
No one attempted to kill Matt that afternoon. Outside the city building, a light snow gave the huddling, hustling crowds a bit of sparkle. The sight lowered Matt’s blood pressure. He slowed down to enjoy the array on the plaza: the big Christmas tree with perhaps too many snowmen hanging on it, the massive metal puppy by Picasso, and the stark, geometric menorah erected in the name of equal-time holidaying. He looked back at the overdecorated tree. Yes, he liked the sleek, stark lines of the menorah, but he wasn’t drawn to it. He supposed he was just the type who would always prefer a baroque clutter of fripperies to something grand and solemn. This would be a cause for rebuke one day at the gate of the Great Golden Ultimately.
His mood was so much lighter as he waited for the bus that when it came he nearly let it go by, so he could take instead the one that would carry him to baroquely cluttered Water Tower Place (and Beth.) But there was that party to be faced tonight, and Friday rush hour would make the chances of getting home in time for a shower and a change of clothes iffy at best.
The spirit of the season seemed to be in all the drivers, though, and Matt made it in good time. He was almost whistling as he unlocked the door and dropped the Christmas cards from George and the insurance company on the hall table.
“I’m….” His nose was confronted by an aroma his memory told the nose it ought to recognize.
“Oh,” he moaned, the memory hitting him just before Ada Silberwetter stepped around a corner to hail him.
“About time you got here,” she informed him, one hand on one hip. “Come listen to our clue!”
Matt set down his briefcase and ambled down the hallway. He reached the dining room as Ada sat back down at the table, next to his mother.
“Oh, hello.” Mrs. Benz looked over the tops of her glasses. “Are you home?”
“Tell him what you were telling me,” Ada said, waving at the pages spread out of the table.
The taller woman shrugged and looked, through the glasses this time, at the nearest page, which was cluttered with her handwriting. “Well, it’s only a preliminary character sketch. It’s a kind of psychological profile of Miss Skull.”
She looked up. Seeing her audience nod, she went on, “Miss Skull has a dirty mind, and is proud of it. Miss Skull is creative—I don’t think ‘impudendum’ and ‘erotaerobics’ are really words—and she—or he, of course–likes to show off. You’re right to want to be sure this is actually murder, dear, and if I were you, I’d check among my friends first. Or acquaintances who might play this kind of [rank.”
Ada applauded. Matt had heard nothing especially knew, and saw no reason for delight. “Did you get all of that from the letters? Or the envelopes too?”
“Oh, yes.” His mother picked up the page so she could read down to the bottom. “Assuming Miss Skull stole the stationery and the envelopes, she’s not a scrupulously honest person. And she works in either a very small or a very large office. These are just plain white envelopes, so the place must be too small to spend money on envelopes that match their letterhead, or big enough to stock both letterhead and plain envelopes.”
“If she works for the City,” Ada pointed out, “Then that’s no problem.” She looked up to Matt. “Can you shave a face that long in one day? Cheer up!”
“I’m not in the mood to cheer up.”
“Aren’t you feeling well?” his mother inquired.
“I’m allergic to murder.”
“Oh, he’s just jealous that we’re getting ahead of him while he’s playing around having a job.” Ada reached her feet under the table, hunting with her toes for her shoes. “But we had to compare notes, you know. You don’t catch murderers by sprinkling salt on their tails.”
She found her shoes and stood up. “I suppose I must toddle and let you take care of business. There is that party, after all. You know.”
“I know,” Matt sighed.
His mother looked up. “A party? Is that where we’re going tonight? I thought wee were just going out to eat.”
“That was last night,” Matt told her. “Tonight we’re…. I’m going to the office Christmas arty. You remember.”
His mother frowned, trying to remember. “I’ll be there, too,” Ada put in.
Mrs. Benz’s eyes slid all the way to the right to regard her son. “You’re going…together?” Her mouth jerked up at one side.
Matt leaned forward. “I….”
“Oh, yes, we’ll be together,” Ada cooed. “I guarantee it.”
“Oh, then don’t let me keep you.” Smiling, Mrs. Benz shuffled the pages together. “Have a good time!”
Matt ground his teeth. “Mother, I….”
“s that my other shoe Mrs. Benz? Down there? No, I see. I gave them both on!”
Matt faced Ada, a growl scratching its way out of his throat, not only because he’d been interrupted but also because he knew she had done it to avert whatever he had been about to snarl at his mother. Guilt and embarrassment merged to become fury.
Ada reached up to pat one blazing cheek. “Now, now. Be a good boy and I’ll bring you a Christmas present.” She blew him a kiss and sauntered to the door, leaving Matt bubbling with anger and at the same time wondering why she put him so forcibly in mind of marshmallows.
His mother walked to the window. “Matt? This place you’re going…is it far? Maybe you should take the car.”
They had sold the car four years ago. “No,” Matt said. “Not far. You can see it from here.” You could see a ways from the nineteenth floor, of course. The joke was that when the light was wrong, you couldn’t see across the street.
But she nodded, accepting his judgement, and left him free to get his shower.
There was still time, even for Matthew Benz, once he had his good suit on. He could leave now, he supposed, but rather than be the first one there, wandering around the rooms alone, he sat up to his desk and pulled down the looseleaf binder that contained the manuscript of the first section of “Ascent of the Ruby Slippers”. Perhaps he could find a chapter or passage that he could work on while milling around at a party.
At the unfinished end of the tale, his characters were busy falling into a trap laid by Mai Doon Izahn, the evil warlord obstructing their quest to save post-holocaust mankind from starvation. The trap was fiendish and foolproof and, as far as Matt could determine, the heroes were stuck. He flipped backward through the text, hunting for some early line that might light a lamp or ring a bell to guide him through this maze.
“In the war between the Gibbelins and the Gnoles, there was little for humans to do.” Matt had read the opening of the novel so many times it had become a cliché to him. He flipped forward again.
“At the verge of a mighty forest sat a castle. It was a fine castle, but a bit imposed upon by the forest. In any other location, it would have been a grand castle: indeed, one of the greatest works of architecture to issue from the human brain.”
“It just wasn’t much of anything when compared to the forest.”
Forest. Imposed upon. Dwarfed by the life around it.
“Aha!” Easy enough to make notes about that at a crowded City party. He took a blank sheet of paper, folded it four times, and wrote “crowd” on the outermost layer. If he needed more data than he experienced at the party, he could collect it while Christmas shopping. Saturday would be perfect for that, and he had planned to get tp the library that day to research tombstones.
He looked over the top of the looseleaf binder at the little yellow box on his desk. Miss Skull had been lucky. Putting such a small number of photos in a box meant to hold a hundred sheets of photo paper left a lot of empty space for the post office to mash in. But the box was neither cracked nor dented. He made a note on another sheet of paper. He needed to find a box big enough for mailing away all the Christmas presents for his nieces.
“Matt?” called a voice from the doorway. “Am I going to a party tonight? What should I wear?”
Sighing, he set the binder back on the shelf.





















































