A cab stopped for him—it stopped!—for him!—and he climbed in, and sat in the back, and beamed. He asked the driver to take him to his office. And when the cab driver pointed out that it would almost be quicker to walk, Richard grinned even wider, and said he did not care. And as soon as they were underway he asked—practically begged—the cab driver to regale him, Richard, with his opinions on Inner-City Traffic Problems, How Best to Deal with Crime, and Thorny Political Issues of the Day. The cab driver accused Richard of "taking the Mickey," and sulked for all of the five-minute journey up the Strand. Richard did not care. He tipped the man ridiculously anyway. And then he walked into his office.
As he entered the building, he felt the smile begin to leave his face. Each step he took left him more anxious, more uneasy. What if he still had no job? What did it matter if small, chocolate-covered children and cab drivers could see him, if it turned out that, by some appalling mischance, he remained invisible to his colleagues?
Mr. Figgis, the security guard, looked up from a copy of
"Figgis!" exclaimed Richard, in delight. "And hello to you too, Mister Figgis, you exceptional security guard!"
Nobody had ever said anything remotely like that to Mr. Figgis before, not even naked ladies in his imagination; Figgis stared suspiciously at Richard until he got into the elevator and vanished from sight, then he returned his attention to the naughty teenage nymphets, none of whom, he was beginning to suspect, was ever likely to see twenty-nine again, lollipops or no lollipops.
Richard got out of the elevator and walked, slightly hesitantly, down the corridor.
"The return of the prodigal, eh?" said Gary. "Here you go."
"Hello Gary," said Richard. "Where's my desk?"
"This way," said Gary. "How was Majorca?"
"Majorca?"
"Don't you always go to Majorca?" asked Gary. They were walking up the back stairs that led to the fourth floor.
"Not this time," said Richard.
"I was going to say," said Gary. "Not much of a tan."
"No," agreed Richard. "Well. You know. I needed a change."
Gary nodded. He pointed to a door that had, for as long as Richard had been there, been the door to the executive files and supplies room. "A change? Well, you've certainly got one now. And may I be the first to congratulate you?" The plaque on the door said:
R. B. MAYHEW
JUNIOR PARTNER
"Lucky bastard," said Gary, affectionately.
He wandered off, and Richard went through the door, utterly bemused. The room was no longer an executive supplies and file room: it had been emptied of files and supplies, and painted in gray and black and white, and recarpeted. In the center of the office was a large desk. He examined it: it was, unmistakably, his very own desk. His trolls had all been neatly put away in one of the desk drawers, and he took them all out, and arranged them around the office. He had his own window, with a nice view of the sludge-brown river and the South Bank of the Thames, beyond. There was even a large green plant, with huge waxy leaves, of the kind that looks artificial but isn't. His old, dusty, cream-colored computer terminal had been replaced with a much sleeker, cleaner black computer terminal, which took up less desk space.
He walked over to the window and sipped his tea, staring out at the dirty brown river.
"You've found everything all right, then?" He looked up. Crisp, and efficient, Sylvia, the MD's PA, was standing in the doorway. She smiled when she saw him.
"Um. Yes. Look, there are things I have to take care of at home . . . d'you think it'd be all right if 1 took the rest of the day off and—"
"Suit yourself. You aren't meant to be back in till tomorrow anyway."
"I'm not?" he asked. "Right."
Sylvia frowned. "What happened to your finger?"
"I broke it," he told her.
She looked at his hand with concern. "You weren't in a fight, were you?"
"Me?"
She grinned. "Just teasing. I suppose you shut it in a door. That's what my sister did."