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The Last Magazine

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by Michael Hastings




  ALSO BY MICHAEL HASTINGS

  Panic 2012

  The Operators

  I Lost My Love in Baghdad

  Published by the Penguin Group

  Penguin Group (USA) LLC

  375 Hudson Street

  New York, New York 10014

  USA • Canada • UK • Ireland • Australia • New Zealand • India • South Africa • China

  penguin.com

  A Penguin Random House Company

  Copyright © 2014 by the Estate of Michael Hastings

  Penguin supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part of it in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin to continue to publish books for every reader.

  Blue Rider Press is a registered trademark and its colophon is a trademark of Penguin Group (USA) LLC

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Hastings, Michael, date.

  The last magazine : a novel / Michael Hastings.

  p. cm.

  ISBN 978-0-698-15797-2

  1. American periodicals—Fiction. 2. Journalism—United States—Fiction. 3. Periodicals—Publishing—United States—Fiction. I. Title.

  PS3608.A86147L37 2014 2014006271

  813'.6—dc23

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental. The sequence of real events has also been altered.

  Version_1

  to Brent and Molly

  CONTENTS

  ALSO BY MICHAEL HASTINGS

  TITLE PAGE

  COPYRIGHT

  DEDICATION

  INTRODUCTION: WHY I WRITE

  PART I: The Intern

  1. Morning, Tuesday, August 20, 2002

  2. Tuesday, August 20, 2002

  3. Afternoon, Tuesday, August 20, 2002

  4. Wednesday, August 21, 2002

  5. Friday, August 23, 2002

  6. Saturday Night, August 24, 2002

  7. Early Morning, Sunday, August 25, 2002

  8. Wednesday Evening, October 23, 2002

  9. Book Party, Five Minutes Later

  10. After the Party

  11. Friday, October 25, 2002

  12. Two Hours Later

  PART II: Why We Fight

  PART III: The Invasion

  13. Wednesday, March 19, 2003

  14. Wednesday, March 19, 2003

  15. Thursday, March 20, 2003

  16. Friday, March 21, 2003

  PART IV: After the Invasion

  17. August 2003

  18. September to December 2003

  19. A.E. Peoria Goes on Holiday

  20. The Frenchman and A.E. Peoria’s Last Night in Bangkok

  PART V: Homecoming

  21. Morning, Monday, January 12, 2004

  22. Early Evening, Monday, January 12, 2004

  23. Mid-January 2004

  24. Mid-January 2004, Continued

  25. Mid-January 2004, Continued

  26. February 2004

  PART VI: Disgruntled Employees

  27. February 2004, Continued

  28. Winter–Spring 2004

  29. Sunday, May 16, 2004

  30. Later, 2004

  31. Time Passes

  32. August 2005

  33. October 2005

  34. Later

  35. Sunday, November 20, 2005

  PART VII: The Last Week

  36. Later

  37. Later Still

  38. Monday

  39. Tuesday

  40. Wednesday

  41. Wednesday, Continued

  42. Thursday–Friday–Saturday

  EPILOGUE

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  INTRODUCTION:

  WHY I WRITE

  My name is Michael M. Hastings, and I’m in my twenties. I’m sitting in a studio apartment on the Lower East Side in Manhattan. Second floor, overlooking Orchard and Rivington. There’s snow dropping by the streetlights. It’s three a.m., and I just got off work.

  My magazine has a policy, a little item in the fifty-seven-page Human Resources manual called the “outside activities clause.” It prevents employees from publishing journalism without the magazine’s permission. That could apply to writing books like this one. So I want to say right now: This is fiction, it’s all made up.

  This book is a story about the media elite. Maybe you’re interested in that world. I have the cc’s and the bcc’s and the reply-alls. Three years’ worth, from 2002 to 2005, time- and place-specific, a very recognizable New York, at least for now.

  I do have themes, too. Love, in a way, though it’s not my love, and I can’t say I understand it too well. Not murder, at least not in the whodunit sense. No ghosts or supernatural horrors or serial killers. Sex, yes, I have a bunch of sex scenes. There’s war in the backdrop, looming and distant and not real for most of these characters, myself included.

  Maybe I’m talking genres, and maybe the genre is corporate betrayal.

  Including the big decision that the entire media world is so interested in: Who and what is left standing?

  It’ll take me about 300 pages, approximately 85,000 words, to get to that. By turning the page, you’re 1 percent closer to the truth.

  PART I

  The Intern

  1.

  Morning, Tuesday, August 20, 2002

  What’s our take?”

  That’s Nishant Patel talking. He’s the editor of the international edition of our magazine, available in eighty countries.

  “It’s a real genocide. We got A.E. Peoria there, got some great reporting. Guys on horseback burning a village, cleansing the place, poisoning wells. An interview with the IFLNP rebel leader.”

  “And?”

  “Uh, we’ll be talking about the genocide, that the UN called it that, great detail, how the catastrophic—”

  “That’s not new.”

  “The genocide?”

  “Yes.”

  “It’s new, it only started last week—”

  “We’ve read it before.”

