[Please note that NO CHARACTER or SITUATION is “you” or anyone you know, even if it sounds like it – there are bits and pieces of experiences I have had, but no passive-aggressive intent should be inferred – I was just dumping things out of my brain as fast as possible to get to 50,000 words by the end of November!]
Want It Back
© November 2012 Betty Widerski
All Rights Reserved
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It doesn’t matter
If you want it back –
You’ve given it away,
You’ve given it away…
– Amanda Palmer, “Want It Back”
Chapter 1
Allie sighed as she slammed shut the door to the practice room. Once again her bandmates had arrived late, farted around, and left her to shut off the lights and lock up. The “you’re kidding me” moment of the night was that when the new drummer arrived at 8:05pm (to give him his due, ALMOST on time) he walked in and exclaimed, “You’re here!”
“Yes, I agreed we would meet at 8 o’clock, so I arrived by 8.”
“But I didn’t expect that,” he replied. Allie supposed that it was a good sign, even if a bit annoying that he assumed *she* would not be on time – she was vaguely aware that he also apparently played in a local community orchestra. Classical players worked on the assumption that saying “rehearsal starts at 7:30” meant “be in your chairs with your music stands and parts open and instrument ready to play at 7:30”, not the rock band assumption that you started rolling in sometime within 15 minutes of the stated hour.
Still, one band member arriving mostly on time didn’t make much difference when the others texted 15 minutes later that they were stopping at Dunkin’ Donuts for coffee and would be there “shortly.” Allie loved having a good practice session, but not that it usually ended at 10:45 PM or later. She tried to get up at 5:30 AM to arrive at her day job by 8, so getting only five to six hours of sleep if she was lucky left her feeling trashed in the morning.
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