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Storm and Silence(168)

By:Robert Thier


Mr Cartwright’s face split into a delighted smile, and he bowed deeply.

‘Mr Ambrose! Welcome! I must say, I was most pleasantly surprised when I received your message yesterday that you had decided you would support us. It is not often that a man of your stature involves himself in politics.’

Mr Ambrose eyes remained as cold and distant as ever. He did not smile. He did not bow. ‘When there is a good cause to be aided, I cannot simply stand back and do nothing, Mr Cartwright.’

‘That is a very admirable quality in you, Mr Ambrose. And who is this gentleman, if I may ask?’

The fiend gestured to me.

For a moment I thought the ghost of a smile flickered over Mr Ambrose’s face. But no, I had to be wrong. Mr Ambrose did not make use of something as wasteful as a smile - unless he was utilizing it to manipulate people, of course! Bastard!

‘That is my private secretary, Mr Victor Linton. He has a keen interest in matters of gender-politics and so I brought him along. I’m sure it will be a valuable lesson for him.’

Gah! Go on! Strangle him! It’ll be worth the life-long prison sentence! Just do it!

Valuable lesson my foot! I hardly noticed when Mr Cartwright bowed to me as well and said, brightly:

‘I’m delighted to make your acquaintance, Mr Linton. I hope you enjoy our little gathering.’

I didn’t quite know what to answer to that. Making his acquaintance created several powerful feelings in me - delight was definitely not among them. So I just bowed and muttered something unintelligible. He smiled and directed his stuttering assistant to lead us to an empty place in the row of waiters at the back of the platform, right beside a deaf old duke. We were right among the nobs, apparently.

‘So I have a keen interest in gender-politics, do I?’ I hissed into Mr Ambrose’s ears as soon as stuttermouth had vanished.

‘Well, you do, don't you?’

‘Do you know what I have a keen interest in right now? Bashing your face in!’

He didn’t flinch.

‘Calm your overexcited feminine temperament, Mr Linton,’ he advised. ‘No one is threatening to shear your head. Not yet, at least.’

‘You…!’

But before I could specify my opinion of Mr Rikkard Ambrose, a roar of applause went up from the crowd. Either Professor Anstruther had just reached a very convincing argument in his theory, or his place had been taken by a stand-up comedian from the nearest music hall.

I took a look and sighed with resignation. No, it was still Anstruther, propounding his opinions. By now he had reached a detailed analysis of the differing head circumferences of females and males, and was comparing female human skulls to those of various apes.

‘The most similarities I have observed are to be found between women and chimpanzees,’ he was just saying, to another round of applause from the crowd. ‘Their heads show about the same growth pattern.’[44]

‘Interesting theory, don't you think?’ Mr Ambrose commented, in a voice so low only I could hear. ‘Especially considering their comparable intellectual capabilities.’

I balled my little hands into fists. They felt so insignificant. If only they were larger and stronger. If only I were. Strong enough to withstand this.

‘You are despicable,’ I informed Mr Ambrose. ‘I really ought to teach you a lesson!’

‘Really?’ He cocked his head, looking at me with calculating cold eyes. ‘I am quite sure that an assault on your employer would be in contradiction of our agreement and that I would be perfectly within my rights to release you from my service. But if you think it is worth it…’ His cold gaze wandered to my clenched fists. ‘Do not let me stop you.’

Taking a deep breath, I tried to relax my fingers.

You can do this, I told myself. You can do this!

My fingers didn’t relax. But I didn’t punch him either.

‘I know what you’re doing,’ I informed him. ‘And it is not working.’

‘Indeed?’

‘Yes. You’re trying to get me to give you a reason to sack me.’

‘I see.’

‘But I will not. You’re trying to get rid of me because you don't think I can do my job properly, but I will prove you wrong!’

‘So that is my sinister motivation? How deplorably easy I am to see through.’

Was that sarcasm in his voice? No, it couldn’t be. After all, sarcasm was a form of humour.

I didn’t reply to his words, choosing instead to lapse into silence. So did he. I simply stood there and endured, while Mr Ambrose waited for me to crack.

I did not.

Maybe he was surprised by my endurance as I listened to Professor Anstruther droning on and on about women and chimpanzees. But there was something I knew that he didn’t. I had something to look forward to. Maybe, just maybe, this event wouldn’t go quite as Mr Ambrose had anticipated.