  Nishant Patel is hearing story pitches for next week’s magazine. Tuesday mornings, ten a.m., in the sixteenth-floor conference room. He sits at the head of the table, thirteen swivel chairs in length. The section editors sit around him.

  “It’s an on-scener,” continues Jerry, the World Affairs Editor. “Horseback riding, the rebel leader’s got a motorcycle—”

  “What are we saying? To have spent thousands of dollars so Peoria can land at an airport in Khartoum, tell us how hot and sunny it is, and bump his head in a Land Rover so we can read what we’ve already read in the Times?”

  “Nishant, the Times only did one story on it—”

  My job as an intern—or as a just sort of promoted intern—is to sit in the meetings and write down the story list, divided into the proper sections, with a note on how long the story might actually be. Length is measured in columns. There are approximately three columns to a page, about 750 words total, depending on photos. It’s a rough list that changes throughout the week. On Tuesdays at ten a.m., I have to make a best guess at what stories are mos
t likely to survive.

  Jerry’s story on the genocide is already on deathwatch.

  The other editors are looking down, shuffling reading material, pretending to take notes. It’s not proper etiquette to gawk at a drowning man. And if another section editor does speak up, it won’t be to rescue Jerry. It will be to throw a life preserver with the intent of cracking the drowning man’s skull so he sinks even quicker.

  Like so:

  “You know, Nishant,” Sam, the Business Editor, says, “you’re right. That story is stale. I saw a report this week that showed the fastest growth industry in East Africa is mobile phone sales. Up like eight hundred and thirty-three percent from two years ago. If that’s going on across the continent, that’s a story with regional implications.”

  Sam emphasizes the word “regional.”

  Nishant Patel nods.

  “An outsourcing angle too,” says Sam. “Americans outsourcing to the Indians, the Indians outsourcing to the Chinese, and the Chinese outsourcing to the Africans.”

  “Who are the Africans outsourcing to?” Nishant asks himself. “A great question. Yes, get Peoria to talk to someone who sells mobile phones there.”

  I write down the potential story: Mobile Phones/Outsourcing/E. African Genocide (Peoria, 3 Columns).

  Next up is Foster, the Europe Editor.

  “The Islamic Wave Recedes. We have numbers showing that Islamic immigration is dropping. A huge drop, off a fucking cliff. Fears of Islamophobia? Unfounded. Townsend is writing from Paris.”

  “My sense is that the Islamic wave is cresting,” says Nishant.

  “Exactly. The Islamic Wave Is Growing. The numbers don’t tell the whole story. Other factors that aren’t being looked at show a real significant increase. Townsend can get that in by Wednesday.”

  “That sounds fine, yes,” says Nishant.

  “Cover: The Global Housing Boom,” says Sam for Business. “The most expensive house in the world was just sold for two hundred fifty-three million dollars. It’s happening everywhere.”

  “Good, good,” says Nishant.

  “Didn’t we just do that story,” says Jerry from World Affairs, but Nishant has moved on.

  “We’re reviewing three women novelists,” says Anna from Arts & Entertainment and Luxury Life. “All are writing about ethnic marriages—I mean, they are, uh, beautifully written, and they take place in these settings that are just, really, they’re about the experience of two cultures and how—”

  “Fine, fine, but let’s cut down on the novels.”

  “We have our story on Space Tourism,” says Gary from Sci/Tech. “Our crack intern Hastings is working on it.”

  “Who’s Hastings?” says Nishant.

  Let me say that my heart—well, I like the attention. After working over the summer as an unpaid intern, I’d been hired as a temp just last week. I’d never had my name mentioned in a meeting before. Nishant Patel is about to see me for the first time. His gaze trails nine swivel chairs to his right. The eyes of Nishant Patel are deep brown, a set of chocolate emeralds that a profile writer for the New York Herald said were like an Indian Cary Grant, his lashes fluttering in sync with his melodious voice, British with a hint of the refined castes of New Delhi—the voice of an internationally flavored school tie.

  “Thanks, everyone,” Nishant says, and stands up.

  Everyone thanked stands up too, and walks along the sides of the conference room, passing by the great big windows that look across 59th Street to a massive construction site of dual glass towers in Columbus Circle. Our competitor, the other weekly newsmagazine we call Brand X (and they call us Brand X), is getting ready to move into the towers when construction is complete. Brand X, as usual, is following our lead. We were here first. (You can also see an apartment building on Central Park West where everyone says Al Pacino lives.)

  I step out into the hallway, and as I’m walking away, I overhear a brief exchange. I look back to see who’s talking.

  “Professor Patel,” says a voice in the hallway with a southern drawl.

  “Mr. Berman,” Nishant Patel says.

  It is the first time I see them side by side, Nishant Patel and Sanders Berman, sizing each other up.

  2.

  Tuesday, August 20, 2002

  Magazine journalist A.E. Peoria is kneeling on top of a 1994 Toyota Land Cruiser in eastern Chad. It’s night, and he’s up on a small hill to get reception. The engine is running so that the electronics he has plugged into the jeep stay charged. A.E. Peoria is swearing. He believes that his Uniriya mobile satellite phone must be pointed 33 degrees southeast, and that should make it work.

