

I find a piece of scrap paper and jot down a quick note in the best handwriting I can muster, though my hands shake for about a million reasons, or maybe a million and one. We need to talk. ASAP, I write, and leave the note on the plastic keyboard before returning to my own cube, disgruntled.

This morning I’m given the all-important task of Bates labeling documents. It sounds important, it really does. It has a name even, Bates labeling, like the fact that those little dots over a lower case i or j have a name—a tittle it’s called, a simple fact I discovered while searching the internet and charging my time to one of the firm’s more opulent clients—or when your second toe is bigger than your big toe, it’s called a Morton’s toe. Important things worthy of names. Like Bates labels. Matters of life or death.

But no. What I’m doing is placing hundreds of thousands of numbered stickers on a looming document production before being given the task of photocopying them three or five or ten times. There are boxes of documents, and worse yet, they’re not even full of scandalous details like the divorce lawyers get, but rather financial documents. Because I get to work for transactional lawyers, boring men who get their kicks staring at financial documents and talking about money all the livelong day while paying me pennies above minimum wage.

As I settle into my task of Bates labeling, my movements become hurried and repetitive, my mind far removed from the stacks of financial documents that lay before me. I’m at work, but I certainly can’t focus on work. All I can think about is Esther. Where is Esther? I can’t focus on a single thing, not Bates labeling the piles of documents before me, nor skimming through a mountain of correspondence and pleadings, marking over and over again our client’s name with a red Post-it flag, until all the words start to blur before my eyes. I replay our last conversation in my mind. Did I miss something hidden there in the tone of her voice or her weary smile? She was sick; she didn’t feel well. I’d be a killjoy, Quinn. Go without me. You’ll have more fun.

But now I have to wonder: Was this a test? Was Esther putting me to the test? Seeing what kind of roommate I really was, and whether or not I’d put her needs before my own.

If that’s the case, then I guess I failed. I went out without her; I had fun. I didn’t even think to stop by Esther’s room when I got home to see how she was feeling and if she was okay. The thought never even crossed my mind. I didn’t offer to bring her a blanket or warm up a bowl of soup. Another roommate, a better roommate, would have made soup. Another roommate would have said, “No way,” to Esther’s insistence that I go. “No way, Esther. I’ll have more fun here with you.”

Don't You Cry: A gripping suspense full of secrets

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