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Jane finally extricated herself and went to the table, balancing a plate. Someone had apparently mistaken her plate for his or her own in the crush and put a glop of something with rice and coconut on hers that she would never have considered even tasting. Someone must have filled a plate for Mrs. Pryce, probably the maid, because Pryce hadn't been fighting the crowd in the kitchen. She was sitting at the head of the table in regal splendor in a thronelike chair that was the match of the one she'd occupied earlier.

“Where's my tea?" Mrs. Pryce suddenly said to the room at large. Those who were struggling to sit down and finding themselves literally rubbing elbows ignored her. "I guess I just have to do everything myself," she said, struggling to her feet and barging toward the pantry hallway.

“Funny, I had the impression she did nothing herself," Missy said.

“Is there salt on the table?" Desiree asked. There was a general shifting as everyone looked for it. "Oh, there. Bob, next to you." Everybody had to shift their elbows around to pass a china salt shaker in the shape of a thatched cottage.

“Sorry, Grady," Missy said as she jostled his arm, causing him to drop his spoon.

“What is this green stuff?" somebody asked.

Ruth kept looking back over her shoulder at the multitudinously brown tapestry as if it might suddenly fling itself over her head and smother her. Every time she craned around, she jostled her sister, Naomi, who was picking fretfully at her food.

“Is this part of you or me?" Cecily asked Shelley, slowly adjusting her legs under the table.

“Oh, I didn't get anything to drink either," Jane said, getting back up. "Mom? Shelley? You want-anything?"

“I'll get myself some coffee," Shelley said, joining her. The crowd in the hall had thinned out, and there was no sign of Mrs. Pryce. Jane noticed that there was another door to the kitchen, presumably leading to the gloomy front hall. Mrs. Pryce must have gone that way. The maid was sitting on a high stool by the sink, staring out the window and absently picking at a hangnail.

Jane and Shelley got their drinks and returned to find most of the others crawling around on the floor, trying to help Grady find his contact lens. Mrs. Pryce found it by stepping on it as she came through from the living room. Instead of apologizing to Grady, she gave a general lecture on the wickedness of modern things, pointing out that spectacles were good enough for her generation.

“Okay, that's all I can stand," Grady said, huffing a little as he got up from the floor. "Could somebody drive me home to get my glasses?”

There was a deafening chorus of volunteers.

“I've got to pick up something for class anyway," Missy outshouted the rest. "I'll take you, Grady. There won't be time to get back. We'll see the rest of you later," she said, all but skipping in her haste to escape.

Jane watched them leave, sadly. She glanced at her watch. They'd only been there half an hour, and it already seemed like days and days. If it weren't for her obligation to her mother—and to Priscilla—she'd have run sobbing after Grady and Missy, begging to go with them.

7

“I think a teacher ought to be like the captain of a ship—the last one off in case of disaster," Jane said darkly to Missy as they came into the classroom.

Missy laughed. "You're all grown-ups, and perfectly able to fend for yourselves. And you did survive, or you wouldn't be here to bitch at me now.”

Jane slipped another envelope onto the desk. "A little more of Priscilla," she said in a low tone.

“Oh, good! Jane, I want to talk to you about this. Can I come by in the morning?"

“Sure.”

The rest of the class was trailing in, giving Missy and Grady dirty looks. Grady looked guilty. Missy didn't. Mrs. Pryce was last. She again took her place center front. Nobody would have dared to take her place.

“I still smell like that house," Shelley muttered.

Missy started her lecture. "Tonight I want to start class by talking about some basic rules of good writing that apply no matter what the subject matter, whether fiction or nonfiction—”

Mrs. Pryce coughed several times.

Missy waited politely, then went on, "First, I have a handout here that lists some good basic grammar books and style sheets that you might want to get.

You should have one of these handy as you continue your writing. Grady, will you pass these out for me?”

He bounced up, took the sheets, and started distributing them. As he reached Mrs. Pryce, she grabbed hers and said, "Get me a drink of water."

“In a minute," Grady said, leaning across her to give a sheet to Ruth Rogers on her other side.

Mrs. Pryce slapped his arm away. "Now!”

Grady shrugged and went out into the hall. Mrs. Pryce craned her neck around and glared at the rest of them. "What are you all gawking at? You're all fools!"

“Mrs. Pryce, I'm going to have to ask you to leave if there's one more outburst," Missy said firmly.

Pryce either didn't hear her or pretended not to. "Where has that idiot man gone?" she said. "Just go back to your business. All of you. I'll have my husband see to things if I have to.”

Jane felt a shiver of apprehension. General Pryce, if she remembered correctly, had been dead for some years.

Grady came in with a paper cup of water. As he handed it to Mrs. Pryce, she had a coughing spasm. She gulped down the water, choked slightly, and said, "Why are you turning those lights up? You're doing this to harass me. Well, you'll just all blind yourselves in the bargain, and it'll serve you right. You're all against me. Don't think I don't know it—" Her voice was rising, sounding dry and hoarse. Naomi, looking paler than usual and obviously alarmed, inched her chair a fraction closer to Jane and her mother. Mrs. Pryce thrashed her cane around, knocking it against a few chairs before she settled it firmly on the floor and started to rise. But she fell back in her chair heavily.

“You!" she said, suddenly focusing on Bob Neufield. "You got just what you deserved, and don't try to tell me otherwise. You depraved pretty boys don't deserve to have the opportunity to serve a fine country like this—”

Bob Neufield drew himself up and looked as if he'd been stabbed in the heart.

“Mrs. Pryce, you must be quiet!" Missy said, looking around frantically. "What's the matter with you?"

“I'll get you some more water. Just settle down." Grady spoke to her as if she were a badly behaved child.

“You'll blind yourselves. It'll serve you right," Mrs. Pryce said. Her glare had turned to a squint and she was shivering uncontrollably.

Ruth Rogers had risen from her chair; she put one hand on Mrs. Pryce's forehead and grabbed her wrist with the other. Mrs. Pryce struggled. "Take your hands off me! How dare you touch me, you disgusting woman!”

Ruth hung on, looking at Missy. "She's feverish and her pulse is very fast."

“I'll call an ambulance," Missy said, coming around the desk and racing from the room.

Jane looked at her mother. "Is there anything we should do?"

“Let's clear a path for the medics.”

Mrs. Pryce was still raving and trying to get away from Ruth, who was keeping her firmly in her chair. Ruth's frail sister, Naomi, was helping to hang on to the elderly woman, who was showing surprising strength. Jane, Shelley, and Cecily started pushing the chairs to the side of the room, making a wide aisle. Desiree Loftus, looking terrified, got up and started helping them. Bob Neufield was standing back, look‑ ing like a military guard who was under orders not to react.

They could already hear the sirens. "Here, let's get out of the way," Grady said, and with Bob Neufield's help, started pushing everybody except Ruth and Naomi toward the door. The women started snatching up their belongings and going into the hallway.