She checked her emails again and there was still nothing from Adam Smith and Associates. It had been a week and a day since she had received the email informing her she was on the shortlist for the trainee position, but they hadn’t told her how many were on it with her only that she had made it out of the thousand applicants. She should be pleased, she knew she should. She wanted this job. It was perfect and here in Toronto. If she landed it then it would become the doorway to a successful career in architecture hence the thousand applicants. But...she chewed her lower lip and slowed her steps. If the answer was yes she wouldn’t be able to make the trip to Europe and well, she would have to decline the offer of a place at Falmouth School of Art for a Masters in Art & Environment, which she knew was just a dream anyway.
Demi jumped when her phone rang. Matt's photo flashed on the screen with his big grin. “Hi."
“Hello beautiful.”
Demi rolled her eyes. They were just words. If only she felt he actually meant it. “What’s up?”
“Just booked our tickets to Europe.”
“No, no you can’t have.” Demi swallowed. “I haven’t heard about the job.”
“Don’t mean to burst your bubble, but yes you made the short list out of a thousand but no way will you make the final cut.”
“Thanks for your belief in me.”
“But I do believe in you and that’s why you should forget the boring job and follow your heart to Cornwall and to the masters you want.”
She closed her eyes and took a breath. She couldn’t reason with him. She had a tough enough time doing that with herself. “Please tell me you haven’t actually booked flights.”
“Relax. I’ve just reserved them.”
“How long will they hold them?”
“Two days.”
“Good. Give me until then.”
Matt was hopeless but she was worse. Bloody dreamers both.She put her toe in and out of a puddle and watched the ripples before she checked her emails again to find there was still nothing from Adam Smith and Associates. It had been a week and a day since she had received the email informing her she was on the shortlist. She should be pleased, she knew she should. She wanted this job. It was perfect and here in Toronto. If she landed it then it would become the doorway to a successful career in architecture.
Thunder rumbled in the distance. The storm would be here shortly but not yet. Demi’s eyes traced the outline of the one houses that had been ‘improved’ from a humble bungalow to a grand residence. Her nose twitched. It didn’t fit the neighbourhood but she was sure it had been what the clients had requested. Was life always like that?
She chewed her lower lip and slowed her steps. If the she was accepted then she wouldn’t be able to make the trip and well, she would have to decline the offer of a place at Falmouth School of Art for a Masters in Art & Environment. It was just a dream anyway and one her mother hadn’t shared for her.
10 comments:
Much much better!! Glad to have helped.
Biddy you helped immensely - it might have taken me weeks to spot it or to come back to it! It's not quite right yet but it is much much better as you say :-)
lx
The second version brought the text alive. It was great.
Liz X
Thanks Liz - not great but certainly a hell of a lot better :-)
lx
The second version was great. I'm now off to read Jan's post.
Liz, its very comforting to know everyone has those info dump moments, and its not just me! And you sorted it perfectly. Bravo!
Fantastic! Such a difference! Oh, the pesky info dump trap is one that lurks in wait for any of us, but- phew! - that's what rewrites are for.
Sally - thanks. I am seeing it everywhere as i cull through the first draft - but then that's what a first draft is for me...getting the story out which means loads of info dump :-)
Chris - yes thank God for rewrites and this time I am truly embracing the rewrite and changing my mind set from it's a burden to it's a pleasure.
lx
amazing what a difference it makes. I often don't spot the "tell" until revisions.
Barrie - so pleased I'm alone in seeing them until that stage!
lx
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