ANOTHER WEEK IN HELL
                         
						
                        by
                        CATHRL
									
			 RATED FRC | 
                        
                          | 
                       
                     
                    
                   
                   
                  
                  
                  Thanks to Sandy (SkyWench) for 
                  permission to write a follow-up to her story
                  A Week In Hell
                  written for the 2007 TIWF Fish Out Of Water Challenge. 
                  
                  
                  This story won the Tracy Island 
                  Writers Forum's 2007 Sequel Challenge as voted by TIWF 
                  members. 
                   
                  
                  
                  Day Six 
                  
                  Home free! 
                  Pure, simple bliss. No more office. No more plastic cups and 
                  even more plastic coffee. No more co-workers who wouldn't know 
                  a Steinway from Thunderbird Two. No more four foot six 
                  lack-of-privacy miniwall. 
                  
                  No, this 
                  is more my style. My desk is Thunderbird Two's console, and my 
                  paperwork is the list I make of what I have to fix or replace 
                  after a rescue. And living in the city? No, thank you. I 
                  hadn't realised how used I was to the quiet here, at night 
                  especially. Every siren in the street outside my window woke 
                  me up, all week, and even with thick blinds it was never 
                  properly dark. 
                  
                  And there 
                  are people everywhere, all the time. I used to be good with 
                  people. I still am, when I need to be. But there, I needed to 
                  interact all the time, and with total strangers who had 
                  nothing in common with me. I sometimes get asked if it isn't 
                  lonely living on an island with only my family and a few 
                  friends. Not half as lonely as living on your own in a big 
                  city, I'll tell you. 
                  
                  I am so 
                  glad I won't be back there Monday. Though I pity whoever has 
                  to fix that document shredder. The thing has a mind of its 
                  own. 
                  
                  
                  Day Seven 
                  
                  Gordon was 
                  asking about who I got to know last week. He seems surprised 
                  that I hadn't really talked to everyone. I couldn't see the 
                  point – I mean, I was only there for a week. Much more 
                  important that they got to know the new guy, the one who was 
                  staying. What was his name again? I can't remember. 
                  
                  Still, 
                  some of these people Gordon met sounded great. I wonder if 
                  anyone in my office is half that eccentric in private? I can't 
                  imagine anyone I met skydiving or playing in a rock band, or 
                  writing, what did he call it, fanfiction? 
                  
                  I wonder 
                  what they thought of me? Boring Virgil, dozing in his cubicle 
                  while everyone else gathers round the water cooler to discuss 
                  the latest office gossip. If only they knew. 
                  
                  
                  Day Eight 
                  
                  Excerpt 
                  from informal appraisal of temporary personnel. 
                  
                  Tracy, 
                  Virgil. 
                  
                  The guy's 
                  got brains, but could I get him to use them? Didn't want to be 
                  here. Shame. I never needed to explain anything twice, but the 
                  guy doesn't seem to understand urgency.  
                  
                  The 
                  doodles in the margins were impressive. Not appropriate for 
                  official documents, though. Maybe the design department can 
                  use him.  
                  
                  Well, that 
                  was embarrassing. Father didn't look too impressed, either. 
                  Probably why he read it out at breakfast. Scott and Gordon had 
                  a good laugh at it. I knew this was going to happen. 
                  
                  How can he 
                  not have figured out who I really am, though? I mean, come 
                  on, Bryan! The surname's Tracy. Did you sleep through 
                  every news article about Father, ever? There's not one that 
                  doesn't go into nauseating detail on the naming convention for 
                  his sons. And if that wasn't enough, why did you think 
                  you were reporting on a temporary assistant direct to Jeff 
                  Tracy himself? Talk about not using your brains. 
                  
                  The worst 
                  of it is, Gordon even has the moral high ground. It seems 
                  that, while my brothers may joke about desk jobs, they take 
                  their weeks in various departments of Tracy Enterprises a 
                  little more seriously than I did. Scott would, of course. But 
                  Gordon…I thought he was joking. I was sure he was joking. 
                  Until he showed me his own report. From the same damn office I 
                  was in, no less. The skydiver and the amateur author and the 
                  drummer – they're people I worked with? No way! And 
                  funky-cubicle guy is a mad keen rock climber in his free time, 
                  apparently. Well, that explains about ten per cent of the 
                  photos. I didn't notice the ones Gordon gave him, but I guess 
                  they were on the wall among all the rest. They got on real 
                  well, it seems. Though he didn't much take to my cubicle-mate, 
                  either. Apparently it was Danish pastries everywhere, that 
                  week. 
                  
                  Gordon's 
                  report? Helpful, enthusiastic, efficient, hard-working, 
                  friendly… What did I get again? Doodling daydreamer. Okay, 
                  it's not like I wanted the job. But that sucks. 
                  
                  
                  Day Nine 
                  
                  Father 
                  comes into breakfast this morning grumbling about personnel 
                  issues. Seems he has a standing order that certain short-term 
                  vacancies are forwarded to his office, so he can decide if he 
                  wants to assign one of us for some experience. Thank 
                  heavens I've done my stint, I think, and then he drops the 
                  bombshell. 
                  
                  It's the 
                  job I was doing last week. Turns out the guy's going to be off 
                  sick for a while, and they need another week's cover while 
                  they get someone more permanent in. They'd especially like the 
                  redheaded guy back. I don't even get a mention. 
                  
                  You could 
                  have knocked me down with a feather. I mean, I was doing that 
                  job last week. I didn't do that badly. Did I? 
                  
                  Gordon 
                  shakes his head cheerfully, he's got some important 
                  maintenance to do on Thunderbird Four, and Father looks at 
                  Alan. Okay, that's it. Because I know Alan did his 
                  stint recently too, over in the New Zealand office, the week 
                  before I did mine. 
                  
                  "I'll do 
                  it." 
                  
                  Even Scott 
                  stops eating. 
                  
                  "Virgil," 
                  Father says. "You hated it there. You don't have to do this. 
                  I've looked at those designs – would you prefer a week in the 
                  architects' office?" 
                  
                  Well, of 
                  course I would. But Gordon's expression says it all. He thinks 
                  I quit on the assignment, even if I did sit in the chair for 
                  all five days. And I don't quit on anything, ever. 
                  
                  "I'll do 
                  it, Dad. Tell them I'll be there tomorrow morning, first 
                  thing." That ought to surprise them, for a start. I don't 
                  think I made it in before ten last week. 
                  
                  This time, 
                  they're going to remember me a lot more fondly. This time it 
                  won't all be slapdash and coffee. I'll fix that document 
                  shredder properly. I'll find out their names and go to lunch 
                  with them. And hey, if I'm doing what I'm supposed to be 
                  doing, maybe I won't get looked at sideways if I suggest 
                  something different. If I'm competent, maybe they'll even 
                  figure out who I really am. And the island will still be here 
                  for me to come home to at the end of the week. 
                  
                  Now why do 
                  I have a nagging suspicion that Father knew full well that 
                  this was going to happen?  |