Miles Black walked several paces from his battered utility before he realised he had absent mindedly put on his hat when getting out of the vehicle. It was a broad-brimmed akubra scarred by work on his parents’ stud in Victoria’s high country. Back home he would have kept on walking, but he was wearing his dark, pin-striped suit, white shirt and red tie and he was in Sydney for an interview. A hat did not fit the picture. He went back and dropped it in the utility, and then had the usual trouble closing the passenger side door. Rust had eaten into the door catch which meant that the door had to be lifted and slammed at the same time to close properly. Apart from a second-hand computer and a few clothes left at a hostel, it was all Miles owned. He locked the door again and walked around to his interview.
The headquarters of the Bugle Newspaper Group was a long, two-storey brick building set back from a main road – a busy one – in one of Sydney’s far northern suburbs. The building was built beside a natural, sharp drop in the ground, so that visitors could walk along a short footpath, past the modest sign saying ‘Bugle Group’, through double glass doors into the reception area at one end of the building without realising that they were on the first floor, which was reserved for administration and sales. The reporters were kept on the ground floor, well away from any visitors.
Having seen plenty of young reporters came and go the receptionist barely glanced at Miles. If she had looked a little longer she would have seen a well-built man in his early twenties of medium height, with sun tanned face and clear eyes. She might also have noticed a firm jaw and dark eyes and judged him “passable”: and an even closer inspection would have revealed a hint of bow leg in his stance. He had, in fact, been brought up working with horses. As it was she checked her list and told him to wait, pointing to one of the green vinyl chairs by the wall. There was a stairway to the lower level on the other side of the entrance hall, which Miles thought led to both the reporters and the printing presses, for he knew the Bugle Group still did its own printing.
He killed time by inspecting a series of framed front pages of various Bugle Group newspapers set on the wall above the receptionist’s head. He was too far away to read the stories on the pages but on one, for the McCarrs Regional Bugle, he could see the headline ‘Residents flee’ with a dramatic picture of burning forest beside it. Another for the South Forest Bugle, which serviced the suburb in which the Bugle Group headquarters stood, had the headline ‘Local musos win through’ with a picture of a school band with their instruments poised. There were plenty of front pages. For alone among the local newspaper groups the Bugle had refused to amalgamate its papers when the local councils were merged in Sydney many years previously. Instead of the informal industry rule of one paper per local council, there were four for the City of McCarrs – the McCarrs Regional Bugle, the South Forest Bugle, the Smith’s Creek Bugle and the Brown Beach Bugle. Instead of having one local paper for the City of Lovett Bay, the Bugle group had three and so on. This meant Bugle papers were tiny with two or perhaps even one, lone reporter, instead of the teams of reporters found elsewhere in Sydney.
Miles was aware of this history, having surfed through several web sites before making the long trip to the South Forest building, and was vaguely aware that a job with the Bugle group did not rate highly in journalism. However, his knowledge of the group’s history, such as it was, did not solve the problem of the framed front pages he saw. A few were important stories but mostly they were routine. A life saved here, a new shopping centre opened there; and the local MP making a fuss about something else on another page. But why had those pages been framed? Much later he learned that they had all received awards for printing.
As Miles scanned the framed headlines he saw, out of the corner of his eye, a woman appear at the top of the stairs. She was a stern-looking woman perhaps in her 40s, wearing dark-rimmed glasses, and a dark blue dress. Her hair was swept up in a bun at the back that made her look older. This was Mrs. Bronwyn Forester.
“Miles Black?” she asked, in a tone suggesting she was about to make an arrest. Miles nodded. She gestured for him to follow, then walked back down the stairs without saying a word. The interviewee hesitated for a moment, wondering if he had actually been summoned – the women had been very abrupt – then trailed after her down the steps and through a set of double doors into what seemed to be the editorial room.
The building’s architect had obviously been venting his feelings about journalism when he designed the room. It had no windows. One side was well below street level, thanks to the drop in the ground. On the other side was the main access corridor for the building with no windows in the internal wall between the corridor and the newsroom. It was possible to sit in the newsroom, and not know whether it was day or night, cloudy or bright outside. The interior designers played their part by installing green carpet and wood paneling which must have looked dated the moment it was installed, and gave it a pallid hue by fluorescent lighting.
To the left was a series of offices and meeting rooms, mostly unused. On the right the room had been divided into two sections by a panel and half glass partition. In the smaller area, closest to Miles, sat reporters, each behind a PC mounted on a narrow adjustable desk. They also had vinyl-topped desks which they mostly seemed to use to stack piles of papers and reports. As he walked in they were laughing over a shared joke.
On the other side of the partition were the sub-editors who set the stories into the paper and wrote the headlines. They were mostly a lot older than the reporters, more female and considerably more harassed. Keeping track of all the different stories - some stories ran across all titles, some in a sub group and some in just one - was a production nightmare, which should have been handed over to News Ltd or Fairfax long ago to be straightened out. However, the nightmare was kept going by the Bugle Property News, with pages and pages of glossy, expensive ads. Several web sites competed with it, but BPN still ruled because it got packaged with the local newspapers that were thrust through all the mailboxes find once a week.
