Ed Gorman - Short Stories, Volume 1
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- Название:Short Stories, Volume 1
- Автор:
- Издательство:Fictionwise.com
- Жанр:
- Год:2003
- ISBN:978-1-59062-568-2
- Рейтинг книги:4 / 5. Голосов: 1
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Short Stories, Volume 1: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация
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contains Fictionwise.com members favorites “En Famille” and “Favor and the Princess” and more excellent short mysteries.
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“I’m not having too bad a month.”
Ms. Sandstrom nodded wearily and looked around the room. “Do we have to ask Donaldson here any more questions? Isn’t he telling us everything we need to know when he says ‘I’m not having too bad a month?’ What’re we hearing when Donaldson says that?”
I hadn’t noticed till this morning how much Ms. Sandstrom reminded me of Miss Hutchison, my fourth grade teacher. Her favorite weapon had also been humiliation.
Dick Weybright raised his hand. Dick Weybright always raises his hand, especially when he gets to help Ms. Sandstrom humiliate somebody.
“We hear defeatism, when he says that,” Dick said. “We hear defeatism and a serious lack of self-esteem.”
Twice a week, Ms. Sandstrom made us listen to motivational tapes. You know, “I upped my income, Up yours,” that sort of thing. And nobody took those tapes more seriously than Dick Weybright.
“Very good, Dick,” Ms. Sandstrom said. “Defeatism and lack of self-esteem. That tells us all we need to know about Donaldson here. Just as the fact that he’s got a crack in his glasses tells us something else about him, doesn’t it?”
Dick Weybright waggled his hand again. “Lack of self-respect.”
“Exactly,” Ms. Sandstrom said, smiling coldly at me. “Lack of self-respect.”
She didn’t address me again until I was leaving the sales room. I’d knocked some of my papers on the floor. By the time I got them picked up, I was alone with Ms. Sandstrom. I heard her come up behind me as I pointed myself toward the door.
“You missed something, Donaldson.”
I turned. “Oh?”
She waved Laura’s envelope in the air. Then her blue eyes showed curiosity as they read the name on the envelope. “You’re not one of those, are you, Donaldson?”
“One of those?”
“Men who read their wives’ mail.”
“Oh. One of those. I see.”
“Are you?”
“No.”
“Then what’re you doing with this?”
“What am I doing with that?”
“That parrot’s in here again.”
“I must’ve picked it up off the table by mistake.”
“The table?”
“The little Edwardian table under the mirror in the foyer. Where we always set the mail.”
She shook her head again. She shook her head a lot. “You are one of those, aren’t you, Donaldson? So were my first three husbands, the bastards.”
She handed me the envelope, brushed past me and disappeared down the hall.
There’s a park near the river where I usually eat lunch when I’m downtown for the day. I spend most of the time feeding the pigeons.
Today I spent most of my time staring at the envelope laid next to me on the park bench. There was a warm spring breeze and I half hoped it would lift up the envelope and carry it away.
Now I wished I’d left the number ten with the manly scrawl right where I’d found it because it was getting harder and harder to resist lifting the letter from inside and giving it a quick read.
I checked my watch. Twenty minutes to go before I needed to be back at work. Twenty minutes to stare at the letter. Twenty minutes to resist temptation.
Twenty minutes — and how’s this for cheap symbolism? — during which the sky went from cloudless blue to dark and ominous.
By now, I’d pretty much decided that the letter had to be from a man. Otherwise, why would Laura have hidden it in her drawer? I’d also decided that it must contain something pretty incriminating.
Had she been having an affair with somebody? Was she thinking of running away with somebody?
On the way back to the office, I carefully slipped the letter from the envelope and read it. Read it four times as a matter of fact. And felt worse every time I did.
So Chris Tomlin, her ridiculously handsome, ridiculously wealthy, ridiculously slick college boyfriend was back in her life.
I can’t tell you much about the rest of the afternoon. It’s all very vague: voices spoke to me, phones rang at me, computer printers spat things at me — but I didn’t respond. I felt as if I were scuttling across the floor of an ocean so deep that neither light nor sound could penetrate it.
Chris Tomlin. My God.
I kept reading the letter, stopping only when I’d memorized it entirely and could keep rerunning it in my mind without any visual aid.
Dear Laura,
I still haven’t forgotten you — or forgiven you for choosing you-know-who over me.
I’m going to be in your fair city this Friday.
How about meeting me at the Fairmont right at noon for lunch?
Of course, you could contact me the evening
before if you’re interested. I’ll be staying at the Wallingham. I did a little checking and found that you work nearby.
I can’t wait to see you.
Love,
Chris Tomlin.Not even good old Ms. Sandstrom could penetrate my stupor. I know she charged into my office a few times and made some nasty threats — something about my not returning the call of one of our most important customers — but I honestly couldn’t tell you who she wanted me to call or what she wanted me to say.
About all I can remember is that it got very dark and cold suddenly. The lights blinked on and off a few times. We were having a terrible rainstorm. Somebody came in soaked and said that the storm sewers were backing up and that downtown was a mess.
Not that I paid this information any particular heed.
I was wondering if she’d call him Thursday night. I took it as a foregone conclusion that she would have lunch with him on Friday. But how about Thursday night?
Would she visit him in his hotel room?
And come to think of it, why had she chosen me over Chris Tomlin? I mean, while I may not be a nerd, I’m not exactly a movie star, either. And with Chris Tomlin, there wouldn’t have been any penny-pinching for a down payment on a house, either.
With his daddy’s millions in pharmaceuticals, good ole Chris would have bought her a manse as a wedding present.
The workday ended. The usual number of people peeked into my office to say the usual number of good nights. The usual cleaning crew, high school kids in gray uniforms, appeared to start hauling out trash and run roaring vacuum cleaners. And I went through my usual process of staying at my desk until it was time to pick up Laura.
I was just about to walk out the front door when I noticed in the gloom that Ms. Sandstrom’s light was still on.
She had good ears. Even above the vacuum cleaner roaring its way down the hall to her left, she heard me leaving and looked up.
She waved me into her office.
When I reached her desk, she handed me a slip of paper with some typing on it.
“How does that read to you, Donaldson?”
“Uh, what is it?”
“A Help Wanted ad I may be running tomorrow.”
That was another thing Miss Hutchison, my fourth grade teacher, had been good at — indirect torture.
Ms. Sandstrom wanted me to read the ad she’d be running for my replacement.
I scanned it and handed it back.
“Nice.”
“Is that all you have to say? Nice?”
“I guess so.”
“You realize that this means I’m going to fire you?”
“That’s what I took it to mean.”
“What the hell’s wrong with you, Donaldson? Usually you’d be groveling and sniveling by now.”
“I’ve got some — personal problems.”
A smirk. “That’s what you get for reading your wife’s mail.”
Then a scowl. “When you come in tomorrow morning, you come straight to my office, you understand?”
I nodded. “All right.”
“And be prepared to do some groveling and sniveling. You’re going to need it.”
Why don’t I just make a list of the things I found wrong with my Toyota after I slammed the door and belted myself in.
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