
Matt was late for work the next morning, for which he blamed Ada Silberwetter. It was not her fault; he knew that. He was so exhausted after an evening of conversational combat that he should have taken to his bed as soon as he and his mother got safely back to the apartment. Instead, he had sat up until four, plotting the next section of “Ascent of the Ruby Slippers” so as to fit in all the notes he’d taken during dinner.
And he wasn’t technically late: just the last one to reach Down. Walter Prince, watching the last duckling rush in, had seemed about to comment. There had been a change of mind for some reason, and, after a nod to Matt, had slammed his cubicle door shut in place of bellowing.
Just as well, Matt thought, barging into his own little box. He had enough to occupy his mind, with crazy women, murderers, AND plot devices, that being civil to Walter Prince might have been beyond his capacity. He flipped his briefcase up onto the desktop and sent his desk calendar flying off the other side.
Snarling, he stormed around to retrieve the calendar and, stooping, watched the pens and pencils slip from his shirt pocket to clatter next to the skinny cardboard with December facing out. That sailed from his foot to the wall. No sense trying to kick pencils, so Matt threw himself back into his chair and nearly toppled over backward.
As usual, fury was followed by remorse and then despair. Leave the pencils! What difference did it make? All this fuss and bother just t stay alive and make a mark on the world, so it would not forget you when you died. Why? Matt knew no one would forget him when he was gone. No one thought about him all that much NOW.
From death, his thoughts turned lightly to those of tombstones, and the box of pictures inside his briefcase again. He decided not to bother with them, either. He’d looked at them twenty-seven times during Ada Silberwetter’s little game of Clue in the restaurant. He was sick of them.
Still…. He got up and collected his pens, pencils, and calendars, and then walked over to look out the door of his cubicle. Maryann was on the phone.
“Open for business in a moment,” she told Matt, who reached her command center just after she hung up and was reaching for her memo pad.
“N rush.” He attached the teddy bear pin to his lapel. “Just need some more, er, paper clips.”
“That I can get you,” she said, kicking her chair back toward the supply cabinets, She leaned over in her seat, her blouse riding up just far enough above her belt to expose one quarter inch of skin.
Matt cleared his throat. “Er, what do you know about tombstones?”
Maryann paused, blinked, and caught up a box of paper clips. “They’re expensive,” she said, coming forward again.
“What’s expensive?” asked Linda, on her way past the combination supply depot and staff lounge.
“What do you know about tombstones?” Maryann demanded, before Matt could head her off.
Linda shuddered. “I know it’s too early in the morning to be talking about them. Why?”
“Just morbid small talk.” Maryann shook out her hair in back with one hand while surreptitiously pulling her blouse back into place with the other. “Matt was asking about tombstones.”
Matt shrugged a response to raised eyebrows. “And skulls,” he said. Might as well take it from snout to curly tail.
“Halloween’s over, you now,” said Carleton Nairn, clipping some pages into his clipboard as he walked up.
“Halloween?” Maryann demanded, placing one index finger in the center of her chin. “Oh, I remember! That’s the holiday when they start putting up the Christmas decorations.”
“Skulls.” Linda shuddered again. “We had enough of that yesterday, with that mystery writer and her Miss Skull.”
Something hit the floor. “Oh!”
Holly was dressed conservatively. For Holly, for Friday. True the blue tights obviously deserved their name, but a little silver skirt covered part of them. When she bent over to retrieve the thick folder that had escaped her grip, Matt found the window which had been cut in the back of the skirt to display the tights. Everyone turned back to Maryann’s desk at the same moment.
“Skulls, eh?” said Carleton Nairn. “And gravestones?”
“What about Miss Skull?” Holly demanded.
Matt hadn’t intended to set up a panel discussion, but before he could say anything else, a booming “Good morning!” turned everyone’s minds from graveyards to a less pleasant subject.
Walter Prince advanced on the conference, shaking a sheaf of paper. “The latest studies of office procedure, people, proves that jobs take longer if you stop in the middle.”
Heads turned in the direction feet were taking them to the shelter of the cubicles. Everyone at Down was habitually in the middle of something at any given time. It was better to move out of range while Walter Prince was still dealing in general terms and hadn’t gotten down to specifics.
Matt stood his ground; it was his job to take the brunt while others took shelter. But Carleton Nairn didn’t know this, and the papers now rattled in the rookie’s direction. “Did you read this report after you wrote it?” demanded Walter Prince. “Or even while you were writing it? I’m only asking, Nairn, in hopes of uncovering some reason that any sane individual would report these figures on page six.”
Carleton Nairn was none too large to begin with, and seemed to shrink. But he swallowed hard and replied, manfully, “I take full responsibility, sir.”
Matt’s heart sank as that “Oh, do you?” expression spread across Walter Prince’s face. But Carleton Nairn went on, “I should have double-checked the data Mr. Benz gave me.”
Matt tried to recall any data he’d given Carleton Nairn. Yesterday morning: elementary data Nairn would have found without aid had Nairn worked at Down a whole week. Straightforward stuff, as far as he could remember: names and phone numbers. He tried to angle around to get a look at the report.
But this was twisted now between Walter Prince’s hands. “Benz gave you these figures?”
“Well, yes, sir.” Carleton Nairn’s head drew a little between his shoulders. “But I certainly should have taken time to be sure….”
Walter Prince waved a hand at him, just missing his nose. “Never mind, then. They’re probably okay.” His eyes flicked toward Matt and then away.
Now Carleton Nairn frowned. “Oh, sir, I really ought to….”
Brows came down and forward. “When I want more out of you, Nairn, I’ll light a match!” Walter Prince’s voice was so fierce that the usually unflappable Maryann looked up in wonder. Her eyes went rounder as the chief went on, “You may trust anything Mr. Benz comes up with, Nairn. He looks slow, but he is diligent, hardheaded, and thorough. If you have any aspirations to competence, you would do well to take a lesson from him.”
Linda was leaning out of her cubicle, her mouth hanging open. Carleton Nairn backed away, his hands raised in a “Hey, hey” position. Walter Prince stalked away, detouring around Matt with a grumble and a mutter.
Even allowing for “He looks slow”, the attack was not Walter Prince’s style at all. It lacked sarcasm, it lacked bite. If Matt hadn’t known his superior better, he would have suspected Walter Prince of trying to inflict a compliment instead of an injury.
“Um.” He leaned toward Carleton Nairn. “Do you have another copy of that report. I could….”
A Prince-like glare stabbed at him from the rookie’s eyes. Matt gave up and hurried back to his cubicle to take shelter with the box of paper clips.















































