Thursday, April 12, 2012

The Very Beginning


Lucia tripped, falling to her knees on the wet stone of the sidewalk and dropping her only camera – a 5D Mark II – so it ended up crashing into the edge of the curb. It came apart into a hundred bits of technology, as if it had been made of spun sugar. The memory card glared up at her from a shallow puddle in the street gutter. Any hope of salvaging at least her most recent work to sell vanished, but she plucked the card out of the water with an expression of quiet reservation to Murphy's Law on her lean, doll-like face. 

“Damnit,” she mumbled, too introverted to curse, even when no one was around her. It's not like her employer would think she was lying, or would be angry, but Lucia could already see the disappointment drawing lines in his sharp eyes and on angular features that reminded her of a condor.

She grimaced, trying to keep herself from breaking into tears right there as she rose to her feet. Gathering the broken camera, Lucia wondered where the money would come from to buy a new one – there was no way this mess of plastic and metal could be repaired. Could she get an advance on work she wasn't sure she'd even get? It was hard being in a pool of photographers, all eager to take any job dangled above the proverbial pit, and all with working cameras – except her.

A heavy, passive aggressive sigh escaped her lips as Lucia dropped the broken camera into her worn out messenger bag. She idly traced her finger around the Celtic tree of life that was silk-screened onto the front. She couldn't just throw out the camera – her brother bought it for her after breaking into his college fund he knew he'd never use. Lucia didn't know where Gregor was, or what he did to survive, but she liked to think he got a stable job using his hands. He had always been good with his hands.

The city street was deserted around her, and Lucia paused to admire the effect that the cast iron streetlights had on making the scene appear darker rather than brighter. It scared her, no doubt, there was an unease churning her empty stomach, but it was beautiful. Even after living in the city for five years, Lucia never ran into any muggers or been assaulted – she'd admit, though, that probably had to do more with her only going to out work and grocery shop, and less with the relative safety of the area.

It began to drizzle and Lucia shook herself out of her absentminded trance. She shivered and yanked the high collar of her raspberry pea coat up around her chin. Walking the rest of the way to her apartment was going to suck, but she set out, focusing on the click of her heels rather than the chill leaking into her extremities.

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