than ever of how wrong it was for me to read it.
It didn't stop me. I shoved the other mail into my bag and
slid the card from its envelope, my heart already pounding
in anticipation of what I'd find today and how different it
would seem now that I knew for whom the words were
truly meant.
"No." My mouth fel slack with the sound of disbelief and I stared harder at the card.
I folded it shut as though it might change what I'd read, but
as though they'd been written in flames, the words burned
my fingers through the paper.
No. No, no, no.
This is your last list.
It couldn't be. It shouldn't be. It was not alowed to be!
You've done wel, though I think you understand you need
more work on discipline. Should you desire further
instruction and encouragement, I might consider continuing
your service to me. But only if I see a ful commitment
from you. You know how to get in touch with me.
Don't feel yourself worthy of more of my time. Only I can
decide that.
Wow, and oh, no. I tucked the card back into the
envelope and pressed it to my chest as I stepped aside to
let the snotty woman who'd dismissed me several times
before get to her mailbox. She gave me a curious glance,
but something in my face must have looked formidable
enough that she glanced quickly away.
I turned my back to the row of mailboxes with the note stil
clutched to me. I wanted to cry. Or puke. I wanted to put
the note back and pretend I hadn't read it.
But instead, I did what I hadn't ever done before on
purpose. I shoved it in my bag.
I was keeping it.
Paul wasn't in his office when I got to work, but that was
fine. I didn't have time to worry about him this morning, or
his lists that could never take the place of the one in my
bag. I hadn't taken it out to look at it again, though I could
remember each swirl and whirl of every letter and line.
I made the coffee and set his cup by the pot with the sugar
and powered creamer already in it. In his office I lit the
desk lamp instead of the overheads that gave him a
headache, and I puled up al the files he'd need to work
on. I even set his radio, though not to the station he usualy
chose but one with alternative pop instead of the soft-rock
channel he usualy played.
I did al of this without a list and not because I feared what
would happen if he came in and found none of it done. I
did it, simply, because Paul needed these things in order to
be productive. If my boss was being productive, he would
have less time to hover over me, and simply put, today I
would not have been able to stand hovering.
would not have been able to stand hovering.
I fielded a few phone cals and settled some business by
the time he breezed in with a frown.
"Paige, I need coffee, please."
I pointed to the counter. "It's al ready, Paul."
"Thanks." He said it offhandedly, then looked at the mug
and back at me. "Thank you, Paige."
I nodded but didn't glance up from my files. I had a lot of
work to do today and not enough attention to give him
more than that. Most of my mind was stil caught up in
what I was going to do without the lists. Paul disappeared
into his office and shut the door, and I let out the sigh I'd
been holding.
Anger shook my fingers as I typed. What a fool Eric had
been! He'd asked for discipline and from the start he'd
made a mess of it! Turning in his essay late, not folowing
the lists. Why had he bothered? Why had he wasted his
mistress's time? Because there was no doubt in my mind
any longer the sender of the notes had been a woman al
along.
Men weren't so eloquent. Men weren't so perfectly cold in
dispensing their instructions even as they drew forth an
emotional response. Only women could dig so deep and
pul out so much.
I typed faster, making mistakes and going back to fix them
because I'd be damned if I turned in faulty work and gave
Paul a reason to judge me. From behind his half-closed
door I heard the music swel, but he didn't change the
station. The lights didn't come on, either. I concentrated on
my tasks, but today they gave me no satisfaction.
Fuck!
I sat back in my chair, muttering. Nothing satisfied me, and
I understood why. It wasn't only because the notes were
going to end, it was because I'd solved at least half the
mystery. I knew who the notes were for, if not who was
sending them. And knowing, I couldn't stop thinking about
it.
If I hadn't found out it was Eric, a man. If that hadn't
changed my perception of what it meant to be on the
receiving end of the lists. If. If. If!
"Paige?" Paul caled. "Can I see you in here for a minute?"
He certainly could, though I doubted he'd be as thriled
with quiet, subservient little Paige as he'd been. I pushed
back from my desk and stood tal in my expensive shoes.
The list had told me to buy these shoes. This blouse and
skirt. My armor, what I put on when I wanted the world to
see me as who I wanted to be and not who they might
think I was.
"Yes, Paul."
For the first time in many weeks, I didn't sit to talk to him.
He had to tilt his chair back a little to look up at me. I
noticed the difference, and I thought he did, too, because
when he spoke he sounded a little uncertain.
"Thank you for setting up my office."
"You're welcome."
I thought he would say more, but Paul just turned his
attention back to his computer and dismissed me with his
silence. I had time to think of what it meant when I went
back to my own desk, but I didn't care enough to bother.
When my cel rang just before noon, I almost didn't
answer. I didn't want to talk to Austin, but it was my dad,
an even greater surprise. I flipped open the phone and
pressed it to my ear, though it wasn't my habit to take
personal cals at work.
"Dad. Hi."
"How'd you know it was me?"
