Sad Desk Salad (24 page)

Read Sad Desk Salad Online

Authors: Jessica Grose

Tags: #Humorous, #Satire, #Contemporary Women, #Fiction

BOOK: Sad Desk Salad
2.84Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Still, I have a shred of wishful thinking left when I look through the missed messages on my iPhone. Thirteen are texts from Moira:

 

Moira Fitzgerald: WHERE THE FUCK ARE YOU

 

Moira Fitzgerald: WHERE THE FUCK ARE YOU

 

You get the drift. The fourteenth is a message from a New York City–area number I’ve never seen before. Maybe it’s from Doug’s landline? My mom’s advice has put things in perspective for me, at least a little: There
is
a world outside Chick Habit and I need to start engaging with it. I decide to pick up the message before going back to my computer and possibly getting fired. Which in some ways would be a relief.

A gravelly male voice fills my ear. “This is Robert Shapton,
New York Post.
Sources are telling us that Rebecca West has been missing from her off-campus sublet in Cambridge for at least forty-eight hours. We’d like a comment from you. It’s about seven
A.M
. on Friday now, and I’ve just gotten into the office. If you’d like to respond before six tonight, my number is 212-555-3049.”

My heart sinks. I believed my mom when she said that the death threats were a lot of hot air from a sea of randoms—that’s always what
my
death threats seemed like, anyway. But now it seems like Rebecca might actually be at risk. That would explain why she hasn’t responded to me or anyone else since the story broke two days ago.

The most benign interpretation for her disappearance is that she’s gone into hiding out of extreme embarrassment, the most sinister that she’s been kidnapped or hurt in some other awful way. The worst-case scenario is that she has some heretofore unknown mental instability, and my publishing that video pushed her over the edge into self-harm.

An image appears in my head of Becky in the days before I published the video. She’s bopping around Cambridge—maybe with a friend or two at her side. Like any normal college student she’s heading to classes with a bag over her shoulder, smiling that sweet smile I know—everyone knows now—from the video. Then in my mental home video she’s walking along the Charles holding hands with her robot, pointing out important buildings to him like he’s a regular tourist and she’s his guide. She seems carefree and happy, and I feel sick with the idea that I’ve destroyed that for her.

I feel even sicker picturing her lithe body splayed out in a gutter somewhere, perhaps the victim of some John Hinckley Jr.–style psycho who has become obsessed with Becky’s story.

I start crying, hard. This isn’t a game anymore—it’s shockingly real. But I try to soothe myself by letting my inner voice say, You can’t entertain those worst-case-scenario notions just yet. You don’t have enough information to know whether or not this “disappearance” is something to freak out about.

Still, if Shapton’s reporting hits the Internet without an update, or any hint as to where Becky West might have gone, I won’t be able to leave my house, either—my front door will be surrounded by villagers with pitchforks and picket signs.

I need to think before I respond to this Shapton fellow. Since the
Post
does its own original reporting, my hope is that this is an exclusive and won’t hit the rest of the world ’til tomorrow morning, in the next edition of the paper. But before I go ahead and assume that, I should check the latest Internet coverage of the case to be sure.

When my computer springs to life there are several IMs from Moira clogging up my screen.

 

MoiraPoira (08:01:23):
WHERE THE FUCK WERE YOU?

 

MoiraPoira (08:01:25):
WHERE THE FUCK WERE YOU?

 

And so on, and so forth. For once I am not going to respond to her instantly, and I’m not going to fall back into the quicksand of my RSS feed, either. Somehow I’m going to try to figure out if Becky West is okay, and maybe even try to help find her.

I start by searching “Becky West disappearance.” About three hundred pages come up, most of them porn-related, with headlines about Becky West’s bra “disappearing.” On the fourth page of results, I find a small squib on some MIT student’s Facebook page from Wednesday night. The poster is a pretty Asian girl with black-rimmed glasses, one whose face is familiar from my Facebook stalkings of Becky. She’s in a lot of Becky’s photos, most notably one of the two of them rosy-faced at a college party, arms casually slung over each other.

 

Roberta Sasaki
Wednesday
Has anyone seen Becky recently? She was supposed to meet me for yoga today but she never showed up, and I couldn’t find her at home. Did she disappear?
Like • Comment • Share
10 people like this.

 

This is probably what tipped off the
Post
. I try to tell myself that I’ve blown off yoga classes before just because I was tired, not because I was dead. But it doesn’t help much.

