Chapter 3
Chapter Three
Igripped the brown folder containing my three best articles from last year, and carried it into Chief Benedict’s cozy corner-office overlooking the street that lined the Cathedral of Learning.
“I’d like to hand in my submission for the BCA competition,” I said, handing my folder to him over his desk.
He lowered what he was reading, scrubbed his hand over his beard and snagged the folder from my grip, eyeing me carefully.
“You’re calling it close to the deadline, I told you about this a week ago.
” He glanced at his silver clock that matched the desk and chairs.
His gaze fell to the folder and he thumbed it open. “I remember these.”
I let out the breath I was holding. The chief remembered them. That was a good sign. A very good sign—
“But don’t get your hopes up. I don’t think they’ll do.”
“Sorry?”
The chief pulled the plastic spine off the folder and took out one of my articles. “These are perfectly solid reports, Liam.”
“Then what’s wrong with them?”
“Nothing wrong. But they fail to hit ‘just right’.” He waved the article. “Do you trust me to replace this with what I think is your best work?”
“I respect you, Chief Benedict, but I can’t lie. I’m not sure. What do you think is my best?” Which one had he removed? I leaned forward—
Dump!
Chief Benedict threw it into the large wastepaper basket beside the desk. He clapped his hands together once. “The Ghosts of College Past, Present, and Yet to Come. That’s your best. Such a creative defense of universities from capitalism.”
I balked. Yes, the story had been fun to write and I enjoyed giving my politics page a Christmas flair—but it was so . . . so . . . light. “That’s my best work?” I shook my head.
Chief Benedict pulled the hair at the tip of his beard.
“It was wide-reaching, engaging, it hooked readers who rarely read the politics page. You were showing us the issue, not telling us—it’s one of the best I’ve read from any student in a long time.
And if you’ll let me, I’d like to place that one in here. ”
“Fine,” I said slowly. “But I disagree. I think the other two will rank higher.”
“Let’s see, shall we?”
My hand found its way to the pen in my pocket, and it was clicking the top with erratic rhythm. I gave the chief a nod and stepped back toward the door.
“Just a sec,” he said.
I paused.
“Do me a favor, would you?” He stood and lifted a stack of old Scribe magazines, then sauntered around the desk and handed them to me. “Take these back to the archives.”
I took the stack and looked him in the eye. “I wanted the features editor position. I thought I’d worked hard enough for it.”
“You work plenty hard, and it’s going to happen.”
“When?”
“Next year, perhaps.”
I breathed in deeply. A whole year away? That would be too late. I’d never get the chance to hold the position for two consecutive years! “What about next semester?”
“I’m not quite convinced you’ll be ready.”
“I will be. Let me prove it to you.”
Chief Benedict crossed his arms over his checkered shirt as he stared at me, calculating something. He lifted a hand to rub his beard again and then let out something between a sigh and a chuckle.
“Okay, Liam, how about this: at the end of the semester you’ll write a feature piece for the magazine. You can write it on any topic. If it stuns me, if it shows me you’ve grown as a writer, I will promote you to features editor next semester. You have my word.”
Resting the stack of old Scribe editions on his desk, I withdrew my notebook and pen. “When exactly?”
The chief glanced at his calendar. “In my inbox by Friday at midnight, December fifth. Sound fair?”
“Midnight?”
“For any last-minute changes I know you’ll want to make.” He reached out a hand, and I didn’t hesitate to lock him into a warm shake. With a nod, the chief let go.
I hugged the stack all the way down to the basement, to a room lined with filing cabinets sorted by year. A long table stretched down the middle, and I dropped the magazines onto it.
A sneer behind me jerked me around, knocking half the pile to the floor.
Jack and Jill stood in the doorway. Jill sauntered in and tossed a magazine at my face. I caught it and straightened my glasses. The most recent Scribe.
“Are you serious? What am I saying—of course you are. You can’t be anything but. University of Party, Lectures in Life? I knew chief made a mistake. Knew it. Students are sniggering at that piece of shit all over campus. Just go to the cafeterias and listen.”
I gripped this week’s Scribe, my fingers trembling. Why was I so jumpy? I’d never let the guy get to me before.
Freddy, holding out his steel-gloved hand under the streetlight, flashed in my mind. I shivered. Jill was a prick, but he wasn’t Freddy.
