
The sandwich gone, Matt was scribbling a lyrical passage about a cake with black icing that might fit into the Monochrome Interlude when someone told him “Not much in the dukey crowd today.”
Looking up, he found Carleton Nairn, a cup of coffee in one hand, settling into the seat Linda had vacated. “What’s the best way to drink this stuff?” the newcomer asked. “Or should I just keep punching buttons until I get one that’s bearable?”
Matt had never tried the vintage coffee vending machine, but he’d heard about it. “Yeah,” he chuckled.
Carleton Nairn sipped at the paper cup and winced. “Urf. Hey, I hear there’s a party Friday night. Going?”
Matt nodded. “Can I give you a ride?” Nairn went on.
“Um, no. Thanks.” Lest he hurt a new colleague’s feelings, he added, “I’ve, er, already got one.”
“Be nice to see everyone,” said Nairn, attempting another sip. “Even if most of them suddenly don’t remember me. I heard the Silberwetters are going to be there.”
Matt raised one shoulder to express ignorance and apathy.” They’re always somewhere,”
Carleton Nairn went on, a tinge of nostalgia in his voice. “Hey, maybe you went to their Thanksgiving do?”
“I was at my brother’s,” Matt told him.
“You turned the Silberwetters down?”
“I was not invited,” said Matt, fixing his eyes on Carleton Nairn’s face.
His companion didn’t seem to notice. “Well, I hear it was something: one of those Turley Buffets you can have catered, you know, with owl’s eggs, goose livers, every bird except turkey. I like a buffet deal, myself: if everyone’s standing, no one’s inspired to make a big speech. Now, who was it told me about that? Mr. Prince, I believe, going on about parties. He seemed annoyed about something.” Nairn took another sip of pseudo-coffee. “Likely he’s annoyed about everything.”
Matt forced a smile and a half-hearty “Heh-heh.”
Carleton Nairn’s eyelids fluttered as though someone had shined a bright light into his face. He cleared his throat and went on, “Not shy, is she?”
Matt scribbled “Two bricks shy of a load” on his scratch pad, but decided he didn’t know Carleton Nairn well enough.
“We go way back,” Carleton Nairn went on. “She’d get her claws into any man she laid eyes on. I guess you never even saw her before she turns up in your office.”
Matt shuddered and tried to close his mind’s eye. “Oh, I’ve seen her.”
Watery eyes reflected up from watery coffee as Nairn leaned into another sip. “Oh, that’s right. She used to work in Streets and San.”
“Before my time,” Matt told him, with another shudder.
“That was back when Walter Prince still had your job.’ Nair settled back in the chair. “And I….I knew the whole crew down Down: Thaxter, Prince, Silberwetter…but to you I guess this is as old as jellybean jokes.”
“No, no.” Matt set down his pen and folded his hands into what he hoped was a position of interest. “Um, fascinating.” One hand strayed toward the apple, but came back. Matt didn’t eat apples in front of witnesses: why force anyone to look at his teeth?
“Not very,” Carleton Nairn told him. “People you never knew, some dead, some hitting the bricks….” He sucked in more coffee. “She ever talk to you about the Good Old Days?”
Matt’s eyes were on the apple. “We, um, didn’t discuss that.”
Carleton Nairn looked Matt up and down, shrugged, and checked the inside of the paper cup. “I still remember how shocked they all were when Jerry was killed.” He wadded the empty cup between his hands. “Well, we all were: it was tough luck. The burglar never expected to find him in, watching TV, and had to shoot him to loot the place. After her time, though, I guess. She was divorcing Thaxter already by then. Or was he her second? Anyway, she likely wouldn’t remember that.”
Matt shrugged again. Carleton Nairn stood up. “So.” He flipped the stained wad of cardboard toward the trash can. “Be seeing you at the party, I guess. IF I don’t come begging for help this afternoon first.”
“Um,” was Matt’s reply. “See you.” He watched Nairn cross to pick up the cup, which had missed the can by a yard. As soon as his new subordinate reached the door of the lunge, Matt grabbed the apple and brought it toward his mouth.
“Why, hello, Mr. Nairn,” came a chirp from the door.
“Howdy, Ms. MacTaggart,” Carleton Nairn greeted the owner. “Going to the party?”
“Oh, yes!” she told him. “It’s my first as an employee. You’ll be there too, won’t you?”
“Wouldn’t miss it. Free food and drink, right?”
Matt slowly lowered the unbitten apple as Holly sashayed past him to the vending machines. This was all surely his imagination. He was a writer, after all, so naturally he was practiced in imagining plots where there weren’t any at all.
Holly planted the backs of her hands on her hips as she confronted the candy and cookie dispenser. Matt was not the only inhabitant of the lounge watching. Her quilted blouse had a deep golden V by way of neckline; her belt, of the same semi-metal, fastened with a crescent moon in the vicinity of her navel. A necklace of black and gold feathers tortured into figure eights wandered over her shoulders to her chest and back again. Tassels of red and green hung from black vinyl boots for an incongruous holiday touch.
She made her selection and leaned a long way forward to drop in her money and press the right buttons. Matt-the-Writer scrawled a few descriptive notes on the scratchpad. The pants slid along well-muscled caves to wrinkled deeply at…what part of the body? Backs-of-the-knees? Kneepits?
He scribbled “Kneepits? Real word? New one?” Would this fit somewhere into “Ascent of the Ruby Slippers”? Which of his characters did he want to sport noticeable kneepits?
Metal scraped on the floor and Holly plopped down into the chair already warmed up by Linda and Nairn. Her little box—six Oreos–slid onto the table as she reached down to unbunch the fabric at her kneepits. Then she adjusted cloth farther up. For a moment she just sat on her hands, her knees together but her ankles spread beyond the metal feet of the chair. This close, Matt thought she looked younger, more vulnerable. She was not, after all, so very old, and still a newcomer to Down, a novice even if she did have Marshall Silberwetter for a grandfather, and could….
That train of thought was derailed by another word question. Matt scribbled “stepgrandmother” among his notes.
His movement broke the spell over Holly. She wriggled a bit and then brought her hands up to the Oreos. “Are you going to the party tomorrow, Ma…Mr. Benz?”
Matt was thrown off by this address. He swallowed hard. “Mm-hmm. Er, free food, right?”
She laughed just as she had for Carleton Nairn. Her eyes did not move away from Matt’s. “I could give you a ride.”
Matt held up both hands, palm out. “No thanks. It’s…it’s been taken care of,”
The intent look on her face informed him he had chosen precisely the wrong phrase. “Ye-es.” She slid one finger across the Oreos. “My grandmother will be there, won’t she?”
Matt felt a sudden kinship with the cats in Pepe LePew cartoons.









