"I have caler ID, Dad. I have your number programmed
into my phone." Not that I used it much.
He loved gadgets but wasn't particularly tech savvy. "Can't
pul anything over on you, huh? What are you doing for
lunch?"
"I brought a sandwich."
"How about I take you out for lunch? I have to be up your
way today for a meeting. Stela's off shopping or
something. It'l just be you and me."
My dad had taken an early retirement a year before, but
though he'd suggested it a few times, this was the first time
he'd actualy invited me to lunch. We made plans to meet
he'd actualy invited me to lunch. We made plans to meet
at a chain restaurant not too far from my office. I knocked
on Paul's door to tel him I'd be leaving. He'd been
concentrating hard on his work, and I had to knock twice
before he looked up. He was going to get a headache that
way, even without the overhead lights on.
"Paul. I'm going to lunch with my dad. I'd like to take an
extra hour today. I can stay later, if you need me to."
He shook his head. "No, Paige. That's fine. Go enjoy
yourself."
"Want me to bring you back anything?"
"No." He sighed and waved a hand at the monitor. "I need to get this done before I leave for Kansas next week."
"You have my cel number if you need me," I told him.
"Cal if you want me to stop on my way back."
Paul has a very nice smile he doesn't use half as often as he
should. It doesn't make him into a movie star by any
means, but it was easy enough to see why his wife had
agreed to become Mrs. Johnson.
I couldn't remember the last time I'd gone to lunch with my
dad. He usualy managed to remember my birthday, if not
the day at least the month, and major holidays seemed to
trigger his memory, too, but with nothing on the calendar it
was a bit unusual for him to ask me. He greeted me with
the same hug and kiss as he always did, the one that left
me feeling slightly strange though he never seemed to think
so.
We both ordered the same thing, soup and salad. "Stela's
got me on some sort of diet," he explained. "Says we both
need to drop a few pounds. You look like you've slimmed
down a bit."
"I've been working out." Leave it to my dad to compliment
me while making me feel bad at the same time.
"We just got an eliptical trainer and a Bowflex. You can
come over and use it if you want." My dad thickly buttered
a rol already glistening with grease.
"There's a gym in my apartment building, but thanks." I
didn't even take a rol, thinking of the word discipline and
what it meant to me. I didn't point out how little sense it
made for me to drive al the way to my dad's house to
work out.
work out.
"You could stop by anyway some time this week. Check it
out."
In the past I'd have given him an awkward laugh and
shrugged off the invitation knowing that though he meant
the offer, he wouldn't notice if I didn't take him up on it.
Real invitations, the ones I was expected to take, came
from Stela and always had. Now, though, something in the
way he said it sounded different.
"Sure, I guess I could."
"Your brother's been giving us a bit of a rough time," my
dad said.
Interrupted by the waitress bringing our soup, I didn't
answer at first. My dad, as was typical of him, ignored the
server, spiling his guts in front of a stranger when I'd have
preferred the decency of a few minutes' wait. Ah, wel, it
wasn't my secret.
"Jeremy," he added. "He's been acting up in school, getting into trouble at home. Won't listen to a damn thing we tel
him."
him."
I didn't think pointing out giving in to your child's every
whim was bound to catch up to you would be appropriate,
so I made some sympathetic murmurs and wondered why
my dad was sharing.
"He's been realy mouthy to me."
"Kids go through stages, don't they?"
My dad gave me a fond smile. "You never have."
Choices. We al make them, sometimes more than once.
Sometimes it's the choices we make over and over that
define us, but more often it's the ones we don't.
"Kids who feel confident in their parents' affections can
take the risk of acting out," I said calmly. "I gave my mom a heluva hard time growing up."
My dad's not a stupid man, though he is deliberately blind
to certain things. He sighed. "Paige. I know I haven't
always been there for you."
I lifted my spoon to give my hands something to do, but it
clattered against the bowl and I didn't want to risk spiling
clattered against the bowl and I didn't want to risk spiling
the soup, so I put the spoon down. Of al the awkward
moments we'd ever shared, this had to rank right up there
with the top ten. Worse even than the year he'd noticed I'd
started wearing a bra and announced it at one of Stela's
parties.
Knowing he wanted me to say it didn't matter only made it
harder for me to answer. I stared into my soup for a long,
hard minute and felt his gaze weighting me. I wanted to
make it al right for my dad because it would be easier then
to pretend it was al right for me. But in the end I said
nothing, silence more of an answer than words could ever
have been.
"Could you come by?" he said after another half minute
ticked by. "Jeremy has always liked you, Paige. He looks
up to you like a—"
"Sister?" I looked up at him, then, and took pity on the
man who was responsible for one-half of me.
"You are his sister. We've never tried to make you feel like anything less."
He wasn't going to apologize more, I could see that. I was
pretty sure he hadn't realy meant the first one. On the
surface, sure, but not down deep. No where it mattered.
"I can come over. Sure. I'm not certain what you think I
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