
Muzak and mistletoe but more to the point were the mugs of egg nog clustered under a large statue of a bandaged finger in flight. Not far away. Trays of glasses—wine and soup—surrounded an artwork made up of the exclamation points from a hundred junked typewriters. Mugs and cups had been in straight lines earlier, but this catered order was long gone now, disappearing as the guests appeared.
They arrived in clumps, first a few at a time, and then in battalions, until the crossroads of conversation reached a buzzing level worse than all the sounds ever uttered by all the politicians of babblekind They had settled not bunches across the broad room. A few brave nomads moved from these nebulous settlements to visit other camps, but usually the clumps moved together as one body, swirling among the other clusters of merrymakers. None but the waiter crossed the Great Wall that snaked throughout the room, invisible but inviolable, separating rulers from rabble. The distance between employer and employed was like a swift, vast river, and although not a few had crossed it before this party, few were building bridges for those who would follow.
Matt wished they’d stand in little squares corresponding to their boxes on the organizational chart. Not only would it be amusing, at least to him, but it would make conversation easier. He wouldn’t need to bend down to read lapel labels to find out who was who.
That group in that corner was speaking Polish, which Matt had heard aplenty in the bar in his youth. The clump just to the right favored Korean, while the larger group far from the double glass doors took care of Spanish. Where ethnicity didn’t define the gathering, clothing did: this price range gathered HERE, well insulated from THAT price range.
Matt could not spot one person dressed the way he was. It had been the same way all through school, even though his clothes came from one of the most popular mail order catalogs. Tonight he wore the newest of his three dark blue suits, over one of his collection of white shirts with thin black stripes. His closet contained three generations’ heritage of neckties, but he alternated between two: the black one with little red stars and the black one with little white dots. How could anything so nondescript, he wondered, stick out like a gangrenous thumb?
Overhead the Muzak changed, easing into “Wunderbar”, a song bright and secular. This was, after all, not a Christmas party. Held on City property, paid for with City funds, it could be nothing other than an End-of-the-Year Get-Together, all the hyphens serving as camouflage.
Matt’s egg nog was gone. He set the mug down next to the thick glass ashtray. He had chosen this chair because it was close to this ashtray, and to the glass double doors. Someplace to run, something to throw: he liked to have these handy at any large gathering. His size frequently made him a target for overlubricated guests looking to prove their mettle.
The glass doors, presumably locked, would open onto a balcony in better weather. The balcony was currently filling with snow. At ten stories, the violent wind and flying sleet were just fog, spreading a fuzzy glow around the streetlights. It looked peaceful out there. No profit out there, he supposed: he needed crowd noise to add to “Ascent of the Ruby Slippers”.
One eighth page of the paper in his pocket was already scribbled with notes, despite the noise that made it difficult for him to eavesdrop efficiently on passing conversations to copy them for frippery fiction. He didn’t always need to hear the dialogue to follow, for example, the drama od that smiling man who nodded and the smiling woman who shook her head in reply. Matt could even predict the ending of the story, as the nodding grew confident as the headshaking diminished.
He picked up his mug to make sure it was empty. Time to get another; it was too early to take root here, pre-empting a chair one of the older guests could use. And, of course, he had to be seen. When the mayor and crew made their obligatory appearance, every department would be taking the roll. Matt wanted to be sure he was marked Present.
He stood up and turned right in the same motion, and was very nearly skewered by a lethal-looking fingernail pointed his direction.
“You!” said Maryann Hoxey, in a voice of command. “Don’t try to get away. I want to introduce my husband to everyone.”
Matt murmured insincere admissions of joy at the prospect, but she continued, darkly, “It’s what he gets for not taking me dancing last Saturday. This way.”
Matt followed, grinning, but Mr. Hoxey barely noticed their approach. His head was turned at an acute angle, and his eyes were wide.
“What,” he demanded, “Is THAT?”
Strolling among the merry mob, THAT was Holly L. MacTaggart, her face transformed by make-up designed to make her look dead and eyelashes that reached halfway to the end of her pert nose. Eight ribbons in varying shades of red nestled among her hair. Her pants were hot pink—very hot—and as tight as the black vinyl blouse that divided her in half between belt and shoulders, the top half flesh, the bottom half vinyl. Her arms were hung with a collection of plastic watches and leather dog collars. A charm bracelet swung from her right ear, and what looked like a vacuum cleaner fanbelt dangled from the other.
Abandoning Matt, Maryann plunged gleefully forward to draw this walking work of art over to her husband. “Pleased to meet you,” said Holly, her polite boredom stating clearly that she would not have bothered to respond had Maryann been anything less than a secretary. She had not come to this party to speak to anyone from Down, but to alert the rest of the world that she was ready for better things. Still, she knew better than to snub Maryann, so she was poised, polite, professional.