I straightened, and opened the magazine to my article. People were laughing at this? But this was quality.
“Come on, Jill,” Jack said, shrugging my presence off like I didn’t matter, like there were better things to do with the day. “Maybe his next one will be better. Even I found switching to politics articles tough.”
“Yours was actually pretty good,” I said.
Jack and Jill might get off on making me feel like a failure, but I considered myself above that.
A true journalist would look at Jack’s article objectively.
And objectively, it was good. I liked how his article explored the corruption of the prison system.
“The details you gave about life in prison were horrifying and gripping.”
Jack grew quiet, and Jill glared at me.
“Gripping?” Jill said. “Insensitive prick. His brother is in there!”
I raised my hands. “I didn’t know. My comment was not meant to disregard—”
“Just shut it, and make the next party page better,” Jill said evenly, as if it cost him a lot to control himself. “Don’t want to have lost all my readers when I take the page back.” He stalked out of the room, with Jack following him.
I slumped against the table, pushing more old Scribe magazines to the floor.
Jack’s voice tunneled down the hall. “Scribe’s not the place to get aggressive, man.”
“Well . . . but . . . he shouldn’t have been so dismissive about—and anyway, the party page. It’s my thing. I worked my ass off for it. It’s hard for me to see anyone else with it. And it’s true. The guy doesn’t know what it means to cut loose . . .”
Turning to my column in this week’s Scribe, I re-read it. It was a good column. It offered insight. Had depth.
I shook my head. Jill was wrong.
Dropping the magazine onto the desk, I bent over to clear up the floor. Tonight I’d attend another party and write my next piece. Something that would inspire more than cheap laughs, but conversation and—
My hand stilled on a Scribe from two years back, which lay open to the middle. A picture of a hooded figure’s blurry silhouette stared back at me. I frowned, and my pulse pumped faster as I snatched the magazine closer.
“The Raven Saves Again,” I read.
I scanned the familiar article. I’ve read this before.
Last weekend after partying with friends at Rigg House’s Swalloween party, Nick O’Connor did what he did after every party, and walked back across campus to his dorm.
Only the short walk didn’t turn out like it usually did.
A few blocks from Rigg House, he was hit from behind.
“I was caught off guard . . . didn’t see him coming.
I lost my balance and fell.” As the attacker went to strike again, a hooded figure leaped out from the shadows and dragged the attacker off, allowing O’Connor to run back to his dorm.
. . . “This guy just came out of nowhere. It was like he appeared from the sky, dark like a raven . . . [He was] wearing this navy hood, like a jacket or something. Couldn’t see his face. ”
Same rescuer as mine. Large hood, vague outline, no face.
Police arrested the suspect and have charged him with assault.
I scanned further down.
This was not the first report of a hooded man coming to a student’s aid. There are rumors the man is a campus vigilante, and he has been the reason for two prior arrests of students . . . He is mentioned on Scribe’s opinions page on more than a handful of occasions.
I photocopied the article and searched through all the magazines of the past two years for more reports on The Raven. I found three more mentions of him, including one cartoon strip asking the same questions I was: Who was The Raven? And why did he care?
I skimmed over one of the letters from last year’s opinions page. One student wrote a short note to the vigilante, demanding that he “hang up his hood . . . [as] committing one crime to solve another, does not a hero make.”
Not everyone was a fan of The Raven.
I filed the photocopies—along with the meager bits of information I’d found Googling him—into the flap of my notebook, and put the stack of magazines the chief had given me—and the new stack I’d collected—into their proper place.
Click. Click. Click.
My finger worked the pen in my pocket.
Yes, that was an idea.
I could use my time at these parties not only to write my reports, but also to ask questions. Maybe others had stories about The Raven? Maybe I could discover his identity and get answers to my questions.
Then I could write a report about him, unveiling the man behind the hood at long last. What would Jill say to that? Likely it’d render him speechless, and I was all for it. I glanced toward my University of Party, Lectures in Life column.
Students would eat up news of a campus vigilante. There’d sure be no laughing.
I dodged a whack from a pinata baton and darted behind the trunk of a neighboring pine.
I should have been looking forward, not over my shoulder and jumping at any little shadow that moved. Freddy wasn’t there anymore. He wasn’t.
Straightening my shoulders, I jog-walked across the front lawn toward the crisp sounds of live salsa music.