On that visit all Miles saw was a group of sub-editors staring into battered PCs on desks scattered at random through their side of the room, with connecting data cables taped to the floor. No one looked up. The printers, who tended giant presses through a set of double doors at the far end of the room, wrestled with production problems as bad as those of the subs.
Miles was led to the far corner of this editorial cavern to the office of Justin Brock, editor-in-chief of the unholy mess. Bronwyn rapped on the door, looked in briefly then gestured for Miles to enter. Without a word she returned to her desk, a few paces from Brock’s office, to brood on how life could be better.
Miles pushed the door open to find a man in his late fifties, of robust physique albeit with the beginnings of a pot belly despite frequent golf that gave him a healthy tan. His hair had long fallen away to silver side fringes, framing a round, youthful face that featured a long nose and two small, brown eyes. Those eyes could turn hard, but sparkled with charm when he chose, which was not often with staff members. Potential recruits were a different matter. Dressed in an open-necked business shirt and casual slacks, he looked like an executive who had come into the office on the weekend. His BMW was the only journalist’s car allowed in the company car park at the back
“Miles is it?” said Justin getting out of chair to shake hands, and gesturing at the chair in front of his desk. “Bronwyn’s not great at announcing people. We’re not formal around here.” Miles glanced around the office. The main wall decoration was framed awards, one from the Law Society of Victoria for the best story on law for the year, another from a financial institution and another which appeared to be a legal document.
“It’s a writ,” said Justin noticing Miles gazing at the decoration. “Only one I got in my hand from twenty-five years on the metros. Guy who issued it went to jail just after, but it makes a nice memento.”
“It does at that.” replied Miles thinking that the mementoes and the book case, on which stood a cricket trophy of long ago, could do with a good dusting – and he was not one to notice dust.
“So you want to join our crew, do you Miles?” said the editor in chief leaning back in his leather chair.
“Yes, I do.”
Justin took a sheaf of papers, which Miles recognised as his CV sent in by email, from the top of a stack on one corner of his desk. At the other corner was an identical tray which contained two envelopes. He wondered briefly about the two trays.
“From the bush, I see. You’re from down south - Curriwong.”
“Corryong.”
“Yeah, right. Where is Corryong?”
“On the Murray Valley Highway, just short of the Kosciuszko National Park on the Vic side.”
“Snowy River country! You’re a real bushie!” Miles never saw why anyone from the city became so enthusiastic when he said where he was from. If they felt that way, why didn’t they go out and live there?
“Can you muster cattle?’
“Matter o’ fact, I can.” Miles could well have added that Corryong was the home of Jack Riley, the stockman generally accepted as the original for Banjo Patterson’s poem The Man From Snowy River, but did not. If he mentioned the poem city folk were likely to start loudly reciting what they remembered of it.
Justin smiled. “You talk like a bushie. Got a drawl there.”
“So do your reporters have to talk fast?”
Justin dropped back in his chair, opened his mouth and shook his shook his head as his way of expressing mock astonishment. “Mate, I wish most of ‘em w’d shut up and get out there and get stories. Never mind how fast they talk… Well, let’s see,” he glanced at the CV, “An ag science degree at a college in Albury. Ag science? Never had one of those before. Then you did two years on the High Country Gazette, part-time. Why didn’t you get busy on a farm like every other bastard with an ag science degree?”
“I was. Had to help out with the family stud.”
“A stud? Racehorses?”
Miles shook his head. “Not that sort of stud. We do stock and quarter horses for farms, mustering cattle; a few of what they call warmbloods for dressage and show events.” The stud had briefly tried to breed racehorses with the only result being a big financial loss, which was part of the reason Miles had to help out. The other part was that his father had fallen ill.
“I see,” Justin put the CV down and folded his hands across his small pot belly. “So tell us Miles, what brings you to the Bugle Group?”
“The stud was in a bit o’ trouble. Took the job on the Gazette to bring money in, any money, ‘n liked it.”
“Bitten by the newspaper bug, eh?”
“You could say that.”
“Not a good bug to be bitten by Miles. Newspapers are dying. They don’t pull in the readers like they use to and the advertisers are going elsewhere. Even the celebrity magazines who still have readers, are finding it tough. All that also comes with a complete lack of community respect. Every now and then some bunch of clowns or other run polls of community attitudes to the professions. In those journalists typically rate somewhere between used car salesmen and sex workers and, Miles mate, last poll like that I saw the sex workers were gaining. You’re jumping onto a sinking, disregarded ship, Miles.”
The high countryman shrugged. “So I get my feet wet.”
