
The rest of the day passed without incident, aside from the tantrum Walter Prince threw on learning Matt has assumed the authority to unlock Watanabe’s cubicle and present it to Carleton Nairn. In the beginning, Matt had suffered terrific anxiety over such explosions, but by now he couldn’t even work up a sweat. He had learned that one of the primary functions of Walter Prince’s assistant was to absorb at least one tirade a day. If it hadn’t been about Carleton Nairn’s workspace, it would have been something else.
It was wearying, though, day after day, so instead of boarding a Number 11 bus, Matt walked a couple of blocks to catch a One-Fifty-One and rode it to Water Tower Place. A little Christas shopping would settle his nerves.
After all, there were no decisions to be made outside Water Tower Place the month before Christmas. You just joined the migratory pattern and pried yourself loose once you reached the top floor. Here the array was beautiful and useless and all browsing strictly frivolous. Matt’s height made it easy to window shop, and he checked all the store displays, debating whether his mother would prefer a ceramic satyr ir a seven foot vinyl grandfather clock with a telephone holder on each side of the case. He had no intention of buying either; he was pretty sure he didn’t want to meet any human being who would. In his pocket was a list of things his mother had mentioned wanting, but he did not check this. The Benz family had always bought gifts on the Surprise Principle: if you bought someone something they asked for, it wouldn’t be a surprise.
Finishing the seventh floor, and noting distaste that a boring clothing shop was slated to open between the tobacco novelties store and the designer telephone outlet, he worked his way down through the mall. Eventually, and not by accident, he found himself in front of the bakery where Beth worked. The crowd was sparse here. Shops on both sides had decided to relocate, and remodeling for new tenants was going on behind silvery wooden barricades that completely hid the gourmet pastry shop between.
There was only one other customer when Matt walked in. She was enough. “One without too many nuts,” she said, looking over a tray of precisely identical brownies. “And not too dry. The one I had yesterday was like chalk. And not all mooshy in the middle, either. You know what I mean: not quite done. You know what I want.”
A yellow-haired, red-faced clerk was doing her best to maintain an even temper. The other counter attendant was a large-eyed creature whose shoulders rose bare inches above the counter. The soft face was fixed in an expression of concentrated disinterest: large eyes intently regarded a square of linoleum that was not quite the same shape as the rest of the floor.
This short gloomy person was Beth Zimmerman who, under the name Jinx Bottym, wrote much short gloomy verse. She had won some attention with her book, Aftermath Alphabet (“A is for Apple, Big and Brown; B is for Burned-out Buildings in Town”). But writing poetry still paid less regularly than packing fat round cookies into white paper bags.
“I have some envelopes for you,” Matt told her, unlatching his briefcase.
“Ah,” she said, not shifting her eyes from the linoleum.
Not that Beth was ever excited about anything, but Matt could understand a certain lack of glee at the five envelopes with fold marks across them as he drew these from the briefcase. Acting as her agent, Matt sent Jinx Bottym’s poems hither and yon, getting most of it back in stamped return envelopes. Beth knew as well as he did the author’s credo: “Big Checks Come In Unfolded Envelopes.”
Matt slid these across the counter and brought the briefcase up to relatch it. “Say,” he said, glancing into the luggage on his knee, “These aren’t yours, are they? I found them this morning and don’t know where they came from.”
Beth’s glance actually brushed the yellow box he brought out, but then went right past to rest on a spot of powdered sugar marring the surface of a lonely chocolate doughnut. “No,” she said.
He raised the lid. “Well, look.”
Matt’s heart soared: when that left nostril flared, it meant Beth was interested. Two small white hands pushed his away from the box. Matt leaned toward the pictures of the ancient gravestones, her blouse billowing against the countertop to expose what was more of a dimple than cleavage.
Matt tried to look away and failed. His moral compass, he felt, had been bent out of shape forever the afternoon he was flashed by the wife of Marshall Silberwetter, a city official so far Matt’s superior that Matt never knew whether to shake his hand or kowtow. Mrs. Silberwetter had wanted to see what Matt would do. When Matt did absolutely nothing, this amused her far more than any other action he might have come up with.
Matt still felt sullied by the encounter. Hitherto, his association with Beth, though tinged a bit with romance, had been primarily intellectual. Now he couldn’t look at her without speculation.
Beth had the top picture out of the box, flipping it over to consider two Xs penciled on the back. Her eyes, of course, still seemed to be pointing at the lonely doughnut in the display case, but she said, without interest, “Interesting.”
“Would you….” Matt’s voice seemed ridiculously breathless to him. “Would you like to keep them…overnight?” He felt himself blush. “I have to figure out whose they are, but I don’t suppose anyone will miss them tonight.”
The top picture went back into the box, which then slid into a pocket in Beth’s apron. “Okay.”
Matt’s heart was high as he sloshed out of water Tower Place to await Number Eleven. By the time the bus arrived, however, he was already trying to identify what he had done wrong. E should have allowed Beth to keep them more than one night; insisting on one was probably too pushy. Of course, he could hardly have stood there negotiating a special date for the return of the photographs. Beth’s manager didn’t like employees to stand around talking. Had the manager been within earshot? Matt scolded himself for not checking. He always reminded himself to look for the manager before even passing Beth the envelopes. After he reviewed the scene in the bakery six times without coming to any definite conclusions about the manager’s whereabouts, he replayed everything he’d said, checking words and intonations for mistakes.
This took time; his mind was still on it as he walked through the lobby of his building and boarded the elevator. He was on the nineteenth floor and inside the apartment before he knew it. Once he did know it, he turned back for a look at the locks.
Usually, getting past this door involved a certain amount of agony because his mother, hearing him arrive, would hurry to “help”. Turning knobs, she would lock locks he had unlocked and unlock others until they were both thoroughly confused. But this time there had been no such reception.
He slid toward his mother’s bedroom door to see if anything was wrong and then heard a voice ask, “What time does your son get home?”
Matt, remembering his mother’s fans, nodded and started to tiptoe back toward his own bedroom, hoping to attract no attention. “Oh,” his mother replied, “By the time he gets home, it’ll be about the time he usually gets here.”
The other voice had been faintly familiar, reassuring Matt, but the little laugh that greeted his mother’s reply sent shivers shooting the length of his backbone. He held his position, trying to remember where he’d heard it.
His brain tossed him a possibility, and he shook his head. Impossible. His mother didn’t even know…. He started toward the bedroom again. One knee knocked the briefcase against the wall.
“Matt?” called Mrs. Benz. “Matt, is that you?”
There was no escape. “It better be,” he replied.
Chars shifted; two women came into view from the dining nook. “Oh, Matt!” Mrs. Benz turned to her guest. “This is my son Matthew. Matt, this is Ada Silberwetter. We’re here in the dining room having some…. Oh, I still haven’t brought in the tea!”
Raising both hands to shoulder height, she turned and hurried back through the dining room to the kitchen. The people she left behind studied each other from opposite ends of the hall. Matt noticed his hands were poised above his hips as if he was about to reach for his sixguns. The briefcase whacked the wall again as he swept both hands behind his back.







































