****
If you enjoyed The Deed Box, here’s an extract of Tomorrow’s Anecdote, a retro newsroom mystery set in the turbulent Thatcher years.
Extract: Tomorrow’s Anecdote
by Pamela Kelt
No-one could have seen the line of trees falling like dominoes as they toppled towards the A36 under cover of darkness that Thursday evening. One minute, I was driving back in a rental car from Brighton to the West Country, my shoulders aching with keeping it on the road as a crosswind buffeted. The next, I was slowing down to tackle a tricky bend when a giant tree trunk landed on the bonnet with an almighty thump.
As the car juddered to a standstill, I rammed on the brakes out of instinct. The seatbelt cut into my neck as I lurched forwards, then back, just like a test mannequin. For a moment, I sat there, pulse palpitating, still gripping the wheel. Then I counted to ten, opened my eyes and found myself staring out at a confused mass of branches and yellowing leaves. They glowed oddly in the light of my remaining headlamp. It was like being upside-down in a tree house, but much less fun.
My chest hurt. I realised the steering wheel was crushing my sternum. The crash had shunted my seat forward. Hands shaking, I fumbled for the belt release, and pinged it loose. Wincing, I bent down and yanked at the floor-level bar, shoving backwards with the balls of my feet. Nothing. Grunting with the effort, I tried again to no avail. The sliding mechanism must have jammed in the crash.
At that point, the electrics gave up and everything went pitch black. My forehead ached. I must have hit my head against the steering wheel. Darkness seeped into my mind and I slumped in my seat, semi-conscious. My brain seemed to float away from my body and I began to relive the past three days I had spent in a ghastly Portakabin where I had endured the vilest form of professional torture … that most feared phenomenon of all, The Management Course.
****
“Let’s do some role play,” said Denise, with a bright smile.
Let’s bloody not, we all thought, cringing, averting our gaze like naughty school kids.
We were a select crew; myself, one Clare Forester, a single-parent features sub with aspirations. I was employed at The Clarion, a modest newspaper in a market town in Somerset. Over the past decade, it had been buying out a dozen smaller provincial titles and centralised production in Wellsbury Spa, where I now lived.
Then there was Malcolm from a Carlisle daily, a portly middle-aged sports editor with lugubrious jowls and purple bags under his eyes.
Next to him sat Frankie, hot off the press from a Glasgow tabloid, a stocky chap with a fierce gaze and twitchy fingers that never stopped tapping biros on the desk.
At the opposite end of the journalistic spectrum was our final victim, Nigel, an acne-spattered youth from an obscure tri-weekly in Yorkshire who I reckoned was looking forward to his 15th birthday. He was only there because his boss had shingles.
A more motley set you wouldn’t find in any other line of work, yet we were all united in one thing: our loathing of the fragrant Denise.
###
Read more here.
###