Justin laughed. “Fortunately, a few bastards still read us because we get shoved through their mailboxes every week, along with a whacking great chunk of real estate ads for which the Dixon family,” - the Bugle Group’s owners who refused to sell to the big publishing houses - “curse every one of ‘em, charge like wounded bulls. But we’re a newspaper group just like the big ones are and that means the journos don’t take orders from sales guys. We decide what’s best for our readers. Gotit?”
“Sure.”
“But you didn’t have to come this far to get a newspaper fix. There’s a daily in Albury, right? Border Mail?”
“Yeah. Getting a junior spot there can be tough.”
“Suppose. Or what about cross the state and try the Bendigo paper, or any one of the regionals. Must be a couple on this side of the border not so far from home. Let’s see – there’d be a paper at Wagga or The Canberra Times maybe. That’d be tough too but worth a try and easier to step up into the metros if that’s where you’re aiming.”
Miles shrugged. In fact, he had gone for interviews at the Daily Advertiser at Wagga Wagga, The Goulburn Post in Goulburn and the Illawarra Mercury at Wollongong, before winding up in Sydney. The editors of those papers had been good natured enough to see the blow-in from the bush at short notice but had no openings.
“Tight at the moment,” was all he said.
Justin nodded. “It’s tight all over, mate. Same on the wires and on newspapers and online, what there is of it that pays.”
A disastrous turn in his private life had driven Miles away from high country with its clear skies and sweeping views, and forced him to fall back on his skills as a journalist - such as they were after a short time on a bush paper. But he had not fully realised, until he started his trip, just how difficult it was to get a job as a reporter without the editor owing his family a favor.
“See Miles,” said Justin, “we do usually hire reporters from the bush or other suburbans. If we take anyone from metros or radio or anything like that they don’t do the job. We deal in local stories, local personalities. Sometimes we might do courts or get a local robbery, or expose local councils for the thieving, corrupt bullshit artists that they are, but a lot of it is arranging pics for the school’s Easter hat parade, and writing about car parking near the town mall. The metro guys don’t want to do that stuff. You follow me, Miles?”
Miles did follow him. Among other things he had written about were the Corryong sewer system; a man who collected beer bottles; a shop keeper who had retired after 40 years on the job; and an interesting rubbish tip. He also knew all about arranging pics for the school Easter Hat Parade. In that respect, at least, The Bugle Group could have few terrors for him.
“If you’re aiming high they can be pretty shitty jobs, but they can be what you make of it. Survive here for a while and you can do anything. I see the stuff you’ve been doing is the sort’a stuff we do around here.” Jason picked up the resume and flipped through the copies of stories Miles had included. One story was of the man who collected bottles. Jason paused at it, snorted in an amused way and flipped on. “And you have a referee, who I remember from state rounds on The Age 20 years ago. I wondered where Rod had got to.” Miles was interested to hear this. He had gotten on very well with Rod – a journalist of the old school who had insisted on lecturing his junior staff at length on reporting – but he had left so quickly that the parting had not been amicable. “Rod says you’re an operator.”
“Nah, not me.”
“I wouldn’t admit to it either, but he says you should be given a go and if he says so then I’ll give you what you wish for – a job here - but it’s a tough one. You know Koala Bay?”
“Suburb around here.”
Justin nodded. “Most remote office we’ve got, about half an hour’s drive north of here. Mate, it’s almost in bloody Newcastle. Some of our reporters work out of this office, but if the paper’s area is too far away the reporters work out of satellite offices. Koala Bay is a satellite office. It’ll be you and another reporter, Angela, and some admin people and such but you won’t have much to do with them. You’ll like the office – just a couple of streets down from the beach.”
“So Angela is the editor?”
“No, she’s a junior – less experience than you - but she doesn’t report to you.”
Miles had never expected to be made editor, but he was naturally curious. “Then who’s editor?”
“I’m the closest you’ve got. Listen, if you want the job I’ll take you through to Evelyn who’ll be your sub and she’ll explain how our system works. The money is poor – you get J3 at our rate.” (Miles was not quite sure what that meant, but suspected he would not be paid very much. His suspicions were later confirmed.) “We pay a car allowance but we don’t pay for mobile phones.” He put particular emphasis on the word don’t. “But I gotta rush this. If you want it the job is yours from Monday.”
“Happy to be aboard.”
“Good, good! And I expect some stories from up there. The woman you’re replacing, Jan, was hopeless.” He said the last word with force. “She’s been there a month and she’s getting out before I can sack her. What we do is not all dull stuff, but Jan didn’t get anything.” He handed Miles the latest issue of the Koala Bay Bugle, the first issue he had ever set eyes on. The front cover featured a group of school girls who had done a walk against hunger, and a lead story about the local MP having planted trees on the foreshore. Miles blinked and read the story again. Even the High Country Gazette had never been reduced to that sort of desperation. He flicked through the rest of the paper. There were no news stories worthy of the name.
“Did you speak to Jan?”
“Tried a couple of times but she always called back after I was gone.”
Somewhere in the back of Miles’ mind a warning bell sounded, but when you want a job warning bells are easy to ignore.