  The Toyota Land Cruiser is making a beeping sound because the keys are in the ignition and the door is slightly ajar. It’s actually more like a dinging sound than a beep, and Peoria would close the door but he needs the interior ceiling light from the car to see what he is doing. His seven-inch black Maglite, which he usually would be gripping in his teeth, has run out of batteries. Or so he thinks.

  Before climbing onto the roof of the Land Cruiser, he had tried to turn on the flashlight. When the light didn’t come on, he checked the batteries to make sure the + and − were correctly in place. Unscrewing the top, he saw that the two double-A batteries inside weren’t the Energizers he’d purchased at the Dubai Duty Free Travelers’ Shop and Market at the Dubai International Airport. These were batteries with Chinese characters on them, the word MAJORPOWERY in pink English.

  Someone had switched his Energizers for MAJORPOWERYS.

  Why hadn’t the person just taken the flashlight—that would have made more sense. Why did the thief bother replacing the Energizers with dead knockoffs? The thief either was trying to be clever and/or knew him, swapping dead batteries so he wouldn’t notice the difference in the flashlight’s weight. The prime suspect, he reasoned, was his translator, David D. Obutu from N’Djamena.

  “It’s dark, man, don’t go up there. It’s stupid shit,” David D. Obutu had told him twenty minutes before Peoria had decided to drive the Land Cruiser to the top of the small hill.

  “I have to get reception to check if there’s anything from New York.”

  “Stupid shit, man. You have a light up there they can see for fucking kilometers, man. They’ll start shooting again.”

  “They haven’t shot in three days. I should be okay. I’ll do it quick.”

  “It’s some stupid shit, man.”

  “This is stupid shit. I’m here to do stupid shit. I’m not asking you, I’m just telling you.”

  “The villagers aren’t going to be very happy with you.”

  “Fucking villagers have more to worry about than me checking my email for twenty minutes.”

  That was how he’d left things with David D. Obutu, translator turned battery thief.

  Now kneeling atop the Land Cruiser, Peoria understands why David D. Obutu didn’t want him to go up to the hill. Obutu knew he’d need his Maglite. When the Maglite didn’t work, he might check the batteries. David D. Obutu’s motives, A.E. Peoria thinks, were not pure. His motives were not to protect Peoria’s well-being, or the well-being of the village (really a refugee camp), but to prevent the detection of the theft.

  Still, magazine journalist A.E. Peoria knows that Obutu did have a point, even if it was secondary to hiding the double-A rip-off—kneeling atop a Land Cruiser at the crest of a hill next to the refugee camp that had been victimized, in the strongest sense of the word, by various tribal/warlord/bandit factions in the previous weeks, was stupid shit. Especially with the door to the Land Cruiser left slightly ajar.

  He had thought he’d need the light for just a few moments—a minute at most—while he plugged the Ethernet cable connection into the Uniriya, then booted up his laptop, then aimed the Uniriya in the appropriate direction to pick up the satellite signal.

  But the fucking thin
g isn’t working, and he needs the light on as he keeps trying different angles and different settings.

  It is doubly bad, MAJORPOWERY bad, because now the screen on his laptop adds to the illumination.

  Ten minutes I have been fucking around with this thing, A.E. Peoria thinks.

  He feels like he is being watched. What is that kind of feeling anyway? How does that work?

  Sitting cross-legged, Native American style, on the roof of the Toyota Land Cruiser, he can see the tent village/refugee camp to the west and to the east he can’t see anything clearly but knows there is a border. He sees that about one hundred of the refugees have crowded together near the bottom of the hill. It’s so dark he knows people are there only because they are a mob of blackness, and he thinks this might be taken as a reference to skin color, but it’s actually a reference to the fact that the gathered crowd has just taken on a shadowy shape. They are watching him; he is entertainment.

  He uncrosses his legs and kicks the driver-side door shut. The interior car light stays on a few more moments, then turns off.

  The dinging, too, ceases.

  He decides to use his laptop screen for light, which is annoying because the dial that adjusts the angle of the Uniriya satellite modem is very small. The digital glow, even after he opens the laptop like a book, flattening it out so that he can get the screen close to the dial, isn’t very helpful.

  The laptop and the satellite modem are tethered together by a blue Ethernet cable, making the movement even more awkward. Other wires come down off the car through the rolled-down window on the driver’s side to stay charged in a contraption hooked into the Land Cruiser’s cigarette lighter. The cigarette lighter is rarely used for lighting cigarettes anymore, A.E. Peoria thinks.

  What is that noise?

  Oh, it’s just a new dinging. It’s his laptop making the new dinging noise, no longer the car door, which means the software for the Uniriya is trying to “acquire” the satellite, ding, ding, ding.

  He presses the mute button on his laptop so it stops making the dinging noise. He’s sweating and worried and very much discomfited. That fucking David D. Obutu. The country to the east, where the refugees came from and where the attackers came from, looks very flat and peaceful and serene and unthreatening—though admittedly he can’t really see much of it in the dark. And A.E. Peoria knows that scenery in this region is not a good way to judge the chance of catastrophic violence occurring at any moment.

 

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