Part 29 (2/2)
Thanks for your support on the visa...
No, that wouldn't do.
I know you're busy, but I'm not seeing Oscar. He's a w.a.n.k...
What's he supposed to say to that? intervened my head. Dear Ruby, yes, I know he is a w.a.n.ker. The entire world knows he's a w.a.n.ker. You slept with a w.a.n.ker. What does that say about you? Kind regards, Luke, Your Boss, Whose Opinion of Your Personal Life Shouldn't Matter.
'We're here,' said George. I thanked him and went inside.
The auditorium was abuzz. A purple backdrop was being fitted on the stage. The lectern was plain with a simple, light oakwood finish. Young party members roamed the room in purple T-s.h.i.+rts.
A girl approached me. 'Oh my G.o.d, you're the illegal immigration staffer, aren't you?' Her excitement was the sort usually reserved for encounters on the Oscars red carpet. 'Sorry, I'm a total news junkie.'
'What does your T-s.h.i.+rt say?' I ignored her question.
She pulled it flat over her stomach. 'VOTE NO TO DIRTY POLITICS.'
I spotted Maddy adjusting the giant white-felt P for Party onstage and made my way towards her. 'What are we going to do about the T-s.h.i.+rts?'
'It's too late now. They're everywhere.'
'Is Di here yet?'
She nodded, texting simultaneously. 'Di, Luke and Theo are backstage figuring out what the f.u.c.k they're going to do next.'
I picked up coffees for everyone and took them to the backstage room. Theo and Luke were at the whiteboard, sketching out ideas, while Di sat in the corner attached to her charging phone. Theo greeted me with a nod; Luke kept writing.
'Who wants coffee and my aunt's homemade hot cross buns?'
'f.u.c.k, yeah,' said Di.
'Just give us some time, please,' snapped Luke without looking at me.
'Ease up, Luke. Have you got your period or something?' asked Di.
'I'll have Luke's coffee,' said Theo. 'And buns.'
'Sorry.' I put their coffees on a table and closed the door behind me.
Maddy was in an adjacent room. 'Can I do something to help?' I asked, handing her a coffee and bun.
'I need someone to inflate three thousand balloons.' She pointed to a tall cylinder of helium in the corner.
'Sign me up.'
My fingers might have ached from all the knot-tying, but it was indescribably satisfying to perform a task with such limited capacity for error. Fix balloon to nozzle. Check. Turn tap to release helium. Check. When balloon inflates, close tap. Check. Tie balloon. Check. Tie ribbon. Check. Next balloon.
Theo came to join me. 'Can I play?'
'Sure.' I handed him a balloon. 'How are things going?' 'Badly.'
'What's the strategy?'
'There isn't one.' He accidentally released an untied balloon, which went whizzing around the room before it landed limply in the corner. 'Any more buns?' He helped himself to the paper bag.
I wanted to ask him about Luke, but as Theo had the emotional and social intelligence of a lawn mower it would have been a pointless pursuit. 'Has Archie resigned?'
'Nope.'
'Why not?'
'Because I've got nothing to apologise for,' said Archie, emerging from behind a balloon bouquet. He seemed lost, like a jester with no court.
'Sorry, Archie, but I disagree.' I resisted the temptation to be mean about it.
'I did what you guys should've been doing,' he said, clearing a path. 'It's neck and neck. This new PM offers about as much change as people can stomach at the moment. It's a case of same horse, new jockey-that's what mums and dads want. We need something big to bring her down and so that's what I tried to do. You don't think they're not out there looking for exactly the same stuff to shoot Max with?'
'That's not the point,' I said. 'We've campaigned in earnest on this high moral ground and now you're what they're going to shoot us with. You dug for dirt and put it in writing and you did so when there was no need to. We were doing fine on policy grounds. I think that warrants some remorse, don't you?'
He considered it for a second. 'No, I really don't. I get it, Roo. This is your first shot at politics, but I've been doing this my whole life. This is how it works. Don't like the game? Don't play.'
'You're right. This is my first time. Maybe more people like me would get involved in politics if people like you weren't. You're a walking stereotype. You're the lonely, bitter cynic who has never done anything else but spin, and this is the result-you can't see right from wrong anymore.'
'Is your aunt single?' Theo looked into the empty paper bag.
'No.'
'b.u.mmer.' He scrunched the bag and turned to Archie. 'Look, just do the right thing or you'll be sacked. At least you maintain some integrity by offering your resignation; otherwise, your career will be even more f.u.c.ked. That's my advice.'
Archie kicked the A-frame I had been using to anchor my inflated balloons, and stomped off. The balloons floated to the ceiling. Teetering dangerously on my wedges, I bounced up and down, clutching at dangling ribbons while cursing my father for the short gene. Theo shrugged and left.
'Excuse me,' I said, chasing a pa.s.sing conference centre attendant down the hallway, 'you wouldn't happen to have a pair of kitchen tongs, would you?'
'Try catering. Ground floor.'
The enormous commercial kitchen was full of chefs with their bouffant hats. There must have been fifty of them. I cleared my throat. 'Excuse me,' I hollered, 'does anyone have a pair of kitchen tongs I can borrow?' They either couldn't hear me or didn't want to.
I moved between two long stainless-steel bench-tops and repeated my request. Nothing. Was I invisible? I cupped my hands around my mouth to perform Di's megaphone trick. 'EXCUSE ME, DOES ANYONE HAVE A PAIR OF-'
The man stationed behind me must have been preparing to feed delegates of the International Vegans Convention because in his fright he upended a steel vat full of vinaigretted alfalfa sprouts all over me, coating my face, neck and chest in a slick of forage.
'My garnis.h.!.+'
The white coats parted, making way for a smaller one. 'Oo is ziss?' he thundered.
Alfalfa man shrugged.
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