I move on to Becky’s Facebook page, which looks as pristine and innocent as it was on Tuesday when I first ransacked it. Her wall betrays no evidence of distress, besides a number of friends pledging their support to her:

 

Sara Klein
Tuesday
Becky, don’t let any of this get you down. We know the real you and you are going to come out of this even stronger! Xoxoxoxoxooxoxox
Like • Comment • Share
2 people like this.
Candace Woo-Rogers
Tuesday
We are here for you Beckster! Your gurls in Omaha have got yr back.
Like • Comment • Share
Danny Crandall
Tuesday
I’m so sorry. I love you.
Like • Comment • Share
4 people like this.

 

I look back through her photographs. I stop at one in particular, from when she was a kid. She is with her three towheaded sisters, all wearing matching pink seersucker dresses and standing outside a corn maze. They’re next to a sign that says
THE MAIZE
, spelled out in hand-painted cornstalks.

Something starts itching on my arms. I peer down and realize that I’ve broken out into hives. This physical manifestation of my guilt is too much to bear. How will I live with myself if something has happened to Becky? How will I face my own mother? She’s had it hard enough the past two years without my making her feel like a failure of a parent.

I keep staring at those four very similar faces, trying to figure out which one is Becky. But I can’t—all eight blue peepers look identical to me, and the longer I stare at them the more innocently judgmental those young faces look: pale and happy and excited about miles and miles of corn. I start scratching my arms deeply, like I deserve to feel the pain. Am I going to be held responsible by the public if something bad happened to Becky? Is there some kind of legal action that can be taken against me, like with those cyberbullying high school kids? Will I end up getting a teardrop tattoo with an unsanitized pen cap at Rikers? The now-familiar panic is churning in my stomach when my IM notification brings me out of my Nebraskan dream world.

 

Prettyinpink86 (8:20:01):
Are you OK?

 

She is so full of shit I can’t stand it. I’ve had enough. If I’m going to get fired anyway, and possibly be indicted in the disappearance of a blameless young girl, I might as well go full Monty and accuse Molly of being the hate blogger.

 

Alex182 (8:21:06):
No, I’m not fucking OK, and you of all people should know that.

 

There’s a long pause before Molly responds.

 

Prettyinpink86 (8:23:45):
I’m not sure what you’re talking about?

 

Alex182 (8:24:23):
Oh come off it, Molly. Quit this nicey-nice bullshit. I know you’re the one behind Breaking the Chick Habit.

 

Prettyinpink86 (8:25:14):
This is a misunderstanding.

 

How does one scoff over IM?

 

Alex182 (8:26:01):
Uh, right. I traced the IP address to Fort Greene, and I know you followed me to the Cactus Inn.

 

Prettyinpink86 (8:27:25):
Lots of people live in Fort Greene, and it was just a weird coincidence that you ran into me at the Cactus.

 

Alex182 (8:28:22):
OK, psycho. Whatever. I know you’re lying, so just cut it out. You’ve made it pretty clear that you wanted my job from day one, sucking up to Moira like you have. This is just some pathetic ploy to bring me down and I won’t fall for it.

 

I’m smiling for the first time in at least a day. After being on the defensive for so long, it feels good to be the one attacking for once.

 

Prettyinpink86 (8:29:59):
If you’d just let me type for a second, you would know I was just trying to help you.

 

Alex182 (8:30:42):
Yeah, right.

 

Prettyinpink86 (8:31:24):
If you’d just LET ME TYPE, you would find out that the woman I was with at the Cactus Inn the other night is my old boss Shira Allen, from
People,
and that I regularly pump her for information that would help ALL of us at Chick Habit. She thinks of me as her little pet so she tells me a lot of stuff she’s not supposed to.

 

I hesitate. Am I really going to buy that? It sounds too pat.

 

Alex182 (8:31:35):
How can I believe you?

 

Prettyinpink86 (8:32:51):
Because I’m telling the truth. If you’d shut up for a darn minute and stop accusing me of trying to bring you down, I could tell you that she gave me a really important tidbit about Becky West. That Robert Shapton guy from the
Post
has called all of us at Chick Habit, trying to reach you. If word gets out that Becky West is missing, Alex, you’re going to have to hire a bodyguard. You’ll have to go into hiding with Casey Anthony.

Other books

Rapids by Tim Parks
Weekend with Death by Patricia Wentworth
Side Show by Rick Shelley
Game Play by Anderson, Kevin J
Brighid's Flame by Cate Morgan