She was seating herself on a large chesterfield couch as Arthur was saying petulantly,
"Honestly, Merlin, sometimes you treat me as if I'm a child."
"Arthur, we have a guest."
"I am perfectly capable of making decisions and watching out for .. .pardon?"
"A guest." The boy was skinny, his hands too large for his arms, his feet too large for his legs. His silken brown hair was longish in the back, and his ears virtually stuck out at right angles to his head. He was nattily attired in dark blue slacks, shirt, striped tie, and a blazer with a little sword emblem on the pocket. Bizarrely, the man's clothing was identical, but the boy looked better in it.
Arthur turned, and the moment he saw Gwen, he smiled. Merlin, on the other hand, frowned deeply.
Gwen found herself staring deeply into Arthur's eyes. She had never seen such dark eyes, she thought. Dark as a bottomless pit, which she would willingly plunge into....
She tore her gaze from him and swung over to the boy he'd called Merlin.
And stifled a gasp.
It was like looking at two different people in the same body. The lines of the boy's face were youthful enough, but his eyes were like an old man's, smoldering with wisdom of ages and resentment when he looked at her. He frightened her terribly, and she stared down at her shoes.
Arthur appeared oblivious to her thoughts. "How unforgivably rude of me," he said. "You're the young woman who was sent over by the employment office."
"That's right," she said quietly.
Arthur regarded her for a time and then said, "Is there something particularly intriguing about your feet, my dear?"
She looked up, her cheeks coloring. "I'm sorry. I just-"
"What is your name, child?"
The question had been asked by the eight-year-old boy, and 30
the phrasing was, at the very least, extraordinary. She gaped openly at him. "My what?"
"Nom de guerre. Moniker. Name."
"Oh, name!"
Merlin let out a sigh as she stammered out, "Gwendoiyne."
"What a lovely name," said Arthur, and Gwen looked up to see that Arthur was staring at her.
He saw her noticing, but did not look away. His stare was wonderfully open, and unembarrassed. "Forgive me for staring so, but you remind me a great deal of someone I once knew-"
"Arthur," said the boy warningly, "what were we just discussing?"
"Merlin, please. My apologies, Gwendoiyne. I am Arthur Pendr- Arthur Penn. My associate"-he chuckled slightly on the word-"is Merlin."
"Last name?" asked Gwen.
"Last one / intend to use," snapped Merlin.
"As you know," continued Arthur, "I am in the market to hire a personal secretary. This may not seem necessary now, but I assure you in the months to come this office will become quite busy. I would like to know all about your background, everything you've done in the past several years. We have several people to see, so I'll tell you right now that it may be a week or two before we can let you and your agency know for certain. Stop glowering, Merlin. You'll get crows' feet. Remember the last time that happened, you couldn't walk properly for days."
Gwen laughed, but Arthur stared at her with an upraised eyebrow and said, "Was something funny?"
"No. Not at all. I understand. Find out about me, more people to see, a week or two for response. Got it."
"Fine then. Let's begin." Arthur pulled around a comfortable chair and seated himself across from Gwen. He leaned back, steepled his long fingers, and said, "So let's start, miss ... I'm sorry, Gwen, I didn't catch your last name."
"DeVere," she said. "Gwen DeVere."
"You start on Monday," said Arthur.
Merlin, seated on the desktop, moaned.
When Gwen DeVere returned home, the apartment seemed
3 J
a little less gloomy, and as she marched in the door she called out, "Lance, Igotit!"
She stood in the doorway, dripping little puddles at her feet.
There was no response. She sighed, the wind slightly taken out of her sails. She should have known. It was raining heavily, and Lance only went out when it was a downpour such as this. He got inspiration from foul weather, he said. He had once filled a cup with rainwater, held it in front of her and informed her that an entire allegory of mankind could be found in that glass of precipitation. When she'd said she only saw rainwater, he'd emptied the contents on her head.
She thought about what the phantom receptionist had said, and went into the bathroom, her feet squishing in her shoes.
A few minutes later, wrapped in a towel, she went to the window and looked out at the street.
It was covered with garbage, and derelicts were huddling in doorways for shelter. There was a constant tension in the neighborhood, a tension that she supposed was natural in the city.
But it wasn't natural to her, and she wasn't going to live with it if she could help it. Perhaps, once she'd been working steadily for a while, they could afford to move out to a nicer area.
Maybe someplace out in Brooklyn, or maybe even the Island.
If only Lance would get a job.
But his writing always came first.
She glanced over at his work area, for it could hardly be called a desk. The crumpled paper was gaining altitude. She reached over, pulled one wad from the stack, and uncrumpled it. It had one sentence typed across the middle-"All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy"-and she cursed the day she'd taken him to see The Shining.
If only Lance would get a job.
If only she could leave him.
But he was all she had.
She flopped down onto the bed, reached over and snapped on the small, black-and-white TV. She recognized the old movie as soon as it came on-Danny Kaye in The Court Jester.
Knights and knighthood. Those were the days. Chivalry. Women were demigods back then, she thought, and men their protectors. Now it's everyone for themselves.
She reached over to the bureau, opened her purse and dug 32
through it. Eight dollars and change. What the hell. She reached over to phone for a pizza, figuring it would arrive two hours later, cold and soggy. But it wasn't really dinnertime for two hours yet, anyway, and she could heat it up.
And maybe the pizza guy would come riding up on a silver charger, balancing the pie on a gleaming shield___
Late into the night the offices in the Camelot Building's thirteenth floor blazed with light.
"You're out of your mind. You know that, don't you? Ten centuries to contemplate, and you're no smarter now, Wart, than you were then."
Arthur had removed his coat and tie and was sitting in shirtsleeves, watching Merlin stalk the room like a cat tracking down a mouse. From his reclining position on the couch he called,
"Now Merlin, I think you're exaggerating a bit."
The lad turned on him. "You think?" he said in a voice ringing with authority despite its boyishness. "Who told you to think!?"
Arthur's voice was sharp as he said, "I caution you, Merlin. You will not address me in that manner. I am still your-"
Merlin turned, placing his hands defiantly on his narrow hips. "My what? Finish the sentence.
My king? Well huzzah, Your Majesty," and he genuflected mockingly. "You rule a kingdom of one ... unless you planned to return and lay claim as king of all the Britons. I can just see it!"
He rubbed his hands together, relishing a good laugh, as Arthur shifted uncomfortably on the couch. "I wonder how they would react, those ineffectual, impotent figureheads who do nothing for the populace except provide them with tidbits to gossip about in taverns at teatime. There you'll be, presenting yourself as the once and future king. What the bloody hell do you think will happen? Do you think the queen is liable to step down and say, 'Good of you to show, old sod. We've spent centuries keeping your place warm. Have the throne.'