At least until she decided she had chatted long enough to satisfy protocol and turned to go. Her poise slipped as her eyes gazed beyond Matt.
“Oh, goobers!” she said, under her breath. “Here comes the county seat.”
Maryann choked. Holly, oblivious to this, muttered, “A life like clowns at the circus.”
Matt had a pretty fair guess at who was coming by. “Slapstick?” he inquired. “Carefree? Chaotic?”
Red spots showed on pasty cheeks. “No! How could so many men fit into one vehicle?”
Maryann and her husband had already turned to smile a greeting. Matt took a breath, squared his shoulders, and did the same.
Marshall was with her, and three of his grandchildren/staffers. But Ada Silberwetter could not be outnumbered. She had assembled no vinyl binding, preferring a simple gown not unlike Maryann’s. Except that hers flowed from curve to curve without a single obstruction to prevent the mind from going into a trance. Matt blinked. So many modern fashions said, “I am magnificent! Touch me and die!” This said “Let’s go play!”
Holly had pulled closer to Matt. “She pays so much to look so cheap.”
Ada did not look cheap to Matt. She looked prohibitively expensive.
Holly decided on a strong offense. “Oh, Grandpa!” she cried. “I was going to wear your brooch but I ran out of room!”
She slid a hand along her chest toward the tiny strip of vinyl. Marshall looked her up and down with the eye of a connoisseur. Ada leaned forward to whisper, “Curves are back in style, if you hadn’t heard.”
“Oh, hello, Grrrrrandma.” Holly’s patented winsome smile suggested she had suddenly noticed Marshall’s latest wife. Matt could tell the difference between a greeting and an opening salvo, and moved a little out of the crossfire. “It’s just the season for a plump pudding.”
Marshall winked at Maryann. Ada smiled and Holly spread her feet a little to brace herself for the next wave.
Matt was to miss the skirmish, though; Marshall was gesturing him to one side. “I hear you’ve got a brother in the pharmacy trade. What’s good for dry skin?”
The elder statesman spoke with what seemed unfeigned amiability. Things had been different over the summer, when a garbled version of Ada’s meeting with Matt reached her husband. Marshall had sent a pair of grandsons around to take Matt on a brief tour of distant neigborhoods while spelling out the law. On actually meeting Matt later, however, Marshall’s self-confidence triumphed over hostility. He now saw Matt as someone who could not steal anyone’s wife, much less the wife of a Marshall Silberwetter. Insultingly convinced of Matt’s harmlessness, he now pumped his distant subordinate for details on winter skin care while his wife and granddaughter traded compliments.
Matt didn’t need to hear the rumble of artillery to know how the battle was going. He had had no serious doubts about the outcome. Ada Silberwetter, her eyelids half down and her mouth half open, remained in possession of the field as Holly L. MacTaggart, bright red under the makeup but still icily polite, stormed away.
“We’d better mosey, lamb,” Ada told her husband. “That Mr. Natarus will be looking for you.”
“Ah.” Marshall smiled at Matt and put out a hand. The smile was his own, if the teeth were not, and his grip was firm. “Thanks for the info. I’ll get some of that stuff. Drop over to the house some time.”
“We’ll play the piano,” Ada suggested, reaching to pat Matt’s shoulder in passing. “I know the bottom part if you can play the top.”
Light shimmered in Marshall’s polished black hair as they moved on. “I wish you wouldn’t torment the unworldly ones, Bundle,” he told his wife.
“He’s not unworldly, Lamb,” she said, as supple and symmetrical in retreat as advance. “He’s otherworldly.”
Then she was gone and Matt could breathe again. He turned his back on the memory and, looking up, sucked in the sigh he had just released. Laser-sharp beams were coming to puncture him from eyes all around. Linda’s gaze, from over by the egg nog, was of lethal quality; hatred burned in the stricken eyes of Walter Prince. Eyes he didn’t know scanned him like X-rays.
Matt had recently moved up half a box on the City organizational chart, but this did not bring him shoulder-to-shoulder with the likes of Marshall Silberwetter; it was more like hairline to toenail. When Ada talked to him, suspicion hardly simmered, for Ada Silberwetter might talk to anything in trousers. But that Marshall Silberwetter would waste time, and a smile, and a handshake, on a Matthew Benz was no mere dalliance.
Matt opened his mouth. Then he shut it. What could he say? “Hey! I’m a nobody! Really!”
At that moment, someone else’s voice called “Hey! Looks like the buffet’s open!”
Turning, Matt all but ran for a plate. He never liked to be first in line—with his size, people always thought he was bullying his way up—but survival outranked dignity.












































